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A79995 The civil magistrates povver in matters of religion modestly debated, impartially stated according to the bounds and grounds of scripture, and answer returned to those objections against the same which seem to have any weight in them. Together with A brief answer to a certain slanderous pamphlet called Ill news from New-England; or, a narrative of New-Englands persecution. By John Clark of Road-Island, physician. By Thomas Cobbet teacher of the church at Lynne in New-England. This treatise concerning the christian magistrates power, and the exerting thereof, in, and about matters of religion, written with much zeal and judgement by Mr. Cobbet of New-England, I doe allow to be printed; as being very profitable for these times. Feb. 7th. 1652. Obadiah Sedgwick. Cobbet, Thomas, 1608-1685. 1653 (1653) Wing C4776; Wing B4541; Thomason E687_2; Thomason E687_3; ESTC R206875 97,858 126

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〈◊〉 〈◊〉 restraine them The second branch is as evident that it is a toleration of that which tendeth to break the peace c. for errours and such like corruptions in religion trouble the Churches which are the choicest societies in that polity hence that Gal. 5. 10. 12. I would to God they were cut off which trouble you speaking of seducers and Acts 20. 30. they draw away or rent away as members from the body disciples after them hence that reasoning of Paul 1 Cor. 11. 18. I hear there are divisions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 schismes amongst you which he proveth vers 19. thus For there must needs be heresies amongst you c. as if the one is a necessary cause of the other where there are heresies amongst Church-Members there will be Schismes True it is Churches have their wayes of healing such evills in their members as they have to heale other scandalous evills in them as drunkennesse lying c. but that hinders not Gods civill ordinance of the Magistrates coercive power also more in the one then in the other yea errours and heresies are wont to breed troubles and divisions in civill societies Hence those seducers and their followers who turne the grace of God into wantonnesse Jude 4. and are filthy dreamers vers 8. are branded for seditious persons in Common-wealths even such as come justly to perish as sometimes seditious Corah did vers 11. perish in the gain-saying of Core Hence those black brands of seducers who have a forme of godliness that they are traitourous heady high-minded truce-breakers false accusers fierce c. making their times perilous 2 Tim. 3. 1. 3 4 5. and that he speaketh that of seducers vers 6 7 8 9 13. declare Hence those also in Jude are branded for murmurers and complainers Jude 16. ever and anon quarrelling against matters in Church and State 1 so Tim. 6. 3 4. the very fruits of false doctrines are reckoned to be envy strifes railings evill surmises and perverse disputes and as that Apostle reckoneth those fruits of the flesh Gal. 5. 19. as concomitants so doubtlesse by purety of proportion those adjoyned v. 26. contentions seditions Heresies c. those Antichristian seducers Revel 16. 13 14. are persons of turbulent spirits in civill states stirring up to warres and the like that Impostor and seducer Theudas mentioned Acts 5. as a murtherer and seditious person Histories ancient and moderne are full of examples of this nature of persons of corrupt Principles in religion becoming movers and Abettors of civil Seditions The third branch that it is a toleration of that which breaketh religious States hedges and walls c. appeareth that hedge Job 1. 10. Zech. 2. 4. 5. and wall of fire of Gods gracious protecting providence over such a State is undermined by such things As Adam was naked in that respect Gen. 3. 10. so was the State of corrupted Israel naked Exod. 32. 25. before their Idolatry was punished Moses saw that they were naked and as a meanes of recovery of their wonted covering he commandeth the civill execution of Justice upon some for terrour to all the rest vers 26 27. those fox-like false Prophets Ezek. 13. 4 5. let alone did spoile the vines and break the hedges and saith God both to Church and State Rulers Yee have not gone up into the gap neither made up the hedge for the house of Israel to stand in the battle in the day of the Lord. Their care should have been to have prevented such breaches thereby but yet though the hedge was broken a gap made and warre from God prepared against them all might have done well enough had not State and Church Officers both been too indulgent and remisse in punishing the causes of such mischiefs Hence also when such corruptions in Ministry and Worship mentioned Ezek. 22. 26 27. are let alone verse 30. we read of a gap made and no man of Authority being found to make it up for the Land that God should not destroy it Therefore saith God vers 31. I have poured out 1 Kings 11. 