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A30238 An expository comment, doctrinal, controversal, and practical upon the whole first chapter to the second epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians by Anthony Burgesse ... Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664. 1661 (1661) Wing B5647; ESTC R19585 945,529 736

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the Church but that is finaliter not originaliter because the end of their office is for the good of the people They have not these Offices for their own honour and dignity but meerly for the good of others So that although in respect of Christ they are meerly Ministers and servants yet in respect of the Church and the people they are Fathers and Pastors having a spiritual rule over them 3. Neither doth this expression encourage a licentious boundlesse questioning of the Doctrine that the Ministers of the Gospel do deliver because they are not infallible because they are not commanded absolutely to depend on them Therefore some runne into a disorderly extream cavilling and questioning every thing that is taught But you must know that although every Christian be allowed a judgement of discretion and he is by his own faith to be saved Hence the Bereans are accounted more noble because they compared the Doctrine delivered with the Scriptures yet withall they are commanded to hear the Ministers highly to esteem of them for the workes sake To obey them and to submit themselves to them So that the liberty a believer is allowed must not tend to the overthrow of the office of the Ministry It is true here is much wisdome and grace required in bounding the peoples liberty and yet asserting their dependance upon the Ministers whom God hath set over them and from whom they are to seek direction and guidance but this work is not to be done here It is certain they may mutually stand together yea they were appointed by God for the mutual good of each other and therefore it 's nothing but corruption that maketh a contrariety herein sometimes by the Ministers pride and affectation of power and sometimes by the peoples pride and conceitednesse whereby they refuse humbly to submit to such order and officers as God hath commanded them But this deserveth a large Tractate For all evil ariseth in the Church because these bounds are transgressed In some ages the officers tyranny in other ages the peoples licentiousness have much hindered the power of godliness and the beauty of Ordinances Lastly By this is not excluded that duty whereby Ministers ought with holy zeal and courage reprove sinne and that in the greatest of men Yea and whosoever are obstinate and impenitent sinners to refuse the administration of the seals of Church-communion unto them When the Apostle commanded this incestuous person whom some think to be a man of great place among the Corinthians to be cast out when he delivered Hymenaeus and Philetus up to Satan when he commands If any walk disorderly to withdraw from such 2 Thess 3. 6. Yea and if any obey not his word to note or signifie such a man All these are demonstrations of power but not lordly dominion yea where reproof admonition and excommunication are rightly administred to a spiritual heart awakened they become more dreadfull than civil or bodily punishments because what is done this way God bindeth in Heaven God casteth such out of his communion and commands them as David to Absolom not to come in his presence Thus the Apostle doth not exclude these necessary ministerial duties although distastfull to flesh and blood Yea though corrupt persons account them nothing but the expression of lordlinesse Even as when Lot reproved those wicked Sodomites they replied He would be a Judge over them Gen. 19. 9. and Moses when he rebuked the Hebrews striving one with another How scornfully did the injurious person answer him Who made thee a Prince and a Judge over us Exod. 2. 14. By this we see how imbred a thing it is in all sinners if they be reproved and controlled in their wickednesse to account all nothing but dominion and lordlinesse Even the holy Government of the Church appointed by Christ for spiritual and supernatural ends and so wholly for the good of those that go astray yet by evil men hath been complained of as worse than Turkish slavery How little do such men consider what their Christianity obligeth them unto What it is to be baptized into the name of Christ and to acknowledge him the Head Lord and Governour of his Church For if they did they would not say Let us break his bends and cast his cords away from us Is not the Discipline of Christ to be received as well as his Doctrine Did not the Apostle rejoyce to behold the faith and order of the Colossians Col. 2. 5. Thus you see what is not excluded Let us then consider in the next place What the Apostle doth positively shut out by this negative expression Not that we have dominion over you And 1. It doth exclude all abuse and excesse even of lawfull power For those who are true officers of Christ having a lawfull power committed to them may yet abuse it they may shew much rashnesse too much austerity in the exercise of it Therefore in the next Chapter we see this holy Apostle though zealous to have this incestuous person cast out yet when truly humbled and repenting he is no lesse carefull to have him received again requiring them to confirm their love to him lest he should be swallowed up with too much grief Some learned men have thought that the primitive Bishops did exceed in their austerity herein as appeareth by many Canons made against some sinners who for two or three years were not to be received into Church-communion though truly repenting yet some excuse them because the condition of the times did then they say require it that the Churches zeal against sinne might vindicate her against those abominable calumnies cast upon her by the Heathens as if she did secretly nourish all impiety And although she was thus severe yet the Novatians did refuse communion with the Church as being too remisse in that she would at any time receive such who through fear apostatized in time of persecution though never so sincerely manifesting their humiliation Thus all unlawfull austerity even in lawfull power is excluded 2. By this the Apostle doth disclaim all civil and political Government Hence the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth one in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Varinus and one that hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Budaeus The Apostles did not invade the Magistrates office neither would Christ the fountain of all Church-power be a divider of an inheritance A civil power is coactive and compelling by force which Church-power is not And although Bellarmine say Ecclesiastical power is ridiculous and in vain if it may not civilly compell Yea a prophane Papist saith Our Lord Christ had been indiscreet if he had not given this temporal power also Yet they speak this according to their humane apprehensions transforming Christs kingdome into an earthly and external one 3. Hereby he excludeth a magisterial power though in an ecclesiastical way over consciences That is he doth not assume to himself to be Lord in the Church but
God as the elder brother did the Prodigals conversion It is disputed by Casuists Whether a prophane ungodly Minister formerly though now truly converted is to be continued in his Ministry at least in that place where he hath lived so scandalously Some are rigid for the negative Yea the Novatians of old would not admit any Christian that had grossely sinned though repenting to Church-communion Others are more mollified and hold such Ministers truly manifesting their conversion and repentance ought to be received and that as Ministers again But the determination of this Case concerning a particular person would be difficult because circumstances may much alter the matter But in the general we see Christ appointing Peter to feed his sheep though he had apostatized in so dreadfull a manner Neither may we runne to that absurd and impious Position of some who said the Apostles delivered a more perfect way of Discipline than Christ did because say they Christ received Peter again and gave him Commission for his Apostleship through the whole world In the Old Testament David and Solomon are used as Pen-men of the holy Scripture though polluted once with sinne in a scandalous manner And here we see Paul though formerly a notorious sinner and adversary to the Gospel yet is appointed by God to be a chosen vessel to carry his name And certainly the receiving of such after their serious and publick satisfaction to the Church of God or to ministerial imploiment may be of great use For hereby he will be the more industrious and diligent to reduce other sinners especially such as he hath been an occasion to lead into sinne Thus David promiseth Psal 51. Then will I teach transgressors thy Law And Christ bids Peter When he is converted to confirm his Brethren Oh what zeal and holy revenge will seize upon such a mans heart to make all the world see that he would now set up the way of Christ as he did once the Devils way especially such as he hath been a means to seduce and harden in sin over those he will weep and mourn How greatly will this lie upon his heart such it may be will lie damned in Hell and I have been the cause of it It may be some are now in Hell cursing the day that ever I was a Minister or Pastor to them because I encouraged and made their hearts bold and glad in wickedness Oh then if such agonies and estuations be in their souls in what pain and travail will they be to snatch such out of the fire whom they have been a cause to thrust in Doth God sometimes call even great sinners and that to eminent honour in his Church Then here we see a notable encouragement even for the most prophane to hearken to these offers of grace Might not you justly have expected that God should have made your condition as hopeless as the Devil Though God would out of pity have converted some of mankind yet he might have barred out all such notorious and prophane sinners as thou art But oh the goodness of God that will not have thee to say My sins are greater than can be forgiven I am a viler person than grace ever can or will convert What May the Prodigal sonne not onely be received into favour but the Father will runne and meet him weep over him put honour upon him Why then doth not this kindle a fire in your bowels Why do you not cry even me even me Lord the chiefest sinner of many thousands do thou draw to thy own self From the second consideration of Paul be exhorted to pray to God that he would raise up many Pauls in his Church godly and learned Ministers that by godliness may subdue sinne and by learning may conquer heresies such as these are both burning and shining lights such as these are Stars indeed both for the light they give and the purity of their conversation Happy is the Church of God when such Stars shine in her If we have godly Ministers and not learned then the subtil Papist and Heretick will be ready to prevail If we have learned but not godly then all holy order will beneglected then prophaneness and impiety will lift up its head but both together make a blessed Church SERM. III. Paul's Name being prefixed to his Epistle shews it to be of Divine Authority though of it self not a sufficient Argument to prove it The Pen-men were only Instruments God the principal Author of the Scriptures and therefore we should rest satisfied with their style and method and not question their Authority How to arm our selves against the Devil and all Hereticks opposing the Divinity of the Scriptures 2 COR. 1. 1. Paul an Apostle of Jesus Christ c. HItherto we have considered Paul under a two-sold respect there remaineth one more observable thing from the mentioning of himself which is not to be omitted For it may be demanded Why he prefixeth his name in this Preface And the Answer is That as he expresseth his calling of Apostleship to bring Authority to his person so he also mentioneth his name to obtain credit to what he doth write that they may be assured this is his Epistle and not sent to them by any other For if the Corinthians were ignorant of the Authour of it or that he was not one who was guided by the Holy Ghost they would not have much regarded it So that from hence observe Inasmuch that Paul ' s name is set to this Epistle it is thereby of Canonical and Divine Authority and so ought to be received with all faith and obedience Paul's Epistles were never doubted of except that to the Hebrews which is attributed to him as the Epistle of James the 2d of Peter the two last Epistles of John and the Revelation have been but were alwayes received into the Canon Indeed there were the Elioniti called so say some from the Hebrew word because they were poor and simple in understanding These with such succeeding them in many opinions did reject all Paul's Epistles not but that they thought they were made by him only they rejected his Doctrine because they thought he was an adversary to the Law and contrary to Moses This truth about the Canonical Authority of this Book and the rest in the Bible is of very great concernment not only because of the weighty controversies and disputes both of old and alate herein but also because of a practical consideration For though men do generally profess themselves to be Christians and say They acknowledge the holy Bible as of Divine Authority yet where is the man almost that liveth as if he did believe it to be a true Book For doth any wicked man that goeth on in his impenitent wayes believe the Word of God to be true that condemneth him that forbids and threatens his wayes that tels him assuredly that if it be true and the Word of God without reformation he will be as assuredly damned
as if he were in Hell already Can a man then believe this to be Gods Word and yet be so desperately mad as to live in a full contrariety to it If therefore this very Epistle be received as the Word of God that it 's no Apocryphal or humane Invention but Paul wrote it as inspired and directed by the Holy Ghost How can ye how dare ye reject the counsel and admonitions contained therein both as you are a Church and as you are particular persons But to enlarge this Doctrine consider these things First That the meer prefixing of a name though of some holy Authour is not enough barely of it self to confirm the Divine Authority of the Scripture For although indeed most of the Books both in the Old and New Testament have their names prefixed yet some of them have not as of Judges So in the New Testament the Epistle to the Hebrews hath not the name of its Authour But these are few only in respect of those whose Authours are known All the Prophets begin their Prophecies with their Names and the Authority they have by God that greater faith may be given to what they deliver If then the Authour of some Books be not known yet if these Books have all those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and marks which other Books have for their Canonical Authority then they are to be received as the Word of God Therefore I say a meer Inscription of the Name without other signs is not enough for there are false Gospels that go under the name of Thomas and Barnabas yea there is a third Epistle said to be of Paul to the Corinthians and Paul's Epistles to Seneca are mentioned by Austin and Hierom with some respect though both Papists and Protestants reject them as Apocryphal We must therefore besides the Name consider those other Arguments which prove the Divine Authority of the Scripture and see whether they be in it or not It doth appear that even in Paul's time there were some deceivers who would counterfeit Letters as if written by Paul and set his Name thereunto to get the more Authority This he informeth the Thessalonians of 2 Thess 2. 2. That they should not be shaken in mind by word or letter as from him c. You see there were some that preached the instant approach of Christs coming and they alledged Paul for it Paul said so and Paul wrote so Hence it is that to prevent such mistakes he doth so often mention his own hand in writing The salutation of me Paul with mine own hand 1 Cor. 16. 21. Gal. 6. 11. Col. 4. 18. 2 Thes 3. 17. Phil. 1. 9. he put his own hand as well as his own name to his Epistles Secondly Consider that Paul and so all other Pen-men of the holy Scripture they were not the principal Authours but instruments used by God and that not in a general or common way As when godly men make Sermons or write Books but in a peculiar and extraordinary manner So that there could not be any mistake or errour This is witnessed by Paul 2 Tim. 3. 16. All Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 given by inspiration All Scripture And although the Books of the Old Testament were it may be then only written yet it holds by proportion of all that shall afterwards be written Peter also confirmeth this 2 Pet. 1. 21. For the Prophese came not of old time by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost The whole Word of God then came not by mens inventions neither was it any designe in them to make such a Canon or Rule for men to walk by but they were inspired by God both in the speaking and writing of it so that both for matter and words they were infallibly guided And therefore though Chrysostome and others do admit of some repugnancy in the holy Writers of the Bible in matters of lesse moment and say That this makes more to prove the Divine Authority of the Bible because hereby it doth appear that they did not all conspire and agree together yet this is dangerous to hold so For if they might erre in matters of Less moment why not in greater Besides the Text saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All Scripture that is the whole Scripture in all the parts of it So that the Bible it 's Gods Book it comes from him he hath commanded it as a Rule in which we must search and by which we are to order our lives Oh then with what reverence and respect should we receive it There we see the mind of God the will of God who would not think that there should be nothing done in the Church of God but what is according to the Bible the Doctrine of the Bible the Worship of the Bible the good Order of the Bible Yea that there should be nothing done in Nations in Cities in Towns in Villages in Families but what the Bible commands For that being the Word of God all Laws all humane Authority and Power are to submit to that And certainly this is an infinite mercy That in all things necessary to salvation we may know the will of God what he would have us to do It 's not then Paul or Peter but God himself whose Authority you despise when you will not obey the commands in their writings for they are but the Pen-men or rather those that did dictate it for Paul had some others sometimes to write his Epistles as it 's thought Tertius wrote that to the Romans Therefore because he wrote that to the Galatians with his own hand he takes notice of it Gal. 6. 11. that thereby they might be the more earnest against those false teachers that would bring in the Ceremonial Rites for Justification yet though the Holy Ghost did thus inspire and direct the holy Writers thereof both for matter and words that doth not hinder but that it was in a sutable way to their Gifts and Parts Therefore there is a great difference between the Prophet Isaiah's and Amos's Prophesies in respect of the style and so of Luke and John Hence thirdly Seeing the Scripture is thus inspired by God and the Pen-men were moved by him in the composing of it this should teach us to rest satisfied in the style and method of it For the style because it hath not the florid and Rhetorical Ornaments that humane Authours have therefore some have disdained it Yea how many had rather read some quaint English Books or Poets or Oratours rather than that Oh be ashamed of that curiosicy and vanity of thine if thou art not ashamed to believe in a crucified God in Christ though born in a manger Why of such a Scripture that doth in a plain but majesticall manner relate these things They say where mines of Gold are there groweth little Grass and few Flowers Thus where divine and holy matter is affectation of words and humane eloquence would be a
