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A76157 Confirmation and restauration the necessary means of reformation, and reconciliation; for the healing of the corruptions and divisions of the churches: submissively, but earnestly tendered to the consideration of the soveraigne powers, magistrates, ministers, and people, that they may awake, and be up and doing in the execution of so much, as appeareth to be necessary as they are true to Christ, his Church and Gospel, and to their own and others souls, and to the peace and wellfare of the nations; and as they will answer the neglect to Christ, at their peril. / By Richard Baxter, an unworthy minister of Christ, that longeth to see the healing of the churches. Baxter, Richard, 1615-1691. 1658 (1658) Wing B1232; Thomason E2111_1; ESTC R209487 172,368 411

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Baptism was an Actuall Profession 9. The constant Practice of the Universal Church hath given us by infallible Tradition as full assurance of the order of Baptism and in particular of an Exprss Profession and Covenant then made as of any point that by the hands of the Church can be received by us 10. And it was in those daies a more notorious Profession to be so Baptized and to joyn in the holy Assemblies then now it is When the Profession of Christianity did hazard mens liberties estates and lives to be openly then Baptized upon Covenanting with God the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost and openly joyn with a hated persecuted sort of men was an eminent sort of Profession It being also usually Private in houses as separated from the main body of the people and not in publike places like ours where men are justly driven to come as leaners for instruction Moreover it 's said of all that were Baptized being then at Age that they first Believed And how could the Baptizers know that they believed but by their Profession Yea it 's said of Simon Magus that he Believed and was Baptized which though he might really have some historical Faith yet implyeth that he openly Professed more then he indeed had or else he had scarce been Baptized Which hath caused Interpreters to judge that by Faith is meant a Profession of Faith And if so then sure a Profession was still Necessary Yea Christ in his Commission directeth his Apostles to make Disciples and then Baptize them promising that he that believeth and is Baptized shall be saved And who can tell whether a man be a Disciple a Believer or an Infidel but by his Profession How was it known but by their Profession that the Samaritans Believed Philip preaching the things concerning the Kingdom of God and the Name of Jesus Christ before they were Baptized both men and women Act. 8. 12. Philip caused the Eunuch to profess before he would Baptise him that he believed that Jesus Christ is the Sonne of God which upon his teaching the rest did import the rest if it were not more fully as is likest Professed Act. 8 37 38. Saul had more then a bare Profession before Baptism Acts 9. 5 15 17. Cornelius and his company had a Profession and more for they had the Holy Ghost powred on them speaking with tongues and magnifying God that use of the gift of tongues imparting more then the gift it self Acts 10. 46. Yea the Spirit bid Peter Go and not doubt Acts 11. 12 And it was such a gift of the Spirit as caused the Apostles to conclude that God had granted the Gentiles Repentance unto life Acts 11. 18. How was it known but by their Profession Acts 11. 21. That that great number Believed and turned to the Lord And the Grace of God was such as Barnabas saw vers 23. And when Saul after his Baptism assayed to joyn himself to the Disciples at Jerusalem they so suspected him that they would not receive him till Barnabas took him and brought him to the Apostles and declared to them how God had dealt with him and how boldly at Damascus he had preached in the Name of Jesus which shews that they admitted not men to their Communion till their Profession seemed Credible to them For no doubt but Saul told them himself that he was a Believer before he was put to make use of the testimony of Barnabas The Converted Gentiles Acts 13. 48. shewed their Belief and gladness and openly glorified the Word of the Lord. How but by a Profession did it come to pass that the great multitude at Iconium both Jews and Greeks were known to be Believers Acts 14. 1. The same I may say of the Jaylour Acts 16. Who by works as well as words declared his Conversion And the Bereans Acts 17. 12. And the Athenians Acts 17. 34. And Crispus with the Corinthians Acts 18. 8. Acts 19. 18. The believing Ephesians Confessed and shewed their deeds and many of them burnt as many of their Books of ill Arts as came to fifty thousand pieces of silver In a word it is the standing Rule that If thou confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in thy heart that God raised him from the dead thou shalt be saved For with the heart man believeth unto Righteousnes and with the mouth Confession is made unto Salvation He that bids us Receive him that is weak in the Faith but not to doubtfull disputations implieth that we must not receive them that Profess not at least a weak Faith Heb. 5. 6. 1 2 3. Shew that the Principles of the Doctrine of Christ were first laid as the Foundation before Baptism And who received those Principles could not be known but by a Profession To this let me adde that Poenitentiam age●e was judged by the Ancient Doctours the Repentance that was prerequisite to Baptism and that is A manifested professed Repentance Gods order is to the Adult first to send Preachers to proclaim the Gospel and when by that men are brought so farre as to Profess or manifest that their cies are opened and that they are turned from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God then must they be Baptized for the Remission of their sinnes and to receive the Inheritance among the Sanctified by Faith in Christ Acts 26. 17. 18. As their sinnes are not forgiven them till they are Converted Mark 4. 12. So they must not be Baptised for the forgiveness of sinnes till they Profess themselves Converted Seeing to the Church non esse non apparere is all one Repentance towards God and Faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ is the summe of that Preaching that maketh Disciples Acts 20. 21. And therefore both these must by Profession seem to be received before any at age are Baptized If as many as are Baptized into Christ are Baptized into his death and are buried with him by Baptism into his death that like as Christ was raised from the dead so we also should walk in Newness of life Rom. 6. 4 5. Then no doubt but such as were to be Baptized did first Pro●ess this mortification and a consent to be buried and revived with Christ and to live to him in Newness of life For Paul was never so much for the Opus operatum above the Papsts as to think that the Baptizing of an Infidel might effect these high and excellent things And he that Professeth not Faith nor ever did is to the Church an Infidel In our Baptism we put off the body of the sinnes of the flesh by the Circumcision of Christ being buried with him and rising with him through Faith quickned with him and having all our trespasses forgiven Col. 3. 11 12 13. And will any man yea will Paul ascribe all this to those that did not so much as Profess the things signified or the necessary Condition Will Baptism in the judgment of a wise man do all this for