1 2 3 4 5 6. c. mine Indignation upon them Corruptions in religion connived at and too much countenanced by Solomon in his wives rent that Kingdome in pieces whence by punishing such corruptions in religion evill is said to be put away from Israel Deut. 17. 2. 3. 7. as if otherwise Israel had been exposed to that evill R. 7. Such a toleration of such corruptions before mentioned it interpretatively by God himselfe a kicking at Religion and honouring of such as hold forth and practise those corruptions in religion above the Lord himselfe and therefore undeniably not to be yielded unto by regulated civill Rulers the consequence none but profane spirits will deny the antecedent is evident by that 1 Sam. 2. 12. to 16. compared with 23 24 25 29. verses It was a corrupt religious custome to snatch out in that sort what first came to hand and forcibly to take the fat of the peoples sacrifices for the Priests use the matter was not fundamentall nor contrary to the light of nature but very justly offensive to God and men ver 17. Eli is told of all that as well as of other sins of his sons against the second Table he chideth them a little as a father but doth not as he was a Judge 1 Sam. 4. 18. He judged Israel forty yeares punish'd them according to their deserts he is indulgent they are let alone what is Gods censure of this v. 29. Wherefore kick yee not Hophni and Phineas only but Eli too at my acrifice and at mine offering c. and honourest thy sons above me to make your selves fat with the choicest of all the offerings of Israel God instanceth in this his indulgence towards his sons in that matter of that corrupt religious custome onely as if that was as vers 17. of most heinous guilt before him the sin of your young men was great before the Lord and it is observable since there is a purity of proportion Such Rulers as can be indulgent to g●osse errours and corruptions in religion in Gods worship and sacrifices they little regard Gods truth or worship they kick at i● in Gods account and if they will needs b● soever-tender of such as are not fit objects of their tendernesse they shew little tendernesse of Gods name truth worship or honour they it seemeth more regard them and their ease c. then God thou honourest thy sons above me now who would be so thought of by the Lord. R. 8. Such a toleration of such evills mentioned causeth the very evills themselves to be charged upon Rulers and bringeth the wrath of God upon them also ergo not to be yielded to by any godly wise Rulers the consequence none not prodigall of Rulers welfare will deny The Antecedent appeareth Solomon is said to goe after Ashteroth c. which as its thought was onely in respect of his connivence at and
example is shewed that abuses even in externals are by all means to be reformed in which matter godly Magistrates are to lend their help to the Ministers that as they by preaching so Magistrates may even by external repurgation remove those things which are repugnant to the regular worship of God But as for that Christ did it appertaineth not so much to his Priestly Office as to his Kingly Marlorate on the place from this that Christ as well by fact as word casteth out Temple abuses saith They are hence taught who have received authoritie from God in the Church how they ought by work as well as word to purge the Church Although they know the corruptions as superstition idolatrie and such like have taken deep rooting in the hearts of the wicked For therefore hath the Lord armed their hands that they might take chief care of his worship Master Dyke writing upon this fact of Christs purging the Temple and having declared how this fact of Christ was not imitable as Christ did thus as the Sonne of God he propoundeth this question how far forth this fact of Christ is imitable And Ainsworth men are either publick persons or private publick either in the Magistracie or in the Ministery As for Magistrates they being Christs Vicegerents as God in special manner the imitation of this fact belongeth to them For God hath given them the sword not to let it lie rusting in the scabbard but to strike and he hath put the whip into their hands to scourge withall c. Then he sheweth how Ministers in their way of preaching are to doe thus and then how private men in their way of prayer and sighings but not by other violence are to be doing this way Musculus upon Iohn 2d. