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A07822 Salomon or A treatise declaring the state of the kingdome of Israel, as it was in the daies of Salomon Whereunto is annexed another treatise, of the Church: or more particularly, of the right constitution of a Church. Morton, Thomas, of Berwick. 1596 (1596) STC 18197.7; ESTC S112936 159,289 238

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Yea this course did Esra take in a like case by the counsell and commaundement of king Artaxarxes as we reade in the seauenth of that booke Vers. 25. And thou Ezra according to the wisedome of thy God which is in thee appoint Iudges euen all that knowe the lawes of thy God And if it were obiected but there a●e not a sufficient number of men which k●ow how to iudge instruct and order the people therefore he addeth and those that knowe not make them to know how they ought to doe these thinges So that by the good direction and counsell of those who are the chiefe worke-men in this planting of a Church men otherwise ignorant and vnexpert may become able to teach gouerne others Neyther ought this to seeme straunge vnto vs considering the weake and simple state of the people at the first is such as that although in some respect they had neede of most expert master-builders yet they may be helped and taught by those who doe themselues neede to be instructed And according to the meane estate both of the teachers and also of the people we must be content as no doubt the Lord in mercy doth accept it with a smale measure both of knowledg and also of obedience in the waies of God and if it here be obiected that which the Apostle forbiddeth Timothy to wit that none newly conuerted from paganisme should be a Bishop or elder we answere that if that be his meaning yet this commandement must giue place to the necessity of the Church yea many such may be knowen to be very sound in the faith so that we need not feare any apostasie in them And forasmuch as it may be well thought that these men cannot so soone be endued with such a measure of knowledge in the gouernment of the Church and in the teaching and ordering of the people but that they will be wanting in many things and oftentimes erre in administration it being of it selfe so hard and difficult as that euen they who haue all their life time laboured in this worke and beene teachers and gouernours in the Church shall find themselues in many respectes insufficient yea ignorant and vnexpert in many cases which do often fall out among the people therefore they by whose meanes and ministerie the Church was first founded euen as by most wise maister-builders must still haue an eye to the seuerall congregations and set those things in order which are amisse resolue the doubtes which are risen among them strengthen confirme and encourage both the people in their profession and obedience which they performe both to God and to his ministers which are set ouer them and especially they are to str●ngthen the teachers themselues least they faint vnder the waight of this most painfull and troublesome calling wherein they finde so many offences in the people so many infirmities and wantes in themselues yea so many l●ts and hinderances of their minis●ery laid by the malice of sathan and the meanes of wicked men Thus did the Apostle Paule exhort confirme and encourage the elders of the Church at Ephesus Act. 20. whose example is to be followed of all in this case who are endued with more excellent gifts of knowledge and wisdome in gouerning the Church of God then these are to whom in the want of men fully sufficient the congregations of the people are committed Sect. 9. To whom the enacting of ecclesiasticall lawes in a publick Church doth belong IT remaineth that we consider to whom it belongeth to make ecclesiasticall lawes in a publick Church In priuate Churches this ought to be done as hath bene said by the whole body of the Church consisting of the rulers and the people for these churches are as it w●re free cities exempted in regard of diuine matters from the iurisdiction of all superiour power saue only of Christ howsoeuer they be subiect to magistrates as touching ciuill obedience But it is farre otherwise in publick Churc●es the which comming into the common-wealth come within the dominion and iurisdiction of the ciuill magistrate not to spoile him of his power either in whole as when the ciuill state is ruled by any in the name of the Church or in part as when the Church taketh to her selfe full and supreame authority in the ordering of her own matters and so exempting hir selfe from the ciuill power doth restraine it from medling with all matters within that dominion But the Church becomming publick doth subiect her selfe to the said power as to a superiour or he●d and suffereth her selfe to be ordered by it in great part For euen as a man as long as he liueth in a desert place or keepeth himselfe within his owne house may liue according to his owne will but as soone as he ioyneth himselfe to a common-wealth and commeth into a publick place he must square his actions according to the commaundement of the magistrate so standeth the case with the Church The which is free as long as she is priuate but being publick is ouerruled by the ciuill power yea euen in making ecclesiasticall lawes this ciuill power hath place where by ecclesiasticall lawes we doe not meane those which prescribe the manner of the worshippe of God and the substance of church-Church-gouernment for these are appointed by God in the word and cannot be changed by any creature but we meane lawes made onely of the circumstances of Gods worshippe being things indifferent neither commanded forbidden nor expressed in the scripture There is an other kinde of lawes which also may be called ecclesiasticall for that they concerne the Church made to allowe commaund and authorise the publick building of it such were the edictes of Cyrus Darius and Artaxerxes for the reedifying of the temple at Ierusalem likewise the lawes of the good kings of Iuda for the ouerthrowing of idolatrie and the publick establishing of the true worshippe of God These lawes are to be made by the sole authoritie of the ciuill ruler or at the least by that authority whereby ciuill lawes are made neither can there any question be made hereof For it is plaine that no man can make the building of a publick Church either peaceable or lawfull but they who haue the ruling of that place wherein it is to be built But as touching the giuer or maker of the other lawes there is great question for it seemeth to many very vnmeete that the ciuil power should enter so farre into the Church as to haue to doe with the making of the lawes whereby it is to be ordered Yea that it is without the compasse of the magistrates calling to meddle with these matters But it seemeth that we ought to be so farre from excluding the ciuill ruler from the making of these lawes which were in some sorte to take the scepter out of his hand forasmuch as where there is a Church publickly sette vp in any realme there the state of the Church and the common-wealth doe verie much depend of
each other and their generall affaires are so lincked together as that neither can be well ordered without respect had to the other as that we rather take it agreeable to the worde of GOD that the cheife stroke in this action be giuen vnto him For the further declaration hereof the making of lawes hath two partes the first is the counselling or aduising of them the second is the establishing or enacting of them both which as it seemeth belong to the ciuill ruler the first in parte the second wholly The enacting of the lawes is the making of them and therefore in the first place we will endeauour to shewe that those thinges which are aduised for the ordering of a publick Church haue both the name and the force of lawes from the ciuill power for first this must of necessititie be graunted to it in the first founding of the C●urch wherein we are to suppose that there are neither ministers nor any beleeuing people only the magistrate hauing the knowledge of the true God goeth aboute to bring the people thereunto The which thing he cannot do without making and establishing lawes for that purpose So that as we see it to be in other matters in that the ciuill ruler is the first and sole founder of these publick Churches he hath the power of enacting those lawes whereby the whole worke is both begun continued and preserued thus the Apostles being the first founders of the Churches did make lawes and constitutions for the ordering of them as we may see 1. Cor. 4.17 Where Paule witnesseth of himselfe that he did make the same cōstitutions in al Churches In like manner the cheife rulers although they haue not Apostolicall callings offices and giftes yet for that in planting publick Churches they do supplie thier places we are to grant vnto them authority in this behalfe And as this po●er cannot be denyed to the magistrate in the first founding of a Church so whenas the Church is built his authoritie is not diminished or abated or giuen to any other but remaineth still in his owne handes The trueth whereof may be declared in this manner to make a lawgiuer there must these things concur First a publick calling whereby he hath care and c●arge of the people to procure their good as by all other meanes so especially by giuing them good and righteous lawes by the which they may be ordered Secondly authoritie to command and also power to compell those who are rebellious to yeeld obedience vnto the said lawes The which thinges for so much as they are wanting in all others saue in the cheife ruler hereof it commeth to passe that the giuing of lawes cannot belong to any saue to him onely For the greater euidence of this point we are to consider to whom this making of ecclesiasticall lawes is giuen being denied to the ciuill ruler namely to the whole ministerie of the Church established who as they haue the ordering and ruling of the Church and the greatest measu●e of knowledge in these affaires so it may seeme most meete that the making of lawes be permitted vnto them For the answering whereof this is to be marked that we do not here enquire who a●e most meet to aduise ecclesiasticall lawes and to be admitted into consultation of them for we cannot doubt but that the ministers of the word are vsually most fit for this purpose but who hath this calling office and authority to make these lawes All which seeme to be wanting in the minister● whose calling and office is to be in particular Churches the ministers of the word of prayer of the sacraments of discipline but not to be lawgiuers in the Church For so they should rule ouer it as Lordes which is forbidden 1. Pet. 5.3 yea they haue no power to make and authorize lawes no not in a priuate Church which is free from the ciuill power For although they beare the chiefest sway in this and in all other actions yet the lawes take their authoritie not from the ministers but from the whole bodie of the Church consisting of ministers and people But in a publicke Church this authoritie goeth from the people to the ciuill ruler by whose authoritie it is planted built and preferred the worde lawfully preached in great assemblies of the people the which otherwise were tumultes yea the positiue lawes of the Church authorized put in force So that in a priuate Church the state i● popular but in a publicke Church it is according to the ciuill state as namely monarchicall in the rule of one If any doe here obiect that definition of the office and duetie of a ruler which the people of Israel make 1. Sam. 8.20 saying We wil haue a king who shall iudge vs and fight our battailes for vs and thereof gather that he being otherwise busied cannot vse the meanes of attayning a sufficient measure of knowledge in ordering of the Church we answere that this people had no care but of worldly matters And further that there is no ruler in his owne person so continually imployed in ciuil or warlike affaires but that he may and ought to giue himselfe to the studie of the worde of GOD and to the vse of all men whereby he may be made able for the discharging of this duety to the Church The trueth of this pointe appeareth in the example of Iosua who had a more waightie and troublesome charge laide vpon him namely to bring the people of Israel into the land of Chanaan and to giue them quiet possession of it then any ruler hath in the ordinarie gouernment of his realme and yet the Lorde gaue him this commaundement in the first place Ios. 1.8 That the booke of the lawe should neuer depart from him but that he should meditate on it day and night If it be further asked why the Apostles neuer make mention of any such authority that princes should ha●e in the church the answere is plaine to wit that there were no publicke Churches in their daies And therefore the ciuill ruler had no further to deale with them then to tolerate them within their dominions and to see that they liued in ciuill peace and order As touching the aduising of lawes although the ciuill ruler haue the authoritie of enacting them yet he ought to be very sparing and moderate in vsing it The which thing as it is necessarelie to be obserued in the ciuill gouernment of all rulers who desire to haue a quiet and peaceable estate so it is much more requisite in ordering the Churrch which ought to be ruled after a most gentle and milde manner euen as the prophet Esay doth teach vs saying that in the time of the gospell Kings Queenes shal be nourse-fathers and nourse-mothers to the Church that is they shall rule and order it not tyrannically by force and violence but in a louing and tender sort euen as we see nourses deale with young children The which affection a christian ruler
of the same ciuill power THus much of the voluntarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of councels now followeth the necessarie coniunction of them so called because it is not in their power to shake off that common authoritie whereunto they are subiect This necessarie coniunction hath place then whenas diuerse particular Churches are tyed together in obedience to the same ciuill authoritie by the which they are ruled as hath beene declared in the former chapter Yea it may be seene almost in all publick Churches the which vsually consist of so great a number of professours as cannot possiblie be contained within the compasse of one C●urch for if any one populous citie doe generally professe the gospell it must of necessitie be deuided into diuers particular Churches much more a christian country nation or kingdome cannot but containe in it many particular Churches All which although they haue their proper rulers or teachers and orders as free Churches haue yet they haue also a common gouernment and lawes proceeding from the ciuill power to the obedience whereof they are all bound For in publicke Churches the ciuill power hath the greatest sway in gouerning by the which being one the whole Church and euery particular assembly is brought to a conformitie both in doctrine as also in gouernment yea it is requisite needfull that it should be so for otherwise if euery particular Church did differ from the rest in gouernment the whole Church could not be ordered without great trouble and confusion But yet this common gouernment of the magis●●ate doth not take away the grouernment of particular Churches no more then the councels whereof we haue spoken do from free Churches This is to be done by the authoritie of the ciuill ruler yet by the aduise of others In the choise of whom as it is lawfull for the prince to call or passe ouer whom he thinketh meete or vnmeete so it will be conuenient for the good of the Church the which it is not lawfull for him eyther wholly to neglect or lightly to regard to call of all sortes of men those who are endued with best giftes yet so that some be had out of euery particular Church as if they were free Churches And especially the ministers of the word are to be called for the reasons declared in the former section when they by his authoritie are gathered together he is to take vnto himselfe the ruling of the whole action vnlesse it be needful that he delegate his authoritie to some other and by praying for the blessing of God vpon their consultations declaring the cause of their meeting to begin it Then he is to propound in the first place those wants faults and corruptions of the Ch. which he himselfe hath obserued would haue supplied and taken away to shewe the manner how he thinketh it most meet to be done which being done he is to giue liberty to euery one present to speake their mindes freely of those things which he hath propounded as also of any other thing which they thinke good for the Church that which is agreed vpon doth appeare to al or to the most of them right meete to be decreed he is to establish giuing vnto it the vertue of an ecclesiastical law the which the whole Ch. ought to obey That which cannot be agreed vpon is to be deferred to another time of meeting which ought to be somuch the sooner as the matters controuersed are of greater importance for more mature deliberation with themselues and others will make that cleare and euident which before was doubtfull If there be any thing which neyther can be agreed vpon by the consent of the greater part neither yet deferred without great hurt to the Church the chiefe ruler may with the consent of some of the councell decree and enact that which they thinke needfull to be done Yet he is not to vse this authority in this manner but vpon vrgent necessitie for many inconueniences do follow the enacting of ecclesiasticall lawe● without the full consent of the councell yea the suspitiō of tyrannizing ouer the Ch. of God is by al meanes to be auoyded In regard wherof many christian Emperors rulers did resigne their authoritie which they had in gouerning the ch to these councels insomuch that they had the ful power not only of aduising lawes but also of enacting or the giuing vnto them the force of laws But as hath bene shewed this m●y easely turne to the hurt of the Ch. and therefore it ought not wholly to b● followed yet it sheweth how great regard ciuil rulers ought to haue of the iudgement aduise of those who are godly wise and learned in the ordering of the Churches subiect vnto them And therefore that which the councell thinketh good to be done or the greater part of them ought to be greatly regarded Yet if the chiefe ruler cannot be brought to giue his assent vnto it it cannot haue the force of an ecclesiastical lawe or be imposed vpon the whole Ch. in that name As touching the number wherof any national councel doth consist there cānot any be defined but it must be left to the appointmēt of the chief ruler to whom the deposing authorizing of this whole action doth belong Yet it ought to be proportionable to the quantity of the Ch. to the number of the particular Churches so that if some be had out of euery one of thē it wil make the lawes enacted to be much more willingly receaued obeyed whenas it shal be knowen that some of thē selues did in the name of the rest consent vnto them And especially this is requisite in respect of the chiefe end and vse of these councels both in free and publicke churches whereof we will briefly speake The which is to bring the whole Church to a conformitie of doctrine this is needfull and good to be done and that for these causes first for the repressing of heresies which doe continually arise in the Church For the which purpose the generall consent of the Church is very forcible for eyther the consent and iudgement of the whole Church will be of great waight to take the said heresies out of the mindes of those who doe maintaine them or else the authoritie by which the trueth oppugned is publickly established will be able to remooue the maintainers of them out of the Church Secondly this forme of doctrine agreed vpon by many will be effectuall to strengthen and confirme those who are weake in the faith and not fully grounded in some pointes of christian religion Yea it may be a meanes to helpe forward those who haue not as yet taken vpon them the profession of the gospel Not that we ought to build our faith vpon the authority of men but for that we ought to take from the Church a confirmation of our faith seeing we may be greatly helped and strengthned by this meanes And lastly this forme of
