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A05689 Cartain obseruations of that reuerend, religious and faithfull servant of God, and glorious martyr of Iesus Christ, Mr. Randal Bate, which were part of his daily meditations in the time of his sufferings, whilst he was prisoner in the gatehouse at Westminster Bate, Randal. 1625 (1625) STC 1580; ESTC S117192 109,500 280

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spirit and follow corrupt nature that studies more to please it selfe and men then to please the Lord. This giues way to all idolatry whatsoever Apoc. 21 the fearful haue their portion with idolaters It is to giue away the Lords right and makes men they cannot with any zeale or loue preach or practice the main truthes of God Our Saviour Christ refused to be subject to the Pharisies washings a ceremony out of Gods worship not corrupted so by idolaters but in other kinds commanded and appointed by God 10 A thing indifferent having holinesse put in it ceaseth to be indifferent and becomes simply evil and abominable for then it is will-worship as the brazen serpent 2 God onely must sanctifie things Relatiuely for an holy use Io. 2 Mark 11. 11 That is not a thing indifferent which the holy Scriptures hath commanded or forbidden in generall or speciall in any infallible example or by consequence For every man is bound to the will of God simply being made known That men are bound to examples it may appear 1 Because the Holy Ghost records them for our learning and practice Rom. 15 Christs example is brought to proue we must not please our se●● es so that divine examples binde when they are not against a divine Rule 2 It is the manner of Scripture to propound divers duties onely in examples because they moue much 3 Infallible examples were guided immediately by the holy Ghost and therefore are sure rules for us to follow even in circumstances And see Math. 21 how our Saviour Christ proues by consequence the resurrection against the Sadduces 12 Circumstances of holy actions are commanded by the Lord in the generall as time to meet to hear the word and receiue Sacraments the Table to set bread and wine upon but in the particular the Church may appoint what is fittest for order and edification from the generall rules and examples of holy Scriptures ever knowing we are bound to follow the Traditions and Ordinances of Christ and his Apostles as they they haue delivered them unto us 1 Corinth 11.12 13 This word onely is to be understood in every commandement yea in every part of Gods worship so as no other god may be adored saue I●hovah nor after any other manner then he commands Mat. 4.10 with Deut. 6.10 For to fear the Lord and keep his commandemants is the whole duty of man 2 Men going beyond the bounds appointed by the Lord sin against him 3 Men are expresly tyed to the Law and Testimony Isa 8. 4 Men are in darknesse and know not which way they walk except the light of the word guide them 2 Pet. 1. 14 Every particular Congregation assembled lawfully in the name of Christ that is after his own institution with the Officers given and appointed hath full liberty of her ●elfe to execute Discipl ne being independant to any other Ecclesiasticall power on earth whatsoever Math. 18 Having reproved the offender by 2 or 3 then tell the Church or Congregation after which is no higher power Whatsoever they binde on earth is bound in heaven Paul reproved the Corinthians that they had not excommunicated the incestuous person Bu●erus ibi totum Christi Regnum there is Christs whole Kingdom neither may any take away that which Christ hath given for upon his shoulders is the government and he hath all authority and will haue it thus dispensed wherfore if Naboth would not sell the inheritance of his fathers much lesse may wee sell the inheritance of Christ Nor did Christ subject one Congregation to another for that step to the Popedome came in long after And all Pastors being equall by Gods institution are forbidden to exercise authority one over an other or expect any such title as may import it or affect preeminence like Diotrophes 15 Commanding or following humane Traditions for carnall policy or good intent brings an utter ruin and insensible judgement upon any Kingdom Hos 5 witnesse Ieroboam in the Kingdom of Israel Gideon for making the Ephod Then men 1 grow strangers from Gods own worship 2 To think Religion is but a devise of man 3 They put down the servants of the Lord 4 They despise and resist the Lords word brought by his servants 16 Of all men Ministers are bound to abhorre the least reliques of idolatry and can be least forced to the use therof Lev. 21.5 For first they draw neerest unto the Lord who is a consuming fire and will be sanctified in them that come neer him 2 Ministers must leade the people in this as in other duties 3 The most zealous servants of God haue been ever very forward against all superstitious monuments 4 Magistrates and people haue a speciall charge Lev. 21.5 to sanctifie the Priest which was then the Lords Minister 17 The Church hath not all her light at once nor by one instrument Christ comes to his people as the Sun riseth first the day dawnes then darknesse is quite expelled and at last the Sunne is in his strength For 1 the servants of God at first doe set themselues against the great and maine corruptions of the time as Luther and the former servants of God did against the foundations of Babell 2 The Lords manner is to proceed from lesser to greater as may evidently be seen in the six daies work in the creation of the world 3 All men receiue the spirit but by measure and for a speciall work 4 That the Church might be carefull to bring forth many children to God and fervently and ardently to pray for the conversion of the Iewes at whose coming home wonderfull light shall appear to the whole world 18 A whole visible Church when it abounds with men of excellent graces for Magistrates and Ministers may yet omit duties commanded by the Lord and doe many things without warrant from the Scriptures So in all the daies of the Iudges and good Kings they on itted keeping of the feast of Boothes as it appeares They sacrificed in the high places in Iehosaphats time So the first and purest times after Christ began shortly in many ceremonies to bee too superstitious For 1 much ignorance is in us all and Gods Spirit is promised to l●ade us no further then wee doe take heed to the Word 2 In things absolutely necessary 3 The Church is too carelesse in some things and we all are too prone to rest before wee haue done our whole work 19 Consent of Writers Orthodoxall is had though not mentioned where Scripture is plain for any point This appeares 1 because the Church is led by the same Spirit the Scriptures were penned and inspired by 2 God hath in all times and ages some witnesses to stand for him and his truth 3 Gods children haue the same minde and walk in one way This consent is either in the grounds and common principles though they doe not come to the particulars because these things were not then controverted Or in will and heart as if such truthes
seats of more ambitious spirits though inferiour in gifts did challenge superior●ty by a kinde of succession 5 The dignity of the Cities and liberallity of the first Emperours did much help forward this businesse not intending any hurt For the mystery of iniquity did worke cunningly and invisibly Having removed out of thy minde what blinds many an eie now a little consider what grounds the Scripture affoords against this form of government And first that Luk. 22.24.25.26 wh●re the Disciples contending who should be greatest our Saviour remoues this conce●t by shewing them plainly they stroue for that their condition was not capable of For the k●ngs of the Gentiles and their officers haue both t●mporall authority and great Titles fitting their estate But you shall haue neither such authority one over another nor such titles but he that is greatest in gifts and respect let him arrogate no more over his brethren then if he were the least This place is plain not onely against ambition but superiority in degrees authority and titles 1 Because it is made a property incommunicable of Princes and Civill Magistrates to haue such authority 2 Because Christs Kingdom must not be like the kingdoms of earthly Princes but like Christ conversing amongst his schollers In the 27 vers hee shewes directly though we were masters yet we should be amongst them that are under us as if we were servants The first part therefore shewes their foolishnesse in desiring that which could not be given them which was indeed ambition The other reproues their desire of commanding and Lording over their fellows 2 The second Argument against Lord ruling Diocesan Bishops is from Acts 20.28 where the Apostle shewes the office and nature of an Apostolicall Bishop which is a person set over a flock by the Holy Ghost to feed that Congregation of Christ with others Heere by feeding according to the usuall manner of Scripture Discipline is meant too as may be gathered from Ezech. 34 and Ioh. 20. In which places feeding extends to all Ministeriall duties whereby the good and salvat on of the flock may be procured This place proues 1 that there should not be one alone but many which haue the care of the same flock 2 That they are all bound to tend the flock exercising discipline to the same for the Apostle speaks to all 3 Though there be difference in respect of the dispensation of their Ministery yet they are alike in respect of the generallity and extent of their charge secondly in that all are to concurre and haue their severall gifts and diligence imployed both in doctrine and discipline 1 This place upon this ground quite overthrows Diocesan ruling Bishops because they are alone 2 They haue no pa t cular flock and so by consequence are no Ministers 3 They challenge sole jurisdiction to themselues and their officers debarring all others from medling 3 A third place of Scripture 1 Pet. 5.1.2.3 Elders are to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overseeing the state of the flock over which they are If therefore the Elder and Bishop bee all one and that the Lord hath put no d●fference b●twixt them then there ought not to be one alone which either is to arrogate the name or nature of Bishop This place is strengthened from the place fore-alledged Act. 20 where the Elders are first called Presbyteri afterwards Episcopi This is plain in Tit. 1.5 compared with the 7 vers where Elder and B●s●op are all one Where God hath appointed many to one common businesse man may not restrain it to one This is to adde to one and dimin●●h from others both which bring c●●ses upon the doers 4 Phillip 1 There were divers Bishops in one Cit●e therefore in those times one alone had not any such Diocesan