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

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carefull to serue him to set forth his glory and to build his Church as they ought to be Lastly to conclude this whole treatise we learne by these two last actions that as Samuel howsoeuer he did greatly mislike the alteration of the former state and the setting vp of this new gouernment yet whenas it was once by the permission of God and the importunitie of the people established he did labour that it should continue for euer for the which purpose he did both write the doctrine of it in a booke and also laide the saide booke before the Lorde so we doe labour to continue that gouernment which is in force in that place or country where we liue although we doe perhaps imagine yea perswade our selues that we could finde out a better forme of gouernment which should be voyde of those in conueniences which we see in the present state For as the wise men of this world teach vs there is nothing more troublesome dangerous yea pernitious to any people then the alteration of the forme of gouerment which is in force and as the wisdome of God speaketh in the scripture no●●ing is more hainous odious in the sight of God and man then to seeke the subuersion of magistrates states and kingdomes FINIS Printed at London for Robert Dexter 1596. CHAP. I. Of the Catholicke Church Sect. 1. Of the name and definition of the Catholicke Church THE Church whereof we are nowe to entreate in greek and latine is called Ecclesia the which worde is diuersely taken in the scripture for in the naturall acception it doth generally signifie any assemblie of men met about any matter as we may see Act. 19.39 But for somuch as the scripture doth onely by occasion make mention of ciuill meetinges therefore it doth for the most part signifie a holie assemblie of men mette about holy and diuine matters whereof the booke of God doth wholly and of set purpose entreate Yea in this second sense it is diuersely vsed first for the triumphant Church of the state whereof we doe not speake any thing in this treatise because it is neither needfull nor yet possible for vs to know it and therfore not lawfull to labour in the curious searching of it it being not reuealed in the worde of God Secondly the worde Ecclesia is vsed to signifie the Church militant wherin we are now conuersant and therfore it doth greatly belong vnto vs to know the state of it because God hath appointed it to be the way whereby we must passe to the triumphant Church In this sense we doe heere entreat of the Church And lastly euen in this third sense the name of the Church is diuersly vsed to wit first for the whole Church heere on earth as it is in all those places where it is put for all the faithfull people in the worlde as namely 1. Cor. 10.32 Giue no offence neither to the Iewe or Gentile nor to the Church of God that is to none that beleeueth Secondly for the whole vi●ible Church as we reade 1. Cor. 12.28 God hath put in his Church Apostles Prophets Pastors Doctors For although neyther the catholicke nor yet the visible Church doth come togither in one place yet because all the members of them both are ioyned together in the bond of the spirite and in the vnitie of faith the word Ecclesia is properly giuen vnto them Lastly it signifieth a particular Church which is a member of the whole as the Church at Corinth or any other mentioned in the writinges of the Apostles But in the first place we are to speake not of the particular Church but of the whole Church heere on earth which is vsually called the Church militant because it fighteth against the enemies of our saluation to wit this present worlde sinne sathan and his manifolde temptations It is also called although not in the scripture the catholicke Church the worde Catholicke is most commonly opposed to hereticall and attributed to that man or Church which doth holde the syncere doctrine of religion without any great errour especially by them who doe falsely imagine and teach that the greater parte is alwaies the sounder and more syncere in doctrine But heere we vse it in the proper and naturall sense to signifie the whole vniuersall Church which is thus defined The catholike Church is the whole number of those men who in any part of the worlde serue the true God in Iesus Christ. In this definition we are to consider and explane diuerse pointes Sect. 2. Of the place of the Catholicke Church AND first of the place of the catholicke Church it is not any one towne citie prouince nation or kingdome whatsoeuer but the whole worlde 1. Cor. 1 1. in euerie part whereof God hath some that serue him because he will haue no part wholly either shut out from the participation of his mercy or left without excuse or yet destitute of his presence as if he were thrust cleane out from the possession of it The trueth whereof appeareth in the scripture which sheweth that howsoeuer the visible Church and the open profession of religion was till the time of the gospell shut vp within one familie kindred or country yet that God was both knowen and serued by some in other places euen in all the partes of the world So we read Actes 2. That there were men of all the nations vnder heauen which feared God and there a particular enumeration is made of them Parthians Medes Elamites the inhabitante● of Mesopotamia of Iudea Cappadocia Pontus Asia Phrygia and Pamphilia Aegypt Lybia Cyrene Rome Creta and Arabia So Christ giueth commission to his Apostles Mark 16.15 to preach to all nations in the worlde and accordingly Paule witnesseth that the gospell was spred into the whole world and did daily fructifie and increase Coll. 1.6 Likewise Peter doth obserue this point of the vniuersalitie of the Church Act. 10.34.35 in Cornelius saying I perceiue of a trueth that God doth not regard persons that is that he doth not tie himself to the nation of the Iewes or to any other but that in euery nation he that feareth God is accepted of him So Act. 13.17 yet this is to be noted that whenas al the people of the world are brought within the cōpasse of one place then the catholick Church also is contained in the same place so it becommeth a particular Church So in the beginning whenas there was no man liuing out of Adams familie the catholicke Church was contained within the limites thereof Likewise in the generall destruction of the worlde both all the people of the worlde and the whole Church were shut vp in Noahs Arke This exception beeing made this doctrine standeth true That no particular place house citie country or nation whatsoeuer but euen the whole world is the subiect and place of the Catholicke Church Sect. 3. That hypocrites are members of the Catholike Church ALthough the catholicke Church
be despersed ouer the whole worlde yet not all nor many in comparison of the infidels but a verie fewe belong vnto it And therefore we are in the next place to see who are the members of it and of whom it doth consist The answere to this point we haue in the definition which saith that all who serue God in any part of the worlde are of the catholicke Church For as a king may deuide the whole worlde into his owne subiectes who liue within his dominions knowe obey and honour him and into forrenners who are without the compasse of his iurisdiction doe him no seruice make no account of him and in briefe haue no kinde of dealing with him so all men liuing in the worlde are eyther Gods subiectes and seruantes liuing within the compasse of the catholicke Church and as it is written Ephes. 2.12.19 Citizens with the faintes and of the houshold of God or else they are aliantes from the common wealth of Israell without the promise couenant or hope of saluation yea without God in the worlde But forsomuch as God is serued many waies in deede or in shewe onely sincerely or hypocritically purely or corruptly fully or after an imperfect manner in knowledge or in ignorance and after many other differences therefore we are to search out what manner of seruing God doth make a man to be a member of the catholicke Church wherunto we answere that the outward profession of the true seruice of God although ioy●ed with impotencie of performing any actual seruice yea with hypocrisie corruption imperfection errour and heresie will serue for this purpose and doth make a man a true member of the catholicke Church For the first difference some serue God actually by praying to God or praising him by hearing his word and obeying it or which is all in all by trusting fearing and louing God in heart namelie so many of the Church as haue comne to yeares of discretion but there are some who cannot serue God by any of these meanes or any other of the same kinde to witte infantes who by reason of the infirmitie of their age cannot heare or vnderstande and therefore can neither knowe nor beleeue God or serue him in any actuall manner Yet they may and doe by the helpe of others take vpon them and beare the true profession of the seruice of God by receiuing the sacrament of initiation or first entrance into the Church by the which meanes they become true members of the catholicke Church as well as men of ripe age The trueth heereof appeareth 1. Corin. 