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A66445 The blovdy tenent, of persecution, for cause of conscience, discussed, in a conference betweene trvth and peace vvho, in all tender affection, present to the high court of Parliament, as the result of their discourse, these, amongst other passages, of highest consideration. Williams, Roger, 1604?-1683.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1644 (1644) Wing W2758; ESTC R2405 232,471 275

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Conscience Peace What should be the reason of this their expression Truth Doubtles their Consciences tell them how few of those Churches which they yet acknowledge Churches are able and willing to hold forth Christ Iesus the Sun of Righteousnes healing with his wings the doubting and afflicted conscience Lastly their conscience tells them that a Servant of Christ Iesus may possibly be sent as an Heretick to be healed by a false Church which Church will never be willing to deale with him or never be able to convince him Peace Yea but they say by such a course the Magistrate shall convince such an ones conscience that hee seekes his good c. Truth If a man thus bound be sent to a Church to be healed in his conscience either he is an Heretick or he is not Admit he be yet he disputes in feare as the poor theefe the Mouse disputes with a terrible persecuting Cat who while she seemes to play and gently tosse yet the conclusion is a proud insulting and devouring crueltie If no Heretick but an innocent and faithfull witnes of any Truth of Jesus disputes he not as a Lambe in the Lyons paw being sure in the end to be torne in pieces Peace They adde The censure this way proceeds with more power and blessing Truth All power and blessing is from that blessed Son of God unto whom all power is given from the Father in Heaven and Earth He hath promised his presence with his Messengers preaching and baptizing to the worlds end ratifying in Heaven what they blinde or loose on Earth But let any man shew me such a commission instruction and promise given by the Son of God to Civill powers in these spirituall affaires of his Christian Kingdome and Worship Peace Lastly they conclude This course of first sending the Heretick to be healed by the Church takes away all excuse for none can say that he is persecuted for his Conscience but for sinning against his Conscience Truth Iesabel placing poore Naboth before the Elders as a blasphemer of God and the King and sanctifying the plotted and intended murther with a day of humiliation may seeme to take away all excuse and to conclude the Blasphemer worthy to be stoned But Iehovah the God of Recompences ●er 51. when he makes Inquisition for blood will find both Iesabel and Ahab guilty and make the Dogs a feast with the flesh of Iesabel and leave not to Ahab a man to pisse against the wall for as Paul in his owne plea there was nothing committed worthy of death and against thee O King saith Daniel I have not sinned Dan. 6. in any Civill fact against the State CHAP. C. Peace THeir eighth question is this viz. What power Magistrates have about the gathering of Churches First the Magistrate hath power and it is his duty to incourage and countenance such persons as voluntarily joyn themselves in holy Covenant both by his presence if it may be and promise of protection they accepting the right hand of fellowship from other neighbour Churches Secondly he hath power ●o forbid all Idolatrous and corrupt Assemblies who offer to put themselves under their patronage and shall attempt to joyne themselves into a Church-estate and if they shall not hearken to force them therefrom by the power of the Sword Psal. 101. 8. For our tolerating many Religions in a State in severall Churches beside the provoking of God may in time not only corrupt leaven divide and so destroy the peace of the Churches but also dissolve the continuity of the State especially ours whose wals are made of the stones of the Churches it being also contrary to the end of our planting in this part of the World which was not only to enjoy the pure Ordinances but to enjoy them all in purity Thirdly He hath power to compell all men within his grant to heare the Word for hearing the Word of God is a duty which the light of Nature leadeth even Heathens to The Ninivites heard Ionah though a stranger and unknowne unto them to be an extraordinary Prophet Ionah 3. And Eglon the King of Moab hearing that Ehud had a message from God he rose out of his seat for more reverent attention Iudg. 3. 20. Yet he hath no power to compell all men to become members of Churches because he hath not power to make them fit members for the Church which is not wrought by the power of the Sword but by the power of the Word Nor may he force the Churches to accept of any for members but those whom the Churches themselves can freely approve of Truth To the first branch of this head I answer That the Magistrate should encourage and countenance the Church yea and protect the persons of the Church from violence disturbance c. It being truly noble and glorious by how much the Spouse and Queene of the Lord Iesus transcends the Ladies Queens and Empresses of the World in glory beauty chastity and innocency 'T is true all Magistrates in the world do this viz. Incourage and protect that Church or Assembly of worshippers which they judge to be true and approve of but not permitting other consciences then their owne It hath come to passe in all ages and yet doubtlesse will that the Lord Iesus and His Queene are driven and persecuted out of the World To the second That the Magistrate ought to suppresse all Churches which he judgeth false he quoteth Psal. 101. 8. Betimes I will cut off the wicked of the Land that I may cut off all evill doers from the City of Jehovah unto which he addeth foure Reasons Peace Deare Truth first a word to that Scripture so often quoted and so much boasted of Truth Concerning that holy Land of Canaan concerning the City of Iehovah Ierusalem out of which King David here resolves to cut off all the wicked and evill doers I shall speake more largely on the 11 Head or Question in the differences between that and all other Lands At present I answer There is no holy Land or City of the Lord no King of Sion c. but the Church of Iesus Christ and the King thereof according to 1 Pet. 2. 9. Ye are a holy Nation and Ierusalem is the holy people of God in the true profession of Christianity Heb. 12. Gal. 4. Rev. 21. Out of which the Lord Iesus by his holy Ordinances in such a government and by such governours as he hath appointed he cuts off every wicked person and evill doer If Christ Iesus had intended any difference of plate Cities or Countries doubtlesse Ierusalem and Samaria had been thought of or the Cities of Asia wherein the Christian Religion was so gloriously planted But the Lord Iesus disclaimes Ierusalem and Samaria forth having any respect of holinesse more then other Cities Iohn 4. And the Spirit of God evidently testineth that the Churches were in the Cities and Countries not that the whole Cities or Countries were Gods holy Land
16 And if so how should Paul appeale in spirituall things to Caesar or write to the Churches of Iesus to submite in Christian or Spirituall matters Fifthly if Paul had appealed to Caesar in spirituall respects hee had greatly prophaned the holy name of God in holy things in so improper and vaine a prostitution of spirituall things to carnall and naturall judgements which are not able to comprehend spirituall matters which are alone spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. And yet Caesar as a civill supreme Magistrate ought to defend Paul from Civill violence and sta●derous accusations about sedition mutiny civill disobedience c. And in that sense who doubts but God's people may appeale to the Romane Caesar an Egyptian Pharach a Philistian Abimelecke an Assyrian Nabuchadnezzar the great M●gol Prester Iohn the great Turke or an Indian Sachim CHAP. L. Peace WHich is the third Argument against the civill Magistrates power in spirituall and soule matters out of this Scripture Rom. 13 Truth I dispute from the nature of the Magistrates weapons vers 4. He hath a sword which hee beares not in vaine delivered to him as I acknowledge from Gods appointment in the free consent and choice of the subjects for common good We must distinguish of swords We finde foure sorts of swords mentioned in the New Testament First the sword of persecution which Herod stretched forth against Iames Act. 12. Secondly the sword of Gods Spirit expresly said to be the Word of God Ephes. 6. A sword of two edges caried in the mouth of Christ Rev. 1. which is of strong and mighty operation piercing betweene the bones and the marrow betweene the soule and the spirit Heb. 4. Thirdly the great sword of War and Destruction given to him that rides that terrible Red Horse of War so that he takes Peace from the Earth and men kill one another as is most lamentably true in the slaughter of so many hundred thousand soules within these few yeares in severall parts of Europe our owne and others None of these 3 swords are intended in this Scripture Therefore fourthly there is a Civill sword called the Sword of Civill justice which being of a materiall civill nature for the defence of Persons Estates Families Liberties of a City or Civill State and the suppressing of uncivill or injurious persons or actions by such civill punishment It cannot according to its utmost reach and capacitie now under Christ when all Nations are meerly civill without any such typicall holy respect upon them as was upon Israel a Nationall Church I say cannot extend to spirituall and Soul-causes Spirituall and Soule punishment which belongs to that spirituall sword with two edges the soule-piercing in soule-saving or soule-killing the Word of God CHAP. LII Truth A Fourth Argument from this Scripture I take in the 6. verse from Tribute custome c. which is a meerly civill Reward or Recompence for the Magistrates worke Now as the wages are such is the worke But the wages are meerely civill Custome Tribute c. not the contributions of the Saints or churches of Christ proper to the Spirituall and Christian state and such work only must the Magistrate attend upon as may properly deserve such civill wages reward or recompence Lastly that the Spirit of God never intended to direct or warrant the Magistrate to use his Power in spirituall affaires and Religious worship I argue from the terme or title it pleaseth the wisedome of God to give such Civill officers to wit vers 6. Gods Ministers Now at the very first blush no man denies a double Ministerie The one appointed by Christ Iesus in his Church to gather to governe receive in cast out and order all the affaires of the Church the House Citie or Kingdome of God Ephes. 4. 1 Cor. 12. Secondly a Civill Ministery or office meerely humane and civill which Men agree to constitute called therefore an humane creation 1 Pet. 2. and is as true and lawfull in those Nations Cities Kingdomes c. which never heard of the true God nor his holy Sonne Iesus as in any part of the World beside where the Name of Iesus is most taken up From all which premises viz. that the scope of the Spirit of God in this Chapter is to handle the matters of the second Table having handled the matters of the first in the 12. since the Magistrates of whom Paul wrote were naturall ungodly persecuting and yet lawfull Magistrates and to be obeyed in all lawfull Civill things Since all Magistrates are Gods Ministers essentially civill bounded to a civill work with civill weapons or instruments and paid or rewarded with civill rewards From all which I say I undeniably collect that this Scripture is generally mistaken and wrested from the scope of Gods Spirit and the nature of the place and cannot truly be alleadged by any for the Power of the Civill Magistrate to be exercised in spirituall and Soule-matters CHAP. LII Peace AGainst this I know many object out of the 4. verse of this Chapter that the Magistrate is to avenge or punish Evill from whence is gathered that Heresie false Christs false Churches false Ministeries false Seales being evill ought to be punished Civilly c. Truth I answer that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is generally opposed to Civill Goodnesse or Virtue in a Common-wealth and not to Spirituall Good or Religion in the Church Secondly I have proved from the scope of the place that here is not intended Evill against the Spirituall or Christian Estate handled in the 12 Chap. but Evill against the Civill State in this 13. properly falling under the cognizance of the Civill Minister of God the Magistrate and punishable by that civill sword of his as an incivilitie disorder or breach of that civill order peace and civility unto which all the Inhabitants of a City Town or Kingdome oblige themselves Peace I have heard that the Elders of the New-English Churches who yet out of this 13 Rom. maintaine Persecution grant that the Magistrate is to preserve the peace and welfare of the State and therefore that he ought not to punish such sinnes as hurt not his peace In particular they say the Magistra●e may not punish secret sinnes in the Soule Nor such sinnes as are yet handling in the Church in a private way Nor such sinnes which are private in Families and therefore they say the Magistrate transgresteth to prosecute complaints of children against their parents servants agai●st masters wives against husbands and yet this proper to the Civill State Nor such sinnes as are between the Members and Churches themselves And they confesse that if the Magistrate punish and the Church punish there will be a greater Rent in their Peace Truth From thence sweet Peace may we well observe First the Magistrate is not to punish all Evill according to this their confession The distinction of private and publike Evill will not here availe because such as urge
them but not invest them with office amongst them Secondly the Maintenance of Church-officers being to arise from all those who are ordinarily taught thereby Gal. 6. 6. hence it is the dutie of the Civill Magistrate to contend with the people as Nehemiah did chap. 13. ver 10. 11. who doe neglect and forsake the due maintenance of the Church of God and to command them to give such portions for the maintenance of Church officers as the Gospell commandeth to be offered to them freely and bountifully 2. Cor. 9. 5 6 7. According as Hezekiah commanded the people to give to the Priests and Levites the portions appointed by the Law that they might be incouraged in the Law of the Lord 2 Chron. 31. 4. Thirdly the furnishing the Church with set officers depending much upon erecting and maintenance of Schooles and good education of youth and it lying chiefly in the hand of the Magistrate to provide for the furthering thereof they may therefore and should so farre provide for the Churches as to erect Schooles take care for fit Governours and Tutours and commend it to all the Churches if they see it meet that in all the Churches within the Jurisdiction once in a yeare and if it may be the Sabbath before the Generall Court of Election there be a Free-will offering of all people for the maintenance of such Schooles And the monies of every Towne so given to be brought on the day of Election to the Treasurie of the Colledge and the monies to be disposed by such who are so chosen for the disposing thereof Truth In the choice of officers it is very obscure what they mean by this supreme power of Christ Jesus sending to preach We know the Commission of the Lord Jesus to his first Messengers to goe into all Nations to preach and gather Churches and they were immediately sent forth by him but Mr. Cotton elswhere boldeth that there is now extant no immediate Ministry from Christ but mediate that is from the Church Let us first see how they agree with themselves and secondly how they agree with the Magistrate in this busines First if they hold a sending forth to preach by Christs supreme power according to Math. 28. Mark 16. Rom. 10. they must necessarily grant a time when the Church is not but is to be constituted out of the Nations and Peoples now converted by this preaching whence according to the course of Scripture the nature of the Worke and their own Grant in this place it is apparent that there is a Ministery before the Church gathering and espousing the Church to Christ and therefore their other Tenent must needs be too light viz. that there is no Ministry but that which is mediate from the Church Peace Blessed Truth this doctrine of a Ministry before the Church is harsh and deep yet most true most sweet Yet you know their Ground that two or three Godly persons may joyne themselves together become a Church make officers send them forth to preach to convert baptize and gather New Churches Truth I answer first we find not in the first institution and pasterne that ever any such two or three or more did gather and constitute themselves a Church of Christ without a Ministrie sent from God to invite and call them by the Word and to receive them unto fellowship with God upon the receiving of that Word and Message And therefore it may very well be quaeried how without such a Ministry two or three become a Church and how the power of Christ is conveyed unto them Who espoused this people unto Iesus Christ as the Church at Corinth was espoused by Paul 2 Cor. 11. If it be said themselves or if it be said the Scriptures let one instance be produced in the first patternes and practices of such a Practice It hath been generally confest that there is no comming to the Mariage feast without a Messenger inviting sent from God to the Soules of men Matth. 22. Luc. 14. Rom. 10. We finde when the Thessalonians turned to God from their Idolls to serve the living and true God 1 Thessal 1. 9. it pleased God to bring a Word of Power unto them by the mouth of Paul in the same place Peace You know deare Truth it is a common plea that Gods people now are converted already and therefore may congregate themselves c. Truth Two things must here be cleered First doth their conversion amount to externall turning from Idolls I Thess. 1. 9. beside their internall Repentance Faith Love c. Secondly who wrought this conversion who begot these Children for though the Corinthians might have ten thousand Teachers yet Paul had begotten them by the Word 'T is true as Mr. Cotton himselfe elsewhere acknowledgeth God sendeth many Preachers in the way of his providence even in Babel mysticall though not according to his Ordinance and Institution So even in the wildernesse Rev. 12. God provideth for the sustentation of the woman Rev. 12. by which provision even in the most Popish times and places yea and by most false and Popish callings now in this lightsome Age confest so to be God hath done great things to the personall conversion consolation and salvation of his people But as there seems yet to be desired such constitution of the Christian Church as the first institution and patterne calls for So also such a calling and converting of Gods people from Antichristian Idols to the Christian Worship And therefore such a Ministry according to the first patterne sent from Christ Iesus to renew and restore the Worship and Ordinances of God in Christ. Lastly if it should be granted that without a Ministry sent from Christ to gather Churches that Gods people in this Country may be called converted from Antichristian Idolls to the true worship of God in the true Church estate and Ordinances will it not follow that in all other Countries of the World Gods Elect must or may be so converted from their severall respective false worships and Idolatries and brought into the true Christian Church estate without such a Ministry sent unto them Or are there two wayes appointed by the Lord Iesus one for this Country and another for the rest of the World Or lastly if two or three more without a Ministry shall arise up become a Church make Ministers c. I ask whether those two or three or more must not be accounted immediately and extraordinarily stirred up by God and whether this be that supreme power of Christ Iesus which they speake of sending forth two or three private persons to make a Church and Ministers without a true Ministry of Christ Iesus first sent unto themselves Is this that commission which all Ministers pretend unto Mat. 28. 19. c. first in the hands of two or three private persons becomming a Church without a mediat call from which Church say they there can be no true Ministry and yet also confesse that Christ sendeth
I finde not a little in the Testament of Christ Iesus I finde the Church of Christ frequently compared to a Schoole All Beleevers are his Disciples or Scholars yea women also Acts 9. 36. There was a certaine Disciple or Scholar called Dorcas Have not the Universities sacrilegiously stole this blessed name of Christs Scholars from his people Is not the very Scripture language it selfe become absurd to wit to call Gods people especially Women as Dorcas Scholars Peace Some will object how shall the Scriptures be brought to ●ight from out of Popish darknesse except these Schooles of Prophets convey them to us Truth I know no Schooles of Prophets in the New Testament but the particular Congregation of Christ Iesus 1 Cor. 14. And I question whether any thing but Sinne stopt and dried up the current of the Spirit in those rare gifts of tongues to Gods sons daughters serving so admirably both for the understanding of the Originall Scriptures and also for the propagating of the name of Christ. Who knowes but that it may please the Lord againe to cloath his people with a spirit of zeale and courage for the name of Christ yea and powre forth those fiery streames againe of Tongues and Prophecie in the restauration of Zion If it be not his holy pleasure so to doe but that his people with daily study and labour must dig to come at the Originall Fountaines Gods people have many wayes besides the Universitie lazie and Monkish to attaine to an excellent measure of the knowledge of those tongues That most despised while living and now much honoured Mr. Ainsworth had scarce his Peere amongst a thousand Academians for the Scripture Originalls and yet he scarce set foot within a Colledge walls CHAP. CVIII Peace I Shall now present you with their 10. Head viz. concerning the Magistrates power in matters of Doctrine That which is unjustly ascribed to the Pope is as unjustly ascribed to the Magistrates viz. to have power of making new Articles of Faith or Rules of Life or of pressing upon the Churches to give such publike honour to the Apocrypha writings or Homilies of men as to read them to the people in the roome of the Oracles of God Truth This Position simply considered I acknowledge a most holy truth of God both against the Pope and the Civill Magistrates challenge both pretending to be the Vicars of Christ Iesus upon the Earth Yet two things here I shall propose to consideration First since the Parliament of England thrust the Pope out of his chaire in England and set downe King Henry the 8. and his Successours in the Popes roome establishing them supreme Governours of the Church of England since such an absolute government is given by all men to them to be Guardians of the first Table and worship of God to set up the true worship to suppresse all false and that by the power of the Sword and therefore consequently they must judge and determine what the true is and what the false And since the Magistrate is bound by these Authours principles to see the Church the Church officers and members doe thair duty he must therefore judge what is the Churches duty and when she performes or not performes it or when she exceeds so like wise when the Ministers performe their duty or when they exceed it And if the Magistrate must judge then certainly by his owne eye and not by the eyes of others though assembled in a Nationall or Generall Councell Then also upon his judgement must the people rest as upon the minde and judgement of Christ or else it must be confest that he hath no such power left him by Christ to compell the soules of men in matters of Gods worship Secondly concerning the Apocrypha writings and Homilies to be urged by the Magistrate to be read unto the people as the Oracles of God I aske if the Homilies of England contain not in them much pretious and heavenly matter ● Secondly if they were not 〈◊〉 at least many of them by excellent men for learning holinesse and witnesse of Christs Truth incomparable Thirdly were they not authorised by that most rare and pious Prince Ed. 6. then head of the Church of England With what great solemnity and rejoycing were they received of thousands Yet now behold their children after them sharply censure them for Apocrypha writings and Homilies trust into the roome of the Word of God and so falling into the consideration of a false and counterfeit Scripture I demand of these worthy men whether a servant of God might then lawfully have refused to read or heare such a false Scripture Secondly if so whether King Edward might have lawfully compelled such a man to yeeld and submit or else have persecuted him yea according to the Authors principles whether he ought to have spared him because after the admonitions of such pious and learned men this man shall now prove an Hereticke and as an obstinate person sinning against the light of his owne conscience In this case what shall the conscience of the subject doe awed by the dread of the most High What shall the conscience of the Magistrate do zealous for his glorious Reformation being constantly perswaded by his Clergy of his Lieutenantship received from Christ Again what priviledge have those worthy servants of God either in Old or New England to be exempted from the mistakes into which those glo●ious Worthies in K. Edwards time did fall and if so what bloudy conclusions are presented to the World perswading men to plucke up by the Roots from the Land of the living all such as seem in their eyes hereticall or obstinate CHAP. CIX Peace DEare Truth What darke and dismall bloudy paths doe we walke in How is thy name and mine in all ages cried up yet as an English Flag in a Spanish bottome not in truth but dangerous treachery and abuse both of Truth and Peace We are now come to the 11 Head which concernes the Magistrates power in worship First they have power say they to reforme things in the worship of God in a Church corrupted and to establish the pure worship of God defending the same by the power of the sword against all those who shall attempt to corrupt it For first the reigning of Idolatry and corruption in Religion is imputed to the want of a King Iudges 17. 5 6. Secondly Remissenes in Reforming Religion is a fault imputed to them who suffered the High Places in Israel and in Gallio who cared not for such things Acts 18. Thirdly Forwardnesse this way is a duty not only for Kings in the Old Testament but for Princes under the New 1 Tim 2. 2. Rom. 13. 4. Esay 49. 23. Neither did the Kings of Israel reforme things amisse as types of Christ but as Civill Magistrates and so exemplary to all Christians And here Reformation in Religion is commendable in a Persian King Ezra 7.