Bishoprick as ours claym All that were exercised in any Ministeriall function or imployed for government are saluted by the name of Bishops Therefore it is plain one alone was not Bishop nor one more then another By which may bee shewed plainly that the Angell Revel 2 signifies the whole body of the Ministery For Metaphoricall places must be expounded by plaine places So Psal 34.8 79.2 and in many other places 5 Ephes 4.11 1 Tim. 3.1 where the Apostie describes the Ministers and Officers of Christ he hath not mentioned any such one which should haue the superiority and jurisdiction which proues firmly there ought to bee none such for no work no office Now the holy Ghost hath not assigned any such work to any 2 The Holy Ghost describeth most exactly the office of the high Priest and his garments apart from the ordinary Priests So hee would now if there had been any such order in them 3 1 Tim. 3 H●e describes the o●lice of Deacons and Widdows and would hee not these 4 The Apostle salutes in his Epistles all Orders Phil. 1.1 and there is no mention of a Diocesan Bishop 6 Argum. Discipline is in the hands of the Ministers and Elders whole Church Math. 18. Therfore not in one mans hands This place is firme for the Church is made the highest to which the last appeale is and that which rents and severs corrupt members from the body This therfore cannot be one man For Ecclesia ever signifies a company and number comming together All these places are firm and mainf●●● plainly the unlawfulnesse of any Diocesan Bishop Now follow some reasons proving the same truth that there ought not to be Diocesan Bishops Reas 1. Christ measureth out gifts to all according to the place and office they sustaine and are to discharge But no man hath gifts sufficient now to dischage this great and weighty calling to execute discipline over a whole Province That this is plain appears in that the Apostles themselues appointed in every Congregation Discipline to be executed and did not arrogate authority over the Churches but gaue charge that each Congregation should execute discipline it selfe 2 It as hard if not more difficult to execute discipline as to feed all a Diocesse or Province by teaching But who dare arrogate so much to himselfe 3 Who is there now a daies that hath an hundred times more sufficiency then an able Minister which hee must haue by proportion having so many charges under 2 It is not lawfull for man to devise a calling and office which excludes any Ordinance and Calling appointed by the Lord for that never comes from heaven But Diocesan Bishops exclude Elders that are appointed by the Lord as may appear 1 Tim. 5.17 and ●ha● more fully hereafter God willing be shewed 3 If Diocesan Bishops were from God they should haue place in the Church according to the quality of the work wherin they are exerc sed and for which they are cheifly instituted But they haue no place according to the work of Discipline vvhich is infe●●our to the M●nistery of the word as serving onely to make it effectuall whereas they hold a place aboue the most painfull Ministers of
but they must learn by hearing the Word of the Lord. Which things are plain against our Ceremonies For 1 men haue no word for these therfore they are unlawfull 2 Men adde by carnall reason unto the ordinances and worship of God these Ceremonies which is as unlawfull as to detract any Ceremony and ordinance God hath appointed to his people 3 These hinder the keeping of Gods Commandements 1 Because carnall reason is unmortified that leads men 2 Men please their affections both which hinder Gods Commandements from being kept Rom. 8. 3 Men dote upon their devises whē they are used which hinders them frō●ouing the Lord and his ordinances with all their hea●t 4 Men so striue to bring in these and to keep them in as that all their labour is spent herein If it be said that this is meant of adding or detracting in the substance of Gods worship Answ This cannot be so understood 1. Because the Lord forbids all adding and this in Ceremonies is adding 2 Because the Lord binds to the manner prescribed as well as to the matter Deut. 32. 3. Men may not adde in doctrine nor detract therfore not in Ceremonies 4 Because the Lord punished them when they varied in the least Ceremonie and circumstance from the pattern in the mo●●nt Arg. 5. Deut. 7. All the monuments of Idolatry should be destroyed 2 The Church ought to haue speciall outward holines more then any other people hath a part wherof is in overthrowing such pollutions 3 The Lord will haue all sorts of Images to be destroyed The Lord will not have his chidren communicate with Idolaters either in their religious Ceremonies or outward communion Hence we learn 1 That these ought to be destroyed since they are to us monuments of Popery they bring that to our remembrance 2 Now they are appendants of that religion onely at this day 3 They are as dangerous to us as the monuments of these Gentils were to the Iews 4 The Lord will haue his children goe as far from Idolatry as is possible now wee retayning their Ceromonies haue Communion with them If it be said this place speaks of them that are open Idolaters and had devised these things themselues The Answer is that Papists are open Idolaters 2 They devised these things of themselues and though they should be before Popery yet they might be and were beginnings of Popery Arg. 6 Dev. 7. two last verses Things dedicated to Idols and abused in state of worship may not be turned to private uses much lesse to publick in the service of God 2 That men should utterly detest and shew their greatest hatred against the monuments and things abused to Idolatry 3 These are accursed things and men coveting the same become accursed 4 Man may not pick things lawfull in themselues out of idolatrous worship and apply them to what use he will This place is against these Ceremonies in question that haue been in state of religious worship therfore ought to be abandoned 2 Men are bound both inwardly and outwardly to manifest their great detestation and loathing of such things therfore ought not to use them 3 The retaining of th●se things brings curses upon minister and people God Layes a speciall curse upon his own creatures abused to Idolatry much more upon mans devises Object This place holds but for the individuals not for the generals For Gold might be used and that afterwards about the service of God Answ 1. These Ceremonies were never in use but Religious and therfore the Argument holds firm à pari from the like All the Gold that was defiled by Idolaters ought to be abhorred So all Crosses and Surplusses haue been abused for they had no other use therfore to be abhorred 2 Gold in it selfe as it is the creature is not here detested but in this form and for this use So the matter simply of a Surplus as it is the creature is not unlawful no the other Ceremonies but in this form and applyed to this use which is in the generall of Crosses and Surp●esses which was but in speciall for the other 3 The Lord brought in Gold and Images too of diverse creatures into the Temple But this Law is not to binde the Lord as none other is For laws binds the creature not the Creator therfore it remains firm that these being such accursed things should be utt●r●y abandoned and though pickt out amongst many yet without question far worse then the gold about the Images Arg. 7. Deut. 12.3 the very names of idols ought to be rooted out of the places where they haue been worshipped and v. 30 31 men may not chuse how they will seru the Lord. 2 God will not be served by his people in the manner nor with those things appointed by man that Idolaters worship their God withall for they bring in every thing that the Lord abhors 3 Men are not to adde any thing to the worship commanded of God though they keep the substance and adde but little 4 Whatsoever is not commanded in the worship of God is forbidden These grounds are plain out of the text and they are sufficient if we had no more places of Scripture to overthrow these Ceremonies For 1 if the names of Idolls should be destroyed then much more these ceremonies which are much more accursed 2 These Ceremonies were of mens chusing at first and therfore unlawfull then 3 Idolaters worship God at their Idols after the same manner with these things therfore they are unlawfull and if these be admitted why not all Popish trumpery upon the same grounds 4 Our Churches retain the substance of Gods worship yet they adde these of their own devising which is directly against the commandement 5 They are not warranted any where wherfore forbidden to all Arg. 8 Deut. 14.1.2 1 Men in civill things should not be like Idolaters nor follow their fashions 2 Holy people must avoide all outward things which may defile them and they must be as the Lord would haue them 3 The Lord severs his people from all other people in their Rytes and Ceremonies This place is very direct against these things 1 Because it is more to be like Idolaters in religious reverence then in civill fashions And suppose these should be used but for a civill respect amongst us they were unlawfull as they are now used in the Colledges of the Vniversities 2 It is not in any mans power to ordain and appoint what garment they will or Ceremonies to be used 3 It is sin to joyn and be one with those from whom the Lord severs now the Lord severs us from Papists and the Lords will is we should differ from them in these rites as well as in doctrine Obj. This was spoken to the Israelites in respect of the heathens Answ The causes are generall wee are the children of the Lord 2 We ought to be as holy as they 3 the Lord hath chosen us to be a peculiar people unto himselfe from Popery