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. upon that he found in the Temple as soon as Christ came into the citie saith he he visiteth the Temple This should be the first care of all godly ones not of Pastours onely but of all Magistrates whatsoever that the Kingdome and worship of God be sought after And upon that and when he had made a scourge of small cords he cast them all out together with the Sheep and the Oxen he observeth we see by this fact of Christ how distasteful they are and how unsufferable in the Church who under pretence of divine worship exercise merchandize Doubtlesse there were many other crimes by which God was commonly provoked and yet we reade not that Christ used like severitie against them but forthwith he casteth this loathsome plague of such Merchandize out of the Temple Who seeth not hence that those things which concern the Glory and Worship of God are not alone before all other things but with greatest severitie to be purged away and that not without cause since in these sinne is committed against the first Table and under pretence of Divine worship service is done to the Devil and to worldly lusts and beside the plague which ariseth here spreadeth into the whole body more speedily and dangerously then can be imagined Again let such who would have nothing done in a compulsive way against Idolaters and corrupters of Gods worship in the Church but thinke such as doe evil are to be intreated willingly to desist let such answer Why Christ did not here doe thus why he did not meekly request these merchants to carrie their Oxen and Sheep and money out of the Temple None say they are by force to be compelled to godlinesse be it so but are they not by force to be restrained yea and driven away who exercise gainfull trades in the Temple what shall we say that Christ here sinned God forbid he compelled them not to Pietie yet he casteth that merchandize out of the Temple Furthermore they have hence ground to change their opinion who teach that external evils in the Church are not to be taken away unless they be first taken out of mens hearts for according to this Doctrine Christ should first have cast that inward evil of covetousnesse out of the Jewes hearts and then have cast them out of the Temple but we see it quite otherwise in what Christ did here he cast these merchants out of the Temple although they kept their covetousnesse still in their hearts giving hence an example whereby he might teach us that publick evil is not to be suffered in the Church although it cannot be rooted out of mens hearts If any reply It is but vain to remove it out of the Church if it be not removed out of the hearts of men surely saith he Christ knew this well enough yet he did his office having made a scourge he hunted these dogs out of the Temple Snecanus in his Tract de Magistratu he maketh use of this example of Christs purging the Temple with a scourge in his hand to prove the Magistrates power now under the Gospel in matters of both tables Beza in his Tract de haereticis à Magistratu puniendis saith In or by what right did Christ twice take the Whip in hand both John 2. 14. and Matth. 21. 12 13. by what right did Peter kill Ananias and Sapphira by what right did Paul strike Elimas blind what by that of the Ecclesiastical Ministry surely no unlesse you would confound the Jurisdictions therefore by the right of the Civil Magistrate for there is no third Yet I acknowledge this power put forth by Ministers of the Word was in them extraordinary and the manner of exercising it after a sort divine but I prove that though the Lord doth not alwayes make use of the help of the Magistrates yet in all ages he doth make use of the Power whereof the Magistrate is the onely ordinary Minister according as himself seeth it meet for the preservation of his Church Now then if any object against this example as Imitable because Object 1 Christ did this as God or at least as the Messiah It is answered first That Civil Rulers are Christs Vicegerents Answ 1 considered as God and are therefore called gods Psal 82. 1 6. and said to judge for God 2 Chron. 19. 6. and called the Ministers of God Rom. 13. 4. the ordinary publick Avengers who are to take vengeance namely in Gods stead to whom alone vengeance doth belong so are they Christs Vicegerents as Mediatour as one that hath all power committed to him in earth as well as heaven Matth. 28. 18. and from him therefore as political head of his people Magistrates power on earth must come Prov. 8. 15 16. by me saith the essential wisdom of God Princes rule hence called King of kings and Lord of lords 1 Tim. 1. 16 17. Rev. 19. 16. yea he maketh Civil Rulers nursing Fathers and Mothers to his Church and so committeth his Church which Esay 49. 23. 1 Tim. 3. 15. is his house into their hands as those who in their civil officed way are every way to further its welfare What Christ did here immediately as an act appertaining