7.14 where the Apostle saith that the children of the Christians are holy meaning euen the yongest infantes as they are borne of faithfull parentes not that the faith of the parentes or the sacrament of the Church doth adde any inward and reall holinesse vnto them but onely giueth vnto them a holy profession or an outward profession of holinesse and of faith and also imputed righteousnesse and supposed holinesse if they belong to Gods election In like manner vnder the lawe all the young children of the Iewes especially after they had receiued the sacrament of circumcision were counted members of the Church and in the number of the holy people of God And therefore God complaineth of the Iewes offering their young ones in sacrifice to idols that they gaue his children to Moloch Ezec. 16.21 Thus much of those who become members of the Church by meere profession nowe we come to the actuall seruing of God the which where it is in sinceritie of hart and life perfourmed it maketh one a member of Christ●s mysticall bodie much more the● of his Church here on earth But all the controuersie is of them in whome this actuall seruice is imperfect as it is first in hypocrites who want the inward seruice of the heart as also heretikes doe some part of the sinceritie of doctrine and dissolute men the seruice of outwarde life and ignorant idiotes the seruice of the minde and lastly as the dispersed members of the Church wante the publike worshippe of God The answere in generall is this that howsoeuer the imperfect seruice of hypocrites wicked men heretikes and idiotes be not acceptable in the sight of God yet it is sufficient to make them true members of the militant Church but we will come to the seuerall consideration of them And first of hypocrites by the which name we call those men in whome the outwarde seruice is perfect in that they both hold and professe the whole trueth of christian religion and also expresse the same in their liues both in worde and deede and yet doe not serue GOD in spiritte and trueth but are destitute of true faith and of all the rest of the effectuall graces of the sanctifying spiritte springing thereof This manner of seruing GOD is not pleasing but rather odious and abhominable to him Esay 1.14 and therefore it is not auailable for the saluation of any but rather maketh mens damnation the more iust yet it giueth vnto them the name of the members of the Church For it is confessed of all that hypocrites may be true ministers in a particular Church as Iudas was a true Apostle whereof it doth necessarelie followe that they are true members of the Church for the teachers and rulers of a Church are the chiefe members of it So that as in a common-wealth or kingdome they who haue freedome and interest in such bodies eyther by nature or fauour are counted true subiectes as long as they liue in outwarde obedience to lawes yea though they be knowen to beare in their heartes an vnnaturall and disloyall affection to their country or prince so it is in the Church with hypocrites destitute of the true faith and loue of God But howe can hypocrites be made true members of the Church which is the bodie of Christ seeing that they haue no coniunction with Christ who is the heade of the Church For the resoluing of this doubt we must consider both Christ the heade and the Church his bodie two diuerse waies for Christ as he is a sauiour is a heade to the mysticall bodie of the elect onely vnto whome he giueth by his spirite effectuall grace spirituall motion and eternall life In this respect hypocrites haue no more to doe with Christ or his Church then darknesse hath with light but heere we doe not meddle with the mysticall body of the Church Secondlie Christ is the kinge Lorde and ruler of his Church militant heere on earth in the which respect hee is a heade not onely to the faithfull but also to hypocrites to whom hee giueth spirituall graces ministeriall giftes and ecclesiasticall functions euen as he maketh the sunne to shine vppon the iust and the vniust first he communicateth to them the giftes of knowledge wisedome doctrine and exhortation of tongues of miracles and prophesie Ephesians 4.8 Where he like a victorious king triumphing ouer his enemies ascended into heauen and gaue
although in respect of the simple handling of the matter it be vnworthy to be accepted and red by the meanest yet no man can doubt or will deny but that the fitnesse of the argument is a probable excuse for this presumptuous dedication Lastly we desire thee good reader to vse christian moderation in suspending thy iudgement of vs till happely time make that manifest which now is doubtfull in regard of two opinions contained in these treatises the which will seeme somewhat strange to some and perhaps to thy selfe among the rest The one is that we enfraunchize the papist Arian al other heretickes professing the gospel of Christ into the catholicke Church by the which we meane nothing else but the whole Church militant here on earth from the which many doe vtterly reiect them as mere infidels and straungers from the couenant and commonwealth of Israel The other opinion is in that we giue to the christian magistrate especially in great and absolute Monarchies greater authoritie both in ciuill and ecclesiasticall causes then seemeth to stand with the good of the Church or the trueth of Gods word For the former we neede not trouble our selues with the defence of it any further then it is declared in the treatise it being held and professed by many sound diuines who are in euerie respect far more able to maintaine it Likewise for the other we haue nothing to say in this place saue onely that we are to desire thee not to attribute it to flattery rather then to a constant and setled perswasion the suspition whereof it is hard for him to auoyde who doth any thing whereby the power and authoritie of mightie men is maintained and enlarged and so their fauour as vsually it commeth to passe procured We doe indeed intend in publishing this treatise the good and peaceable estate of this kingdome and the maintaining of that powerfull and maiesticall authoritie whereunto it hath pleased God to make vs subiect Yea we doe earnestly desire of him that these treatises may haue that effect in al their hearts into whose handes they shal come that they if there be any such who doe nourish in their breastes any sinister affections or opinions in this behalf may be by meanes of them wonne to heartie loue to so gratious a prince loyall subiection to so lawfull and excellent a kinde of gouernment Yea that they who haue alreadie receaued these graces from God may encrease in them and perfourme all dueties which are needfull in regard eyther of the safetie or the maiestie of their prince more willi●gly and chearefully then before as being perhaps resolued of some pointes ●hereof before they doubted And lastly that as touching the religion and worship of God professed in this land they who accounte vs no Church by whome we affirming their opinion to be such as might easely be shewed out of the word of God to be erroneous haue beene vehemently charged in the name of God to publish somewhat of the true nature and constitution of a Church for the manifesting of the trueth in that behalfe may be moued to thinke and acknowledge that God i● truely serued his word preached his sacramentes administred and his name called vpon in all the publicke assemblies throughout this land especially by considering the doctrine nature and state of a publicke Church the which kinde of Churches not being in vse in the daies of the Apostles and therfore not mentioned in their writi●gs seemeth strange to many This we confesse that we intend in this action and are perswaded that we may lawfully yea in some respectes ought necessarely to doe but we trust that God will neuer so giue vs vp to a senselesse minde as to doe any thing for the procuring of the fauour of men contrarie to the trueth of Gods word and the good of his Church He maketh an euill bargaine that throweth himselfe into the bottomlesse sea or rather into the burning furnace of Gods wrath in aduenture of mans fauour which is vncertaine and momentani● sooner lost then gott●n in respect of true happinesse altogether vnprofitable But we trust good reader that this apologie might haue beene spared and that thou wilt take these simple treatises in good part as thou hast done the like heretofore Thus I commend thee as I earnestly desire to be commended by thee to the word and spirit of God to be led into all trueth and preserued without blame till the day of Christ. T. M. The Arguments of these treatises THE former treatise declareth the state of the kingdome of Israell the which we haue endeuoured to learne and set downe in plaine manner out of the scripture wherein there is nothing but truth especially out of the bookes of Samuell the Kings Chronicles wherein the first originall continuance and end yea the whole n●ture and condition of this gouernment is at large declared Where by the kingdome of Israell we doe not meane that apostaticall rebellious and idolatrous kingdome of the ten tribes vsually called the kingdome of Israell or the kingdome of Samaria but the kingdome of Iuda the which we call by the first ancient and right name of Israell because our purpose is to entreate of the state of it as it was at the first instituted by Samuell and as it continued vnder Saule Dauid and Salomon in whose time it was called the kingdome of Israell But in the beginning of the raigne of R●boam it lost ten of the tribes and together the right name which vsually followeth the greater part For the which cause in the time following it was called the kingdome of Iuda for that the tribe of Iuda did not onely make the greatest part of it but also had the prerogatiue of the kingdome annexed vnto it The causes by the which we are moued to thinke the state of this kingdome most worthy to be carefully sought out and truely knowen are these because of all the kingdomes in the world this onely was instituted by God himselfe or at the least approued by him and also registred and fully described in the bookes of the scripture yea and first practised in the Church of God In the which respectes we cannot doubt but that the true and perfect knowledge of it doth greately belong to the Church and to all the members of it And yet we doe not speake of it as of the onely lawfull forme of gouernement and that which ought to be vsed of the Church in all places For there is no kinde of gouernment which may not lawfully bee established among Christians and as lawfully vsed amongest them as this Neyther as if all kingdomes shoulde be squared according to this rule from the which they may farre differ without any blame for the iudiciall lawes of the commonwealth or of the kingdome of Israel doe not belong to the Church Neyther yet doe we affirme this kingdome to be the most excellent and conuenient state and that which christians according to the example of