CERTAIN OBSERVATIONS OF THAT REVEREND religious and faithfull servant of God and glorious Martyr of Iesus Christ M. RANDAL BATE which were part of his daily meditations in the time of his sufferings whilst he was prisoner in the Gatehouse at Westminster THE FIRST SECTION Every part of Wisedom is from heaven from the father of Lights MOst glorious and eternall Lord God which hast vouchsafed by Iesus Christ in all times to publish thy counsell and holy wil to thine own people raised sufficient witnesses against superstition and wil-worship For the clearing of thy truth vouchsafe thy presence with thy weak servant in this businesse that desires thy glory and the good of thy people That so much of thy truth as is needfull for our times may be plainly made manifest to the conscience and heart of all that belong unto thee Lord thou hast appointed Iesus Christ to be our Shepheard and promised thy Word and Spirit should not leaue thy people Thou hast brought us to be partakers of the first resurrection and drawn us out of the world to know thee in part and loue thy name Oh therfore send thyne annoynting eye-salue and cause such a light from heaven to shine in our dark hearts as all contrary thoughts and conceits that rebel against Christ his Kingdom may be subdued all lukewarmenesse may be expelled and that all with one heart and free perswasion of minde may worship thee the onely King and Lawgiver of the Church according to thy will in the unity of the Spirit Amen IN all times deare brethren and much beloved it hath been found true that satan sowes tares where the Lord hath sown wheat which come up in the night so sec●etly and are so like the wheat that they are scarce discerned by any till they haue overgrown the corne and choaked the same nay which is more Errours never want men very busy and dilligent in tending and nourishing them so that if they haue not the chiefe place and be kept with all observance you shall see their Patrones fly in mens faces for the least neglect This too lamentable experience of the Churches condition sufficiently proveth amongst both Iewes and Gentiles For the lying serpent though he study to poyson all mens soules with damnable doctrine yet more principally the visible Church wh ch being a fountaine of living waters troubled by him filthy streames must needs flow thence to all the world Besides when the Church corrupts Gods worship in whole or in part devising any thing of her own it greatly hardens wicked men in their superstitions and devised Religions who seeing the same outside in the Religion of God which they themselues follow are hindred from discerning the graue and simple Majesty of Gods true worship thinking this to be but like their own an invention of men or at least that men are not altogether taught of God in this way nor receiue all that they professe from him alone but doe borrow many things and devise some of their owne to beautifie that which by forra gne beauty is evermore deformed sowcing an old patch of a different colour into a new garment which makes a rent where all was well before To prevent wh ch offence though unfittest I acknowledge of any I haue undertaken th s small Treatise wherein farre be t from me to seek any disgrace of the State because I d scover some corruptions in the Church for it is the Ministe s duty to reproue With much thankefulnesse we all acknowledge Gods mercy towards us in the light and liberty we haue injoyed by meanes of three renoumed Princes whereof two are fallen asleep and one now the Lords annointed surviveth on whom the Lord multiply all graces of his Spirit Neither doe I thinke that men of any reasonable understanding wi● think the publi hing of the t uth in a plaine manner any disgrace if it be done in way of exhortation for suppose I should erre in judgment yet the thing being done in loue and humility with all respect and due regard unto the State I doubt not but his Majesty and the State under him wil take it as a fruit of loue from him that unfeynedly seeks their peace and happinesse I know it will be said we are factious and sowe discord and therefore deserue sharpe punishment for troubling the quiet and peace of the State But mens cen●ures doe not feare me nor is my life precious unto me so as my race may be run with joy and a good conscience whether I ●iue it is unto Christ and for h m or whether I dye it is unto him and for his Glory And let not any of our opposit●s dream but the Lord will raise up such by his Spirit that shall rep●oue th●se remainders of superst tion more and more ●●a●ply till he come himself in his own person He will not be overcome by men but will set up his Christ in all his Ordinances As for troubling the State I professe I doe not trouble the land for we adhere to Christ and walk by his light onely And let all men know it is farre better they should heare the sharpest reproofes that doe most cut then fee●e the sma●t hand of God for continuing unreformed which men cannot but look for if they goe on in this way which the Lord hath ●o often reproved and dehorted us from Many I suppose on the other hand will blame and censure me because I t ach not an utter depa●ture from a corrupt form of worship whom I doe seriously desire to peruse the grounds herein conteyned for their satisfaction in this point Wherfore considering no just cause of offence is given to any for the substance of the matter especially and the necessity there is to witnesse the truth I haue published this to settle the judgement and informe the conscience of them that want better means I know and see what an hinderance it is to many in mayn points and duties of Religion to doubt in matters of small moment in shew and circumstantiall I know how many mens hearts are torn each from other and divided about these things Many going further on the right hand in detestation of errours then they are called by the Lord Doe not these call upon every man for the use of his tallent that the hey and stubble built on the foundation may be removed by the approach of the light and all may walk in one way making truth and peace to kisse each other Onely there are two things yet questionable 1 For the maner of handling these controversies it seemes nothing fit that such plain and simple stuffe should be brought to the building of the Tabernacle especially there be ng so many men of excellent parts furnished with all manner of learning and sound judgement that might travell with more successe in this businesse To which I answer from my heart that I could with it to be so and ●f they be not otherwise imployed I doe desire them
their subjects in preventing their hurt It is the Lord onely that must keep others from abusing holy th●ngs now the Lord w●ll keep onely things of his own appointment and such as are profitable If amongst the Israelites an oxe were used to push and gore and it were testified to the owner and he did not put him to death if any were hurt by him the owner was to answer either with his life or goods Exod. 21.29.30 So Magistrates not removing dangers are accessary to all the falls which thousands catch thereby 5 Princes haue authority to compell all their subiects to covenant with the Lord to serue him onely according to his will So did Iosua Ios 24. So did Asa and Iosiah So did Moses and the Elders of Israel Deu. 26.5 So did the great King Nebuchadnezzar that saw but one speciall work of the Lord in the delivering of his faithfull servants So did Ezekiah And this reacheth to make Lawes and publique Edicts that binde all To punish the obstinate offenders with death to send for men with command to come to the service of the Lord so did the former Pr●nces This men are bound to Psal 101. For 1 all men are superstitious or Atheists naturally and therfore they need to bee kept in compasse and drawn to the meanes 2 All men following their own inventions pollute the land and bring judgments therupon like the men that claue to Baal-Peor 6 Princes haue authority to send out Ministers fitted with gifts to preach the Word so did Iehosaphat The Magistrate is to s●e that the Lord may haue most glory in the publishing of salvation that Christs Kingdom be set up that none perish for want of meanes Therefore are they called Gods especially 7 Princes in things not commanded by the Lord but left indifferent ought rather then otherwise to make distinction twixt their people and Idolaters Deut. 4.1.2 For first Gods people are the children of the Lord God to be holy unto him in a peculiar manner Secondly The Lord hath used so to put many barres twixt us and Idolaters and then indeed things indifferent so used most edifie the Church Thirdly Idolaters are made hereby the sooner to consider of their Religion Fourthly of all persons Ministers are most bound to abhorre the least reliques of idolatry and can be least forced to the use thereof Levit. 21.5 they draw neerest to the Lord that is a consuming fire 2 Magistrates and people haue a speciall charge to sanctifie the Priest Lev. 21.8 8 Magistrates are bound to be so carefull that the people fall not back to idolatry that they are bound to remoue all idolaters especially false Prophets and Seducers Deut. 13.6 Deut. 17.2 Deut. 7.2 Exod. 32 Ex. 22.20 2 King 10 Iehu Iosias 2 King 23 Elias For 1 these pervert the straight wayes of the Lord. 2 It is as great a sinne now to call upon a Saint or an Angell as it was to offer to an Idoll Therfore all Princes should follow Asaes worthy example 2 Chron. 1● 13 The summe of all is that Princes may reforme abuses and establish the pure worship of God among their people If it be said This seemes to be a burthen and abasing to Princes rather then any honour the Answer is plain That it is the honour of the creature to procure the honour of God Thus doe the Angels 2 It is great honour to be about the Lord in any place 3 All offices are but ministeries 4 None but the Magistate can doe this This Authority though the Scriptures manifest that others executed it yet with all they doe it with the consent of the Princes 2 By the advice and d rection of the Prophets of God so did David 3 By drawing on the people in the demolishing of Idotry Thus thou seest in part wherin the Magistrates Authority consists now follows to shew wherein it is limited in the positions following 1 The Magistrate cannot institute any thing in the outward worship of God None of the Kings of Iudah without extraordinary warrant did but reform which is to remoue superstition and bring men to the true worship of God 2 The Lord hath commanded that men should not adde which binds directly in outward worship 3 The Lord hath given direction for as much service as he requires of men and will accept Isa 29.13 Io. 2. What better colour then to haue mony-changers and sheep in the Temple to further and speed the service of God and dispatch the unacquainted Israelites that came from far But this as all humane helps not sanctified by the Lord doe prophanes the house of God and therfore justly banished thence by our Saviour Christ Nothing may come neerer the Lord then hee appoints and all that comes from man is filthy and defiles both the Lord and the user 2 Circumstances in Gods worship are not free neither in these things may Princes command what they please 1 Chron. 28.19 Salomon hath a pattern of the Temple and direction for the place 2 Chron. 3.1 So for the ordering of men to these and these offices Because all things being inexpedient edifie not Acts 1 Acts 6 1 Corinth 10. 3 The Princes commanding of a thing indifferent is no sufficient ground for the usage of it in the service of God For first all things must be sanctified by the Word which shewes the right use of these things Also Princes commands in things indifferent in many cases are not to be obeyed As 1 if the party cannot be resolved of the lawfulnesse of them then the Lord forbids to use them 2 If they hurt or destroy for all power is for the good of others 3 Though they be indifferent in themselues yet having been monuments of Idolatry or being now abused by Idolaters in state of divine worship Hes 2. 4 When they are commanded for ill ends as to be signes of the new covenant of grace for men may not ordain new signes of the covenant of grace 4 Princes may not appoint significant ceremonies the second commandement forbids it Ezech. 43.8 These are parts of Gods outward worship for they are religious actions 2 They lessen the esteem of Gods own Ordinances 3 There is no such example in the whole Scripture of any holy Prince that did any such thing 4 Christ is the onely Teacher of his Church therfore all doctrins and ceremonies not appointed by him are to be rejected for we are bound to hear his voyce onely 5 As these abound so hath the Lord withdrawn his presence from the visible Church Ezech. 43.8 6 The Lord accounts nothing his but what he appoints 7 The wil of God only makes things acceptable to him and profitable to the Church 5 Princes haue not power to binde the conscience Isa 33.21 Iam. 4.12 For 1 they cannot make a thing simply evill 2 They canot discern nor punish the inner man that is onely the priviledg of the Lord. 3 Christians are not servants of men but onely of Christ that hath purchased