a two-fold Kingdome attributed unto Christ The one as he is God having the same Essence with the Father and so ruling over the whole world The other as he is Mediatour and Head of the Church and so the chief Governour and Shepherd thereof in a peculiar manner The first is called his Essential and natural Kingdom The second his Dispensatory and Donative The Sacinians have occasioned this distinction For when we bring those places where Christ is said to be King and Lord to be exalted above all principalities to prove his eternal God-head They answer This is a constituted God-head Christ was not thus King till after his resurrection and therefore say they it was given him in time whereas if it were an essential attribute of God it must he had from all eternity To this it is answered That Christ as God had right to all that glory and honour which was given him in time but then as Mediatour so it was a reward at least a consequent of his obedience and humiliation So that they grant Christ did in time receive a Mediatory Kingdom and glory whereby he was made Head of his Church and to rule in with supream power and authority though from the Father neither doth this derogate from his Deity to say it was given him for it was not given him to make him more perfect only to perfect his Church and it 's a gift of such a thing which only can be attributed to God for none but he that is God can be Mediatour and Head of his Church because he that is so must be the cause of all the grace and spiritual benefits which are in the Church Secondly Christ being thus exalted as Head of the Church all Church-power is radically and f●●tally seated in him So that the power to make Church-officers doth not arise originally from the people as they say civil power doth and is therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 on humane ordinance but it cometh from the Lord Christ. Hence Matth. 28. 18 19. when Christ had said All power is given me in heaven and earth then from this power he appoints them to go teach and baptize Thus in another place he saith John 20. 21 22 23. As my Father hath sent me so I send you whosoever sinnes ye remit c. From his Mediatorship ye see he giveth the Keys of Government to his Officers This also in a lively manner is affirmed Ephes 4. 10 11. where Christs ascension is spoken of and his glorious exaltation That he might fill all things that is appoint all things in his Church whereupon he enumerateth all Offices and sheweth that they have all their Commission from Christ and that both the ordinary as well as the extraordinary Therefore in the third place The Officers in the Church are properly servants to Christ and receive their power and commission from him It 's not the Church but Christ that hath set Officers in his Church The Church indeed may apply the person to the office but Christ institutes and applieth the office to the person The Church cannot make a Minister in this sense viz. to institute the office for then it might appoint other offices then Christ hath only it may design the person For Christ is the fountain of all Church-power and officers receive their authority from him It 's true that the Apostle saith to the Church of Corinth All things are yours 2 Cor. 4. 5. And in another place We are your servants for Jesus sake but the meaning therof is ministerially their office and the execution that was wholly for the Churches edification not that they had their power from the Church For who can think that Paul had his authority from men when he disclaimeth it so often yet he reckoneth himself in the number of those that are servants for their spiritual benefit Thirdly Although it be disputed Whether the power of appointing Officers and Laws in the Church belongeth to Christ as a Prophet or a King Some say as a Prophet he doth thus govern his Church yet it is more probable that be doth this as a King So that Christ as a spiritual King over his people doth appoint what officers what Ordinances and Orders he pleaseth so that you must know that this is part of Christs Jus regale and they come equally from the same fountain both to appoint an Officer and an Ordinance The Church can no more appoint a new Office than it can a new Ordinance a new Sacrament This is greatly to be observed because the Governours in the Church or the civil Magistrate for politick considerations have instituted new Offices and many times made the Government of the Church sutable to that of the Commonwealth equalizing spiritual Officers with Civil but this may be no more done then to appoint a new Ordinance and the reason is because both Offices and Ordinances are for supernatural effects to convert to build up in grace Now none may appoint any thing for such high ends but those only who are able to accomplish them Christ only can convert therefore he only can appoint an Officer or Ordinance for conversion Besides to appoint new Officers would redound to Christs dishonour as if he were not either wise or able enough to appoint all things in the Church necessary to attain salvation whereas the Apostle preferreth Christ above Moses That he was but as a servant but Christ as a son in the house Heb. 3. Use of Exhortation first To the Church-officer Doth he come with Christs Commission Doth he appear in his Name Then let him be sure to improve his Office according to Christs command If Paul be an Apostle of Jesus Christ then his work will be to exalt Christ our power saith he is not for destruction but edification 2 Cor. 13. It 's a capital crime for an Embassadour to vary from his Cossimission to go contrary to that This should daily lie upon our hearts To what end have I this Office from Christ Is it not to labour in his vineyard Is it not to convert souls Do not all the names which Church-officers have imploy labour work and diligence Especially these things they must take heed of 1. That they turn not the Office of Christ into matter of pride dominion and earthly interest Even the Apostle himself said Not as having dominion over your faith but helpers of your joy 2 Cor. 1. ult And the Apostle Peter forbids the lording over Gods heritage 1 Pet. 5. 3. This tyranny in the Church by the Officers thereof hath been a fatal destruction thereunto When the Sunne hath been in the Eclipse sad alterations must needs follow say Astrologers As not into pragmatical domination so neither may they turn it into earthy and worldly advantages setting up their own name their own greatness or their own worth thereby which the Apostle often disclaimeth But we are to walk even as Christ himself in his office who
in these Sunnes no wonder if they be in the Moons the lesser lights of the Church Yea Gal. 1. there we may read of an high contest and that was not indeed about a doctrinal matter of Religion but in practice which did relate to Religion for there Paul resisted Peter to the face and blamed him before them all Thus you see that though there were none but Pauls and Barnabasses none but Pauls and Peters and such eminent Apostles in the Church of God yet we could not look for such an absolute and perfect concord that there should not be the least difference in any thing The Church never was or will be like the upper region that is not molested with the least turbulent vapour Secondly There is a full conformity or agreement in the substantials and necessaries of Religion and also in all the accessories and circumstantials therein And this is the next perfect Unity to the former and this was in the Apostolical Church Those that were the true Officers of Christ had no difference either in Doctrine or Church-government or worship of God but they were all unanimous as farre as may be observed Indeed Act. 15. 1. we read of some Pharisees who were said to believe That they taught a necessity of circumcision and observation of Mosaical Rites to the converted Gentiles which made a very great rupture and schisme in the Churches while newly planted And although there was a Councel gathered together to stop this breach and Decrees made to regulate the Church herein yet it should seem that their Authority and Interest did not pluck up this division by the root For Paul in some of his Epistles makes this his great doctrinal scope to establish them in their Christian liberty but for the Apostles themselves and the faithfull Officers in the Church they seemed as to teach the same thing so to walk in the same order and wayes of Christ Lastly There is a consent and agreement in the essentials and fundamentals of holiness but difference and hot dissentions in those things that are praeter or circa fundamentals as also in matters of Discipline and Government Now although we maintain against Papists That by the good blessing of God all the Reformed Churches excluding Socinians c. do agree in the essentials to salvation yet it must be likewise granted That in respect of accessories there are sad divisions and wofull rents in the Church of God The name of Lutherans and Calvinists as also of several forms of Government do argue that there is a great breach amongst us And this we must expect to have alwayes in the Church as long as men are subject to ignorance mistakes and carnal affections And therefore we are not to be offended and scandalized at it much less hearken to Popish Emissaries who take this advantage amongst weak people to perswade them that the Church of Rome is therefore the only true Church These things premised let us consider what are cementing and uniting principles what do conduce to Unity amongst the Officers of God in his Church And First That which is alwayes willing to be last is Humility and a spirit of meekness and moderation You never heard of an humble man that he was a disturber of the Church or broacher of heresies Hereticks have alwayes been proud haughty and ambitious men as Marcion Nestorius and others especially the Pope of Rome who exalteth himself above all that is called God Were then men of more humble and lowly spirits having low apprehensions of their gifts and abilities this would wonderfully make to consent and agreement Secondly Earnest and servent prayer unto God for the holy Spirit For seeing it 's the Spirit of God that is promised to lead us into the truth And Officers of the Church have a more peculiar promise for it above ordinary believers as being in a more peculiar Office and receiving a proper Commission from Christ It is therefore necessary to implore this assistance of Gods Spirit For whereas the Papist doth scornfully and with derision ask How comes it about that seeing every Sect in the Protestants doth lay claim to the Spirit of God all owning it to be their guider in their several wayes How comes it about that yet these spirits are so contrary to one another Can the holy Spirit of God be opposite to it self To this calumny it is easily answered That all Officers and Teachers do not equally and in the same measure partake of Gods Spirit For besides that there is not now any such measure of it given to any Officers in the Church that makes them infallible There is an inequality and difference in the degrees of partaking of this holy Spirit of God so farre as it is communicable Some have it more in the gift of illumination some more in the gift of sanctification and withall some are more negligent and faulty than others And therefore the holy Ghost is not communicated to all alike For pride negligence want of servent and earnest prayer makes the Spirit of God to keep off from us Oh then that all who have inspection in the Church of Christ were more earnest for Gods Spirit that he would enlighten us and direct us howsoever that he would so sanctifie us that if we did erre yet we shall not be obstinate and pertinacious in it Thirdly An uniting principle is to take heed of self-will and self-conceit to make our wils and humours or apprehensions the Law and Rule of truth The Apostle amongst other qualifications in an Elder requireth Tit. 1. 7. That he be not self-willed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that pleaseth himself or is self-conceited of his own abilities For all herefies and divisions are bred in the womb of this self-conceit and commonly the more ignorant and the less knowing the more obstinate and self-conceited For the more knowledge any man hath the more he apprehends his own weakness and ignorance he also seeth the strength of such arguments which one of a shallow capacity can no more reach unto than a Pigmy can the Pyramides More principles might be offered unto you but I have spoken to this at large from John 17. where our Saviour prayeth over and over again for unity amongst believers as if it were the only pillar of all sound Doctrine and true holiness Only the usefulness of this agreement is seen in the good influence that it will have upon the body of believers a divided Ministry will also make a divided people If those bright luminaries of Heaven should oppose one another as the Moon doth sometimes the Sunne what sad Eclipses doth it produce We read 1 Cor. 3. that amongst these Corinthians there were heavy divisions though that seemed to be the peoples sin most who made such a difference one saying I am for Paul another I am for Apollo Let the Use be To us all to importune God who is the God of peace and who alone can fashion the hearts and
's very necessary to distinguish this Catholick invisible Church from a visible particular one The Papists confounding these and making their Roman particular Church a Catholick one and applying such Texts of Scripture as are spoken of the Universal invisible Church to their particular do thereby grosly mistake in pleading for the infallibility and perpetuity of their Church But Secondly The Scripture doth use the word Church for a visible company of persons professing faith in Christ and then it hath several acceptions For sometimes it is used for the general Company of believers Act. 8. 3. Thus Paul is said to persecute the Church Or else more particularly and for a Church at such a place as the Church at Jerusalem the Church at Corinth Again the word Church is sometimes used more strictly for the People onely as distinct from Pastors Thus the Epistles of John are directed To the Angels of the seven Churches Thus the Elders are exhorted Act. 20. 28. To feed the Church of God over which they were set And in this sense the Remonstrants speak confidently That the word Church is most commonly used and that never or very seldom it comprehends the Officers also But this is not so for Mat. 18. Tell the Church by the Church must needs be meant Officers at least with the Church for they are said to bind and lose which power is given to Officers only It 's true they and so Grotius by Church understand a multitude or more in opposition to those two or three witnesses that were required before But the Context may easily be improved to overthrow that 1 Cor. 12. 28. God is there said to set in his Church some Pastors and Teachers that is as part but the chief part of the Church Even as the Starres are set in the firmament but as parts of the Heavens though the more noble and fulgent parts Again when the Apostle here writeth to the Church of Corinth he must needs comprehend the Officers as well as the People because he writeth about such duties wherein the Officers were interested as the censuring of the incestuous person he speaks also of Prophets which were extraordinary Officers in that Church and they are blamed for male-administration about the Sacrament of the Lords-Supper So that although Grotius thinketh that abuse was because they had no constituted Officers yet it 's plain they had some because they had the administration of the Sacraments Lastly The word Church is applied sometimes to an essential Church as it is called for a company of believers simply as such believing in Christ of which often in Scripture sometimes for an organized Church that is formed and stated in that godly order by a Ministry Government and Discipline conjoyned together So that they make a particular flock being bound to submit to their Pastors as their peculiar Pastors and Pastors bound to watch over them as their peculiar flock Whether indeed this Church of Corinth was one Congregational Church or one Church aggregated of several Congregations is disputed But of this in its time This Church of Corinth was formed and stated in some order though there were great abuses in it As for our common use of the word Church taking it for a place or the material building that is an improper speech but allowable by a Synecdoche as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth both the place and persons therein convened And although one or two learned men from 1 Cor. 11. would have the word used there for a place yet the arguments are not cogent for the people are properly the Church it 's they that Christ hath redeemed they are to be built up by Pastors and Teachers whereas the material Church is built by manual Artificers not needing an Apostle but a Carpenter This may suffice for Explication only let this be added that the Greek word relates to Gods calling it signifieth a Society called by God So that the Apostle directs his Epistle to that Society or company of persons that did come our from the Heathenish Idolatries and abominations that the other Corinthians lived in and did profess their faith in Christ with obedience to him From whence observe That a Church is a company called of God by the preaching of the Word to the profession of faith in Christ and an observation of all that solemn worship and Ordinances which Christ hath appointed with a life in external conformity thereunto This is a Church When you read of a Church at Jerusalem a Church at Corinth the seven Churches of Asia you are to understand such a company And this Doctrine about a Church is much to be insisted on People are generally carnal ignorant and prophane And although they would think it an high reproach to have the name of a Church denied them or to be cast out of the Church as so many Heathens yet they do not attend to the nature of a Church nor to the properties of those who are to be members thereof It is true there are vast and infinite Disputes about a Church and every sect or party is ready to monopolize and appropriate that name to them That they are only the Church But these great Disputes about it argue we should be more carefull to distinguish lest we take Babylon for Jerusalem lest we take that for Gods Temple which is indeed a den of thieves Doth not the Popish party glory in the name of a Church Do they not make it necessary to salvation to come into communion with it and yet it is the place that Gods people are called to come out of lest they partake both of her sins and punishments But let us examine the chief particulars in the Doctrine which is a popular deseription of a Church And First We say It is a Society or Company So that one man cannot be called a Church It 's absurd in the Papists that when they have lifted up the name of a Church like a Gorgons head to turn all men into stones that they must not mutter a word against it when you come to examine what this Church is at last it is but one man and that is the Pope What number goeth to make a Church is not defined To a formed organized Church there must be so many at least that Church duties which are essential may be performed and a distinction between Governours and governed maintained otherwise where two or three are there is a Church said Tertullian Again In that it is a Company we see That it is not lawfull for a man to think of serving God alone by himself when there is an opportunity of joyning to a Church You read Act. 3. and 4. as any persons were converted presently they joyned themselves to the Church It is true there may be such persecutions or other impediments that Christians have wandered up and down and could not enjoy publick or private meetings but this absence from Church-communion was an heavy burden on their spirits And