doctrine ought to be esteemed the publicke confession of the whole Church whereby they doe make knowen not only to other Churches but also to the whole world that they do professe maintaine the trueth of christian religion and of euery part therof do detest abhor al the false worship of the Iewes Turkes and all other infidels whatsoeuer and also that they are free from all false erroneous opinions all grosse blasphemous heresies of men professing the faith wherewith the Church hath bene at al times and is troubled at this day This publicke profession of the faith being with great care diligence made and approued by the generall consent of the whole councel is by the authority of the chiefe ruler to be enioined to the whole Ch. so as it be not lawfull for any man to deny or refute any point of it Yet it ought not to containe in it the determination of al controuersies but only a declaration of the chiefe points of religion in the profession wherof the life as it were the very essence or being of the Church doth consist For as touching matters of lesse moment in the which men may erre without any danger to their owne saluation or hurt to the Church it is impossible that all men should be brought to think and professe the same thing but there will be continually diuersity of opinions in these points in euerie Church Yet it doth belong to this publick councel to consider to determin euen of other doubts cōtrouersies which do troble the Church that by this meanes contention may be taken away and as the Apostle writeth 1. Cor. 1.10 all may say the same things and be knit together in one minde and in one iudgment Yet the determination of the councell of these lighter points ought not to be imposed vpon any man to thinke or to professe but euerie man left to thinke as it shall please God to giue him to vnderstand the worde of God in that behalfe either keeping his opinion dissenting fr●m the Church to himselfe or else imparting it to others in that moderate wise and christian manner as that no man be iustly offended by him or the publick peace of the Churche disquieted but rather all in some measure edified Sect. 4. of the gouerning of the seuerall prouinces of a national Church THus much of a publick or nationall councell gathered ordered and established by the authority of the cheife ruler for this end to bring the whole Church to a conformity both in outward rites and orders and also in the truth of doctrine Wherein this is especially to be cōsidered and therefore not vnfit to be repeated that there be regard had vnto the liberty of inferiour Synodes For as it is impossible to make all men thinke the same thing in all pointes so also it is vnmeet yea impossible that the generall councell should so define of al things which are incident into the gouerning of churches as that nothing be left to the discretion and disposition of inferiour assemblies And therefore the decrees and lawes made by the generall councell ought to be as rules to direct them in their actions although all particular cases and circumstances yea matters of lesse importance be neither determined nor yet mentioned in them Nowe we are to come to prouinciall councels for so much as there do daily many doubts and controuersies arise yea great and waightie affaires do offer themselues amongest the Churches which neither for the greatnesse can sufficiently be determined and ordered by a fewe ministers neither yet conueniently be deferred to a generall meeting which cannot be had without great trouble to the Church Therefore prouinciall sinodes haue a necessarie vse They are of the same nature with general councels saue only that they belong not to the whole Ch. but onely to some parte of it as it is distinguished They are to be called ordered and established by the authoritie of the ciuil ruler and do deale in the same matters and in the manner aforesaid for the care and ordering not only of a whole nationall Ch. generall but also of the seuerall prouinces of it doth belong to the ciuill ruler so that although it doth not belong to his office to enter into particular congregations and there to performe the dutie of an ordinary gouernour or teacher yet he ought to see and procure that they be in good order that the ministers of the word do their duties diligently and sincerly that the people liue in obedience to the gospell of Christ. But in great nations and kingdoms it is not often seene that the cheife ruler can keepe in his owne handes and discharge in his owne person this dutie of ouerseeing the seuerall prouinces of the Ch. and therefore it is as alwaies lawfull so often needfull that he delegate and commit this parte of his dutie to some other euen to whomsoeuer he thinketh meetest for this purpose Neither are we to exclude those who are ministers of the word from this calling as if they only were vnmeete whenas they are in some respects fitter then others hauing been many yeares exercised in the affaires of some particular Church And therefore if it please the ciuill ruler to call any who doth performe some ordinarie ministerie in some particular Church to this office of ouerseeing many Churches he doth nothing but that which is agreable to reason and warrantable by the word of GOD. For men hauing taken vpon them any ministerie are not so tyed vnto it but that they may leaue it when as they shal be called by the cheife ruler to performe any other more waighty and publick dutie yea although it be in some ciuill office and much more to haue the care of many churches Yet it is not meet that any man hauing this office should withall haue any function in a particular Church as doth necessarely require his presence For besides other inconueniences it will be to him an occasion of negligence in the performance of his dutie and an euill example to others Which as it is a grieuous thing in any man to do the worke of God negligently so it is much more offensiue in him whose office and calling it is to see that the Church be well ordered Thus much of the common gouernment of diuers Churches whether they be free or subiect to the same ciuill power From this common gouernment whole nations and kingdoms consisting of many Churches are often called one particular church because they al haue the same humane lawes although if we speake properly they are diuers Churches because they haue not all the same lawes but only some publick common and generall lawes pertaining to all CHAP. XI THus much of a partìcular Church both seuerally and also ioyntly considered In the next and last place we are to come to the visible Church which is nothing else but a collection of all the particular Churches in the world into one body or summe which
this people shoulde earnestly desire and seeke after wishing rather that euerie one be content with that gouernment which is already established in the place where he liueth not thinking of any alteration which is verie dangerous and bringeth with it as alwaies great troubles so often a finall ouerthrow to the people But we leaue it to them who professe knowledge and experience in these matters to determine what kinde of gouernment is eyther most excellent in the owne nature and in contemplation or most conuenient to be put in practise Onely we purpose to make a bare and historical narration of the state of this kingdome the which we trust is not vnprofitable but will serue for the good of the reader in diuers respectes especially in those which haue bene already mentioned The former treatise hath these Sections SEction 1. Of the occasion meaning and diuision of the wordes of the text Pag. 1 Sect. 2. Of magistracie in generall Pag. 4 Sect. 3. Of the state of this kingdome in generall Pag. 9 Sect. 4. That the authoritie of the land was wholly in the handes of the king all other being priuate persons in respecte of him Pag. 12 Sect. 5. That it was n●t lawfull to vse any violence against the persons or the proceedinges no not of the wicked kinges Pag. 17 Sect. 6. Of the obiections which are made against the former position Pag. 22 Sect. 7. What was the behauio●r of the subiectes in regarde of iniuries offered by their ki●ges Pag. 28 Sect. 8. Whether the setting vp of this monarchicall estate were commodious or hurtful to the people Pag. 30 Sect. 9. That no person whatsoeuer was exempted from this power Pag. 34 Sect. 10. What was the power of this kingdome in ecclesiasticall causes Pag. 39 Sect. 11. That the power of this kingdome was free from positiue lawes and a peremptorie power Pag. 46 Sect. 12. Of the causes of the great maiestie of this kingdome Pag. 50 Sect. 13. Of the particulars in the said Maiesty Pag. 54 Sect. 14. That this kingdome was a lawfull kinde of gouernement and how it was subiect to God Pag. 61 Sect. 15. Of the actions of Samuel Pag. 67 The Argument of the latter treatise is the Church militant considered in general in the first chapter of the catholiick Church sections 8. particular in the members of the catholicke Church dispersed abroad in the second chap. sections 3. ioyned together in a particular Church whereof we are to entreate seuerally declaring in generall the definitiō of a particular Ch. in the attributes chapter 3. Sections 3. the building of it to wit the laying the foundation Ch. 4. Sect. 4. the setting vp the frame by establishing lawes ecclesiasticall diuine Ch. 5. Sect. 2. humane C. 6. of ecclesiasticall constitutions sect 5. of the diuers states of it Ch. 7. Sect. 11 In particular the diuerse kindes of a Church which is eyther priuate Ch. 8. Sect. 3. or publicke Chap. 9. Sections 9. Ioyntly in the coniunction of some particular Churches Chap. 10. Sect. 4. all the which make the visible Church Chap. 11. The Argument Chapter 1. Of the catholicke Church SEction 1. Of the name and definition of the catholicke Church pag. 1 Sect. 2. Of the place of the catholicke Church pag. 3 Sect. 3. That hypocrites are members of the catholicke Church pag. 4 Sect. 4. That heretickes are members of the catholicke Church pag. 8 Sect. 5. Of those who dissemble their profession pag. 16 Sect. 6. Who are without the catholicke Church pag. 17 Sect. 7. Of the attributes of the catholicke Church pag. 18 Sect. 8. Of the distribution of the catholicke Church pag. 21 Chapter 2. Of the dispersed members of the Church Sect. 1. For what cause men are separated from the Church pag. 22 Sect. 2. How they serue God pag. 25 Sect. 3. What to thinke of their saluation pag. 26 Chapter 3. Of a particular church Sect. 1. Of the originall of it pag. 29 Sect. 2. Of the definition of it pag. 30 Se●● 3. Of the number of i● pag. 32 Chapter 4. Of the planting of a particular church Sect. 1. Of what people a Church may consist pag. 35 Sect. 2. By whom a church ought to be planted pag. 37 Sect. 3. How the word should be preached to infidels pag. 39 Sect. 4. How men conuerted ought to be ordered pag. 44 Chapter 5. Of ecclesiasticall gouernment Sect. 1. Of church gouernment in generall pag. 48 Sect. 2. Of the diuers kindes of church gouernment pag. 53 Chapter 6. Of ecclesiasticall humane lavves Sect. 1. How these lawes diff●r from the lawes of God pag. 57 Sect. 2. 3. Of the matter of these lawes pag. 58 Sect. 4. After what rules they are to be made pag. 62 Sect. 5. Of the number of them psg 66 Chapter 7. Of the diuers states of a particular church Sect. 1. Of a state vnestablished pag. 67 Sect. 2. Of a pure and perfect state of a church pag. 70 Sect. 3. Of a flourishing state pag. 71 Sect. 4. Of that state wherein the building of the ch is hindred pag. 74 Sect. 5. Of professed hinderers pag. 78 Sect. 6. Of the ch hindred by the ciuil ruler being a professed enemie pa. 79 Sect. 7. Of the church hindred by the ciuill ruler being a member of it p. 83 Sect. 8. Of the church hindered by the ministers of the word pag. 87 Sect. 9. Of an imperfect state of a chur●h pag. 88 Sect. 10. Of a currupt state of a church namely of idolatrie pag. 90 Sect. 11. Of a church corrupt in doctrine pag. 93 Chapter 8 Of a priuate Church Sect. 1. What a priuate Church is Pag. 95 Sect. 2. Of the specials in planting a priuate Church pag. 120 Sect. 3. Of the state of it being planted pag. 99 Chapter 9. Of a publicke or nationall Church Sect. 1. Of the obiections which are made against publick Ch. pag. 102 Sect. 2. Of the coniunction of the church and the commonwealth p. 106 Sect. 3. That a publicke Church with the commonwealth make but one bodie vnder one head pag. 107 Sect. 4. That ciuill and ecclesiastical functions may be together in the same persons pag. 114 Sect. 5. Of the chaunges which happen eyther ●o the Church or common wealth by this coniunction pag. 116 Sect. 6. Of the first mouer in the planting of a publicke Church pag. 118 Sect. 7. Of the special manner of planting a publicke Church pa. 120 Sect 8. Of the establishing of it pag. 123 Sect. 9. To whom the authorizing and aduising of ecclesiastical lawes belongeth in a publicke Church pag. 125 Chapter 10. Of the coniunction of particular Churches Sect. 1. Of the voluntarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of councels pag. 131 Sect. 2. Of whom counsels may and ought to consist pag. 133 Sect. 3. Of the necessarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of the same ciuill power pag. 134 Sect. 4. How the seuerall prouinces of a national church are to be
many and so to conclude this point and specially the first edict which the first king made and that by the immediate motion of the spirit of God because this is most for the purpose of the matter in hand We read 1. Sam. 11.17 that whenas Saule was to call the people together to battaile he gaue foorth such a peremptorie commaundement as neuer any of the Iudges or Elders did For taking a couple of oxen and deuiding them into peeces he sent them to all partes of the land with this message that whosoeuer did not follow him to battaile so shoulde it be done to his oxen Whereupon the people came roundly as one man for that as the text noteth the feare of the Lord that is of this greate power which the Lord had giuen to the king fell vpon them Saule might haue said with Dauid I am yet a tender and newe king and haue many enemies wherefore it is not meete that I shoulde exasperate the people by threarning them but it was the will of God that the people shoulde see in the beginning to what a kinde of power they had ●●●mitted themselues Sect. XII THus much of the power or authority of this kingdome the second part of the doctrine of it is the maiesty of it the fundamental lawes of the kingdom belonging therunto The maiesty of the kingdom is the great glorie and excellency wherein it far passeth other kindes of gouernment and for the which it is much more highly esteemed It was procured by these meanes First by that exceeding great power wherof we haue spoken for whereas the whole administration of all thinges is in the handes of one there the good estate of all men publikely and of euery one particularly doth depend on him whereby it commeth to passe that all mens eyes are set on him yea all men doe honour praise and admire him in whom they see great authoritie and riches and whose wisedome is more conspicuous then any others besides Secondly this kingdome was maiesticall by the first originall of it which it had not from man but from God This law is written Deut. 17.14 When thou hast possessed the land and sayest I will haue a king to raigne ouer me thou shalt make him king whome the Lord thy God shall choose and so the euent proued for the state of this kingdome in generall came from the people to whome also it belonged solemnly to acknowledge him whom God did appoint but the nomination of the particular man on whom this honour should be bestowed came from God who appointed first Saul with his posterity and afterwardes Saul being reiected Dauid and his seed By the which meanes God did choose all the kinges in Israel although he did immediately by his owne voyce onely appoint the first three to wit Saule Dauid and Salomon For euen as the fire wherewith the sacrifices were burnt although it were nourished euerie day by the priest putting fresh wood vnto it and so preserued by the same meanes wherby other fire is kept yet be cause at the first it came downe from heauen miraculously was therfore counted holy and wonderfull euen so was this kingdom because at the first it came from God although afterwardes it were continued by naturall and ordinarie propagation Hence it is that this kingdom is called the kingdome of Iehoua 2. Chro. 13.8 The badge and seale of this diuine originall of this kingdome was that holie vnction whereby these kinges were by the prophets of God solemnly in the name of God inaugurated and therefore the signe being put for the thing signified this annointing betokeneth the holinesse of it insomuch that when the king of Israell is as it were to be painted forth in the natiue colours of his maiestie he is called the annointed of the Lorde Thus 1. Sam. 24.7 God forbid saith Dauid that I should lay my handes on Saule seeing he is the annoynted one of GOD. And 2. Samuell 1.14 hee saith to him who had helpt kinge Saule to kill himselfe Howe was it that thou diddest not feare to put out thy hande to kill the Lordes annoynted The third lawe tending to the maiestie of this kingdome was that it was not any vncertaine and moueable state but constant and fixed in one place it was tyed first to one tribe namely to the tribe of Iuda that by God speaking by the mouth of Iacob the first founder of this nation for in his sonnes it began to be deuided into many tribes and families and so came into the forme of a people the prophesie i● written Gen. 49. The rod shall not depart from Iuda nor a law giuer c. Secondly it was tyed to one and the same familie to wit to the house of Dauid for euer and went by hereditarie right and succession in lineall discent so that continually the sonne succeeded the father The which lawe although it was established in the like gouernementes in other places yet it coulde seldome take place for any long time by reason of the want of right successours But it was heere kept in continuall force and that by the marueilous prouidence of God who as he promised did alwaies giue to Dauid his seruaunt a sonne of his owne loynes to sitte vpon his throne The which prouidence of GOD may especially be noted in the straunge preseruation of Ioas from the cruell handes of that monster Athalia 2. King 11.3 By this meanes it came to passe that this kingdom was both naturall and in processe of time ancient yea after a sort immortall For the first we need not doubt but that there was an exceeding great loue and reuerence of this king wrought in the mindes of the people whenas they sawe that he had not obtained that place by ambition faction force of armes or any other sinister or violent meanes but was euen borne vnto them and by nature or rather by God the ruler and desposer of all naturall causes appointed and distinated to that calling Yea also in time by this hereditarie succession the kingdome became of great antiquitie which addeth much to the maiestie of meane thinges much more to those which in many other respectes are excellent Euen as men doe ascribe a kinde no● onely of reuerence but euen of religion to okes and other trees which haue a long time kept their standing for so in continuance of time they take so deepe roote and gather such strength as that they cannot be moued whereas at the first they may easely be shaken downe so kingdoms continuing long in the same stocke become firme and maiesticall whereas being often transplanted they are weake and contemptible and doe often fall euen in the beginning Thus fell Abimelech his kingdome and euen this kingdome was sore shaken in the defection of the ten tribes because the memory of Ierobaal grandfather to Abimelech a priuate and base man and of Isai the father of Dauid was not cleane worne away and therefore they said