Corruptions in matters of Religion do some way or other strike at all that good not alone by provoking God in Judgment either to blast all that good unto a people amongst whom such corruptions prevail but the corruptions themselves occasion breaches upon mens natural and civil good even their lives safety estates civil peace and liberty and the like Witnesse the sad fruits of Popery too oft in England of Anabaptisme in Germany in John of Leyden and Cnipper Dollings dayes of Levellisme not long since in England when the better part of the Army were sent down towards Oxford as I remember to suppresse the stirre raised by the Levellers and I wish that might have been the last of the destructive turbulent seditious or trecherous designes of men grosly corrupted in their Judgments in the matters of Religion As for the moral good of subjects under Civil Authority how much such corruptions do intrench thereupon let the woful experience of the loosenesse and even profanenesse of too many in both Englands amongst whom corruptions in matters of Religion have taken place testifie besides the scandal upon Religion which such have brought in the eyes of the common sort which have made little or no profession and the woful miscarriages thereby occasioned amongst them also But how such corrupt persons are branded in Scripture for such mischiefs and miscarriages let these places be duly considered Rom. 16. 18. 2 Pet. 2. 1 2 3. compared with verse 10 12 13 14 18 19. Jude 4. with verse 8 10 11 12 13 16 18 19. 2 Tim. 4. 3 4. 1 Tim. 4. 1 2 3 4 5. whence also such perilous times 2 Tim. 3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 13. whence railings strifes and the like 1 Tim. 6. 3 4. whence increase of ungodlinesse 2 Tim. 2. 16. And is not then the Civil Magistrate whose end partly is the subjects natural and civil good bound in his political way to restrain and redresse the causes of the contrary evil but specially as the Magistrate is a political Minister of God in his civil way and by his Civil means of the subjects spiritual good so he is to improve his Authority that the liberty purity and peace of Gods own instituted worship and wayes wherein their spiritual good externally doth much lye be maintained and defended against all Infesting infringing Impugning or Impairing principles or practises breaking forth to the contrary the Civil Magistrate in Gods Appointment is a Minister to the Churches good as that of Rome to which Paul writ Chap. 1. 7. 13. 4. compared he is the Minister of God to thee for thy good Esay 60. 11. the Gentile Kings shall be brought to the Church to be added to it they shall also as Kings in some respect serve the Church else as verse 12. the Nation and the Kingdome or Authoritative part of the Nation that will not serve thee speaking of the Church shall perish and verse 10. Their Kings shall minister to thee Yea in point of the very Discipline of the Church which is to it as its walls they shall help in the building thereof by their Civil Authority setting up that in their Jurisdictions strengthening setling and establishing the same there Hence vers 10. And the sonnes of strangers shall build thy walls their Kings shall minister to thee namely in that matter of building her walls also there mentioned hence also they are called the builders of the Churches walls Esay 49 16 17. compared Thy walls are before me Thy children or as in the Hebrew thy builders namely of those walls make haste As builders by their Civil Authority they shall break down all manifest unevennesse in the Churches fabrick curb all palpable Intrusions of any bad stuffe therein and redresse whatsoever might visibly undermine the same and all this spoken with reference to the Dayes of the New Testament when the Gentiles should be thus behoveful to the Church verse 22. I will lift up my hand to the Gentiles Verse 23. and Kings shall be thy nursing Fathers they shall bow to thee with their faces toward the earth So Esay 60. 3. The Gentiles shall come to thy light and Kings to the brightnesse of thy rising Verse 9. Surely the Isles shall wait for me verse 10. The sons of strangers shall build up thy walls and their Kings shall minister to thee So Rev. 22. 24. And the Kings of the earth shall bring their glory to it namely to that new Jerusalem or purest Gospel Church not in heaven but which cometh from God out of heaven vers 2. Now the glory of the Kings of the earth is chiefly their Soveraignty and Civil Authority which Christ by John saith they shall bring to the Church not to be resigned to them or usurped by the Church or any of her Officers they shall be Kings still although ministring as Kings to the Church Esay 60. 10. but they shall bring this their glory to the Church to be improved for the Churches good or for the maintaining the doctrine discipline and waies of God held forth by the Church in the purity and liberty thereof against all opposers impugners despisers depravers disturbers and corrupters thereof And let none say What need the Church any such terrestrial Object Help It hath carried on Church wayes and worship when it had none to help but rather had the Rulers of the earth hindring it Besides the Church is a compleat Polity within it self and hath weapons to avenge all disobedience in its own way and sphear 2 Cor 10. 