whether some of them have but lower Priviledges is not here to be determined but in a fitter place And therefore I determine not what Priviledges they are that will cease if our Infant Title cease But that according to the tenour of the Promise the Continuance of them with the Addition of the Priviledges proper to the Adult are all laid upon a New Condition 4. Note also that when I call it another or different Condition I mean not that it is different in the Nature of the Act but in the Agent or Subject It is the same kind of Faith which at first is required in the Parent for the Childs behoof and that afterward is required in our selves But the Condition of the Infants Title is but this that he be the Child of a Believer Dedicated to God But the Condition of the Title of persons at Age is that they be themselves Believers that have Dedicated themselves to God The Faith of the Parent is the Condition of Infant Title and the Faith of the person himself is the Condition of the Title of one at Age. That their own Faith is not the Condition of an Infants Title I think I need not prove For 1. They are uncapable of Believing without a Miracle 2. If they were not as some Lutherans fondly think yet it 's certain that we are uncapable of discerning by such a sign I think no Minister that I know will judge what Infants do themselves believe that he may baptise them 3. And I think no man that looks on the Command or Promise and the Person of an Infant will judge that he is either Commanded then to believe or that his Believing is made the Condition of his Infant Title But that a Personal Believing is the Condition of the Title of them at Age is as farre past doubt and it 's proved thus Arg. 1. The Promise it self doth expresly require a Faith of our own of all the Adult that will have part in the Priviledges therefore it is a Faith of our Own that is the Condition of our Title Mark 16 16. He that Believeth and is Baptized shall be saved and he that Believeth not shall be damned Act. 8. 36 37. And the Eunuch said See here is water what doth hinder me to be baptized And Philip said If thou believest with all thy heart thou maist Act. 2. 38 41. Repent and be baptized every one of you in the Name of Jesus Christ for the Remission of sinnes c. Then they that gladly received his word were baptized Act. 10. 44 47 48. Act. 16. 14 15. 30. 32 33. Rom. 10. 12 13 14. With many other Texts do put this out of doubt Argument 2. We were engaged in our Infant baptismal Covenant to Believe and Repent when we came to Age as a means to our reception of the Benefits of the Covenant proper to the Adult therefore we must perform our Covenant and use this means if we will have the benefits Arg. 3. If another Condition were not of Necessity to the Aged beside the Condition that was necessary to them in Infancy then Turks Jews and Heathens should have right to Church-membership and Priviledges of the Adult But the Consequent is notoriously false therefore so is the Antecedent The Reason of the Consequent is evident Because a man that hath believing Parents may turn Turk as is known in thousands of Janizaries or Jew or Pagan and therefore if it were enough that he was the Child of a Believer his Title to Church Priviledges would still continue And so among professed Christians the Child of a Believer may turn Heretick or notoriously prophane and scandalous and yet have Title to Church Priviledges if his first Title still hold and a personal Faith be not a necessary Condition of his Right Adde to these the many Arguments tending to confirm the point in hand which I have laid down on another occasion in my D●sputations of Right to Sacraments But I think I need not spend more words to perswade any Christians that our Parents Faith will not serve to give us Title to the Church Priviledges of the Adult but we lose our Right even to Church-membership it self if when we come to Age we adde not a personal Faith or profession at least of our own I only adde that this is a truth so farre past doubt that even the Papists and the Greekshave put it into their Canons For the former you may find it in the Decrees Part. 3. dist 3. pag. mihi 1241 cited out of Augustinin these words Parvulus qui baptizatur fi●ad anne●s rationales veniens non crediderit nec ab illicitis abstinuerit nihil ei prodest quod parvulus accepit That is An Infant that is baptized if comming to years of discretion he do not believe nor abstain from things unlawfull that which he received in Infancy doth profit him nothing And for the Greeks that this is according to their mind you may see in Zonaras in Comment in Epist Canon Can. 45. cited ex Basilii Mag. Epist 2. ad Amphiloch thus Siquis acc●pto nomine Christianismi Christum contumeliâ afficit nulla est illi appellationis utilitas that is If any one having received the Name of Christianity shall repreach Christ he hath no profit by the Name On which Zonaras addeth Qui Christo credidit Christianus appellatus est cum ex Divinis praecept is vitam instituere oportet ut hac ratione Deus per ipsum glorificetur quemadmodum illis verbis praecipitur sic luceat Lux vestra coram hominibus c. Siquis autem nominatur quidem Christianus De● vero praecepta transgreditur contumeliam irregat Christo cujus de nomine appellatur nec quicquam ex eâ appellatione utilitatis trahit That is Seeing he believed in Christ and is called a Christian ought to order his life by the Commandements of God that so God may be glorified by him according to that Let your light so shine before men c. If any one that is called a Christian shall transgress Gods Commands he brings a reproach on Christ by whose name he is called and he shall not receive the least profit by that Title or Name This is somewhat higher then the point needs that I bring it for And indeed it were a strange thing if all other Infidels should be shut out of the Priviledges of the Church except only the treacherous Covenant-breaking Infidel for such are all that being baptized in Infancy prove no Christians when they come to Age. As if persidiousness would give him right Prop. 5. As a Personal Faith is the Condition before God of Title to the Priviledges of the Adult so the Profession of this Faith is the Condition of his Right before the Church and without this Profession he is not to be taken as an Adult member nor admitted to the Priviledges of such THis Proposition also as the Sunne revealeth its self by its own light and therefore commandeth
