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A61842 The indecency and unlawfulness of baptizing children in private, without necessity, and with the publick form seriously recommended to the consideration of both the clergy and laity of the Church of England : to which is added, a brief exhortation to the constant receiving of the Lords Supper. Strong, Martin, b. 1663 or 4. 1692 (1692) Wing S5995; ESTC R15237 25,798 32

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the Toleration is for Dissenters not for us We have still blessed be God the same Church the same Public Liturgy the same Articles Canons and Constitutions established by the Law of the Land by several Acts of Parliament which stand yet unrepealed And therefore our Obedience is still as due to those Laws as ever Nor can the Toleration with any shew of Modesty or Reason be thought to excuse us so long as we own our selves Members of the Church of England as of a good and an Orthodox Communion But suppose I were concern'd with a professed Dissenter yet I might justly answer 2. That all that any Toleration in the World does or can do is to excuse only from the Penalty not at all from the fault of Disobedience to the Laws and Orders of an Established Lawful Communion it gives a Liberty of Impunity 't is true whether justly or unjustly I will not now dispute but not of justification it takes away the civil Punishment but it can never take away the Sin of Non-conformity or Disobedience my reason for it is this because these are Sins forbidden by the plain Laws of God which no Laws of Man can alter or dispense with For every Orthodox and lawfully constituted Church has a full power from Christs own Institution to make Canons and Constitutions for its own Regulation for the security and preservation of its own Peace and good Order And this lays a sufficient Obligation on all Christians to obey those Laws tho there should be no Civil Authority to back and enforce them The Church considered as a Church is a distinct body and has a distinct Government inherent in it self without any regard had to the State And consequently all disobedience to the Lawful Commands of the Church is an Evil in it self Morally and intrinsecally sinful and therefore can never be altered by any Humane Dispensation or Toleration Hence we find the Primitive Christians decrying Schism and branding it with the most odious Characters before there were any Civil Laws in Defence of Christianity nay when all the Civil Laws were against it as well before the Empire became Christian and again in the intervals of Persecution as when Christianity was Established by a Law So the Donatists were accounted Schismaticks by the Primitive Christians as well under those temporal Princes that favoured as under those who persecuted them Arianism was condemned as well under Constantius and Valens who countenanced as under Constantine who opposed it so that tho a Toleration do take away Civil Penalties yet the Laws of God and of Scripture that require Vnity Communion and Compliance with an established Orthodox Church do stand still uncancell'd and in as much force as ever If any one doubt the truth of this Let him only read the ingenious Mr Norris his Charge of Schism continued and if he can fairly answer what that learned Author there urges in defence of this Assertion I promise him I will instantly give up the Cause and become his Proselite There is a passage in the learned Dr. Stillingfleets Sermon of the Mischief of Separation so apposite to our present Argument that I cannot forbear setting it down 'T is Page the 45th in these words Let us who continue in the Communion of our Church walk by the same Rule and mind the same things While we keep to one Rule all People know what it is to be of our Church if men set up their own Fancies above the Rule they charge it with Imperfection if they do not obey the Rule they make themselves wiser than those that made it It hath not been the Doctrine or Rules of our Church which have ever given advantage to the Enemies of it but the Indiscretion of some in going beyond them and the Inconstancy of others in not holding to them This being the Judgment and Opinion of so great a man and of so pacifick a Temper deserves a serious Consideration by all who wish well to the Church of England 4. The Baptizing Children in Private by the Public Form is contrary to every Ministers solemn Promises and Subscriptions For the 36th Canon of our Church Every Minister is required both at his receiving of Orders and at his Admission to any Benefice or Living to make this Promise and to subscribe it with his own hand in these very words viz. That he himself will use the Form prescribed in the book of Common Prayer both in Public Prayer and in the Administration of the Sacraments and none other And now I appeal to the sense of all the world whether that Minister who uses that Form of Public Baptism in Private Houses which is prescribed to be used in the Church does not break this Promise And whether he who does not in Private houses use the Form Prescribed for that purpose does not do the same Does such a Man use the Form prescribed by the Book of Common Prayer and none other as he promised and subscribed Perhaps it will be said that he uses the same words tho in a different Place But still I answer That this is not the Form prescribed by the Book of Common Prayer The Form prescribed is perfectly of Another Nature The Church has composed two Forms for Baptism of Infants the one for the Church the other for Private houses the one for ordinary and common cases the other for the extraordinary