the Church should be at the call and commaundement of the secular power whereby they might be eyther wholly dispossessed of their places or continually troubled interrupted in ordering the affaires of the Church and the matters of God and finally iniuriously and contumeliously handled which thing the holines of their places and persons wil in no wise suffer For the answere of this doubt it is plaine in the word of God that all ecclesiasticall persons whatsoeuer yea the chiefe priestes in them the high priest himself the prince and head of the priestes who was the type of Christ the Oracle of God and on whom the whole glory and maiesty of the priesthood was bestowed was no lesse subiect to the iurisdiction of the kinge then he which had the basest place and calling in the common-wealth The trueth heereof appeareth by the lamentable tragedie of Abimelech 1. Sam. 2. who being summoned by Saule to appeare came with all the priestes that were with him and being come acknowledged Saul● to be his Lord Verse 12. and did not appeale frō his vniust sentence of death to any other power The same end befel his son Abiather who for that he tooke part with Adonia was by Salomon put out of his office and condemned to die 1. King 2.26 And likewise Zachariah the son of Ieh●ida 2. Chro. 24.21 Now although two of these kinges did impiously and tyrannically abuse their authority yet it doth appeare that they had authority ouer them yea not onely these examples but the course of the whole scripture and equitie it selfe doth shew that it ought to be so We knowe that euen Christ himselfe more holy in person and office then all the priestes men or angels in the world did throughout the whole course of his life submit himselfe to the ciuill power and at the end of it did suffer himselfe to be violently apprehended contu●eliously entreated yea vniustly cōdemned by the deputy of a heathen Emperour Likewise the Apostle Paule did appeale and subiect himselfe to the authority of Caesar. Neyther is there any cause or reason why it should be otherwise For howsoeuer the Romish prelates haue not only drawen out their neckes from the subiection of princes but also haue inuaded their thrones and subdued them vnder their feete and the whole cleargie say to the ciuill power come not near nor yet once touch me because I am holier then thou and think themselues too good to be iudged by any but by their owne ordinarie yet the trueth is that all persons as well ciuill as ecclesiasticall are and ought to be by the word of God equally subiect to the ciuill power For shall Christ himselfe and in him God himselfe stand before the iudgement seat of princes and shall sinfull men nay shall wretched wormes thinke them too prophane to be competent iudges in their causes no no the seruant is not aboue the master nor the creature aboue the creator and therefore we say with the Apostle that al soules that is euery man that hath a soule that none shoulde thinke himselfe exempted ought to be subiect to the higher powers Rom. 13.1 The ground of the contrary errour is an arrogant opinion which presumptuous men bearing function in the Church haue of their own holin●sse in respect of others whereas in the Church of God men who haue ciuil callings are no lesse holy then they who haue ecclesiastica● yea somtimes much more holy they who haue ecclesiastical holy callings being otherwise wicked prophane for it is truly said althoug● impiously applied by the rebellious company of Corah Numb 16.3 That not only Moses Aaron but euen the whole multitude of the common people much more the Lords annoynted is holy In the next place we are to search whether that as al persons so likewise al causes belonged to the authority of the King of Israell First of ciuill then of ecclesiasticall causes in the first kinde it is not needful that we should insist forsomuch as all men euen they who are most sparing and wary in giuing power to these kinges doe acknowledge that all ciuill causes did properly belong to their iurisdiction And so it was indeede For the king had authoritie to appointe all the publike officers of his kingdome who should be his counsellers at home or his Captaines abroad who shoulde be the iudges of the people and who of the chiefe senate in Ierusalem and good reason it was that he shoulde haue this power in these causes For seeing that his office was especially to iudge the causes of the people and to fight their battailes for the which purpose the people desired a king it could not be denied vnto him to appointe those to be his deputies whom he thought most able to discharge these dueties Yea further it belonged to him to call all publike assemblies and to order them to make peace with whom he would and to goe to battaile against whome ●e when 〈◊〉 thought good The trueth of this pointe doth 〈◊〉 plainely appeare throughout the whole storie that we need not insist in it Sect. X. NOwe we are to enquire what was the authoritie of the kinge in the matters of the Church to wit in ordering the state of religion and of the seruice of God Whereof there is greate question made whilest some doe wholly exclude him out of the Church not permitting him to intermeddle with any affaires belonging vnto it others suffer him to deale in these causes yet not to beare any great sway or to ouerrule in them and the third sort giueth vnto him the greatest part of that ecclesiasticall authoritie which belongeth to man The which distinction is necessarely to be considered for God hath not giuen to any man such ful and absolute authoritie in the Church as in the common-wealth for he hath made Christ the soueraign Lord and King of the Church to rule it by his owne lawes and worde Yet one parte of ecclesiasticall iurisdiction belongeth to men who are to establish the diuine lawes of the worship of God and to make ecclesiastical constitutions for that purpose But who hath authoritie to doe this there is all the controuersie In the first opinion or rather grosse and palpable errour are the Bishops of Rome with their adherentes who that they might through the Church enter into the common-wealth inuade the riches preferments and pleasures of kinges and vsurpe their states and crownes haue thrust out of the Church this king of Israell least that by his example other magistrates shoulde challenge to themselues ●uthoritie in causes ecclesiasticall In the second opinion are men otherwise syncere in iudgement who in a good meaning affection to the Church thinke it not safe or conuenient to permitte her wholly to the ciuill power and in a reuerent opinion of her iudge it vnmeete that ciuill rulers should order diuine matters and so make the Church say vnto the magistrate touch me not for I am more holy then thou
father but in the sonne in whome onely he is well pleased And therefore the nation of the Iewes hauing reiected Christ is by that meanes reiected of God from being his people neyther are they to be accounted members of the Church although they serue God with neuer so great zeale Rom. 11. The same account we are to make of the Turkes Saracens Moores and all those nations which professe the religion of Mahomet the which we confesse doth retaine diuerse pointes of christianitie yea and that if it be well marked it wil be sound a close or mysticall Arianisme couering and glosing ouer many waightie pointes of faith with iudaicall types and poeticall fictions that it being by this meanes made darke and aenigmaticall might be more highly esteemed by blinde and ignorant men Whereas if it had beene set downe in a plaine and simple manner it woulde haue beene easely vndestood disputed of and in the ende altogether contemned Yet forsomuch as this religion doth not worship and honour Iesus Christ as the onely sonne of God and sauiour of the world as the first Arians therefore 〈◊〉 the professours of it cannot be accounted members of the Church but meere infidels separated from Christ and voyde of the hope of eternall saluation Sect. 7. Of the attributes of the catholicke Church THus we hauing the definition of the catholicke Church are further to consider the nature and state of it in certaine properties which are attributed vnto it Of the which this may be the first that out of the catholicke Church there is no saluation and therefore all the heathen all vnbeleeuing Iewes Turkes and generally all Infidels whatsoeuer doe liue and die to the iudgement and sight of man in the state of eternall damnation This the scripture witnesseth in many places as namely 2. Thes. 2.8 God in the last iudgement shall render vengeance to al that know not God and obey not the gospel of our Lorde Iesus Christ and yet this sentence of damnation which the scripture pronounceth on infidels is so to be vnderstoode as that we doe alwaies except the infinite power and mercy of God who both can as hath beene before touched doth in all partes of the world saue some and that by extraordinarie meanes vnknowen to vs where the ordinarie way is wanting The second attribute