me to say but little for the Confirmation of it Arg. 1. The Church cannot judge of things unknown Non entium non apparentium eadem est ratio Not to appear and not to be is all one as to the judgment of the Church We are not searchers of the heart and therefore we must judge by the discoveries of the heart by outward signes Arg. 2. If Profession of Faith were not necessary Coram Ecclesiâ to mens Church-membership and Priviledges then Infidels and Heathens would have Right as was said in the former case and also the Church and the world would be confounded and the Church would be no Church But these are consequents that I hope no Christians will have a favourable thought of and therefore they should reject the Antecedent Arg. 3. It is a granted case among all Christians that Profession is thus necessary the Apostles and Ancient Churches admitted none without it nor no more must we Though all require not the same manner of Profession yet that Profession it self is the least that can be required of any man that layeth claim to Church Priviledges and Ordinances proper to Adult members this we are all agreed in and therefore I need not adde more proof where I find no Controversie But yet as commonly as we are agreed on this yet because it is the very point which most of the stress of our present Disputation lieth on it may not be amiss to foresee what may possibly be Objected by any new comers hereafter Object Perhaps some may say 1. That we find no mention of Professions required in Scripture 2. It is not probable that Peter received a Profession from those thousands whom he so suddenly Baptized 3 Our Churches have been true Churches without such a Profession personally and distinctly made therefore it may be so still To these briefly yet satisfactorily 1. The Scripture gives us abundant proof that a plain Profession was made in those times by such as were baptized at Age and so admitted by reason of their ripeness and capacity into the Church and to the speciall Communion and Priviledges of the Adult at once To say much of the times of the old Testament or before Christ would be but to interrupt you with less pertinent things Yet there it is apparent that all the people were solemnly engaged in Covenant with God by Moses more then once and that this was renewed by Joshua and other godly Princes and that Asa made the people not only enter into a Covenant to seek the Lord God of their fathers with all their hearts and with all their Soul But that whosoever would not seek him should be put to death whether smal or great man or woman And they sware to the Lord with a loud voice and with shoutings and with trumpets and with cornets 2 Chron. 15. 12 13 14. So following Princes called the people to this open Covenanting But this is not all To take the Lord only to be their God with the rest of the Law was the very essence of an Isarelites Religion which they did not only openly Profess but excessively sometimes glory in As Circumcision sealed the Covenant and therefore supposed the Covenant to Infants and aged whoever were circumcised so had they many sorts of Sacrifice and other worship in which they all were openly to profess the same Religion and Covenant Many Purifications also and Sanctifyings of the people they had and many figures of the Covenant I am the Lord thy God c. Thou shalt have no other Gods before me c. was the tenour of the Covenant which every Israelite expressly and by frequent acts professed to consent to The Law is called a Covenant which all were to own and avouch the Lord to be their God and themselves his people See Deut. 26. 17 18. chap. 29. 10 11 14 c. 2 King 23. 3. 2 Chron. 23. 3 16. chap. 29. 10. Ezr. 10. 3. Neh. 9. 38. Psal 50. 5. Ezek. 20. 37. Jer. 50. 5. Isa 56. 4 5. Exod. 34. 27. Psal 103. 18. 25. 10. 18. 10 c. And yet I hope no Chhistian would wish that we should deal no more openly and clearly with God the Church and our selves in daies of Gospel Light and worship then the Jews were to do in their darker state under obscure Types and shadows We find that when John Baptist set up his Ministry he caused the people to Cenfess their sinnes Matth. 3. 6. And if we confess our sinnes God is faithfull and just to forgive us our sinnes 1 Joh. 1. 19. And whereas some say that John Baptized them that he calleth a Generation of Vipers I Answer 1. We will believe that when they prove it It seems rather that he put them back 2. If he did Baptize them it was not till they Confessed their sinnes before that all did and it seems by his charge till they promised to bring forth fruits meet for Repentance Matth. 3. 8. Christ would not have so instructed Nicodemus in the Nature and necessity of Regeneration before he was a Disciple if a Professed or Apparent preparation had not been necessary Nor would he ordinarily have taught men the Necessity of denying themselves and forsaking all for a treasure in Heaven with such like if they would be his Disciples if the Profession of so doing had not been Necessary to their visible Discipleship I grant that so full a Profession was not made before Christs Resurrection as after For many Articles of our Belief were afterward made Necessary And the Apostles themselves were unacquainted with what the weakest Christian did afterwards believe But still the Essentials of Faith then Necessary in existence to mens Justification were Necessary in Profession ●● mens visible Christianity or Church-membership As to those Acts. 2. 37. c. It is plain that they made an open Profession if you Consider 1. That they were openly told the Doctrine which they must be baptized into if they did consent 2. It is said They that gladly received that word were baptized 3. It is certain therefore that they first testified their glad reception of the Word 4. We may not imagine that Peter was God or knew the hearts of all those thousands and therefore he must know it by their Profession that they gladly received the Word 5. Their own mouths cry out for advice in order to their Salvation 6. It had been absurd for the Apostles to attempt to baptize men that had not first professed their Consent 7. The Scripture gives us not the full historical Narration of all that was said and done in such Cases but of so much as was Necessary 8. The Institution and Nature of the Ordinance tells us that Baptism could not be administred without a Profession to the Adult For they were to be Baptzed into the Name of Father Sonne and Holy Ghost and therefore were to profess that they believed in Father Sonne and Holy Ghost Yea the very receiving of