ciuil affaires the princes of the families tribes and of the people of Israel are called the heades of them because they did first moue in all publicke actions and yet the person of the ciuill ruler whether of the king of senatours or of any other in particular is to be counted a member of the Church as other men are Thus we see that the Church together with the ciuill state make not t●o but one bodie vnder one and the same head Sect. 4. Ciuill and ecclesiasticall callinges may be in the same subiect NOW we are to see how these two states may also agree in subiect that is be ordered by the same persons For this false distinction of the body of the Church from the body of the common wealth as it hath sprung from a false opinion of two distinct supreame heades the one ouer the Church the other ouer the ciuill state so it hath beene confirmed by a false difference which hath beene put betwixt ciuill and eclesiasticall persons as if the hauing of any function in the one state did quite cut a man off from medling with the other and that by reason of the contrary natures of these two states and of the functions belonging vnto them But according to the worde of God these ciuil and ecclesiasticall callinges doe not so fight but that they may meete together in one man without iarring For it is not vnlawfull for one who beareth some publicke function or is in any degree or place of honour in the commonwealth to meddle with the ordering of the Church if he haue giftes from God and a lawfull calling from men or yet for him who is alreadie an ecclesiasticall person to haue retaine or take vpon him any ciuill calling The trueth of this doctrine may be plainely seene in the scripture which sheweth that both ciuil ecclesiastical callings may lawfully concurre in the same person when the state of the Church doth so require For if we doe consider the Church before the law we shal find that the first borne of the family was to the rest both a magistrate and a minister so that although the examples of the Church being in her infancie and imperfect estate ought not wholly to be applied to the Church in the time of the gospell yet we may hereby know that there is no such contrariety in the natures of these callings but that they may be in the same person Likewise we read that in the time of the law many who were appointed by God to his seruice did beare ciuill callings Thus did Samuel Eli and the rest of the priestes and elders who were vnto the people as iudges lawiers did gouerne them euen in the ciuill affaires Lastly if it be obiected that these functions ought to be laid vpon diuerse men forasmuch as one man cannot be able to attend vpon many callinges we answere confessing this to be true that for the better discharging of these callings they ought ordinarelie to be committed to diuers men yet that it is no more vnlawful for one man to haue a ciuil and an ecclesiasticall calling then to haue two ciuill callinges and that some men are endued with so greate a measure of knowledge wisedome diligence and other giftes that they may be imployed in both these kindes of callinges By that which hath beene said of this second point we may easely gather the resolution of the third question to wit that in this coniunction the Church hath not the vpper hand neyther can commaund and ouerrule but is subiect to the ciuill power as to her superiour by whose leaue she came into the commonwealth and by the which she is maintained vpholden yea in great part ordered as hereafter will appeare Yea further we may know in part by the same conclusion what to thinke of the fourth point to wit how these states do meddle the one with the other and namely that the ciuil power doth many waies intermeddle with the Church euen as the heade doth with the body for it doth not onely suffer or procure the building of it but also effect it not onely plant it but also establish and maintaine yea repaire it being fallen purge it being corrupt and order it by ecclesiasticall lawes as the processe of this treatise will declare in particular As for the Church it doth not meddle with the ciuil state or gouernment of the commonwealth but ought to leaue it wholly to the ciuill magistrate Sect. 5. Of the chaunges happening eyther to the Church or the commonwealth by their coniunction LAstly we are to consider what chaunges commodities or discommodities do arise either to the Church or to the commonwealth by this coniunction of them in one body And first that form or kind of ciuil gouerment whether it were the rule of one of a few or of many whether the authoritie were absolute and great or conditionall moderate and limitted which was in vse amongest any people before they did beleeue is not by this meanes alter●d but remaineth in full force as before For a publicke Church may stand with any forme of gouernment and be subiect vnto it without making any alteration Yet it cutteth off whatsoeuer is in the ciuill state in the lawes customes or offices of it vnlawfull and repugnant to the worde of God for the Church cannot possibly agree and be ioyned with that which doth not agree with the worde Other chaunge it maketh none saue onely that the ciuill state becommeth by this meanes more happie sure and firme yea more glorious and flourishing for besides the secrete blessing which God doth many waies poure vpon those countries the which doe honour him by professing the name of his sonne Christ and so doe giue not onely a poore harbour but euen publicke and sol●mne entertainement to his Church as he did blesse the house of Obed Edome 2. Sam. 6.11 for that the Arke remained there for a season there are euident and necessarie reasons why it shoulde so be For there is no humane law●s no feare of punishment or hope of rewarde whatsoeu●r that can binde men so sure to the perfourmance both of faithfull and loyall obedience to their rulers as also of all dueties to their neighbours as doth religion and the feare of God in the heartes of men And although it ●e not to be hoped especially in these publicke Churches that the heartes of all men generallie shoulde be truelie possessed with the feare GOD yet the worde of God being preached leaueth euen in the consciences of hypocrites a feare of committing hainous crimes the which for the most part ciuil lawes do forbid yea in the Church the ministery of the word reproueth and also correcteth the least faultes which are incident into the life of man whereby it commeth to passe that theft mur●her and al other such grosse crimes are not once named Lastly there is nothing so honorable and glorious for any people as to haue the true religion established amongst
ought to haue vse and shew in all his dealings with the Church and especially in giuing lawes for the ordering of it For although in other matters his will may in some sort stand for a law yet in this case he ought not to be so peremptorie or wilfull but that he doe willingly suffer himselfe to be ruled by the worde of God to doe that which is most agreeable vnto it And forasmuch as in indifferent things wherof these lawes are to be made it is not alwaies easie to see what is most right and meete to be done and for that ciuill rulers haue not the extraordinarie assistance and the spirit of God to direct them in these actions therefore it is needfull that they consult with others take their aduise in making lawes for the Church and so much the rather as an ouersight in gouerning the Church is more hurtfull then it is in ciuill mattes If it be here asked who ought to be admitted to this waightie consultation and what is the whole order of this action we referr●●he answere hereof to the next chapter CHAP. X. Of the coniunction of particular Churches Sect. 1. Of the voluntarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of councels THVS much of a particuiar Church seuerally considered and being distinguished from all others by the proprietie of humane ecclesiasticall lawes or more plainely by a distinct gouernment euen as we see one citie countrie or kingdome to be separated from another by the owne limits whether hils riuers seas or any other thus the Church which was planted at Corinth by the Apostle was free from all other Churches being not bound to their lawes and orders Yet often it commeth to passe that they are ioyned together and that euen in this bonde of humane gouernment by the which they are vsually seuered one from another Of this coniunction we are briefly to entreate the which we find to be of two sortes the one voluntarie the other necessarie voluntarie coniunction is that whereby particular Churches which otherwise are free from all humane authoritie and iurisdiction doe submit themselues to a common-guernment for their common good as we see that free cities enter into a league and a common-gouernment that so they may be the better ordered The subiect of this authoritie are councels prouinciall naturall and generall which are assemblies of certaine men sente from particular Churches with authoritie to iudge and determine of the waightie causes of those Churches In these councels we are to consider first their originall and authority and secondly of whom they doe consist For the first although the gouernment which God hath appointed for the ordering of Churches in particular be in it selfe sufficient for that purpose yet there is many waies great vse of this common-gouernment of counsels For there is not so greate force and authoritie for the repressing of the stubborne and disobedient for the resoluing of doubtes the deciding of waightie controuersies the confirming of the trueth of doctrine the resuting of pernitious heresies the making of ecclesiasticall constitutions of rites and ceremonies and finally for the ordering of great waightie matters in the ministerie of any one Church as there is in a greate number whose godlinesse wisedome and learning are famously knowen to all men Yea there is among many excellent men greate varietie of knowledge wisedome and all spirituall graces the which being ioyned together are more auailable for the edifying of the Church then if they were onely seuerally vsed in particular Churches For these causes was this common gouernment of councels instituted in the Church at the first and hath continued in all the ages of it The first example of a councell in the time of the gospell is Act. 15.6 where all the Apostles and the whole Church which was at Ierusalem come tog●ther for the deciding of a great controuersie moued about the keeping of the cer●moniall lawe But this counsell although in force and authoritie it was occumenical or generall in that the constitutions made then by the Apostles did belong to all the Churches in the worlde yet in act and in deede it was a particular assemblie of that one Church which was at Ierusalem consisting of the Apostles Elders and of the whole people as appeareth Vers. 22. so that this example serueth not for our purpose neyther proueth the diuine institution of prouincial councels Yea as it seemeth we haue not any example or precept of this coniunction of particular Churches mentioned in the actes writinges of the Apostles or elsewhere in the holy scripture Whe●eof some haue gathered that these councels are vnlawfull and their authoritie vsurped being not of God but from man and that there is no other gou●rnment appointed for the Church but that which may be had within the compasse of euerie particular Church For answere whereof we knowe that of lawfull things some are necessarie being commaunded by God so that the omitting of them is sinne in his sight but other things are so lawfull as that they may la●fully be left vndone being not commanded but permitted to vs to doe when we shal thinke them conuenient Of this latter kinde are these common councels and this voluntary coniunction of diuerse Churches vnder one gouernment For we haue no flat commaundement in the word as touching it neither can any Church be compelled to ioyne in this manner yet one Church may lawfully vse the helpe of an other for their mutuall good If it be here obiected that it is not in the power of man to appointe any other forme of Church-gouernment then God himselfe hath prescribed in his worde we answere that these common councels do not take away the gouernment of particular churches but rather do establishe it yea make it more effectuall and forcible and supplieth the wantes the which by reason of the infirmitie and wants of men are often found in it The reason why these councels are not mentioned in the scripture is for that in the daies of the Apostles the Churches could not ioyne themselues together in this manner not only because they were not fully setled within themselues but cheifely because they were fewe in number and so farre distante one from another that they could not with any conuenience communicate ordinarely together Yea the Apostles were to them in steed of the most generall councels for they referred all their doubts controuersies and matters of importaunce to their determination wherein the rested as in the word of God Whereby it appeareth that although these councels haue not their originall and authority immediatly and directly from God as the ministerie of a particular Church hath yet that they haue bene instituted and vsed by the Church for iust and necessarie caus●s according to the worde and will of God Likewise the authority of these councelles is the full authoritie of those Churches from the which the seuerall commissioners or delegates were sent And therefore it ought to be
reuerenced and obeyed yet this is to be noted that this authority doth not stretch it selfe to any Churches saue only to those which ioyne themselues together in this kinde of gouernment or rather in this subiection And therefore a councell which is gathered out of all the Churches of some countrie or parte of the world cannot impose lawes vpon the Churches of other countries yea if in an oecumenicall councell any one Church should refuse to ioyne it selfe with the rest the lawes of that councell should not builde that one Church for councels haue no authoritie but ouer those Churches from the which they haue authority Sect. 2. Of whom councels may and ought to consist SEcondly we are to see of whom these councels ought to consist the answere is of men whom the common consent of the Churches ioyned together vnder this common gouernment doth in respect of the excellencie of their giftes to wit of zeale godlines wisdom learning experience faithfulnesse boldnesse diligence and such other graces requisite in this behalfe iudge fit for this purpose Here we haue two questions to answere The first is whether that any besides the ministers of the word ought to be of these councels the second is whether that a councell may conueniently consist wholly of those who are not ministers of the word For answere of both these questions we confesse that the ministers ought to be accounted most fit to be admitted into consultation of these waighty matters for that they ought not only to know the state and condition of the particular churches better the any other it being their calling and office to looke vnto them but also to be endued with more excellent giftes then are to be expected vsually in others yet these councels may lawfully according to the word of god cōsist of others Yea the constitutions or decrees of such councels are no lesse to haue the force reuerence and obedience of ecclesiasticall lawes then if they had been made by a councell consisting wholly of ministers For it is in the power of the Churches which do consociat● themselues in this manner to delegate their authority to whom they will of what calling or condition soeuer he be For although the knowledge and care of the state of the Church and all other graces haue in corrupt times bene appropriated to the ministers the people being accounted ignorant and prophane idoles neither able nor worthy to deale with ecclesiasticall matters much lesse to iudge deter●ine and aduise of matt●rs of great importance yet we learne out of the worde and see it ratified by experience that the spirite of GOD and all spirituall graces do as well belong and are as often as plentifully yea some times in greater measure granted to other Christians then to the ministers of the word So that the ministers of the worde cannot challenge to themselues authority and abilitie to be the only doers in this action but must admitte into their company and consultation those of the people that are iudged fitte for this purpose yea although there be a sufficient nomber of ministers able to performe whatsoeuer is required in this behalfe yet it is diuers waies inconuenient that councels shoulde consist wholly of them For first we knowe that a great parte of these lawes do concerne the ministers themselues and the performance of their duties and functions wherein if there be any generall negligence want or ouersight and errour which is no straunge thing as they knowe who are acquainted with the histories and state of the Church who shal lay open the faulte make lawes for the redressing of it For although it may be supposed that they wil doe it of their owne accord yet it standeth not with their wisdome who haue the choosing of fit men for these councels to commit the matter wholly to them especially whenas the amending of the errour is against the credite commoditie or ease of the ministers yea it is not agreeable to any reason that they should appoint to themselues the duties and worke which they ought to doe and correct whatsoeuer is amisse therein for we know that most of all those corruptions wherewith the Church hath bene polluted and defaced these many ages haue bene both broug●t in and continued by the meanes of these councels consisting of ministers onely Besides this reiecting of the whole Church as vnfit to aduise any thing for their owne good is both iniurious to God who especially in this time of the Gospell poureth foorth his spirite with a full and indifferent hand on all his seruants that call vpon him so that his graces bestowed on the Church are as the oyntment which being poured vpon Aarons head ran downe euen to the skirtes of his garments and also reprochfull to the Church as being destitute of all spirituall wisdome and vnderstanding Lastly the excluding of all the people from councels maketh the lawes enacted by them to be vnwillingly receaued for that the ministers taking all the authoritie into their own handes doe easely incurre the suspition of tirannizing ouer the Church whereas the lawes would be readely obeyed without murmuring or repining if that some of the people had a hand in the making of them As touching the second question although a councell gathered about ecclesiasticall matters might lawfully consist wholly of those who are not ministers of the word yet it is seldome conuenient that this shoulde be put in practise for first the ordinary authority wherewith the ministers are endued in that they are the teachers and gouerners of the people although it be not sufficient to make lawes yet it requireth that they shoulde vsually beare the greatest sway in making those humane lawes whereby the Church should be gouerned yea by this meanes it commeth to passe that the lawes haue greater force and authoritie among the people then when they come from men otherwise meerly priuate Yea the state of many Churches is so that fewe men of other callings besides the ministers of the word giue themselues to the studie of the word of God or haue sufficient knowledge for this purpose thinking that it doth belong to ministers onely to know the manner of the worshippe of God and of the gouernment of his Church And if we doe suppose a flourishing state of a Church wherein knowledge doth abound not onely in the ministers but also among the people so as they are able to giue a sounde iudgement and good aduise in these waightie matters yet the ministers ought not to be excluded for if the people doe abound with knowledge it is like yea necessarie that the ministers be much more filled with all spirituall vnderstanding and wisedome yea it is seldom seene that others know the state of the Church and of the people which in making these lawes is chiefly to be regarded so wel as the ministers do who are cōtinually exercised in looking vnto thē Sect. 3. Of the necessarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment
is called the visible Church by relation had to the catholik Church the which by reason of the dispersed members of it is inuisible as hath bene declared whenas euery particular Church yea euen priuate Churches and so consequently the visible Church consisting thereof doth make a publick profession of the fayth This visible Church doth continually existe in the world forsomuch as GOD hath appointed that his name shoulde continually as longe as the worlde endureth be called vpon and worshipped in one place or other as the story of the Ch. doth witnes We confesse that it hath often lurcked in secret places and often been so ouer-shadowed with errours superstition and idolatrie that it could hardly be discerned and so hath been euen as the sunne is in the eclipse yet neuer wholly taken away for whenas there was but one particular Ch. in the world yea this particular church was not publick but priuate within one mans family and secret lurking in a corner so that they who liued at that time or in the ages following could not define where the Church was at such a time yet that Church made the visible Church For their profession was visible and open among themselues and also to others although it were not seen at that instant for a thing which is not actually seen may be visible Secondly this is to be noted that in the first ages of the world before the time of the Gospell the visible Ch. did often consist of one only particular church there being no moe in the world but since the publishing of the gospel it hath hitherto shall alwaies consist of many Lastly as touching the place of this visible Ch. although it be not tyed to any certaine place yet it hath alwaies bene cheifly in some one parte of the world So we knowe that first it was wholly in the east partes in the countries of Mesopotania Syria Iurie and others adioyning vnto these Afterwards in the first time of the gospell it was cheifly in Asia And in these last ages we see that it hath been almost wholly in Europe and whether God will change the dwelling place of it again or no euen transporte it to the fourth parte of the world lately found out or to any other place it is knowne to himselfe onely Diuers ●ther points should be added for the full declaration of ●he nature and state of the visible Church But many of them a●● common with the catholick Church and therefore are handled in the first Chapter where they may be considered The rest we cut off for breuities sake because this treatise is already growen beyond our purpose and expectation So then to conclude if to this visible Church we do adde the dispersed members of the catholick Church we haue the catholick Church And so the end of this treatise is brought to the beginning FINIS Why the people desired an alteration of the state The occasion of this alteration Magistracie Gods ordinance The church hath neuer beene without magistracie How God erecteth magistracie among infidels Why God appointed magistracie In what respect the magistrate beareth the image of God The kingdome of Israel a type of Christes kingdome How God was the king of Israel The iudicial law in part abrogated by the erecting of this kingdome God put from his kingdome What authoritie the people had before the time of the Kinges No authoritie in Israel but in the hands of the king The king to his subiects as a father to his children The prophets neuer reproue the people for not resisting the idolatrous kings Vnlawfull to vse violeēe against the ki●g in the maintenance of religion The people could not resume their liberty giuen into the handes of the kings It belonged not to the people but to God to nominate the king Saul remained the lawfull king of Israell after that Dauid was annointed and appointed to the kingdome The rebellion of Ieroboam of the tenne tribes vnlawfull Hazaels rebellion foretold by God but not permitted God would not take the kingdome from Dauids posterity The kingdome so annexed to the house of Dauid that it could not be taken from it God neuer approued any conspiracy made against any of the kings With what weapons this people might fight against their kinges Why absolute monarchies were more in vse in the first ages of the world The gouernment of the kings compared with the former Ecclesiasticall persons subiect to the authoritie and iurisdiction of the king God deferred the building of the Temple till that the kingdome were erected The Church with the common welth make but one bodie Resisting of wicked kings weakeneth the authority of good kings Ecclesiastical constitutions made by the authority of the kinges The kings exempted from the Iudiciall lawes Great power bringeth with it great maiesty The diuine original of this kingdome made it maiesticall The annointing of these kinges signified the holinesse of their persons and functions Long continuance of hereditarie succession made this kingdome strong and maiesticall What made the gouernment of the Iudges to be contemned The statelinesse of this kingdome in the daies of Salomon The maiesty of this kingdome increase and decrease as did the sinceritie of religion The kinge might lawfully exact of the people not only for necessarie vses but for pompe pleasure An absolute Monarchie is a chargeable and costly gouernment The people had this gouernment in great reuerence and estimation This kingdome standeth yet in Christ. The people account the kinges better then ten thousand of themselues This gouernment doth more resemble the authority of God then any other kind doth Why God was offended with the people asking a king God did alwaies like this gouernment and purpose to establish it God the author of kingdomes and the setter vp of kinges The kinge held his kingdome as from God and was subiect to his will and worde This example of Samuel teaching the people the state of the kingdome is to be followed by the ministers of Gods word Nothing better beseeming Christians then due subiection to magistates A compendious abstract of the state of the kingdome of Israel Care to be had of posterity Alteration of gouernment in any common wealth troublesome and dangerous The worde Catholicke not vsed in the scripture The catholicke Church was twise contained in one familie The profession of the true religion maketh one a member of the catholicke Church Infantes are members of the catholike Church Hypocritical professours are members of the catholicke Church Excommunication doth not separate from the catholicke but only frō the visible Church Heretikes as Arians and papistes are to be counted members of the catholicke Church The papist holdeth the foundation of Christian religion Whole Churches haue held grieuous errours The state of the Church before the comming of Christ. Faith and fundamentall errours together The same errour more pernitious at one time thē at another Greater hope of the saluation of an ignorant then of a learned
gouerned pag. 141 Chapter 11 Of the visible church pag. 143 We pray thee good reader to turne hither when thou meetest with any stay and to read those places as they are heere set downe Our desire was that thou shouldest be eased of this trouble as thou maist perceiue but now we must desire thee to take it in good part Farewel Jn the former treatise Pag. 14. li. 4. who answereth pag. 18.9 necessity the glory pag. 19.1 in his Church pag. 39.2 against whom and when he pag. 59.2 duetifully obeide pag. 65.13 that he spake pag. 70.26 contempt and Jn the latter tre●tise Pa. 2.17 Of a particular Ch p. 18.6 Arians did therfore p. 28.4 Baalam all of them p. 33.15 of multitude p. 38.32 him call p. 24.23 into those infinite p. 40.34 in that the p. 54.23 the sun●e of p. 39.25 an extraordinarie p. 45.23 of the receauers 27. the other gaue p. 49.32 at the same time p. 50.34 perfectly set downe p. 59.35 the Ch. was bound p. 62.23 the direction p. 79.28 as their gift p. 82.2 Church then in p. 89.15 so perfect a state p. 90 30. affectation p. 94.22 Churches of Ariās p. 95.22 which in all p. 103.25 which is p. 104.10 in number p. 129.25 all meanes p. 56.5 yea farre aboue p. 86.19 professing the faith p. 130.26 of the spirit p. 131.29 national gene p. 134.13 binde that one p. 138.1 for in publicke p. 142.7 and orderi●g p. 10.13 to be aliantes p. 24.23 into those infinite p. 40.34 first which will p. ●2 13. in his Apologie p. 66.36 of iudaicall p. 65.16 of lesse moment p. 82.2 Church then in p. 97.1 a priuate Church p. 98.24 moe then one p. 106.6 the fauour p. 112.23 they had an The ground of this treatise we take out of the first booke of Samuel the 10. Chapter the 25. verse where it is thus written And Samuel spake vnto the people the iudgement of the kingdome and wrote in a booke and laide it before the face of the Lorde c. IT pleased God in mercy to choose out of all the nations of the worlde the people of Israel to be a peculiar people vnto him selfe on whome he would set his whole affection and poure foorth the full treasures of his blessings both spirituall to wit his couenant and his promises his word and his Church his worshippe and his visible presence yea which is all in all his owne onely sonne the sauiour of the worlde and with him eternall saluation and also temporall as namely continuall deliuerance from all daungers in Aegypt in the wildernesse and in the lande of Chanaan a fruitfull land to dwell in wise and puisant iudges to gouerne them and to saue them out of the handes of all enemies from Moyses to Samuel But this people was an vnfaithfull that is to say an vngracious people and did neither worthely esteeme nor carefully keepe the blessinges bestowed vpon them but as they were in nature and conditions so they did affect to be in all other respectes like vnto the prophane nations of the earth and therefore they chaunged both the ciuill and also the ecclesiasticall state appointed by God insomuch that for the true worship of God they did often take vnto themselues the idolatrie of the heathen and in steede of the iudges by whome they had beene gouerned now 400. yeares they would needes haue a king set ouer them as other nations had The which desire although it were greately displeasing in the eyes of God and of Samuel yet by the importunitie of the people it was obtained insomuch that in steede of the sonnes of Samuel who gouerned the lande in their fathers age Saule in sonne of Cis was annointed kinge of Israell This chaunge of the ciuill magistrate beeing made it did of necessitie followe that there shoulde bee a chaunge of the lawes also by the which the people were gouerned according to that which is commonly saide newe Lordes must haue newe lawes For although they tooke the occasion of this alteration at the personal faultes of the sonnes of Samuel yet they chaunged not onely the gouernour but also the gouernment it selfe and brought in an other kinde of gouernment farre different from that which was before in force and therefore requiring newe lawes whereupon to stand Yea the processe of this treatise will in part declare that the difference betwixt these two gouernmentes the one of the Iudges and the other of the Kinges was so great that the lawes of the one estate coulde no more agree to the other then the furniture of a mightie gyant will serue a childe or the base apparrell of a meane man beseeme a statelie prince In consideration whereof Samuell or rather GOD by the ministerie of Samuell as hee had giuen to the people a king so in the next place hee giueth vnto them the state of a kingdome and that by establishing those orders and lawes according to the which both the king shoulde rule and the people obey Not that hee did prescribe vnto them any newe iudiciall lawes but onely he made the fundamentall lawes of the kingdome the which are heere called the iudgement of the kingdome that is the verie nature condition and manner of this newe gouernment the proper lawes of it and as it were the verie markes by the which it may bee iudged that is knowen in it self and distinguished from all other kindes of gouernment For so the word heere vsed doth signifie in manie places of the scripture as namely 2. Kinges 1.7 where Achasia asketh his messengers what is the iudgemente of the man whome they saide to be Elias that is what was his behauiour his apparrell his countenaunce and as we doe vsually say what manner of man is hee so heere the iudgement of the kingdome is to be vnderstood Likewise by the face of GOD heere is meant the place of the presence of God to witte the tabernacle wherein God was worshipped or more specially the Arke with the propitiatorie which was a visible signe of the presence of God Thus much of the occasion and meaning of these wordes which wee may handle in this order That first we speake of that which is heere called the iudgement of the kingdome which is the doctrine of it and in the seconde place consider the actions of Samuell mentioned in the text the which are three in number The first is that he spake this doctrine of the kingdome to the people the second that he wrote it in a booke the thirde is that hee laide the booke before the Lorde of these in order Sect. II. BVt before wee come to the speciall doctrine of this kingdome it will not be eyther vnprofitable or impertinent if we doe briefly consider the genenerall doctrine of magistracie The which as it is worthy diligentlie to be handled and commended to the Church of GOD so it will giue greate lighte to this whole treatise following Magistracie therefore is not a meere deuise of
although more enioyed then considered as also for that they may in part be gathered of that which hath beene spoken Sect. III. THus we haue by the generall doctrine of magistracie an entrance made to the speciall doctrine of the kingdome of Israell wherein we haue many seueral points to consider which for order and memorie sake may be reduced to two heades whereof the first containeth the state of this kingdom in respect of n●en or of the people of Israel the second the state of it in respect of God The first head hath the greatest part of the difference of this kingdome from the former gouernment of Iudges consisting especially in two thinges the speciall power which it had ouer the people and the speciall maiestie of it both which were exceeding great in this state yea so great that in these respectes the gouernment of the iudges may seeme not onely a meane but almost a priuate estate Hence it is that this kingdome of Israel is by Iacob prophecying of it Gen. 49.9 compared to a Lion the which doth in strength and especially in a maiesticall statelinesse so farre exceede all other beastes that it is vsually called the king of them If we desire to knowe howe it came to passe that there was so greate power and maiestie giuen to this kingdome we must haue recourse to the originall of it The causes of the setting vppe of this estate were two The first is that which may be saide to bee the cause of all thinges in the worlde to witte the eternall counsell and decree of God by the which it was before al ages appointed that the king of Israell shoulde be a type of Christ and his temporarie gouernment a type of the spirituall and eternall kingdome of Christ as is afterwarde to be declared Nowe that this kingdome might be a fitte and liuely type it was needfull that it shoulde be endued with a greate measure of power and maiestie that so it might the more liuely represente the infinite power and authoritie which the Messias was to haue ouer all creatures in heauen and in earth and likewise his vnspeakable and incomprehensible maiesty and glorie filling the heauen of heauens The second cause of the greate power and maiesty of this kingdome was the desire or rather the will of the people who did so earnestly yea so eagerly and importunately call for this stately gouernment that they would take no denyall nor heare any thing which coulde be alledged to be contrarie For that the people did alwaies desire this state we may see Deutro 17.14 where God foretelleth this that when they were once possessed of the lande they woulde haue a King and Iudg. 8.22 where they offer to make Gedeon king and more plainely Iudges 9. where they like Abimeleches opinion saying that it was better for them to haue one then many to raigne ouer them Neyther did they desire to haue one sette ouer them with the bare name and title of a kinge or with anie meane authoritie but that hee shoulde haue power and maiestie in the highest degree For howsoeuer it might seeme that this their desire was in some respecte incommodious to themselues for that the greater power they gaue to the king the lesse libertie they lefte to themselues and the greater that his pompe and maiestie was the more heauie tributes must be imposed on them for the maintayning of it yet they did so vehementlie desire to be like to other nations in a stately monarchie that they thought no price too greate for it thinking belike as it is commonlye saide that it was greater honour for them to make a mightie and a glorious Kinge then to be kings thēselues as euery one was in the time of the Iudges wherein euery man did that which was good in his own eyes because they had no king to order them Iudg. 18.1.19.1 And yet we do not deny but that in ordaining so mighty maiestical an authority they thought it would be for their owne good howsoeuer it might seeme to derogate from their liberty and profitte and that the commodities would be moe and more waightie then the inconueniences of it wherein whether they did iudge right or no let others determine Sect. IIII. NOW we are to come to the particular declaration of these things First of the power of this kingdome and secondly of the maiestie of it The doctrine of the power hath in it these foure questions The first is whether the power of the king were whole or deuided The second whether it were generall ouer all persons and causes or restrained The third whether it were absolute or tied to lawes The last whether it were a milde or a peremptory power The power whereof we doe intreate is the full supreame and vniuersall authoritie for of any inferiour power we doe not speake of gouerning the people and of ordering all their publicke affaires the which before that this kingdome was set vp was not wholy in any one hand but deuided amongst many For it was partly in the handes of God partly in the handes of the iudge which was for the time partly in the handes of the elders or senat and partly in the handes of the bodie of the people For the first where we say that God had a part of this authoritie we doe not consider him simply as God for in that respect not a part only but the whole supreame power not of that country onely but of all the nations in the world yea of heauen and earth was and is in his handes but we consider him as he was after a speciall manner the king and ruler of this people so as he neuer was or will be to any other nation The actions of God which did proceede from this his regal authoritie were these First that he gaue to this people iudiciall lawes and constitutions which is part of the office not of God for then these iudiciall lawes should belong to the whole world seeing GOD is the God not of the Iewes only but also of the gentils But other nations are not tyed to these laws but only to the morall law and to these Iudicials so farre as they are morall to wit to the grounds and equitie of them but not to the lawes themselues The second thing which God did by vertue of this authoritie was the supreme administration of their battailes in cases of greate extremitie For as greate princes sende captaines to fight in their steade yet according to their direction and appointment so God did immediately either by his word or spirit stirre vp some man to fight the battailes of the people and did directe them in such actions And this Gedeon acknowledgeth Iudges 7.20 Where hee saith the sworde of the Lorde and of Gedeon In these respectes GOD was the kinge of this nation as Gedeon doth confesse Iudges 8.23 who so answereth the people going aboute to make him kinge that neyther hee nor anie of his posteritie shoulde