the Greeke signifie no more then the Gentiles or Nations of the Earth which were without and not within the true typicall nationall Church of the Iewes before Christ and since his comming the Gentiles or Nations of the World who are without that one holy Nation of the Christian Israel the Church gathered unto Christ Iesus in particular and distinct congregations all the World over Translatours promiscuously render the words Gentiles Heathens Nations whence it is evident that even such as professe the Name of Christ in an unregenerate and impenitent estate whether Papist or Protestant are yet without that is Heathen Gentiles or of the Nations CHAP. CXXXIII Peace DEare Truth it is now time to cast your eye on the second part of this Head or picture uncomely and deformed Truth It containes two sorts of Religious meetings or assemblies First more extraordinary and occasionall for which he quotes the practice of Iosiah An. Iosiah was in the type so are not now the severall Governours of Commonweales Kings or Governours of the Church or Israel whose state I have proved to be a None-such and not to bee parallel'd but in the Antitype the particular Church of Christ where Christ Iesus alone sits King in his owne most holy Government Secondly they propound meetings or assemblings ordinary stated and constant yearly and monthly unto which the civill Magistrate should give liberty For these meetings they propound plausible arguments from the necessity of them from Christian fellowship from Gods glory from the experience of the benefit of them and from the good report of them as also those two Scriptures 1 Cor. 10. 32. 2 Cor. 11. 38. To these I answer If they intend that the civill Magistrate should permit liberty to the free and voluntary Spirituall meetings of their Subjects I shall subscribe unto them but if they intend that the Magistrate should give liberty only unto themselves and not to the rest of their subjects that is to desire their owne soules only to be free and all other soules of their subjects to be kept in bondage Secondly if they intend that the Magistrate should inforce all the Elders of such Churches under their Iurisdiction to keepe correspondencie with them in such meetings then I say as before it is to cause him to give Libertie with a partiall hand and unequall Ballance for thus I argue If the Civill State and Civill officers be of their Religion and Conscience it is not proper for them to give libertie or freedome but to give honourable testimonie and approbation and their own personall submission to the Churches But if the civill State and Officers be of another conscience and worship and shall be bound to grant permission and libertie to them their consciences and meetings and not to those of his own Religion and Conscience also how will this appeare to be equall in the very eye of Common peace and righteousnesse For those yearely and monthly meetings as we find not any such in the first Churches So neither will those generall arguments from the plausible pretence of Christian fellowship Gods glory c. prove such particular wayes of glorifying God without some precept or president of such a kind For those Scriptures 1 Cor. 10. 33. 2 Cor. 11. 38. expressing the Apostle Paul his zeale for glorifying God and his care for all the Churches it is cleere they concerne such as are indeed Pauls successors sent forth by Christ Iesus to preach and gather Churches● but those Scriptures concerne not the Churches themselves nor the Pastours of the Churches properly least of all the Civill State and Commonwealth neither of which the Churches the Pastours or Commonwealth doe goe forth personally with that commission Matth. 28. to preach and baptize that is to gather Churches unto Christ. For as for the first the Churches are not Ministers of the Gospel the Angels or Messengers of the Churches and the Churches themselves were distinct Revel 2. 3. As for the second the pastours and Elders of the Church their worke is not to gather Churches but to governe and feed them Acts 20. 1 Pet. 5. As for the civill Magistrate it is a Ministry indeed Magistrates are Gods Ministers Rom. 13. but it is of another Nature and therefore none of these the Churches of Christ the Shepherds of those Churches nor the civill Magistrate succeeding the Apostles or first Messengers these Scriptures alleadged concerne not any of these to have care of all the Churches Peace Deare Truth who can heare this Word but will presently cry out Who then may rightly challenge that commission and that promise Math. 28. c. Truth Sweet Peace in due place and season that Question may be resolved but doubtles the true successours must precede or goe before the Church making Disciples and baptizing as the Apostles did who were neither the Churches nor the Pastors and fixed Teachers of them but as they gathered so had the care of the Churches CHAP. CXXXIV Peace I Cease to urge this further and in the last place marvell what should be the reason of that Conclusion viz. There is no power of determination in any of these meetings but that all must be left to the particular determination of the Churches Truth At the meeting at Ierusalem when Paul and Barnabas and others were sent thither from the Church of Christ at Antioch the Apostles and Elders did not only consult and advise but particularly determined the Question which the Church of Antioch sent to them about Acts 15. and send their particular determinations or decrees to the Churches afterward So that if these Assemblies were of the nature of that pattern or president as is generally pretended and had such a promise of the assistance and concurrence of the Spirit as that Assembly had they might then say as that Assembly did Acts 15. It seemeth good to the holy Spirit and to us and should not leave particular determinations to the particular Churches in which sometimes are very few able Guides and Leaders Peace But what should be the Reason to perswade these worthy men to conceive the particular Congregations or Churches to be more fit and competent Iudges in such high points then an Assembly of so excellent and choice persons who must only consult and advise c. Truth Doubtlesse there is a strong conviction in their Soules of a professed promised presence of the Lord Iesus in the midst of his Church gathered after his mind and will more then unto such kind of Assemblies though consisting of far more able persons even the flower and creame of all the Churches Peace It is generally conceived that the promise of Christs presence to the end of the World Matth. 28. is made to the Church Truth There is doubtlesse a promise of Christs presence in the midst of his Church and Congregation Matth. 18. but the promise of Christs presence Matth. 28. cannot properly and immediately belong to
the principall Contents of the Booke TRuth and Peace their rare and seldome meeting Page 15 2 Great complaints of Peace 16 Persecutors seldome plead Christ but Moses for their Authour 17 Strife Christian and unchristian ibid A threefold dolefull cry ibid. The wonderfull providence of God in the writing of the argument●s against persecution 18 A definition of persecution discussed 19 Conscience will not be restrained from its owne worship nor constrained to another 20 A chaste soule in Gods worship compared to a chaste wife ibid. Gods people have erred stom the very fundamentalls of visible worship ibid 4 Sorts of spirituall foundations in the New Testament 21 The 6 fundamentalls of the Christian Religion ibid. The comming out of Babel not Iocall but mysticall ibid. The great ignorance of Gods people concerning the nature of a true Church ibid. Common-Prayer written against by the New English Ministers 23 Gods people have worshipped God with false worships ibid. God is pleased sometimes to convey good unto his people beyond a promise ibid. A notable speech of King James to a great Nonconformist turned persecutor 24 Civill peace discussed ibid. The difference between Spirituall and civill state 25 Six cases wherein Gods people have been usually accounted arrogant and peace breakers but most unjustly 26 The true causes of breach and disturbance of civill peace 29 A preposterous way of suppressing errours 30 Persecutors must needs oppresse both erroneous and true consciences ibid. All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him ibid. What is meant by the Hereticke Tit. 3. Pag. 33 The word Heretick generally mistaken 34 Corporall killing in the Law typing out Spirituall killing in the Gospell 36 The cariage of a Soule sensible of mercy towards others in their blindness c. 38 The difference between the Church and the World wherein it is in all places 38 The Church and civill State confusedly made all one 39 The most peaceable accused for peace-breaking 40 A large Examination of what is meant by the Tares and letting of them alone ibid. Sathans subtletic about the opening of Scripture 41 Two sorts of Hypocrites 44 The Lord Iesus the great Teacher by Parables and the only Expounder of them 44 Preaching for conversion is properly out of the Church 45 The tares proved properly to signifie Antichristians ibid. Gods Kingdome on Earth the visible Church 46 The difference between the Wheat and the Tares as also betweene these Tares and all others 46 A civill Magistracie from the beginning of the world 47 The Tares are to be tolerated the longest of all sinners 48 The danger of infection by permitting of the Tares assoyled ibid. The civill Magistrate not so particularly spoken to in the New Testament as Fathers Masters c. and why 50 A two-fold state of Christianitie Persecuted under the Romane Emperours and Apostated under the Romane Popes ibid. 3 Particulars contained in that prohibition of Christ Iesus concerning the Tares Let them alone Mat. 13. 51 Accompanying with Idolaters 1 Cor. 5. discussed 52 Civill Magistrates never invested by Christ Iesus with the power and title of Defenders of the Faith 54 Gods people ever earnest with God for an Arme of Flesh. 55 The 〈◊〉 punishment of the blind Pharises in 4 respects ibid. The point of seducing infecting or Soule killing examined 57 Strange consusions in punishments 59 The blood of Soules Acts 20. lies upon such as professe the Ministrie the blood of Bodies only upon the State ibid. ●surpers and true Heires of Christ Iesus Page 60 The Civill Magistrate bound to preserve the bo●●s of their subjects and not to destroy them for conscience sake 61 The fire from heaven Rev. 13. 13. 2 Tim. 2. 25 26. examined 62 The originall of the Christian name Acts 11. 63 A Civill sword in Religion makes a Nation of hypocrites Isa. 10 64 A difference of the true and false Christ and Christians 65 The nature of the worship of unbeleeving and naturall persons ibid. Antoninus Pius his famous act concerning Religion 66 Isa. 24. Mic. 4. 3. concerning Christs visible Kingdome discussed ibid. Acts 20 29. The suppressing of Spirituall wolves discussed 67 It is in vaine to decline the name of the head of the Church and yet to practise the headship 68 Titus 1. 9. 10 discussed 69 Vnmercifull and bloody doctrine 70 The Spirituall weapons 2 Cor. 10. 4. discussed ibid. Civill weapons most improper in Spirituall causes 71 The Spirituall artillerie Eph. 6. applied 72 Rom. 13. concerning Civill Rulers power in Spirituall causes largely examined 73 Pauls appeale to Caesar examined 77 And cleared by 5 arguments ibid. 4 Sorts of swords 79 What is to be understood by evill Rom. 13. 4. 81 Though evill be alwayes evill yet the permission of it may sometimes be good 83 2 Sorts of commands both from Moses and Christ. 84 The permission of diverce in Israel Mat. 19. 17 18. ibid. Usury in the Civill state lawfully permitted 85 Seducing teachers either Pagan Iewish Turkish or Antichristian way yet be obedient subjects to the Civill Laws 86 Scandalous livers against the Civill state 87 Toleration of Jesabel and Balaam Rev. 2 14. 20. examined 88 The Christian world hath swallowed up Christianity 89 Christ Iesus the deepest polititian that ever was yet commands be a toleration of Antichristians 91 The Princes of the world seldome take part with Christ Iesus 93 Buchanans items to King James ibid. King James his sayings against persecution ibid. King Steven of Poland his sayings against persecution Page 93 Forcing of conscience a soule rape 94 Persecution for conscience hath been the launcet which hath let blood the Nations All Spirituall whores are bloody ibid. Poligamie or the many wives of the Fathers ibid. David advancing of Gods worship against order 95 Constantine and the good Emperours confest to have done more hurt to the Name and Crowne of Christ then the bloody Noroes did ibid. The language of persecuters 96 Christs Li●●ies may flourish in the Church notwithstanding the weeds in the world permitted 97 Queen Elizabeth and King James their persecuting for cause of Religion examined ibid. Queen Elizabeth confessed by Mr. Cotton to have almost fired the world in civill combustions 98 The Wars between the Papists and the Protestants ibid. The Wars and successe of the Waldensians against three Popes 99 Gods people victorious ●ver commers and with what weapons ibid. The Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted ibid. The nature of excommunication 100 The opinion of ancient Writers examined concerning the doctrine of persecution 101 Constraint upon conscience in Old and New England ibid. The Indians of New England permitted in their worshipping of devils 102 In 2 cases a false Religion will not hurt 103 The absolute sufficiencie of the Sword of the Spirit 104 A Nationall Church not instituted by Christ. ibid. Man hath no power to make Lawes to binde conscience 105 Hearing of the word in a Church estate a part of Gods worship 107 Papists plea for
toleration of conscience ibid. Protestant partiality in the cause of persecution 108 Pills to purge out the bitter humour of persecution ibid. Superstition and persecution have had many votes and suffrages from Gods owne people 109 Soul-killing discussed ibid. Phineas his act discussed 111 Eliah his slaughters examined ibid Dangerous consequences flowing from the civill Magistrates power in Spirituall cases 114 The world turned upside downe Page 114 The wonderfull answer of the Ministers of New England to the Ministers of Old ibid. Lamentable differences even amongst them that feare God 115 The doctrine of persecution ever drives the most godly out of the world 116 A Modell of Church and Civill power composed by Mr. Cotton and the Ministers of New England and sent to Salem as a further confirmation of the bloody doctrine of persecution for cause of conscience examined and answered 118 Christs power in the Church confest to be above all Magistrates in Spirituall things 119 Isa. 49. 23. lamentably wrested ibid. The civill Commonweale and the Spirituall Commonweale the Church not inconsistent though independent the one on the other 120 Christ ordinances put upon a whole city or Nation may civilize them and moralize but not Christianize before repentance first wrought 121 Mr. Cottons and the New English Ministers confession that the Magistrate hath neither Civill nor Spirituall power in Soul matters 122 The Magistrates and the Church by Mr. Cottons grounds in one and the same cause made the Iudges onthe Bench and delinquents at the Bar. 123 A demonstrative illustration that the Magistrate cannot have power over the Church in Spirituall or Church causes 124 The true way of the God of Peace in differences between the Church and the Magistrate 125. The tearms Godlinesse and Honesty explained 1 Tim. 2. x. and honesty proved not to signifie in that place the righteousnes of the second Table 127 The forcing of men to Gods worship the greatest breach of civill peace 129 The Roman Caesars of Christs time described ibid. It pleased not the Lord Iesus in the institution of the Christian Church to appoint and raise up any Civill Governours to take care of his worship 130 The true custodes utriusque Tabulae and keepers of the Ordinances and worship of Iesus Christ. ibid. The Kings of Aegypt Moah Philistia Assyria Ni●●vch were not charged with the worship of God as the Kings of Iudah were 131 Masters of families not charged under the Gospel to force all the consci●uces of their families to worship 132 Gods people have then shined brightest in Godlines when they have enjoyed least quietnesse pag. 134. Few Magistrates few Men spiritually good yet divers sorts of commendable Goodnes beside spirituall ibid. Civill power originally and fundamentally in the People Mr. Cotton and the New English give the power of Christ into the hands of th● Commonweale 137 Lawes concerning Religion of two sorts 138 The very Indians abhor to disturbe any Conscience at Worship 139 Canons and constitutions pretended Civill but indeed Ecclesiasticall ibid. A threesold guilt lying upon Civill powers commanding the Subjects Soule in Worship 143 Persons may with lesse sinne be forced to marry whom they cannot love then to worship where they cannot beleeve ibid. As the cause so the weapons of the Beast and the La●● be are infinitely different 146 A●taxerxes his Dicree examined 147 The summe of the Examples of the Gentile Kings decrees concerning Gods worship in Scripture 149 The Doctrine of putting to death Blasphemers of Christ cuts off the hopes of the Iewes partaking in his blood 18● The direfull effects of fighting for Conscience 151 Errour is confident as well as Truth 152 Spirituall prisons 153 Some Consciences not so easily healed and cured as men imagine 154 Persecuters dispute with Hereticks as a tyrann call Cat with the poore Mouse And with a true Witnes as a roaring Lyon with an innocent Lambe in his paw 155 Persecuters endure not tho name of Persecuters 156 Psal 101 concerning cutting off the wicked examined 158 No difference of Lands and Countries since Christ Iesus his comming ib. The New English seperate in America but not in Europe 159 Christ Iesus forbidding his followers to permit Leaven in the Church doth not forbid to permit Leaven in the World 160 The Wall Cant. 8. 9. discussed 161 Every Religion commands its professors to heare only its own Priests or Ministers 162 Ionah his preaching to the Ninevites discussed 162 ●●aring of the Word discussed ibid. Eglon his rising up to Ehuds message discussed ibid. A two-fold Ministrie of Christ First Apostolicall properly converting Secondly Feeding or Pastorall pag. 162 The New English forcing the people to Church and yet not to Religion as they say forcing them to be of no Religion all their dayes 163 The Civill State can no more lawfully compell the Consciences of men to Church to heare the Word then to receive the Sacraments 164 No president in the word of any people converting and baptizing themselves 166 True conversion to visible Christianitie is not only from sins against the second Table but from false Worships also ibid. The Commission Mat. 28 discussed 167 The Civill Magistrate not be trusted with that Commission ibid. Iehosaphat 2 Chron. 1● a figure of Christ Iesus in his Church not of the Civill Magistrate in the State 168 The maintenance of the Ministrie Gal. 6. 6. examined ibid. Christ Iesus never appointed a maintenance of the Ministrie from the i●penitent and unbelieving 169 They that compell men to heare compell them also to pay for their hearing and conversion ibid. Luc. 14. Compell them to come in examined ibid. Naturall men can neither truly worship nor mainteine it 170 The Nationall Church of the Iewes might well be forced to a setled maintenance but not so the Christian Church 171 The maintenance which Christ hath appointed his Ministrie in the Church 172 The Vniversities of Europe causes of universall sins and plagues yet Schooles are honourable for tongues and Arts. 173 The true Church is Christs Schoole and Believers his Scholars ibid. Mr. Ainsworth excellent in the Tongues yet no Vniversitie man 174 K. Henry the 8. set down in the Popes chaire in England 175 Apocrypha Homilies and Common Prayer precious to our forefathers ib. Reformation proved fallible 176 The president of the Kings of Israel Iudah largely examined 178 The Persian Kings example make strongly against the doctrine of Persecution 179 1. The difference of the hand of Canaan from all lands and countries in 7 particulars ibid. 2. The difference of the people of Israel from all other peoples in 7 particulars 183 Wonderfull turnings of Religion in England in twelve yeares revolution Page 185 The Pope not unlike to recover his Monarchy over Europe before his dow●fall ibid. Israel Gods only Church might well renew that Nationall Covenant and ceremoniall worship which other Nations cannot doe 187 ● The difference of the Kings and Governours of Israel from all Kings and Governours of the world
beleeve in conscience to be the truth or for practising some worke which you beleeve in conscience to be a religious dutie Truth I acknowledge that to molest any person Iew or Gentile for either professing doctrine or practising worship meerly religious or spirituall it is to persecute him and such a person what ever his doctrine or practice be true or false suffereth persecution for conscience But withall I desire it may bee well observed that this distinction is not full and complete For beside this that a man may be persecuted because he holdeth or practiseth what he beleeves in conscience to be a Truth as Daniel did for which he was cast into the Lyons den Dan. 6. and many thousands of Christians because they durst not cease to preach and practise what they beleeved was by Go● commanded as the Apostles answered Acts 4 5. I say besides this a man may also be persecuted because hee dares not be constrained to yeeld obedience to such doctrines and worships as are by men invented and appointed So the three famous Iewes were cast into the fiery furnace for refusing to fall downe in a non-conformity to the whole conforming world before the golden Image Dan. 3. 21. So thousands of Christs witnesses and of late in those bloudy Marian dayes have rather chose to yeeld their bodies to all sorts of torments then to subscribe to doctrines or practise worships unto which the States and Times as Nabuchadnezzar to his golden Image have compelled and urged them A chaste wife will not onely abhorre to be restrained from her husbands bed as adulterous and polluted but also abhor if not much more to bee constrained to the bed of a stranger And what is abominable in corporall is much more loathsome in spirituall whoredome and defilement The Spouse of Christ Iesus who could not finde her soules beloved in the wayes of his worship and Ministery Cant. 1. 3. and 5. Chapters abhorred to turne aside to other Flockes Worships c. and to imbrace the bosome of a false Christ Cant. 1. 8. CHAP. IV. Peace THe second distinction is this In points of Doctrine some are fundamentall without right beleefe whereof a man cannot be saved others are circumstantiall and lesse principall wherein a man may differ in judgement without prejudice of salvation on either part Truth To this distinction I dare not subscribe for then I should everlastingly condemne thousands and ten thousands yea the whole generation of the righteous who since the falling away from the first primitive Christian state or worship have and doe erre fundamentally concerning the true matter constitution gathering and governing of the Church and yet farre be it from any pious breast to imagine that they are not saved and that their soules are not bound up in the bundle of eternall life We reade of foure sorts of spirituall or Christian foundations in the New Testaments First the Foundation of all foundations the Corner-stone it selfe the Lord Iesus on whom all depend Persons Doctrines Practices 1. Cor. 3. 2. Ministriall foundations The Church is built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Ephel 2. 20. 3. The foundation of future rejoycing in the fruits of Obedience 1 Tim. 6. 4. The foundation of Doctrines without the knowledge of which there can be no true profession of Christ according to the first institution Heb. 6. The foundation or principles of Repentance from dead works Faith towards God the Doctrine of Baptisme Laying on of Hands the Resurrection and Eternall Iudgement In some of these to wit those concerning Baptismes Laying on of Hands Gods people will be found to be ignorant for many hundred yeares and I yet cannot see it proved that light is risen I mean the light of the first institution in practice Gods people in their persons Heart-waking Cant. 5. 2. in the life of personall grace will yet be found fast asleep in respect of publike Christian Worship Gods people in their persons are His most deare and precious yet in respect of the Christian Worship they are mingled amongst the Babylonians from whence they are called to come out not locally as some have said for that belonged to a materiall and locall Babell and literall Babell and Ierusalem have now no difference Iohn 4. 21. but spiritually and mystically to come out from her sins and Abominations If Mr. Cotton maintaine the true Church of Christ to consist of the true matter of holy persons call'd out from the World and the true forme of Vnion in a Church Covenant And that also neither Nationall Provinciall nor Diocesan Churches are of Christs institution how many Thousands of Gods people of all sorts Clergie and Laitie as they call them will they finde both in former and later times captivated in such Nationall Provinciall and Diocesan Churches yea and so far from living in yea or knowing of any such Churches for matter and forme as they conceive now only to be true that untill of late yeares how few of Gods people knew any other Church then the Parish Church of dead stones or timber It being a late marvailous light revealed by Christ Iesus the Sun of Righteousnesse that his people are a Company or Church of living stones 1 Pet. 2 9. And however his own Soule and the soules of many others precious to God are perswaded to separate from Nationall Provinciall and Diocesan Churches and to assemble into particular Churches yet since there are no Parish Churches in England but what are made up of the Parish bounds within such and such a compasse of houses and that such Churches have beene and are in constant dependance on and subordination to the Nationall Church how can the New-English particular Churches joyne with the Old English Parish Churches in so many Ordinances of Word Prayer Singing Contribution c. but they must needs confesse that as yet their Soules are farre from the knowledge of the foundation of a true Christian Church whose matter must not only be living stones but also separated from the rubbish of Antichristian confusions and desolations CHAP. V. Peace WIth lamentation I may adde How can their Soules be cleare in this foundation of the true Christian matter who persecute and oppresse their own acknowledged Brethren presenting Light unto them about this Point But I shall now present you with Mr. Cottons third distinction In point of Practice saith he some concerne the weightier duties of the Law as What God we worship and with what kind of Worship whether such as if it be Right fellowship with God is held if false fellowship with God is lost Truth It is worth the inquirie what kind of Worship he intendeth for Worship is of various signification whether in generall acceptation he meane the rightnesse or corruptnesse of the Church or the Ministry of the Church or the Ministrations of the Word Prayer Seales c. And because it pleaseth the Spirit