cases of sickness and necessity Now he that confounds these two Offices which the Church has made distinct and wholy omitting that Form which is designed for Private Vses that in Private which is commanded to be used in Public that Person does not use the Form prescribed by the Book of Common Prayer and none other but perfectly another than what is commanded If any one in the World can deny this assertion or without Tricks and Fallacies fairly justify this Practice from Breach of Promise I will never more trust my discursive Faculty so long as I live can any thing be more indisputably clear If to doubt in this case be not to seek Knots in a Bulrush I know not what is This Argument very nearly concerns us of the Clergy and we should all do well seriously to consider it and the rather because our own undue Compliances in this respect are made use of by the Laity as the greatest Argument for the Continuance of this Vnlawful Practice But if the most solemn Promises and repeated Subscriptions signify any thing we are all certainly bound to do our utmost for the reforming of this unhappy Custom in doing of which there would be far less difficulty than now there is were we our selves Vnanimous in the Attempt were we All resolved to be just to our own Engagements and would not undermine each others Endeavours by our contrary Practices 'T is plain we are not left at Liberty to do as we please in this case we are bound by Laws by Promises and Subscriptions And when the Laity know and consider this I cannot but
See Dr. Caves Primitive Chr. Chap. 6. Part 1. and Cap. 9. always paid such an extraordinary Respect and Veneration to the public places of Gods Worship both at their first Entrance into and all the while they continued in them And for this reason 't is that the Public place of Gods Worship is in Scripture set forth by so many honourable Names and Titles such as are the Temple the Tabernacle and the Sanctuary of the Lord the Habitation of his Holiness and the place where his Honor dwelleth the House of Prayer and the Church of God All which things put together do strongly prove that there is at least a Relative holiness in the Church above other places and that God is more immediately present there to hear the Petitions and to answer the Prayers of his humble Supplicants and to give a due vertue and efficacy to his blessed Sacraments But lest I should be thought to be singular in this opinion I shall beg leave for the satisfaction of every unbyass'd Reader to transcribe the words of a pious and learned Bishop of this Church Dr. Sparrow Bp. of Norwich in his Rationalé on the Com. Prayer p. 371. who speaking of the Dedication of Churches and Chappels to Service of God tells us That our Prayers and public Services are most readily accepted in such holy separate places and he proves it from 2 Chron. 7 15. Now mine Eyes shall be open and mine Ears attent to the Prayer in this place which promise of acceptance belongs to any other place so dedicated and consecrated to Gods holy Worship and Service as was this house which Solomon built for the reason which God gives of his gracious readiness to hear the Prayer of that holy place is in general this v. 16. For now have I chosen and sanctified this House that my Name might be there for ever Now that this house is dedicated and solemnly set apart by religious Rites and Prayers to my Service A quatenus ad omne valet consequentia now I have chosen it for mine And a little farther he adds By the like reason whatsoever other place shall be dedicated to him shall have the Eyes of God open and his Ear attentive to the Prayer of it And God Almighty promises as much Exod. 20.24 In all places where I record my Name I will come unto thee and bless thee that is in all places dedicated to me and my Service and so made mine And a little farther p. 385. are these very remarkable words The Church is the most convenient place for the service of God and adds much to the beauty of holiness And he that should neglect that decency and despising the Church should offer up the Publick Worship of which we have already proved Baptism to be a most solemn part in Private He would by so doing sin against that law of God that says Cursed be he that having a better Lamb in his flock offers up to God a worse Mal. 1.14 For God Almighty must be served with the best we have otherwise we despise him He that can have a Church and will offer up the holy Service in a worse place Let him fear that Curse This I think is home to the purpose and an evident proof of my former assertion from the plainest Texts of Scripture and if it seem severely spoken let it be remembred that 't is substantially proved and that they are not mine but a Reverend Prelates words of this Church whose name and authority ought to be had in veneration by all its members And would to God those persons who contend so earnestly for Baptizing their Children at home without any just necessity would consider seriously whether This be not very like that sin of despising the Church of God which St. Paul so severely condemned in the Corinthians 1 Ep. 11.22 and not only making their own houses equal to the Church but in this respect preferring them before it Upon the whole of this first Argument I think it is undeniably proved that Baptism is not of a Private but of a Publick Nature and that the Church is the fittest and most decent place for the Administration of it And therefore that to administer it in Private houses is both contrary to the Nature and Designs of Baptism and a plain transgression of this precept of St. Paul Let all things be done decently and in