are said not to be all Israel who are of Israel In the Old Testament we read of many who outwardly submitted to the profession of Gods commands who yet were not found at heart and therefore our Saviour in the course of his Ministry did not direct his preaching more to any subject almost then this viz. to have the internals of grace as well as externals so that we may say There is a called and elected Church and a called Church only not elected and this is to take off all Churches from idolizing and doting upon the Ordinances and external administrations which are in a Church as the Jews did and as most Christians do We are to go further and to see whether we be indeed and really Christs body as well as seemingly For if we do compare a Church called only with the Church called and elected and to the spiritual priviledges that are promised so our Divines use to say That it is but equivocally a Church they have no true acceptance with God If there should be a Society professing faith in Christ and have pure administrations but not one in the Society having true real sanctifying grace this Society in respect of God and Christ hath no true communion with them They have but the name not the nature and so are equivocally not univocally a true Church For why should it be otherwise with a Society then every member of it taken singly Now it 's certain in such a supposed Society where all are professors but not one member truly godly there every individual person notwithstanding all Church enjoyments yet hath no lively interest in Christ he is but as a glass eye or wooden leg in the body that hath no vivifical nourishment or is animated by the soul and therefore such are said to be De corpore Ecclesiae but not de animâ if then this be true of every member of that Church it must be also true of the Church taken collectively Only this is true if we consider such a company relatively to God But then if we consider them quoad nos in respect of men who cannot judge the hearts nor know when true grace is in any mans soul then such a Church or a Society may be called truly a Church For it is the external profession and outward submission to Christs order that doth make a Church visible to us and therefore in such a Church there are true Ordinances true Administrations And this is the rule we must go by in joyning our selves to a Church and keeping external communion with it if it be a called Church though not elected and be so farre orthodox and pure that we may have communion with them without sinne This is a Church to us howsoever God may look upon them as having a name to live but were dead as God said of Sardis Rev. 3. 1. which yet was a Church This distinction is of a two-fold use to prevent two mistakes First Of such who confound an external Church with an elected making Gods call and his election in an equal latitude thinking that because none but predestinated and truly sanctified men are of the invisible Church therefore none but such are also of the visible And then Secondly Of those who if they be of a Church especially cleansed from superstitions and prophaneness if the Church be a Reformed Church they rest in those external administrations and never attend to the work of grace indeed For if among Papists though so greatly polluted yet the Church is made an Idol to them no wonder if the Reformed Churches are prone to put confidence in Church-reformations without attending to internal sanctification But the Apostle tells us Gal. 6. 15. That in Christ Jesus neither circumcision or uncircumcision availeth any thing but a new creature that is no externals in the Church of God though of his own institution avail any thing without regeneration Therefore rest not in this that you are called of God that ye are his Church for many taken out of his Church shall be damned as well as out of the world yea more in the Church that is the visible Society professing of Christ will be damned then saved as appeareth by that expression twice repeated by our Saviour as being of so great concernment being worthy to be heard again and again Many are called but few are saved Mat. 22. 14. and 20. 16. And thus much of the Efficient Cause with the manner Called of God In the next place There is the Instrumental Cause and that is by the preaching of the Word For so we read upon Christs giving his Apostles commission to teach and preach to all Nations there were Churches gathered in every place And this is to be understood of the ordinary way For whether the Word even as read may not in some extraordinary cases be a means to bring some one person or more to the Church of God is not here to be disputed for we speak of the solemn ordinary instituted means of God and so there is no other way but the preaching of the Word Hence Rom. 10. 14 15. you see there a concatenation and chaining of calling upon God and believing together of beliving and hearing together and of hearing and the Ministry together But it 's objected by the Socinians That if the preaching of the Word be an instrument to gather a Church then it cannot be a note of the Church For that which is antecedent to a Church and is before the Church is cannot be a note of it To this we may answer That it is both an instrument to gather a Church and then a note of it when gathered neither is there any absurdity therein It 's true that very numerical preaching which at first made the Church cannot be a mark or note of it but the same specifical preaching or that which is like it that doth truly declare where the true Church is So that by this we may see the dignity and usefulness of the Ministry for by that God is pleased to raise up all the Churches that are in the world God who did immediatly create the world and used no instruments yet in planting of his Church doth and therefore they are workers with him 2 Cor. 6. 1. Neither is the Ministry only necessary to constitute a Church and then afterwards useless as Episcopius saith Where people have the Scriptures there the Ministry is of no necessity Yea the Socinians make it only a matter of order and conveniency For Ministers are not only appointed to gather Churches at first but when they are planted continually to water them Therefore Ephes 4. their usefulness is shewed even to constituted Churches For the further building them up even till they come to a full stature in Christ. And therefore the Apostles thought it not enough to make Churches to erect new spiritual Societies that should profess Christ but Elders were to be ordained in every Church that were to have constant residence amongst
them and to give them daily food watching over their souls and therefore their title of Shepherds and the people being called a Flock do evidently demonstrate the necessity of a Ministry not only at first as miracles were but perpetually even to the coming of Christ Thirdly There is in the Description the Formal Cause to which also may be reduced the Final Cause The Formal Cause is in the publick and solemn observation of that Church-communion which God hath required I shall only mention that formal and external Communion wherein it consists And that is 1. In the solemn assembling and meeting of themselves together Heb. 10. 25. The Apostle doth there reprove the neglect of this duty which is the seminary and fountain of all holiness while the coals lie together they keep their heat and inflame one another Thus it 's our communion in the Assemblies that is the means to keep up grace and holiness How much did David bewail his banishment from the Ordinances as you heard And is it not the highest censure and most dreadfull punishment that can be for a Christian upon just grounds to be cast out of the Church Is not this to fall into the Kingdom of Satan Is it not to be delivered up to him Now then if it be next to hell it self thus to be cast out of Church-communion and the publick Ordinances Why doest thou wilfully bring this upon thy self Thy own slothfull and prophane careless heart makes thee neglect the publick Assemblies This is a sinne of an higher nature than thou art aware of for God is present in Church Assemblies you have the benefit of the prayers then poured forth the Ordinances are of enlightning and quickning efficacy Now for thee voluntarily to deprive thy self of this spiritual advantage is a sinne of an high degree Indeed when want of health or other just impediments keep us from the Assemblies God can then make up the publick benefits in private But I speak of a voluntary wilfull omission of such publick Communion Oh little do such men consider that they have but a day Their life is but a day and the season of grace is but a day and doest thou neglect that day when it may be thou shalt never have such a day again never have a Sabbath any more That carnal plea also of getting as much good at home and they can edifie themselves as well with reading books in private unless in case of necessity as I said is ungodly and unjustifiable excuse for this is to make Church-communion and holy Assemblies to be of no necessity and so wholly to overthrow them 2. In this solemn meeting there are these publick duties wherein the Church is to imploy her self 1. Publick prayer to God This in the primitive times was done so servently and zealously that they did even seem to besiege Heaven and to take it by force Oh what prevailing power must the Church have with God when they are so many wrestling Jacobs If the effectual servent prayer of one righteous man prevaileth much how much m●… joyned together If it were a Congregation of Jo●…s how mightily should we prevail with God But we m●… Chrysostome How are all the grave and holy things of Go●… formality and a shew How many in our Congregatio●…end to this publick duty of prayer They fear not lest ●…any A●… in the Congregation So that for thy deadn●… the sinnes ●…est in God be angry with our Assemblies and ●…t be graciously ●…ent with us Thou art a dead flie in this box of ointment The prophane man little thinketh what obstructions he makes in our publick petitions by his wickedness unrepented of 2. There is the publick preaching of the Word And this necessarily supposeth a formed and stated Church wherein are Governours and governed Those who by Office preach and those who by duty hear This publick Ministry in the Church of God is not for convenience or good order meerly but it is an institution of Christ and hath several effects attributed to it as conversion of such who are in their natural condition the edifying of those who are converted for instruction that men be not led aside with errours and strange Doctrine for rebuke and reproof of such who walk disorderly c. And therefore because of the necessity of it those who have commission to do it have manifold directions about it To preach in season and out of season and the reason seemeth strange Because there are many who will not endure sound Doctrine 2 Tim. 4. 2. Yea there is a wo to them if they be negligent herein 1 Cor. 9. 16. And in all this they are to be instant and industrious it being a cursed thing to do the work of the Lordnegligently The matter they preach must be holy savoury and nourishing compared therefore to food You are to come to a Sermon with an hungry stomack Yea as new born children ye are to swallow down the sincere milk of the Word And therefore to preach froth and meer fancifull things is as absurd as if a man should invite another to a dinner and provide him nothing but the pictures of some meat It 's compared to seed the Husbandman will not sow his ground with chaff Yea it 's compared to a two-edged sword that is quick and piereing into the very secret thoughts of mens hearts It is for want of such soul-piercing and soul-saving preaching that people are lulled or sleep in their sinnes that there is nothing but formality and customariness in most men The word of God is to flash in your faces like so much lightning and to make even the proudest and the most scornfull to tremble within them They must speak as the Oracles of God What is that but as men filled with the Spirit of God breaking out like fire from them And with such proportionable affections are you to hear This is to meet as the Church of God no man sleeping no man drousie or wandering and roving in his mind but to say with the Centurion We are all here to hear what God will say to us 3. The Administration of Sacraments according to Gods order and such holy wayes as he hath appointed The Sacraments are of infinite consequence to the Church of God and when people through their ignorance and prophaneness make themselves unfit subjects they are enemies to their souls For though God be present in the Word and prayer yet his sacramental presence is in a more indeared and peculiar manner Lastly There is that godly Discipline and holy Order in Church-communion which is as the hedge to the field of corn Take away this holy order the Church will become a gangrened body either with heresies or prophaneness Hence is that binding and losing of sinners Hence is that command of casting out wicked obstinate persons of pirging out the old leaven because a little leaven will quickly sour all 1 Cor. 5. Hence also are those duties of admonishing and noting such
as go astray and the turning from those that walk disorderly 2 Thess 3. These several acts of Church Discipline commanded in the Scripture are very evident And although there are a generation of men who would with scorn and pride cry it down as lordly and Popish and I know not what yet at last it will be found that that it was only their lusts and love to sinne their hatred of sinne their hatred of powerfull godliness which provoketh them hereunto What would they have said if they had lived in Tertullians Cyprians Chrysostomes and Austin's dayes when there was such zeal in Church Discipline against all prophaneness that in some things they were immoderately severe If then this be the external form of Church-communion if in these things Church Assemblies are to be exercised let us mourn for our general Apostasie that in some sense our Church Assemblies have been like the world at first a meer chaos and confusion Not that ever any Church will be so reformed as that it will not need further Reformation But only let us endeavour to attain what degree of purity may be had SERM. XIV Of the Notes and Signes of a true Church 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church at Corinth c. YOu have heard what is to be vnderstood by this expression of a Church The true Doctrine about this being so necessary I shall further inlarge my self not entring into the whole Common-place of a Church for that would be too prolix and ere this Epistle be ended we may happily meet with more Texts that may afford further knowledge in this point Only I shall after the popular definition of a Church give you the Notes or Marks whereby we may come to know what is or where is the true Church For this hath been a great controversie between Papists and us There are indeed some of late as the Remonstrants Episcopius c. who say This dispute and enquiry about the marks of a Church is wholly uselesse and needlesse For say they either we have to do with an Infidel or a Believer if with an Infidel it is absurd to tell him of the Notes of a Church who doth not believe there is any such thing as a Church at all And for a Believer he is in the Church already and so they are uselesse to him But this is meerly frivolous For 1. When we have to do with an unbeliever we must not in the first place deal with him about a Church to prove that we are the true Church but that there is a God who is to be worshipped as natural light will convince of this Then that this God hath made known how he will be worshipped Next that the Scriptures do contain this revealed will of God And when this foundation is ●aid then out of Gods Word we are to inform him of a Church So that in order there is first The Word of God to be discovered 2. What is the true sense and meaning of it Lastly That what society hath this there is a true Church And Secondly Even Heathens by hearing of the Word preached have by the Grace of God been converted and so the Word preached which was at first instrumental to convert them doth afterwards by way of a sign or mark confirm them therein The Apostle tells us of an unbeliever coming into Church-meetings who is so wrought upon that he crieth out Verily God is here 1 Cor. 14. 25. And as to the Believer the notes of a Church are necessary for the further confirming and establishing of him For seeing that every Party or Sect saith They are the true Church and with them onely is Communion to be had condemning other meetings as false as the Synagogue of Satan and as necessarily damning all those that continue in that Communion different from them It is thereby of great use that we should have such Notes or Marks to conclude that where such are certainly there is a Church for we are not to be Scepticks or Seekers When the Scripture commands us To tell the Church Mat. 18. To conjoyn our selves to the Church of God it plainly intimateth that such a Society may be known Even as there was a Star to guide the Wisemen unto Christ In the second place There are three things necessary to make a Note or a Mark of a Church 1. It must be more known than the thing it self 2. It must be proper and peculiar to that thing alone of which it is a Note For if it be common to others it cannot be a Note Sense is not a Note of a man because it 's common to a beast And Lastly It must be inseparable For if it doth not alwayes agree to it then we cannot tell how to discern that we look for Now for such Notes of the Church the Protestants say there are these three only 1. The pure preaching of the Word with the publick receiving and professing of it 2. The right and orderly administration of the Sacraments 3. The due use of holy Order and Discipline Where these things are there we may conclude that certainly Gods true Church is and with such a Society we may lawfully joyn Thirdly Only when we give these three Notes we do not make all of the same equal necessity Discipline and holy Order is for the well-being of a Church This Church of Corinth was a Church though that was neglected It is true this is greatly to be pressed for and the introducing of Christs order into a Church is like the bringing of the Ark into Obed-Edoms family So that without this manifest impiety being suffered God will be so highly provoked as to give a Bill of Divorce to it and take away his Gospel from such an unworthy people yet this is not made essential to the being of a Church So also the administration of Sacraments There was a time when the Church had none viz. before Circumcision was appointed but since Christs appointment of them there they ought to be used where the way and manner he hath appointed can be attained For the dispensers of those holy Mysteries must take heed That they give not pearl to swine nor encourage prophane men in their impieties by giving them the testimonies of Gods love whom yet he abhorreth Therefore that which is infallibly necessary and alwayes accompanying a true Church is the preaching of the Word in a right manner with the publick receiving and profession of this I adde the publick profession because the Word may be purely taught to a people who yet are not the Church because they do refuse and reject the Gospel tendred to them as the Jews did and many Heathens so that there must be a manifest and publick profession of it And besides the true preaching of the Word is only a sign of a true Minister not of a true Church unless they give their consent thereunto So that when our Divines say The pure preaching of the Word is a Note