of the catholicke Church is this that it can neuer erre in the foundation of religion which is all one as if we did say the catholicke Church neuer ceaseth to be or with this there is continually in the worlde a number of men which serue the true God in Iesus Christ. The trueth of this appeareth by the storie of the Church in the holie scripture and in other bookes which shewe by whome and in what places God hath beene truelie worshipped in euery seuerall age And no maruaile for if the Church shoulde cease to be in the worlde then the world it selfe shoulde haue an ende which was created and doth continue chiefely for this ende to wit to be an habitation for the Church As we reade 1. Cor. 2.16 All thinges are yours euen the verie worlde that is all thinges doe serue as meanes for your good and for the working of your saluation In this sense the Apostle saith 1. Tim. 3.13 That the Church is the piller and firmament that is a most firme and sure piller of trueth to wit of the true religion and worshippe of God And yet the catholicke Church may erre in matters of religion yea euen in those pointes which are waightie and are neare about the foundation it selfe although it alwaies remaine sure and stedfast So it is manifest that the ignorances and errours of the Church which were from the beginning vntill the comming of Christ were both many and greate as hath beene noted before And howe greate errours haue preuailed throughout the whole Church in most of the ages since that time we who liue in this light of the gospell doe easelie and plainely see Yea we knowe that which the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 13. that while the faithfull are in this worlde they see knowe and prophecie but in part and cannot be wholly freed from errour till they see the Lorde perfectly and in him all thinges So we reade Leuit. 4.13 that there was a sacrifice appointed for the expiation of the generall errour of the whole people of the Iewes who then were the whole visible Church of God Thirdlie the catholicke Church doth continually encrease in number and doth consist of moe in the latter ages of the worlde then in the former For before the time of the lawe the Lord was knowen and worshipped onely of a fewe families or kindreds but afterwardes of a great populous nation but since the comming of Christ the Church ●oth enlarge her tentes and receiueth all the nations of the earth Likewise in the first ages of the gospell there was no nation country or citie no not any one towne or village which did generally receiue it but onely a fewe heere and there the rest remaining in infidelitie but in the ages following great nations generally yea infinite multitudes of people became christians Yea this number shall continually encrease vntill the fulnesse of the gentiles be come into the Church whereof the Apostle speaketh Rom. 11. and then shall the nation of the Iewes make a notable addition to this number The cause of this increase is for that God doth not reueale himselfe and his word all at once to the world but by degrees by little and little Where this may also profitably be noted that as the number of beleeuers so also their knowledge doth increase the word of God being much more plentifully reuealed in the latter times they being generally considered then it was in the former As touching the number we know that the visible Church by the which we may certainely gather the state of the catholicke Church was vntill the time of Moses contained within the compasse of one kindred till the comming of Christ in one nation but afterwarde it spred it selfe ouer the whole world Yea the latter times of the gospell shall daily more and more exceede the first in number of beleeuers because now both the ful number of the gentiles and also of the Iewish nation is to come into the Church And in like manner the latter times doe exceede the former in knowledge Fourthly the catholicke Church hath no heade or ruler heere on earth neyther any externall gouernment but is ordered by the spirituall gouernment of Christ who is the onely heade of it For the gouernment and rules prescribed by God to his Church haue place and are put in practise onely in particular Churches which are the members of the catholicke Church Fiftly the catholicke Church is inuisible for that it consisteth not onely of particular Churches which are visible but also of particular men which serue God yet so as that they are not knowen by
and of the iudgementes of God that by this meanes they may be driuen to Christ and euen compelled to imbrace the doctrine of the gospell For as the iron must first be made hote in the fire before it will receaue any newe fo●me so must the hard heart be mollified in the furnace of the wrath of God before it will receaue the doctrine of faith and therefore it is needfull that there should by this meanes a way be made for the doctrine of the gospell for men must first be made to see their sinnes and the punishment of eternall death due vnto them before they can learne the vse and necessitie of Christ and of his righteousnesse For the phisition commeth not to whole men neyther doth the surgeon lay his plaisters but vpon wounded and brused members Thus did Iohn goe before Christ in the spirit of Elias to prepare the people for the Lord Luk. 1.17 and thus Christ prepared the young man Math. 19.21 and Peter the Iewes Actes 2.37 who when they were pricked in their heartes by hearing their sinnes they came to the Apostles saying men and brethren what shall we doe And Paul the men of Athens Act. 17.31 and lastly thus did God himselfe by a feareful earthquake prepare the iaylor Actes 16.30 and according to these exmples all other vnbeleeuers are to be conuerted by bringing them to a sight of their sinnes and a sense of the anger of GOD and that especially by mentioning and vrging those sinnes which are most hainous in their owne eyes and by the confession of all men which they can least excuse and whereof they are most ashamed Yea the doctrine of the lawe ought to goe before because it will more easelie be receaued and beleeued forsomuch as it is naturall to men being ingrafted in euerie mans minde since the first creation of man For although it were by the fall of Adam greatlie diminished obscured and peruerted yet there remaineth a confused and darke knowledge of good and euill of right and wrong and also of the rewarde belonging to obedience and the punishment of death due to sinne Rom. 1.32 the Gentiles knowe the lawe of God that they who committe sinne are worthy of death Yea of this knowledge commeth a conscience in infidels sometimes excusing them altho●gh falsely but for the most parte accusing them for their sinne before God So that this their knowledge of the lawe and conscience of sinne may easely be inlightned and stirred vppe by the preaching of the lawe whereas the doctrine of faith is contrarie to naturall reason and therefore harde to be perswaded Thus we see the first parte of the ministerie of the worde to wit that whereby infidels are to be prepared for the gospell This being done then the doctrine of christian religion is briefely and summarelie to be propunded euen as the Apostles did vse to preach Christ. The summe of whose sermons was this that saluation is to be had by faith in Iesus Christ the sonne of God and the redeemer of the world The trueth of this doctrine is to be proued by such testimonies as are of most force as the lawe and prophetes are with the Iewes out of the which we see that Christ and his Apostles doe continually proue that which they speake Likewise as touching the gentiles although the maine points of the gospell be contrarie to humane reason and therefore not to be grounded thereon yet we are not destitute of many helpes and euident argumentes drawen out of their owne poets philosophers prophetisses and oracles whereby the probabilitie trueth and necessitie of the gospell may be declared euen to the heathen The which who so desireth to know may see them in those bookes which are written for the demonstration of the trueth of christian religion both in the first ages of the Church as also in these latter times Especially the vanitie of that false and idolatrous worship is to be laid open vnto them that so they being as it were driuen from that may be constrained to seeke the true religion as hath beene declared Sect. 4. How men conuerted to the faith ought to be ordered SO many of them as can be wonne by this means to beleeue the trueth of the doctrine deliuered are vpon confession of their faith to haue baptisme administred vnto them to be a seale of their faith to themselues and a badge of their profession to others and so to be separated from the rest as those of whom the Church is to consist Yea although they doe not at the first expresse the power of religion in true repentance and a christian life yet if they doe beleeue that to be the true religion of GOD and be content to professe the same then are they to be accounted members of the Church So we reade Actes 8.16 that many of the Samaritanes were baptised and so receaued into the Church whenas none of them had receaued the holy ghost but onely beleeued in the name of Iesus as they were taught So the Eunuch was baptised Actes 8. vpon this confession I beleeue that Iesus Christ is the sonne of God For euen as they who labour in digging mettals out of the earth doe at the first ●ake for golde whatsoeuer doth glister and afterward purge the pure golde from the corrupt drosse and from all base mettall and as fishers take for fishe whatsoeuer commeth to the net but afterwarde separate the good from the bad Math. 13.47.48 so at the first the ministerie receaueth all that seeme to beleeue but in processe of time it separateth the hypocrite from the beleeuer and the wicked from the godly although not perfitly But before the administration of baptisme the summarie doctrine of it must be taught that so it may be receaued with greater fruite to wit that this sacrament was appointed by God himselfe as Iohn the first minister of it doth testifie Iohn 2.33 to be in his church a badge and common liueray of all his seruants whereby they are to professe his name and to be knowen from vnbeleeuers and also for their owne edification that by baptisme they may be confirmed in beleeuing the doctrine both of the law and of the gospell and further that it belongeth cheifly to the doctrine of the law in that by drowning vs in water it putteth vs in remembraunce of that eternall death whereunto we were subiect before as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 6.4 and that it is of the same nature and vse with circumcision the which did vnder the law both distinguishe the Iewes as gods people from all other nations as prophane and also set before the eies of the receauers eternall death as the other ordinarie sacrament of the passouer did eternall life for the one sacrament was of a bloudy signification wounding the body and so threatning death but the other graue the comfortable nourishment of life and so doe baptisme the Lords supper differ Lastly that both baptisme and circumcision although they