order Secondly To Administer Baptism in Private houses is contrary to the constant practice of the Catholick Christian Church in all ages For the proof of this I cannot take a better Method than to give you the words of the judicious and learned Dr. Cave Prim. Christ c. 10. p. 311. pars pr. who speaking of the place where Baptism was anciently administred tells us That 't was always as near as might be to the place of their Public Assemblies and that 't was seldom performed without the presence of the Congregation and that for very good reasons both as 't is a principal act of Religious Worship and as 't is the initiating of Persons into the Church which therefore ought to be as Public as possible that so the whole Congregation might be Spectators and Witnesses of that Profession and Engagement which the baptized Person then took upon him And this the Primitive Christians so zealously kept to that the Trullan Council Can. 59. allows not Baptism to be administred in a Private Chappel or Oratory but only in the Public Churches punishing the Persons offending in this particular with Deposition from their Office if they were Clergy-men and if Laity with Excommunication For this reason they had their Baptisteria or Fonts built at first in some place near the Church then in the Church * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Porch till afterward they were placed in the Church itself This I think is very plain and I have chose to transcribe the very words of this reverend and learned Person because of his great Name and Eminency in the Church especially as a faithful and diligent Inquirer into the Customs and Practice of Antiquity of which this Book called Primitive Christianity is amongst the rest One illustrious proof I was once thinking to add some other Observations of my own relating to this affair But I since find this particular so largely and unanswerably proved by an ingenious Author who has lately writ on this very subject Mr. Arwaker's Dissuasive from Baptizing Children in Private printed 1687. that because I can add nothing new I think it better to refer the inquisitive Reader thither The Book is licensed by the Arch-Bishop and dedicated to the Bishop of London Of both whose pious Endeavours to reform this Vnlawful Custom the Author gives us an account in his Epistle Dedicatory which I observe for this reason that the Reader may know that what I here write against has been condemned by the Metropolitan and the whole Church of England in general Whoever reads this little book
THE Indecency and Unlawfulness OF Baptizing Children IN PRIVATE Without Necessity and with the Publick Form Seriously recommended to the Consideration of both the Clergy and Laity of the Church of England By Martin Strong M. A. and Vicar of Yeovill in Somersetshire To which is added A brief Exhortation to the constant Receiving of the Lords Supper Let all things be done decently and in Order 1 Cor. 14.40 Administrari debent Sacramenta Coelu Ecclesiae non alibi quando scilicet congregata est tota Ecclesia vel illius pars magna non Extra Coelum Ecclesiae Gul. Bucani Instit Theol. p. 607. LONDON Printed for Tho. Bennet at the Half-Moon in St. Paul's Church-yard 1692. TO MY Honoured Friend and Patron Sir EDWARD PHELIPPS Of MONTACVTE Honoured Sir I need not make Apologies for devoting the ensuing Papers to your Patronage The triste I confess is too mean to be presented to so great a Name but yet not to have done it would have been both Vngrateful and Vnjust For 't was composed for the benefit of a place in which I am now happily fixed by your generous and uncorrupted Charity and in bestowing of which you made no other demands beside a promise under my hand of living on the place and taking care of the People So far were you from making Merchandise of Souls that you esteem'd your right of Patronage only as a sacred trust for which you must give account to Almighty God And may this pious Example never want its followers I desire that this Dedication may remain as a lasting Monument of my Gratitude tho I am very sensible it does not lessen but add to my obligations for the prefixing of your Name to this little Treatise will I doubt not supply the want of a Character in its Author and make it the more acceptable to the World May all the Blessings of Heaven attend your Person your Vertuous Lady and every member of your Family May your Vnwearied Assiduity in serving your Country never want encouragment May you continually enjoy the Advantages of doing good here on Earth and receive a glorious reward for all in a better World These Sir shall be the constant Prayers of Your most Obliged Humble Servant M. Strong To my Beloved Parishioners THE Inhabitants of YEOVILL My Dear Neighbours THE design of this little Book is purely to reform if possible a Bad Custom which has too long prevailed among you I mean The Baptizing of your Children in Private without Necessity and with the Publick Form You all know I have already from the Pulpit told you both of the Indecency and Unlawfulness of this Practice and solemnly protested to you that these were the only reasons that prevailed with me not to comply with it After all which I could not but hope that you would have granted the request I then made to you and not have pressed me any more to do a thing which I had so evidently proved to be against both your duty and my own But to my great concern I have found it otherwise In my own Vindication therefore as well as for your Satisfaction I have now committed what I formerly Preached to the Press with such additions and alterations as I thought necessary to make it