of God to make the Ministry one of the foundations of the Christian Religion Heb. 6. 12. and also to make the Ministrie of the Word and Prayer in the Church to be two speciall works even of the Apostles themselves Acts 6. 2. I shall desire it may be well considered in the feare of God First concerning the Ministery of the Word The New-English Ministers when they were new elected ordained Ministers in New Englād must undeniably grant that at that time they were no Ministers notwithstanding their profession of standing so long in a true Ministry in Old England whether received from the Bishops which some have maintained true or from the People which Mr. Cotton others better liked and which Ministrie was alwayes accounted perpetuall and indelible I apply and aske Will it not follow that if their new Ministry and Ordination be true the former was false and if false that in the exercise of it notwithstanding abilities graces intentions labours and by Gods gracious unpromised extraordinary blessing some successe I say will it not according to this distinction follow that according to visible rule Fellowship with God was lost Secondly concerning Prayer The New English Ministers have disclaimed and written against that worshipping of God by the Common or set formes of Prayer which yet themselves practised in England notwithstanding they knew that many servants of God in great sufferings witnessed against such a Ministrie of the Word and such a Ministrie of Prayer Peace I could name the persons time and place when some of them were faithfully admonished for using of the Common prayer and the Arguments presented to them then seeming weake but now acknowledged sound yet at that time they satisfied their hearts with the practice of the Author of the Councell of Trent who used to read only some of the choicest selected Prayers in the Masse-booke which I confesse was also their own practice in their using of the Common-Prayer But now according to this distinction I ask whether or no fellowship with God in such prayers was lost Truth I could particularize other exercises of Worship which cannot be denied according to this distinction to be of the waightier points of the Law to wit What God we Worship and with what kind of worship wherein fellowship with God in many of our unclean and abominable Worships hath been lost Only upon these premises I shall observe First that Gods people even the standard-bearers and leaders of them according to this distinction have worshipped God in their sleepy ignorance by such a kind of Worship as wherein fellowship with God is lost yea also this it is possible for them to do after much light is risen against such Worship and in particular brought to the eyes of such holy and worthy persons Secondly there may be inward and secret fellowship with God in false Ministeries of Word and Prayer for that to the eternall prayse of Infinite Mercy beyond a word or promise of God I acknowledge when yet as the distinction saith in such worship not being right fellowship with God is lost and such a service or ministration must be lamented and forsaken Thirdly I observe that Gods people may live and die in such kindes of worship notwithstanding that light from God publikely and privately hath beene presented to them able to convince yet not reaching to their conviction and forsaking of such wayes contrary to a conclusion afterward exprest to wit That fundamentals are so cleere that a man cannot but be convinced in Conscience and therefore that such a person not being convinced he is condemned of himselfe and may be persecuted for sinning against his conscience Fourthly I observe that in such a maintaining a clearnesse of fundamentals or waightier points and upon that ground a persecuting of men because they sinne against their consciences Mr. Cotton measures that to others which himselfe when he lived in such practices would not have had measured to himselfe As first that it might have beene affirmed of him that in such practices he did sinne against his conscience having sufficient light shining about him Secondly that hee should or might lawfully have beene cut off by death or banishment as an Hereticke sinning against his owne conscience And in this respect the Speech of King Iames was notable to a great Non-conformitant converted as is said by King Iames to conformity and counselling the King afterward to persecute the Non-conformists ev●n unto death Thou Beast quoth the King if I had dealt so with thee in thy non-conformity where hadst thou beene CHAP. VI. Peace THe next distinction concerning the manner of persons holding forth the aforesaid practices not onely the waightier duties of the Law but points of doctrine and worship lesse principall Some saith he hold them forth in a meeke and peaceable way some with such arrogance and impetuousnesse as of it selfe tendeth to the disturbance of civill peace Truth In the examination of this distinction we shall discusse First what is civill Peace wherein we shall vindicate thy name the better Secondly what it is to hold forth a Doctrine or Practice in this impetuousnesse or arrogancy First for civill peace what is it but pax civitatis the peace of the Citie whether an English City Scotch or Irish Citie or further abroad French Spanish Turkish City c. Thus it pleased the Father of Lights to define it Iorem. 29. 7. Pray for the peace of the City which peace of the City or Citizens so compacted in a civill way of union may be intire unbroken safe c. notwithstanding so many thousands of Gods people the Iewes were there in bondage and would neither be constrained to the worship of the Citie Babell nor restrained from so much of the worship of the true God as they then could practice as in plaine in the practice of the 3 Worthies Shadrach Misach and Abednego as also of Daniel Dan. 3. Dan. 6. the peace of the City or Kingdome being a far different Peace from the Peace of the Religion or Spirituall Worship maintained professed of the Citizens This Peace of their Worship which worship also in some Cities being various being a false Peace Gods people were and ought to be Nonconformitants not daring either to be restrained from the true or constrained to false Worship and yet without breach of the Civill or Citie-peace properly so called Peace Hence it is that so many glorious and flourishing Cities of the World maintaine their Civill peace yea the very Americans wildest Pagans keep the peace of their Towns or Cities though neither in one nor the other can any man prove a true Church of God in those places and consequently no spirituall and heavenly peace The Peace spirituall whether true or false being of a higher and farre different nature from the Peace of the place or people being meerly and essentially civill and humane Truth O how lost are the
and scope The beloved Spouse of Christ is no receptacle for any filthy person obstinate in any filthynesse against the purity of the Lord Jesus who hath commanded his people to purge out the old leaven not only greater portions but a little leaven which will leaven the whole lumpe and therefore this Hereticke or obstinate person in these vaine and unprofitable questions was to be rejected as well as if his obstinacie had been in greater matters Againe if there were a doore or window left open to vaine and unprofitable questions and sinnes of smaller nature how apt are persons to cover with a silken covering and to say Why I am no Hereticke in Fundamentalls spare me in this or that little one this or that opinion or practice these are of an inferiour circumstantiall nature c. So that the coherence with the former verses and the scope of the Spirit of God in this and other like Scriptures being carefully observed this Greek word Hereticke is no more in true English and in Truth then an obstinate and wilfull person in the Church of Creet striving and contending about those unprofitable Questions and Genealogies c. and is not such a monster intended in this place as mo●● Interpreters run upon to wit One obstinate in Fundamentalls and as the Answerer makes the Apostle to write in such Fundamentalls and principall points wherein the Word of God is so cleare that a man cannot but be convinced in conscience and therefore is not persecuted for matter of conscience but for sinning against his conscience CHAP. XIV Peace NOw in the second place What is this Self-condemnation Truth The Apostle seemeth to make this a ground of the rejecting of such a person because he is subverted and sinneth being condemned of himselfe It will appeare upon due search that this selfe-condemning is not here intended to be in Hereticks as men say in fundamentalls only but as it is meant here in men obstinate in the lesser Questions c. First he is subverted or turned crooked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word opposite to streightnesse or rightnesse So that the scope is as I conceive upon true and faithfull admonition once or twice the pride of heart or heat of wrath drawes a vaile over the eyes and heart so that the soule is turned loosed and from the checks of truth Secondly he sinneth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is being subverted or turned aside he sinneth or wanders from the path of Truth and is condemned by himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is by the secret checkes and whisperings of his owne conscience which will take Gods part against a mans selfe in smiting accusing c. Which checks of conscience we finde even in Gods owne dear people as is most admirably opened in the 5 of Cant. in those sad drowsie and unkinde passages of the Spouse in her answer to the knocks and calls of the Lord Iesus which Gods people in all their awakening acknowledge how sleightly they have listned to the checks of their owne consciences This the Answerer pleaseth to call sinning against his conscience for which he may lawfully be persecuted to wit for sinning against his conscience Which conclusion though painted over with the vermillion of mistaken Scripture and that old dreame of Iew and Gentile that the Crowne of Iesus will consist of outward materiall gold and his sword be made of iron or steele executing judgement in his Church and Kingdome by corporall punishment I hope by the assistance of the Lord Jesus to manifest it to be the overturning and rooting up the very foundation and roots of all true Christianity and absolutely denying the Lord Iesus the Great Anointed to be yet come in the Flesh. CHAP. XV. THis will appeare if we examine the two last Quaries of this place of Titus to wit First What this Admonition is Secondly What is the Rejection here intended Reject him First then Titus unto whom this Epistle these directions were written and in him to all that succeed him in the like work of the Gospell to the Worlds end he was no Minister of the Civill State armed with the majestie and terrour of a materiall sword who might for offences against the civill state inflict punishments upon the bodies of men by imprisonments whippings sines banishment death Titus was a Minister of the Gospel or Glad tidings armed onely with the Spirituall sword of the Word of God and such Spirituall weapons as yet through God were mighty to the casting down of strong holds yea every high thought of the highest head and heart in the world 2 Cor. 10. 4. Therefore these first and second Admonitions were not civill or corporall punishments on mens persons or purses which the Courts of Men may lawfully inflict upon Malefactors but they were the reprehensions convictions exhortations and perswasions of the Word of the Eternall God charged home to the Conscience in the name and presence of the Lord Iesus in the middest of the Church Which being despised and not hearkned to in the last place followes rejection which is not a cutting off by heading hanging burning c. or an expelling of the Country and Coasts neither which no nor any lesser civill punishment Titus nor the Church at Crete had any power to exercise But it was that dreadfull cutting off from that visible Head and Body Christ Iesus and his Church that purging out of the old leaven from the lumpe of the Saints the putting away of the evill and wicked person from the holy Land and Commonwealth of Gods Israel 1 Cor. 5. where it is observable that the same word used by Moses for putting a malefactor to death in typicall Israel by sword stoning c. Deut 13. 5. is here used by Paul for the spirituall killing or cutting off by Excommunication 1 Cor. 5. 13. Put away that evill person c. Now I desire the Answerer and any in the holy awe and feare of God to consider That From whom the first and second Admonition was to proceed from them also was the rejecting or casting out to proceed as before But not from the Civill Magistrate to whom Paul writes not this Epistle and who also is not bound once and twice to admonish but may speedily punish as he sees cause the persons or purses of Delinquents against his Civill State but from Titus the Minister or Angel of the Church and from the Church with him were these first and second Admonitions to proceed And Therefore at last also this Rejecting which can be no other but a casting out or excommunicating of him from their Church-societie Indeed this rejecting is no other then that avoyding which Paul writes of to the Church of Christ at Rome Rom. 16. 17. which avoyding however wofully perverted by some to prove persecution belonged to the Governours of Christs Church Kingdom in Rome and not to the Romane Emperour for him to rid and avoyd the World of
them by bloody and cruell Persecution CHAP. XVI Peace THe third Conclusion is In points of lesser moment there ought to be a Toleration Which though I acknowledge to be the Truth of God yet 3 things are very observable in the manner of laying it down for Sathan useth excellent arrowes to bad markes and sometimes beyond the intent and hidden from the eye of the Archer First saith he such a person is to be tolerated till God may be pleased to reveale his Truth to him Truth This is well observed by you for indeed this is the very ground why the Apostle calls for meekenesse and gentlenesse toward all men and toward such as oppose themselves 2 Tim. 2. because there is a peradventure or it may be It may be God may give them Repentance That God that hath shewen mercy to one may shew mercy to another It may be that eye-salve that anointed one mans eye who was blinde and opposite may anoint another as blinde and opposite He that hath given Repentance to the husband may give it to his wise c. Hence that Soule that is lively and sensible of mercy received to it selfe in former blindnesse opposition and enmitie against God cannot but be patient and gentle toward the Iewes who yet deny the Lord Iesus to be come and justifie their Fore-fathers in murthering of him Toward the Turkes who acknowledge Christ a great Prophet yet affirme lesse than Mahomet Yea to all the severall sorts of Antichristians who set up many a false Christ in stead of him And lastly to the Pagans and wildest sorts of the sons of men who have not yet heard of the Father nor the Son And to all these sorts Iewes Turkes Antichristians Pagans when they oppose the light presented to them In sense of its ow● former opposition and that God peradventure may at last give repentance I adde such a Soule will not onely be patient but earnestly and constantly pray for all sorts of men that out of them Gods elect may be called to the fellowship of Christ Iesus And lastly not only pray but endeavour to its utmost abilitie their participation of the same grace and mercy That great Rock upon which so many gallant Ships miscarrie viz. That such persons false Prophets Hereticks c. were to be put to death in Israel I shall with Gods assistance remove as also that fine silken covering of the Image viz. that such persons ought to be put to death or banished to prevent the infecting and seducing of others I shall with Gods assistance in the following discourse pluck off Secondly I observe from the Scriptures he quoteth for this Toleration Phil. 3. Rom. 14 how closely yet I hope unadvisedly he makes the Churches of Christ at Philippi and Rome all one with the Cities Philippi and Rome in which the Churches were and to whom onely Paul wrote As if what these Churches in Philippi and Rome must tolerate amongst themselves that the Ci●ies Philippi and Rome must tole rate in their citizens and what these Churches must not tolerate that these Cities Philippi and Rome must not tolerate within the compasse of the City State and Jurisdiction Truth Upon that ground by undeniable consequence these Cities Philippi and Rome were bound not to tolerate themselves that is the Cities and Citizens of Philippi and Rome in their own Civill life and being but must kill or expell themselves from their own Cities as being Idolatrous worshippers of other gods then the true God in Iesus Christ. But as the Lilie is amongst the Thornes so is Christs Love among the Daughters and as the Apple-tree among the Trees of the Forrest so is her Beloved among the Sons so great a difference is there between the Church in a Citie or Country and the Civill state City or Country in which it is No lesse then as David in another case Psal. 103. as far as the Heavens are from the Earth are they that are truly Christs that is anointed truly with the Spirit of Christ from many thousands who love not the Lord Iesus Christ and yet are and must be permitted in the World or Civill State although they have no right to enter into the gates of Ierusalem the Church of God And this is the more carefully to bee minded because when ever a toleration of others Religion and Conscience is pleaded for such as are I hope in truth zealous for God readily produce plenty of Scriptures written to the Church both before and since Christs comming all commanding and pressing the putting forth of the uncleane the cutting off the obstinate the purging out the Leaven rejecting of Heretickes As if because brians thornes and phistles may not be in the Garden of the Church therefore they must all bee pluckt up out of the Wildernesse whereas he that is a Briar that is a Iew a Turke a Pagan an Antichristian to day may be when the Word of the Lord runs freely a member of Iesus Christ to morrow cut out of the wilde Olive and planted into the true Peace Thirdly from this toleration of persons but holding lesser errours I observe the unmercifulnesse of such doctrines and hearts as if they had forgotten the Blessednesse Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy Math. 5. He that is sleightly and but a little hurt shall be suffered and meanes vouchsafed for his cure But the deepe wounded sinners and leprous ulcerous and those of bloudy issues twelve yeares together and those which have been bowed down 38. years of their life they must not be suffered untill peradventure God may give them repentance but either it is not lawfull for a godly Magistrate to rule and governe such a people as some have said or else if they be under government and reforme not to the State Religion after the first and second admonition the Civill Magistrate is bound to persecute c. Truth Such persons have need as Paul to the Romanes Chap. 12. 1. to be besought by the mercy of God to put on bowels of mercy toward such as have neither wronged them in body or goods and therefore justly should not be punished in their goods or persons CHAP. XVII Peace I Shall now trouble you deare Truth but with one conclusion more which is this viz. That if a man hold forth errour with a boysterous and arrogant spirit to the disturbance of the civill Peace he ought to be punished c. Truth To this I have spoken too confessing that if any man commit ought of those things which Paul was accused of Act. 25. 11. he ought not to be spared yea he ought not as Paul saith in such cases to refuse to dye But if the matter be of another nature a spirituall and divine nature I have written before in many cases and might in many more that the Worship which a State professeth may bee contradicted and preached against and yet no breach of Civill Peace
viz. That tares must needs signifie hypocrites or doctrines or practices who are like Gods children Truth c. I answer first The Parable holds forth no such thing that the likenesse of the tares should deceive the servants to cause them to suppose for a time that they were good wheat but that as soone as ever the tares appeared ver 26. the servants came to the housholder about them ver 27. the Scripture holds forth no such time wherein they doubted or suspected what they were Peace It may be said they did not appeare to be tares untill the co●ne was in the blade and put forth its fruit Truth I answer The one appeared as soone as the other for so the word clearly carries it that the seed of both having been sowne when the wheat appeared and put forth its blade and fruit the tares also were as early and put forth themselves as appeared also Secondly there is such a dissimilitude or unlikenesse I say such a dissimilitude that as soone as tares and wheat are sprung up to blade and fruit every husbandman can tell which is wheat and which are tares and cockle c. Peace It may be said true So when the hypocrite is manifested then all may know him c. but before hypocrites be manifested by fruits they are unknowne I answer search into the Parable and aske when was it that the servants first complained of the tares to the housholder but when they appeared or came in sight there being no interim wherein the servants could not tell what to make of them but doubted whether they were wheat or tares as the Answerer implies Secondly when was it that the housholder gave charge to let them alone but after that they appeared and were known to be tares which should imply by this interpretation of the Answerer that when men are discovered and knowne to be Hypocrites yet stil●●uch a generation of Hypocrites in the Church must be let alone and tolerated untill the harvest or end of the world which is contrary to all order piety and safety in the Church of the Lord Iesus as doubtlesse the Answerers will grant so that those Tares being notoriously knowne to be different from the Corne I conclude that they cannot here be intended by the Lord Iesus to signifie secret Hypocrites but more open and apparent Sinners CHAP. XXI THe second reason why these tares cannot signifie hypocrites in the Church I take from the Lord Iesus His own Interpretation of the field in which both wheat and tares are sowne which saith he is the World out of which God chooseth and calleth His Church The World lyes in wickednesse is like a Wildernesse or a Sea of wilde Beasts innumerable fornicators covetous Idolaters c. with whom Gods people may lawfully converse and cohabit in Cities Townes c. else must they not live in the World but goe out of it In which world as soone as ever the Lord Iesus had sowne the good seed the children of the Kingdome true Christianity or the true Church the Enemy Sathan presently in the night of security Ignorance and Errour whilest men slept sowed also these tares which are Antichristians or false Christians These strange Professours of the Name of Iesus the Ministers and Prophets of God beholding they are ready to runne to Heaven to fetch fiery judgements from thence to consume these strange Christians and to pluck them by the roots out of the world But the Son of Man the meek Lamb of God for the Elect sake which must be gathered out of Iew and Gentile Pagan Antichristian commands a permission of them in the World untill the time of the end of the World when the Goats and Sheep the Tares and Wheat shall be eternally separated each from other Peace You know some excellent Worthies dead and living have laboured to turne this Field of the World into the Garden of the Church Truth But who can imagine that the Wisdome of the Father the Lord Iesus Christ would so open this Parable as He professedly doth as that it should be close shut up and that one difficulty or locke should be opened by a greater and harder in calling the World the Church contrary also to the way of the Light and Love that is in Jesus when he would purposely teach and instruct His scholars contrary to the nature of Parables and similitudes And lastly to the nature of the Church or Garden of Christ. CHAP. XXII IN the former Parable the Lord Iesus compared the Kingdome of Heaven to the sowing of Seed The true Messengers of Christ are the Sowers who cast the Seed of the Word of the Kingdome upon foure sorts of ground which foure sorts of ground or hearts of men cannot be supposed to be of the Church nor will it ever be proved that the Church consisteth of any more sorts or natures of ground properly but one to wit the honest and good ground and the proper worke of the Church concernes the flourishing and prosperity of this sort of ground and not the other unconverted●●ree ●●ree sorts who it may be seldome or never come 〈◊〉 the Church unlesse they be forced by the Civill sword which the patern● or first sowers never used and being forced they are put into a way of Religion by such a course if not so they are forced to live without● Religion for one of the two must necessarily follow as I shall prove afterward In the field of the World then are all those sorts of ground high way hearers stony and thorny ground hearers as well as the honest and good ground and I suppose it will not now be said by the Answerer that those three sorts of bad grounds were hypocrites or tares in the Church Now after the Lord Iesus had propounded that great leading Parable of the Sower and the Seed He is pleased to propound this Parable of the Tares with admirable coherence and sweet consolation to the honest and good ground who with glad and honest hearts having received the word of the Kingdome may yet seem to be discouraged and troubled with so many Antichristians and false Professours of the Name of Christ. The Lord Iesus therefore gives direction concerning these tares that unto the end of the World successively in all the sorts and generations of them they must be not approved or countenanced but let alone or permitted in the World Secondly he gives to His owne good seed this consolation that those heavenly Reapers the Angells in the harvest or end of the World will take an order and course with them to wit they shall binde them into bundles and cast them into the everlasting burnings and to make the cup of their consolation run over He addes vers 4. Then then at that time shall the Righteous shine as the Sun in the Kingdome of their Father These tares then neither being erronious doctrines nor corrupt practises nor hypocrites