of the Church They include and suppose the publick receiving of it by the people yea some do clearly expresse it By this pure and true preaching of the Word we may discern the true Church from Jewes and Pagans as also from Heretical and Idololatrical Societies yet pretending to a Church Fourthly When these Notes especially the former are said to be proper and inseparable to the Church of God You must alwayes remember here is a latitude in the application of these Notes For some Churches may have the Word more soundly preached and the Sacraments more dispensed than another and yet for all that not to be denied to be Churches This Church of Corinth was foully out of order And so most of those Churches in Asia were sharply reproved yet they did not cease to be a Church Yea the Church of Israel had many corruptions both in worship and life yet it was a long while ere God did cast her off So that we must not for some defilements either in the Doctrine Worship or Manners of a Church presently deny her to be a Church and separate from her for this is against Scripture information Yea there is no Church so perfect but needeth some Reformation They may build hay and stubble though they keep the foundation So that he must go out of the world that would live in a Church where nothing is amiss Even that Church of Smyrna the Apostle mentioneth Revel 2. 8. that was as her Name signifying sweet smelling and fragrant like a Garden or bed of Spices yet she was troubled with some who said They were Jews but were not but were of the Synagogue of Satan But of this more when we come to the next Doctrine Fifthly These then being the visible Marks of a visible Church we must not confound them with the properties of the Church invisible The Church of God hath as it were a two-fold Form one Internal and Essential which consists in their Union with Christ and communion with his benefits Now none but those that are truly godly are of the Church in this invisible manner he must be regenerated and graffed into Christ that can have any saving benefit by Christ But then 2. The Church of God hath an External and outward Form which consists in the external profession of faith and observance of Christs Ordinances Now a man may be of the Church in respect of this outward standing though he be not truly godly Therefore Dr Ames said well That it was a false thing which Bellarmine objected to us about the constitution of a Church as if we required internal graces to the making of a man a member of the Church in respect of the visible state of it We read in the New Testament that upon the outward profession of their faith they were baptized and received into the Church though it 's plain all of them had not true internal grace So then when the Question is put Whether may a man that is not truly godly be of the Church or no You must distinguish between the inward form of the Church which is union with Christ the Head and so he is not no more than a wooden leg is a member of the body that is not animated by the soul and the External visible state of it and so he is of the Church till by his obstinacy in wickedness he be cast out as unworthy We must not therefore give those Notes of the Church as visible which belong to it only as invisible viz. Election Vocation and Justification c. Sixthly The Papist to avoid this extream he giveth such Marks of a Church as savour rather of worldly ambition and pride Yea the true Church of God many times is known by the contrary Marks they give amplitude and universality as also temporal felicity Now this is rather a Description of some worldly Monarchy than Gods Church For as for the Churches amplitude though absolutely in it self it may be sometimes numerous yet at other times it hath been brought into a narrow compasse Elijah thought none was left and God speaks of but seven thousand that did not how the knee to Baal which was a very inconsiderable number to the Idolaters Therefore respectively to the wicked of the world even when they are most ample they are but a little flock And as for any glorious felicity though the Church of God hath sometimes had her respite and halcyon dayes yet for the most part a crown of thorns hath been on her head and therefore she is justly called the Militant Church while in this world because of her spiritual conflict with all sorts of enemies So that the Church of Christ may sometimes say as Christ once did The Foxes have their holes and the Birds of the air their nests but the Sonne of man hath not where to lay his head Thus the Foxes of the world the crafty subtil men have great abundance many times when the Church hath hid her self in the wildernesse And Fowls of the air men of proud and lofty minds have their nests when the Church like Noah's Dove hath not where to set her foot Seventhly I shall not enlarge my self to prove these only to be the proper Notes of the Church only consider that place Act. 2. 41 42. where you have all of them conjoyned together 1. They received the Word gladly There is a solemn profession of it 2. There is the administration of the Sacraments They were baptized and continued in breaking of bread with prayers There is the solemn calling upon God And as an epitomizing of all this it 's said Then were added unto the Church about three thousand souls Thus 1 Tim. 3. 15. the Church is called The pillar and foundation of the truth that is by the Ministeries preservation of it and the peoples submitting unto it Lastly If to this it be objected as Socinians do who hold this way of Notes to find out a Church to be useless and vain That true Doctrine cannot be a sign of the Church because it 's the Form and Essence of it Now that which notifieth the essence of a thing must be distinct from it To this it is answered That the form as it giveth being to a thing so it giveth to distinguish from others Forma dat esse distingui Although we do not say True Doctrine is the Note of a Church but the external preaching and receiving of it that is a Note incurring into our senses Even as Reason though it give a man his rational being yet speaking is the proper and true sign that manifests this So let true Doctrine or a true faith be the soul and life of a Church yet the external profession is the outward Note and Sign of it And if further it be said That every Sect doth claim to it self the pure preaching of the Word and the right administration of Ordinances Therefore these cannot be a sign It 's answered The consequence is denied for true preaching and
Why doest thou not go out from the Church of God Why doest thou not turn Heathen and Pagan again For certainly the Churches of Christ have no such prophane customs Thirdly It 's supernatural and of God in respect of the Order Laws Rule and Government it is to walk by The Doctrine believed is revealed by God The Worship practised is to be appointed by God The Government and Order is to be commanded by God And thus Beloved we might at large shew you That all things that are essential in the Church are to be of God No Doctrine no Worship no Administration of Sacraments but what is of God We might shew you what God hath appointed in the Credendis and Agendis Ecclesiae Oh that this were well understood by us What makes men so wilfull for their lusts for their superstitious customs but because they consider not the Church is a spiritual house and the Laws and Orders thereof are appointed by Christ himself If the Church be of God all things therein must be of God likewise Hence our Saviour saith Every plant that is not of my Fathers planting shall be rooted out Mat. 15. 13. What makes men rage and fret if things in the Church be not according to their own humours and lusts Is it not because they do not attend to this That it is Gods Church It 's not the Popes Church nor the Magistrates Church but Gods Church Surely this truth would make us in all things ask as Christ did in another case Whose image and superscription hath it Give unto God the things that are Gods Fourthly It 's supernatural and of God even in respect of the manner of doing all things in the Church Every solemn duty is to be done as from God and through him even in an holy and divine manner The Minister must preach as inabled of God The hearer must hear as strengthened thereunto of God The Apostle praiseth the Thessalonians That they received the Word not as the word of man but of God As the Apostle speaks of his administration of the Gospel 2 Cor. 2. 17. As of God in the sight of God so ought all our Church-assemblies to be performed What Jeremiah then hath his head full enough of water to make lamentation for the formality customariness and meer external service that is done to God in our Assemblies Men are become like Idols having eyes they see not ears they hear not hearts they understand not whereas our praying our hearing our approachings in these Assemblies should be as of God not Nature or Custom or the Laws of men but the Spirit of God mightily working in us should put us upon these things Whereas now we see people in Church-assemblies finding no more of the gracious power and presence of God then if they were in their markets or other civil meetings As the Apostle said Do ye seek an experiment of Christ in me So ought it to be here we are to demonstrate in our Church-assemblies experimental works of Christ upon us As the duty is of God the Ordinance is of God so should the frame and disposition of our hearts be of God Fifthly The Church is of God in respect of his protection and gracious presence God promiseth his presence and delights to be in the Assembly of his Saints Matth. 18. 20. When two or three are gathered together in my Name I will be in the midst of them It 's the gracious presence of God that blesseth Ordinances Hence Christ is described Revel 1. 13. VValking in the midst of the golden Candlesticks that is the Churches and the Ordinances therein We are apt to complain if Gods blessing goeth not along with us in outward undertakings We can say as Moses to God If thy presence go not along with us we will not go up When it may relate to our outward advantage but we do not take notice of Gods presence in the Assemblies why God is not amongst us to hear our prayers why God is not present with the Word to make it an enlightning a converting Word It should affect your hearts more than it doth if in every Sermon the Spirit of God hath not fallen upon thy heart like fire if it hath not melted quickned enlivened thy soul Oh say why did God withdraw himself if he visited the hearts of others yet not mine I was dead luke-warm and found no efficacy come from Christ What sins am I guilty of What have I done that makes God thus absent himself from the publick Ordinances at least to me Sixthly The Church is of God in respect of all the supernatural Effects and benefits which alone are communicated there In the Church of God alone is Justification Sanctification Assurance of his favour In the pool of Bethesda onely did the Angel come in In the waters of Jordan only could Naaman be healed In the Ark only could there be external safety from the waters And thus in the Church only there are those soul-mercies to be obtained Lastly The Church is of God finaliter Because the enjoyment of God is the proper end of all Churches It 's true all civil societies are to make the glory of God their ultimate end but yet the immediate end is to acquire a temporal and political blessedness but the end of Gods Church is more transcendent and spiritual for therefore are preaching hearing therefore are Sabbaths and our solemn Assemblies that we might have more enjoyment of God that our doubts may be answered our corruptions mortified our graces made more fervent and zealous This made David so esteem the Tabernacle of the Lord and desiring rather to be a door-keeper there then to have any earthly greatness What was it the material Tabernacles that David so longed for No it was the enjoyment of God in those Ordinances But as little children admire the fine out-side of some excellent Book when they understand not the excellent matter contained therein so saith Chrysostome many regard the out-sides and externals of religious duties not knowing at all what the spiritual effects thereof mean Oh then let ignorant and wicked men tremble If the Church be of God how comest thou to be of the Devil and to do his works SERM. XVI Of the City of Corinth God sometimes gathers a Church amongst the most prophane people A Church though many wayes defiled may be a Church still as it was with the Corinthians 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth THe next thing to be treated of is the Description of this Church by the place where it is viz. at Corinth And that we may understand the great grace and power of God in gathering a Church to himself out of this City it 's good to observe what the Learned speak of it It was called so they say from Corinthus the sonne of Orestes or of Pelops but when they had in a dishonourable manner abused some Roman Embassadours they were destroyed by a Roman named Lucius Mummius
freed from it Thus you see many of them were rather beasts than a Church Lastly For Godlinesse or Religion there were also sad disorders about that There were some that denied the Resurrection that said Let us eat and drink for to morrow we shall die these were Atheists And certainly had this been the Assertion of the whole Church and not some few only amongst them if it had been their Catholick and Universal Doctrine maintained by all they had ceased to be a Church they had degenerated into meer Atheism but it was some only that were thus infected Again Another offence in Religion was their great Church-divisions some exalting Paul some Apollo insomuch that in stead of edifying and building up one another they were divided into as many Sects almost as they had Teachers And then lastly There was horrible confusion and ungodliness in respect of Church-order All godly Discipline was laid aside the administration of the Sacraments was promiscuous come who would come though in their unworthiness they might receive it And although Gods judgment was upon them either the Plague or some general disease and that because no better order was about the Sacrament yet for all that they did not judge or condemn themselves Thus this Church was like a very Chaos and yet a Church still SERM. XVII A further Discovery of the truth of this Assertion that a Church may be a true Church though much defiled both in Doctrine and Manners 2 COR. 1. 1. To the Church of God which is at Corinth c. THis Church of Corinth is dignified as you heard with this glorious Title of the Church of God notwithstanding those manifest and notorious depravations that were amongst them and that of all sorts This truth we entred upon and before we give you some demonstrations to evidence it it is good to take notice of some observable particulars which tend to the clearing of it Only this must be premised that whereas a Church may be denied to be so either from its constitution or from its conversation We are speaking of the later way and so consider First That the soundness and purity of Churches doth admit of degrees That as one Starre doth excell another in glory yet both Starres So one Church may greatly transcend another in orthodoxy and purity and yet both be Churches In those seven Churches of Asia there were some reproved more than others We cannot expect that all Churches should be of the same measure in knowledge and grace no mor than particular Christians and therefore we are not to conclude such a Church is no Church because not so pure as another Church no more than such a man is not a godly man because he hath not such a measure of Illumination and Sanctification as another And to say in the general That it is a Christians duty to find out the purest Church in the world and there to associate himself with it must needs fill a Christian with infinite perplexities of conscience as also to expose him to insupportable outward inconveniencies Let us not therefore do with a Church as a godly tender heart is apt to do with himself because he finds many failings and great imperfections therefore he is ready to judge that he hath no grace at all Thus because there are several disorders and distempers in such a Church which are deservedly daily matter of groan and sorrow to thee therefore thou beginnest to sentence such a Church as no longer Gods Church Again seeing that there are gradual differences of soundness and purity in Churches this should also make every Church take heed of appropriating the glorious name of a Church or Saints or Christians to themselves only as if none were Saints or Christians but what are members of their Society This is and hath been a most uncharitable proud disposition of some Churches The Popish Church saith There is no sanctity or holiness but with them Inter Catholicos saith Bellarmine multi quidem sunt mali sed inter haereticos ne uniu quidem est bonus What a censorious condemnation is this Not one good Protestant whom they call Hereticks not in all our Churches Thus they only appropriate the name of Church and sanctity to themselves So the Donatists did of old they inclosed the Church only amongst themselves they called none Christians but themselves To become a Donatist was to become a Christian with them So that we see it 's very hard for Churches not to admire their own wayes and constitutions thinking that none are Churches but themselves there may be pharisaical Churches that may condemn other Churches as Publicans as well as it is so in persons whereas it is good to observe that the Scripture doth describe Christians by such names as do not at all relate or distinguish by any Government or external constitution to be a believer to be a Saint to be a Christian These titles denote either some inward qualification or external profession but do not at all insinuate what kinds of order or way they are in yet this is not so to be understood as if Christs order and way his Government and Discipline were an indifferent or arbitrary thing only it is to shew that we are not to monopolize godliness amongst our selves meerly because of a Church-constitution although we are not to receive any form or spiritual order in our Churches but of Christs appointment There is a great difference and latitude in the soundness and purity of Churches Secondly When we speak of a Church being Gods true Church though greatly corrupted we must take heed of two extreams the first of those who therefore would have no Reformation though there be never so many disorders but say It 's wisdome and prudence to let all things be as they have been for it may be Gods Church though there be divers abuses Take heed of such carnal indulgence as this because it 's the Church of God therefore make no more stirre let errours and prophaneness alone let disorders continue and this many times is palliated with fair specious pretences that such indeavours to reform will breed great discontents and divisions in stead of having a pure Church it may be made no Church at all especially this is the more difficulty obtained if it be a Reformation in worship and manners for we are more willing to sit down under an Orthodox Church then a pure Church We can more easily endure to have sound Doctrine established then pure and holy Order because this doth so directly contradict our lusts and pleasures Hence Malachy prophesieth of Christs repurgation of his Church as a very dreadfull time even like the day of judgement Mal. 3. 2 4. Christ is there said to sit as a refiner and as a purger to take away dro● but who shall abide the day of his coming Christs coming being thus like the Refiners fire and the Fullers sope was as terrible as the day of judgment to them Who may abide