a point as the Covenant that men make with Christ We have wares that deserve the light and need not a dark shop We have a Master that we need not be affraid or ashamed explicitly and publickly to confess It beseemes not so high and honourable a Profession as that of a Christian to be lapt up in obscurity Such a Glorious state as Sonneship to God to be an Heir of Heaven c. should be entered into with great solemnity and owned accordingly at our first rationall acceptance and acknowledgment Kings are Crowned more solemnly then poor men take possession of their cottages Christ will be ashamed of them before the Angels that are ashamed of him before men and will confess them before his Father that confess him before men Christianity is not a game to be plaid under board Why then should any be against an open Professing and Covenanting with Christ If it be needfull that we Covenant certainly the plainest and most explicite Covenanting is the best And what will be his portion that hath a male in his flock and offereth the worst yea the halt and blind to God Let us therefore deal as openly and plainly and understandingly in the Covenant of God as we can and not contrive it in the greatest darkness that is consistent with the Essence of a Church Nay let us not tempt men to unchurch us or separate from us by leaving our cause to such Arguments as this such a man sitteth among other hearers in the Congregation therefore he maketh a Profession of the Christian Faith lest they think it followeth not therefore he seemeth to understand the Christian Faith much less he Professeth it especially when it 's known that so many understand it not and that the Papists in their writings maintain it lawfull for them to be present at our Assemblies and Infidels tell us that they can hear any man and do come thither Nehemiah caused the Jewsto subscribe the Covenant and seal it c. 9 v 38. Even under the Law it was the character of visible Saints to make a Covenant with God by Sacrifice Psal 50. 5. At least now God hath caused us to pass under the Rod. Let us yield to be brought under the bond of the Covenant Ezek. 20. 37. And let us as weeping Israel and Judah Seek the Lord our God and ask the way to Zion with our faces thitherward saying come and let us joyne our selves to the Lord in a perpetual Covenant that shall not be forgotten Jer. 50 4 5. Let us take hold of his Covenant and choose the things that please him that he may bring us into his holy Mountain and make us joyfull in his house of Prayer and our Sacrifices may be accepted on his Altar Isa 56. 4 6 7. Are not these the daies of which it is said Isa 44. 3 4 5. I will poure water on him that is thirsty and floods upon the dry ground I will poure my Spirit on thy seed and my blessing on thine offspring and they shall spring as among the grass as willows by the water courses One shall say I am the Lords and another shall call himself by the name of Jacob and another shall subscribe with his hand unto the Lord and surname himself by the name of Israel I would have as little Covenanting for doubtfull or needless or mutable things in Church or State as is possible but in the great things of our Salvation even the Essence of Christianity we cannot be bound too fast nor deal too understandingly and openly with God Prop. 6. It is not every kind of Profession that is the Condition or necessary qualification of those that are to be admitted to the Priviledges of Adult members but such a Profession as God hath made necessaery by his express Word and by the Nature of the Object and the Vses and Ends to which be doth require it THe Negative is not controverted among us If any were so quarrelsom or ignorant it 's easily proved And I shall do it briefly but satisfactorily in the opening of the Affirmative I have proved in my first Disputation of Right to Sacraments which I desire the Reader that would have further satisfaction to peruse the Necessity of these following Qualifications of this Profession 1. In General as to the Object of our Faith it must be a Profession of true Christianity and no less It must be a Profession of our entertainment both of the Truth of the Gospel and of the Good therein Revealed and offered More particularly it must be a Profession that we believe in God the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost as to the Nature persons and works which they have done or undertaken for us Yet more particularly and explicitly It must be a Profession 1. That we Believe in God the Father and so the pure Deity as our Creatour Soveraign and chief Good who gave us the Law of Nature by breaking of which we have lost our selves and all our part in Everlasting Life 2. That we Believe in Jesus Christ God and Man that taking our Nature fulfilled the Law overcame the Devil dyed as a Sacrifice for our sinnes Rose again and conqured death ascened into Heaven where he is Lord of all and the King Prophet and Priest of his Church in Glory with the Father That he hath offered himself with Pardon and Eternal Life to all that will accept him on his terms and that he will come again at last to Raise us from death and judge the world and Justifie his Saints and bring them to Eternal Glory and cast the wicked into utter misery 3. That we Believe in God the Holy Ghost that Inspired the Prophets and Apostles to deliver and confirm the Word of God and who is the Sanctifier of all that shall be saved illuminating their understandings changing their hearts and lives humbling them for their sinne and misery causing them to believe in Christ the Remedie and heartily and thankfully accept him Possessing them with an hearty Love of God and a heavenly mind and a hatred of sinne and Love of Holiness and turning the principal bent of their hearts and lives to the Pleasing of God and the attaining of Eternal Life This much must be believed and the Belief of this much must be somehow Professed 2. As to the Acts of the thing Professed it must be not only the naked Assent of the Understanding but both this Assent that the Gospel is true and a Consent of the Will to take God the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost to the forementioned Ends in the forementioned Relations and to give up our selves unfeignedly to him renouncing the flesh the world and the Devil 3. As to the Nature of the Profession it self 1. It must in General be Credible For no man is bound to Believe that which is Incredible The words are the signs of the mind and as such they are to be uttered and received If they be contrary to the mind they are false and