mouth will I judge thee For what can be said more heavenly by the tongues of Men and Angels to shew the heavenly meek temper of all the Souldiers of the Lambe of God as also to set forth what are the Spirituall weapons and ammunition of the holy war and battle of the Gospell and Kingdome of Iesus Christ for the subduing of the Nations of the World unto him Peace And yet out of the same mouth which should not be faith Iames proceeds good and evill sweet and sowre for he addes But this doth not forbid them to drive ravenous wolves from the sheepfold and to restraine them from devouring the sheepe of Christ. Truth In these words according to the judgement here maintained by him he fights against the former truth to wit that by spirituall weapons Christ Iesus will subdue the Nations of the Earth to the obedience of the Gospel for by driving away these Wolves hee intends not onely the resistance and violence which the Shepherds of Christ ought spiritually to make but the civill resistance of the materiall Swords Staves Guns c. Whence● I argue that same power that forceth the evill or Wolves out forceth the good the Sheepe in for of the same or like things is the same or like reason as the same arme of flesh that with a staffe beats off a Wolfe with a Rod and Hooke brings in the Sheepe the same dog that assaulteth and teareth the Wolfe frighteth and forceth in the straggling Sheep CHAP. XLII Peace BVt for the clearer opening of this mystery I pray explicate that Scripture where the Spirit of God is pleased to use this similitude of Wolves Acts 20. 29. out of which keeping to the Allegory I shall propose these Quaeries First what Wolves were these Paul warnes of Truth Answ. Wolves literally he will not say Nor secondly persecutors of the Flock such as the Romane Emperours were Magistrates under him Therefore thirdly such as brought other Religions and Worships as the Spirit of God opens it vers 30. Such as amongst themselves should speake perverse things as many Antichrists did and especially The Antichrist And I aske whether or no such as may hold forth other Worships or Religions Iewes Turkes or Antichristians may not be peaceable and quiet Subjects loving and helpfull neighbours faire and just dealers true and loyall to the civill government It is cleare they may from all Reason and Experience in many flourishing Cities and Kingdomes of the World and so offend not against the civill State and Peace nor incurre the punishment of the civill sword notwithstanding that in spirituall and mysticall account they are ravenous and greedy Wolves Peace 2. I quaere to whom Paul gave this charge to watch against them vers 31. Truth They were not the Magistrates of the City of Ephesus but the Elders or Ministers of the Church of Christ his mysticall flock of sheepe at Ephesus Vnto them was this charge of watching given and so consequently of driving away these Wolves And however that many of these charges and exhortations given by that One Shepherd Christ Iesus to the Shepherds or Ministers of Churches be commonly attributed and directed by the Answerer in this discourse to the civill Magistrate yet I desire in the feare and holy presence of God it may bee inquired into whether in all the Will or Testament of Christ there bee any such word of Christ by way of command promise or example countenancing the Governors of the civill State to meddle with these Wolves if in civill things peaceable and obedient Peace Truly if this charge were given to the Magistrates at Ephesus or any Magistrate in the World doubtlesse they must bee able to discerne and determine out of their owne officiall abilities in these spirituall Law questions who are spirituall Sheep what is their food what their poison what their properties who their Keepers c. So on the contrary who are Wolves what their properties their haunts their assaults the manner of taking c. spiritually and this beside the care and study of the Civill Lawes and the discerning of his owne proper Civill Sheep obedient Sheepe c. as also wolvish oppressors c. whom he is bound to punish and suppresse Truth I know that Civill Magistrates in some places have declined the name of Head of the Church and Ecclesiasticall Judge yet can they not with good conscience decline the name if they doe the worke and performe the office of determining and punishing a meerly spirituall Wolfe They must be sufficiently also able to judge in all spirituall causes and that with their owne and not with other mens eyes no more then they doe in civill causes contrary to the common practice of the Governours and Rulers of Civill States who often set up that for a Religion or Worship to God which the Clergie or Churchmen as men speake shall in their Consciences agree upon And if this be not so to wit that Magistrates must not be Spirituall Iudges as some decline it in the title Supreme Head and Governour why is Gallio wont to be exclaimed against for refusing to be a Iudge in such matters as concerned the Iewish Worship and Religion How is he censured for a Prophane person without conscience c. in that he would bee no Iudge or Head for that is all one in point of Government Peace In the third place I quaerie whether the Father who gave and the Sonne who keepes the Sheepe bee not greater then all Who can pluck these Sheepe the Elect out of his hand which answers that common objection of that danger of devouring although there were no other weapons in the world appointed by the Lord Jesus But CHAP. XLIII FOurthly I ask Were not these Elders or Ministers of the Church of Ephesus sufficiently furnished from the Lord Iesus to drive away these mysticall and spirituall Wolves Truth True it is against the inhumane and uncivill violence of Persecutors they were not nor are Gods children able and provided but to resist drive away expell and kill spirituall mysticall Wolves by the word of the Lord none are fit to be Christs Shepherds who are not able● Tit. 1. 9. 10. 11. The Bishop or Overseer must be able by sound doctrine both to exhort and to convince the Gainsayers which Gainsayers to be by him convinced that is overcome or subdued though it may be in themselves ever obstinate they were I say as greedy Wolves in Crete as any could be at Ephesus for so saith Paul vers 10. they were unruly and vaine talkers deceivers whose mouthes must bee stopped who subverted whole houses and yet Titus and every ordinary Shepherd of a flocke of Christ had ability sufficient to defend the flock from spirituall and mysticall wolves without the helpe of the Civill Magistrate Peace In this respect therefore me thinks we may ●itly allude to that excellent answer of Iob to Bildad the Shuhite Iob 26. How
Iesus his command Magistrates are bound not to persecute and to see that none of their subjects be persecuted and oppressed for their conscience and worship being otherwise subject and peaceable in Civill Obedience CHAP. LXVII IN the second place I answer and aske what glory to God what good to the soules or bodies of their subjects shall Princes did these Princes bring in persecuting c. Peace Mr. Cotton tells us in his discourse upon the third Violl that Queene Elizabeth had almost fired the world in civill combustions by such her pe●secuting For though hee bring it in to another end yet he confesseth that it raised all Christendome in combustion raised the Warres of 88. and the Spanish Invasion and he addes both concerning the English Nation and the Dutch that if God had not born witnesse to his people and their Laws in defeating the intendments of their enemies against both the Nations it might have beene the ruine of them both Truth That those Lawes and Practices of Queene Elizabeth raised those combustions in Christendome I deny not That they might likely have cost the ruine of English and Dutch I grant That it was Gods gracious worke in defeating the Intendments of their enemies I thankfully acknowledge But that God bore witnesse to such persecutions and lawes for such persecutions I deny for First event and successe come alike to all and are no Arguments of love or hatred c. Secondly the Papists in their warres have ever yet had both in Peace and War victory and dominion and therefore if successe be the measure God hath borne witnesse unto them It is most true what Daniel in his 8. and 11. and 12. Chapters and Iohn in his Revel 11. 12. and 13. Chapters write of the great successe of Antichrist against Christ Iesus for a time appointed Successe was various betweene Charles the fift and some German Princes Philip of Spaine and the Low Countries The French King and his Protestant Subjects sometimes losing sometimes winning interchangeably But most memorable is the famous history of the Wald●nses and Albingenses those famous Witnesses of Iesus Christ who rising from Wald● at Lyons in France 1160. spread over France Italy Germany and almost all Countries into thousands and ten thousands making separation from the Pope and Church of Rome These fought many Battels with various successe and had the assistance and protection of divers great Princes against three succeeding Popes and their Armies but after mutuall slaughters and miseries to both sides the finall successe of victory fell to the Popedome and Romish Church in the utter extirpation of those famous Waldensian witnesses Gods servants are all overcommers when they war with Gods weapons in Gods cause and Worship and Revel 2. and 3. Chapters seven times is it recorded To him that overcommeth in Ephesus To him that overcommeth in Sardis c. and Revel 12. Gods servants overcame the Dragon or Devill in the Romane Emperours by three weapons The blood of the Lambe The word of their Testimony and The not loving of their lives unto the death CHAP. LXVIII Peace THe Answerer in the next place descends to the third and last Head of Arguments produced by the Authour taken from the judgement of ancient and later Writers yea even of the Papists themselves who have condemned persecution for conscience sake some of which the Answerer pleaseth to answer and thus writeth You begin with Hilarie whose testimony without prejudice to the Truth we may admit For it is true the Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted But to excommunicate an Hereticke is not to persecute that is it is not to punish an innocent but a culpable and damnable person and that not for conscience but for persisting in errour against light of conscience whereof he hath beene convinced Truth In this Answer here are two things First his confession of the same Truth affirmed by Hilarius to wit that the Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted su●ing wi●h that fo●eg●ing observation of King Iames from Rev. 20. Peace Yet to this he addes a colour thus which saith he wee may admit without prejudice to the truth Truth I answer if it bee a marke of the Christian Church to bee persecuted and of the Antichristian o● false Church to persecute then those Churches cannot be truly Christian according to the first institution which either actually themselves or by the Civill power of Kings and Princes given to them or procured by them to fight for them doe persecute such as dissent from them or be opposite against them Peace Yea but in the second place he addeth that to excommunicate an Heretick is not to persecute but to punish him for sinning against the light of his own conscience c. Truth I answer if this worthy Answerer were throughly awaked from the Spouses spirituall slumber Cant. 5. and had recovered from the drunkennesse of the great Whore who intoxicateth the Nations Revel 17. It is impossible that he should so answer for First who questioneth whether to excommunicate an Heretick this is an obstinate Gainsayer as we have opened the word upon Tit. 3. I say who questioneth whether that be to persecute Excommunication being of a spirituall nature a Sentence denounced by the Word of Christ Iesus the Spirituall King of his Church and a Spirituall killing by the most sharpe two-edged Sword of the Spirit in delivering up the person excommunicate to Sathan Therefore who sees not that his Answer comes not neere our Question Peace In the Answerers second conclusion in the entrance of this Discourse he proves persecution against an Heretick for sinning against his conscience and quotes Tit. 3. 10. which only proves as I have there made it evident a Spirituall rejecting or excommunicating from the Church of God and so comes not neer the question Here again he would prove Churches charged to be false because they persecute I say he would prove them not to be false because they persecute not for saith he Excommunication is not Persecution Whereas the Question is as the whole discourse and Hilaries own amplification of the matter in this speech and the practice of all Ages testifies whether it be not a false Church that doth persecute other Churches or Members opposing her in Spirituall and Church matter not by Excommunications but by imprisonments stocking whipping sining banishing hanging burning c. notwithstanding that such persons in Civill obedience and subjection are unreproveable Truth I conclude this passage with Hilarius and the Answerer That the Christian Church doth not persecute no more then a Lilie doth scratch the Thornes or a Lambe pursue and teare the ●olves or a Turtle dove hunt the Hawkes and Eagles or a chaste and modest Virgin fight and scratch like whores and harlots And for punishing the Heretick for sinning against his conscience after conviction which in the second conclusion he affirmeth to be by a
app●ove a cutting off by the sword of the Spirit in the Church and the purging out of the leaven in the Church in the Cities of Corinth and Galatia And if Tertullian should so meane as himselfe doth yet First that grant of his that Heresie must be cut off with the sword of the Spirit implies an absolute sufficiencie in the sword of the Spirit to cut it down according to that mighty operation of Spirituall weapons 2 Cor. 10. 4. powerfully sufficient either to convert the Heretick to God and subdue his very thoughts into subjection to Christ or else spiritually to slay and execute him Secondly it is cleare to be the meaning of the Apostle and of the Spirit of God not there to speake to the Church in Corinth or Galatia or any other Church concerning any other dough or house or body or ●lock but the dough the body the house the ●lock of Christ his Church Out of which such spa●ks such leaven such rotten slesh and scabbed sheep are to be avoided Nor could the eye of this worthy Answerer ever be so obscured as to run to a Smiths shop for a Sword of iron and steale to helpe the Sword of the Spirit if the Sun of Righteousnesse had once been pleased to shew him that a Nationall Church which elsewhere he professeth against a state Church whether explicite as in Ola England or implicite as in New is not the Institution of the Lord Iesus Christ. The Nationall typicall State-Church of the Iewes necessarily called for such weapons but the particular Churches of Christ in all parts of the World consisting of Iewes or Gentiles is powerfully able by the sword of the Spirit to defend it selfe and ●ffend Men or Devils although the Stat● or Kingdome wherein such a Church or Churches of Christ are gathered have neither carnall speare nor sword c. as once it was in the Nationall Church of the Land of Canaan CHAP. LXXII Peace BReutius whom you next quote saith he speaketh not to your cause Wee willingly grant you that man hath no power to make Lawes to binde conscience but this hinders not but men may see the Lawes of God observed which doe binde conscience Truth I answer In granting with Breutius that man hath not power to make Lawes to binde conscience hee overthrowes such his tenent and practice as restraine men from their Worship according to their Conscience and beleefe and constraine them to such worships though it bee out of a pretence that they are convinced which their owne soules tell them they have no satisfaction nor faith in Secondly whereas he affirmeth that men may make Lawes to see the Lawes of God observed I answer as God needeth not the helpe of a materiall sword of steele to assist the sword of the Spirit in the affaires of conscience so those men those Magistrates yea that Commonwealth which makes such Magistrates must needs have power and authority from Christ Iesus to sit Iudge and to determine in all the great controversies concerning doctrine discipline government c. And then I aske whether upon this ground it must not evidently follow that Either there is no lawfull Commonwealth nor civill State of men in the world which is not qualified with this spirituall discerning and then also that the very Commonweale hath more light concerning the Church of Christ then the Church it selfe Or that the Commonweale and Magistrates thereof must judge and punish as they are perswaded in their owne beleefe and conscience be their conscience Paganish Turkish or Antichristian what is this but to confound Heaven and Earth together and not onely to take away the being of Christianity out of the World but to take away all civility and the world out of the world and to lay all upon heapes of confusion CHAP. LXXIII Peace THe like answer saith he may bee returned to Luther whom you next alledge First that the government of the civill Magistrate extendeth no further then over the bodies and goods of their subjects not over their soules and therefore they may not undertake to give Lawes unto the soules and consciences of men Secondly that the Church of Christ doth not use the Arme of secular power to compell men to the true profession of the truth for this is to be done with spirituall weapons whereby Christians are to be exhorted not compelled But this saith hee hindreth not that Christians sinning against light of faith and conscience may justly be censured by the Church with excommunication and by the civill sword also in case they shall corrupt others to the perdition of their soules Truth I answer in this joynt confession of the Answerer with Luther to wit that the government of the civill Magistrate extendeth no further then over the bodies and goods of their subjects not over their soules who sees not what a cleare testimony from his own mouth and pen is given to wit that either the Spirituall and Church estate the preaching of the Word and the gathering of the Church the Baptisme of it the Ministry Government and Administrations thereof belong to the civill body of the Commonweale that is to the bodies and goods of men which seemes monstrous to imagine Or else that the civill Magistrate cannot without exceeding the bounds of his office meddle with those spirituall affaires Againe necessarily must it follow that these two are contradictory to themselves to wit The Magistrate power extends no further then the bodies and goods of the subject and yet The Magistrates must punish Christians for sinning against the light of faith and conscience and for corrupting the soules of men The Father of Lights make this worthy Answerer and all that feare him to see their wandring in this case not only from his feare but also from the light of Reason it selfe their owne convictions and confessions Secondly in his joint confession with Luther that the Church doth not use the secular power to compell men to the Faith and Profession of the truth he condemneth as before I have observed First his former Implication viz● that they may bee compelled when they are convinced of the truth of it Secondly their owne practice who suffer no man of any different conscience and worship to live in their jurisdiction except that he depart from his owne exercise of Religion and Worship differing from the worship allowed of in the civill State yea and also actually submit to come to their Church Which howsoever it is coloured over with this varnish viz. that men are compelled no further then unto the hearing of the word unto which all men are bound yet it will appeare that teaching and being taught in a Church estate is a Church worship as true and proper a Church worship as the Supper of the Lord Act. 2. 46. Secondly all persons Papist and Protestant that are conscientious have alwayes suffered upon this ground especially that they have refused to come to
that judgement declare themselves never to have seene a true difference betweene the Church and the World and the Spirituall and Civill State and how●oever these worthy Authours seeme to make a kinde of separation from the World and professe that the Church must consist of spirituall and living Stones Saints Regenerate persons and so make some peculiar inclosed Ordinances as the Supper of the Lord which none say they but godly persons must taste of yet by compelling all within their Iurisdiction to an outward conformity of the Church worship of the Word and Prayer and maintenance of the Ministry thereof they evidently declare that they still lodge and dwell in the confused mixtures of the uncleane and cleane of the flock of Christ and Herds of the World together I meane in spirituall and religious worship Truth For a more ful and clear discussion of this Scripture 1 Tim. 2. 1. 2. on which is weakly built such a mighty building I shall propose and resolve these foure Quaeries CHAP. LXXXVII First what is meant by godlinesse and honesty in this place Secondly what may the scope of the holy Spirit of God be in this place Thirdly whether the civill Magistrate was then custos utri●●sque Tabulae keeper of both Tables c. Fourthly whether a Church or Congregation of Christians may not live in godlinesse and honesty although the civill Magistrate be of another conscience and worship and the whole State and Country with him To the first What is here meant by godlinesse and honesty Answ. I finde not that the Spirit of God here intendeth the first and second Table For how ever the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifie godlinesse or the worship of God yet the second word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I finde not that it signifies such an honesty as compriseth the duties of the second Table but such an honesty as signifies solemnity gravity and so it is turned by the Translatours Tit. 2. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is in doctrine incorruptnesse gravity which doctrine cannot there bee taken for the doctrine of the civill state or second Table but the gravity majesty and solemnity of the spirituall doctrine of Christianity So that according to the Translatours owne rendring of that word in Titus this place of Timothy should be thus rendred In all godlinesse or worshipping of God and gravity that is a solemne or grave profession of the worship of God and yet this mistaken and misinterpreted Scripture is that great Castle and strong Hold which so many ●lye unto concerning the Magistrates charge over the two Tables Secondly what is the scope of the Spirit of God in this place I answer first negatively the scope is not to speake of the duties of the first and second Table Nor secondly is the scope to charge the Magistrate with forcing the people who have chose him to godlinesse or Gods worship according to his conscience the Magistrate keeping the peace of externall godlinesse and the Church of internall as is affirmed but Secondly positively I say the Spirit of God by Paul in this place provokes Timothy and the Church at Ephesus and so consequently all the Ministers of Christs Churches and Christians to pray for two things First for the peaceable and quiet state of the Countries and places of their abode that is implyed in their praying as Paul directs them for a quiet and peaceable condition and suits sweetly with the command of the Lord to his people even in Babel Ier. 29. 7. Pray for the peace of the City and seeke the good of it for in the Peace thereof it shall goe well with you Which Ruie will hold in any Pagan or Popish city and therefore consequently are Gods people to pray against Warres Famines Pestilences and especially to bee far from kindling coales of War and endeavour the bringing in and advancing their conscience by the sword Secondly they are here commanded to pray for the salvation of all men that all men and especially Kings and Magistrates might be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth implying that the grave or solemne and shining profession of godlinesse or Gods worship according to Christ Iesus is a blessed meanes to cause all sorts of men to be affected with the Christian profession and to come to the same knowledge of that one God and one Mediatour Christ Iesus All which tends directly against what it is brought for to wit the Magistrates forcing all men to godlinesse or the worshipping of God which in truth causeth the greatest breach of peace and the greatest distractions in the World and the setting up that for godlinesse or worship which is no more then Nebuchadnezzars golden Image a State worship and in some places the worship of the Beast and his Image Dan 3. Rev. 13. CHAP. LXXXVIII THirdly I quaerie whether the Civill Magistrate which was then the Roman Emperour was keeper or guardian of both Tables as is affirmed Scripture and all History tell us that those Caesars were not only ignorant without God without Christ c. but professed worshippers or maintainers of the Roman gods or divells as also notorious for all sorts of wickednesse and lastly cruell and bloudy Lions and Tygers toward the Christians for many hundred yeares Hence I argue from the wisdome love and faithfulnesse of the Lord Iesus in his house it was impossible that he should appoint such ignorant such Idolatrous such wicked and such cruell persons to be his chiefe Officers and Deputy Lieutenants under himselfe to keep the worship of God to guard his Church his Wife No wise and loving father was ever knowne to put his childe no not his beasts dogs or swine but unto fitting keepers Men judge it matter of high complaint that the Records of Parliament the Kings children the Tower of London the Great Seale should be committed to unworthy keepers And can it be without high blasphemie conceived that the Lord Iesus should commit his Sheep his Children yea his Spouse his thousand shields and bucklers in the Tower of his Church● and lastly his Great and Glorious Broad Seales of Baptisme and his Supper to be preserved pure in their adminstrations I say that the Lord Iesus who is wisdome and faithfulnesse it selfe should deliver these to such keepers Peace Some will say it is one thing what persons are in ●act and practice another what they ought to be by right and office Truth In such cases as I have mentioned no man doth in the common eye of reason deliver such matters of charge and trust to such as declare themselves and sinnes like Sodome at the very time of this great charge and trust to be committed to them Peace It will further be said that many of the Kings of Iudah who had the charge of establishing reforming and so consequently of keeping the first Table the Church Gods worship c. were notoriously wicked Idolatrous c. Truth I must