6. It is true say I this help from Civil Authority is not of Answ absolute necessity to the esse of the Church or to the esse of its operations but it is an accumulative good conferred of God upon the Church to have such builders of her walls and such nursing fathers to curb and hinder whatsoever is destructive to her good and so it is necessary to the optimum esse of the Church Besides when the Church hath used all her power against corrupters of her purity or disturbers of her peace by excommunicating of them from her Society which were of it yet such may grow the more insolent and commonly do wax the more turbulent and pragmatical that way and do more hurt after the Church hath gone to her utmost limits to censure them then before yea turbulent seducers may go from sea to sea to make proselytes and draw disciples after them where the particular Churches have no immediate power over them either then the Civil Magistrates sword and service is needful or else there will be left no ordinary and orderly power to restrain and punish such grosse Abuses in such cases A third Reason of this Assertion may be taken both from Reason 3 the Prayers which the Lord chargeth his people to make for this end and from the praises also which they return to God when such an end is Attained The former is held forth 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. I exhort
be in some part onely of their bodies as in their hands or the like yet he saith of it that it shall be a means of good to some so punished corporally vers 4 5 6. thus was I wounded in the house of my friends A fifth Reason is taken from the publick evil removed and Reason 5 good attained on the one hand by the due use of such power and the sad mischiefs attending either the want or grosse neglect thereof on the other hand When Idolaters are commanded to be stoned Deut. 17. 2 3 5 7. its added so shalt thou put the evil away from among you and as evil is removed hereby so is good attained both moral Deut. 17. 10. All Israel shall hear and fear and do no more any such wickednesse and civil good as that in outward estate as when theirs was impoverished by that drought and famine yet upon the execution of Justice upon those Idolaters reparation is therein made by that ruine 1 King 18. 40 41. also that of Civil peace 2 Chron. 14. 3 4 5. Therefore the Kingdome was quiet before him Again what a deluge of evil overfloweth all where the use of such power is wanting or neglected thence that Idolatry in Israel when no Supreme Magistrate no King in Israel Judg. 17. 45 6. thence such corruption in Church discipline as the consecration and administration of that hedge Priest vers 12. and Chap. 18. 1. compared and as mischiefs arise thence in spirituals and Ecclesiasticals so also in temporals for when none is found to stand in the Gap and Authoritatively to make up the hedge which is broken by such prophanations of Gods holy day and holy things and lawes then cometh an inundation of ruinating Judgments upon that State as Ezek. 21. 25 26. compared with vers 30 31. yea and as mischief to State and Church in general so to corrupt and indulgent Rulers in particular as also to their houses What mischief came upon that indulgent Judge Eli for his too grosse connivence at such corrupt customes in Religion as well as at other lewd pranks of his sons read see and consider 1 Sam. 2. 22 23 24. with 27 28 29 c. A sixth Reason may be taken from the unwonted dispensation Reason 6 of Gods providence when the zeal in the ordinary Ministers of Gods vengeance faileth this way he stirreth up zeal in others in a more then ordinary way to execute such vengeance as when Ahab faileth to punish such abuses in Religion Elijah is stirred up to do it 1 King 18. God would have it some way done so far is he from prohibiting the doing of it The last Reason may be taken from the examples both of such as have acted this way by the light of grace and are commended Reason 7 for it in Scripture and of others who being themselves Pagans yet have done somewhat this way by a mere common light at least of Nature and Nations Of the former sort read that of Moses Exod. 32. 20 21 22. and that of that general assembly of the Tribes at least in their Heads and Representatives recorded to their honour Josh 22. 10 11 12 c. unto ver 34. besides that of Asah 2 Chron. 15. 12 13 16 c. and of Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 19. 3 4 5 6 7 8. and of Josiah 2 Chr. 34. 33. vers 4. with 2 King 23. 20. and of Nehemiah Chap. 13. 21. and that of the converted Kings in the dayes of the Gospel who as they shall hate the corrupt and false Church-state of Rome so shall they execute corporal vengeance of God upon that Whore Rev. 17. 