if wilfully contrary they are a lie And God doth not make a lie to be the Condition of Church-membership or Priviledges nor doth he bind his Ministers or Church to believe a known lie Nothing but Real or seeming truth is to be believed 2. More particularly the Profession which we speak of must have these Qualifications 1. It must be or seem to be Vnderstanding Ignorant is non est Consensus If a Parrat could say the Creed it were not a Credible Profession of Faith Therefore the Ancient Church was wont by Catechists to prepare them to understand the Doctrine which they were to believe and profess This is past Controversie I think no Minister would take that mans Profession that seemeth not to Understand what he saith 2. No Profession is Credible but that which is or seems to be serious He that speaks in scorn or jest is not to be believed as one that speaks his mind nor is it to pass for a Profession 3. No Profession is credible or sufficient but that which is or seems to be Free and Voluntary Though some force or outward urgencies in some cases may help to incline the will yet willing it must be or it is not a Credible Profession He that Professeth himself a Christian when a sword or Pistol is at his brest is not to be Credited if he continue it not when he is free And also that which is done in a meer Passion without Deliberation is not to be taken as the act of the Man and a true expression of the bent of his mind unless he afterwards stand to it upon Deliberation 4. It must be a Profession not nullified by a contradiction in word or deed Though their may an obscure contradiction not understood consist with it or a contradiction only in Degree as Lord I believe help thou my unbelief yet there must be no contradiction of the Essentials of our Profession that nullifieth it by shewing that we lie or speak against the bent of our hearts If a Minister can by contrary words or deeds disprove the Profession of the party he is not to believe it or accept it For we are not to believe without Evidence of Credibility much less against it I have given instances of this in the foresaid Disputation of Sacracrament pag. 10. 5. When by Covenant-breaking and Perfidiousness or often Lying a man is become come Incredible having forfeited the Credit of his word with wise and charitable men this man must give us a Practical as well as Verbal Profession before we can again admit him to the Priviledges of the Church For though we are not to be so strict as some old Fathers seem to have been and the Novations were that would not admit such Penitents again into the Church at all but leave them to Gods own Judgment yet must we not go against Reason and Scripture and the Nature of the thing in believing that which is not to be believed nor to cast by all Order and Discipline and prostitute Gods Ordinances to the lusts of men and make them a scorn or level the Church of Christ with the world The Testimonies cited by me on another occasion in the foresaid Disputations shew the Judgment of Protestants in these Points and somewhat of the Judgment of Antiquity I shall recite but those on the Title page of the third Disputation Tertullian Apologet. cap. 16. Sed dices etiam de n●stris excedere quosdam à Regulis disciplinae Desi●unt tum Christiani haberi penes res Philosophi verò illi cum talibus factis in Nomine honore Sapientiae perseverant that is But you 'l say that even of ours some swarve from or forsake the Rules of Discipline Answ They cease then to be counted Christians with us But your Philosophers with such deeds do keep the Name and honour of Wisdom The Judgment of the French Professours at Saumours you have in these words Thes Salmuriens vol. 3. pag. 39. Thes 39. Sacramenta non conferuntur nisi iis qui vel findem habent vel salt●m eam praese ferant adeò ut nullis certis argumentis compertum esse possit eam esse ●mentitam that is Sacraments are conferred on none but these that either have Faith or at least pretend or Profess to have it so that it cannot by any certain Arguments be proved to be feigned The Judgment of the Scottish Divines may be much discovered in these two Testimonies following Gillespie Aaron's Rod Blossoming pag. 514. I believe no consciencious Minister would adventure to Baptise one who hath manifest and infallible signs of unregeneration Sure We cannot be answerable to God if we should minister Baptism to a man whose works and words do manifestly declare him to be an unregenerated unconverted Person And if we may not initiate such a one how shall we bring him to the Lords Table Rutherford Due Right of Presbyteries pag. 231. n. 2. But saith Robinson most of England are ignorant of the first Rudiments and Foundations of Religion and therefore cannot be a Church Answ Such are materially not the Visible Church and have not a Profession and are to be taught and if they will fully remain in that darkness are to be cast out If you would have the Testimonies of Protestants you may read above threescore of them expressly maintaining that it is a Profession of Saving Faith that is prerequisite to to our Right of Sacraments cited in my forementioned Disputation second To which I adde 33. more cited to a like purpose in my fift Disputation of Sacraments And to these adde the large testimony of Davenant with his many Arguments on Colos 1. vers 18. too large to recite And for the later sort of Episcopal Divines that they also agree in the same I will satisfie you from an Eminent man among them Mr Herbert Thorndike in his Discourse of the Right of the Church pag. 31 32. where he saith And hereby we see how binding and loosing sinnes is attributed to the Keyes of the Church Which being made a Visible Society by the power of holding Assemblies to which no man is to be admitted till there be just presumption that he is of the Heavenly Jerusalem that is above I shall adde more from him anon Somewhat I have elswhere cited of the Fathers Judgments in this Point and more anon I shall have occasion to produce But in a Point that we are agreed on that is not Every Profession but only a Credible Profession of true Christianity even of Faith and Repentance that must be taken as Satisfactory by the Church I hope I may spare any further proof Prop. 7. The Profession of those that expect the Church-sttate and Priviledges of the Adult is to be tried judged and Approved by the Pastours of the Church to whose Office it is that this belongeth THis Proposition hath two parts 1. That it is not a Profession untryed and unapproved that must serve the turn 2. That the trying and