from them according to their office as it pleased God alwayes to send to the Kings of Israel and Judah in the like case Peace Some will here object Pauls appealing to Caesar. Truth And I must refer them to what I formerly answered to that Objection Paul never appealed to Caesar as a Judge appointed by Christ Jesus to give definitive sentence in any spirituall or Church controversie but against that civill violence and murther which the Iewes intended against him Paul justly appealed For otherwise if in a spirituall cause he should have appealed he should have overthrowne his owne Apostleship and Power given him by Christ Iesus in spirituall things above the highest Kings or Emperors of the world beside CHAP. XC Peace BLessed Truth I shall now remember you of the fourth Quaerie upon this place of Timothy to wit whether a Church of Christ Iesus may not live in Gods worship and comelinesse notwithstanding that the civill Magistrate professe not the same but a contrary Religion and Worship in his owne person and the Country with him Truth I answer the Churches of Christ under the Roman Emperours did live in all godlinesse and christian gravity as appeares by all their holy and glorious practices which the Scripture abundantly testifies Secondly this ●lowes from an institution or appointment of such a power and authority left by the Lord Iesus to his Apostles and Churches that no ungodlinesse or dishonesty in the first appearance of it was to be suffered but supprest and cast out from the Churches of Christ even the little Leaven of doctrine or practice 1 Corinth 5. Gal. 5. Lastly I adde that although sometimes it pleaseth the Lord to vouchsafe his servants peace and quietnesse and to command them here in Timothy to pray for it for those good ends and purposes for which God hath appointed civill Magistracy in the world to keepe the world in peace and quietnesse Yet Gods people have used most to abound with godlinesse and honesty when they have enjoyed least peace and quietnesse Then like those spices Cant. 4. Myrrhe Frankincense Saffron Calamus c. they have yeelded the sweetest favour to God and man when they were pounded and burnt in cruell persecution of the Romane Censors then are they as Gods Venison most sweet when most hunted Gods Stars shining brightest in the darkest night more heavenly in conversation more mortified more abounding in love each to other more longing to be with God when the inhospitable and salvage World hath used them like strangers and forced them to hasten home to another Country which they professe to seeke CHAP. XCI Peace DEare Truth it seemes not to be unseasonable to close up this passage with a short descant upon that Assertion viz. A subject without godlinesse will not be bonus vir a good man nor a Magistrate except he see godlinesse preserved will not be bonus Magistratus Truth I confesse that without godlinesse or a true w●rshipping of God with an upright heart according to Gods Ordinances neither Subjects nor Magistrates can please God in Christ Iesus and so be spiritually or christianly good which few Magistrates and few men either come to or are ordained unto God having chosen a little ●lock out of the world and those generally poore and meane 1 Cor. 1. Iam. 2. Yet this I must remember you of that when the most High God created all things of nothing he saw and acknowledged divers sorts of goodnesse which must still be acknowledged in their distinct kindes a good Ayre a good Ground a good Tree a good Sheepe c. I say the same in Artificialls a good Garment a good House a good Sword a good Ship I also adde a good City a good Company or Corporation a good Husband Father Master Hence also we say a good Physitian a good Lawyer a good Sea-man a good Merchant a good Pilot for such or such ● shoare or Harbour that is Morally Civilly good in their severall Civill respects and imployments Hence Psal. 133. the Church or Citie of God is compared to a Citie compact within it selfe which compactnes may be found in many Townes and Cities of the World where yet hath not shined any spirituall or supernaturall goodnesse Hence the Lord Iesus Matth. 12. describes an ill state of an house or kingdome viz. to be divided against it selfe which cannot stand These I observe to prove that a Subject a Magistrate may be a good Subject a good Magistrate in respect of civill or morall goodnes which thousands want and where it is it is commendable and beautifull though Godlines which is infinitely more beautifull be wanting and which is onely proper to the Christian state the Commonweale of Israel the true Church the holy Nation Ephes. 2. 1 Pet. 2. Lastly however the Authors deny that there can be Bonus Magistratus a good Magistrate except the see all Godlines preserved yet themselves confesse that civill honesty is sufficient to make a good Subject in these words viz. He must see that Honestie be preserved within his jurisdiction else the Subject will not be Bonus civ●s a good citizen and doubtlesse if the Law of Relations hold true that civill honestie which makes a good citizen must also together with qualifications sit for a Commander make also a good Magistrate CHAP. XCII Peace THe 4. head is The proper meanes of both these Powers to attaine their ends First the proper meanes whereby the Civill Power may and should attaine its end are onely Politicall and principally these Five First the erecting and establishing what forme of Civill Government may seeme in wisedome most meet according to generall rules of the Word and state of the people Secondly the making publishing and establishing of wholesome Civill Lawes not only such as concerne Civill Justice but also the free passage of true Religion for outward Civill Peace ariseth and is maintained from them both from the latter as well as from the former Civill peace cannot stand intire where Religion is corrupted 2 Chron. 15. 3. 5. 6. Iudg. 8. And yet such Lawes though conversant about Religion may still be counted Civill Lawes as on the contrary an Oath doth still remaine Religious though conversant about Civill matters Thirdly Election and appointment of Civill officers to see execution of those Lawes Fourthly Civill Punishments and Rewards of Transgressors and Observers of these Lawes Fifthly taking up Armes against the Enemies of Civill Peace Secondly the meanes whereby the Church may and should attaine her ends are only ecclesiasticall which are chiefly five First setting up that forme of Church Government only of which Christ hath given them a pattern in his Word Secondly acknowledging and admitting of no Lawgiver in the Church but Christ and the publishing of his Lawes Thirdly Electing and ordaining of such officers onely as Christ hath appointed in his Word Fourthly to receive into their fellowship them that are approved and in●licting Spirituall censures against them that offend
simply unlawfull as unto a falsely constituted Church Ministry Worship Administration and they shall not escape the D●ch by being led blindefold by the Magistrate but though hee fall in first yet they shall in after him and upon him to his greater and more dreadfull judgement In particular thus If the Magistrate may restraine me from that gesture in the Supper of the Lord which I am perswaded I ought to practice he may also restraine me by his commands from that Supper of the Lord it selfe in such or such a Church according to my conscience If he cannot as they grant constraine me to such or such a garment in the worship of God can he constraine me to worship God by such a Ministry and with such worship which my soule and conscience cannot be perswaded is of God If he cannot command me in that circumstance of time to worship God this or that day can he command mee to the worship it selfe Peace Me thinkes I discerne a threefold guilt to lye upon such Civill powers as impose upon and inforce the conscience though not unto the ministration and participation of the Seales yet either to depart from that worship which it is perswaded of or to any exercise or worship which it hath not faith in First of an appearance of that Arminian Popish doctrine of freewill as if it lay in their owne power and ability to beleeve upon the Magistrates command since it is confessed that what is submitted to by any without faith it is sinne be it never so true and holy Rom. 14. Secondly since God only openeth the heart and worketh the will Phil. 2. it seemes to be an high presumption to suppose that together with a command restraining from or constraining to worship that God is also to be forced or commanded to give faith to open the heart to incline the will c. Thirdly A guilt of the hypocrisie of their subjects and people in forcing them to act and practice in matters of Religion and Worship against the doubts and checks of their consciences causing their bodies to worship when their soules are far off to draw near with their lips their hearts being far off c. With lesse sinne ten thousand fold may a naturall ●ather force his 〈◊〉 or the Father of the Commonweale force all the maydens in a Country to the marriage beds of such and such men whom they cannot love then the soules of these and other subjects to such worship or Ministry which is either a true or false because Cant. 1. 16. Truth Sweet Peace your conclusions are undeniable and O that they might sinke deep into those Noble and Honourable Bosomes it so deeply concernes but proceed CHAP. XCV Peace IN that fifth head they further say thus Thirdly in matters Ecclesiasticall we beleeve first That Civill Magistrates have no power to make or constitute Lawes about Church affaires which the Lord Jesus hath not ordained in his Word for the well ordering of the Church for the Apostle solemnely chargeth Timothy and in him all Goverours of the Church before God and the Lord Jesus Christ who is the only Potentate the King of Kings and Lord of Lords that the Commandement given by him for the ordering of the Church be kept without spot unrebukeable to the appearing of the Lord Jesus Christ 1 Tim. 6. 14. 15. And this Commandement given in the Word the Apostle faith is able to make the man of God perfect in all Righteousnesse 2 Tim. 3. 17. And indeed the adminstration of all Christs affaires doth immediately aime at spirituall and divine ends as the worship of God and the salvation of mens soules and therefore no Law nor meanes can be devised by the wisdome or wit of man that can be fit or able to reach such ends but use must be made of such onely as the divine Wisdome and holy Will of God hath ordained Secondly We beleeve the Magistrates power in making Lawes about Church affaires is not only thus limited and restrained by Christ to matters which concerne the substance of Gods worship and of Church government but also such as concerne outward order as in Rites and Ceremonies for uniformities sake For we finde not in the Gospell that Christ hath any where provided for the uniformity of Churches but onely for their unity Paul in matters of Christian libertie commendeth the unity of their Faith in the holy Spirit giving order that wee should not judge nor condemne one another in difference of judgement and practice of such things where men live to God on both sides even though there were some errour on one side Rom. 14. to the 6. How much lesse in things indifferent where there may be no etrour on either side When the Apostle directeth the Church of Corinth that all things be done decently and in order he meant not to give power to Church Officers or to Civill Magistrates to order what ever they should thinke meet for decencie and order but only to provide that all the Ordinances of God be administred in the Church decently without unnaturall or uncivill uncomelinesse as that of long haire or womens prophe●ying of the like and orderly without confusion or disturbance of edification as the speaking of many at once in the Church Thirdly we doe neverthelesse willingly grant that Magistrates upon due and diligent search what is the counsell and will of God in his Word concerning the right ordering of the Church may and ought to publish and declare establish and ratifie such Lawes and Ordinances as Christ hath appointed in his Word for the well ordering of Church affaires both for the gathering of the Church and the right administration of all the Ordinances of God amongst them in such a manner as the Lord hath appointed to edification The Law of Artaxerxes Ezra 7. 23. was not usurpation over the Churches liberty but a Royall and just confirmation of them Whatsoever is commanded by the God of Heaven For why should there be wrath against the King and his Sonnes Truth Deare Peace me thinkes I see before mine eyes a wall daubed up of which Ezekiel speakes with untempered morter Here they restraine the Magistrate from making Lawes either concerning the substance or ceremony of Religion but such only as Christ hath commanded and those say they must publish and declare after the example of Artaxerxes I shall herein performe two things First examine this Magistrates duty to publish declare c. such Laws and Ordinances as Christ hath appointed Secondly I shall examine that proofe from Artaxerxes Ezra 7. 23. In the first me thinks I heare the voice of the people of Israel 1 Sam. 8. 5. Make us a King that may rule over us after the manner of the Nations rejecting the Lord ruling over them by his holy Word in the mouth of his Prophets and sheltring themselves under an Arme of Flesh which Arme of Flesh God gave them in His Anger and cut off againe in His
the heart of the King viz. to restraine upon paine of Death all the millions of men under his Dominion from the Idolatties of their severall and respective Countries to constraine them all upon the like penaltie to conforme to the Worship of the God of Israel to build him a Temple erect an Altar ordaine Priests offer sacrifice observe the Fasts and Feasts of Israel yea did God put it into the Kings heart to send Levites into all the parts of his Dominion compelling them to heare which is but a naturall thing as some unsoundly speake unto which all are bound to submit Well however Ezra gives thankes to God for the Kings and so should all that feate God in all Countries if he would please to put it into the hearts of the Kings States and Parliaments to take off the yoakes of Violence and permit at least the Consciences of their Subjects and especially such as in truth make Conscience of their Worships to the God of Israel and yet no cause for Ezra then or Gods Ezra's and Israelites now to acknowledge the care and charge of Gods worship Church and Ordinances to lie upon the shoulders of Artaxerxes or any other Civill Prince or Ruler Lastly for the Confirmation or Ratification which they suppose Magistrates are bound to give to the Lawes of Christ I answer Gods cause Christs Truth and the two-edged sword of his Word never stood in need of a temporall Sword or an humane Witnes to confirme and ratifie them If we receive the witnesse of an honest man the witnesse of the most holy God is greater 1. Iohn 5. The result and summe of the whole matter is this 1. It may please God sometimes to stir up the Rulers of the Earth to permit and tolerate to favour and countenance Gods people in their worships though only out of some strong conviction of conscience or feare of wrath c. and yet themselves neither understand Gods worship nor leave their owne state Idolatry or Country worship For this Gods people ought to give thankes unto God yea and all men from this example may learne not to charge upon the Magistrates conscience besides the care of the Civill peace the bodies and goods of men the Spirituall peace in the worship of God and soules of men but hence are Magistrates instructed favourably to permit their subjects in their worships although themselves bee not perswaded to submit to them as Nebuchadnezzar Cyrus Darius and Artaxerxes did CHAP. XCVII Peace THe sixt question is this How far the Church is subject to their Lawes All those say they who are members of the Commonweale are bound to be subject to all the just and righteous Laws thereof and therefore membership in Churches not cutting men off from the membership in commonweales they are bound to be subject even every soule Rom. 13. 1. as Christ himselfe and the Apostles were in their places wherein they lived and therefore to exempt the Clergy as the Papists do from Civill subjection and to say that generatio Clerici is corruptio subditi is both sinfull and scandalous to the Gospel of God and though all are equally subject yet Church members are more especially bound to yeeld subjection and the most eminent most especially bound not only because conscience doth more strongly binde but also because their ill examples are more infectious to others pernicious to the State and provoke Gods wrath to bring vengeance on the State Hence if the whole Church or officers of the Church shall sin against the State or any person by sedition contempt of Authority heresie blasphemy oppression slander or shall withdraw any of their members from the service of the State without the consent thereof their persons and estates are liable to Civill punishments of Magistrates according to their righteous and wholsome Lawes Exod. 22. 20. Levit. 24. 16. Deut. 13. 5. 18. 10. Truth What concernes this head in civill things I gladly subscribe unto what concernes heresie blasphemy c. I have plentifully before spoken to and shall here only say 2 things First those Scriptures produced concerne only the people of God in a Church estate and must have reference onely to the Church of Christ Jesus which as Mr. Cotton confesseth is not Nationall but Congregationall of so many as may meet in one place 1 Cor. 14 therefore no Civ●ll State can be the antitype and parallell to which purpose upon the 11 Question I shall at large shew the difference betweene that Nationall Church and State of Israel and all other States and Nations in the World Secondly If the Rulers of the Earth are bound to put to death all that worship other gods then the true God or that blaspheme that is speake evill of in a lesser or higher degree that one true God it must unavoidably follow that the beloved for the Fathers sake the Jewes whose very Religion blasphemeth Christ in the highest degree I say they are actually sonnes of death and all to be immediately executed according to those quoted Scriptures And Secondly the Townes Cities Nations and Kingdomes of the World must generally be put to the sword if they speedily renounce not their Gods and Worships and so cease to blaspheme the true God by their Idolatries This bloody consequence cannot be avoided by any Scripture rule for if that rule be of force Deut. 13. 18. not to spare or shew mercy upon person or City falling to Idolatry that bars out all favour or partiality and then what heapes upon heapes in the slaughter houses and shambles of Civill Warres must the world come to as I have formerly noted and that unnecessarily it being not required by the Lord Jesus for his sake and the Magistrates power and weapons being essentially Civill and so not reaching to the impiety or ungodlinesse but the incivility and unrighteousnesse of tongue or hand CHAP. XCVIII Peace DEare Truth these are the poysoned daggers stabbing at my tender heart Oh when shall the Prince of peace appeare and reconcile the bloudy sons of men but let me now propose their 7 head viz. In what order may the Magistrate execute punishment on a Church or Church-member that offendeth his Lawes First grosse and publicke notorious sinnes which are against the light of conscience as Heresie c. there the Magistrate keeping him under safe ward should send the offendour first to the Church to heale his conscience still provided that the Church be both able and willing thereunto By which meanes the Magistrate shall convince such an ones conscience that he seeketh his healing rather then his hurt The censure also against him shall proceed with more power and blessing and none shall have cause to say that the Magistrate persecutes men for their consciences but that he justly punisheth such an one for sinning rather against his conscience Tit. 3. 0. Secondly in private offences how the Magistrate may proceed see Chap. 12. It is not materiall
viz. that none but members of Churches enjoy civill freedome amongst them ordinarily in imitation of that Nationall Church and State of the Iewes then I answer they that follow Moses Church constitution which the New English by such a practice implicitely doe must cease to pretend to the Lord Iesus Christ and his institutions Secondly we shall finde lawfull civill State both before and since Christ Iesus in which we finde not any tidings of the true God our Christ. Lastly their civill New English State framed out of their Churches may yet stand subsist and flourish although they did as by the word of the Lord they ought permit either Iewes or Turkes or Antichristians to live amongst them subject unto their Civill Government CHAP. CII Peace ONe branch more viz. the third remaines of this Head and it concerns the hearing of the Word unto which say they all men are to be compelled because hearing of the word is a duty which even Nature leadeth Heathens to for this they quote the practice of the Ninevites hea●ing Ionah and Eglo● King of Moab his rising up to Ehuds pretended message from God Iudg 3. Truth I must deny that position for light of Nature leadeth men to heare that onely which Nature conceiveth to be good for it and therefore not to heare a Messenger Minister or Preacher whom conscience perswades is a false messenger or deceiver and comes to deceive my soule as Millions of men and women in their severall respective religions and consciences are so perswaded conceiving their owne to be true Secondly as concerning the instances Ionah did not compell the Ninevites to heare that message which he brought unto them Besides the matter of compulsion to a constant worship of the world in Church estate which is the Question comes not neare Ionahs case Nor did Christ Iesus or any of his Embassadours so practice but if persons refused to heare the command of the Lord Iesus to his Messengers was onely to depart from them shaking off the dust of their feet with a denunciation of Gods wrath against them Math. 10. Act. 14. Concerning Eglon his rising up First Eh●d compelled not that King either to heare or reverence and all that can bee imitable in Eglon is a voluntary and willing reverence which persons ought to expresse to what they are perswaded comes from God But how doe both these instances mightily convince and condemne themselves who not onely professe to turne away from but also persecute or hunt all such as shall dare to professe a Ministry or Church estate differing from their owne though for personall godlinesse and excellency of gifts reverenced by themselves Thirdly to the point of compulsion It hath pleased the Lord Iesus to appoint a two fold Ministry of his Word First for unbeleevers and their conversion according to Math. 28. 19. Marc. 16 15 16. and the constant practice of the Apostles in the first preaching of the Gospel Secondly a Ministry of feeding and nourishing up such as are converted and brought into Church estate according to Ephes. 4. c. Now to neither of these doe we finde any compulsion appointed by the Lord Iesus or practised by any of his The compulsion preached and practised in New England is not to the hearing of that Ministry sent forth to convert unbeleevers and to constitute Churches for such a Ministry they practise not but to the hearing of the word of edification exhortation consolation dispenced onely in the Churches of worshippers I apply When Paul came first to Corinth to preach Christ Iesus by their Rule the Magistrates of Corinth ought by the Sword to have compelled all the people of Corinth to heare Paul Secondly after a Church of Christ was gathered by their rule the Magistrates of Corinth ought to have compelled the people still even those who had refused his Doctrine for the few onely of the Church embraced it to have heard the Word still and to have kept one day in seven to the Christians God and to have come to the Christians Church all their dayes And what is this but a setled formality of Religion and Worship unto which a people are brought by the power of the sword And however they affirme that persons are not to be compelled to be members of Churches nor the Church compelled to receive any Yet if persons be compelled to forsake their Religion which their hearts cleave to and to come to Church to the worship of the Word Prayers Psalmes and Contributions and this all their dayes I aske whether this be not this peoples Religion unto which submitting they shall be quiet all their dayes without the inforcing them to the practice of any other Religion And if this bee not so then I aske Will it not inevitably follow that they not onely permit but enforce people to bee of no Religion at all all their dayes This toleration of Religion or rather irreligious compulsion is above all tolerations monstrous to wit to compell men to bee of no Religion all their dayes I desire all men and these worthy Authors of this Modell to lay their hands upon their heart and to consider whether this compulsion of men to heare the Word as they say whether it carries men to wit to be of no Religion all their dayes worse then the very Indians who dare not live without Religion according as they are perswaded Lastly I adde from the Ordinance of the Lord Iesus and practice of the Apostles Acts 2. 42. where the Word and Prayer is joyned with the exercise of their fellowship and breaking of Bread in which Exercises the Church continued constantly that it is apparent that a Civill State may as lawfully compell men by the civill sword to the breaking of bread or Lords Supper as to the Word or Prayer or Fellowship For first they are all of the same nature Ordinances in the Church I speake of the feeding Ministrie in the Church unto which persons are compell'd and Church Worship Secondly every conscience in the World is fearfull at least shie of the Priests and Ministers of other Gods and Worships and of holding Spirituall fellowship in any of their Services Which is the case of many a Soule viz. to question the Ministers themselves as well as the Supper it selfe CHAP. CIII Peace DEare Truth This pressing of men to the Spirituall Battels of Christ Jesus is the cause why as it is commonly with prest Souldiers that so many thousands flie in the day of Battell But I present you with the 9. Question viz. What power the Magistrate hath in providing of Church-Officers First say they the Election of Church officers being the proper Act of the Church therefore the Magistrate hath no power either as Prince or Patron to assume such power unto himselfe When Christ sends to preach by his supreme power the Magistrate may send forth by his power subordinate to gather Churches and may force people to heare
forth to preach by his supreme power and the Magistrate by his power subordinate to gather Churches CHAP. CIV Peace YOu have taken great paines to shew the irreconciliablenesse of those their two assertions viz. First there is now no Ministry as they say but what is mediat from the Church and yet secondly Christ Jesus sends Preachers forth by his supreme power to gather the Church I now wait to heare how as they say the Magistrate may send forth by his power subordinate to gather Churches enforcing the people to heare c. Truth If there be a Ministry sent forth by Christs supreme power and a Ministry sent forth by the Magistrates subordinate power to gather Churches I aske what is the difference between these two Is there any gathering of Churches but by that commission Mat. 28. Teach and baptize And is the civill Magistrate intrusted with a power from Christ as his Deputy to give this commission and so to send out Ministers to preach and baptize As there is nothing in the Testament of Christ concerning such a delegation or assignment of such power of Christ to the civill Magistrate So I also ask since in every free State civill Magistrates have no more power but what the people 's of those States Lands and Countries betrust them with whether or no by this meanes it must not follow that Christ Iesus hath left with the Peoples and Nations of the World his Spirituall Kingly power to grant commissions and send out Ministers to themselves to preach convert and baptize themselves How inevitably this followes upon their conclusion of power in Magistrates to send c. and what unchristian and unreasonable consequences must flow from hence let all consider in the feare of God Iehosaphats sending forth the Levites to teach in Iudah c. as they alledge it not so elsewhere it shall more fully appeare to be a type and figure of Christ Iesus the only King of his Church providing for the feeding of his Church and People by his true Christian Priests and Levites viz. The Ministry which in the Gospel he hath appointed CHAP. CV Peace VVE have examined the Ministry be pleased deare Truth to speake to the second branch of this head viz. the maintenance of it They affirme that the Magistrate may force out the Ministers maintenance from all that are taught by them and that after the patterne of Israel and the argument from 1 Cor. 9. Gal. 6. 6. Truth This theame viz. concerning the maintenance of the Priests and Ministers of worship is indeed the Apple of the Eye the Dianah of the Dianah c. yet all that love Christ Jesus in sincerity and soules in and from him will readily professe to abhorre filthy lucre Tit. 1. and the wages of Balaam both more common and frequent then easily is discernable To that Scripture Gal. 6. 6. Let him that is taught in the Word make him that teacheth partaker of all his goods I answer That teaching was of persons converted beleevers entred into the Schoole and Family of Christ the Church which Church being rightly gathered is also rightly invested with the power of the Lord Iesus to force every soule therein by spirituall weapons and penalties to doe its duty But this forcing of the Magistrate is intended and practised to all sorts of persons without as well as within the Church unconverted naturall and dead in sinne as well as those that live and feeding enjoy the benefit of spirituall food Now for those sorts of persons to whom Christ Iesus sends his Word out of Church estate Iewes or Gentiles according to the Parable of Math. 13. high-way hearers stony ground and thorny ground hearers wee never finde title of any maintenance to bee expected least of all to bee forced and exacted from them By civill power they cannot be forced for it is no civill payment or businesse no matter of Caesar but concerning God nor by spirituall power which hath nothing to doe with those which are without 1. Cor. 5. It is reasonable to expect and demand of such as live within the state a civill maintenance of their civill officers and to force it where it is denyed It is reasonable for a Schoole-master to demand his recompence for his labour in his Schoole but it is not reasonable to expect or force it from stranges enemies rebels to that City from such as come not within or else would not bee received into the Schoole What is the Church of Christ Iesus but the City the School● and Family of Christ the Officers of this City Schoole Family may reasonably expect maintenance from such they minister unto but not from strangers enemies c. Peace It is most true that sinne goes in a linke for that tenent that all the men of the world may bee compelled to heare Christ preach and enjoy the labours of the Teacher as well as the Church it selfe forceth on another also as evill viz. that they should also be compelled to pay as being most equall and reasonable to pay for their conversion Truth Some use to urge that Text of Luc. 14. Compell them to come in Compell them to Masse say the Papists compell them to Church and Common prayer say the Protestants Compell them to the Meeting say the New English In all these compulsions they disagree amongst themselves but in this viz. Compell them to pay in this they all agree There is a double violence which both Errour and Falshood use to the soules of men First morall and perswasive such was the perswasion first used to Ioseph by his Mistris such was the perswasions of Tamar from Ammon such was the compelling of the young man by the Harlot Prov. 7. shee caught him by her much faire speech and kisses And thus is the whole world compelled to the worship of the Golden Image Dan. 3. The second Compulsion is civill such as Iosephs Mistris began to practise upon Ioseph to attaine her whorish desires Such as Ammon practised on Tamar to satisfie his brutish lust And such was Nabuchadnezzars second compulsion his fiery Furnace Dan. 3. and mysticall Nabuchadnezzars killing all that receive not his marke Rev. 13. The first sort of these violences to wit by powerfull argument and perswasion the Ministers of the Gospel also use Hence all those powerfull perswasions of Wisedomes Maidens Pro. 9. Hence saith Paul knowing the terrour of the Lord we perswade men 2 Cor. 5. and pull some out of the fire saith Iud● such must that compulsion be Luc. 14. viz. the powerfull perswasions of the word being that two-edged sword comming out of the mouth of Christ Iesus in his true Ministers sent forth to invite poore sinners to partake of the Feast of the Lambe of God The civill Ministers of the Commonweale cannot be sent upon this businesse with their civill weapons and compulsions but the spirituall Minister of the Gospel with his spirituall sword of