happily united together so that both in their several stations do promote the Kingdom of Christ There are extremities on both sides some exclude all civil Government from the matters of the Church or Religion as if the Magistrate and the civil power had nothing to do to appoint any thing in reference to these spiritual matters which if so then Kings and Queens could not be nursing Fathers and Mothers in the Church Then the Magistrate should not be the Custos utriusque tabulae then holy Magistrates should sinne in reforming abuses and corruptions which are crept into the Church of God which yet Hezekiah and Josiah did and so likewise Constantine did to his great praise saying to the Officers of the Church he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He had an external Episcopacie and Superintendency Then in the second place there is another extream errour which is to confound the State and the Church as if Christ had appointed no distinct Officers or work but that any man authorized by a commission from the civil power was hereby inabled to do any Office in the Church and that Christ had not set Pastors or Teachers in his Church but civil Governours Now how blessed and happy hath it been when these Societies have been friendly complying and furthering one another The Commonwealth helping and furthering defending and protecting the Church The Church also performing all Church-Ordinances in such a manner that God may bless that state and make it to be as Obed-Edoms house while he entertained the Ark Quamdiu respublicae manent hospitia Ecclesiae tamdiu suns duraturae Hence in the third place The Devil and his instruments have alwayes laboured the ruine of godliness by making divisions and using several stratagems to overthrow the harmonious Unity that ought to be in the Church of God and civil State In Popery we see abominable mischief came to Religion by the usurping of the name of the Church for they excluded the Magistrates and supream Governours from any Government therein and at last pleading exemption from all Obedience and Subjection to the chief powers though so expresly contrary to Paul Rom. 13. Thus they make a few only yea but one the Pope at last to be the Church and then attribute to him a power to dispose of Kingdoms and States where and to whom he pleaseth directly and immediately say some and those who do most mince it say indirectè and in ordine ad spiritualia On the other side sometimes the civil State hath been jealous yea and violently perscuting the Church of God as if that of Julian were true A Church and a civil Society could not stand together as if Christ had commanded such things of his Church that were inconsistent with and would utterly overthrow all civil Government Thus Pilate he was jealous because he heard of Christs Kingdom and although it be known that his Kingdom is not of this world that Church power is wholly spiritual in order to mens souls yet how often are the Governours suspicious about it But these particulars are of large consideration and handled by learned Authours I come therefore to shew That a peoples consideration of themselves as a Church should be preferred above all their civil Glory and Dignity It ought to be more as one Emperour said to be a Member of the Church then an Emperour of the whole world The Church of Rome in Pauls time while pure in the faith was more admirable then the City of Rome which was Queen over the whole world The Grounds why we are to give this preheminence to a Church-consideration are First Because a Church-constitution is supernatural all is of God in a more special manner then in civil Societies For although all civil Powers be of God and the making of civil Societies of making Nations and Kingdoms be in an extraordinary manner attributed to him in the Scripture yet still this is in the course of Nature but a Church is planted by the grace of God and it 's above the work of Nature either ordinary or extraordinary to be made such a Society Secondly As we are a Church we have the nearest relation and reference to God not as a City or a Corporation are but as a Church are we his House his Body his Vinyard Neither can we expect such presence of God in our civil Assemblies and Judicatories as in Church-meetings The power and grace of God is in a more powerfull and special manner discovering it self there Thirdly Hereby we have greater Titles and more noble Dignity Although it 's true in the account of the world nothing is more contemptible The Church is called the Kingdom of God we are hereby the children of God the Covenant of Grace is made with us So that all who are not of the Church be they never such glorious victorious and wise Nations yet they are without God and they are under the Kingdom of Satan whereas Gods Church is the Object of his love there he is said to delight to dwell Use of Instruction to Believers who are the Church of God to consider that title and relation they are in as such Though great though rich though honourable yet let it not be accounted equal to the being one of Gods Church If the Devil should shew thee the glory of all the world promising to bestow it on thee upon condition thou renouncest thy Church interest and Church membership with great indignation refuse it What high esteem was put upon the being a Roman Citizen Paul stood upon his Roman freedom in a particular case but this is nothing to be of that free City which is Jerusalem from above even in this Earth By meditating on this thou wilt be more thankfull to God that he hath made thee one of his Church than if he had given all the Turkish Empire to thee for that is but as Luther said Mica cani a crum to the dog in respect of the childrens bread Again The consideration of a Church-priviledge and interest will make thee most to attend to that in disposing and setling thy self when at liberty Most people look to live where the best trading is the greatest priviledges or best earthly accommodation But if thou art one free to settle thy self where thou mayest thou that fearest God will look upon Church advantages as the greatest glory and profit of all Lastly This will take off all those general thoughts which do almost reign every where to consider of men by their Cities and Townes not by their Churches It 's the Town at such a place the Corporation at such a place but no attending to that place as it is a Church of God Hence it is that we are wholly drowned in the thoughts of our selves as a Town as a Parish in civil respects but never considering the relation of a Church and what duties we are obliged unto thereby The two other Observations are to be dispatched in a little room as
from the Apostles writing a second time to the Church of Corinth which he seldom did to any Church but to that of the Thessalonians and to Timothy a single person One reason whereof amongst others was because that his former Epistle had taken some good effect and whereas they had been too remiss before about their indulgence to that incestuous person it seemeth this Epistle had now so awakened them that they began to be too severe to him though repenting and humbling himself as appeareth Chap. 2. 6 7. whereupon he exhorteth them To comfort him lest he be swallowed up with too much sorrow It 's true there were other reasons why he wrote this second Epistle but this is one amongst the rest From whence we might observe That it 's very hard for the Churches of God to keep within their proper bounds about Church-administrations Nothing is more ordinary than to fall from one extream to another These Corinthians that were so negligent in good order that many pollutions were suffered amongst them insomuch that Gods judgements had surprized them for their default herein Now when awakened to do their duty they are ready to overdo and from too much remisness to fall into too much severity Thus in many other things we might instance how the Churches of God have fallen from one extremity to another but this subject especially as it relateth to Church-Discipline will be more sutably treated of in Chap. 2. I therefore briefly raise a third Observation and that is from the Apostles care and zeal to build up the Church of God For whereas he could not come to the Corinthians as yet lest any Church-corruption or disorders should arise thereby he endeavours by writing to do that in his absence which he would not do by his presence From whence we may gather That it 's the Ministers duty not only by personal preaching but by all other lawfull wayes to promote that Church he hath any relation unto When Paul cannot preach he will write This zeal in Paul drew out those many Epistles that now we have recorded in Scripture Our Apostle speaketh notably to this 1 Thess 2. 17 18. and Chap. 3. 1. where he sheweth his cordial affections towards that people with what violence he was kept from them and because Satan hindered him he saith He could no longer forbear but would be left at Athens alone without any comfort or solace rather than not to send to them that so they might not be moved from the Gospel Thus at other times we see this glorious Apostle when present yet not contented with his publick preaching did from house to house as occasion served with tears beseech and testifie every one to cleave unto the Lord. From this example of Paul who though an Apostle and so not bound to attend on particular Churches yet did by letters confirm and quicken those Churches he had planted We see how great and grievous a sinne a voluntary and unnecessary non-residence is in those Pastours who by their Office are bound to a particular Flock and to watch over them For though in some weighty cases for the good of the whole Church they may be detained from their Flock yet voluntarily and slothfully to do this will at last be found a grievous soul-murdering sin Use 2. To reprove that people who complain of too much preaching and too much ministerial imploiment thinking it needless SERM. XIX Of the Name and Nature of a Church-Saint 2 COR. 1. 1. With all the Saints which are in all Achaia WE are now arrived at the last clause in this verse which containeth a more general Description of those to whom he directs this Epistle Some Epistles are called Catholick because not inscribed to any particular Churches or persons but to the whole Church of God Others are more particular and local as this to the Corinthians yet we see it 's not so inscribed to them but that also all the adjacent Saints are comprehended in it Yea though Paul and others wrote their Epistles to certain Churches and persons yet they are in some sense Catholick for they all were written as a perpetual Rule to the whole Church of God in all ages So that this Epistle doth concern even the Churches of God in other Nations as well as that of Corinth when guilty of such disorder So that in the Inscription which is more general than the former clause we may take notice 1. Of the Persons to whom Paul writeth and they are described by their qualifications Saints 2. By a Note of Universality All the Saints There is none so mean or inconsiderable but the Apostle writeth as well to such a poor contemptible Saint as well as to the greatest and most eminent 3. There is the place where Which are in all Achaia I shall first consider the Qualification Saints He giveth this title to all that were of this Church even as in the former Epistle he saith They were sanctified in Jesus Christ Now the Question is How the Apostle could give the title of Saints to to all the Corinthians with those in Achaia for they both seem guilty of the same sins and therefore from this Epistle directed to them when yet they were so foully polluted Was the incestuous person before he repented Were those unclean persons that had not humbled themselves for their sins and Paul was afraid he should find them such when he came Were those Saints Were such who denied the Resurrection yea that had no knowledge of God as Paul said of some to whose shame he spake it were these Saints To this Austin of old answered and so some of late That the Apostle speaks this generally of the whole body because some amongst them were Saints The denomination being from the most worthy part So that they conclude of this as a Rule to interpret Scripture by To understand that of some parts which yet is attributed to to the whole And for this reason they say it is That the Apostle writing to some Churches as to this of Corinth doth sometimes speak of them as if they were all godly and at another time he reproveth them so as if they were all blame-worthy Thus because some were Saints indeed therefore he writeth to the whole Church as if Saints as we call a field of corn by that name though there may be many weeds and bryars amongst it This hath some truth but yet this is not all Secondly It may be thought that the Apostle calls them Saints in the judgment of charity because they did outwardly profess their faith and obedience in Christ even as Paul saith of Sylvanus 1 Pet. 5. 12. A faithfull brother as I suppose but a judgement of charity must be according to truth and he knew that all in Corinth were not truly Saints And as for that expression of Pauls concerning Sylvanus Calvin Estius and others do not relate the phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a faithfull brother but to
when they called the Blackmoors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 silver white Thou art a Saint in that sense he said Auri sacri fames indeed thou art most accursed and art but a mockery in respect of God and man As it is a shame so it is an horrible reproach even as Revel 2. there is the blasphemy of some who said they were Jews and were not Thus it is a blasphemy in thee to be externally a Saint and not really as the Apostle Rom. 2. 24. speaking of such saith The Name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles through you The mischief of the scandalous prophane lifes in the Church hath been the cause not only of Gods eminent judgements upon it even at last to unchurch them but also hath been like winds in the bowels of the earth making a dreadfull earthquake Heresies in Doctrine have not more molested the Church than prophaneness in life The troubles of the Donatists made in the Church for many years together was it not because of the prophaneness of Christians lives In our dayes What is the great argument against our Churches that they are no true Churches that they are the Synagogue of Satan Doth not this arise wholly from the ungodliness of most mens lives Call such Saints you may as well name darkness light Yea what is the cause that the bringing in of any good Order in a Church the purging out of the old leaven is such a grievous tormenting matter Why do generally people dislike and rage at it Is not all this because though men are contented with the name of a Saint yet they cannot endure the practical power of it So that we may say the real ungodliness of such who are in the Church is the cause of all the evil that comes in the Church Thou blamest this and that way of Government thou sayest Such or such a thing is the cause of all our evil No it 's the love to mens lust men would be of the Church and yet live the life of beasts and Devils And it is for this general impiety that even Heaven and Earth may be astonished Thou cavillest How can this or that Practice or Order be proved Jure Divino But where canst thou prove thy oaths thy lusts thy drunkennesse thy contempt of Godlinesse to be Jure Divino 2. Real Saintship is so acceptable unto God in his Church that let men have 〈…〉 eminent places and esteem therein yet if they walk contrary to this Rule of sanctity and that obstinately Christ hath commanded such to be cast out as utterly unfit to be of such a Society The incestuous person in this Church of Corinth is thought by Chrysostome to be a man of chiefest place and note amongst them yet for all that till he repent and humble himself they are commanded to cast him out from amongst them As the Apostle to this Church saith What communion is there between light and darknesse Christ and Belial The Pythagoreans were so strict about the manners of those who were in their sect that as Origen against Celsus relates when any of their society had fallen into a foul sin they did cast him out of their company and commanded a Coffin to be placed by him as being a dead man But the Lord Christ hath commanded That such who live in the Church obstinately against the manners of a Saint should be thrown out from his people and so delivered up to Satan as being more properly of him and his way But because more may in time be said of the nature of this Church-Saintship I passe it by for the present concluding with a severe Reproof even like thunder and lightning against all such who deride at sanctity and purity Are there not too many sonnes of Belial who make a scoff at such glorious names of a Saint of a Christian of a Brother of a Believer Wherein canst thou demonstrate thy self to be of the Devil more than in this one thing Thy heart rageth thy tongue foameth at sanctity and purity What is this but to blaspheme the Scripture yea God and Christ himself Why do not such cast off their Christianity and live with Pagans and Heathens SERM. XXI Wherefore 't is a Christians Duty to joyn himself to Church-society And in what cases he may be excused What are the false Grounds why some neglect this Duty The Soul of the poorest Saint is to be regarded as well as of the richest 2 COR. 1. 1. With all the Saints that are in all Achaia IT is now full time to conclude this Text. There remain two things more which deserve some consideration The first is occasioned by Calvin's Question upon the place How is it saith he that he distinguished Saints from the Church Did not these Saints imbody themselves that lived in the Province of Achais Was it lawfull for them to live dispersed and single lives not entring into Churchcommunnion To which he answers That the times might be then so turbulent and persecution so hot that they could not gather into a Church nor have any such publick meetings Now this Interpretation is not necessary For the Apostle writing to the Church at Ephesus and Colosse yet doth not use that name but speaks in the general To the Saints and faithfull Brethren when yet without question they were in a Church-state there Yea in his Epistle to the Romans he makes no mention of them as a Church but styleth them Saints which puts Salmeron upon his guesses Why he doth not give the name of a Church to them As also Why he doth not salute Peter their supposed Bishop Neither may we think that when James and Peter inscribe their Epistles to the Believers scattered in several Regions but that they might have occasionally their publick meetings to worship God in Yet though this Exposition be not necessary we may well receive Calvins conjecture as probable For there have been times when the Saints have been forced to hide themselves in Dens and Caves not having opportunity to meet together though even that was an heavy burden and trouble to them This being granted we may observe That although it be a Duty for Saints to joyne themselves in a Church-way yet there may sometimes fall out such just reasons that may excuse them Indeed voluntarily to keep off from the Assemblies and to think a private worshipping of God is enough and that he requireth no more is both against Scripture-command and the example of primitive Christians but when there is some unavoidable necessity than there is a lawfull excuse That it is a duty for Saints to joyn themselves in a Church-way may be made evident from these Grounds briefly First From the name Church ordinarily given to ●olievers Now a Church is a Society or Company met together and therefore it is not lawfull for thee to live alone or be a Minister of Sacraments and all things to thy self Even as Aristotle said of him that would live alone not joyning