For so the building of the materiall temple was hindered by false prophets Nehe. 6. Yea none did so importunatly hinder or so spitefully entreate the true prophets of God as did the false prophets and the whole company of worldly carnal minded priestes Thus we se. 2. Chro. 18.23 that Zedekia did to Micha and Iere. 20.1 Pashur to Ieremie the priestes Scribes pharises to our sauiour Christ the false Apostles to Paule Such were those foolish vaine-glorious preachers at Corinth who swelling in a fond opinion and a foolish vse of humane wisdome did build vpon the good foundation of the sincere plaine and simple doctrine of the trueth hay stuble wood and such things as would be afterwards consumed with the fire that is would be found in examination to haue no substance of true religion These did seeme to build as well yea much more then the apostle but they were deceitfull workers and by this working did greatly hinder the true building of the church For if there were no builders all men that do professe the faith would seeke for some but these deceitfull builders perswade men that they are the true ministers of Christ and no maruail when as Sathan himselfe that foule and lothsome spirite doth transforme himselfe into an Angell of light and so they hinder them of faithfull and painfull teachers Lastly these hinderers may be knowen by their fruites as Christ teacheth vs Math. 7.15.16 euen by their dissolute liues the which they spend in seeking not the saluation of men and Gods glory but their owne pleasure ease commoditie yea riches and preferment Yea this their hypocrisie is to be detected least otherwise their purpose of hindering the Church do preuaile and that both by word when occasion serueth and also by the contrary sinceritie of the true builders Thus Christ dealeth with the Scribes and Pharisies Math. 23. and in many other places Sect. 9. Of an imperfect state of a Church WHenas the building of the Church is hindred by any meanes it commeth to passe that the state of it is imperfect corrupt or both For although in Christ the Church be perfect and pure yet she being in this worlde is often otherwise An imperfect state of a church is when as some part of the gouernment of the church is wanting as if the ministerie of the worde be wanting or if the ministers doe seldome and negligently preach the worde of GOD vnto the people Yet not the wantes that are in any fewe men but those which are generall and tollerated by the publick lawes or the common consent of the church make an imperfect state The imperfection is so much the more grieuous as the offices or functions of the offices which are wanting are more needfull in the church And therefore whenas there is no preaching ministerie in the Church the want is great and the case most lamentable because God hath ordained that his church should be built and his seruants saued by preaching the which being wanting the ordinary meanes of faith and of saluation is also wanting The want of any office is to be supplied by that which is nearest vnto it so did the leuites supplie the want of the priestes being by reason of their legall vncleannesse not meete to sacrifice 2. Ch●o 29.34 Yea that which is publickly wanting is priuately to be supplied what part of Gods worship or any thing belonging to it soeuer it be Yet we must not rest herein but carefully labour for a ful and perfect form of gouernment wherof how much is wanting so much of the meanes of our saluation is wanting And therefore we are heere to consider howe we may liue in an imperfect Church and how we ought to forsake it For the first we neede not doubt but that we may lawfully remaine in a Church the which wanteth some office or function appointed by God yea that our seruice wil be in some measure accepted of God who winketh at the infirmities and imperfections of his faithfull seruantes whether priuate or publicke Euen as he did at the passouer offered by Ezechias and the people wherein many thinges required by the law were wanting yea the Church seldome attaineth and keepeth so absolute perfect as that nothing is wanting in it Thus many of the Churches in the daies of the Apostles wanted some offices which were afterwardes supplied And in the ages following the troubles and persecutions of the Church made many wantes in it the which may be borne with these conditions First when as they are not so great but that notwithstanding them we haue the meanes of saluation edificarion Secondly if that the want be not wilfull but constrained and necessarie as when the Iewes intermitted the vse of circumcisiō in the wildernes Lastly if that we doe still aime at a perfect state cōsidering that the other is neyther so auailable for the glory of God vnto whome we should not offer any lame blinde or maimed sacrifice or any imperfect seruice or yet so effectuall for our saluation For although a man may preserue his naturall life with bread and water yet he ought to desire the vse of other creatures seruing for his purpose that he may liue in strength and vigour of bodie and minde Sect. 10. Of a corrupt state of a Church specially of idolatrous worship A Cor●upt state is whenas in steede of the true and sincere gouernment appointed by God a false gouernment contrary to the word of God hinde●●ng the edification of the Church is publikely established or vsed or whenas some part of the gouerment is corrupted The causes of this estate are these first an imperfect state for the want of any part of the gouernment breedeth corruption For where there is no teaching there must needs be generall ignorance and many errours in iudgement where powerfull exhortation is not vsed there the graces of the spirit belonging to the practise of christianity are wanting and where the censures of the Church are not in force there dissolutenesse in the liues of men must needes preuaile The second cause is the reliques of the former false worship being not wholly abolished the which are like vnto a roote left in the earth and to a wound or sore the which being not wel clensed will fester and send forth much corruption Hence came that corruption of popery to wit from the reliques of Iudaisme and heathenisme and so that leauen hauing once infected the whole lumpe of the Church we knowe that although the substance of it be taken out yet the taste and sowernesse of it doth remaine in many places The kindes of a corrupt state are many as are the parts of the syncere gouernment For the first the ministry of the Church may be many waies out of order as if it be sufficient and destitute of giltes needful or if the manner of execution of it be corrupt as when it is turned into vaine ostentation and to an vnprofitable affection of learning reading wit
memorie and other common giftes Then followeth a corrupt worship consisting in outward rites and ceremonies in vaine babling in suffering hunger or in other bodily exercises Further if in steede of true doctrine errours be publickely taught and generally receaued or if in steede of a christian life sinne doe abounde by these meanes and many other which it is not needefull to rehearse commeth a corrupt state of a Church But heere we are briefely to touch a question which hath beene in part handled alone Chap. 1. Sect. 4. to wit howe farre a Church may be corrupt before it cease to be a true Church that is a Church truely and indeede For answere whereof it seemeth that wheresoeuer a company of men doe ioyntlie and publickely by worshipping the true God in Christ professe the substance of Christian religion which is faith in Iesus Christ the sonne of God and Sauiour of the world that there is a true Church notwithstanding any corruption whatsoeuer yea although it be of that nature that it might be made by consequent of argument to fight with the very foundation of christian religion and so hainous as that in respect thereof the people stained with this corruption are worthy to be abhorred of all men and vnworthy to be called the Church of God We will take an instance of a people which together with the profession of the faith doe m●intaine and vse idolatrie not worshipping a false God for then they were without all question to be counted infidels but the true God after a false and deuised manner These seeme to be a Church although they doe prophane the worship of God after a