and purgings Are not all the Nations of the Earth alike cleane unto God or rather alike uncleane untill it pleaseth the Father of mercies to call some out to the Knowledge and Grace of his Sonne making them to see their filthinesse and strangenesse from the Commonweale of Israel and to wash in the bloud of the Lambe of God This taking away the difference between Nation and Nation Country and Country is most fully and admirably declared in that great vision of all sorts of living creatures presented unto Peter Acts 10. whereby it pleased the Lord to informe Peter of the abolishing of the difference between Iew and Gentile in any holy or unholy cleane or uncleane respect Fifthly not only to speake of all but to select one or two more This people of Israel in that Nationall State were a type of all the Children of God in all ages under the profession of the Gospel who are therefore called the Children of Abraham and the Israel of God Gal. 3. Gal. 6. A Kingly Priesthood and holy Nation 1 Pet. 2. 9 in a cleare and manifest Antitype to the former Israel Exod. 19. 6. Hence Christians now are figuratively in this respect called Iewes Rev. 3. where lies a cleare distinction of the true and false Christian under the consideration of the true and false Iew Behold I will make them of the Synagogue of Sathan that say they are Jewes and are not but doe lie Rev. 3. But such a typicall respect we finde not now upon any People Nation or Country of the whole World But out of all Nations Tongues and Languages is God pleased to call some and redeem them to Himselfe Rev. 5. 9. And hath made no difference betweene the Iewes and Gentiles Greekes and Scithians Gal. 3. who by Regeneration or second birth become the Israel of God Gal. 6. the Temple of God 1 Cor. 3. and the true Ierusalem Heb. 12. Lastly all this whole Nation or people as they were of one typicall seed of Abraham sealed with a shamefull painfull Ordinance of cutting off the fore-skin which differenced them from all the World beside So also were they bound to such and such solemnities of figurative worships Amongst many others I shall end this passage concerning the people with a famous observation out of Numb 9. 1 3. viz. All that whole Nation was bound to celebrate and keepe the Feast of the Passeover in his season or else they were to be Put to death But doth God require a whole Nation Country or Kingdome now thus to celebrate the spirituall Passeover the Supper and Feast of the Lambe Christ Iesus at such a time once a yeare and that whosoever shall not so doe shall bee put to death What horrible prophanations what grosse hypocrisies yea what wonderfull desolations sooner or later must needs follow upon such a course T is true the people of Israel brought into covenant with God in Abraham and so successively borne in Covenant with God might in that state of a Nationall Church solemnly covenant and sweare that whosoever would not seeke Iehovah the God of Israel should be put to death 2 Chron. 15. whether small or great whether man or woman But may whole Nations or Kingdomes now according to any one title exprest by Christ Iesus to that purpose follow that patterne of Israel and put to death all both men and women great and small that according to the rules of the Gospel are not borne againe penitent humble heavenly patient c. What a world of hypocrisie from hence is practised by thousands that for feare will stoope to give that God their bodies in a forme whom yet in truth their hearts affect not Yea also what a world of prophanation of the holy Name and holy Ordinances of the Lord in prostituting the holy things of God like the Vessels of the Sanctuary Dan. 5. to prophane impenitent and unregenerate persons Lastly what slaughters both of men and women must this necessarily bring into the world by the Insurrections and Civill Warres about Religion and Conscience Yea what slaughters of the innocent and faithfull witnesses of Christ Jesus who choose to bee slaine all the day long for Christ his sake and to fight for their Lord and Master Christ onely with spirituall and Christian weapons CHAP. CXIV Peace IT seemes deare Truth a mighty Gulfe betweene that people and Nation and the Nations of the world then extant and ever since Truth As sure as the blessed substance to all those shadowes Christ Iesus is come so unmatchable and never to bee paralleld by any Nationall State was that Israel in the Figure or Shadow And yet the Israel of God now the Regenerate or Newborne the circumcised in Heart by Repentance and Mortification who willingly submit unto the Lord Iesus as their onely King and Head may fitly parallell and answer that Israel in the type without such danger of hypocrisie of such horrible prophanations and of firing the Civill State in such bloody combustions as all Ages have brought forth upon this compelling a whole Nation or Kingdome to be the antitype of Israel Peace Were this Light entertained some hopes would shine forth for my returne and restauration Truth I have yet to adde a third consideration concerning the Kings and Governours of that Land and people They were to be unlesse in their captivities of their Brethren members of the true Church of God as appeares in the History of Moses the Elders of Israel and the Iudges and Kings of Israel afterward But first who can deny but that there may be now many lawfull Governours Magistrates and Kings in the Nations of the World where is no true Church of Iesus Christ Secondly we know the many excellent gifts wherewith it hath pleased God to furnish many inabling them for publike service to their Countries both in Peace and War as all Ages and Experience testifies on whose soules hee hath not yet pleased to shine in the face of Iesus Christ which Gifts and Talents must all lye buried in the Earth unlesse such persons may lawfully be called and chosen to and improved in publike service notwithstanding their different or contrary Conscience and Worship Thirdly if none but true Christians members of Christ Iesus might be Civill Magistrates and publikely intrusted with civill affaires then none but members of Churches Christians should be Husbands of Wives Fathers of Children Masters of Servants But against this doctrine the whole creation the whole World may justly rise up in armes as not onely contrary to true Piety but common Humanity it selfe For if a Commonweale bee lawfull amongst men that have not heard of God nor Christ certainly their Officers Ministers and Governours must be lawfull also Fourthly it is notoriously knowne to be the dangerous doctrine profest by some Papists that Princes degenerating from their Religion and turning Heretickes are to be deposed and their Subjects actually discharged from their
raised concerning those famous acts of Asa Hezekiah Iehosaphat Iosiah What thinke you of the Fast proclaimed by Iehosaphat 2 Chron. 20. 3. Truth I finde it to be the duty of Kings and all in authority to incourage Christs Messengers of Truth proclaiming Repentance c. But under the Gospel to enforce all naturall and unregenerate people to acts of worship what president hath Christ Iesus given us First t is true Iehosaphat proclaimed a Fast c. but was he not in matters spirituall a type of Christ the true King of Israel Secondly Iehosaphat calls the members of the true Church to Church service and worship of God But consider if civill Powers now may judge of and determine the actions of worship proper to the Saints I● they may appoint the time of the Churches worship Fasting and Prayer c. why may they not as wel forbid those times which a Church of Christ shall make choice of seeing it is a branch of the same Root to forbid what lik●th not as well as to injoyne what pleaseth And if in those most solemne duties and exercises why not also in other ordinary meetings and worships And if so where is the power of the Lord Jesus bequeathed to his Ministers and Churches of which the power of those Kings was but a shadow CHAP. CXVIII Peace THe liberty of the Subject sounds most sweet London and Oxford both professe to fight for it How much infinitly more sweet is that true soule liberty according to Christ Iesus I know you would not take from Caesar ought although it were to give to God And what is Gods and his peoples I wish that Caesar may not take Yet for the satisfaction of some be pleased to glance upon Iosiah his famous Acts in the Church of God concerning the worship of God the Priests Levites and their Services compelling the people to keepe the Passeover making himselfe a covenant before the Lord and compelling all that were found in Ierusalem and Benjamin to stand to it Truth To these famous practices of Iosiah I shall parallell the practices of Englands Kings and first de jure a word or two of their right then de facto discusse what hath been done First de jure Iosiah was a precious branch of that Royall Root King David who was immediately designed by God and when the golden linkes of the Royall chaine broke in the usurpations of the Romane Conquerour it pleased the most wise God to send a Sonne of David a Sonne of God to beginne againe that Royall Line to sit upon the Throne of his Father David Luc. 1. 32. Acts 2. 30. It is not so with the Gentile Princes Rulers and Magistrates whether Monarchicall Aristrocraticall or Democraticall who though government in generall be from God yet receive their callings power and authority both Kings and Parliaments mediately from the people Secondly Iosiah and those Kings were Kings and Governours over the then true and onely Church of God Nationall brought into the Covenant of God in Abraham and so downward and they might well be forced to stand to that Covenant into which with such immediate signes and miracles they had beene brought But what Commission from Christ Iesus had Henry the eight Edward the 6. or any Iosiah like to force the many hundred thousands of English men and women without such immediate signes and miracles that Israel had to enter into an holy and spirituall Covenant with the invisible God the Father of Spirits or upon paine of death as in Iosia●s time to stand to that which they never made nor before Evangelicall Repentance are possibly capable of Now secondly de facto let it be well remembred concerning the Kings of England professing Reformation The foundation of all was laid in Henry the 8. The Pope chalengeth to be the Vicar of Christ Iesus here upon earth to have power of reforming the Church redressing abuses c. Henry 8. falls out with the Pope and chalengeth that very power to himself of which he had despoiled the Pope as appeares by that Act of Parliament establishing Henry 8 the supreme Head and Governour in all cases Ecclesiasticall c. It pleased the most High God to plague the Pope by Henry the 8. his means but neither Pope nor King can ever prove such power from Christ derived to either of them Secondly as before intimated let us view the Workes and Acts of Englands imitation of Iosiahs practice Henry the 7. leaves England under the slavish bondage of the Popes yoake Henry the 8. reformes all England to a new fashion halfe Papist halfe Protestant King Edward the 6. turnes about the Wheele of the State and workes the whole Land to absolute Protestanisme Queene Mary succeeding to the Helme steeres a direct contrary course breakes in peeces all that Edward wrought and brings forth an old edition of Englands Reformation all Popish Mary not living out halfe her dayes as the Prophet speakes of bloudy persons Elizabeth like Ioseph advanced from the Prison to the Palace and from the irons to the Crowne she pluckes up all her sister Maries plants and sounds a Trumpet all Protestant What sober man stands not amazed at these Revolutions and yet like Mother like Daughter and how zealous are we their off-spring for another impression and better edition of a Nationall Canaan in imitation of Iudah and Iosiah which if attained who knowes how soone succeeding Kings or Parliaments will quite pull downe and abrogate Thirdly in all these formings and reformings a Nationall Church of naturall unregenerate men was like wax the subject matter of all these formes and changes whether Popish or Protestant concerning which Nationall State the time is yet to come when ever the Lord Jesus hath given a word of institution and appointment CHAP. CXIX Peace YOu bring to minde deare Truth a plea of some wiser Papists for the Popes supremacy viz. that it was no such exorbitant or unheard of power and jurisdiction which the Pope chalenged but the very same which a Woman Queene Elizabeth her selfe chalenged stiling her Papissa or she Pope withall pleading that in point of Reason it was far more suitable that the Lord Jesus would delegate his power rather to a Clergie man then a Lay man as Henry the 8. or a woman as his daughter Elizabeth Truth I beleeve that neither one nor t'other hit the white yet I beleeve the Papists arrowes fall the nearest to it in this particular viz. That the government of the Church of Christ should rather belong to such as professe a Ministry or Office Spirituall then to such as are meerly Temporall and Civill So that in conclusion the whole controversi● concerning the government of Christ Kingdome or Church will be found to lye between the true and false Ministry both chalenging the true commission power and keyes from Christ. Peace This all glorious diadem of the Kingly power of the Lord Iesus
doubtlesse so farre as they have gone they bid the most and make the fairest plea for the puritie and power of Christ Iesus let the rest of the Inhabitants of the World be Judges Let all the former well be viewed in their externall State pomp riches conformitie to the World c. And on the other side let the latter be considered in their more through departure from sinne and sinfull Worship their condescending generally to the lowest and meanest contentments of this life their exposing of themselves for Christ to greater sufferings and their desiring no Civill sword nor Arme of Flesh but the two-edged sword of Gods Spirit to try out the matter by and then let the Inhabitants of the World judge which come neerest to the doctrine holines povertie patience and practice of the Lord Jesus Christ and whether or no these later deserve not so much of Humanitie and the Subjects Libertie as not offending the Civill State in the freedome of their Soules to enjoy the common aire to breath in CHAP. CXX Peace DEare Truth you have shewne me a little draught of Zions sorrowes her children tearing out their mothers bowels O when will Hee that stablisheth comforteth and builds up Zion looke downe from Heaven and have mercy on her c. Truth The Vision yet doth tarry saith Habacuk but will most surely come and therefore the patient and believing must wait for it But to your last Proposition whether the Kings of Israel and Judah were not types of Civill Magistrates now I suppose by what hath been already spoken these things will be evident First that those former types of the Land of the People of their Worships were types and figures of a spirituall Land spirituall People and spirituall Worship under Christ. Therefore consequently their Saviours Redeemers Deliverers Iudges Kings must also have their spirituall Antitypes and so consequently not civill but spirituall Governours and Rulers lest the very essentiall nature of Types Figures and Shadowes be overthrow●e Secondly although the Magistrate by a Civill sword might well compell that Nationall Church to the externall exercise of their Naturall Worship yet it is not possible according to the rule of the New Testament to compell whole Nations to true Repentance and Regeneration without which so farre as may be discerned true the Worship and holy Name of God is prophaned and blasphemed An Arme of Flesh and Sword of Steele cannot reach to cut the darknesse of the Mind the hardnesse and unbeleefe of the Heart and kindely operate upon the Soules affections to forsake a long continued Fathers worship and to imbrace a new though the best and truest This worke performes alone that sword out of the mouth of Christ with two edges Rev. 1. 3. Thirdly we have not one tittle in the New Testament of Christ Iesus concerning such a parallel neither from Himselfe nor from his Ministers with whom he conversed fourty dayes after his Resurrection instructing them in the matters of his Kingdome Acts 1. Neither find we any such commission or direction given to the Civill Magistrate to this purpose nor to the Saints for their submission in matters spirituall but the contrary Acts 4. 5. 1 Cor. 7. 23. Coloss. 2. 18. Fourthly we have formerly viewed the very nature and essence of a Civill Magistrate and find it the same in all parts of the World where ever people live upon the face of the Earth agreeing together in Townes Cities Provinces Kingdomes I say the same essentially Civill both from 1. the rise and fountaine whence it springs to wit the p●●ples choice and free consent 2. The Object of it viz. the common-weale or safety of such a people in their bodies and goods as the Authours of this Modell have themselves confessed This civill Nature of the Magistrate we have proved to receive no addition of power from the Magistrates being a Christian no more then it receives diminution from his not being a Christian even as the Common-weale is a true Common-weale although it have not heard of Christianitie and Christianitie professed in it as in Pergamus Ephesus c. makes it ne're no more a Commonweale and Christianitie taken away and the candlestick removed makes it ne're the lesse a Commonweale Fifthly the Spirit of God expresly relates the worke of the civill Magistrate under the Gospel Rom. 13. expresly mentioning as the Magistrates object the duties of the second Table concerning the bodies and goods of the subject 2. The reward or wages which people owe for such a worke to wit not the contribution of the Church for any spirituall work but tribute toll custome which are wages payable by all sorts of men Natives and Forreigners who enjoy the same benefit of publick peace and commerce in the Nation Sixthly Since the civill Magistrate whether Kings or Parliaments States and Governours can receive no more in justice then what the People give and are therefore but the eyes and hands and instruments of the people simply considered without respect to this or that Religion it must inevitably follow as formerly I have touched that if Magistrates have received their power from the people then the greatest number of the people of every Land have received from Christ Iesus a power to establish correct reforme his Saints and servants his wife and spowse the Church And she that by the expresse word of the Lord Psal. 149. binds Kings in chaines and Nobles in links of iron must her selfe be subject to the changeable pleasures of the people of the World which lies in wickednesse 1 Iohn 5. even in matters of Heavenly and spirituall Nature Hence therefore in all controversie concerning the Church Ministrie and worship the last Appeale must come to the Bar of the People or Commonweal where all may personally meet as in some Commonweales of small number or in greater by their Representatives Hence then no person esteemed a beleever and added to the Church No Officer chosen and ordained No person cast forth and excommunicated but as the Common-weale and people please and in conclusion no Church of Christ in this Land or World and consequently no visibly Christ the Head of it Yea yet higher consequently no God in the World worshipped according to the institutions of Christ Jesus except the severall peoples of the Nations of the World shall give allowance Peace Deare Truth Oh whither have our Forefathers and teachers led us higher then to God himselfe by these doctrines driven out of the World you cannot rise and yet so high must the inevitable and undeniable consequences of these their doctrines reach if men walke by their owne common Principles Truth I may therefore here seasonably adde a seventh which is a necessary consequence of all the former Arguments and an Argument it selfe viz. we finde expresly a spirituall power of Christ Iesus in the hands of his Saints Ministers and Churches to bee the true Antitype of those
former figures in all the Prophecies concerning Christ his spirituall power Isa. 9. Dan. 7. Mich. 4. c. compared with Luc. 1. 32. Act. 2. 30. 1 Cor. 5. Math. 18. Marc. 13. 34. c. CHAP. CXXI Peace GLorious and conquering Truth mee thinkes I see most evidently thy glorious conquests how mighty are thy spirituall weapons 2 Cor. 10. to breake downe those mighty and strong Holds and Castles which men have fortified themselves withall against thee O that even the thoughts of men may submit and bow downe to the captivity of Jesus Christ Truth Your kinde incouragement makes mee proceed more cheerfully to a fourth difference from the Lawes and Statutes of this Land different from all the Lawes and Statutes of the World and parallel'd onely by the Lawes and Ordinances of spirituall Israel First then consider we the Law-maker or rather the Law-publisher or Prophet as Moses calls himselfe Deut. 18. and Act. 3. he is expresly called that Prophet who figured out Christ Iesus who was to come like unto Moses greater then Moses as the son is greater then the servant Such Law-givers or Law-publishers never had any State or People as Moses the type or Christ Iesus miraculously stirred up and sent as the mouth of God betweene God and his people Secondly concerning the Lawes themselves It is true the second Table containes the Law of Nature the Law Morall and Civill yet such a Law was also given to this people as never to any people in the World such was the Law of worship Psal. 147. peculiarly given to Iacob and God did not deale so with other Nations which Lawes for the matter of the worship in all those wonderfull significant Sacrifices and for the manner by such a Priesthood such a place of Tabernacle and afterward of Temple such times and solemnities of Festivals were never to be parallel'd by any other Nation but onely by the true Christian Israel established by Iesus Christ amongst Iewes and Gentiles throughout the World Thirdly the Law of the tenne Words Deut. 10. the Epitome of all the rest it pleased the most high God to frame and pen twice with his owne most holy and dreadfull finger upon Mount Sinai which he never did to any other Nation before or since but onely to that spirituall Israel the people and Church of God in whose hearts of flesh he writes his Lawes according to Ier 31. Heb 8. and 10. Peace Such promulgation of such Lawes by such a Prophet must needs be matchlesse and unparallel'd Truth In the fift place consider we the punishments and rewards annexed to the breach or observation of these Lawes First those which were of a temporall and present consideration of this life Blessings and Curses of all sorts opened at large Levit. 26. and Deut. 28. which cannot possibly be made good in any State Countrey or Kingdome but in a spirituall sense in the Church and Kingdome of Christ. The reason is this such a temporall prosperity of outward peace and plenty of all things of increase of children of cattell of honour of health of successe of victory suits not temporally with the afflicted and persecuted estate of Gods people now And therefore spirituall and soule blessednesse must be the Antitype viz. In the midst of revilings and all manner of evill speeches for Christs sake soule blessednesse In the midst of afflictions and persecutions soule blessednesse Math. 5. and Luc. 6. And yet herein the Israel of God should enjoy their spirituall peace Gal. 6. 16. Out of that blessed temporall estate to be cast or caried captive was their excommunication or casting out of Gods sight 2 King 17. 23. Therefore was the blasphemer the false Prophet the idolater to bee cast out or cut off from this holy Land which punishment cannot be parallel'd by the punishment of any State or Kingdome in the world but onely by the excommunicating or outcasting of person or Church from the fellowship of the Saints and Churches of Christ Iesus in the Gospel And therefore as before I have noted the putting away of the false prophet by stoning him to death Deut. 13. is fitly answered and that in the very same words in the Antitype when by the generall consent or stoning of the whole Assembly and wicked person is put away from amongst them that is spiritually cut off out of the Land of the spiritually living the people or Church of God 1 Cor. 5. Galat. 5. Lastly the great and high reward or punishment of the keeping or breach of these Lawes to Israel was such as cannot suit with any State or Kingdome in the World beside the Reward of the Observation was Life Eternall Life The Breach of any one of these Law● was death Eternall death or damnation from the presence of the Lord. So Rom. 10. Iam. 2. Such a Covenant God made not before nor since with any State or People in the world For Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that beleeveth Rom. 10. 4. And he that beleeveth in that Son of God hath eternall life hee that beleeveth not hath not life but is condemned already John 3. and 1 John 5. CHAP. CXXII Peace DEare Truth you have most lively set forth the unparallel'd state of that typicall Land and people of the Iewes in their peace and quiet government Let mee now request you in the last place to glance at the difference of the wars of this people from the wars of other Nations and of their having no Antitype but the Churches of Christ Iesus First all Nations round about Israel more or lesse sometime or other had indignation against this people Aegyptians Edomites Moabites Ammonites Midians Philistians Assyrians and Babylonians c. as appeares in the History of Moses Samuel Iudges and Kings and in all the Prophets You have an expresse Catalogue of them Psal. 83. sometimes many hundred thousand Enemies in pitcht field against them of Ethiopians ten hundred thousand at once in the dayes of Asa 2 Chron. 14. and at other times as the sand upon the Sea shoare Such Enemies the Lord Iesus foretold his Israel The World shall hate you Iohn 16. You shall be hated of all men for my Names sake Matth. 24. All that will live godly in Christ Iesus must be persecuted or hunted 1 Tim. 4. And not only by flesh and bloud but also by Principalities Powers Spirituall wickednesse in high places Ephes. 6. by the whole Pagan World under the Roman Emperours and the whole Antichristian World under the Roman Popes Rev 12. 13. Chap. by the Kings of the Earth Rev. 17. And Gog and Magog like the sand upon the Sea shoare Rev. 20. Peace Such Enemies such Armies no History no experience proves ever to have come against one poore Nation as against Israel in the type and never was nor shall be knowne to come against any State or Country now but the Israel of