generall state of religion be permitted vnto him wee cannot exclude him from the making of lawes whereby the lawes of God are to be executed The humane lawes of this Church were very fewe because almost all the circumstances of the seruice of God were prescribed by the ceremoniall lawe yet there was alwaies necessary occasion of making some in the which worke the king had the chiefe stroke Thus did Dauid and Salomon make many ecclesiastical lawes which continued long after in the Church and are mentioned by Iosias saying 2. Chro. 35.4 Prepare your selues ye Leuites by your companies according to the writing of Dauid and the writing of Salomon yet these lawes were made by the aduise of others to wit eyther of the prophets as we may see 2. Chro. 33.15 or of the Church and people Thus did Ezechias hold a councel 2. Chro 30.2 wherin by the aduise of the whole Church the passeouer was held in the second month likewise verse 13 the whole assembly tooke counsell to keepe the feast other seauen daies so that although these ecclesiasticall constitutions were established by the sole authority of the king yet they were aduised by others that nothing should be done in the Church peremptorely by the absolute authority of the king or any other but rather by the counsel of others so with the good liking of al men Yea an errour cōmitted in the ordering of the church is more grieuous dangerous therfore was to be auoyded as by al other meanes so especially by taking the aduise of others in making lawes for this purpose Yet it did not belong to the king to take vppon him the office of the high priest as we may see in the example of Ozias 2. Chro. 26. or to meddle with the proper dueties of any other ecclesiasticall person or yet to change the ceremonial law but onely to order the publike state of religion to make by the aduise of others and to establishe by his own authority those lawes which serued for that purpose Sect. XI THere remaine two other properties of this regall power to wit that it was absolute and peremptorie the which we will propounde verie briefly For the first we doe not meane that this power was so loosed from lawes that the king might doe what him listed for he was tied to some lawes as namely first to the keeping of the morall law yea vpon paine of forfaiting and loosing his kingdome if he did wickedly transgresse the same and if at anie time he did commaund contrarie to this lawe he was not to be obeyed 1. King 18.13 1. Sam. 22.17 and secondly the fundamentall lawes of the kingdome the state whereof it was not in his power to alter Yea also he was tied to the ceremoniall lawe containing the outward manner of the worshippe of God But he was loosed first from the Iudiciall lawe of God and secondly from all possitiue lawes made by men By the Iudiciall lawes are vsually ment all those lawes of Moses which belong vnto the practise of the second table and of such dueties as we owe to our neighbour And it is as it were an addition to the seconde Table as the ceremoniall lawe is to the first But heere wee meane more specially onely so many of them as did belong to the publike administration of the common-wealth which may properly be called politicall iudiciall or forensicall concerning the manner of administring iustice and iudgement as namely in what order iudgement ought to beginne and proceede what punishmente ought to be inflicted for euerie seuerall offence and also howe they shoulde behaue themselues in battaile in all which the Iudges Elders and people had a prescript forme which they did follow and were bound by the commaundement of God so to doe But the kinges were freed from these lawes so that if they did execute iustice and iudgement it was free for them to doe it in what forme manner they thought best as for example the iudiciall lawe required that when any had committed any hainous trespasse there shoulde be two or three witnesses solemnely produced and that they shoulde beginne the execution and first throwe stones at the offendour But the kinges namely Saule Dauid and Salomon did put diuerse to death without obseruation of any of these circumstances Neyther heerein did they sinne against God and his lawe because they were freed from it Yea it belonged to the king to make these positiue lawes of the circumstances of executing iudgement and therefore to be a iudge a lawgiuer a kinge and a defender from forraine enemies are all ioyned together Isa. 23.22 the Lord is our iudge our law-giuer our kinge and he shall saue vs. Yea the power of this kingdome was such in this behalfe that the kinge might of himselfe without calling any to consultation make publishe establishe and execute lawes and edictes whereof there are manie examples yet it was more vsuall yea and conuenient in regard both of king and people that the aduise of the priests prophets rulers and elders of the people shoulde be taken Lastly this power of this kingdome herein differeth from the power of the Iudges Elders and of the people in that it was not so gentle and milde but after a sort a fierce and peremptorie power as may easelie be gathered by that which hath beene spoken of it for where there is a greate generall and absolute power wholly in any one hand it must needs be of this nature Hence it was that the people stood in farre greater awe of this authority then of any other insomuch that the lawes edictes and commaundementes of the kinges were like vnto the roaring of a Lyon whereat all the beastes in the forrest doe tremble and quake for feare Yea their whole behauiour was much more reuerent to the kinges then to their other rulers So we read Iudg. 8.1 and 12. that whenas Gedeon and Iephta had gotten notable victories of the enemie the Ephramites came vpon them very presumptuously to quarrell with them because for sooth they had not taken them with thē to the battaile but they did not vse to aske their kings any such questions or to require any reason of their doings but did readelie come when they called goe when they sent and do whatsoeuer thing was inioined by them Yea we may wel thinke that the cause why Rehoboam gaue the people such a strange answere was not for that he ment to increase their tributes for there was no cause why he shoulde so doe the temple and the kinges pallaces being builte and the king being furnished with all thinges requisite eyther for maiesty at home or strength abroade for the which purpose those gret tributes were imposed but rather because he and his young counsell were highly offended and inflamed with anger against the people for that they did offer to make him a conditionall king who should not raigne but vpon those conditions which they propounded To take one example of
law of God from the priest and meditate thereon day and night that he may keepe it without declining to the right hand or to the left Yea the state of this kingdome did depend wholly vppon God and was helde by condition of obeying him so that as a tenant or vassall doth holde his landes and liuing of his liege Lorde or King vpon this condition that he shall doe him seruice and homage and to be at his commaunde the which if he doe not he doth forthwith forfaite his title and dispossesse himselfe of all in like manner this kingdome did holde of God by condition of obeying him This lawe of the kingdome Samuel doth diligently teach 1. Sam. 12.23 if ye doe wickedly then shall you perish both you and your king The which punishment was executed vpon Saul Salomon and the whole race of Idolatrous kinges in the destruction of the kingdome and nation Sect. XV. HItherto we haue declared the doctrine of the kingdome of Israell the which was the first thing we tooke to speake of Nowe we come to the actions of Samuel mentioned in the wordes of the text Whereof the first is that he speake this doctrine of the people and that no doubt for this end that they might knowe the state of that gouernment what dueties they were to performe to their kinges in what manner they were to be subiect to obey him In whose example al the ministers of the worde may marke their duetie that they ought with all care and diligence to teach the people to obey the ciuill power to honor loue fear it to be ready to impart that which God hath bestowed vpō thē on the maintenance of it and finally to performe al those dueties which the law of God or of man doth require at their hands Thus Paul writeth to Titus Chap. 3.2 Warne and put al Christiās in mind that they be subiect to rule to obey the magistrats to be ready to euery good work for there is nothing that doth better beseem a Christiā mā or people then harty loue ready obedience to the magistrate comming not of constraint and feare of punishment but of conscience neyther is there any thing that doth more disgrace the profession of Christ and lay it open to the reproches of infidels and wicked men then disloyall behauiour to magistrates especially to kinges and great princes to whome all lawes both diuine and humane require that a g●●at measure of honour obedience and maintenance be performed T●e second action of Samuel is that he wrote this doctrine of the kingdome in a booke and that for perpetuity that it might be preserued safe in time to come and so serue for the instruction of the ages following As touching this booke it perished with many others written by the prophets and holy men of God and that by the negligence of the priestes and people yet there is a summe or compendious abstract of it saued from the iniurie of the times and the publike calamities which befalling this nation did bury many notable monumentes The which we haue recorded 1. Sam. 8. verse 10. and so forth to the 19. out of the which place this doctrine which hath beene deliuered in this short treatise of the power and maiesty of the kingdom may be gathered the words are these Now therefore hearken vnto their voyce howbeit yet testifie vnto them and shew them the manner of the king that shall raigne ouer them Hee will take your sonnes and put them to his chariots and make them Captaines ouer thousandes and ouer fifties and will set them to care his ground and to gather in his haruest and to make instruments of warre and thinges that serue for his chariots And he wil take your daughters and make them apoticaries cookes and bakers and he shall take your fieldes and your vineyardes and your best oliue trees and giue them to his seruantes and he shall tak● the tenth of your seede and of your vineyardes and giue to his Eunuches and to his seruantes and he shall take your men-seruantes and maid-seruantes and the chiefe of your young men and your asses and put them to his worke he will take the tenth of you● sheepe and ye shal be his seruantes The second action giueth vs this instruction that according to the example of Samuell a●l Christians ought to desire and they to whome God hath giuen giftes fitte for this purpose by all meanes to endeauour that they may profit the Church not onely whilest they l●●e but also after their death by leauing behinde them those thinges which may further the edification of it Thus haue the p●ophets Apostles and holy men of God done from time to time whose writinges doe testifie their care diligence and paines taken in this behalfe The which as we doe now inioy to our vnspeakeable profite and comfort so ought we to be stirred vp by their example to performe the like duetie to others euen as we commend the carefull foresight of those men who as they eate the fruite of the trees which their forefathers did plant so they plant other trees which may serue for the vse of their posterity For although no man can hope that his labours should be in any me●sure so profitable to the Church as the bookes of the Prophets and Apostles are who had the extraordinarie giftes of prophecie and reuelation and were directed by the continuall assistance of Gods spirit yet the ordinarie gifts of knowledge and wisedom which God hath giuen to be perpetuall in his Church wil helpe forward the building of it chiefly in the ministerie of the word and also by the meanes of writing whereof there will be a necessarie vse as long as the Church endureth not onely for the interpretation of the word of God but also for the scanning of controuersies the confuting of heresies the reproouing of vices the which will continually be new and fresh in the Church The last action of Samuel is that he laid this booke before the face of the Lorde that is in the place of Gods worship where he was so present that he might as it were be knowen and discerned there euen as one man is knowen from an other by his face This Samuell did for this end that God might be both a witnesse of his faithfulnesse in teaching the people their due●ie in this behalfe and also a maintainer of that ●state the which was established by the will of God yea a reuenger of all disorders and of all disloyalty which should be any way committed against the state And so we neede not doubt but that God doth watch with the eye of his prouidence ouer kings and princes after a speciall manner vouchsafing to them who are faithfull and Godly a great measure of wisedome and of all graces of the spirit meete for so high a calling yea and doth seuerely punish the resistance c●ntempt disgrace offered to those princes which are so
by the fame of the true religiō some haue bene conuerted so was Rahab liuing in Iericho of whome it is saide Heb. 11. that she beleeued or by reading bookes containing the doctrine of religion Lastly it may please God to vse for this purpose that knowledge which remaineth in the minds of men since the fall of Adam and which is stirred vp by the contemplation of the creatures and all those meanes which naturall men haue for the attaining of knowledge These or any other meanes God may vse extraordinarily yea he may doe it without any meanes but in his ordinarie working none of these aforesaid meanes are auailable for faith is gotten ordinarely onely by hearing the worde preached and therefore we are to esteeme and iudge of them who haue not the ministerie of the worde that they wante the ordinarie meanes of attaining a true and sauing faith alwaies excepting the power and extraordinarie worke of God the which is not tyed to any meanes CHAP. III. Of a particular Church Sect. 1. Of the originall of particular Churches THus much of the dispersed mēbers of the catholicke Church the which state God doth accept where it cannot be amended but so that he wil haue al his seruantes to indeauour by al means possible to come liue together for their mutuall edification and therefore as for the more commodious maintaining of our temporall liues he hath appointed ciuill societies so for the beginning and maintaining of spirituall strength and life in vs he hath appointed holy assemblies which are particular Churches out of the which a christian may liue this spirituall life but yet in great weakenesse and danger euen as a man may preserue his naturall life in a desert place but he cannot haue perfect strength and health vnlesse he liue in some place frequented by men and replenished with thinges needfull for that purpose And therefore we are now to declare what a particular Church is Sect. 2. Of the definition of a parlicular Church A Particular Church is a company of men separated from the infidels of the world to serue God vnder al the same diuine and humane lawes or vnder the same ecclesiasticall gouernment both diuine and humane This definition doth in some sort comprehend in it the whole nature and essence of a particular Church and therefore a great part of this treatise is to be spent in the explication of it wherein that we may proceede in some distinct and plaine order we haue these three heads to obserue First the separating of those of whom the Church is to consist from the infidels of the world Secondly the diuine lawes by the which they thus brought together are to be ordered And lastly the humane lawes which are added to the lawes of God For euen as it is in the establishing of a common wealth or kingdome first men must be brought together who are to be the inhabitantes of that citie or country Secondly there must certaine generall and fundamentall lawes be made containing the very state and forme of gouernment and of subiection which must stand in force continually without any alteration and lastly there must be added some speciall positiue lawes which are often to be changed as present occasion shall require so is it in the establishing of a Church First men are called from infidelity to faith as from barbarisme to ciuility then they haue giuen vnto them the lawes which God in 〈◊〉 word hath made for the gouernment of his Church till the end of the world and lastly the changeable ecclesiasticall lawes of men Againe as we see men doe in the building of a house first they prepare stones then they ioyne them together in some fourme of a house till by little and little they set vp the whole frame of it and lastly they adde doores windowes fenses and whatsoeuer may serue for the vse of the dweller in like manner the calling of men to the knowledge of Christ is the preparing of the matter of a Church secondly the establishing of the gouernment of the Church the māner of seruing God is a setting vp of the frame of it an lastly the making of ecclesiasticall constitutions is the applying of this gouernment to the speciall vse of those men whome we woulde bring vnto the fourme of a Church that it may be a fit dwelling place for them This latter similitude we desire the reader to marke the rather for that we are to vse it throughout this whole treatise And that because it hath pleased the spiritte of GOD to teach vs so to doe who in the scripture doth for the most parte compare the Church to a house and to the buylding of it as we may see 1. Cor. 3.11.12 1. Tim. 3.15 1. Pet. 4.17 In this definition the last wordes onely the rest being of themselues plaine enough neede this explication that by humane lawes we doe not meane ciuill lawes but ecclesiasticall constitutions added to the lawes of GOD appointed in the worde by the which humane lawes being alwaies in some pointe or other differing from the lawes of other Churches particular Churches haue their difference and distincte limittes appointed to them For therefore we haue inserted this partickle all in the definition because many yea all the Churches in the worlde may agree in some ecclesiasticall constitutions but not in all So that the same gouernment maketh one and the same Church yea although they be distinguished into diuerse congregations and haue many distinct places of seruing God As if the lawes of any towne doe stretch to the suburbes and villages aboute there is but one corporation or ciuill bodie And to vse our accustomed similitude as that is one familie which hath the same gouernour ouer it the same orders in it although they be in diuerse roomes so it is in this behalfe a distincte gouernment maketh a distinct Church The gouernment is then distincte when eyther the humane Church lawes are diuerse or at the least the rulers and gouernours of the companie haue in their handes authoritie to make diuers lawes in that manner which we are afterwardes to declare So that where we see many distinct and diuerse assemblies or congregations of christians all to depend vpon one company hauing in their handes the saide authoritie and from thence to fetch all their constitutions and determinations of causes they are to be accounted not many but one onely particular Church which notwithstanding if they did no waie depend vpon any other were to be accounted so many distinct Churches So the Church of Israell although it did consist of many distinct townes and cities the which had their proper leuites and gouernours yet because for gouernment they did all depend vpon the high priest and the other priestes which did offer sacrifice in the temple at Ierusalem they all made but one Church So that those christians are to be accounted a particular Church which are ioyned together not onely in the same faith as the
they were brought into the forme of it so we reade Act. 14.23 after that they had beleeued now a good space of time they had elders appointed and so became a Church for most commonly men conuerted are a fewe at the first and therefore must stay till they be a competent number yea when a sufficient number doth beleeue there must be a time to consider the state of the people to prouide fit teachers and rulers and to make humane constitutions for the ordering of them and for the practizing of the lawes of God The lawes orders the establishing and practizing wherof maketh a company of Christians to become a Church are of two sortes The first are the lawes of God appointed for the gouerning of the Church these doe containe the substance of the gouernment of the Church and are the same at that same time to all the Churches in the world the other sort is of humane constitutions made for the establishing of the former in some particular place and doe define the circumstances of the former lawes and therefore are diuerse in euery Church and to be changed as the circumstance of place time persons and the condition of the Church doth require First of the lawes of God then of the lawes of men The lawes commonly called Church-gouernment or from the latter part Church-discipline are that parte of the worde of God which prescribeth howe particular Churches seuerally and ioyntly ought to be ordered in vsing the publicke meanes of the seruice of God The first worde of this definition giueth vs this to vnderstand that God himselfe is the onely law-giuer in his Church as touching the substance of the gouernment which is not any deuise of man but a holy institution of God Yea we must of necessitie graunt this royal prerogatiue to God that he be the author of the lawes by the which his Church is ordered and that because he onelie and no creature can shewe after what manner he will be worshipped So that if there be any other forme of gouernment deuised by man it is wil-worshippe and not onelie not acceptable but euen abhominable in his sight Yea the Church is the house of God wherein he dwelleth and whereof he is the authour and owner And therfore it is good reason that he onelie shoulde beare rule in it he ruleth ciuill societies by the lawes of Kinges and Princes but his Church by the lawes of Christ his sonne whome he hath annointed the onelie king of his Church Hence it followeth that these lawes are not chaungeable but perpetuall and made to continue as long as the Church remaineth in this world So. 1. Tim. 6.14 after that the Apostle had set downe the summe of this doctrine he chargeth Timothie to keepe those thinges which he had enioyned vntill the comming of Christ that is that he endeauour by teaching them to others that they might continue for euer For that these words are to be vnderstood of these lawes it appeareth Vers. 21. o● the 5. chapter where the same obtestation is vsed in the same matter The doctrine of this gouernment is fully plainely and perfectly set set downe in the worde of God yea euery parte of it and therefore whatsoeuer parte of the substance of the go●●rnment of the Church cannot be authorized by the worde it is to be reiected for all the offices giftes functions partes and manner of the seruice of God are taught vs both by precept and by example But it is otherwise with the circumstances of this gouernment for they are not neyther could possibly be defined in the worde and therefore are to be changed as the Church shall thinke good But the substance of this gouernment is perpetuall euen as is the worde of God which shall neuer be augmented and as is the worshippe of God which shall not be altered yea as permanent as is the doctrine of faith and as generall For as there is but one faith and one GOD so there is but one meanes of faith and of seruing God not many as if there were tenne thousande Gods to be worshipped and as if the Church of GOD were a birde of diuers colours one being not like or conformable to another And therefore as princes which beare rule ouer many cities doe make them all liue vnder the same forme of lawes and as children of the same parentes are like in countenance and sutable in their apparrell so all the particular Churches in the worlde haue one and the same gouernment appointed for them The chiefe cause whereby many are induced to thinke that no certaine forme of gouernment of the Church is commaunded by God is for that it is not handled at large and of set purpose in the scripture but onely briefely touched and mentioned by occasion Whereunto we answere that so are many waighty pointes of religion not once in plaine tearmes to be founde in any parte of scripture and many brought in onely vpon some occasion the which to call in question were great impiety but there is no part of the substance of this gouernment which is not plainely set downe in the worde Yea in these lawes the wisedome of God doth so cleerely shine that the Angel● doe reioyce in beholding that heauenly order by the which the Church is gouerned So did the Apostle Collossians 2.5 with ioy think● vppon the orders of that Church Although the gouernment of the Church be one and the same at the same time and euen as the worde of God belongeth a like to all there being one vniforme order appointed for all yet the same is chaunged by God himselfe as it doth most fitly agree to the present state of the Church wherein doth appeare that manifolde wisedome of God Ephes. 3.10 But the foundation and groundworke of this gouernment doth alwaies remaine the same as we see the lawes of kingdomes and common-wealthes to be often changed but yet the fundamentall lawes whereon the state standeth doe alwaies remaine firme and vnchaunged This gouernment is alwaies changed vnto a better and more perfect state euen as the Church doth continually growe to perfection For if we compare the latter ages of the Church generally with the former we shall finde that as there is in particular men a growth in their bodies and soules so also in the Church For the latter times doe excell the former not onely in number of professours but also in knowledge and in abundance of all spirituall graces The cause whereof is for that it pleaseth God to reueale himselfe to the world not all at once but by little and little Heb. 1.1 euen as his word hath beene in these last ages more fully declared to the Church then before Thus shall the Church growe till we all meete in the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ. And herein we cannot resemble the dealing of God more fitly then to that vsuall manner which parentes vse in bringing vp their children who doe not at