most horrible grieuous m●nner thus as it may seem some christans did in the first time of the gospel who did both beleeue in some sort yet could not of a sudden shake off that idolatrie wherein they had liued so many yeares For so Paul writeth 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is called a brother that is a christian be a fornicatour or couetous or a worshipper of Images This kind of w●rship is in vse in the Church of Rome the which seemeth to be a Church althogh in the lowest degree that can be imagined vnlesse as it semeth that we may do we wil admit into the church the people of the ten tribs who were idolaters yet by circumcisiō some otherwaies did professe the name of Iehoua as we may note out of many testimonies of scripture And first out of those places where they are called the people of god as we read Ro. 10.25.26 wher the people of God the beloued of God and the children of the liuing God doe all signifie a true Church In the 1. King 16.2 they are twise so called wher God saith that he made Bahasa the captaine of his people Israell Secondly God is called the God of the ten tribes and said to be among them 1. King 20.28 because the Syrians speaking of the God of the ten tribes of whome they were ouercome said that Iehoua was God of the hils onely and 1. King 18.35 thou art the God of Israel Thirdly for that they alwaies had the true prophets of God and by them did aske and receiue counsell of God in their waightie affaires Thus 1. King 22.5.6.7.11 Achab asked counsel of God 2. King 2.16 Ahazia is reproued by God for that He sent to aske counsell at Baalsebub as though there were not a GOD in Is●ael whose worde he might haue sought after Likewise 1. King 5.8 Eliseus saith this is a most certaine thing that Israell is not at any time without a prophet The trueth hereof may be gathered also 1. King 18.21 where Elias saith that the people did halt betwixt God and Baal that is did serue them both together And lastly by that which is often said that the kinges of Israel did euil in the eyes of God that is in that place wherupon God did as yet looke with the eyes of his mercy as vpon his Church So that although they did wante almost the whole publicke worship and therefore are said 2. Chro. 15.3 to be without God without priestes and the law yet because the name of God was generally by circumcision professed of them they seeme to retaine the name of a Church and o● the people of God Euen as the Church of Rome serueth God and Christ by baptisme and by professing his name otherwaies although they haue no part of the worship of God vncorrupt●d And so the ten tribes some christians in the primitiue church the papists and as we may thinke king Salomon with many others ioyned idolatry the worship of the true God together as it is said of the Samaritanes that they feared the Lord and worshipped idols 2. Kinges 17.41 yet these Samaritanes were not a Church for they did only in their mindes slauishly feare God but all their outward worship was done vnto idols Sect. 11. Of a Church corrupt in doctrine NOwe we are to enquire howe farre a people may be corrupt in doctrine and yet remain a Church Whereunto we answere as before that all they who hold the foundation of religion are to be counted a Church although together they be infected with many grieuous errours By the foundation of religion we doe not meane any one particular point no not the waightiest points or those which come nearest to the foundation it selfe but the generall and maine doctrine of Christianitie the which was before the comming of Ch●ist this I beleeue in the Messias who is to come of the seed of Dauid and since his comming it is this I beleeue that Iesus is Christ as the foundation of religion is defined by the Apostle 1. Cor. 3.11 The truth hereof may euidently appeare by considering the state of the visible Church before the comming of Christ especially as it was at the time of his comming in the which although God did reueale his will more clearely to some of his prophets people yet the church generally was altogether ignorant of the waightiest points of the Gospell as of Christ the trinitie two distinct natures the vnion of them of his offices death and resurrection Now although simple ignoraunce be not so grieuous a sinne as wilfull heresie neither an heresie before the comming of Christ as one since his comming yet in this respect they are all one for a man doth erre in that point which he doth not knowe holding the errour contrary to the said trueth Euen as the Iewes not knowing the heades of doctrine before named did alwaies in all ages and doe to this day so many as continue in vnb●leife deny the doctrine of the trinitie for they make but one person to wit God the father and the doctrine of the deitie of Christ thinking that the Messias should be a mere man they deny his offices thinking that he should be a temporall king onely and therefore they knewe not the doctrine of regeneration as we see in
heretike Heretikes haue giuen their liues for the gospel Difference to be put betwixt the simple professours of errours and the obstinate maintainers of them What is the foundation of reliligion before and since the comming of Christ. The deuil hath knowledge but neither faith nor the profession of faith Mahometisme a mystical Ariaanisme No saluation The ca●holicke Church cannot erre in the foundatiō of religion The catholicke Church hath often beene in most grieuous errours The catholicke Church doth continually encrease in number and in knowledge The catholicke Church hath no head o● outward gouernment The catholicke Church in●isible Dispersed Christians with the Churches professing the gospel make the Catholicke Church Eremeticall separation from the Church vnawfull How the sacraments may be priuately receiued God accepteth the imperfect seruice of those who cannot be in the visible Church Dispersed christians ought to labour by all meanes to ioyne themselues to some Church By what meanes God calleth those who are with out the visible Church Three things required to the constitution of a Church A diuerse gouernment maketh a distinct Church The whole nation of the Iewes made but one particular Church A particular Church often contained in one familie Why it was needful that the whole nation of the Iewes should be one particular church Better for a Church to consist of many christians then of a fewe No kinde of men excluded from being the Church of God The most barbarous may become Christians The planting of Churches belongeth to thē who haue either extraordinarie callings or the most excellent gifes Great care to be had in planting a Church The ministerie of the word was more effectuall in the primitiue Church then it hath bene at any time since The Iewes are to be conuerted by the generall consent of the Gentiles in receauing the gospell How infidels ought to be prepared for the doctrine of the gospell How the doctrine of the gospell is to be propounded to infidels Baptisme is the badge or liueray of christians Baptisme circumcision sacraments of the lawe of death Great seueritie in punishing open offences to be vsed in the planting of Churches The establishing of ecclesiasticall lawes among beleeuers maketh a Church Ecclesiasticall lawes or ecclesiasticall gouernment is partly diuine and partly huma●● None but God can appoint the substance of Church-gouernment The gouernment of the Church alwaies changed to a better estate What was the state of the Church before the lawe What was the state of the Church vnder the lawe The state of the Church in the time of the gospel Th● Church in the time of the Gospel hath more of inward grace lesse in outward shewes and ceremonies The gouernment of the Church neuer altered but by men sent immediately from God The difference betwixt diuine and humane ecclesiastical lawes Humane ecclesiastical lawes are made of the circumstances of Gods worship How humane ecclesiastical lawes are set downe in the word of God In conueniēt lawes may lawfully be obeyed In making ecclesiastical lawes regard must be had of the knowledge or ignornance of the time Sharper laws to be made for one people then for another For what causes the multitude of ecclesiasticall lawes ought to be auoyded The difficulty of planting a Church maketh an vn●stablished state The number of Christians is to encrease daily The primitiue Church did most florish in spirituall giftes God maketh the building of the Church troublesom● and dangerous for the trial of those who build it The Church vtt●r●y ●uer throwen to mans iudgement Two ki●des of ciuil authoritie and 〈◊〉 What magistrates may be resisted in the cause of the Church The original of absolute autho●itie Vniust conquest and vsurpation may become a lawfull dominion Fli●ht i● time of persecution alwaies lawful and often good for the Church The Censures of the Church belong as well to christian rulers as to ●he people What cautions are to be obserued in excommunicating the c●uill ruler Excommunication is no curse neither toucheth the authoritie of the magistrate Public●e wants are to be priuately s●●plied How we may lawfully remaine in an imperfect Church No corruption maketh them who holde the foundation of religion to be no Church The tenne tribes in their defection were the Church of God The ten tribes in th●ir defect● on were the Church of G●d Idolat●ie the worship of the true God ioyned g●th●r The errours of the I●wes before the comming of Christ. No publicke Church sau● the people of the Iewes til the daies of Constātine The causes of a priuate C●urch Priuate men may plante priuate Churches Euery one ought to builde the Church so farre as his authoritie stretcheth Christians in priuate Churches ought not to abhorre the company