16. Of the later sort we need not instance in Numa's Lawes against the use of Images in any religious way or in others in the Roman or Grecian States since scarce any Pagan State whatsoever but have enacted and executed Civil punishments upon the despisers or depravers of their gods or of the worship or worshippers of Dan. 3. 1 2. c. them which though it shew the miserable fruits of mans Fall in this their misguided and misplaced zeal yet by these ruines we may judge that it is a principle deeply engraven in mans heart that as there should be some to rule and some to be ruled some God and some worship of that God so by the Law of Nature and Nations there should be the external exercise of some external coercive power in cases of prophanations and abuses of the name and worship of that God who is to be adored And let none now object that such Authoritative acts in Object such persons were typical For 1. We speak not of David and Solomon and such Answ like but of others and will any say that Moses in his Act or the Heads of the Tribes in their act or Nehemiah in his act that these were types of Christ we might have instanced in the Judges in Jobs time that corruption in Worship as the worship of the Sun or Moon c. was an Iniquity to be punished by the Judges so our last Translation rendreth that place Job 31. 26 27 28. yet were not those Judges types of Christ 2. Those Worthies mentioned did exercise power in matters of the second Table also yet not therein Types of Christ for then the substance being come the shadow vanisheth and so all Civil Power and Jurisdiction in matters of Righteousness as well as Religion would be turned up by the roots 3. Those zealous Acts of the converted Kings against all superstitions and the fomentors and Abettors of them prophesied of Rev. 17. 16. can under no pretence be called Old Testament types or Old Testament Zelots The point propounded being explained in the Distinctions and Conclusions before laid down and being thus confirmed we shall now consider of some doctrinal Instructions arising thence 1. Then if this be so It serveth to refute and remove many Object pretences aod answer many Objections tending to undermine the Coercive Power of the Civil Magistrate in matters of Religion Such as these following 1. If you grant Magistrates such Coercive power in matters Answ of Religion you will make them Church Officers The second Conclusion denyeth to them any way of exercising that power which is properly Ecclesiastical allowing them only a Civil way of doing what they do in matters of Religion When Church Officers with the Church do Ecclesiastically punish one of their members for that which is also a civil offence as when they cast him out for lying drunkenness Incest c. they are not therefore Civil Officers because they do it in their own proper way namely Ecclesiastically So when Civil Courts censure persons for heresie schisme c. which also is an Ecclesiastical offence they are not therefore Church Officers because they do it in a Civil way and as it is a breach of humane Lawes made against the same and as it tendeth to break civil peace In the one Court they are censured as matters of the Lord properly in
respecting Christ our blessed Prophet and high Priest and Counsellor Esay 9. 6. Which Prophet whosoever shall not hear shall be destroyed from his People Acts 3. 22 23. But respecting the Ministers of the Churches of the Gospel from whom the mind and sentence of God in controversall cases is to be sought by all sorts and being found is to be followed by all sorts whence that by allusion to the Priests under the Law yet respecting the time of the Gospell Ezek. 44. 23 24. And the id est the Priests shal teach my People id est Members of Churches whether Civill Rulers or Subjects the difference between the clean and unclean and cause men to discern between clean and unclean And in controversie they shall stand in Iudgement and they shall Iudge it onely with this limitation According to my Iudgements where by Judging he intendeth the Ecclesiasticall Judging which appertaineth to Church-Officers and not a Civill and Politicall Judging which is peculiar to the Civill Magistrate of which more anon Conc. 3. That Civill rulers are to call upon the Ministers of the Churches under their Jurisdiction to expound the whole Counsell of God to their people especially about such matters of Religion or of the Church as they are by Law to Establish Hence that Act of Iehoshaphat sending abroad the Priests and Levites to teach those Cities the mind and Counsell of God what was according or repugnant thereunto before he sent out Civill Judges to deal in their Judiciall way with them concerning matters of that nature 2 Chron 17. 7 8 9. compared with Chapter 19. 4 5 6. Conc. 4. That in all matters of Religion or of the Church the Laws which Civill Authority do establish they must establish them by and with the consent of the people either in themselves or their representatives this strengthning their Politicall Laws that they bind Scientes Volentes As Asah willing to make a binding Capitall Law about Religion by his Authority he summoneth the people with whose consent it is made 2 Chron. 