the guiding and governing of the Church They are called Elders in respect of their age and office which was to govern with the Ministers and perform all private duties for the good of the congregation as necessity required as to pray w●th the sick to admonish reprou and joyn with the Minister in excommunication to ordain officers for the congregation and to provide by all good means for the outward good of the Church That these ought to be●n eve●y Congregation we hold firmly aga●●st the maintainers of this strange and uncouth discipline And it may appear first out of Math. 18 where Christs institutes what is needfull for the Church whereof this is one secondly the Church doth what it doth not confusedly but by the ministry of some thirdly the promise is made ●n binding and roosing to two or three which imposts that though the right of the keyes bee in the whole Church yet the Ministery therof is in some few selected and chosen out for that purpose Our Saviour alludes to the custome of the Iewish Synagogues wherein there were Eld●rs But howsoever this place may seem too weak at first sight to build the erection of this office upon yet the practise of the Apostles withall compared and the directions they haue left to the Church in this case will put all out of doubt to him that wrangles not for himselfe and to please men To goe along therfore in the Scripture and first the Acts of the Apostles which conta ns a type and map of the prim●tiue times and purest Chu●ches that ever were in the world ment●on these Acts 15.4 22 wh●ch place cannot be understood but of such ●u●ing Elders of the people as were amongst the ●ewes not of teaching Elders For the Apostles were as the Ministe●s and did perform all Ministeriall duties having none their Curats under th●m as Bishops had afterward For Evangelist were to accompany the Apostles in planting Churches neither ●s there any mention of any such here 2 They are d●stinguished here both from the Church called the brethren and Apostles Neither can this title be understood of Pastors because the Apostles were wont to appoint them onely when Churches were gathered and they were to leaue them as may appear Acts 14.23 Tit. 1.5 3 These here mentioned are as assistants to the Apostles governing and ordering the Churches businesse as both here and Acts 21 where they are present with the Apostles and in none other office nor use imployed but onely this Lastly Paul and Barnabas and some others came up to Ierusalem to the Apostles and Elders which had ca●e of the Discipline and Religion with them The third place is Rom. 12.8 he that rules in or with dilligence where first the Apostle distinguisheth this ruling both from the ministery of the Word and from distributing and shewing mercy Hence therfore there must be some to rule in the church 2 Men are charged according to their callings and measure of gifts received to exercise themselues for the churches good who sees not plainly that the Regiment of the church is not in one Lord Bishops hand since Bishops are not in each congregation where they rule 2 That this ought to be where the Ministry of the Word is 3 This diligence cannot be meant of a three yeares visitation nor yearly Synods wherein presentments are Rece ved what bold and impudent face once dare think so wickedly of the Apostles but of that continuall care and oversight which they should shew towards the sheep of Christ which ever need some spirituall med●cine and Phisick for their soules 4 A fourth place is 1 Cor. 12.28 where the Apostle reckons up the severall gifts and offices which God himselfe hath set and appointed in his church Apostles are chiefe then Prophets and Governments There the Apostle distinguisheth Governments from the Ministry of the word 2 Being appointed by the Lord none can remoue them but he againe 3 The Lord giues extraordinary meanes for soule and body in extraordinary times when a church is to be planted because there want ordinary means 2 to procure the more authority and respect to the church then and ever he giues sufficient 4 The Lord hath s●t government in the church which the Magistrate cannot alter 5 The church is a perfect body that hath members sufficient to uphold and m●n●ster to all its own necessities neither is this to be neglected that the holy Ghost both here and Rom. 12 sets Government after Deaconship as though hee saw how some would arise and conjoyn things severed by the Lord which to prevēt he shews these are not to be so conjoyned as though the Minister should haue all the government in his own hands but some speciall persons are to be assi●n●d wh●ch may govern the Minister themselues 5 1 Tim. 4.14 with imposition of hands of the Presbytery which is to be understood of the Colledge of Presbyters contayning these amongst others For these had a speciall hand in electing and ordaining all church-officers 2 these joyned in making decrees for the government of the church Act. 15 therfore much more in executing of them 3 Timothy was called ordinarily at first not to be an Evangelist as appears Acts 16 Paul called him to that after the Churches had witnessed of him 4 The Apostle Paul Acts 20 speaks to them amongst others that they ●●ould tend the Church and they hav ng government in their hands were to suffer no wolues to come in But because men of a contentious spirit whose greatest hopes depend upon the contrary discipline will ha●dly yeeld t●ll plain force driue them nay force of the word will not till the sword of the Magistrate compells therfore the next place is 1 Tim. 5.17 in deluding of which place many sweat much in vaine for the Apost●e being to giue direction to Timothy how to carry himselfe in the Church of God shews h m his duty towards every condition as widdows in the beginning of th s chapter next Elders and such as rule well are worthy of double honour especially such as labour in the word and doctrine which first words implyes necessarily that there were then in the Church Elders that did govern the Churches which did not labour in the word and doctrine 2 Such ought to be had in speciall account that doe rule well 3 Such as labour in the word and doct●ine ought more to be respected then they that onely governe 4 That all M●n●sters are to haue a spec●all hand in the governing of the Churches commuted to them I will not much insist upon this place more for I know some adversaries need not so much conv●ct on as to haue their h●a●ts perswaded Pray thou that readest that the Lord would perswade them to dwell in the t●nts of Shem and be content to suffer here with their brethren that th●y may ●a●gn with Christ hereafter Many adversaries will not set themselues to learn the t●●th but being drunk with selfe-concert th●nk nothing good
greater care must be had of all that we doe not suffer his policies to prevail 3. Men should not speak with strange tongues in publick without interpretation 4 No publique duty is to be performed which doth not edifie 5 Prayer and thanks-giving are to be conceived by one alone 6 Private persons are to giue assent and testifie the same by voice in the end by this word Amen every one in his own person not one called Clark for others 7 Good things not done in a good manner cease to be good 8 The whole Church ought to meet together to perform publique worship 9 Vnbeleevers may be suffred and admitted to hear 10 Such things as may discredit Gods Ordinances and worship to simple persons and men of different religion being not commanded by the Lord ought to bee avoyded as kneeling in the Sacrament c. 11 True preaching must be such as makes ignorant and wicked men acknowledge Gods presence with his Ordinances 2 Such as layes open the very secrets of mens hearts 12 They whom the word soundly works on will worship God reverence his Ministers It is not ceremonies that maks Ministers known but the Word preached soundly 13 Every man ought so to imploy his gifts as the church may haue most benefit by him 14 Two or three Prophets at the most are to speak at one publique ordinary meeting 15 Prophets must discern for the people that no false doctrine be broached by any 16 Prophets ought to speake one by one 17 The church hath need of all mens gifts 18 Since the end of the Ministery is to gaine knowledge and comfort to all men all must labour in the word for these ends 19 Men must so order things as all may exercise their gifts for the publique good 20 Every mans doctrine and preaching may and should be tryed and discerned by the Prophets 21 The disorder and dissension which is in the church springs not from the Lord. 22 The order appointed by the Lord keeps peace 23 No woman ought to speak in the publique congregation 24 All holy actions must be done with a seemly decency which is in fitting and reverent manner sutable to the action we goe about So as the benefit of the exercise may redound to others 24 All holy things must be done in order so as one holy action be not confounded and drowned by another but each part of divine worship and every person is to haue his proper place Meanes for Decency and Order 1 The nature and use of each gift and duty must be known 2 Men must carry themselues not so as they please themselues and win credit but as they may profit best the church and keep peace with others 3 Obserue in the like case what Gods servants haue done afore that are mentioned in Scriptures This place binds because it is the commandement of the Lord. 2 All the reasons are generall Tit. 1.5 Titus must doe all things in Crete according as Paul had commanded him nothing was left to his