the first lay vpon them that straight and perfect kinde of discipline which afterwardes they vse whenas by reason of their riperyares they are more capable of it Yea this continuall growth of the Church was shewed by Ezech. 4.1 vers 3.4.5 by the rising of the waters to his anckles knees loynes and head Sect. 2. Of the diuers state● of ecclesiasticall gouernment WE find in the worde of God three kindes of Church-gouernment the first of these was in force before the giuing of the lawe the second in the time of the law the third in the time of the gospell The first we may fitly resemble vnto the first infancy of a childe being newly borne in the which although there be all the faculties of the soule and body yet they cannot as yet doe their functions and therefore can hardly be discerned or distinguished So in this first state there are all the partes of Chuch-gouernment although they doe not so plainly appeare as in the other following there was a ministerie of the worde although ioyned or rather confounded with the ciuil gouernment for both the offices lay vppon the first borne in the family The worde of God was in small measure and seldome reuealed the same was confirmed by diuers sacraments and also strengthened by censures against the disobedient But all these things were little practized as also the number of professours was very smale For this time was the first infancie of the Church from which it was continually to growe on to perfection Next vnto this succeedeth the manner of gouernment vnder the lawe instituted by God by the ministerie of Moses being much more perfite then the former euen as is the childhoode to the infancie so that nowe all the faculties do their seuerall functions and may easely be perceaued in themselues and distinguished from the other The worshippe of God greatly inlarged and the number of those that serue God encreased to many millions the will of God so plentifully and largely reuealed that it was of necessitie committed to writing least that it should be forgotten many sacraments to confirme the truth of it against vnbeleife sharpe and seuere censures appointed for offendours and yet this is but the childhoode of the Church ●al 4.1 is so farre yea much more exceeded in perfection of the third as it doth exceede the former The third is in the time of the gospell wherin the Lorde doth as it were put the last hand to the gouernment of his Church bringing it to that perfecton which should continue to the end of the world Now is the number of those who serue God encreased aboue measure in so much that the Church must enlarge her tentes and receaue all the nations of the earth comming to dwell with her Esa. 54.1.2.3 and accordingly there is ● most perfect gouernment appointed by Christ the true nature whereof will the more easely appeare if we compare it with the former from the which it doth differ as doth the ripe age of a man from his childhoode so that nowe the church may truly say When I was a childe I vnderstoode spake and did as a childe but nowe I haue put away childish things The ground of this difference is the comming of Christ in whome all the treasures of the will and wisdome of God were both hid ●nd reuealed to the Church The shadowes and ceremonies vsed before were made of no vse and insteede of them the trueth it selfe came in place Nowe are all the misteries of our saluation vncouered the shadowes being driuen away by the appearing of the sonne of righteousnesse The graces of the spirite are nowe as it were with a full hand poured on those which beleeue which God kept in store till this time that by the plentifull pouring of them out he might celebrate the glorious mariage of Christ with his Church Hereof doth the whole difference arise we knowe that the worshippe of God is either outward consisting in bodely actions or inward in the obedience of the hart this doth the Lorde require the other is not acceptable vnto him but as it proceedeth from this fountaine The outward worshippe will easely be performed although it haue most streight conditions annexed vnto it as we read Mica 6.6 where withall shall I come before the Lorde will he acc●pt th●usands of rams c. but inwarde and spirituall worshippe is not onely hard but also impossible to be performed without the grace of God as being cleane contrary to our nature And therefore it pleased God in a tender regard which he had to his Church vnder the lawe in respect of the weaknes of it to appoint vnto them more of that outward worshippe and to accept their spirituall seruice although it were in smale measure but contrarily nowe vnder the gospell he re●uireth a great measure of spirituall worshippe and enioyneth little of the other This distinction is made by Christ Iohn 4.21.23 the time commeth when neither at Ierusalem nor on this mount you shall worshippe my father but in spirite and truth This is also that newe couenant whereof Ioel speaketh whenas God shall poure his spirite vppon all fl●sh not but that the faithfull vnder the lawe both had the spirite of God and also performed vnto him spirituall worshippe without the which the other is but abhominable vnto him but yet not in so great measure as nowe in the time of the gospell Hence it is that the whole worshippe of God vnder the lawe was verie glorious in outwarde appearance for this end to purchase obedience and reuerence at the handes of the people Which is contrary to the simplicitie of the gospell for nowe the whole worshippe of God is base and contemptible in outward appearance but mighty in the power of the spirite as we read 1. Cor. 14. if all prophecie and there come in one that beleeueth not or one vnlearned he is rebuked of all men and is iudged of all and so are the secretes of his heart made manifest and so he will fall downe on his face and worshippe God and say plainely that God is in you indeed the which appeareth by the great abundance of spirituall grace in the time of the gospell but vnder the lawe the priestes were not so indued which that measure of spirituall graces but in steed of them they had outwarde helpes to purchase reuerence to the worde of GOD and to themselues amongst the people the temple for outward magnificence most glorious the holy places had in high accounte of all men the priestes separated from the rest of the people in many respects and for the same end the high priest was adorned with glorious robes that so he might the more excell But nowe none of these meanes are in vse onely the powerfull simplicitie of the gospell is insteed farre aboue all The Church then had but a smal measure of knowledge in comparison of these times and accordingly were they taught but nowe the Lorde
looketh for another measure of knowledge and th●refore other meanes of attaining it are necessarily to be vsed Lastly this is to be noted that this Church-gouernment was neuer altered but by the expresse commaundemen● of God as it was ordained by him onely the changing of it being confirmed by miracles to be from God as we may see in the instituting of the legall gouernment by Moses and this vnder the gospell by the Apostles and that change 2. Chron. 8.26 and 35.15 was by speciall direction from God Yea the gouernment of the Church both typicall before the gospel and reall in the time of it was instituted by extraordinary prophets to wit Adam Moses and Christs apostles and so left to ordinary ministers name ly to the first borne then to the Leuits and lastly to the ministers of the word in the time of the gospell Thus much in generall of Church-gouernment and of the three diuers states of it whereof order requireth that we shoulde heere entreate in particular But we cannot in this short treatise enter into this wide and large field and therefore supposing for orders sake this argument to be here handled we goe on to that which followeth CHAP. VI. Of ecclesiasticall humane lawes Sect. 1. How they differ from the lawes of God THus much of the lawes which God hath appointed for the ordering of his church Now we are to come to the humane lawes of the Church the which we will consider first by comparing them with the aforesaid lawes of God and secondly as they are in themselues For the first both kindes agree in name being both called ecclesiasticall and in the end which is the good order of the Church and also in the generall subiect which is the publicke seruice of God together with those actions which belong vnto it Yet they differ in many respectes First and especially in the author or efficient the former kind being made by God himselfe the other by men whereof it commeth that the first kinde is farre more excellent then the other the one consisting wholly and meerely of the wisedome of God the other hauing in them much weaknesse and ignorance the one absolute and perfect the other continually hauing wantes and imperfections And therefore the one kinde is temporarie and mutable the other perpetuall and constant although when the appointed time of them is expired they are changed by God but they admit no alteration from man Further the lawes of God belong to the whole visible Church and to euery particular Church but the other onely to some one or a few of them For as a king who hath dominion o●er many cities doth vse himselfe to make the chiefe lawes by ●he which al and each one of those cities are to be gouerned yet he leaueth to them this power to take vp and retaine customes fashions and orders proper to themselues yea to make particular lawes of matters of lesse moment as may best agree to their seuerall states and conditions so hath Christ the king of his Church himselfe made the chiefe orders but left the rest for the Church to make Lastly the first kinde is about the substance very forme of the seruice of God the other about the circumstances of it And therefore the adding of this latter kinde to the former doth not adde any thing to the substance of Church-gouernment but onely doth establish it and maketh that it may conueniently be vsed Euen as we doe often see that the whole and perfect frame of a house in the full proportion of it is set vp not wanting eyther foundation walles or roofe but afterward there are added to it nailes and pinnes to keep the frame fast together yea dore● windowes and whatsoeuer is requisite to make the said frame a cōmodious dwelling place for the builder of it euen so the gouernment of the Church as it is appointed by God and hath in some part beene described is the perfect frame of the house of God the lawes of men are the other implementes which are added thereunto Sect. 2. Of the matter of ecclesiasticall humane lawe● and how they ought to be taken out of the word of God THus much bri●fly of these lawes by way of comparison with the other now we are to consider the nature of them more plainely and distinctly First for the matter of these lawes we see that they are of the circumstances of the gouernment of the Church to wit at what time in what place yea and howe often it ought to be vsed all which are vsually called rites or ceremonies and are as it were the fashions of the Church As for example the law● of God is that there shoulde be ministers in the Church to teach the people but howe often they shoulde teach at what speciall times where and with what gesture these thinges are not determined in the worde of God but left to the ecclesiasticall lawes of men If it be asked why it hath pleased God to decke and beautifie his Church vnder the law not onely with the substance of gouernment but also with so many ceremoniall lawes that scarse any circumstance of any action was left vnappointed by himselfe and to suffer his Church nowe in the time of the gospell to be naked and destitute almost of all ceremoniall lawes but such as are made by men we answere rendering three causes thereof The first is for that the Church vnder the lawe was without that ripenesse of knowledge wherevnto she hath come in the time of the gospell and therefore had neede to haue all the particulars of euerie action prescribed But now the Church being endued with more knowledge hath these thinges lefte to her discretion euen as we see men vse to deale who if they commit any buisinesse to one whome they thinke to be endued with wisedome and experience they doe not tell him the particular manner of doing but onely thus much in generall that they woulde haue such a thing done otherwise if he wante this knowledge then they leaue nothing arbitrarie to him but set downe euerie pointe and the speciall circumstances thereof The second cause is this in the making of these Church-lawes there must be greate regarde had as we afterwarde are to shew of the nature manners behauiour and state of that people for whome they are to be made Nowe vnder the law the visible Church did consist of one nation onely to wit of the Iewes but vnder the gospell all the nations of the worlde are at one time or other of the Church So that lawes agreeable to each people would haue beene so infinite that they coulde not haue beene written neyther doth the worde of God nowe belong in any part to any one nation but generally and equally to all Thirdlie the Church being bound in regarde of her infancy to the obseruation of the legall ceremonies nowe the Church is set in full libertie by the comming of Christ and no further tyed to such outward
rites then she listeth her selfe so that these ecclesiasticall lawes made by the authority of the Church doe not stretch themselues vnto the substance of the gouernment of the Church as to the institution of any office beside those which are ●xpresly mentioned in the worde If it be obiected that Dauid did adde vnto the ceremoniall lawe the office of singers 1. Chro. 6.31 The answere is that he did this by himselfe and others as by prophets not by any ordinarie authoritie In the second place we are to see after what manner and by what rule these lawes are to be made We answere according to the word of God the square of all christian and spirituall actions not only in the ordering of the Church but also throughout the whole course of a christian mans life But seeing that they are not expresly mentioned in the worde howe doth it appeare that they ought to be framed according to this rule The answere is that the worde doth shewe what ought to be done in these thinges First by giuing general rules to guide vs as these That there ought to be nothing in these lawes vnlawfull or contrarie to the morall lawe of God nothing inconuenient offensiue or hurtfull to the Church nothing needlesse and superfluous yea that they ought to be so made as they may most tende to the glorie of God and the edification of the Church But these rules doe belong as wel to the particular actions of priuate men as to the publicke consultations of the Church so that they cannot be any certaine direction in this behalfe And therefore we must come to the second helpe which the scripture doth afforde vs for the making of these lawes to wit particular examples of the like cases which giue a greate lighte in these actions and are a sufficient warrant for vs to imitate the difference betwixt those cases and those which we haue in hande being wiselie obserued But neyther this second meanes is sufficient forsomuch as particular cases are so infinite and diuerse that there cannot alwaies be found like examples yea the differences of the exāples being found do easely breede great controuersie doubt and erroure And therefore we must haue recourse to the third and last meanes which is that those humane lawes be made agreeable to the lawes of God and the ceremonies to the substance of Church-gouernment so as they may most fitly expresse and resemble the nature of the action But neither this third way doth alwaies serue for the finding out of the truth because it is hard to see the true nature o● the action where vnto the ceremonie is to be made conformable especially since the time wherein the gouernment of the Church hath been peruerted altered and almost wholly corrupted as also because that it is not alwaies easie to iudge a right of the generall rules and of the examples of the scripture and of those other pointes which we are nowe ●o consider Yet these are the meanes which God hath appointed for this purpose and which being diligently vsed will by the blessing of God lead vs to the truth Thus we see that the deuising of these lawes ought to be according to the worde of God and yet so that they are left arbitrarie to the Church not ●s if it were lawfull for them to doe what they lift in the least action of their priuate liues much lesse in the publick ordering of the Church For the word of God must be our rule according to the which all actions and lawes are to be squared and tried For euen those things which are in theire own nature indifferent left to our own choise to doe or not to doe being generally considered yet whenas they come to be practised weighed with special circumstances so that the trueth doth appeare vnto vs then they are no more indifferent as before but either good or euill to be done or not to be done As in the foresaide instance at what time the worde of God shoulde be publickly preached is a thing indifferent whereof there is no commandement in the worde and therefore it is left to the Church to determine Yet if they appoint those times at which the people cannot conueniently come together then they do euen in this indifferent thing offend against the worde of God which commandeth that in all our actions both priuate and much more publick we do that which may make most for the glory of God and the edi●●cation of our brethren and yet these lawes which are so made that they are onely inconuenient to the Church not simply vnlawfull although they cannot lawfully be made yet they may lawfully be obeyde For although it be not lawfull for any man to bring griefe or inconuenience to his brother yet it is lawfull to take and beare that inconuenience whenas it cannot conueniently be auoided Sect. 4. According to what rules ecclesiasticall humane lawe● ought to be made THus we see that the scripture is the chiefe rule of these lawes in aduising whereof there must consideration be had of all circumstances whatsoeuer that as farre as may be they may agree withall and fight with none and especially of these First of the age or condition of the time wherein the Church is Secondly of the nature disposition and fashions of the people Thirdly of the state of that Church for which the lawes are to be made Fourthly of the condition of the ciuil estate of the kingdome or common-wealth wherein the Church is built And lastly of the lawes of other Churches We say that in making Church lawes besides the direction of the worde diuers other rules are necessarely to be obserued First the state of the time wherein we liue whether it be a time of knowledge wherein men do commonly knowe the will of GOD or a time of ignorance and blindnesse wherein the worde of GOD is rare as it was in the daies of Eli. 1. Samuell 3.1 Hereof due regarde is to be had that neither lesse nor more be exacted of the people by the lawes then the time present can afforde for priuate ignoraunces may be suddainly taken away but publick blindnesse cannot be fully amended but in progresse of time For some times the truth of GOD shineth clearely euen as the sunne at noone day which at other times is ouercast with cloudes and mistes of blindnesse and shineth more darkely euen as the sunne in the beginning of the day This hath been the state of the Church nowe these many ages wherein blindnesse and palpable darknesse brought in by antichrist hath ouershadowed the face of the whole earth but nowe by the mercy of GOD the trueth hath these many yeares and doth daily more and more appeare vnto vs insomuch that if we doe compare this present time with those dayes wherein it pleased God not many yeares past to reueale his will vnto vs we shall find a great difference of knowledge in the Church yea so great ●s that the