himself to any humane Society he must be aut Deus aut Bestia It is applicable here he must be made even like God that needeth no growth of grace yea that is above all duty or homage to God or else a very beast one that hath no sense or feeling about a God and his Worship The syonymous names also to a Church doth evidence this They are called Christs body now it 's necessary for the members of the body to be joyned together else there cannot be that mutual help and furthering of one another They are also called an House and a spiritual Building wherein they are to be as living stones and such must be close and well compacted together Secondly From the communion of Saints which is a duty so often prescribed in Scripture such as to watch over one another to provoke one another to comfort and rebuke if need be Now how can this be if Saints be dispersed from each other Thirdly From the Officers and Ordinances which Christ hath commanded that do necessarily inferre Church-Assemblies For Pastors and Teachers are appointed to preach the Word to be constant therein And how can that be if there be not publick meetings Fourthly The Sacraments likewise do not they seal not only a communion with Christ but also with one another So that it would be a sacrilegious violation of Christs command for a man to receive the Sacrament alone The Protestants do justly condemn those Private Masses in Popery as ridiculous and contrary to the Institution of that Sacrament Fifthly The examples of Christians who upon their conversion are recorded to joyn themselves to the Church and they continued together praying and breaking of bread Yea in the Old Testament we see still there was a constant publick meeting to worship God and David professeth his joy in those solemn meetings as also his resolutions To praise God in the great Congregation And certainly as by these solemn meetings God is more honoured therefore the glorified Saints in Heaven are said to be a Church Heb. 12. 23. so God hath promised to such meetings an higher degree of his presence He delights to be in the Assembly of his Saints So that these publick meetings are for our spiritual good as well as Gods glory Though this be so yet there may be some Cause that may justly excuse us As First Publick and violent persecutions as have been many times in Gods Church then they have not been suffered to have either publick or private meetings Heb. 12. The Apostle mentioneth such times when he speaks of some Of whom the world was not worthy of yet were not allowed a place in the world but were as so many beasts chased up and down living in dens and holes of Rocks Thus it was also once with David when banished out of Judea though this was a sad affliction and he doth in several Psalms bewail his exile from the Ordinances more than any temporal mercy whatsoever neither his countrey or outward accommodations do sit so upon his heart as that I cannot enjoy God in his Ordinances as I have done So then though they were not actually in any Church-communion yet because of their desire and wish they were to be as accounted of it Secondly It may so fall out that there be such a malice and poison in the hearts of those that do govern and rule in the Church that they will excommunicate and cast out those that are true believers from the Church and will not let them have any Church-society Now in such cases if the godly cannot obtain any publick Church-priviledge which yet they desire this will lie on those that cast them out Luke 6. 22. John 16. 2. Our Saviour tels the Disciples it shall be their portion They shall be cast out of the Synagogues separated from company even as they did a blind man healed confessing Christ whom yet Christ met and encouraged This then is no new thing Yea Bernard complained in his time Heu Domine qui sunt in Ecclesiâ primi sunt in persecutione primi Thirdly If there be such a general and universal pollution that a Christian at least for the present knoweth not what Church to joyn to where he can have communion without partaking of gross Idolatry It 's a Rule avouched in the Canon-Law Causa non separatio facit Shisma Those that would not bow their knee to Baal in Elijah's time were not Schismaticks for there was a just cause to refuse such Idolatry if then it be truly with a man as it was in supposition with Elijah that he is left alone Idolatry hath filled the whole Church visibly in such a case though that be hardly to be seen he is to abstain from Church-societies till God make way for it For then it is as if a Christian should by some accident be cast upon a Countrey of Infidels and Pagans as some Christians have been there cannot be had any Church-society at all Lastly The Church of God in the primitive times when many Heathens and Infidels were converted had this custome which I find commended by most and that was before the Church would receive such converted Heathens into an actual Communion with the Church they took time to instruct them and to try whether they were fit for that Sacrament or no and when they were prepared then they received them These were called Catechumenoi and Competentes They were truly members of the Church as the Protestants maintain against Bellarmine only they had not as yet the actual admission into it This custom in Antiquity of admitting none to Baptisme but such as were instructed doth hold by proportion for the Lords Supper likewise Seeing now that all are baptized in their Infancy and whether Parents have done their duties or that they have sufficient knowledge to come to a Sacrament may justly be questioned when we see so much gross ignorance in the Christian Religion abounding every where Therefore in Antiquity there was Ecclesiastical Confirmation which was to make search and trial about the knowledge and sufficiency of such who had been baptized and if found duly qualified then they were confirmed Such care did they use in Antiquity about those that were admitted to Church-society insomuch that Casaubon a man of famous learning saith It had been well in the Church of God if men had laid aside many unnecessary disputes and endeavoured to bring in that holy and godly order the primitive Church had especially about the Lords Supper And Calvin speaking of this custom of Confirmation before it was so horribly depraved by after ages and made a Sacrament wisheth it were brought into the Church of God again as that which would make parents more diligent who now think the institution of their children doth not belong to them neither would there be such ignorance and rudeness in people as now thereis Insti● lib. 4. c. 19. Sect. 13. In these cases a Saint without Church-communion may be excused But then
useth in his Church not in respect of the Lordship and Dominion it self Christ shall never cease to be the King and Lord of his people only that manner of Government which now Christ exerciseth shall cease all Ordinances and administrations the Ministry and Sacraments yea all Magistracy and Civil Power that God might be all in all fot then we shall not mediately by Christ approach unto God as we do here but immediately yet so as all glory and honour will redound to Christ Thirdly Christ was thus a Lord in the state of his humiliation even in his very Infancy as well as after his exaltation and resurrection And here again the Socinians blaspheme denying That Christ was thus a Lord till his resurrection But although indeed the Scripture doth often attribute this glory and great name to him after his sufferings and upon his resurrection yet that is not because he was not so before but partly because then there was a glorious manifestation of his Dominion The Sunne did not appear so admirable in his eclipse Christ in the state of his humiliation did not so fully and palpably discover this his greatness yet for all that he was endowed with it and Christ doth acknowledg himself to have a Kingdom to Pilate even before his sufferings Yea at his birth the Wisemen came to worship him as Lord and King and when he rode in triumph into Jerusalem that Prophecy was fulfilled Behold thy King cometh to thee And certainly if then he was a Saviour and the Messias he must needs be also Lord and King Yea in the greatest expressions of his humane weaknesses as in his birth and death there was also powerfull demonstrations of his Divine Majesty Neither is Vorstius his Objection of any value That because Christ in his Infancy had not that wisdom required to govern which afterwards he did grow up into therefore he could not be Lord For in Christ while an Infant were hidden the treasures of all wisdom though these were not actually to be put forth but when there was an occasion to do so There was no defect in Christ to be Head of his Church while a child because even then he could put forth whatsoever was required at that time to govern the Church with And indeed to argue that he was not Lordor King because he did not actually put forth himself in that way is absurd for kingly or lordly actions did not make him to be a King or Lord but because he was Lord and King therefore he did as he pleased put forth such actions Certainly the Apostle cals him the Lord of glory even while they crucified him 1 Cor. 2. 8. And the Socinians themselves acknowledge him upon his ascension to be Lord of glory when yet the greatest instance of his lordly power is still to be accomplished which is the judging of all mankind at that dreadfull Day of Judgment Christ then was always Lord both in his state of humiliation and also of his exaltation Fourthly This lordly power which Christ hath extends to all things in the world he is Lord over the whole world He is the universal Monarch for God hath given him all the kingdoms of the world Rev. 11. 15. The kingdoms of this world are there said to become the Lords and of his Christ Yea in some sense this great Dominion is given to every Saint Revel 2. 26. To have power over all Nations even as he hath received of the Father Hence it is said John 5. 22. That the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne not that the Father hath wholly abdicated himself from the government of the world as the Socinians say but because Christ as Mediator is subordinate unto him in this administration Christ therefore hath an universal power over the whole world And whereas learned men say One man cannot be universal Governour over the whole world much lesse over the Church because no man can have those qualifications fit for to discharge that Government yet in Christ this doth not hold because he is God as well as man but this Dominion of Christ in respect of his Church is of another nature than that of the world for he rules the world with a rod of iron breaking every thing to pieces that shall prejudice his Church So that this power over them is wholly coactive as they do not willingly own or submit to him as a Lord so he doth by his omnipotent power keep them under and makes them servants and vassals for his work and to bring about such glorious ends which they never intended or shall have any benefit by as those that built Noah's Ark were not preserved in it But to his Church there he holdeth out a Scepter of grace For as they do willingly own him as their King submitting to his order and laws so he taketh special care over them and they may more safely lay themselves down under his protection than under the greatest Potentate in the world More might be said Doctrinally about this Dominion of Christ but let us consider what comfortable and usefull improvement is to be made of it And 1. Is Christ thus a Lord and that above all Lords Then what ground is here for our faith under all discouragements and affections How little doest thou posfess thy heart with this Lord of glory Doest thou doubt about the pardon of sinne conquering of corruptions preservation under temptations Is not all this because thou doest not remember Christ is Lord of Lords Will not he bear thee up Doth he want either knowledge or power Especially this should encourage us in any work for him Thou fearest the frowns of man the oppositions of man thou doubtest thy cause will sink and is not all this because thou lookest upon earthly power as greater than Christs power Was ever any temporal lord able to do such things as the Lord Christ Never than saint or be discouraged under his work Use 2. If he be our Lord then here is ground for duty as well as for comfort Joh. 13. 13. Ye call me Master and Lord ye do well saith Christ but from that consideration he puts them upon duty And certainly i● Christ be our Lord where then is our honour our obedience to him May not he impose what duties injoyn the Church what Laws and order to walk by he pleaseth Shall we be our own lords Our tongues our hearts are not our own but our Lords Take heed of being in the number of those who shall deny the Lord that bought them 2 Pet. 2. 1. for such as do so bring upon themselves swift destruction if he be not thy Lord in grace and favour he will be thy Lord in wrath and in thy confusion They that said Psal 12. 4. Who is Lord over us found that God would be above them SERM. XXIX Of the Duty of Thankefulness Blessing and Praising God for all his Mercies 2 COR. 1. 3. Blessed be God even the
observable in the Corinthians repentance that they repair and set up that good and holy order which was collapsed amongst them And therefore as Paul said to the Colossians Chap. 2. 5. He did rejoyce to behold their order So might he here In his former Epistle he severely taxeth them for want of Church-Discipline that they neglected good order there was a scandalous sinner suffered amongst them and they did not mourn and humble themselves because of it they did not cast him out and free the Church from that contagion therefore with many arguments he presseth them to gather together and to execute Church-Discipline to cast out this wicked person from amongst them 2 Corinth 5. which accordingly they did or were about to do yea they seem to fall into too much austerity from their laxe indulgence and connivence at sinne to too much severity against a penitent humbled sinner as appeareth 2 Cor. 2. where the Apostle exhorts them To confirm their love to the incestuous person now deeply sensible of his sinne lest he be swallowed up with overmuch sorrow When therefore Paul saw that those who had such disorders in their Church no zeal against sinners no endeavours to purge out the old leaven to be so greatly changed that they are hardly perswaded to moderate their zeal this may well provoke him to say His hope was stedfast of them For if they would have been remisse and negligent in any thing it would have been about Church-order For we see sound Doctrine is sooner received into any Church than holy Discipline There were but few Kings among the Jewes that did endeavour a Reformation of the disorder which was about Ordinances and it is noted as a peculiar work of God upon those mens hearts who were ready thereunto as for the other they mocked and derided at such a pious endeavour 2 Chron. 30. 10 11 12. There was the hand of God upon some in a special manner to induce them thereunto The Church of Ephesus Revel 2. 2. is commended Because she could not bear those that were evil It argueth the strength of the stomack to exonerate it self of burdensome humours So that by this we see That the hopes of those who are faithfull Guides in the Church are greatly quenched concerning such who are refractory and adversaries to that holy order which would deliver the Congregation from the ignorance and prophanenesse abiding there The very Heathens will rise up in judgement against them who would admit no prophane sinner to their Heathenish Rites witnesse that known acclamation Procul ô procul este prophani The Priest also about to sacrifice asked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who was there And answer was retuened 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Good and honest men Origen also justifying the Christian Discipline that did shut out from their communion prophane persons instanceth in the Sect of Pythagoreans who when any of their company had fallen into grosse sinnes they ejected him and sent a Coffin to him made for that purpose signifying thereby that he was no better than a dead corpse Yea the Socinians though blaspheming the Deity of Christ will condemn such carnal Gospellers For this is one argument they use against the Evangelical Reformed Churches that there is not such holy order against prophane and impenitent sinners as ought to be Yea some of them go so farre as to say That that is not a Church which hath not Discipline If then Heathens and damnable Hereticks have been zealous for purity about their religious Rites how hopelesse are they who had rather with the Gadarens have Christ go out of their Countrey then be deprived of their swinish lusts Thirdly Lastly Pauls hope was therefore stedfast concerning the Corinthians Because of that which followeth in the Text they did communicate with Paul in a patient suffering for Christ and therefore being sufferers with Christ they should also reign with him Christs friends are tried in the time of adversity It 's an hopefull sign of an honest and sincere heart when thou canst cleave to Christ and confesse his Name in the midst of all persecutions Then Christ saith Now I know thou lovest me because thou hast not withholden thy dearest comforts for my sake When under persecutions for Christs name thou canst rejoyce and not as Bonaventure expresseth it be like the Cart-wheel which while it beareth its burden doth sometimes make an harsh and unpleasant noise Christ hath both his Summer and his Winter for his Church and therefore this Garden Habet Lilia sua rosas suas Her Lilies in time of peace and her Roses in time of persecution Now those that love Christ more than father or mother or life it self and then as it followeth Matth. 10. 37 38. take up his crosse for this can never be done without the former these do give great hopes of the truth of grace in them Now the ground of this encouragement to a godly Minister is the state of grace here and of glory hereafter For his flock is both the end of his work and the end of him that worketh It is both finis operis and operantis As then Christ whose death was for the salvation of believers is said to see the travail of his soul and to be satisfied So it is with every true Pastor What a joyfull thing would it be to have good hopes of the work of grace in every one that belongeth to his charge So that thy ignorance dissolutenesse and such damnable wayes are the grief and trouble the thorns in the sides of those who are to give an account for thee Oh let not the contrary be true that such is the ungodlinesse the prophanenesse of thy life that our fear of thee our grief about thee is continual SERM. LVII Of our partaking with others in their Suffering for Christ and how this is a way to interest our selves in the Joy and Glory which such Sufferers enjoy 2 COR. 1. 7. Knowing that as you are partakers of the sufferings so shall ye be also of the consolation IN these words we have a Declaration or Specification wherein or wherefore the hope of the Apostle was thus stedfast concerning them it is because they did not wholly cast off Paul and contemn him for his afflictions as the false Apostles endeavoured The Apostles hope was stedfast as you heard not like the hope that we sometimes have which is mutable and uncertain For how many are there with Pharaoh and Abab under some judgements of God or under some exquisite agonies of the soul which complain of their sinnes cry out of their impieties So that we have some buddings of hope concerning them till at last they dash all and disappoint all expectation by their Apostasie but such is not the Apostles hope concerning these he hath a surer foundation and therefore he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Knowing not guessing or opinionating by slight conjectures but knowing It should according to the rule of Grammar be 〈◊〉