own a bitrament now Titus was an Evangelist and had greater power and authority then any ordinary Pastor therfore the church may not a●ter the government left by the Apostles For out of these words these positions arise naturally 1 That Paul taught a form and manner of ordering churches 2 Titus was bound to this and to none other 3 Deacons and Elders and the least things are described by the Apostles and left us in their writings as afterwards shall appear God willing These things binde us as Moses writings bound the people of the Iewes for they were sent to us to make us Christs disciples and plant churches therfore discipline is no wayes arbitrary 4 The Apostles are injoyned to teach the churches to obserue all things which Christ had commanded Whence it is plain that men must be taught the will of God for the way and meanes of salvation 2 they must be dedicated to the Lord by Baptism 3 they must be taught to keep all things besides which Christ hath commanded Sacrament of the Lords Supper c. and Discipline 4 Christ is present where these things are to blesse them to the churches good 5 they ought to continue to the end of the world 6 the church ought not to be burthened with things not commanded by Christ This place bindes firmly 1 because Christ Mat. 18 gaue such commandement 2 the Apostles taught these things to the churches therfore they were commanded by Christ before Ephes 4 Christ hath given gifts unto men both callings and abilities which are sufficient onely profitable to his church These gifts are for restoring of the Saints and work of the Ministery therfore contain discipline under them which both restoreth the Saints and is a work of the Ministry therfore the churches government is not arbitrary From hence note 1 It is Christs priviledg to appoint Ministers and the degrees therof 2 That he appoints both extraordinary and ordinary 3 Hee appoints sufficient for his church 4 The same that teach men by the Word are to execute discipline over them Hitherto by the Scriptures hath this truth been proved Now evident reason grounded on holy Scripture proues the same Reas 1 Christ by Moses taught how the church should be governed in the time of the old Testament both for the officers Priests high Priests and Levits therfore it cannot be but that he comming in his own person that was the Day-star Sun of righteousnesse from whence all the other borrowed their light must needs teach his church how it should be ordered and governed for the light foretold extended to all things concerning the churches good 2 The Church is the house of God and therfore to be governed according to his own will which he hath manifested for that end and it is not to be supposed since the Lord requires us to set our houses in order he amongst men is counted a carelesse unthrift that leaus his servants to doe what they l●st that he will himself neglect to giue order how both steward and children and servants should be dealt withall And if it be presumption for meaner persons to dare to intrude and govern noble mens houses according to their own will what is this to rush into the house of God and sway all all things there by affection or carnall reason without direction from God 3 No human wisedom is sufficient or able to govern the church of Christ wherin so many diseases are to bee healed and businesses to be dispatched for the good of men soules and preserving the people of God and upholding the Kingdom of Christ Who is sufficient when hee hath all things to his hand for doctrine both matter and manner Then much lesse is he able to govern when ne●ther the pe●sons nor manner is expressed And if the worth est servants of God were not able not durst order any thing but what they learned from the Lord who are they that conce●t their own w●sedom
are reckoned up that are allowed by Christ which place is left as a rule of trying Ministers Try them by their office and use of the same 4 Math. 28.19.20 Ministers must goe and teach making others Christs Disciples and teach them to obseru what he hath commanded Reading Ministers hence are none for he that hath no authority from Christ hath none for he hath all authority in earth as well as in heaven Reading Ministers are not sent by Christ 2 They cannot so teach as others may be made the disciples of Christ 3 They cannot teach the converted to keep the Ordinances of Christ unto the end of the world which is added lest any should think that either men converted and Churches planted should not need the Ministery of the Word or that in some times of scarcity men may put in Readers 5 Math. 24. He that is not faithfull nor wise is not set over the family of the Lord to giue them their portion in due season But Reading Ministers are not faithfull nor wise neither know mens portions neither the portion of one nor another for they cannot discern twixt a civill man and the child of God neither know the portion of the weak nor of the strong neither can they giue each one their portion in due season This is plain by Experience 6 Whom the Holy Ghost hath not set over the people he is none but these are not set over by the Holy Ghost for there is no rule nor example to warrant them This Argument is grounded on Acts 20.28 where the Holy Ghost is the Author of the Ministery 2 The persons are Elders that are and ought to take heed to themselues and others 3 Are to feed and govern the Church of Christ which doth not agree to the order of Reading Ministers 7 He who is a Bishop of God must be apt to teach but these are not for they haue no Ministeriall gift nor haue they the form of wholesom doctrine This Argument is grounded upon Pauls Canons 1 Tim. 3.1 His wrok who is a Minister is so excellent that who is sufficient for these things But reading ministers haue no such work of excellency but any yong Scholler may be sufficient for this work Every true Minister is successor to the Apostles in the substance of their Calling which is teaching the whole counsell of God to that Congregation they are set over by the Holy Ghost But these Readers are successors to dumb Dogs and blind guides All divine relation is grounded either on the nature of the thing or some divine Institution which indeed is the proper ground To be a Minister is a Divine Relation and hath no such ground in these men Object 1. These are sent by the Church therfore they haue authority Answ It is the priviledge of Christ by his Spirit to send forth Ministers as may appear Math. 28 compared with Acts 20.28 2 the Church hath no authority against the Word this is against the Word to haue such Ministers 3 the Church hath no more authority in Ordination then in Excommunication but Ioh. 9 whom men had unjustly excommunicated the Lord absolved Object 2. These are called dumb dogs therfore Dogs Answ The argument is not firm from the name to the thing For the divill raised up by the witch of Endor is called Samuel 2 they are so called that it may be known to whom the Holy Ghost speaketh From hence it is plain how unlawfull a thing it is to joyn with Reading ministers in any ministeriall duty either praying or administring the Sacraments For 1 All worship done to the Lord must be justifiable by the Word and warranted by same But this worship is not There is no place of Scripture to proue the lawfulnesse of this service done by a Reader This argument is strong For the Scripture is a perfect rule for all things but especially for the worship of God And to use another worship then can be warranted is to sin against the Lord and to follow blind devotion without judgement which brings us to death 2 It was the sinne of Ieroboam that as he devised a new worship so new Priests of the lowest of the people This is both a new worship never known in the Church t●ll Antichrist got in to haue onely a s●t form of prayer and they are of the lowest of the people that are ministers of it wherfore it is but as Ieroboams worship 3 Christ is not there by his institution gifts nor spirit which is the very life of Christian duties And the servants of God must be where their Master is which is where m●n are gathered together in his name which is by his institution and gifts and presence of his holy Spirit 4 These are no true Ministers as is proved before therfore not safe to joyn with them that which they doe is not pleasing to God they having no Calling therunto it is like the sacrifice of Core and Dathan and the sacrifice of Vzzah 5 Men cannot thriue nor grow in grace by such exercis●s that haue grace already they cannot come to see the●r misery nor be st●rred up to r●nue the●r ●ep●ntance that haue this grace already nor can they keep the Sabboth hereby W●tn●sse the exper●ence of poore Christians ●n this case t●at are spirituall and can judge of th●ngs these being wells and clouds without water 6 Men cannot possibly be fitt●d to ●eceiu the Lords Supper by such a M●nistery for th●s requires that each should b● able to examine himselfe which none can doe but such as are taught the g●ounds of Relig●on 2 Men should be st●rred up to this duty being all so backward as is pla n in the practise of the Cori●t●●ans which these m●n cannot doe Now what dang●r it is to receiue the Lords Supper unwo●thily you may see 1 Cor. 11 What good or benefit can a man haue by a dumb Dog or a blinde Gu●d● 7 The people should seek the law at his mouth whose lippes prese u knowledge Mal. 2 and goe to that shepheard that can feed them and that Watchman that can admonish them of danger but th●se mens lips doe not preseru knowledge 8 These make no difference having no discerning but reade Apocryphall writings and all that is in their way wh●ch being directly aga●nst the Word command●ng Chr●st on●ly to be hea●d how can men joyn in the same w●th any comfo●t 9 Men hard●n the ●gnorant in this ev●ll way and g●ue offence both to the b●nd Min●st●●s and people mak●●g as t●ough this were s●fficient to salvat on 10 Men by this p●oclaine the●r small accou●t of Gods own Ord●nances which they might enjoy by the same pa ne● cost o● removall or ●lse profite themse●ues more in pr●vate You therfore dear br●thren that liue under such consid●r wh●t you do● you liue as Athi●sts indeed upon the ma●te● For what are your prayers and rec●iving of Sac●am●nts which you th nk is the best serv ce of God but a provoking of the