fit for a Publick view And that I might not be wanting in any part of my duty to you I have printed these Papers to attend you at your houses hoping by this means to remove those mistakes and prejudices which some of you may have entertained in this matter and to convince you fully that the thing I here argue against is really an Errour Nor should any thing less than this unhappy necessity have ever tempted me to appear in Print In the management of this Argument I have endeavoured to be both as Brief and Plain as possible to set every thing in a clear and convincing light and to come down to the meanest Vnderstanding which I desire the Reader in general to remember and then I need not make Apologies for the Style which might easily have been of another nature but I was to consult chiefly the capacities of my own People and in a matter of Universal concern I was willing All might understand me As for other imperfectians they may justly be imputed to my multiplicity of business diversions and avocations in a large and populous Town I am conscious enough how many they are but yet I have this satisfaction that these papers had at least as was protested the Undissembled approbation of a worthy and judicious Friend a person of a considerable Character and Authority in the Church for whose particular favours I cannot but take this occasion of making a publick and grateful acknowledgment And now Neighbours I have only one thing to desire of you that in reading this discourse you would consider every thing calmly and impartially without passion humour or prejudice Read it with that simplicity and indifferency of mind that becomes humble teachable and Charitable Christians Do not Nickname or misconstrue what is by me well intended Almighty God the searcher of hearts knows that I aim at nothing but your benefit and Conviction I have worded every thing after the mildest and most inoffensive manner I was able If any thing seem closely or severely spoken 't is no more than what I thought absolutely necessary for the exposing of the weakness of those objections which are usually urged in justification of what I here oppose And after all if you find that the Arguments here insisted on are such as cannot be answered then as you love your own Souls let me beseech you not wilfully to resist the truth but be glad and thankful rather that you are freed from your mistakes I have added at the end a Brief Exhortation to the constant receiving of the Lord's Supper which is a duty too much neglected amongst you as well as in other places In return for all which I desire nothing but your Prayers as you ever have mine And God Almighty follow you all with his Blessings and give you hearts willing both to learn and obey the truth Your Sincere Friend and Servant M. Srong The Indecency and Vnlawfulness of Baptizing Children in Private without Necessity and with the Publick Form c. 'T IS a strange prevailing power that Custom has upon the minds of all mankind The very Custom and Commonness of dying seems to have taken off the thoughts of death from the World Manna itself was slighted when 't was rained down every day And that most sacred and venerable rite of Christianity the blessed Sacrament itself by being daily administred in the Primitive Church in a little time began to be despis'd And be the thing never so apparently vicious or evidently unlawful yet such is the bewitching force of an habitual Customary Practice that it hinders men from perceiving it and begets such inveterate prejudices in their minds as darken the Reason and corrupt the Judgment and bear down
the force of the strongest Arguments and of the most convincing Reasons in the World Nothing but This could possibly have prevailed with so many members even of our own Communion to persevere so obstinately in Baptizing their Children in Private houses without any just Necessity and with the Publick Form a Custom confessedly Indecent and undeniably Vnlawful That it is so is the design of this following Treatise to evince and I hope to do it Vnanswerably by insisting on these several Arguments 1. That the Baptizing Children in Private houses is contrary to the nature and design of Christian Baptism 2. 'T is contrary to the constant and universal Practice of the Catholick Christian Church in all ages 3. 'T is contrary to the express Laws and Rubrick of our own established National Church of England 4. 'T is contrary to every Ministers solemn Promises and Subscriptions And 5. 'T is Absurd and Irrational If I can prove beyond denial these several Assertions I hope it will be granted that I have sufficiently performed my promised Undertaking and that I had good reason for refusing to comply with this Illegal Custom But to prevent all mistakes it must be remembred that Exception and Allowance is still to be made for the Case of invincible Necessity of extreme Sickness and danger of Death at which time the Church admits of Private Baptism and has composed a particular Form for that purpose of which I shall say more in its proper place This being premised I assert First That the Administration of Baptism in Private houses is contrary to the Nature and Designs of Baptism for Baptism is a great and most solemn part of Gods Publick Worship 'T is that Divine Sacrament by which we are entred and admitted into the Christian Church and Covenant by which we are made members of that Holy Catholick Church and united to that Communion of Saints and common Society of Christians which makes one fundamental Article of our Creed Baptism is also an open and solemn profession of our belief in the Sacred Trinity Father