Scripture that the Holy Ghost is in a special manner promised to Believers over and above that measure of the Spirit which caused them to believe 3. We find that Prayer with Laying on of hands was the outward means to be used by Christs Ministers for the procuring of this blessing 4. We find that this was a fixed Ordinance to the Church and not a temporary thing Lay all this together and you will see as much as my Proposition doth affirm Let 's try the proof of it I. Though the proof of the first be not Necessary to the main point yet it somewhat strengtheneth the cause Mark 10. 16. Christ took the Children up in his armes put his hands upon them and blessed them so Math. 19. 15. This is not I confess a Confirmation upon personal Profession which I am now pleading for But this is a Benediction by laying on of hands And the subjects of it were such Children as were Members at least of the Jewish Church being before Circumcized II. But to come neerer the matter let us enquire what this Gift of the Holy Ghost was that is promised to Believers Whatsoever the Pelagians say the Scripture assureth us that Faith and Repentance which go before Baptism in the Adult are the gifts of the Holy Ghost and yet for all that the Holy Ghost is to be given afterward And though very often this after●gift is manifested by Tongues and Prophesie and Miracles yet that is not all that 's meant in the promise of the Holy Ghost Gad hath not tyed Himself by that promise to any one sort of those extraordinary Gifts no nor constantly to give any of them But he hath promised in General to give Believers the Spirit and therefore there is some other standing gift for which the Spirit is promised to all such And indeed the Spirit promised is One though the gifts are many and the many sorts of gifts make not many Spirits If any man therefore shall ask whether by the Promised Spirit be meant Sanctification or Miracles or Prophesie c. I Answer with Paul There are diversities of Gifts but the same Spirit as there are differences of administrations but the same Lord and diversities of operations but the same God 1 Cor. 12. 4 5 6. It is therefore no wiser a question to ask whether by the Spirit be meant this gift or that when it is only the Spirit in General that is promised then to ask whether by the Lord be meant this or that administration and whether by God be meant this or that op●ration To one is given the word of Wisdom by the Spir●t and to another the word of Knowledg by the same Spirit to another Faith by the same Spirit c. vers 8 9 10. Now I confess if any man can prove that this promise of the Spirit to the faithfull is meant only of the extraordinary gift of Miracles then he would weaken the Argument that I am about But I prove that contrary 1. Cor. 12. 12 13. It is the gift of the Spirit by which we are One body which is called Christs by which we are all baptized into this one body and such members as have a lively fellow-feeling of each others state vers 26. 27. Yea such as giveth to the Elect the excellent durable grace of Charity vers 31. and Chap. 13. Gal. 4. 6. And because ye are Sonnes God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Sonne into your hearts crying Abba Father Note here that it is not only the gift of Miracles but the Spirit of Adoption that is here mentioned and that it 's given to Believers because they are Sonnes And all the first part of Rom. 8. to vers 29. doth shew that it is the Spirit of Adoption Supplication and that by which we mortifie the flesh that is given to Believers 2 Cor. 1. 21 22 Now he which stablisheth us with you in Christ and hath anointed us is God who hath also sealed us and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts It is not the common gifts of the Spirit only that are here spoken of nor is it the first gift of Faith but it is Confirmation or inward establishment in Christ and that Spirit which is the Fathers Seal upon us and the earnest of the Inheritance I believe not that it is outward Anointing or sealing with the signe of the Cross that is here mentioned as many Papists dreame but inward unction seal earnest and confirmation by the Spirit are here exprest So 2 Cor. 5. 5. Zach. 12. 10. It is the Spirit of Grace and Supplication that is promised to the Church And see the pattern in Christ our head on whom after Baptism the Spirit descended and to whom it is promised Matth. 12 18. Ephes 1. 13 14. In whom also after yee believed yee were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise which is the earnest of our Inheritance Here it 's evident that it 's such a gift of the Spirit which is an Earnest of Heaven that is given to men after they believe Joh. 7. 39. For the Holy Ghost was not yet given them because that Jesus was not yet Glorisied Yet the Apostles had Faiththen And that it is not meant only of the Apostles extraordinary gifts of Miracles the foregoeing words shew He that believeth on me out of his belly shall flow living waeters but this he spake of the Spirit which they that believe on him should receive By all this it is evident that there was an Eminent gift of the Holy Ghost promised to them that had already the grace of Faith and Repentance and Love to Christ wrought in them by the Holy Ghost and that though this Eminent Gift did very much consist in gifts of Languages Prophesie and mighty works for the Confirmation of Christs Doctrine which was then to be planted in the world yet was it not only in those gifts but as some had only those common though extraordinary gifts for the good of the Church so some had an Eminent addition of Special Gifts to seal them up to the day of Redemption and be the earnest of the Inheritance to the saving of the Soul If you ask Wherein these special Eminent Gifts of the Holy Ghost do consist I Answer 1. In a clearer knowledg of Christ and the rsteries of the Gospel not an uneffectual but a powerful affecting practical Knowledge 2. In a fuller measure of Love agreeable to this Knowledg 3. In Joy and Peace and sweet Consolation 4. In establishment and corroboration and firmer resolution for Christ and everlasting Life For the understanding of which we must know that as the Doctrine is the Means of conveying the Spirit so the Spirit given is answerable to the Doctrine and Administration that men are under It 's a very great question whether Adam in Innocency had the Spirit or not But as the Administration according to the meer Light and Law of Nature is eminently in Scripture attributed to the