Lord to anger That you s●ould dare to send such a l●me and bl nde m●ss●nger to the Lord of Frosts and such sacr●fices withall comming from the drowned in ignorance and superst●t●on and that you should put the Lords name upon such a M●nister which is not s●●t nor allowed by him Doe you n●t depriue your selu●s of those excellent and p●ec●ous treasures in the Gospell of Christ because you want a man to preach them Ep●es 3 Doe you not hereby ●ndanger and loose your soules which liue in ignorance 2 Thess 2. Doe you know the anger of the Lord will be upon you for this Hos 6. Would you chuse for the bodies sake such a Physitian as hath no skill at all nor any good report to haue cured any under his hand Or such a Counsellour as could not advise but reade you a statute or book-case at all adventures Would you trust your sheep with an Idoll-shepheard that cannot tend them And will ye make so small account of your soules thus to passe them over O return and seek the Lord ye haue hitherto sitten in ignorance and in the shadow of death you never knew what the Gospell meant nor what a God the Lord is witnesse the base and wicked conceiving of him and carriage towards him in publique and private Wherfore let this moue you to provide you a man of understanding that may be able to f●ed you Turn you therfore from all your evill wa●es that yee may be brought to Sion the place where the Lord will be found and seen of all his people Let none be so hardy as to maintain these in their Callings SECTION XIIII THe next sort of Min●sters wherof some doubt whether they may hear them or no are such as conforme to these ceremonies now controverted Which howsoever it come in them from an utter hatred of Popish devises and an heart carefull to keep themselues unspotted of the world yet without all quest●on they erre Concerning th●s therfore that mor● clearly the truth may be boulted out we will propound some grounds to stay upon 1 The Ordinances of God remain pure and holy though men be corrupt that administer them and so are like the Lord. 2 Private men are bound to try the doctrine of M●n●sters and look to that rather then be examin●ng of their entrance into that Calling they are in this all the Scriptures run upon 3 God doth good to his Church by the gifts he hath given to wicked men for his people For they are f●om the Holy Ghost given to restore the Saints and for the work of the Ministry These things considered it may appear upon sufficient grounds that men may lawfully hear 1 Such as are conscionable in their Ministery though they erre in judgement for the Ceremonies and be ordained according to the manner of the times For first these haue the substance of a lawfull calling elect●on and approbation from the people 2 Dissention in lesser matters hath never hindred either Communion nor est●em●ng one of another twixt the servants of God Phil. 3. 3 These are sent of God though not by this way they are not unlike to Iacob whose the blessing was though he should not haue sought ●t by lying 4 Their sin in admission is their own personall sin and cannot hurt others not partaking with it 5 Men may and ought to receiue their send●ng not from men but from the Lord of the Harv●st Object It seemes to approue thei● sinne since men pertake with them in their Ministery which they haue gotten unlawfully Is it not to communicate in stollen goods Answ No for they ought to be admitted and the Ministery is the●rs and the Congregations choosing them onely it is their errour to come in by a wrong way Now to st●al is to take from men that which doth not belong unto them which cannot be applyed to them A second sort of Ministers are bad and corrupt in doctrine and manners these preaching many truths from God may be heard For 1 They sit in Moses chair Matth. 23.2 Moses chair is the doctrine of Moses otherwis● they should haue sit in Aarons chair if he had spoken of the Calling 2 Otherwise we should not yeeld absolute obedience to the doctrine taught except it were Moses doctrine 3 The main cause why the people should hear these is manif●sted by our Saviour but this is not so much succession in Calling as succession in Doctrine 1 These Pharisies had corrupted their Call●ng 2 They perverted the Law with their Glosses 3 Were ignorant of the righteousnesse of faith 4 Hipocrites in life and bitter enemies to the Kingdom of Christ 5 They preached the Word without authority coldly as did not stir affections 2 Argu● Doctrine and gifts are the Churches who may take their own from a very theife Yet these Cautions must be observed 1 That we be able in some measure to discern and try the spirits 2 That w● be compelled by necessity 3 That we b● careful to get what p●ivate and pub●●que help possibly we can 4 That we hunger after other powerfull meanes and as soon as the Lord offers any we remoue and follow the light 5 Refuse private conversing with them 6 Contend for the truth in any pa●t oppu●ned by them Object May not Popish Iesuits or the like then be heard Answ Th●se are the professed servants of the beast not of Ch●●st for they haue quite changed the Ministery into a Pri●s●hood 2 We are quite separated from this false Church by the commandement of the Lord and the Magist●ate and all Chu●ches assenting to the same 3 Th●se doe plainly seek to seduce us and withd●aw us from the wor●h●p of the true God all which cannot be found ●n these of our own Church from which wee haue ●o such warrant to seperate nor doe seeke to draw us qu●te from Christ in fa th Yet thus far let me speak to you of the Ministry thus corrupted that are negligent and doe not sorwa●n the peop●e of God of danger You that look to your own wayes and make your belly your God You that preach as they Ier. 5 that other Lords may ●ule over the flock of Chr st Consid●r what you are Are you not men of God Should not you be holy that draw neer to the Lord Should you trouble the waters with your T●aditions that none can drink almost w th a good consc●ence Should you make the sacrifices of God abhorred by your d●ssol●tenesse Should you smite with your tongues your fellow s●rvants whose Min●stery and conversation you know is better then your own Should you use the flock of Chr●st as you doe never visiting of them many of you If woe be to them that joyn house to house what shall become of you that joyn Congregation to Congregation and to these prebenships D●anries c. Should you be terrible to the humbled and afflicted soules Surely the Lord will judge for his people Hear you that force men to things against their
Church hath in command●ng 2 Let them teach how the people ought quietly to submit themselues to their Minister whatsoever and be content with him 3 Let them that seek Reformation be made odious to the people 4 Let them be taught not to search things doubtfull but beleeue their Minister And in cases controverted let men rely rather on the great learning of the present Church and reverend antiquity then to follow these new Geneva-like preachers that will haue nothing warranted but that which is approved by the Scriptures 6 Let not the Gospell be freely preached For these exercises of preaching and prophesying cut down the kingdom of the Pope This is so full of light that if it be preached so plainly as many doe it will lay open all 7 Let men haue such a kind of serving God as will not stirre nor trouble them but altogether please and delight Let them haue such preaching singing organs c. Are not these from Satan Are they not directly against Christ and his Kingdom And the Kings Majesty and his Kingdom which fals or stands not with a Bishop Ceremonies but with the Kingdom of Christ rather witnes that experience of the Fr. King who revolting from the truth how did the Lord meet with him Wherfore be wise ô yee Elders of Israel and sleep not you that are the Lords Watchmen The divell sows tares and th● peace of the King and weale of the Kingdom depends upon th● suppression of Popery Take hea●t every trueh●a●ted Christian and stand in your places aga●nst such courses as bring either Atheism or Idolatry Keep up the Word soundly preached by the Ministers of God which are the strength of the land Incourage the servants of God that are most ca efull to please the Lord. Cause that there be a generall turning to the Lord by fasting and prayer Let the Sabboths of God be kept and sanctified and t●y then wh●ther the Lord stay not his judgments and blesse the land more then ever Then you shall be called The Restorers of the Breaches And if you be not more carefull to seek the Lord and walk by his wisedom know that all human power cannot uphold your Kingdom against Satanicall d●vises SECT XVII Whether it be fitting to bury in Churchyards Answ IT seeems no For the Scripture and practise of all the Saints is against it 2 Men place religion and holinesse in it and when things indifferent come so be abused they are not lawfull to be used 3 This hath and doth cause so many prayers to be read over the dead 4 The covetousnesse of Priests and Friars hath been a speciall meanes of this course Whether it be not not needfull to pull down Churches built for the honour of Idols Answ It seems it is For 1 Hos 4.15 2 The house of Baal was destroyed 3 The high places ought to haue been d●stroyed 4 It is a part of holinesse to overthrow the Groues Deut. 7. 5 The name and memoriall of Idolls ought to be rooted out 6 To dedicate Churches to a Saint is Idolatry which ought to be removed 7 The gold of graven Images is an abomination to the Lord and an accursed thing therfore also Churches which ●are so defiled Object These places were unlawfull because the Lord had chosen a speciall place where be had put his name Answ That reason is never given 2 the pollution by Idolatry is ever urged as the cheife cause Meanes that the people may be fitted for Reformation 1 Men must hunger after all Gods Ordinances 1 Must set their hearts to seek the Lord by earnest praying and turning unto him 3 They must obseru an holy Discipline amongst themselues in admonishing and reproving one an other c. 4 Must touch no unclean thing abhorring all Romish Reliques and Ant●christ especially 5 When men mourn for the burdens laid upon them and groan for the misery of others 6 Rejoyce in the forwardnesse of them that are most zealous not envying one an other 7 That speciall prayers be continually offered up to the Lord for the Magistrate The danger of seperation after the manner now used by some Let none imagine that because I write gainst the practise of Seperat●on that therefore I hate the pe●sons whom I am pe●●wa●ed th●o●gh tende●nes of conscie●ce doe w●thsta●d these corrupt●ons Hear th●●fore a freinds reproof who tenders your good and desires the holy ordinances of God and in all th ngs to keep a good conscience Sometimes affection may outrun soundnes of judgment and in s●eking to fly more then is sin we fall into greater corr●ptions and nourish much ●vill in us Brethren disdain not to read a few lines which I know cannot abate your zeal and may through Gods blessing make your course more comfortab●e Consider well therfore of these g●ounds I lay as a way to that wh ch follows 1 That there is in each a naturall affect●on like zeal as in other graces the deceitfull hea●t will counterfeit gr●●e so in th●s witnes Iehu there is an errour on the right hand 2 That this blind zeal carries men headlong without