of infidels Priuate Chu●ches consist of the most swee●e Chris●ians What a publick Church is Why there were no publick Ch. in the daies of the Apostles Why publick churches can not be so perfect as priua●e How publick Churches are called to the faith Publicke Churches stand no longer then they are vpheld by the ciuill magistrate The ministerie is a member of the ciuill bodie Magistrates haue charge of the soules their subiects No man ought to passe the limits of his calling in building the Church Christ is the head of the Church after another manner then men are The setting vp of a publicke Church doth not alter the forme of ciuill gouernment Ciuill states wel ordered are more fit harbours for the Ch. then disordered states In the first planting of a publicke Church the false worship is to b● abrogated by little little Obstinate infidels may be compelled to heare the word but not to be of the Church In case of necessity men of meane gifts may be admitted to the ministerie of the word The state of a priuate Church is popular but the state of a publicke Church is according to the forme of the ciuil gouernment Why the authoritie of the ciuill ruler ouer the Church is not mentioned by the Apostles in their writinges The vse of councels Why there is no me●tion made of coūcels in the writings of the Apostles For what causes others besides the ministers of the word are to be admitted to ecclesiastical cōsultations No ecclesiastical law can be made made in a publicke Ch. without the consent of the ciuill ruler The general consent of the Church confirmeth faith How the visible Church hath changed the dwelling place
from the safety of the people of states and commonwealthes the ground square and end of all good pollicie carieth with it such a faire shew of equitie and necessitie that like vnto a violent streame it hath caried many headlong in heate to condemne and reiect vtterly these absolute Monarchies as tyrannicall and barbarous kindes of gouernment pernitious to men yea altogether vnlawful and vnmeete for the Church of God But we ought not to suffer our selues to be deceiued by any appearance or pretence whatsoeuer or in respect of any inconueniences although neuer so great to iudge that to be vnlawfull and prophane which God by establishing it in his Church hath shewed to be holy and lawfull But for the further resoluing of this question it is requisite that we againe put you in minde that we doe not heere speake eyther what ought to be the state of al kingdomes in this behalfe or that this is the best kinde of gouernment but only doe shew what was the state of this kingdome of Israell In the which it seemeth that the whole power of ruling the lande was giuen by God and by the people into the handes of the king without any exception whatsoeuer insomuch that the people did not reserue to themselues any power whereby they might lawfully resist his authoritie or oppose themselues to his proceedings although vnlawfull and vniust much lesse take from him the kingdome or to offer any manner of violence vnto his person For the authoritie of this king ouer his people was no lesse then is the authoritie of a father in his familie in respect of his children who if he doe iniuriously intreat any of them or not carefully keep his own goods or liue any way disorderly it is the duety of his children if not with silence to suffer it yet with great modesty to admonish him of it But if they should ioyne themselues together and offer any violence vnto him especially if they should throw him out of his house all men woulde count them rebellious and vngratious children But if they shoulde take his life from him they were to be esteemed notoriously wicked ye rather as monsters worthy to be abhorred of all men So it seemeth that the state of this kingdome was such as that no subiect of what place soeuer no not the whol people iointly could lawfully vse any violence against the kings person or proceedinges and that the king might although not lawfully in respect of the lawe of God of men or of nature yet safely and freely in respect of his subiectes doe whatsoeuer pleased him according as Iacob foretelleth Gen. 49.9 that Iuda the king of his brethren should be as the great Lion who when he laieth himselfe downe who shall raise him vppe or disquiet him The trueth heereof appeareth in the whole course of the story of the kings who praesuming vpon this whole and vndeuided authority did neuer feare or doubt to doe whatsoeuer they listed without asking leaue eyther at nobles elders or people Hence came that foolish and tyrannicall answer which Rehoboā made to the people threatning them 1. King 12.12 in this manner My least part shal be heauier then my fathers loynes whereby he meant that he would encrease those heauie burdens of tributes which his father had laide vpon them For but that he knewe verie well the state of his kingdome to be such as that he might both say and doe what he listed without controlement he had beene more then mad to make such an answere And hence it came that the idolatrous kinges did neuer sticke by their sole authoritie to set vp open idolatrie not once minding who would be offended therewith and likewise the continuall practise of the people doth declare that they did not violētly oppose thēselues to the doings eyther of the good or of the wicked kinges but suffered religion to stand and fall according to their pleasure Yea the dealing of God himselfe doth prooue the same who when he purposed to preserue Dauid against the fury of Saule would neuer suffer him to oppose Ceila or any other of Saules cit●es against him but made him fly first into the mountains and deserts and afterwardes out of the land to the Philistines Yea Dauid although he were appointed by the expresse worde of God to s●cceede Saule in the kingdome yet he was so farre from laying violent handes vpon him that as we reade 1. Sam. 24.6 his heart smote him that is his conscience did accuse him that he had behaued himselfe disloyally against the king in that he had offered violence to the kings garment because that was as a threatning of death vnto him and a greate disgrace Yea further we doe not reade that God did euer by any of his prophets stirre vp the people to maintaine his true wo●shippe by violence against the kinges or euer reproue them because they had suffered them to set vppe idolatrie which is an euident proofe of this point For if it had beene lawfull to resist in any case then surely in the maintenance of the true worshippe of God and of his glorie But heereof there is a great question made for although this king had power in ciuill matters to doe not onely right iustice without the helpe of any other power but also wrong without resistance shall we therefore giue vnto him this power in the cause of religion that he may deface the worshippe of God at his pleasure It may seeme much better that not onely kings should be throwen downe from their thrones but also that heauen and earth shoulde goe togither then that God should be dishonoured and detestable idolatrie erected We confesse that it is a most fearefull thing that the king of Israell who hath his authority from God should vse the same to dishonor God and thrust not only men out of their houses landes but also the great God of heauen earth out of his tēple and Church yea in trueth in some sort out of the world for God had tyed his visible Church to this land And therefore we answere that as it is vsually saide Si ius violandum regni causâ violandum so Si ius regni sit violandum religionis causa est violandum that if it be lawfull for the people of Israell for any cause to resist their lawfull king it is lawfull in the defence of the true religion and Gods glory But as hath beene said it seemeth that the state of this kingdome would not beare any resistance no not in this case much lesse in any other No man yea no company of men could for any offence committed by the king eyther against God or man the first or second table call him to account summon him to appeare in iudgement or vse any manner of violence eyther in word or deede against him Now we are to answere those thinges which may be obiected against this assertion Sect. VI. FIrst it may seeme agreeable to reason that
And therefore they are to serue God in the time of their excommunication Sect. 2. How the dispersed members of the catholicke Church serue God THus much of the causes why some of the mēbers of the Church are dispersed abroad from the company of the Church Now we are to consider what manner of seruice they perform to God in regarde wherof they are accounted members of the Church The which title belongeth only to those who do serue God as hath beene declared The onely meanes whereby they serue God is praier or inuocation of the name of God because this seruice may be perfourmed by one alone but the ministery the word of the sacramentes and other partes of the seruice of God require acompany ioyning together for that purpose So that prayer is that part of the actuall seruice of God which onely belongeth generally to all the members of the Church which are come to yeares of discretion as well to those who are dispersed as to those who liue together in the Church Hence it is that the Apostle Paule when he speaketh of all christians without exception of any calleth them those who call vpon the name of the Lord as namely 1. Cor. 1.1 Thus did Daniell serue God in Babel Dan. 6.10 thrise a day he made his petition to God and praised him Heere order requireth that we should entreate of prayer the most generall and perpetuall part of the seruice of God yea that which is the very badge of all christians and declare the whole nature manner kindes fruite and all the pointes of