professeth himself to be a Believer which cannot be without knowledge This must satisfie them till he nullifie this evidence by a clean bewraying of his Infidelity Object But the Scripture saith not that ignorant persons cannot be Church-members or so much as that they ought meerly for their ignorance to be excommunicate Answ Doth not the Scripture exclude visible unbelievers and take in only visible believers of the Adult and make the Church a society of Believers separated from unbelievers Such ignorance therefore as is essentiall to or inseparable from Infidelity is in Scripture made the very brand of them that are without excluded from the Church If our Gospell be hid it is hid to them that are lost in whom the God of this world hath blinded the mindes of them that believe not lest the light of the glorious Gospell of Christ c. 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. That Preaching which Discipleth men Mat. 28. 19. Doth give them Knowledg or else it could not give them Faith For it openeth their eyes and turneth them from darkness to light c. Act. 26. 18. And surely we are translated out of the power of darknesse into the Kingdome of Christ Col. 1. 14. Those that in time past were not a people but now are the people of the living God are called out of darknesse into his marvellous light 1 Pet. 2. 9 10. And what Communion hath light with darknesse righteousnesse with unrighteousnesse Christ with Beliall the Believer with the Infidell 2 Cor. 6. 14 15 16. Object If Knowledg as such were necessary to membership then none could be a member without it But that 's not so Answ 1. Knowledg as such is necessary no otherwise then Faith as such and all one you may therefore as well plead thus against the necessity of Faith 2. And we grant that neither Knowledg nor Faith are necessary to uncapable Subjects that is in themselves You know Faith in Infants such as we call Faith is not necessary to their Justification and yet will you say it is not necessary to the Adult The promise hath made it necessary to the Capable 3. And we grant that neither Knowledg nor Faith justifying or dogmaticall are necessary to the being of a visible Member that is meerly such God only seeth the heart But yet the appearance or profession of Faith and so of Knowledge in the essentials of Christianity is of necessity 4. But though a personall Faith or Knowledg in truth or in profession be not necessary to an Infant either for Membership or Justification yet their Parents Faith or Profession is necessary or else the promise is to more then Believers and their Seed quod restat probandum Object But a Negative consent is sufficient to continue such in Covenant as before were admitted in Infancy or at age And this Negative consent is but non-actuall dissent or a non-renouncing of the Gospell And therefore as Posi●ive consent so actuall Faith and Knowledge are not necessary Answ A dangerous doctrine A negative consent is no consent Why then should the ears of men be abused by the ●ame when there is nothing to answer it A Negative Faith in english is Infidelity or not believing Is not this a delusory teaching of the Church to call unbelief by the name of Negative Faith or Negative Consent If a block a bruit or a Subject otherwise Naturally uncapable be the Subject then indeed it is inculpable and your Negative Consent or Faith is properly but a Negative dissent or unbelief But if a capable oblieged person be the Subject which is our case then your Negative consent is in english privative not consenting and privative unbelief or rejecting Christ What a meanness is here to convey flat Infidels into the Church or continue them there under the Cloake of an abusive name even by calling a non-dissenting conjunct with their Infidelity or not consenting to the Covenant of grace by the name of Negative consent Were it a person that had entered at age yet if he have afterward but your Negative consent which is neither to consent or dissent he is an Apostate And if he refuse consent when called to it by his lawfull governours he gives occasion to be suspected of Apostacie much more when he continueth to refuse consent when so much of the life and practise of Christianity consisteth in it and in the manifestation of it But especially when persons were Baptized in Infancy and never yet professed a Faith or Consent of their own If that man that had no Faith but his Parents and his being a Believers seed which you call Faederall Faith shall be continued at age a Member of the Church by a not-actuall dissenting or renouncing Christ by expresse words then le ts talk no more of a Church nor abuse poor Heathens and Infidels so much as to question their salvation or let them below us But again I answer you that not consenting is dissenting in the inward act it is undoubted that he that for one year or moneth doth not consent doth certainly dissent There 's no middle state between Believers and Infidels Consenters and Refusers How shall they escape that neglect of so great salvation Neglecting and not consenting in a capable invited Subject is certain Infidelity and therefore in the externall profession we must judge accordingly He that will not confess Christ even in a Christian Church and a peaceable age deserves not to be called a Christian He that is not for him is against him Object But Gods Covenant-people under the Law were not only admitted without their voluntary consent or knowledg but commanded to renue their Covenant in such a manner as that they that were absent and not in place to expresse consent were included in those that were present Answ 1. None but Infants were admitted without consent nor they without the consent of their Parents naturall or civill that had the power of disposing of them 2. Those that were admitted upon others consent were not continued at age without their own 3. The Covenant Deut. 29. 11 12 15. Was no mutuall Covenant to the absent or unborn there mentioned but only a Covenant offered to the Nation and conditionally made on Gods part as a promise to them and their posterity even to many generations But those unborn generations were not in Covenant on their parts as promisers in the stipulation Object Wickedness it self doth not put a man out of the Visible Church For a man is said to be cut off but either de jure or de facto Meritoriously or Effectually the former is improperly called cutting off being but the Desert of it therefore if those baptized in Infancy prove afterward wicked they are not thereby cut off Answ 1. Such persons as we have in question lose their Right and title by a Cessation for want of that personal Condition which the Covenant made Necessary to its continuance So that we need not prove any other cutting off 2. If he