Son and Holy Ghost in whose names we are Baptized but especially 't is a Publick declaration of our Faith in Jesus the Mediator an open acknowledgment to all the Woald that we heartily embrace that Gospel and Religion which Christ reveal'd from his Father to mankind and which distinguishes us from Jews and Mahometans and all other Religions in the World For this reason 't was that the Font was always placed near the door or entrance into the Church Vid. Dr. Patricks Aqua Genitalis to signifie to us that 't is by Baptism we are first entred into the Christian Faith into the Religion and Church of Christ Now all this evidently proves that Baptism is not of a Private but of a Publick Nature and that its ends and designs are Publick And from hence it as evidently follows that it ought to be administred according to its Nature See Dr. Sherlocks Rel. Assemb p. 291. that is not Privately but in the Publick Assembly and Congregation of Christians The force and reason of this Argument is plainly founded upon that Apostolical precept 1 Cor. 14.40 Let all things be done decently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in order If this be Scripture and the word of God it certainly obliges us to perform all the Sacred and Publick offices of our Religion with all that Decency and Solemnity that the Nature of the things and the Majesty of God requires In this sense the most learned Commentators understand the words Nor can any other interpretation be put upon them without offering a manifest violence to the design of the Apostle throughout that whole Chapter which was to correct abuses and indecencies in the service of God and to give such standing rules and general directions as he thought necessary to be observed in Gods Publick worship by all Christian Congregations This being granted I now appeal to the sense and reason of all the world whether it be not more for the Decency and Solemnity of Christian Baptism to be administred in the Church and House of God than in a Private room of common and ordinary use The Sacraments of our Religion are certainly the most solemn parts of it We admit but two of these and Baptism is one And does it not best agree with the solemn Nature of this Sacrament that it should be Administred in the solemn place of Gods worship Since Baptism is an open profession of our Faith in Christ how can this be duly performed in Private or any where out of the Publick Assemblies of Christians And since Baptism is designed to enter and admit us into the Church what place can be so decent for its Administration as the Church To this purpose we have Dr. Burnet telling us Hist Reform Abridged Lib. 2. p. 63. That Baptism being the Admission of a New Member to the Church 't is most suitable to the design of Baptism to do it before the whole Congregation and withal adds that the Liberty of baptizing in Private which was at first indulged by the Church only as a provision for Weakness is since become a Mark of Vanity and a piece of affected State If Baptism be designed to make us members of the Christian Church I would willingly be satisfied how this can be decently performed out of the Church and out of the presence of the Church or can any other place be so fit and convenient for so sacred a thing as the Place that is dedicated and devoted to the service of God These are plain Questions I know but I believe they are unanswerable and I leave them to the Conscience of all Unprejudiced Readers with this serious and earnest Exhortation viz. That they would not look on Baptism to be a trifling or inconsiderable thing as if it were only the giving a Name to the Child and no more but that they would consider it as a most solemn part of Gods Worship as that Divine Sacrament by which their Children are dedicated to God and to the Religon of Christ The want of which Consideration I am convinced is the cause why so many otherwise good and well meaning Persons are so regardless provided it be done at all how or where in what place or after what manner this sacred duty is performed I do not say that there is any Positive Holiness in one place above another or that the place alone can sanctify the worship performed in it without other due Qualifications but this I do affirm and all the sober part of Mankind did ever yet grant that as there is a Relative Holiness in the Lords day above other days of the Week so there is at least a Relative Holiness in the Church above other places both as 't is set apart and consecrated to the service and worship of God and as Almighty God is more especially and immediately present in it Upon this account it was that the pious and Primitive Christians
ready at the Font immediately after the second Lesson at Morning or Evening Prayer which still farther concludes for its being ●n the Church where alone the Prayers and Lessons are usually read And all this is abundantly confirmed by that which follows viz. And the Priest standing there at the Font shall say c. So far I think nothing can be more plain or undeniable But let us go on to the Office for Private Baptism of Children in houses for so 't is called The very Name or Title of which is enough to satisfy any sober man that this alone and not the Public Form is to be used in Houses But the Rubrick is more express There in the 2d Paragraph the Curates or Ministers of every Parish are required often to admonish and warn the People that without great Cause and Necessity to be approved by the Curates themselves they procure not their Children to be baptized at home And in Obedience to this Command of the Church I do now desire and beseech you of my