Cor. 5. CHAP. CXXVII Peace DEare Truth you have uprightly and aptly untied the knots of that 11 Head let me present you with the 12 Head which is Concerning the Magistrates power in the Censures of the Church First say they he hath no power to execute or to substitute any Civill officer to execute any Church censure under the notion of Civill or ●cclesiasticall men Secondly Though a Magistrate may immediately Civilly censure such an offender whose secret sinnes are made manifest by their casting out to be injurious to the good of the State yet such offences of excommunicate persons which manifestly hurt not the good of the State he ought not to proceed against them sooner or later untill the Church hath made her complaint to him and given in their just Reasons for helpe from them For to give libertie to Magistrates without exception to punish all excommunicate persons within so many moneths may prove injurious to the person who needs to the Church who may desire to God who cals for longer indulgence from the hands of thē Thirdly for persons not excommunicate the Magistrate hath no power in mediately to censure such offences of Church members by the power of the Sword but onely for such as doe immediately hurt the peace of the State Because the proper end of Civill Government being the preservation of the peace and welfare of the State they ought not to breake downe those bounds and so to censure immediately for such sins which hurt not their peace Hence first Magistrates have no power to censure for secret sinnes as deadnesse unbeleefe because they are secret and not yet come forth immediately to hurt the peace of the State we say immediately for every sinne even originall sinne remotely hurts the Civill State Secondly hence they have no power to censure for such private sinnes in Church members which being not hainous may be best healed in a private way by the Churches themselves For that which may be best healed by the Church and yet is prosecuted by the State may make a deeper wound and greater rent in the peace both of Church and State the Magistrates also being members of the Church are bound to the rule of Christ viz. not to produce any thing in publike against a brother which may bee best healed in a private way Now we call that private First which is only remaining in Families not knowne of oothers and therefore a Magistrate to heare and prosecute the complaint of children against their parents servants against masters wives against their husbands without acquainting the Church first transgresseth the rule of Christ. Secondly that which is between members of the same Church or of divers Churches for it was a double fault of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 6. first to goe to Law secondly to doe it before an Infidell seeing the Church was able to judge of such kinde of differences by some Arbitratours among themselves So that the Magistrates should referre the differences of Church members to private healing and try that way first By meanes whereof the Churches should be free from much scandall and the State from much trouble and the hearts of the godly from much griefe in beholding such breaches Thirdly such offences which the Conscience of a Brother dealing with another privately dares not as yet publish openly comming to the notice of the Magistrate accidentally he ought not to make publique as yet nor to require the Grand Jurie to present the same no more then the other private brother who is dealing with him untill hee see some issue of the private way Thirdly hence they have no power to put any to an oath ex officio to accuse themselves or the brethren in case either criminis suspecti or praetensi because this preserves not but hurts many wayes the peace of the State and abuseth the ordinance of an Oath which is ordained to end controversies not to begin them Heb. 6. 16. Fourthly hence they have no power to censure any for such offences as breake either no Civill Law of God or Law of the State published according to it for the peace of the State being preserved by wholesome Laws when they are not hurt the peace is not hurt Truth In this passage as I said before I observe how weakly and partially they deale with the soules of Magistrates in telling them they are the Guardians of both Tables must see the Church doe her duty punish c. and yet in this passage the Elders or Ministers of the Churches not only sit Iudges over the Magistrates actions in Church affaires but in civill also straitning and inlarging his commission according to the particular interests of their owne ends or at the best their Consc●ences I grant the Word of the Lord is the only rule light and lanthorn in all cases concerning God or Man and that the Ministers of the Gospell are to teach this way hold out this Lanthorne unto the feete of all men but to give such an absolute power in Spirituall things to the Civill Magistrate and yet after their owne ends or Consciences to abridge it is but the former sporting with holy things and to walk in Contradictions as before I noted Many of the particulars I acknowledge true where the Magistrate is a Member of the Church yet some passages call for Explication and some for Observation First in that they say the Civill Magistrate ought not to proceed against the offences of an Excommunicate person which manifestly hurt not the good of the state untill the Church hath made her complaint for helpe from them I observe 2 things First a cleare grant that when the Church complayneth for helpe then the Magistrate may punish such offences as hurt not the good of the state and yet in a few lines after they say the Magistrates have no power to censure such offences of Church members by the power of the civill sword but only such as doe immediately hurt the peace of the civill state and they adde the Reason because the proper end of the civill Government being the preservation of the peace and welfare of the state they ought not to breake downe those bounds and so to censure immediately for such sinnes which hurt not their peace And in the last place they acknowledge the Magistrate hath no power to punish any for any such offences as breake no civill Law of God or Law of the state published according to it For the peace of the state say they being preserved by wholesome Lawes when they are not hurt the Peace is not hurt CHAP. CXXVIII Peace DEare Truth here are excellent confessions unto which both Truth and Grace may gladly assent but what is your second Observation from hence Truth I observe secondly what a deepe charge of weaknes is layd upon the Church of Christ the Lawes Government and Officers thereof and consequently upon the Lord Iesus himselfe to wit that the Church is not enabled with all
the power of Christ to censure sufficiently an offendour on whom yet they have executed the deepest censure in the world to wit cutting off from Christ shutting out of Heaven casting to the Divell which offendours crime reacheth not to hurt the good of the civill state but that she is forced to make complaint to the civill state and the Officers thereof for their helpe O let not this be tole in Gath nor heard in Ashkalon and O! how dimme must needs that eye be which is blood shot with that blo●dy and cruell Tenent of Persecution for cause of Conscience Peace But what should be meant by this passage viz. That they cannot give liberty to the Magistrate to punish without exception all excommunicate persons within so many months Truth It may be this hath reference to a Law made formerly in New England that if an excommunicate person repented not within as I have heard three months after sentence of excommunication then the Civill Magistrate might proceed with him These worthy men see cause to question this Law upon good reasons rendred though it appears not by their words that they wholly condemne it only they desire a longer time implying that after some longer time the Magistrate may proceed and indeed I see not but according to such principles if the Magistrate himselfe should be cast out he ought to be proceeded against by the Civill state and consequently deposed and punished as the Pope teacheth yea though happily he had not offended against either bodies or goods of any subject Thirdly from this true confession that the Magistrate ought not to punish for many sinnes above mentioned I observe how they crosse the plea which commonly they bring for the Magistrates punishing of false Doctrines Heretiques c. viz. Rom. 13. The Magistrate is to punish them that doe evill and when it is answered True evill against the Second Table which is there onely spoken of and against the Bodies and Goods of the Subject which are the proper object of the Civill Magistrate as they confesse It is replied why is not Idolatry sinne Heresie sinne Schisme and false Worship sinne Yet heere in this passage many evils many sins even of Parents against their Children Masters against their Servants Husbands against their Wives the Magistrate ought not to meddle with Fourthly I dare not assent to that assertion That even originall sinne remotely hurts the civill State T is true some doe as inclinations to murther theft whoredome slander disobedience to Parents and Magistrates but blindnes of minds hardnes of heart inclination to choose or worship this or that God this or that Christ beside the true these hurt not remotely the civill state as not concerning it but the spirituall Peace Let me in the last place remind you of their charge against the Magistrate and which will necessarily turne to my wrong and prejudice They say the Magistrate in hearing and prosecuting the complaints of children against their parents of servants against their masters of wives against their husbands without acquainting the Church first transgresseth the rule of Christ. Truth Sweet Peace they that pretend to be thy dearest friends will prove thy bitter enemies First I ask for one rule out of the Testament of the Lord Iesus to prove this deepe charge and accusation against the Civill Magistrate Secondly This is built upon a supposition of what rarely falls out in the World to wit that there must necessarily be a true Church of Christ in every lawfull State unto whom these complaints must goe whereas how many thousand Common-weales have been and are where the name of Christ hath not or not truly been founded Thirdly The Magistrates office according to their own grant properly respecting the bodies and goods of their Subjects and the whole body of the Common-weale being made up of Families as the members constituting that body I see not how according to the rule of Christ Rom. 13 the Magistrate may refuse to heare and helpe the just complaints of any such petitioners Children Wives and Servants against oppression c. Peace I have long observed that such as have been ready to ascribe to the Civill Magistrate and his Sword more then God hath ascribed have also been most ready to cut off the skirts and in case of his inclining to another conscience then their owne to spoile him of the robe of that due Authoritie with which it hath pleased God and the People to invest and cloath him But I shall now present you with the 13. Head whose Title is CHAP. CXXIX What power Magistrates have in publike Assemblies of Churches FIrst say they the Churches have power to assemble and continue such Assemblies for the performance of all Gods Ordinances without or against the consent of the Magistrate renuente Magistratu because Christians are commanded so to doe Matth. 28. 18. 19. 20. Also because an Angel from God commanded the Apostles so to doe Acts 5. 20 Likewise from the practice of the Apostles who were not rebellious or seditious yet they did so Act. 4. 18. 19. 20. Act. 5. 27 28. Further from the practice of the Primitive Church at Jerusalem who did meet preach pray minister Sacraments censures Act. 4. 23. renuente Magistratu Moreover from the exhortation to the Hebrewes 10. 25. not to forsake their Assemblies though it were in dangerous times and if they might doe this under professed Enemies then we may much more under Christian Magistrates else we were worse under Christian Magistrates then Heathen therefore Magistrates may not hinder them herein as Pharaoh did the people from sacrificing for Wrath will be upon the Realme and the King and his Sons Ez●● 7. 23. Secondly it hath been a usurpation of forraigne Countries and Magistrates to take upon them to determine times and places of Worship rather let the Churches be left herein to their inoffensive Libertie Thirdly concerning their power of Synod Assemblies First in corrupt times the Magistrate desirous to make Reformation of Religion may and should call those who are most fit in severall Churches to assemble together in a Synod to discusse and declare from the Word of God matters of Doctrine and Worship and to helpe forward the Reformation of the Churches God Thus did Iosiah Secondly in the reformed times he ought to give Libertie to the Elders of severall Churches to assemble themselves by their owne mutuall and voluntary agreement at convenient times as the meanes appointed by God whereby he may mediately reform matters amisse in Churches which immediately he cannot nor ought not to doe Thirdly Those meetings for this end we conceive may be of two sorts 1. Monthly of some of the Elders and Messengers of the Churches 2. Annuall of all the Messengers and Elders of the Churches First monthly of some First those members of Churches which are neerest together and so may most conveniently assemble together may by mutuall agreement once in a
moneth consult of such things as make for the good of the Churches Secondly the time of this meeting may be sometimes at one place sometimes at another upon the Lecture day of every Church where Lectures are and let the Lecture that day be ended by eleven of the clock Thirdly let the end of this Assembly be to doe nothing by way of Authoritie but by way of Councell as the need of Churches shall require Secondly Annuall of all the Elders within our jurisdiction or others whereto the Churches may send once in the yeare to consult together for the publike welfare of all the Churches First let the place be sometimes at one Church sometimes at another as Reasons for the present may require Secondly let all the Churches send their waighty questions and cases six weeks or a month before the set time to the Church where the Assembly is to be held and the Officers thereof disperse them speedily to all the Churches that so they may have time to come prepared to the discussing of them Thirdly let this Assembly doe nothing by Authoritie but only by Councell in all cases which fall out leaving the determination of all things to particular Churches within themselves who are to judge and so to receive all doctrines and directions agreeing only with the Word of God The grounds of these Assemblies First need of each others helpe in regard of dayly emergent troubles doubts and controversies Secondly love of each others fellowship Thirdly of Gods glory out of a publike spirit to seeke the welfare of the Churches as well as their owne 1 Cor. 10 33. 2 Cor. 11. 23. Fourthly The great blessing and speciall presence of God upon such Assemblies hitherto Fifthly the good Report the Elders and Brethren of Churches shall have hereby by whose communion of Love others shall know they are the Disciples of Christ. CHAP. CXXX Truth I May well compare this passage to a double picture on the first part or side of it a most faire and beautifull countenance of the pure and holy Word of God on the later side or part a most sowre and uncomely deformed looke of a meere humane invention Concerning the former they prove the true and unquestionable power and priviledge of the Churches of Christ to assemble and practise all the holy Ordinances of God without or against the consent of the Magistrate Their Arguments from Christs and the Angels voyce from the Apostles and Churches practice I desire may take 〈◊〉 impression written by the point of a diamond the finger of Gods spirit in all hearts whom it may concerne This Libertie of the Churches of Christ he inlargeth and amplifieth so far that he calls it an usurpation of some Magistrates to determine the time and place of Worship and say that rather the Churches should be left to their inoffensive libertie Upon which Grant I must renew my former Quaerie Whether this be not to walke in c●ntradictions to hold with light yet walke in darknes for How can they say the Magistrate is appointed by God and Christ the Guardian of the Christian Church and Worship bound to set up the true Church Ministrie and Ordinances to see the Church doe her duty that is to force her to it by the Civill sword bound to suppresse the false Church Ministrie and Ordinances and therefore consequently to judge and determine which is the true Church which is the false and what is the duty of the Church officers and members of it and what not and yet say they the Churches must assemble and practice all Ordinances without his consent yea against it Yea and he hath not so much power as to judge what is a convenient time and place for the Churches to assemble in which if he should doe he should be an usurper and should abridge the Church of her inoffensive libertie As if the Master or Governour of a Ship had power to judge who were true and fit officers mariners c. for the managing of the Ship and were bound to see them each performe his duty and to force them thereunto and yet he should be an usurper if hee should abridge them of meeting and managing the vessel at their pleasure when they please and how they please without and against his consent Certainly if a Physician have power to judge the d●sease of his patient and what course of Physicke he must use can he bee counted an usurper unlesse the patient might take what physicke himselfe pleased day or night summer or winter at home in his chamber or abroad in the aire Secondly by their grant in this passage that Gods people may thus assemble and practice ordinances without and against the consent of the Magistrate I●infer then also may they become a Church constitute and gather without or against the consent of the Magistrate Therefore may the Messengers of Christ preach and baptise that is make disciples and wash them into the true profession of Christianity according to the commission though the Magistrate determine and publikly declare such Ministers such baptismes such Churches to be hereticall Thirdly it may here be questioned what power is now given to the Civill Magistrate in Church matters and Spirituall affairs If it be answered that although Gods people may doe thus against the Magistrates consent yet others may not I answer as before who sees not herein partiality to themselves Gods people must enjoy their Liberty of Conscience and not be forced but all the Subjects in a Kingdome or Monarchie or the whole world beside must be compelled by the power of the Civill Sword to assemble thus and thus Secondly I demand who shall judge whether they are Gods people or no for they say whether the Magistrate consent or consent not that is judge so or not they ought to goe on in the Ordinances renuente Magistratu How agrees this with their former and generall assertion that the Civill Magistrate must set up the Christian Church and Worship therefore by their owne grant he must judge the godly themselves he must discerne who are fit matter for the House of God living stones and what unfit matter trash and rubbish Those worthy men the Authours of these positions and others of their judgement have cause to examine their soules with feare and trembling in the presence of God upon this intergatory viz. whether or no this be not the bottome and root of the matter If they could have the same supply of maintenance without the helpe of the Civill Sword or were perswaded to live upon the voluntary contribution of poore Saints or their owne labour as the Lord Iesus and his first Messengers did I say if this lay not in the bottom whether or no they could not be willingly shut of the Civill power and left only to their inoffensive liberties I could also put a sad Quaerie to the consciences of some viz. what should be the reason why in
their native Country where the Magistrate consented not they forbore to practice such Ordinances as now they doe and intended to doe so soone as they got into another place where they might set up Magistrates of their owne and a Civill Sword c. How much is it to be feared that in case their Magistracie should alter or their persons be cast under a Magistracie prohibiting their practice whether they would then maintaine their separate meetings without and against the consent of the Magistrate renuente Magistratu Lastly it may be questioned how it comes to passe that in pleading for the Churches liberty more now under the Christian Magistrate since the Christians tooke that liberty in dangerous times under the Heathen why he quotes to prove such liberty Pharaohs hindring the Israelites from worship and Ezra 7. 23. Artaxerxes his feare of wrath upon the Realme Are not all their hopes and arguments built upon the Christian Magistrate whom say they the first Christians wanted and yet do they scare the Christian Magistrate whom they account the governour of the Church with Pharaoh and Artaxerxes that knew not God expecting that the Christian Magistrate should act and command no more in Gods worship then they But what can those instances of Pharaohs evill in hindring the Israelites worshipping of God and Artaxerxes giving liberty to Israel to worship God and build the Temple what can they prove but a duty in all P●●ces and Civill Magistrates to take off the yoake of bondage which commonly they lay on the necks of the soules of their subjects in matters of Conscience and Religion CHAP. CXXXI Peace IT is plausible but not reasonable that Gods people should considering the drift of these positions expect more liberty under a Christian then under a Heathen Magistrate Have Gods people more liberty to breake the command of a Christian then an Heathen governour and so to set up Christs Church and Ordinances after their owne conscience against his consent more then against the consent of an Heathen or unbeleeving Magistrate what is become of all the great expectation what a Christian Magistrate may and ought to doe in establishing the Church in reforming the Church and in punishing the contrary 'T is true say men in Christs time and in the time of the first Ministers and Churches there were no Christian Magistrates and therefore in that case it was in vaine for Christians to seeke unto the Heathen Magistrates to governe the Church suppresse Hereticks c. but now we enjoy Christian Magistrates c. Truth All Reason and Religion would now expect more submission therefore in matters concerning Christ to a Christian Magistrate then to a Pagan or Antichristian rule●● But deare Peace the day will discover the fire will trie 1 Cor. 3. what is but wood hay and stubble though built in mens upright intention on that foundation Iesus Christ. But to winde up all as it is most true that Magistracy in generall is of God Rom. 13. for the preservation of Mankinde in civill order and peace the World otherwise would bee like the Sea wherein Men● like Fishes would hunt and devoure each other and the greater devour the lesse So also it is true that Magistracy in speciall for the severall kindes of it is of Man 1. Pet. 2. 13. Now what kinde of Magistrate soever the people shall agree to set up whether he receive Christianity before he be set in office or whether he receive Christianity after hee receives no more power of Magistracy then a Magistrate that hath received no Christianity For neither of them both can receive more then the Commonweal the Body of People and civill State as men communicate unto them and betrust with them All lawfull Magistrates in the World both before the comming of Christ Iesus and since excepting those unparaleld typicall Magistrates of the Church of Israel are but Derivatives and Agents immediately derived and employed as eyes and hands serving for the good of the whole Hence they have and can have no more Power then fundamentally lies in the Bodies or Fountaines themselves which Power Might or Authority is not Religious Christian c. but naturall humane and civill And hence it is true that a Christian Captaine Christian Merchant Physitian Lawyer Pilot Father Master and so consequently Magistra●e c. is no more a Captaine Merchant Physitian Lawyer Pilot Father Master Magistrate c. then a Captaine Marchant c. of any other Conscience or Religion T is true Christianity teacheth all these to act in their severall callings to an higher ultimate end from higher principles in a more heavenly and spirituall manner c. CHAP. CXXXII Peace O that thy Light and Brightnes deare Truth might shine to the darke World in this particular let it not therefore be grievous if I request a little further illustration of it Truth In his season God will glorifie himselfe in all his Truths but to gratifie thy desire thus A Pagan or Antichristian Pilot may be as skilfull to carry the Ship to its desired Port as any Christian Mariner or Pilot in the World and may performe that worke with as much safety and speed yet have they not command over the soules and consciences of their passengers or mariners under them although they may justly see to the labour of the one and the civill behaviour of all in the ship A Christian Pilot he performes the same worke as likewise doth the Metaphoricall Pilot in the ship of the Commonweale from a principle of knowledge and experience but more then this he acts from a roote of the feare of God and love to mankind in his whole course Secondly his aime is more to glorifie God then to gaine his pay or make his voyage Thirdly he walkes heavenly with Men and God in a constant observation of Gods hand in stormes calmes c. So th●t the thread of Navigation being equally spun by a believing or unbelieving Pilot yet is it drawn over with the gold of Godlines and Christianitie by a Christian Pilot while he is holy in all manner of Christianitie 1 Pet. 1 15. But lastly the Christian Pilots power over the Soules and consciences of his Sailers and Passengers is not greater then that of the Antichristian otherwise then he can subdue the soules of any by the two-edged sword of the Spirit the Word of God and by his holy demeanour in his place c. Peace I shall present you with no other consideratioon in this first part of the Picture but this only Although the tearme Heathen is most commonly appropriated to the wilde naked Americans c. yet these worthy men justly apply it even to the civilized Romanes c. and consequently must it be applied to the most civilized Antichristians who are not the Church and people of God in Christ. Truth The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Hebrew and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in