knowledge which men had at the beginning may seeme to haue been great ignoraunce and darknesse in respect of the light which nowe doth appeare So that according to the differences of times we must also make a diuersitie of ecclesia●tcall lawes and that in respect not onely of the people but euen of them also who doe in the name of the whole Church aduise and appoint th●se lawes who although they doe excell all others in knowledge yet they are partakers of the ignoraunces and errors of the tyme wherein they liue from the which no man can be wholly freed as might be declared at large if it were needfull to be stoode vppon by the which meanes it commeth to passe that they doe see much more in processe of time then they did at the first insomuch that they will acknowledge many imperfections in those lawes wherein before there seemed nothing to be wanting Thus we see that the liberty or rather the necessitie of preaching the Gospell to the gentils was in time reuealed vnto the Church whereof at the first they neuer dreamed Acts. 11.18 Secondly if this be graunted that they to whome the aduising of lawes for the Church is commmited do see the whole trueth of those matters whereof they doe consult yet there must be regard had of the state of the Church and of the people for whom these lawes are to be made as the Apostle witnesseth that he could not speake to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 3.1 as vnto spirituall but as vnto carnall men and that in consideration of this their estate he gaue them milke and not strong meate And in like manner he writeth to the Romanes that their saluation was nowe much nearer then when they did first beleeue Rom. 13. where he sheweth that the night of ignoraunce and atheisme wherein they had liued had gone on and passed away by little little and in like manner the day had approched For the Apostle did see that the gentils which had imbraced the gospel could not at the first let goe their whole course of life whereunto they had been continually accustomed and did in that respect no doubt tollerate many things amongst them by reason of the time which afterwarde were not to be suffered In regard of the diuerse naturs of the people we may consider that some need more sharpe and straight lawes to keepe them in order then others doe The which consideration the Apostle did commend to Titus Tit. 1.13 That forasmuch as the Gratians were allwaies lyars euill beastes and slowe bellies therefore he should reproue them sharply And specially we are here to note the sinnes whereunto the people are generally and after a sort naturally giuen that they may be repressed by many lawes and sharpe censures and punishments appointed for them who doe offend and by cutting off the vsuall occasions of those sinne● Yea the manners and behauiours of men commonly receaued are often times to be marked in appointing the outwarde orders and ceremonies of the Church For many things are decent and orderly in one countrie which would be straunge and vnseemely in another Thirdly for the present state of that Church which we do goe about to put in good order by these lawes we are to haue a speciall regarde vnto it the which as it is diuerse and subiect to many alterations so ought the lawes to be changed so as they may best fitte the present state For as the Church is either in planting or else in growing to a ripe age eyther in great motion or else fully established and setled pure or corrupt perfect or imperfect so all the lawes of the Church are to be altered and framed accordingly of all which estates we are hereafter to intreate Fourthly the lawes of the Church are so to be made as that they doe not crosse the lawes of the commonwealth wherein the Church is by hindering the Church from perfourming any ciuill duetie which is lawfull to be done and to omit many other respectes which herein are to be had this is diligently to be regarded that we doe labour to conforme our lawes to the lawes of those Churches which are most pure and syncere in the gouernment of the Church that as we haue the same faith and substance of gouernment so also we may haue the same ceremonies and ecclesiasticall orders although not all for that cannot be yet in the greater part for besides that this full agreement of Churches in all matters both of lesser and greater importance without any iarring is as a sweet harmonie in the eares of God and most decent in the eies of all men euen of those who are strangers from the faith it doth also bring great estimation authoritie and obedience to the lawes of seuerall Churches For that hardly any Christian will be founde so peruerse and wilfull as to contemne or reiect those orders which are approued and pr●ctised by many Churches This argument the Apostle doth often vse to establish and keepe in force the good orders of the Churches as we may see 1. Cor. 11.16 and 14.36 and 1. Th●ss 2.14 Sect. 5 Of the number of ecclesiasticall lawes THE number of these lawes ought to be defined by the necessitie of the Church that they be so many as are needfull for the preseruation of the good estate and order thereof so that if any were taken away there would a manifest inconuenience follow Neyther ought the number to exceede the necessitie of the Church and that for these causes First because the multitude of lawes is contrarie to christian libertie in that it doth both restraine men from doing thinges which otherwise were verie commodious for them to doe and also impose dueties the performance whereof being otherwise needlesse is a burthen and trouble to the Church This reason ought to be of great force for this purpose especially in this time of the gospell wherein it hath pleased God in great mercy and wisedome to take from his Church that heauie yoke of ceremoniall lawes wherewith she was grieuously clogged before and to endue her being nowe more nearely ioyned to Christ her husband with this notable priuiledge and benefit of Christian libertie the which being giuen by God man cannot without great iniurie both to God and man take away And here by the way we may see what an impious and intollerable tyranny the Church of Rome hath exercised in and ouer the Church of God imposing such an infinite number of vaine and ridiculous ceremonies as doth farre exceede the number both of iudiciall also of heathenish ceremonies And therfore herin we are to follow the example of the Apostles Act. 15.28 It seemeth good to the spirit of God and to vs not to lay any burthen of obseruations vppon the Church more then is needfull Secondly the multitude of ecclesiasticall lawes doth bring with it a multitude of ceremonies which in no case is to be admitted for that it doth derogate from the simplicity of the worship of
affection and indeauour doe helpe it forwarde as they who doe builde out of order or not in due time a●d season But there is another k●●d of hin●erers who a●e t●uly and properly so called and these doe of set purpose ●●nder the building of it The which no doubte is not onely a strange thing although it be most vsuall in the world that any man should be giuen vp to such a reprobate and senslesse minde as to labour by all meanes to ouerthrow and deface that wherein his cheife felicitie doth consist but also a most fearefull case for as the Apostle witnesseth 1. Cor. 3.17 Who so destroyeth the temple of God which is holy him shall GOD destroy And Philip 1.28 to be an aduersarie to the Church is a signe of perdition howsoeuer the Lorde may chaunge the hart of the most fierce enimie which his Church hath and make him become a fauourer of it as we see in the example of Paule Sect. 5. Howe the Church is to be built against professed hinderers THey who doe of set purpose hinder the building of the Church are of two sortes to wit professed or hypocritical Of both these kindes the Apostle fore-warneth the elders of the Church which was at Ephesus Act. 20.29 saying I knowe that after my departure fierce wolues shall come in vppon you not sparing the flocke The other kinde followeth And of your selues there shall arise men speaking peruerse things to drawe disciples after them And so doth Christ his disciples Math. 24.9.10 open persecutors shall kill you and yee shal be hated of all men yea many that beleeue shall be offended and one shall betray an other and many false prophets shall arise and deceaue many These hinderers as they are diuers so they are diuersly to be dealt withall yet this belongeth vnto them all that whenas they are obstinately and desperatly malitious in hindering the building of the Church they are subiect to the imprecations of the said Church Neh. 6.14 and 2. Timo. 4.14 professed hinderers are such as are not members of the Church for no man can professe himselfe to be both a seruant to Christ and a hinderer and defacer of his glory which shineth only in the Church and is obscured by hindering the building of it more then by any other meanes but they who hating Christian religion doe by all meanes labour to hinder the propagation of it and that most commonly by open violence These may lawfully be resisted by violence as they doe oppugne the truth as we read that the people of the Iewes did who did build with the one hand and hold their weapons with the other Neh. 4.17 therefore these are called the Lordes battails And hereof we need not doubte but that the force of open enimies labouring to ouerthrow the Church may and ought to be resisted by force There is no cause of warre so iust as is the defence of the Church neither any wherein we may be more bolde to looke euen for the extraordinary helpe and blessing of God in fighting for vs for the good and safety whereof al the creatures in heauen and in earth doe serue Thus Ioah incourageth his brother 2. Sam. 10.12 quite thee like a man and let vs be valiant for our people and for the cities of our God Sect. 6. How the Church is to be built whenas the ciuill magistrate is a professed enimie to the Gospell IT commeth often to passe that the building of the Church is hindered by the ciuill rulers who ought to be the cheife furtherers of it being placed by God in authoritie for this end that by their meanes the people might liue a quiet life in all godlines and honestie 1. Timo. 2.2 But the people by their sinnes doe often pull vpon themselues as diuerse other iudgments so also prophane and Godlesse rulers so much abhorring frō the true worship of God that they do not onely not imbrace it themselues but also hinder their subiects from vsing it The which is a lamētable case euen a horrible cōfusiō of all things whenas the sword of the magistrate is stretched out against the Church the members and builders of it which was appointed cheifly for the maintaining of it yet we haue many examples hereof in all ages of kings princes Emperours all kindes of rulers who haue opposed their whole power and authority to the building of the church This was the state of the church for the space of diuerse hundred yeares in the first time of the Gospell the which did miserably labour vnder the crosse of persecuting Emperours the like may be seene in euerie age And therefore it belongeth to all Christians to knowe howe farre they may go in building the Church in this state of things and whether that it be lawfull as before to build the Church and to maintaine the same being built by force against the violence of the ciuil power The answere to this question is diuerse according to the diuersitie of rule and of subiection for some magistrates doe so rule a● that they themselues are in some sort to be ouerruled by others yea they are subiect to lawes as other men are so as if they doe transgresse either in their priuate life or in publick administration they are to be called to account and to be brought into order by the people or by the ch●ife and noblest of them in the name of the rest These may lawfully by the aforesaid power of ●he people but not by any priuate man or companie of men be compelled to suffer the building of the Church to goe forward But this is no answere to the question for here subiects doe not resist a higher power but the ciuill power being deuided betwixt the people and the rulers one part of it resisteth the other in the which combat the lower power ought to giue place to the higher and therefore the magistrates to the whole body of the people by the which they were put in office to rule them seuerally and ioyntly in the name and by the authoritie of all For this kinde of magistrates is to be accounpted as deputies or substitutes to the people and may lawfully be deposed by them when the common good doth so require Yea if any people haue submitted themselues to any authoritie with condition of hauing the true worshippe of God and the free vse of it they are not bound to obey if the said condition be broken But there is another kind of gouernment wherin the ruler for vsually he is but one hath greater authoritie and a more sure standing in his place in that he is not chosen or appointed by the people to rule neither doth take his authoritie at their handes as their giftes but hath it from God from his predecessors and from himselfe These rulers are for the most part great kinges and Monarches who doe obtaine kingdomes by hereditarie succession from their auncestours hauing either by force conquered the dominion of
profession of the faith and also to b● a meanes to continue them together in the same so it is recorded Act. 8.4 That the Church which was at Ierusalem being dispe●sed they did preach the worde euerie man labouring as he had occasion offered So we reade that Prisci●la and Aquila had a Church in their owne house which we may wel thinke to haue beene gathered and constituted by them for that they are saide to haue preached the gospell diligently and to haue conuerted many Rom. 16.4 1. Cor. 16.19 So Colossians 4.15 the Apostle saluteth Nympha and the Church which was in his house and although it be not mentioned that these men were the founders of these Churches within their owne houses yet this doctrine may be proued by that generall rule of the worde the which layeth this charge vppon euery man that he build the Church and establish the true worship of God so far as his authoritie doth stretch By this rule as euery man is to make himselfe the temple of the holy ghost so masters of families and rulers of cities and countries are bounde to be the first founders of the Church in those places where they haue to doe yea they may lawfully preach the word to any other when occasion is offered Yet whenas they haue wonne any to the profession of Christ who are not of their owne families or gathered them together beeing dispersed abroad to serue God together then they are to commit the further building of it to those who shall be appointed and chosen to teach and order the said congregation And if they themselues be thought meetest for that purpose then are they no more priuate men but ecclesiasticall rulers Also this is to be considered that whenas it pleaseth God to put into any mans heart this desire and purpose to goe about the building of any such priuate Church he or they if they be more then one are to communicate their purpose to those who doe alreadie beleeue and professe the faith neere to that place that their consent and approbation of their doings may be vnto them a kind of calling and also confirme and encourage them in the saide work And in this manner it is not vnlawful for priuate men to be the first builders founders of a priuate Church consisting not onely of their own families but also of any other whose hearts it shall please God to moue to beleeue the gospell and to ioyne with them in the profession of it But in conuerting others there is great wisedome to be vsed forasmuch as ciuill rulers who are not themselues of the Church although they doe giue a toleration for a priuate Church within their dominions yet they wil hardly suffer their subiectes to be turned to any newe religion so that they who doe take in hande this worke are to consider that they haue not such libertie as were to be wished and therefore they ought with peace and quietnesse to vse that libertie which God hath graunted vnto them rather then by passing the limits of their calling to venture the losse of that which they haue So that they are to builde chiefely by gathering together those who doe alreadie professe the faith and that by priuate teaching as occasion is offered and as for others to vse all lawfull meanes to allure them to the liking of their profession as is an honest and vnblameable life whereby they may get the fauour of all men as the Church had Act. 2.47 Then to be readie to receaue all that come vnto them and louingly and mildly to conferre with them of those pointes wherof they doubt Thus did the apostle Paule at Rome for the space of two yeares remayning in an hired house priuatly receaue all that came vnto him did preach the G●spell with all bold●esse without any hindrance the which he could neuer haue done in that place if he had gone about openly publickly to chaunge the state of religion to bring the people of Rom● to the profe●sion of the Gospel Sect. 3. Of the state of it being planted AS great care is to be vsed in the gathering of a priuate Church so likewise continuing it this alwaies is to be obserued that they liue in obedience to all ciuil lawes and constitutions so that they be no cause of disturb●nce to the publick state of the place where they liue For to this ende are all those exhortations which are made concerning obeying magistrates rulers whether high or lo● R●m 13.1 Peter 2.17 in many other places for the Churches were then in those places where heathen magistrates ruled Yea christians liuing in this estate although they ought to desire the company of their brethren professing the faith rather then of infidels which are strangers from God and also as much as they can to haue their continuall conuersation with them yet they ought not to abhorre or fly the company of those who are not of the Church whenas by iust occasion it is offered For so we see the Apostle writeth to the Co●inthians 1.7.12 that the beleeuing husband should not put away the vnbeleeuing wife being content to remaine with him So also we may obserue that the christians were often inuited by infidels to their banquets 1. Cor. 10.27 And as for the sinnes and corruptions which we shall see in them we may and ought to vse greater patience towardes them then towardes those that doe professe the gospell So Paule writeth 1. Cor. 5.12 what haue I to doe to iudge them that are without doe not ye iudge those who are within and therefore we may lawfully leaue their faultes and sinnes vnreproued Yet in all our dealinges with them we must aime at their conuersion and then it will be for the glorie of God and our owne comfort which if it be onely for our temporal commodity cannot be without the offence of our brethren whereunto a speciall regarde is to be had and also to our owne hinderance in regarde of comfort and edification in the knowledge and obedience of Christ. Furthe● in these priuate Churches this is to be obserued that they most vsually consist of the most syncere and faithfull christians For in them none are compelled to professe the faith but all are such as do willingly of their owne accord embrace the gospell Act. 2.41 So many as willingly receaued the worde were baptized Yea this also may be an argument of their sounden●sse in the profession of the trueth for that liuing amongest infidels they cannot but incurre the hatred of many yea oft●ntimes euen of the ciuill rulers themselues by taking vpon them the profession of the gospell and so sustaine many iniu●ies and hurtes in regarde of thinges belonging to this temporall life and manifolde molestations scoffes yea reproches in regarde of the se●uice of God Againe this is to be noted that these priuate Churches are for the most part more pure perfect orderly and free then publi●ke Churches are For