and proved them to be Christ's Disciples No man knew the hearts of others and therefore knew not whom to Love as Christians infallibly discerned But the Profession of Saving Faith and Holiness being then and ever the test of Adult-members they took all the members of the Visible Church as credibly of the invisible though with different degrees of Credibility And accordingly they loved them all with a Christian special Love of the same species though with different degrees of that Love Whereas this Popish new found trick of making a new common sort of Faith and Visible membership that hath no respect to saving Faith doth teach all Christians to Love the members of the Visible Church but with a common love and relieve and help them but with a common Charity And so the device is to confine our special Brotherly Love and Charity to a corner of the Visible Church to a few whom we will please to think to be godly I have oft marvelled in observing some Learned Divines that bend that way that they think compassion and Christian Charity is on their side What Charity can their Doctrine glory of They will be so mercifull to Infidels that are uncapable of a Church-state as to plead them into the Church and when they are there they leave them under the curse and in a state of damnation in their own judgments teaching us to judge uncharitably of the Visible Church in general for their sakes and to look on them as without respect to any saving grace and so without any special Love A cold comfort I to bring them into no more capacity of Gods Mercy nor of our Charity but into much more capacity of aggravated damnation which they might better have prevented by being kept in their proper station till they were capable of more I confess though my belief of mens Profession have different degrees as I see in them different degrees of Credibility yet I have Charitabler thoughts of the members of the Visible Church then these that make so low and miserable a description of them And though I know that there are abundance among them that are Hypocrites and unsanctified yet know I none but Saints and Hypocrites that are tolerable in the Church nor will I accuse particular persons of Hypocrisie till I have cause Neither in my secret or open censures will I pluck up the tares upon any such terms as will not stand with the safety of the wheate but rather let them grow together in my esteeme in the Church till the time of harvest And that I may think charitably of the Church and walk charitably in and towards it therefore I would not have it consist of such notorious ungodly or heretical men as are uncapable objects of Christian Brotherly Love For Heresie the foresaid learned Brother tells us that it cuts men off from the Church I say so to meritoriously at least if by Heresie be meant the exclusion of any essential Article of the Christian Faith But pag. 199 where he saith the Controversie may be easily ended by parting stakes viz. that some Heresie which absolutely denyeth some particular fundamental truth and taketh up some one or few stones thereof is consistent with Church interest and other Heresie which raiseth up the very foundation of Religion denying most or the most chief if not all of the Articles of our Christian Faith is inconsistent therewith I must humbly but very confidently say that this answer will not serve the turne If by Fundamentals be meant as commonly the Essential Articles of Christian Faith then the absolute denying of any one Article doth prove that person to be no Christian nor capable of a Church state For the form is wanting where any Essential part is wanting But if any thing else be meant by Fundamentals no man can decide the Controvesie by it till it be known what it is And it will be hard to fasten it on any thing where the absolute denyal of many points shall unchurch and the absolute denial of one or two points of the same rank and kind not do it Saith he p. 198. The Jews held that an heretical Isralite had no communion with the Church of Israel and why but because Communion supposeth union and union with Israel or the true Church is lost with Faith They also held as Selden noteth that an Israelite turning an Heretike i. e. denying any of the thirteene fundamental Articles to be as an Heathen man And a few lines before he saith that historical Faith which hath the Doctrine of Faith for its Object none do doubt to be an Essential requisite to a true Church-member Yet that with me is a Visible member that hath not this much which is said to be Essential no man doubting of it If they Profess true Faith though they are stark Atheists at the heart and have not so much as historical Faith I shall believe them till they nullifie their own Profession But if they profess not also to consent to have Christ to be their Saviour I shall not take it for a Profession of Christianity Certain I am that the ancient Doctours with one consent did look on the baptized generally as pardoned justified and adopted and therefore thought that Visible Church-membership did imply a credibility at least of a state of saving grace Saith Cyprian Epist 76. Magn. In Baptismo unicuique peccata sua remittuntur And upon this supposition run the Arguments of the councell of Carthage and Firmilian Epist ibid. Saith Augustine De Catechizandis rudibus cap. 26. His dictis interrogandus est an haec credat atque observare desideret Quod cum responderit solemniter utique signandus est ecclesiae more tractandus Obedience it self was promised and a consent to it professed before Baptism then and ever since Christian Baptism was known Idem Epistol 119. Ad Januar. cap. 2. Secundum hanc fidem spem dilectionem quâ caepimus esse sub gratia jam commortui sumus cum Christo consepulti per baptismum in morte c. Baptism then supposeth credibly Faith Hope and Love Idem Epist 23. Having shewed why Parents Faith profiteth Infants and yet their after-sins hurt them not saith Cum autem homo sapere caeperit non illud Sacramentum repetit sed intelligit ejusque veritati consonâ etiam voluntate coaptabitur Hoc quamdiu non potest N. B. valebit Sacramentum ad ejus tutelam adversus contrarias potestates tantum valebit utsi ante rationis usum ex hac vita emigraverit per ipsum Sacramentum Ecclesiae charitate ab illa condemnatione quae per unum hominem intravit in mundum Christiano adjutorio liberetur Hoc qui non credit fieri non posse arbitratur profecto infidelis est etsi habeat fidei Sacramentum longeque melior est ille parvulus qui etiamsi fidem nondum habeat in cogitatione non ei tamen obicem contrariae cogitationis opponit undè Sacramentum