Christian fellowship which doubtlesse they could not doe were the Magistrate supreme Governour under Christ in Ecclesiasticall or Church causes and so consequently the true heire and successour of the Apostles CHAP. CXXXVI Peace THe 15. Head runs thus viz. In what cases must Churches proceed with Magistrates in case of offence We like it well that Churches be flower in proceeding to excommunication as of all other so of Civill Magistrates especially in point of their Judiciall proceedings unlesse it be in scandalous breach of a manifest Law of God and that after notorious evidence of the fact and that after due seeking and waiting for satisfaction in a previous Advertisement And though each particular Church in respect of the Government of Christ be independent and absolute within it selfe yet where the Common-weale consists of Church members it may be a point of Christian wisedome to consider and consult with the Court also so far as any thing may seeme doubtfull to them in the Magistrates case which may be further cleered by intelligence given from them but otherwise we dare not leave it in the power of any Church to forbear to proceed agree upon that on Earth which they plainly see Christ hath resolved in his Word and will ratifie in Heaven Truth If the scope of this Head be to qualifie and adorne christian impartialitie and faithfulnes with christian wisdome and tendernesse I honour and applaud such a Christian motion but whereas that case is put which is no where found in the patterne of the first Churches nor suiting with the Rule of Christianitie to wit that the Commonweale should consist of Church members which must be taken privatively to wit that none should be admitted members of the Commonweale but such as are first members of the Church which must necessarily run the Church upon that Temptation to feele the pulse of the Court concerning a delinquent Magistrate before they dare proceed I say let such Practices be brought to the Touchstone of the true frame of a civill commonweale and the the true frame of the Spirituall or Christian commonweale the Church of Christ and it will be seen what wood hay and stubble of carnall policie and humane inventions in Christs matters are put in place of the precious stones gold and silver of the Ordinances of the most High and only wise God CHAP. CXXXVII Peace DEare Truth We are now arrived at their last Head the Title is this viz. Their power in the Liberties and Priviledges of these Churches First all Magistrates ought to be chosen out of Church-members Ezod 18. 21. Deut. 17. 15. Prov. 29. 2. When the Righteous rule the people rejoyce Secondly that all free men elected be only Church-members 1. Because if none but Church members should rule then others should not choose because they may elect others beside Church members 2. From the patterne of Israel where none had power to choose but only Israel or such as were joyned to the people of God 3. If it shall fall out that in the Court consisting of Magistrates and Deputies there be a dissent between them which may hinder the common good that they now returne for ending the same to their first principles which are the Free men and let them be consulted with Truth In this Head are 2 branches First concerning the choice of Magistrates that such ought to be chosen as are Church members for which is quoted Exod. 18. 21. Dut. 17. 15. Proverbs 19. 29. Unto which I answer It were to be wished that since the point is so weighty as concerning the Pilots and Steeresmen of Kingdoms and Nations c. on whose abilitie care and faithfulnesse depends most commonly the peace and safety of the commonweales they fall in I say it were to be wished that they had more fully explained what they intend by this Affirmative viz. Magistrates ought to be chosen out of Church members For if they intend by this Ought to be chosen a necessitie of concenience viz. that for the greater advancement of common utilitie and rejoycing of the people according to the place quoted Prov. 29. 2. it were to be desired prayed for and peaceably endeavored then I readily assent unto them But if by this Ought they intend such a necessitie as those Scriptures quoted imply viz. that people shall sin by choosing such for Magistrates as are not members of Churches as the Israelites should have sinned if they had not according to Iethro's counsell Exod. 18. and according to the command of God Deut. 18. chosen their Iudges and Kings within themselves in Israel then I propose these necessary Quaries First whether those are not lawfull Civill combinations societies and communions of men in Townes Cities States or Kingdoms where no Church of Christ is resident yea where his name was never yet heard of I adde to this that Men of no small note skilfull in the state of the World acknowledge that the World divided into 30 parts 25 of that 30 have never yet heard of the name of Christ If their Civill polities and combinations be not lawfull because they are not Churches and their Magistrates Church members then disorder confusion and all unrighteousnes is lawfull and pleasing to God Secondly whether in such States or Commonweales where a Church or Churches of Christ are resident such persons may not lawfully succeed to the Crown or Government in whome the feare of God according to Iethroes councell cannot be discerned not are brethren of the Church according to Deut. 17. but only are fitted with Civill and Morall abilities to manage the Civill affaires of the Civill State Thirdly since not many Wise and Noble are called but the poores receive the Gospel as God hath chosen the poore of the World to be rich in Faith 1 Cor. 1 Jam. 2. Whether it may not ordinarily come to passe that there may not be found in a true Church of Christ which sometimes consisteth but of few persons persons fit to be either Kings or Governours c. whose civill office is no lesse difficult then the office of a Doctor of Physick a Master or Pilot of a Ship or a Captaine or Commander of a Band or Army of men for which services the children of God may be no wayes qualified though otherwise excellent for the feare of God and the knowledge and Grace of the Lord Iesus 4. If Magistrates ought that is ought only to be chosen out of the Church I demand if they ought not also to be dethroned and deposed when they cease to be of the Church either by voluntary departure from it or by excommunication out of it according to the bloody tenents and practice of some Papists with whom the Protestants according to their principles although they seeme to abhor it doe absolutely agree 5. Therefore lastly I ask if this be not to turne the World upside down to turne the World out of the World to pluck up the
l. 22. his perilous soule p. 43. l. 20. r. or l. ult Answeres p. 44. l. 2● b● closer p. 49. l. 1. last p 57. l. 22. cut l. 24. l ●●rme that Justice p. 58. l. 5. the lying p 98. l. 6. road or doe these p. 114. l. 29. r the 31 question p. 119 l. 10. remembers p. 139. l. 9. immunitie p. 161. l. 28. or Christ. p. 214. l. 36. delt shall p. 225. l. 19. the Churches of God 225. l. 25. not might not The famous saying of a late King of Bohemia Essay of Religion It is rarely seen that ever persons were pers●●●ed for their 〈…〉 3. Reas. Truth and Peace rarely and seldom meet a great complaints of Peace Persecutors seldom plead Christ but Moses for their Author Strife distinguished 1. Ungodly strife 2. Godly strife A threefold dolefull cry Christs worship is his bed Cant. 1. 16. False worship therefore is a false bed The cry of the soules under the Altar A cry of the whole earth The wonderfull providēce of God in the writing of the Arguments against persecution in Milke The Answer writ in Bloud The first distinctiō discussed Desinition of persecution discussed Conscience will not be restrained from its own worship nor constrained to another A chaste soule in Gods worship like a chast wife The second distinction discussed● Gods people may erre from the very fundamentals of visible worship 4 sorts of spirituall Foundations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sixe Foundations of the Christian Religion or Worship Comming out of Babell not locall but mysticall The great Ignorance of Gods people concerning the Nature of the true Church Mr. Cotton all the Halfe Seperates halting between true fals Churches and consequently not yet clear in the fundamentall matter of a Christiā Church The true Ministrie a Fundamentall The New English Ministers examined Common Prayer cast off written against by the New-English Gods people have worshipped God with false worships It pleaseth God sometimes beyond his promise to convey blessings comfort to His in false worships Fundamentals of Christian worship not so easie and cleare A notable speech of K. Iames to a great non-conformist turned persecuter The 4. distinctiō discussed What civill peace is Gods people must be Nonconformitants to Evill The difference between Spirituall and Civill Peace The difference between the Spirituall and Civill State The Civil State the Spirituall estate and the Church of Christ distinct in Ephesus The Answerer too obscure in generalls Gods meekest servants use to be counted arrogant and impetuous 6 cases wherein Gods people have been bold zealous yet not arrogant Christ Jesus and his Disciples teach publikely a new Doctrine fundamentally different from the Religion professed Gods servants zealous and bold to the faces of the Highest Gods people constantly immoveable to death Gods people ever maintained Christ Jesus the only Lord and King to the conscience That Christ is King alone over conscience is the sum of all true preaching Gods people have see men the disturbers of Civill State Gods word and people the occasion of tumults The instances proposed carry a great shew of impe●●ousnesse yet all are pure and peaceable The true cause of tumults at the preaching of the Word A preposterous way of suppressing errours Light only can expell fogs and darknesse Persecutors oppresse both true and erroneous consciences All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him What is meant by Hereticke in Titus The word Hereticke generally mistaken Checks of conscience What is the first second admonition What the rejecting of the Heretick was Corporall killing in the Law typing out Spirituall killing by Excommunication in the Gospell The third Conclusiō discussed Sathans policie The Answerer granteth a Toleration Patience to be used toward the opposite The cariage of a Soule sensible of mercy toward other sinners in their blindnesse and opposition The Answerer cōfounds the Churches in Philippi and Rome with the Cities Philippi and Rome Difference between 〈◊〉 the Church and the World The Church and Civill Scare confusedly made all one Persecutors have forgotten the blessednesse promised to the mercifull Math. 5. What persons are guilty of breach of civil peace The most peaceable wrongfully accused of peace-breaking The examination of what is meant by the Tares and the command of the L. Jesus to let them alone The Answerers fallacious exposition that Tares signifie either Persons Doctrines or Practices The Answerer ba●ely affirming a most strange interpretation Sathans subtlet●e about the opening of Scripture Toleration in Rom. 14. considered Toleratiō of Jew●sh ceremonies for a time upon some grounds in the Jew●sh Church proves not toleration of Popish and Anti christian Ceremonies in the Christian Church although in the State Tares proved not to signifie hypocrites Hence were the witnesses of Christ 〈◊〉 and others in H. 4. his reigne called Lo●lards as some say from 〈◊〉 weeds known well enough hen●e taken for signe of barrenesse Ius●lix 〈◊〉 sterll●● do●●●an●u● a v●●a others conceive they were so called from one Lolla●d c. but all Papis●s accounted them as Tares because of their profession * The false and counterfeit Christians appeare as soon as the true and faithfull Hypocriticall Christians The Tares cannot signifie Hypocrites Two sorts of Hypoc●ites 1. In the Church as Iudas St. ●o● M●g●● and these must be to le●ated untill discovered and no longer 2. Hypocrites in the world which a●e false Christians ●a●●e Churches these the Lord Iesus wi● have let alone unto Harvest The Field by most generally but falsely interpreted the Church The Lord Iesus the great teacher by Parables and the only expounder of them The scope of the Parable Fou●e sorts of ground or hearers of the word in the world and but one properly in the Church the rest seldome come or acciden●ally to hear the word in the Church which word ought to be ●itted for the feed●ng of the Church or flocke preaching for conversion is properly out of the Church The scope of the Parable of the Tares The Lord Iesus in this ●arable of the Ta●es gives direction and consolation to His servants The Tares proved properly to signifie Antichristians Math. 8. 12 Mat. 21. 43 Gods kingdome on Earth the visible Church The difference between the Wheat the Tares as also between these Tares and all other Civill Magistracie from the beginning of the World Offenders against the Civill lawes not to be perpetually tolerated Nor offenders in the Church of Christ Jesus to be su●●red The great Reapers are the Angels The Tares to be tolerated the longest of any sinners The danger of infection by these tares assoyled Lamentable experience hath proved this true of late in Europe and lamentably true in the sl●ughter of some hundred thousands of the English The great dreadfull Harvest The charge of Christ Jesus Let alone the Tares was not spoken to Magistrates Ministers of the civill state but to
Permission of the Tares in the field of the world for a twofold good 1 Of the good Whe●e 2 Of the whole world ●he field it selfe Seducing teachers either Pagan Jewish or Antichristian may yet be obedient subjects to the Civill lawes Scandalous livers against the Civill state who they are Toleration Rev. 2. 14. 20. examined Christ Ministers Churches have power sufficient from Christ to suppresse Balaam and Iesabel seducing to false worship The Christian world hath swallowed up Christianity The second head of Reasons against such persecution viz. the profession of famous Princes K. James Steven of Poland and K. of Bohemia Isa. 40 6. 2 Pet. 2. Mr. Cottons unequall dealing with Princes The Answerer a knowledgeth a necessi●y of some tol●ration Christ Jesus the deepest politician that ever was and yet he commands a toleration of Antichristians The Princes of the world seldome take put with Christ. Princes not persecuting are very rare Buchanans Item to King Iames. King Iames his sayings against persecution King Steven of Poland his speech against Persecution Forcing of Conscience is a Soule rape Persecution for conscience the Launcet that letteth blood Kings Kingdomes All spirituall Whores are bloody The Godly somotimes evill actors and the Ungodly good actors Poligamie or the many wives of the Fathers Davids advancing of Gods Worship against Gods Order Constantine and the good Emperours are confest to have done more hurt to the name and crown of the Lord Jesus then the persecuting Neroes c. The Garden of the Church and Field of the World made all one by Antichrististianisme The language of Persecuters the wolves and hunters of the World Christs Lilies may flourish in his Church notwithstanding the abundance of weeds in the world permitted The persecution of Queen Elizabeth and King Iames compared together In his opening of the 7. Viols in print Mr. Cotton confesseth that Queen Elizabeth her persecuting the Papists had almost ruined the English Nation The Wars betweene the Papists and the Protestants Eventus omnis 〈…〉 The wars and successe of the Walden●●an witnesses against three Popes and their popish Armies Gods people victorious overcommers and with what weapons The third head of Arguments from ancient and later writers The Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted Persecuting 〈◊〉 cannot be Christs Churches The nature of excommunication What persecution or hunting is Christs Spouse no●ser ●tcher or fighter Who cannot be won by the Word must not be compelled by the Sword Constraine upon Consciences in Old and New England Tertullian his speech discussed The Indians of New England permitted by the English not only to continue ●n their unbele●f which they can●●●●ure but also in their f●lse worsh●p which they might by the civil sworrestraine In a cases a false Religion will not hurt the true Church or the State The seducing or infecting of others discussed The Answerer trus●eth not to the sword of the Spirit only in Spirituall causes The absolute sufficiencie of the sword of the Spirit The Church of Christ to be kept pure A Nationall Church not inst●●●t●d by Christ Jesus The nationall Church of the Jewes 1 Sam. 13. Man hath no power to m●ke lawes to binde conscience Desperate consequences unavoidable Luthers testimony in this case discussed Mr. Cottons positions evidently proved contradictory to themselves Hearing of the Word of God in a Church estate a part of Gods worship Papists plea for toleration of conscience The Protestants partiall in the case of persecution A false balance in Gods matters abominable to God Sheep cannot h●nt no not the wolves Pills to purge out the spi●it of persecution Superstition persecution have had many votes from Gods owne people Austins saying for persecution examined Soul-killing Punishments provided by Christ Jesus against Soule-killers and Soule-wounders Men dead in Sin cannot be Soule kill'd A Nationall enforced Religion or a Civill War for Religion the two great preventers of soule conversion and life Soule killers prove by the grace of Christ Soule savers Optatus examined Persecuters leave Christ flie to Moses for their practice Phineas his act discussed Elia●s slaughters examined Eliahs consuming the 2 Capta●nes and their companies by ●i●e discussed Dangerous consequences flowing from the Civill Magistrates judging in Spirituall causes The World turned upside down The wonderfull answer of the Ministers of the Church of New England to the Ministers of the Church of Old England L●mentable differences even amongst them that ●ear God Betweene the Presbyterians and Independants Covenanters and Noncovenanters of both which many are truly godly in their persons The doctrine of persecution nec●ss●r●ly and most commonly falls 〈◊〉 vi●st upon he ●●ost godly persons The doctrine of persecution drives the most godly persons out of the world The bloody Tenent Warres for Conscience The blessed Magna Charta A strange Modell of a Church and Common-weale after the M●s●call and Jewish pattern Mat. 16. 19. with ●oh 20. 23. Rom. 13. 1. Mat. 10. 18. T it 3. 1. Acts 15. 20. Isa. 49. 2● Gal. 3. ●8 Christs power in his Church confest to be above all Magistrates in 〈◊〉 all things Isa. 49. 23. lamentably wrested The first head examined John 18. 36. J●r 29. 7. Ezta 7. 23. Rom. 1. 2. 3. Tim. 2. 2. The Civill Commonweal and the Spirituall Commonweale the Church not inconsistent though independent the one on the other Christs Ordinances put upon a whole City or Nation may more civilize and moralize but ●ever Christianize them The second head concerning superiority of each power Rom. 13. 1. 5. 6 Isa. 49. 23. Isa. 49. 23. Luc. 12. 14. Joh. 8. 11. And that judicium of the church in law suits 1 Cor. 62 is only arbitrarium not coasti●●m Ans. Truth A contradiction to make the Magistrate supreme judge in spirituall causes and yet to have no spirituall power The Civill Magistrate confest to have no Civill power over the soules of men Nor spirituall The Magistrate and the Church by the Authors grounds at one and the same time in one and the same cause made the Judges on the B●●●h and D●●●quents ●●●th B●●re An illustration demonstrat●ng th●● the C●vill Mag●st●at● c●nnot h●ve power over the Church 〈◊〉 spiritu●ll or Church causes The punishments Civill which the Magistrate insticts upon the Church for Civill crimes lawfull and necessary The true way of the God of Peace in differen●es between the Church the Magistrate Ch●mer de Ec. l●s p. 376. Park part polit lib. 1. cap. 1 The G●rden of the Church and the Wildernesse of the World ma●e all one The Commonweale more charged by these Authors with the W●●sh●p and Ordinances then the Church The authors of these Position● never yet s●w a true d●fference betweene ●he Church of Ch●●●t ●nd the world in po●●t of worsh●p 1 Tim 2. 1. discuss●d The word honesty in this place of Timothy cannot signifie here the honesty or righteousnesse of the second Table The scope of Gods Spirit in this place of
Timothy Gods people must pray for and endeavour the peace of the State they live in Although Pagan or Pop●sh Forcing of men to godlinesse or Gods worship the greatest cause of breach of Civill peace The Roman Caesars described Not appointed by Christ Jesus keepers and guardians of his Church It pleased not the Lord Jesus in the first institution of his Church to furnish himselfe with any such Civill Governours as unto whom hee might commit the care of his worship The true Keepers which Christ Jesus appointed of his O●dinances and Worship The Kings of the Assyrians c. not charged with Gods worship as the Kings of Judah in that Nationall and typicall church Constantine Theodosius c. mis●●formed Masters of families under the Gospel not charged to force all under him from their owne consciences to his If the charge of Gods worship was left with the Romane Emperour then was he bound to turne the whole world into the Garden Flock and Spouse of Christ. Millions put to death Christ never sent any of his Ministers or Servants to the Civil Magistrate for help in spirituall matters Christ Jesus hath left power in his Church to preserve her selfe pure though in an idolatrous Countrey Gods people have used to shine in brightest godlinesse when they have enjoyed least quietnes Few M●gistrates few men spiritually and christianly good Yet divers sorts of goodnesse n●turall artificiall ci●vill c. The Civill Goodnes of Cine● Kingdomes Subj●cts M●gistrates must be owned although Spirituall goodnes proper to the Christian State or Church be wanting Civill power originally and fundamentally in the people Mr. Cotton and the New-English Ministers give the Government of Christs Church or Spouse into the hands of the people or Common-weale The very Indian Americans made Governours of the Church by the Authors of these Positions Many Civill States in flourishing peace and quiet where ●he Lord Jesus is not ●ounded Lawes concerning Religion either Religious o● Civill The very Indians abhor to disturbe any Conscience at Worship Canons and Constitutions p●etended Civill but indeed Ecclesiasticall Laws meerely concerning spirituall things must needs be spirituall The Authors large confession of the liberty of conscience from the Laws of Civill authority in spirituall cases Civill Magistrates confessed not to have power to urg the conscience in indifferent things A threefold guilt●ly●ng upon Civil powers commanding the subjects 〈◊〉 worship Persons may 〈◊〉 sin 〈◊〉 to many whom t●●y 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to worship where they cannot beleeve Gods Israel des●o●s of Saul●arme of flesh The 7 headed Beast and the Lambe differ in their weapons Naboths case typicall Civill Powers abused as a Guard about the Bed of Spirituall whoredomes ●zra 7. 23. discussed Gods people not subject to ●he Kings of Babell or Per●● in Spirituals Tyrants hearts sometimes wonderfully mo●●ified towards Gods people Nabuchadnezzar D●ri●us and A●ta ●erxes th●ir decrees examined Ezra's thanksgiving for the Kings decree examined The duty of all Civill States toward the Consciences of their Subjects Christ needs no humane confirmations The sum of the Examples of Gentile Kings decreeing for Gods Worship in Scripture The Law of putting to death blasphe●● of Christ cuts off I hopes from the Jewes of part ki●g in his blou● The dir●full effects of sighting for conscience E●lour is confident as well as Truth Gods people as well as others will be found obstinate in fundamentall errors in which sufferings and persecution doth harden Strong delusions Spirituall prisons Christ Jesus appointed no materiall prisons for Blasphemers of him c. The Bishops prisons Like mother like daughter Conscience not so easily healed and cared Wounding instead of healing of Consciences Christs Spouse able and willing to be ●e wounded cons●●●nces A persecuting Church disputes with an Heretick as a Cat with the Mouse and with a true Witnes as a Lyon with a Limbe in his paw Persecutours endure not so to be called Psal. 101. 8. concerning the cutting off the wicked examined No Land of Canaan nor holy City now No difference of Lands and Cities since the comming as was before the comming of the Lord Jesus The bloudy interpretation of Psal. 101. The New Engl●sh seperate in America but not in Europe The New Eng●ish permit not their brethren of Old England to enjoy their consciences left th●ir owne numbers might exceed their owne or at least the greatnesse of their owne Assemblies maintenances decrease Christ Jesus never appointed all Religions but his owne to be cut off by the Civill Sword A bloudy mother Christ Spirituall power most powerfull Christ forbidding his followers to permit leaven in the Church doth not for●bid to permit leaven in the World The Wall Cant. 8. 9. discussed A spirituall wall cannot properly impaire the civil Many flourishing Civill States where true Churches are not found Hearing discussed Every Religion prefers its owne Priests and Ministers before all other Jonahs preaching to the Ninevites and their hearing of his message examined Eglon his rising up to Ehuds message examined A two fold Ministry of Christ converting and feeding Paul never used any civill compulsion The New English forcing their subjects to church all their daies and yet forcing them not to any Religion as they say they force the people then to be of no religion all their dayes The Civill State can no more lawfully compell the Consciences of men to Church to heare the Word then to receive the Sacraments In the first patterne there is a converting Ministrie to gather the Church or Flo●k of Christ. No president of any people in the Gospell converting gathering themselves without some Messenger sent from the Lord to effect those ends Professed publique conversion is not onely from sinnes against the second Table in personall Repentance but from false worship also A true Ministery necessary before conversion and therefore before the Church in the first patterne The true way of the M●●●st●y sent with that commission Ma●●h 28. discussed The Civill Magistrate not betrusted with gathering of Churches If the Magistrate then much more the people of the world from whom the Magistrates receive their power Iehosaphat 2 Chron. 17. a figure of Christ Jesus in his Church not of the Civill Magistrate in the State Gal. 6. 6. Concerning the maintenance of the Ministry examined Christ Jesus never appointed a maintenance of his Ministers from the unconverted and unbeleeving They that compell men to heare compell men also to pay for their hearing and conversion Two sorts of compulsion Morall and Civill Compulsion The Ministers of Christ Jesus compell with no other sword then that of Christs mouth the sword of the Spirit with two edges The maintenance of the Ministry spirituall Naturall men can neither truly worship nor maintain it Rebels not subdued by compliance but resistance The nationall Church of the Jewes might well be forced to a settled maintenance of their priests but not so the Christian Church The Civill Sword of the Nationall Church of the Jewes could not