most beastly men Thus it is said of Herod though a King who had command over John Baptists life as the event shewed yet he feared John because he was a just man Mark 6. 20. As the lustre of the Sunne-beams do dazle the Owls and the Bats eyes Thus doth the lively expression of holiness even amaze the most profligate sinners neither is this the lesse true though wicked men rage blaspheme and raise all manner of calumnies against such who walk uprightly for in the midst of this madness their conscience is still awed and convinced So that this doth discover the excellency of a godly life that it breedeth a reverential awe it maketh the consciences of men secretly to own such and to wish that they were as such and that their latter end might be like theirs Secondly Although a godly life be thus necessary in every Christian and especially in a Minister yet the efficacy of the Ministry and sacramental administrations doth not depend upon the holy life of a Minister no more than the Papists say it doth upon a Ministers intention This was a Donatistical errour of old so much opposed by Austin that the wickedness of a Ministers life did frustrate the work of the Sacraments Certainly Christs promise is made to the Office and to the right administration of the Ordinances neither can the evil life of the Minister make void Gods promise of presence to his own Ordinances where people come in a prepared and holy manner This our Saviour seemeth fully to confirm Mat. 23. 23. where he directed his hearers To hear the Pharisees and Scribes because sitting in Moses his chair and to observe what those teachers should bid them observe and do but saith he do not after their works for they say and do not This Text doth confute two sorts of men first Those of the Romane party who make use of this against the Protestants as if it were their sinne to depart from their Bishops and Pastors though it be granted they superadded many superstitious and corrupt doctrines which we would easily yeeld unto if as the Pharisees sate in Moses his chair so they did in Christs chair For this phrase denoteth two things 1. A lawfull Call and Office 2. True and sound Doctrine our Saviour did not mean they were to do every thing the Pharisees said For at another time he bid them Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees which was their doctrine Mat. 16. 6. But his universal expression is to be limited to the subject matter while they did teach what Moses commanded But we deny that the Roman Bishops have Christs chair either in respect of their Office or their doctrine Again the second errour which this Text doth confute is the extremity of those who because of some corruption in the Ministers do wholly cry down the Ministry it self or out of their opposition to what is bad will not receive that which is wholsome and good Our Saviour being to reprove the Pharisees in a most sharp way as hypocrites and blind guides knowing how apt people are to runne from one extremity to another doth therefore advise them that so farre as they keep to Moses his doctrine so farre they are to be attended unto though by their ill lives they destroy all Thus hungry men will eat the meat provided for them at the feast not considering whether the Masters of the feast do eat or no Yea though they do not yet they will not forbear or as Chrysostom Men that dig for gold will gladly take their fulness of that although the ground that yeeldeth it be barren and unfruitfull in respect of grass and flowers But I cannot say all that is to be said on this point Therefore In the third place Though the efficacy of Ordinences dependeth not upon the godlinesse of him that doth administer yet all such dispensers can have no comfort from God neither may they expect acceptance from him while they live in their iniquities Mat. 7. 22. Many will say to me in that day Lord Lord have we not prophesied in thy Name and in thy Name cast out Devils Yet you read of that terrible denunciation towards them Depart from me I know ye not It is a very sad thing to consider how much Christians will rest on titles and names vpon Ordinances and external duties thinking these will carry them to Heaven though otherwise full of impiety The Apostle James argueth against this position that faith without a holy conversation will save as if it were a Doctrine plausibly received Certainly in Austin's time it was so universally entertained that a right faith would save though separated from a godly life that he doth warily though sincerely sit himself against it As it is thus with Christians so also with Ministers and Officers of the Church how apt are they to be confident and to be pussed up because if they have a true Call Church-government and Order according to Christs Institution not so diligently attending to the strict and holy practice of godliness as they ought to do The Apostle speaketh notably to this point 1 Cor. 5. 6 7. where he taxeth them for their boasting in many Church-priviledges when impiety was not censured amongst them Your glorifying is not good They gloried in their teachers they magnified their abilities and gifts but saith the Apostle This is not good All this is vanity as long as wicked men are suffered amongst you So that you see neither parts or gifts nor divine Institutions and Officers in the Church of God without godly and holy lives are matter of any true and solid comfort Therefore we cannot passe by that serious and holy observation which Musculus hath upon this passage of Paul's encouraging himself not from his Apostolical office not from his miraculous and extraordinary gifts but his sincere conversation The Catholical corruption of the Church came in when this pestilence had infected the Officers of the Church that they did not think it so much material how they had their conversation in the world so that they kept faithfull to the Roman Sea And would to God as he goeth on these vanities did not prevail in those Churches which are freed from Antichristianism and this poisonous root saith he is not a little watered of those who cannot speak of the dispensation of the mysteries of God unlesse they often inculcate that it is not so material how the Minister liveth so that Christs Institutions are exactly observed Thus he adding more also to this point This is enough to shew That the Reformed Churches are not to rest upon their Reformed Doctrine Reformed Discipline unless also the lives of all in their respective places be commensurated to the rule of God In the fourth place When we speak of a convincing holy life that may be understood two wayes either 1. Potentially such as is apt to convince and of its own nature tendeth thereunto Or 2. Actually and eventually which doth so
People 1 COR. 1. 14. That we are your rejoycing as ye also are ours THis is the Second particular in the Text and doth contain the Specification wherein this acknowledgment of the Corinthians did consist viz. That he was their Rejoycing However some false teachers had endeavoured to take off their affections from him yet they had acknowledged him to be their Father and Master by whom they were faithfully instructed in the wayes of Godliness and for this they did blesse God and rejoyce that they had such a Teacher which was so great a mercy that few did enjoy the like Now the Apostle addeth That this rejoycing was mutual he did as well rejoyce in such apt and obedient Schollars Chrysostome observeth this Addition to be a great Expression of Pauls Modesty and Humility for that the Corinthians should glory and rejoyce in such an eminent Teacher as Paul was It is no wonder but that he should rejoyce in them who were so inconstant and so uncertain in their affections to him yea who were to be blamed so much in Doctrinalls and practicalls This may make us admire But sayes Chrysostome This Paul doth for humility sake that he might not procure envy us if he thought two arrogantly of himself therefore he assumeth them into a co-partnership with his glory and rejoycing The Original word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 lieth already bear opened There is nothing difficult in the words onely when Paul and the Corinthians are thus said to be one anothers rejoycing we are to understand that the Act is here put for the Object of it as often in the Scripture Thus rejoycing is put for the Object Matter and Cause of our rejoycing and if you say We are to rejoyce in God onely in the Lord not in men that is true We are to rejoyce in God onely as the Author of all our good yet we may in men as they are instruments used by God to communicate his benefits to us Thus a people may rejoyce in a faithfull Minister not principally and originally but secondarily as the Instrument which God hath made very successfull to their souls The Observation then is That it is a most happy and blessed thing when Minister and people can upon just and holy grounds rejoyce mutually in each other When the people can bless God for the Ministerial gifts and graces bestowed upon their Pastor and he again can praise God that he hath a willing teachable and obedient people ready to receive the Ordinances of Christ in the power and purity of them This is a rare priviledg Oh there are but few Churches of which the Ministers may say as Paul to the Colossians Chap. 2. That he doth rejoyce in beholding their order and faith in Christ To meet with a people that are neither ignorant heretical nor prophane but willing to walk according to Christs rule and his order this is to see heaven upon earth The Apostle findeth such matter of joy not onely in those Corinthians but in many other Churches For as he had more Labours more Oppositions more Persecutions than others so also God gave him more joy and comefort in beholding the spiritual successe of his Labours for this was the onely comefort of his spiritual heart to see men imbrace Christ and to live worthy of the Gospel it was not his own Glory Honor and greatness that he aymed at which is an excellent example to us Ministers of the Gospel that our Matter of joy should not be any earthly riches or wealth any great fame or worldly esteem but that we are to win people to Christ alone not our selves Thus the Apostle calleth the Philipians his joy and crown Phil. 4. 1. and 1 Thes 2. 19 20. speaking of his ardent affections to see their face by way of interrogation the more emphatically to express himself he saith What is our hope or joy or crown of rejoycing Are not even ye And then addeth positively the same thing for or rather surely certainly ye are our rejoycing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not a note of reasoning for then the Apostle would prove Idem for Idem as they say but of Affirmation and asseveration Ye are our crown of rejoycing Grotius saith It is an allusion to Kings who on their solemn festival dayes have not an ordinary but extraordinary Crown to wear for the greater pomp and glory Such extraordinary honor would the Thessalonians be to Christ at the great day But let us consider this in the general and then amplifie it respectively to Minister and people And First The Relation of Pastor and people is by divine Institution Christ himself hath appointed the Office it self and the application of it to this or that man through the desire of the Church so that as Churches are of Gods gathering They are his creature in a more special manner than the world is so likewise are the Officers and spiritual Guides to teach them 1 Cor. 12. 28. God hath set in his Church Apostles and Teachers Thus Act 20. 28. The Holy Ghost is said to set them Overseers over their flock ●eeing therefore that this relation is built on a Divine Foundation no wonder if managed according to Divine Rules that it is the cause of exceeding great joy These Relations are respectively for supernatural and spiritual ends and effects The Minister is for illumination Conversion Edification for the destroying of the power and Kingdome of Satan as also the establishing and promoting the Kingdome of grace in the hearts of the people The people also they are to be matter of encouragement to him they are to be helpfull and assistant in their way that Godliness may flourish that the ends of the Ministry may not be frustrated The Apostle sometimes taketh notice of the great usefulness and serviceableness even of some women in that kinde For though Ministers be compared to Light to the Sun and Starrs yet in this there is a difference The Starrs give Light and Influence into these sublunary things but receive no benefit at all from them again but the Ministers of the Church even though as eminent as Paul yet they acknowledg the manifold benefits and that in a spiritual way which they may receive from their people again now then how happy is it when there is a reciprocal and circular helping of each other when spiritual guides do convert edifie and quicken up their people and again the people do assist help and quicken up their Officers certainly as spiritual delights are greater than any bodily ones because the objects are more excellent and usefull so should this mutual rejoycing in our spiritual joy surpass all the delight that we take in our natural and civil relation neither the delight of a Wife in her Husband or of a Childe in his Father should be equal to the joy of a people in Faithfull Officers And so è contra the Reason is evident because the effects of this Relation are spiritual heavenly and
complain of such a dull and liveless Ministry yet how little do people think that many times they give the cause so that its Gods punishment upon them in that very thing yea though Ministers be never so faithfull and godly yet as Calvin observeth they cannot go on in their Ministerial work with that vigor and alacrity they ought to do when their hearts are bound up with sorrow and discouragements about their people All cannot attain to Pauls excellency who could have enlarged bowells to that people who had streightened ones towards him SERM. CVII Of the Necessity of a constant Ministry not only for the constituting but to an establishing the Church 2 COR. 1. 15. That you might have a second benefit IN these words we have the End of Pauls purpose to come to them It was wholly spiritual It was not for any advantage any earthly respects but but wholly for their good to encrease and confirm their graces The End is expressed in these words That ye might have a second benefit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some as Chrysostome interpret for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 yea their are some who would have that to be the word in the Original It is no doubt but that much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or joy did follow upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All spiritual effects and heavenly exercises are apt to breed much joy Hence none have true joy but those that are godly and so by consequence none are blessed but they for Joy is a great ingredient to Happiness Hence Aristotle maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to come of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 exceedingly to rejoyce yet is more consonant to other places of Scripture to read it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thus Rom. 1. 11. He desired to see them that he might impart to them some spiritual benefit The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is chiefly used in the New Testament for the free grace of God towards us in reference to our Eternal Happiness so that the very name ought to be sweet and precious to such who labour under the sense of their unworthiness and see no power or works of their own any wayes able to save them It is of grace therefore that doth not onely exclude merit but supposeth thee unworthy for such mercies of thy own self It is sometimes in Scripture applyed to such Almes as were freely given for the use of distressed Churches 2 Cor. 8. which is therefore called Grace partly because it is of Gods special goodness to give us such a free and liberal Disposition as the first Verse in that Chapter implyeth I do you to wit saith Paul of the grace of God bestowed on the Churches of Macedonia and that was to be liberal to the other afflicted Saints and partly because it cometh from the bountifull disposition of a man to such as are in want In this Text it is to be applyed to spiritual bounty that is to be willing and ready in all serviceableness to promote the spirituall good of others for there are spiritual almes as well as temporal which lieth in reproof in Admonition and frequent Exhortation to what is good Now this Grace or Benefit is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which some translate iterated and repeated though it be more than the Second or third time Chrysostome referreth it to his Epistles and his presence for by both these he communicated spiritual benefit unto them But it is most probably and generally referred to his first and second coming whether Paul did come a third time to those Corinthians is disputed by Commentators because of some passages in the 12 and 13 Chapters of this Epistle of which in its time It is enough that by the first grace or benefit we mean the first work upon them by Pauls Ministry when they were converted from their Paganism and planted a Church of Christ And the second benefit was to confirm them in the same Faith and also to quicken them up unto further degrees of Holiness and this was the second Benefit Paul desired to impart unto them For it appeareth that though this Church of Corinth was a garden planted by Paul yet many weeds and some poysonous ones began to grow up amongst them There were both in Doctrine and Manners many things amiss which needed Pauls presence to reforme Observe That it is not enough to be a Church planted and gathered from out of the world at first but there needeth a constant and dayly Ministry to be tilling and dressing of it That Garden which God planted and put Adam into yet was to be dayly dressed and so it is still with the best Churches even those that are of the Apostolical Plantation yet needed the Apostles care and diligent visitations which was one main cause of writing those several Epistles to several Churches They were not written to convert them or make them Churches but to admonish instruct or confirm and comfort as occasion did require and upon this ground it is that though the office of Apostles and Prophets as also the gift of miracles are now ceased because the Church is now planted yet the office of Pastors and the Ordinances Christ hath instituted are perpetual and must be continued to the end of the world So that the opinion of the Socininians about the Ministry as it were only a thing of order and not of Divine Institution is grosly repugnant to Gods Word as also their Doctrine about Baptism That it was but a temporary Ceremony instituted for the beginning of the Church is full of falshood Churches though constituted yet must be dayly watered neither is it enough for a people once to be brought home to the Faith but they need a second and a third yea a continual benefit For though the Apostle haply did come but the second time to these Corinthians yet he appointed Officers in an ordinary residence amongst them as wel as in other Churches which were continually to watch over them The particulars wherein the Ministry is necessary for perfecting work as well as foundation work for progress as well as ingress for consummation as well as imitation are these First To inform against those Errors which false Teachers do easily insinuate into the hearts of people No sooner hath God sowed his field with precious wheat but the envious one commeth and soweth his tares As the April showers that make grass and flowers to come cause also weeds to grow Thus at the same time God is building the Church the Devil and his instruments are raising their Babel No sooner have the Ministers of God with Isaac digged up Wells but the Philistines have been ready to throw their earth and mud therein If then Errors and damnable Heresies may so quickly infect a Church formerly pure no wonder if there be such necessity of Pastors and Guides who are to lead the people into all truth by their Ministry as the spirit of