examination or sea●ch of their waies to censure others when there is no power further to hurt 3 Men may oppose corruptions in publique and yet neglect to fight against sin resolutely and zealously in themselues therby thinking to please God highly 4 That Tolleration is not approbation Act. 17.30 5 It is the desire of Satan and our own● to seperate from the true children of God upon any occasion whatsoever these enemies much respect 6 Men rending themselues from the true Church as no Church cannot tell where to stay nor to whom to joyn themselues which makes their rents incurable 7 Men may joyn themselus to the purest Congregations if it be without condemning others as nothing 8 Christ is not ever accompanied withall his ordinances in act but many times he goes in one or two amongst his people A Church holding the foundation though it err in many particulars remaines a Church still 9 Many commands binde the Magistrate to redresse things amisse which private persons cannot possibly reform 10 Gods Ordinances make us one with the Lord and with men no further then they are one with the Lord. These things agreed upon I doubt not but men will yeeld to these Arguments following agai●st totall separation First there ●s a true Minist●ry in the Chu●ches of England therfore it ●s lawfull to joyn with them That there is a true Ministery it may appeare 1 B●cause men haue gifts to dispense the Word 2 Men are chosen by the people 3 Graue and godly Preachers doe approue of the ent●●ng ●n of many 4 Men haue ord●nation though not aft●r the purest manner but corrupt wh●ch comming to their knowledg they repent of 5 Men exercise their Ministery not by vertue of a●y power from men but because the Lord hat● s nt them 6 The hand of the Lord is with them to prosper h●s own wo●k so as men are brought to
the Lord. Secondly where the Gospell is soundly preached and men yeeld obed●ence to the known t●uth therto we may saf●ly joyn For these are the ●eep of Christ Ioh. 10. Object The Gospell is not faithfully preached many truths are concealed Answ The main and fundamentfull truths which giue life to a Christian are purely and wholly taught as the doctrine of fa●th and ●epentance 2 Other circumstantiall truths are taught too 1 generally to the und●●stand●ng of the w●se 2 in practis● in that men doe abstain from all things they judg● to be sinne 3 They suffer that is sa●d upon them for refusall hereunto 4 Some haue taught th●se t●uths controv●●t d by writing and private R●solut●on Suppose ●t bee a want amongst us as I confesse men haue been too wary for the most part in this kinde yet notwithstanding consider each want doth not bring a nullity of the Ministery 3 Reason Men must not separate till the Lord separate for Gods people must follow th● Lo●d not goe before him and they must not be holyer then hee who is of purest eyes Now the Lord is not s parated till hee giue men over and send no mo●e Prophets to turn them to h●m for till then though men haue forsaken th● Lord yet he forsakes not them 4 All Christians are bound to follow the Lamb whersoever he goes and joyn with him against the sinns of the times therfore m●n should not separate so and leaue Christ but each to help and stand for Reformation incouraging the servants of the Lord that are sent out to protest against corruptions 5 No instance can be given that ever the servants of God haue severed or were commanded to seperate further then from the corruptions of the time to haue no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse to touch no unclean thing 6 Men mourning for sin not acting nor joyning in consent in any known evill are not guilty of others sins therfore Lot was not guilty of Sodoms sin seeing they vexed his righteous soule 2 Pet. 2.7 Eze. 9 in the Churches of England men may doe thus 7 This kinde of separation obscures the good providence of God towards the land which giues some liberty in his service but with some paines cost and other crosses which usually accompany the pure worship of God This is no small sin to bereaue the Lord of the glory of so great mercy in spiritual blessings as he hath shewed towards our land Secondly this passeth rash judgment upon many reverend Preachers and godly people Thirdly men hereby despise and so loose the b●nefit of the prayers of the Saints which is the greatest ben●fit in the wo●ld next to t●e min●ste●y of the Wo●d Fourthly men so separate as they joyn to no reformed Church that holds and pract●seth the same holy Ordinances of God which they desire and walk in the same way of obedi●nce with them 8 Wheras they might giue testimony to the truth in suffering for the Ordinances of God now they suffer for separation from the Word preached 9 The power of the Gospell doth as much app●ar in any of the Professors being in our Chu●ch as it doth when they are separated wh●ch should not if they onely had t●e O●d●nances of God 10 Gods children may eat their own meat though dogs and sw●ne be admitted through the neg●●gence of th●m that should exerc se Discip●●n● Wherfore b●●thren follow after truth b●t●n loue that you may haue the more inward pe●c● and doe the more good Oppose errour b●t not any truth fight against t●e world but s●●rr not agai●st the ch●●d●en of God Make not the Church weak by your r●nting from it nor giue occasion to the adversaries to speak evill of those truths you hold and ordinances of God which you seek SECTION XVIII BEcause it is so often in the mouths of men that these things controverted are things indifferent therfore it will not bee amisse to set down some speciall rules for discerning and using things indifferent A thing indifferent properly is a mean twixt good and evill and in it selfe neither good nor evill 1 It is a mean seated twixt the extreams having not the nature of either extrem So that a thing commanded or forbidden by the Lord is not indifferent 2 Twixt good and evill therfore that which is a mean in respect of some other sin is not indifferent as fornication is lesse ●vill then adultery yet evill and not indifferent the like may be said of degrees of goodnesse 3 In it selfe that is in its own nature for in the particulars every action is good or evill So that the goodnesse or evill of a thing indifferent is not from it selfe but from the user if he be pure or impure from the circumstances from the manner of doing it So that an action of the same kinde may be evill in one in another commendab●e The laws of man cannot make the th●ngs that are indifferent simp●y good or evill ●o● t●en they should change the very nature of things which men cannot What things are indifferent THe things that are indifferent are such as are left unto mans free cho se for the exerc●se of wisedom fa●th sobriety loue and the l●ke graces of God in h●m Where by the way we may obserue why some things are left indifferent 1 Because in their own nature they are neither good nor ev●●l and therfore not to be commanded or fo●b●dden 2 Because the Lo●d would haue a●l his grac●s and the powers of mens soules to be the more exerc●sed for the hardest th●ngs in Religion are often about things in●●fferent 3 There s●ould be infinite rules given then for these cases are innumerable and so the knowledg of things absolutely needfull should be hindred The particular kinds of things indifferent are 1 Meats and drinks it is true there is nothing of it selfe unclean 2 Garments are things indifferent 3 Recreations 4 The time of publique assembling together upon the Sabboth 5 And lastly whatsoever a man may doe w●thout impiety towards God or wrong to man In the use of things indifferent first every man must learn the right use from the Word 1 Tim. 4 for our own reason is very bl●nd here●n and custom exceeding corrupt and this must the rather be rememb●●d Because 2 Man must giue account to Christ for his using things indifferent 3 Every man must be fully perswaded in h●s own conscience that the thing hee doth is lawfull n it selfe this perswasion is a certain knowledg in his own heart and conscience from the light of the Word and the sp●rit of God shining in him This excluds doubting 1 that is sin So is 2 depending upon others or following others example 3 When men are perswaded but by shews of reason or of men not by sound grounds out of the Scripture 4 Each man must be very wise in using this liberty 1 Men must discern what is expedient and may further to edifie others 2 Men must discern times and circumstances 5 Men must
but in circumstances agreeable to the will of the Lord therfore this manner of worship of God though it be sound in the substance 2 in the Ministers lawfull yet in circumstances it is unlawfull Ob. God had tyed his worship to Ierusalē so he hath not now to this or that manner Answ 1. His not commanding of the manner ●s a forbidding of the same 2 He hath as hath been and by Gods blessing shall be hereafter proved forbidden this manner 3 The very nature of the covenant now made with us shews it which is not obscure typicall adumbratory but all things are plain secondly here the Lord giues freedom from all Ceremonies Gal. 4 thirdly his children haue abundance of spirit in sted of Ceremonies 4 The faithfulnesse of Christ proues it who left all things as perfect as Moses Arg. 16. People forsaking the pu●e worship of God can never stay as appears in Ieroboam all the Kings of Iudah that were evill grew worse and worse This Argument is plain against our Ceremonies which being ●etained will bring in other things of the same and like nature that may be justified by the like grounds The reason of this is men forsaking God wittingly and willingly in the least things the Lord forsakes them and giues them over into a reprobate sense 2 Men take not the Word to stay them now for they haue trangrest the bounds and limits of it 3 It is nature of will-worship Rom. 1 Isa 29 to destroy the wisedom of the wise and make men sottish Arg. 17 All uncleannesse and filthinesse ought to be carried out of the house of God before Gods worship be erected in it 2 Chron. 