Care not to do it But when need shall compel then the Rubrick expresly orders that Baptism be administred on This Fashion namely by that Form of Private Baptism which there follows and not by the Publick Form So that as the Ancient Church never did so neither does the Present Church of England allow of any Private Baptism except in danger of death and in such a case she has provided a Form for that purpose and required the use of that alone And upon the whole I think it undeniably follows that To Baptize Children in Private with the Publick Form and without just Necessity is as Dr. Sherlock tells us Rel. Assemblies p. 295. a plain transgression of the Rule and therefore such a disorder as no man should be guilty of who professes himself a Member of our Church 'T is a plain breach of the express Laws and Commands of our own Communion which was the thing to be proved Now as for this Argument it equally concerns all in general who own themselves of the Church of England Rich and Poor Laity as well as Clergy For by the 20th Article of our Church we all profess to believe That the Church has full power to decree and command all such Rites and Ceremonies as are not contrary to the word of God Nor did ever any yet deny this power but those who were professed Dissenters from us and against them it has been largely and unanswerably proved by many learned Divines of this Church whose Names I have set in the Margin By Dr. Stillingfleet Unreasonab of Separation Dr. Sherlock in his Vindication of that book and in his Answer to the Protestant Reconciler By Dr. Goodman in his Compass Enquiry By Dr. Scot Christian Life Part 2. Vol. 2. p. 433. And instead of all by the Venerable Hooker Eccl. Polity Lib. 3. and others if any one please to consult them Now then thus I argue if the Church has Power to make Laws in things indifferent and not forbidden by the Scriptures it hence necessarily follows that 't is our absolute duty to obey and submit to those Laws when once they are made For a Power to Command necessarily infers the duty of Obedience these are Relative things the one of which unavoidably follows from the other Nor can we disobey the Lawful Commands of the Church without disobeying Heaven at the same time and Christ Jesus himself from whom as from a Supream Head the Church has received this Legislative Power and how then can it become any true Member of the Church to be thus wilfully guilty of trangressing its plainest Laws Or why should any pious and genuine Son of the Church carry himself thus refractory to his spiritual Mother Or can there be any thing more absurd than to profess to believe that the Church has Power to make Laws in indifferent things and yet whenever those Laws come to be obeyed to dispute and deny its Authority Especially considering how pious and primitive a duty this is and what great reason the Church has to require it This certainly is not to do things according to Order that is as the great Dr. Hammond tells us upon the place According to the Order and Direction of the Church Dr. Rich. Sherlocks Practical Christian p. 85 I know not what low thoughts men may now have of this Disobedience But I am sure the pious Dr. Sherlock had another sense of things when he made this a part of his Form of Confession of Sin I have not made Conscience to obey the Laws and Orders of thy Church whether Universal or particular not acknowledging or submitting to the Authority of Either and I am justly therefore to be rankt amongst Publicans and Sinners My Ghostly Fathers and Pastors in the several orders of Bishop Priest and Deacon I have disbelieved disrespected disobeyed in their Callings in their Admonitions for my Souls health I have hated him that reproveth in the Gate I have hardned my heart and refused when admonished to return from the Errour of my ways Nor is this a Law of the Church only but of the Civil State too The whole Rubrick is confirmed by Act of Parliament as well as by Convocation and the Act of Uniformity before our Common Prayer Books expresly injoyns under the severest Penalty that No other Form of Prayer or Administration of the Sacraments be used beside that which is set forth and allowed by that Book So that whoever refuses Obedience to those Laws of the Church concerning Baptism does at the same time disobey a Law of the State too his Civil as well as his Spiritual Parents and Governors and if this be not a plain Breach of the fifth Commandment Let every mans Conscience judge There is I foresee one fond pretence that may possibly be return'd to this Argument and that is the present Act of Toleration or Liberty of Conscience which may be thought to discharge the Duty of Obedience to the Established Laws of the Church But in answer to this vain Cavil I say First That I write not at present to those who are Dissenters from the Church but to those who profess themselves Members of our own Communion and what have such to do with the Toleration Let the Act it self be read and 't will appear that the Toleration was intended only for the Ease of those few for I verily believe they are not many who are sincerely persuaded in their Consciences that 't is not Lawful for them to obey the Orders or joyn in the Worship of the Established Religion Now whatever service the Plea of a Toleration may do such mistaken Persons yet certainly it looks very unaccountable in one of our own Communion to make this pretence in excuse for his Disobedience to those Laws and to that Constitution to which he himself belongs I envy no man the Liberty of Conscience My Charity is Universal I heartily wish well to and pray for all the World But