go rather than peace and quietness of a good conscience A Second Principle of the flesh which maketh men inconstant is An inordinate desire of Greatness and Honour above others They that walk by this must be black and white now say and than deny according as those are affected from whom they exspect Advancement This secret Ambition is accompanyed with a vehement heat and drought of the soul making a man restless till their desires be accomplished Neither may we think the Heathens onely to be blamed for these proud affectations We see even the Apostles twice contending about Primacy and Superiority which is the greater wonder if we consider the meanness of their own condition they were in as also of Christ their Master and yet more wonder it is if we remember how frequently our Saviour did inform them of Persecutions and saddest Calamities for his sake We read likewise of Diotrephes 3 John 9. who loved to have the preheminence and would not own no not the Apostle John himself Now those that walk by such Principles of pride and ambition they must needs be like a materia prima ready to receive any form They flatter they dissemble they commend they dispraise and thus debased they are that afterwards they may be exalted Now nothing is more odious and abominable to a sincere man than such mutability and uncertainty Hence Christians of old were called the just and holdfast men It was not thus with John Baptist of whom saith our Saviour What went ye out to see a read shaken with the winde No he did faithfully and constantly discharge his duty without any fear of men But how many may we go out to see as reeds shaken with every winde And as the reed must grow in some mire so must such mutable persons have some carnal respect to encourage them Those that climbe up to high places are apt to have their heads grow giddy and to be unsteadfast so that when men lay this as a foundation I will have Preferment I will have Honor and greatness though it damn me this man walketh upon slippery ice and no wonder if he often fall 3. Another carnal Principle which maketh Inconstancy in all our wayes is Pleasing of men When a man maketh this his Rule he must change often and be as a shadow which moveth whoily according to the motion of the body stoopeth when that stoopeth and is upright when that is upright The Apostle doth notably disclaim such a sinfull distemper saying Galat. 1. 10. If I should please men I could not be the servant of Christ Man is a mutable creature subject to different apprehensions to different affections loving one thing one day and hating it at another Then must they also who would please men be prepared for all formes and postures insomuch that a man cannot live in greater bondage and slavery tan to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a peoples ape or to study the humouring of those we have to deal with If thou art guilty of this man-pleasing thou art never able to do thy duty thou canst not reprove and punish sin thou canst not be just and righteous in thy place Our Saviour said to his Disciples How can you belive which receive glory of one another John 5. 44. and do not seek the glory of God only Certainly till we study to please God alone in our lives and aim at his glory who is alwayes the same we must be unstable as water and be a lyar to every man We read of some who did believe in Christ yet dared not to make Profession thereof for fear of the Jews Here was a desire to please men rather than God But can the good word and favour of men deliver thee from the wrath of God in thy conscience and eternal torments hereafter When Judas pleased the Chief Priests in betraying of Christ could they comfort him in the Agonies of his conscience yea when he bewailed his sin They say What is that to us look thou to that Mat. 17. 4. Such miserable tormentors instead of comforters will all those men be whom thou hast pleased to displease God 5. Time-serving is a Principle which whosoever walketh by must be as a weather-Cock that is turned with every winde The people of Israel are remarkeable for this Inconstancy under wicked and Idolatrous Kings then they erected Altars they adorned Images and then immediately under Religious and Reforming Kings they would destroy the Idolls and deface the Images they had set up It is true all change and alteration in Religion is not to be blamed yea sometimes it is to be encouraged When Luther and Melancton gave over their former corrupt Doctrines and superstitious Practices the Papists condemned them for Turn-coats and Apostate persons when yet this change was necessary So that as they say in Philosophy there is alteratio corruptiva and perfectiva a destructive change and a perfective change thus it is also in Divinity and the Latter is absolutely commanded by God when Errors or Prophaneness have like a gangrene spread over the whole Church but of that in its time We are now speaking of that sinfull change whereby people accommodate themselves to the times they live in and therefore judg of truth judg of the holy things of God as Jeroboam did with subordination to State-Interests This is the great carnal Policy that the Wise-men of the world admire as if the true Doctrines of Christ were not alwayes the same as if a thing might be the worship of God one time and Idolatry at another as if the same thing might be the Doctrine of Christ at one time and Heresie at another as if that of Cusanus were true though otherwise not a very bad man That the Scripture is to be understood according to the present state and Affairs of the Church and therefore saith he We are not to wonder if at one time some Customes and Usages be exacted in a Church which at another time are to be decryed and refused But certainly the Scripture is a Rule of Faith and Manners in all Ages in all Changes and Revolutions Though Kingdomes and States may alter yet the Scriptures are the same still and what was once the Doctrine Worship and Order of Christ is still the same Lastly That all Particulars may be comprehended in one To live according to the Principles of the Flesh is To set up our selves as the Alpha and Omega to enjoy our selves and to use all things yea God himself in subordination thereunto Thus this love of a mans self even to the hatred of God is that which maketh us put on multiform shapes it is that which maketh us bend and bow and comply in all things For if we did love the Honour and glory of God more than our own selves as we ought to do then we should not attend to self-advantages but Gods glory and honor So that we may say This Self-love is the Beelzebub sin it
blessed for evermore And indeed he that hath the Titles of Jehovah the Properties of Jevovah that doth those works only which Jehovah can do he must needs be so the Son of God that also he is God himself And had not Christ been truly God it be hoved him to have denyed it when it was attributed to him But Phil. 2. He thought it no robbery to be equal with God Such was Christs Humility such was his love to his Fathers glory such was his care to instruct his Disciples in that which was necessary to Salvation that above all things he would have forewarned them not to have taken him for the true High God if he had not been so How solicitous was John Baptist that he might not be thought the Christ How passionately affected were Paul and Barnabas when the Heathens called them Gods and would have attributed divine worship to him Would not Christ have much more disclaimed these things had it not been his due belonging to him That he should be acknowledged the true God equal with the Father For though indeed at sometimes he saith The Father is greater than I and he maketh himself as sent from God to do his will yet then he speaks that in respect of his Office as Mediator and so he is the Servant of God appointed to do his will in reference to the Salvation of Mankinde 2. Hence he is not the son of God in those Respects which others are called so in the Scripture as First Some are called The sons of God in respect of creation because they had their being immediately from God Thus Adam is called the Son of God 2. Some are called the sons of God because of Regeneration and Adoption as all the godly are neither is thus Christ called the son of God Lastly some are called the sons of God because of their excellent Dignity and Priviledg in which sense the Angels are called the sons of God But Christ is called in such a sense the Son of God that it cannot be attributed to any but him and therefore sometimes is called the Onely son of God some imes the Onely begotten son of God And therefore none else may be called the Son of God in that respect he is 3. He is therefore called the son of God because begotten from Eternity of the Father He is not called a Son in a metaphorical but proper sense and that by Generation Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee Psal 27. which though applied in the New Testament Act. 13. 33. to Christs Resurrection when God raised him from the Grave yet that is to be understood in respect of Manifestation and Declaration only then he was powerfully manifested to be indeed the only begotten Son of God That this begetting of him was from Eternity appeareth Mich. 5. 2. Whose goings forth have been from of old from everlasting He is not then called the Son of God in the several senses the Socinians Assigne as because inaugrated to be a Prophet of his Church nor because of that miraculous Conception and Nativity nor because upon his Resurrection he was invested with Lordly Dignity and Dominion but because he was from all Eternity begotten of the Father As for that Passage in Luke 1. 3. where the Angel speaking of the overshadowing by the Holy Ghost addeth Therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God which hath prevailed with some though Orthodox so far as to make that miraculous birth a ground of his Sonship to God The best answer is That it is an Argument from the signe not from the cause because he had such a miraculous conception this did declare that he was the Son of God This must needs be so because he was called the Son of Man from that birth now he could not be called the son of man and the Son of God from the same fundamental respect It is necessary then to inform your selves in this fundamental Article that Christ is the Son of God and in what sense he is so For the Socinians acknowledg him a God but an appointed one a made and constituted one Therefore Smal●ius the Socinian inscribeth his Book de Divinitate Jesu Christi not Deitate he confesseth the Divinity of Christ but not the Deity Now they were called Divi amongst the Heathens who were made Gods after their death 4. When he is called the Son of God and that properly this doth necessarily imply that he was begotten of the Father And in this Consideration the humane thoughts of men would be much scandalized if they did not submit to Scripture How many Hereticks blasphemously have derided at this because we say God had a Son and that he is begotten of the Father But we must know there is a threefold Generation First Physical of man begetting a man and this is accomplished with manifold Imperfections 2. Metaphorical in which sense Philosophers do often speak of the Conceptus mentis that the minde doth degignere verbum which instance some learned Divines delight to use in the Illustration of this Mysterious point 3. There is an hyperphysical or supernatural Generation above the way and course of nature and in this sense the father is said to beget the son so that we are to remove all those Imperfections which adhere to humane Generation especially that of Separation and Multiplication For amongst men when the Father begets the Son there is a multiplication of a new Essence and then a Division or Separation of the Sons Essence from the Father so that although the Son hath the same specifical Essence with the Father yet not the same numerical Essence whereas in this supernatural Mystery there is no division or distinction of the Essence but of the Person 5. Because these Mysteries seem very difficult to flesh and blood therefore under all temptations we must adhere immoveably to the Word of God believing the testimony thereof and not attend to what humane Arguments suggest Thou must no more regard the Socinian Cavils than Hezekiah was to do the railing Language of Rabshaketh and we are the more solemnly ingaged hereunto by our Baptisme for that is a Dedication of us to the Name of the Father Son and Holy Ghost Though there is a Distinction in Order first the Father then the Son yet none in Dignity and therefore it s the name not the names That place also of John howsoever Socinians would wrest it stands like Mount Zion yea firmer than that 1 John 5. 7. There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one When a man taketh off his heart from the Scripture and beginneth to think How can the Infinite Majesty of God have a Son how can he have the same Essence and yet be a distinct Person whether did he beget this Son naturally or freely whether from Eternity or in time and if he
commit idolatry also SERM. CXLIV Of the holy Prudence that Ministerial Power is to be managed with 2 COR. 1. 23. That to spare you I came not as yet to Corinth THe next thing to be considered in this Text is the Matter of the Oath which is indeed a full answer to the calumny charged upon him vers 17. about his lightnesse and inconstancy in altering of his purpose concerning his coming to them In this he sheweth the true reason that there was no fault in him but the blame that was was to be laid at their doors they were not prepared and fitted for his coming therefore he saith To spare you I did not yet come to Corinth It was not then any mutability or carnal principles that moved him herein but a prudent and mercifull ordering of his coming to them for their spiritual good Should he have visited them according to his promise he would have come with a rod and not in the spirit of meeknesse as 1 Cor. 4. 21. and so his presence would have been very ungratefull and therefore he forbeareth a while to see whether his former Epistle might work a full humiliation and reformation amongst them being unwilling to proceed to further and more severe censures And although there were some only of the Corinthians who had thus sinned and were accordingly to be censured yet he saith you in the general because the matter did concern the whole Church The reason then given of delaying his coming is That he might spare them This denoteth the paternal authority and power that Paul had to admonish and censure obstinate offenders For it is an expression from a father as Mal. 3. 17. I will spare them as a father spareth his own sonne Thus it is often applied unto God who ruleth in the world as a Judge Jon. 4. 11. Should I not spare Ni●eveh And he is said Not to spare the Angels and the old world 2 Pet. 2. 4. So that you see the Apostle doth hereby declare that power which God hath given him but because he saith afterwards 2 Cor. 10. 8. that this authority is given for edification and not destruction which he repeateth 2 Cor. 13. 10. as being very memorable and considerable therefore he manageth this power with all wisdome and tendernesse that so he may attain his end of edification that in stead of converting he doth not more harden men in impiety as an indiscreet and unseasonable exercising of ministerial power may do But you will say This seemeth to be no good reason For if Paul had gone to Corinth he might have spared them howsoever Paul surely did not fear his passions would prevail over his judgement or his zeal devour his prudence That is true but yet if he had gone to Corinth and found them obstinate and unhumbled as he feared he should 2 Cor. 12. 21. then if he did not put forth the power God had given him to punish their disobedience his authority would have been contemned and withall the wicked would have been hardened more in their impiety and the godly who desired godly order in the Church would have been discouraged Therefore to prevent this necessary severity he doth in this Epistle as in the former admonish them and warn them so that if possible they might of themselves reforme and so prevent the exercise of his power amongst them For observe what he saith 2 Cor. 13. 2. I told you before and foretell you as if I were present the second time and being absent now I write to them which heretofore have sinned and to all other that if I come again I will not spare As then it is Gods goodnesse and patience to threaten us with hell and damnation that so we might prevent them Thus doth the Apostle imitate the patience of God herein threatning them with the exercise of Church-power upon them that being thereby awakened and repenting there may be no need of it From whence observe That the ministerial power which God giveth the Officers of his Church ought to be managed with much holy prudence and commiseration The end of their power is alwayes to be in their minde which is edification and so are accordingly to use means proportionably thereunto lest in stead of edification there be destruction That God hath given the Ministers of his Gospel an ecclesiastical or Church-power as also what the nature of it is the acts and exercise of it as also the objects to whom it extends I shall here take for granted there will be a more seasonable occasion to treat of these things in some ensuing passages of the Epistle I shall only at this time briefly speak to this particular manner of managing it which is specified in the Text and that is with holy prudence and pity with much long-suffering and meeknesse And First When we call it an holy prudence and moderation let us consider what is meant hereby And First We exclude carnal craft and worldly policy When men make use of Church-power and the Ordinances of Christ onely for carnal ends and to advance themselves and their party thereby It was farre from Paul to make use of any such prophane policy therefore he often proclaimeth the integrity of his heart and intentions that he was not in the number of those who did corrupt the word of God 2 Cor. 2. 17. Chap. 3. 2. he there renounceth the hidden things of dishonesty not walking in craftinesse but commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God So that there is a vast difference between godly prudence which studieth to use the choisest meanes and most fit for the spiritual good of others and a crafty politick way indulging men in their lusts that so they may obtain their corrupt intentions Our Saviour speaketh very notably when he saith Luke 16. 8. The children of this world are wiser in their generation than the children of light Though they be light yet they have not that subtil eye-sight in the things of the world but yet do farre surpasse the greatest Ahitophel in the world in spiritual things crafty and worldly wise men are like the owls that see best in the dark but when the Sunne shineth then their eyes are dazelled Thus such men in outward affairs in evil contrivements are very subtil but as dull as stocks and stones in any heavenly things Let not then any under this pretence of holy prudence in Church-power encourage himself in carnal and worldly craftinesse the Church of Rome is justly branded for this For in antiquity when any Church had excommunicated some for their prophanenesse and ill demeanours who appealing to the Church of Rome for redresse hereby to advance their power they would encourage such and maintain them against those Church-officers who had cast them out This carnal craft and ungodly policy is used by too many Officers in the Church that contemn Christs order that despise all wholsome means to true piety that thereby they may satisfie