29. Hence these ought to be expelled for they are spotted by the flesh defiled by Antichrist and what superstition hath defiled if the Lord ordain it not cannot be cleansed againe 2 These were never clean nor holy for there is no word to warrant them which must sanctifie all Arg. 18 2 King 18.4 1 True zeal and hatred of Superstition abolisheth all monuments of Idolatry 2 Things though of good use at their first Institution yet being abused to Idolatry ought to be abolished as the Brazen serpent 3 Many things passe unreformed even through the hands of good men 4 Abuse of things to Idolatry doth abase them and should make them vile in our eyes if they be not perpetuall Ordinances of God It is not enough to take away the abuse of Idolatrous reliques but the very matter should be removed burst and burnt according to the nature of it This place is very firm against these Cemonies in question 1 Because these were never of good use in the Church 2 Though they had yet being now so grosly abused they ought to be quite abolished since they haue now no necessary use in the Church 3 They are too vile a filthy Surplus and Crosse to come into the presence of Lord who likes nothing but what he appoints himselfe 4 Men cannot prevent the abuse of Idolatrous reliques they being continued 5 Though they could yet ●t were not lawfull to surf●r them for civill uses This example binds us as is plain out of the text For first the Holy Ghost commends it in Hezekiah and such things are written for our learning 2 He did c●eau to the Lords commandement and departed not from him 3 these Commandements were given Moses Arg. 19. Psal 137.3.4.5 1 There ought to be nothing in the worship of God but what is from the Lord. 2 Men are bound in circumstances to worship the Lord according to his commandement and will in the Place therfore also in Garments 3 Affirmatiue Commands in the service of God exclude all mens own inventions though they be not specified 4 Men forget Ierusalem and are carelesse of the Church that please Idolaters and worship God after their desire in any corrupt manner 5 It is better a man never preach then doe any evill in preaching This Psalm quite overthrows our Ceremonies now imposed 1 They are not from the Lord no more then the reading of Apocriphall scripture 2 Men are bound to administer Sacraments as the Lord hath commanded 〈◊〉 s●ch ordinary garments as our Saviour Christ and his Apostles used as they administ●ed Baptism in they that would not sing the Lords song in a strange place would much more refuse to doe it in a strange garment 3 Though these particulars Crosse Surplus and Kneeling be not specified yet in that they are not mentioned in the Wo●d it is enough to proue they should not be used for each strange manner of worshipping the true God is hatefull in Gods eyes 4 It is plain therfore that Ministers refusing to yeeld to these things imposed doe not sinne though they be h●ndred so as they cannot execute their Calling Ob. God had bound his worship to Ierusalem therfore it was unlawfull to worship in any other place But he hath not bound himself to be worshiped in this manner without Crosse and Surplus and kneeling Answ The Lord hath plainly bound men to worship him in spirit and in truth 2 The Lord in his new covenant hath aswell manifested his will as in the old there men might adde and annex nothing without speciall and imediate revelation from God therfore not now 3 As Ierusalē because it was chosen of the Lord appointed the place where he wold be worshiped was by this made holy and so it lawfull for to worship there and no where else So the Lord having chosen no peculiar garment nor appointed any crosse or kneeling they are not holy but to be accounted as strangers that may not come neare the house of the Lord. Arg. 20 Isa 30.22 Men inwardly taught by the Lord cannot endure the least cover of Idols 2 True turning to God maks men cast away the precious monuments of Idolatry 3 Gods children must be pure inwardly and outwardly casting away all tokens of spirituall adultery 4 Men taught by the Lord see filthines in garments abused to Idolatrie 5 Men that return to the Lord must goe as far as is possible from superstition 6 Things abused to Idolatry should be cast away with reproach and disgrace This place is firm against our Ceremonies in controversie 1 Because these were covers and ornaments of Idols the priest being an Idoll to offer up Christ and to forgiue sins which are priviledges of God 2 Vnder this all Idolatrous signes and garments are contayned 3 The best and sincerest Christians through the land abhorr these The second ground is also against these because they haue been ornaments of Idols for to that end doth the Masse-priest weare them 2 If precious ornaments should be cast away how much more these base Ceremonies 3 The children of God must not haue one taken from Idolaters nor one ceremony or sign of Idolatry past these are signs of Superstition past therfore to be cast away 4 Filthy menstruous clouts ought not to be brought near the Lord nor are decent garments
tempting of God if men be not very strong and forced by necessity therunto 3 Preaching is Gods ordinance but the other is not but mans invention 4 We haue warrant for our presence at the one not at the other Obj. Men may communicate with them that kneel why not with other Ceremonies Answ This seems to be commanded each one in speciall who not kneeling doe protest against it Quest Whether parents may bring their children to be Crossed Answ No for first men may doe nothing to their children but what themselues would haue done to themselues if they were to be baptized now And what good heart could endure this Idolatry 2 It is a speciall dishonour to the Lord which men should avoide both by themselues and in and by others 3 This as all human inventions hinders from the child when it is wittingly done by the Parents the power of Baptism as much as is possible Obj. Mens not bringing their sacrifices to the Lord was a sinne though the Priests were evill 1 Sam. 2 why then is not our not beinging our children to bee baptized our sinne in like manner Answ 1 That it was the peoples sin it doth not appear in the text 2 That was properly their personall sin wheras the Minister makes the crosse in the name of the people 3 They inverted the order and that which they did was out of the service of God th●se doe adde of their own in the service of God Lev. 15.8 Whomsoever the leprous person spitteth on on toucheth v. 11 having not washed his hands in water he shall be unclean This sign fies uncleannesse by sin who is so touched by anothers sinne is defiled by it this holds firmely Deut. 22.10 Plow not with an Oxe and an Asse at once It is plain the Lord abhorrs all mixture of religion and superstition Deut. 23.14 The Lord forbids any uncleannesse lest he depart a little uncleanenesse wittingly and willingly suff●ed makes the Lord depart Ex. 20. The second commandement forbids any human device to be respected and reverenced in his worship H●s 4. Men must not goe up to Gilgall and Bethaven and swear the Lord liveth for hee will not haue his worship mixed Zephan 1.5 The Lord will visit such as swear by the Lord and Malcham That is such as joyn any thing to the Lords true worship Col. 2.20 Why as though yee lived in the world are yee burthened with Traditions This place proues that it is the property of the men of the world to receiu Traditions Math. 15 to joyn human Traditions in the worship of God is to worship God in vain if men be convinced of the unlawfulnesse of these traditions or if they place their principall serving of God in them 2 Cor. 6. Bee not unequally yoked with infidels exponente Beza in any action either per se or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 illicitâ These places proue the commanding of superstitions unlawfull Secondly the using of such by the Ministers Thirdly the people joyning with them 1 The Minister stands in the room and person of the people and doth offer for them 2 Christ is after a sort expelled out of his place when human devises are brought in 3 The places speak to the people most of them or all directly binding ech particular Obj. Christ is there present therfore we may be there Answ The consequence is not good because Christ may bee and is there as God 2 Christ is there in his Ordinances to convict the wicked and build up his weak children that doe not discern the evill of these Ceremonies 3 It is requisite that Christ calls us thither as well as that he be there Obj. 2. Anothers sin cannot defile us but this is an others sin Ans 1 It is an others sin and mine too not onely by my presence for that is not sufficient to make one guilty but first he is appointed to doe it for me and so doth it not for himselfe onely 2 The worship is mixt 3 In Christs priviledges it is necessary we giue no subjection to any stranger but plainly stand for Christ Obj. Anothers wickednesse at the Sacraments doth not hurt the worthy receiver no more doth the Ceremony used by the Minister hurt him that hates it Answ The case is not like Because here each one doth receiue for himselfe but there the Minister is the publique person that stands in the roome of the people Obj. Protestation against sin is not ever necessary Answ If wee neither doe it nor seem to doe it But if they seem to doe evill and protest not doe they not giue offence to others and indanger themselues Obj. This will driue men to separate Answ It will keep them from Separation for being taught that in some Assemblies they may partake in Gods Ordinances without mixture they cannot deny to bee present Obj. All the alleaged Arguments proue it unlawfull for the Minister but not to the people Answ 1 We must remember what any Minister doth of his own head besides the common rites appointed by the Church that is a personall sinne but when a prescript Liturgie is appointed for Ministers and people and rytes with all then it seems not to be the Ministers sinne onely but the people 's too who joyn in that worship For it is appointed to all to worship God thus 2 It is performed by all at least in shew Now the places are plain for the people as well as the Minister Having treated of the true discipline and corrupt Ceremonies Now in the next place we may see whether Ministers be justly deprived of their Ministry Him that doubts and will consider wisely I doubt not but these grounds will satisfie 1 No Scripture binds to the obedience of such things Why should men be more wise then the Lord or more holy or put men out of Gods service for things hee requires not at their hands I would fayn learn of one of the opposites how they will clear themselues before God for this is it not hipocrisie to goe beyond the Lord 2 The Lord frees all men directly from human inventions Col. 2 are not men put out of their living and fee-simple which Christ hath purchased and bestowed upon them 3 These things are toyes and trifles in the opposites judgment and matters of conscience to the other side yet for these they depriue the Church of God of their Pastors What Is not a good Minister worth a chip Doe you nothing respect your brethren nor mens consciences 4 This practise is quite contrary to the practice of our Saviour Christ he whipt out all that brought any thing into the Temple besides that was instituted and these whip out men for not bringing in mens dev●●es 5 It is against all sense and reason that workmen appointed by the Lord that doe his work faithfully even in the Stewards judgment should be put out from their work because they please not the stewards eye for their apparel As though men should put out a