15. 9. He gathered all Judah and Benjamin c. and they decreed that vers 13. That whosoever would not seek the Lord should be slain So Jonah 3. 4. It s said the people believed the Lord and proclaimed a Fast but vers 7. that business of the decree for the Fast is applied to the King as his Act by the consent of the Nobles or chief heads of the people and so representing the people by the light and Law of Nature these Pagan Ninevites learned this to be an orderly way of making such like decrees in such like matters of Religion it self whence also was that course taken in the case of a coercive Law to be made about a business of Religious worship for the matter of it allthough in the form of that worship to be decreed of it were devilish It is to be made by the representative Estates of the Persian Kingdom which being a Kingdom was then to be established by the King Dan. 6. 7 8 9 The rulers of thy Kingdom the Officers and Governors the Counsellors and Dukes have consulted together to make a decree for the King and to establish a Statute that whosoever shall ask a petition of any God or man for thirty dais save of thee O King he shall be cast into the Den of Lions Now O King confirm the decree c. When Iehoshaphat was to make that Order about the particular matter of Religion He consulteth with the people 2 Chron. 20. 21. And When he had consulted with the people he appointed singers unto the Lord and that should praise the beauty of holiness as they went before the Army and to say Praise ye the Lord for his mercy indureth for ever Which may serve to take off that offence of some against politicall Laws to be made this way because it will be a forcing of Christian people in matters of Religion since the Laws which are made that way are virtually and interpretatively made with their own free consent As made either by their own free consent personally if not too great a body to be ordinarily called together in one Assembly or at least by their own free consent in their Representatives where the body of the people eannot ordinarily be called together to debate such matters or express personall consent to the Laws which Civill Authority do make about matters of Religion or of the Church which are in themselves doubtfull and not meerly made so by mens wiles and Satans sleights They must be made with great latitude and tender respects to such as are really and truly tender in conscience even Politicall ●hepheards must not over-drive their Flock and such Lambs would be carried in their armes A fourth instruction from the Premises if Civill Authority are so to restrain and punish such matters then are they in their Politicall way to Judge which things acted by the outward man in cases of Religion are contrary to the word and which are not Else shall they sin in a high degree in censuring Politically that as contrary to the word of which they have no right nor power to determine politically either one way or other Job who was a right godly man Job 1. 1. and a man of chief Civill rule in this Country as chap. 29. 7. he had a chief place in the Gate in the seat of Judgement verse 9 even Princes kept silence when he was to speak He Judicially delivered the Fatherlesse verse 12. Brake the Laws of the wicked verse 17. and verse 25. I chose out or as the Geneva Translation hath it I appointed out their way and sate as a King in an army as the Generall of the Field hath with his Councill of War being the highest Military power chief Military Judgement both what Military Orders to make about the common Souldiery and what courses are most advantageous or disadvantageous to the good of the whole or what acts of the Souldery are to be punished or contrariwise incouraged and what particular rewards or punishments such or such particular facts of the Souldiery deserve in way of subordination and conformity unto the Laws of that higher Civil power whose Military Ministers they are so have highest Civill Authority in religious States the like highest politicall Judgement what acts of the outward man respecting Religion are to be incouraged or discouraged in their subjects and in what way and what orders to make for that end so as in way of general conformity and subordination to the Laws of God and Christ whose Ministers they are and so as may be warranted from the Word of God either expresly or by just consequence Job did not leave every one under his authority to chuse what way themselves pleased or judged the best either in matters of Religion or of Righteousness but he in his authoritative politicall way determined that for them he appointed and chose out their way Nor doth he mention this as any injustice in