with the multitude there commeth in confusion and corruption And the ciuill power being in the person of the magistrate ioyned to the church doth often too much abridge the vse of christian liberty taking to it selfe as it may lawfully do full power in making those ecclesiasticall lawes which belong generally to all the churches within the compasse of it But in these churches the whole authoritie of establishing lawes orders and the appointing of rites and ceremonies is in the Church it selfe Lastly it is vsually obiected against these priuate Churches that they are the causes of tumults and ciuil dissensiō and so consequently do bre●d the ruine of those common-wealthes and kingdoms wher●in they a●e toll●rated therefore that it is the part of wise rulers who tender the good and peaceable estate of the people not to suff●r them within their dominions to this we answere confessing that through the peruersnesse of our corrupt natures the which are 〈◊〉 inflamed with bitter enmitie against God and all goo●nesse it commeth often to passe that ●●uersitie of religion doth stirre vp great debate in kingdomes cities and families for this cause the Church desired to be separated in place from the idolatours least th●y should exasperate their mindes against them Gen. 46.34 Exod. 8.26 yea Christ doth professe that this would follow the Gospell that the father should be at deadly variaunce with the sonne and the mother with the daughter and that a mans nearest friend shoulde for this cause become his cruell enimie Yea the bloudie and tragica●l tumults which haue of late times risen and continued vpon this occasion in diuerse places do testifie the truth here of But yet we ought not therefore to banish the Church out of our dominions For it is better to haue the true worshippe of god with warre trouble and dissention then idolatrie with quietnesse So that we ought to say with Christ that seeing the Gospell is euen as a fierbrand in the world what shoulde be our desire but that it be preached for although for a time it breed trouble yet in the end it will be found the onely meanes of true quietnesse CHAP. VIIII Of a publick Church Sect. 1. Of the obiections which are made against publick churches THus much of a priuate Church Besides the which there is another kinde of a church namely when any whole citie countrie or nation doth generally professe the faith and so becommeth a Church consisting not of any smale or meane number but of great multitudes of people euen of whole nations As we see at this day that diue●s great kingdomes and common-wealthes haue receaued the gospell of Christ so that in them the church doth not lurke in any family or priuate corner or is in some few places but is openly publickly and generally set vp in all places by the authority of the ciuill rulers and the common consent of all men This we call a publick C●urch such as we see at this day most of al the cities commonwealthes countries and kingdomes in Eu●ope to be Of the which one is distinguished from another by hauing a proper gouernment of the owne being ruled by the same humane lawes both ciuill and also ecclesiasticall But it may be here thought that these countries are no true churches but that there are churches in them and that not all the people generally but only some fewe of them separated from the rest are to be accounted the true churches of God and that for these reasons first because there was no such churches established by the apostles or recorded to haue bene in the first ages of the gospell Secondly for that although it be not impossible to God to conuert the harts of all men to embrace the gospell yet it is not agreable to his vsuall dealing so to blesse any nation as that all of them without exception should beleeue and become faithfull men Thirdly because of the great confusion and many fould corruptions which are vsually found in such Churches the which seldom or neuer can be brought to the right order of the Church of Christ. Lastly because they are not called to the profession of the faith by the ministerie of the word of God but are in a manner forced thereunto by the lawes edictes of princes and other rulers Wh●reunto we answere that these things doe not hinder these whole cities or nations from being the true churches of God As touching the first we do confesse that there we●e no such publick and generall churches in the daies of the apostles neither in the ages following the cause whereof we may plainly see to be this That then was the ●ime of the infancie of the gospell in respect of the number of beleeuers it hauing been but lately published to the world but this is the time wherein the lord hath appointed that the fulnes of the gentiles should come in which is the conuersion of whole nations and many countries Yea the apostle witnesseth that the fulnes of the Iewes shal be then whenas that whole nation shal generally embrace christ as the sauiour of the world Rom. 11.26 To the second doubt we answere that all the people of any countrie may haue a general faith whereby they do knowe and professe that Iesus Christ is the sauiour of the world that their prof●ssion hereof although it be not effectual to their saluation yea although it be meerly hypocritical they thinking no such thing yet it is sufficient to make them members of the visible chu●ch As touching the corruptiōs which are in such churches we doe confesse that it is greater then either it is to be wished it were or then is in priuat churches where the nūber of beleeuers is lesse and that they cannot so easely be brought to and kept in that holy order which christ hath appointed for his church and further that these publick churches so seldome attaine to any pure or perfect estate because in them the church and the common-wealth are so ioyned linked together the whole affai●es and state of the Church depending on the ciuil estate that the manifold alterations wherūto al kingdoms cōmon-wealthes are subiect do make many chaunges in the church Yet this doth not take from them either the being or the name of the church For it is no straunge thing that there should be greater confusion and moe corruptions in great multitudes of people then in small congregations For so we see euen in the first congregation of C●ristians which the Apostles themselues did gouerne that when the number of disciples did encrease then there was murmuring among them and so euen this priuate Church did tend to some confusion Act. 6.1 yea this thing hath long ago been obserued to haue been con●inually the state of the Church the which as long as it was in persecution did florish not in the number so much as in the time of peace but yet it was farre better ordered godlines loue and vertue did
more florish the Lorde was more feruently and hartely serued and called vpon all faultes and corruptions in life or doctrine were seuerely censured yea rather sharply punished but whenas it pleased God to giue peace and prosperitie to his Church by the meanes of Christian Emperours and kings then did the number of beleeuers mightely increase and the Church did in that respect florish but together with the nūber loosenes in life in the seruice of God scismes heresies and all manner of corruptions did come in increase more and more So that these multitudes of professours are not in regard of these inconueniences to be reiected but rather we are to reioyce at this as the apostle did Philip 1.18 For that Christ was preached although for vaine glorie to praise God for that according as he promised by his prophets Esa 54.2 The Church hath enlarged her tentes so that all the nations of the earth doe come into her bosome Yea euen this that the name of C●rist is not blasphemed as amonge infidels but honored worshipped and called vpon although it be in great confusion yet it maketh for the glorie of God and therefore all good Christians ought to reioyce herein although they doe wholly mist●ke all corruptions and the confusion which is vsually in these publick Churches Lastly concerning their calling we are not to thinke that it is so strange a thing that they are called to the profession of the faith who were borne Christans and doe euen as it were sucke the profession of christianitie from their mothers breastes of whom the Apostle saith that they are holy 1. Cor. 7. or yet they who being professours of the gospell and holding the foundation of christian religion as it seemeth that papistes and such other heretickes doe as we haue declared more at large heretofore are brought by the authoritie of the magistrate from a corrupt manner of seruing God or from grieuous heresies to a more syncere worship and profession as it was in the primatiue Church whenas men were conuerted from heathenisme to christianity And therefore all those who haue beene by baptisme ingraffed into the profession of Christ in their young yeares and haue afterwarde beene continually brought vp in the same profession of the faith declaring vnto all men in the whole course of their liues that they doe like loue and imbrace that profession which they tooke vpon them and doe serue and worship God in the name of Iesus Christ are to be counted members of the Church although they haue no effectuall calling to the vnfained and true obedience of the gospell To conclude this point the example of the Church of the Iewes wil euidently declare the true nature and whole estate of this kinde of Churches and also resolue all doubtes which can be moued For in it all that receiued circumcision were counted members of the Church Yea the Apostle witnesseth that at the time which the Lord hath appointed that whole nations shal againe become the Church of God So that in what place soeuer whether towne citie commonwealth prouince or kingdome the people doe generally professe the faith or thus wheresoeuer the lawes ecclesiasticall doe stretch themselues as wide and doe belong to as many as the ciuill or common lawes made for the administration of the commonwealth there is a true publicke Church set vp Sect. 2. Of the coniunction of the Church and commonwealth BY setting vp a publick Church in any place it cōmeth to passe that the Church commonwealth are ioined together the which in a priuat state of a Church haue nothing to deale the one with the other For there the Ch. either lurketh in secret if she haue not he fauour of the ciuil ruler or at the least dwelleth as in a priuate house if she haue a toleration But now whenas any people gen●rally together with their magistrats do professe the faith the church may be cōpared to Esther who was taken from her priuat state wherin she liued being brought forth into open and publick place was maried to the king so is the coniunction of the Church the common-wealth Wherin we haue these points consider first what is the bond of this coniunction secondly the manner of it thirdly whether state is the superiour fourthly how they meddle with each other lastly the cōmodities discommodities which either the Church or the cōmonwealth reapeth by this meanes or the changes alterations which happen to either of them For the first the bond of this coniunction is the ciuil power which is the ve●y fountain head from the which both these estates do flow and by the which it is brought to passe that there is a publicke Church in any place for howsoeuer great multitude of people may be conuerted only by the ministerie of the word yet we do not see that al generally do professe the faith but only wher the power of the magistrate ioined to the word doth make the gospel to be publickly receaued in that it maketh al that are mēbers of the ciuil body to be members of the Church also Hence it is that as soone as the ciuill power ceaseth to maintaine religion these publicke Churches fall to the ground the bond being broken wherby they were tied to the cōmonwealth So we read Iud. 2.7.19 That the people of Israel serued God as long as Iosua the elders or their iudges liued but as soone as they died they fel away to idolatry Likewise in the first time of the gospel there were no publicke Churches for diuers hundred yeares and al for want of this bond of christian rulers but as soone as the Roman Emperours did embrace the gospel then were publicke Churches set vp in many places Sect. 3. That a publicke Church with the ciuill estate maketh one bodie vnder one head IN the second place we are to see what manner of coniunction this is to wit whether that the Church commonwealth thus ioined together make one body or state ruled by one the same head or else are still two diuerse bodies absolute and perfect each in it selfe without the other and ordered by the owne proper head in all matters belonging vnto it For answere hereof it hath bene thought that in this coniunction there are two bodies not onely diuerse but euen cleane opposite and contrary the one to the other euery respect that they are ordered by two diuerse supreame heades and that all the functions of these bodies are of so contrary natures that they cannot lawfully meete together in the same subiect This opinion which seemeth not to be agreeable to the trueth hath risen of a reuerend religious yea as it proued at length a superstitious opinion of the ecclesiasticall estate with too base and vile an opinion of the ciuill state the which hath seemed so prophane and vnholy as that it coulde not in any respect be ioyned with the other without defiling and prophaning it But the word of
heretike Heretikes haue giuen their liues for the gospel Difference to be put betwixt the simple professours of errours and the obstinate maintainers of them What is the foundation of reliligion before and since the comming of Christ. The deuil hath knowledge but neither faith nor the profession of faith Mahometisme a mystical Ariaanisme No saluation The ca●holicke Church cannot erre in the foundatiō of religion The catholicke Church hath often beene in most grieuous errours The catholicke Church doth continually encrease in number and in knowledge The catholicke Church hath no head o● outward gouernment The catholicke Church in●isible Dispersed Christians with the Churches professing the gospel make the Catholicke Church Eremeticall separation from the Church vnawfull How the sacraments may be priuately receiued God accepteth the imperfect seruice of those who cannot be in the visible Church Dispersed christians ought to labour by all meanes to ioyne themselues to some Church By what meanes God calleth those who are with out the visible Church Three things required to the constitution of a Church A diuerse gouernment maketh a distinct Church The whole nation of the Iewes made but one particular Church A particular Church often contained in one familie Why it was needful that the whole nation of the Iewes should be one particular church Better for a Church to consist of many christians then of a fewe No kinde of men excluded from being the Church of God The most barbarous may become Christians The planting of Churches belongeth to thē who haue either extraordinarie callings or the most excellent gifes Great care to be had in planting a Church The ministerie of the word was more effectuall in the primitiue Church then it hath bene at any time since The Iewes are to be conuerted by the generall consent of the Gentiles in receauing the gospell How infidels ought to be prepared for the doctrine of the gospell How the doctrine of the gospell is to be propounded to infidels Baptisme is the badge or liueray of christians Baptisme circumcision sacraments of the lawe of death Great seueritie in punishing open offences to be vsed in the planting of Churches The establishing of ecclesiasticall lawes among beleeuers maketh a Church Ecclesiasticall lawes or ecclesiasticall gouernment is partly diuine and partly huma●● None but God can appoint the substance of Church-gouernment The gouernment of the Church alwaies changed to a better estate What was the state of the Church before the lawe What was the state of the Church vnder the lawe The state of the Church in the time of the gospel Th● Church in the time of the Gospel hath more of inward grace lesse in outward shewes and ceremonies The gouernment of the Church neuer altered but by men sent immediately from God The difference betwixt diuine and humane ecclesiastical lawes Humane ecclesiastical lawes are made of the circumstances of Gods worship How humane ecclesiastical lawes are set downe in the word of God In conueniēt lawes may lawfully be obeyed In making ecclesiastical lawes regard must be had of the knowledge or ignornance of the time Sharper laws to be made for one people then for another For what causes the multitude of ecclesiasticall lawes ought to be auoyded The difficulty of planting a Church maketh an vn●stablished state The number of Christians is to encrease daily The primitiue Church did most florish in spirituall giftes God maketh the building of the Church troublesom● and dangerous for the trial of those who build it The Church vtt●r●y ●uer throwen to mans iudgement Two ki●des of ciuil authoritie and 〈◊〉 What magistrates may be resisted in the cause of the Church The original of absolute autho●itie Vniust conquest and vsurpation may become a lawfull dominion Fli●ht i● time of persecution alwaies lawful and often good for the Church The Censures of the Church belong as well to christian rulers as to ●he people What cautions are to be obserued in excommunicating the c●uill ruler Excommunication is no curse neither toucheth the authoritie of the magistrate Public●e wants are to be priuately s●●plied How we may lawfully remaine in an imperfect Church No corruption maketh them who holde the foundation of religion to be no Church The tenne tribes in their defection were the Church of God The ten tribes in th●ir defect● on were the Church of G●d Idolat●ie the worship of the true God ioyned g●th●r The errours of the I●wes before the comming of Christ. No publicke Church sau● the people of the Iewes til the daies of Constātine The causes of a priuate C●urch Priuate men may plante priuate Churches Euery one ought to builde the Church so farre as his authoritie stretcheth Christians in priuate Churches ought not to abhorre the company of infidels Priuate Chu●ches consist of the most swee●e Chris●ians What a publick Church is Why there were no publick Ch. in the daies of the Apostles Why publick churches can not be so perfect as priua●e How publick Churches are called to the faith Publicke Churches stand no longer then they are vpheld by the ciuill magistrate The ministerie is a member of the ciuill bodie Magistrates haue charge of the soules their subiects No man ought to passe the limits of his calling in building the Church Christ is the head of the Church after another manner then men are The setting vp of a publicke Church doth not alter the forme of ciuill gouernment Ciuill states wel ordered are more fit harbours for the Ch. then disordered states In the first planting of a publicke Church the false worship is to b● abrogated by little little Obstinate infidels may be compelled to heare the word but not to be of the Church In case of necessity men of meane gifts may be admitted to the ministerie of the word The state of a priuate Church is popular but the state of a publicke Church is according to the forme of the ciuil gouernment Why the authoritie of the ciuill ruler ouer the Church is not mentioned by the Apostles in their writinges The vse of councels Why there is no me●tion made of coūcels in the writings of the Apostles For what causes others besides the ministers of the word are to be admitted to ecclesiastical cōsultations No ecclesiastical law can be made made in a publicke Ch. without the consent of the ciuill ruler The general consent of the Church confirmeth faith How the visible Church hath changed the dwelling place