doctrine belonging to this heade But we will rather passe it ouer with silence for that the matter is both large and requiring a seuerall treatise and also is sufficiently handled by diuerse godly and learned men Here also this question is to be answered whether that the dispersed members of the Church may not vse some other parte of the seruice of God as the sacrmentes for the confirmation of their faith As touching this point it seemeth that whilest any one member of the Church is wholly seuered from the societie of others that he cannot vse them neyther any other part but onely prayer as hath beene said Yet if there be any number of them although but two that then they may lawfully vse both the sacramentes of baptisme and of the Lordes supper For the further declaration whereof we may put this case A christian man and his wife being taken captiues liue amongest infidels where to their knowledge there is not any christian beside themselues There they beget children whome they woulde haue by baptisme consecrated and initiated into the profession of Christianity In this case it is lawfull yea needfull for the parentes both of them or eyther of them to administer baptisme to their children This appeareth Exod 4.25 where Moses and Zippora his wife circumcise their sonne by the commandement or rather by the threatning of God And so did all the Iewes being scattered abroade into all the partes of the worlde circumcise their male children in their owne houses Likewise for the other sacrament of the Lordes supper it is lawfull for christians in the aforesaid case to receiue it at their owne handes as this one example doth sufficiently prooue If it be obiected that the sacramentes being a part of the ministerie of the Church ought not to be administred but by a publicke person and in a publicke place we answere that where there is no Church there a priuate mans house is in steed of it and he himselfe in place of a minister Sect. 3. By what meanes the dispersed members of the Church are called THus much of that seruice wherewith the dispersed members of the Church serue God the which although it be imperfect yet it is acceptable to God where the rest cannot be had and is a sufficient meanes to worke their saluation So we reade Ezech. 11.16 the Lord saith that He will be to his people dispersed abroad in the captiuitie a little sanctuarie that is howsoeuer they were absent from the holy temple at Ierusalem in which place onely it was lawfull to offer sacrifice and to serue God in full and ample manner yet that God would accept that imperfect and maimed seruice which they should perfourme vnto him in their captiuitie by praier and circumcision For as touching the passouer it was a sacrifice and therefore could not be vsed in any place but onely at Ierusalem But although this imperfect seruice be accepted of God yet they themselues doe not so rest in it but that they doe and ought aboue all thinges in the worlde to desire to be in the societie of the Church that so they may enioy the full meanes of working their owne saluation and of glorifying God So that although they be absent in body yet in minde and affection they are ioyned with it In witnesse whereof as also to encrease this desire they did being in a straunge lande amongest the infidels pray toward the place of the Church and worship of God 1. King 8.48 Dan. 6.11 Psal. 84. Lastly it may be asked how those dispersed members of the Church which neuer were in the societie of other christians were called and became members of it whereunto we answere that in the ordinarie working of God there is no faith and true knowledge of God to be gotten but in the visible Church and in the company of beleeuers yet that God doth by extraordinarie meanes saue some who neuer were ioyned to the society of the Church The meanes which God vseth are knowen to him only yet some of them may be gathered out of the scripture As first the reliques of the true worship of God the which taketh such deep root in those places where it is planted that although the visible Church be cleane ouerthrowen yet there will some root of knowledge remain hidden in the ground euen as we see that where a garden replenished with great store of herbes hath been there wil be long after that it is defaced some sprouting vp So that the word of God as it is in the gospel cōpared to a grain of mustard seed Ma. 13.31 in respect of the speedy gret groth of it vpwards so it may be cōpared to it in that they both take so deep root that where they are once sowen there they remaine for many ages Thus there was a glimmering of the true worship of God dispersed abroade by the sonnes of Noah by the which meanes it came to passe that diuerse did in some sorte knowe God among the infidels As Melihezadec Iob with his friends Lot Baal●m of all them knowing the true God Yea in the idolatrie of Mahomet there remaineth something of christian religion hereof they holde many pointes although couered ouer with prophane fable Moreouer some liuing out of the Church are brought to the knowledge of God by the meanes and priuate teaching of some who haue beene of the Church Yea euen
that whenas there is a fault committed in the laying of the foundation of a house the whole building will for euer be the worse for it The first thing therefore to be done in planting a Church is to cōuert infidels to the faith which is done ordinarily by the ministerie of the word of God deliuered plainely sincerely effectually as God hath appointed Notwithstanding which powerfull meanes the subduing of men to the Gospel is a hard matter yea it is much harder in these times then it was in the daies of the Apostles wherein the gospel was first preached For then the ministerie of the Apostles Euangelists and other preachers of the gospel was much more powerfull and effectuall then any ministerie of the worde is in these daies For they had not onely extraordinary measure of those gifts which do yet remaine in the Church for the building thereof as are the gifts of prophecie knowledge wisedome zeale and all other of that kind but they had also other most wonderfull gifts bestowed vpon them as the gifts of speaking in strange languages the gifts of discerning spirits healing the sicke working of miracles and such other which serued onely for this end to bring infidels to the profession of the faith 1. Cor. 14.22 not that true faith was ordinarely wrought by these meanes in men but onely a generall historicall and temporarie faith whereby they did beleeue the doctrine of the gospel to be the worde of God which beliefe being professed was then and is at all times suffici●nt to make one a member of the visible Church heere vpon earth The which the Apostles did labour by their ministerie to bring to passe and did reioyce in it being effected although there did appeare in those beleeuers few or no signes of sauing faith which is a firme confidence in the ●ercy and loue of God in Christ effect●ally wrought in the hear● by the spirit of God arising of a certaine perswasion of the trueth of Gods worde whereof this generall faith is onely a resemblance shadowe and appearance And further for this purpose the giftes of miracles and such other did greatly auaile for they did so astonish and amaze men that they did euen wring out of them an approbation of the doctrine preached that it came from God and therfore was to be receiued Iohn 1.15 Act. 13.11 Thus did the Apostles plant Churches but they who since that time labour in this worke are destitute of this helpe yea also of another farre more effectuall to wit of the wonderfull and extraordinarie blessing of God vpon his Church who did then poure forth his spirit so straungely and so plentifully vpon men in conuerting their heartes to the obedience of the gospell as the like was not before hath not beene since neyther shall be at any time in the Church So that these helpes being wanting in these daies we cannot looke for the like successe in this worke to wit that the Church should haue such a suddaine and straunge encrease as it had in the beginning whenas many thousandes were at once added vnto it Act. 2.41 yet we are not to despaire of good successe forsomuch as the Lord hath not left his ministery destitute of sufficient power to conuert many men to the faith euen those who neuer heard of Christ before For although the extraordinarie callinges and giftes of the Apostles and Euangelistes be not now in the Church neyther to be looked for yet the force of them doth remaine still in that the very declaration of those wonderful miracles whereby the trueth of the gospell was confirmed at the first will to the ende of the worlde adde authoritie and giue successe to the preaching of the Gospell although they were much more effectuall in those who did beholde them with their eies Yea we haue some helpes which were not in the primitiue Church and for the supplie whereof those other were giuen to wit the consent of all ages since the first publishing of the Gospell wherein many haue not only professed the faith but also sealed that their profession with th●ir blood and that not any small number but euen whole nations haue professed and do confesse the gospel The which no doubt is a forcible argument and euen as a cloud of witnesses whereby he who is obstinate in infidelity may be eyther conuerted or confounded and put to silence Yea this generall embracing of the gospell by so many countries and nations is that fulnesse of the Gentiles the which the Lord hath appointed as a meanes whereby that obstinate and harde-hearted nation of the Iewes shall at the appointed time be conuerted And therefore it cannot but be effectuall with the rest of the Gentiles who are not so obstinate in infidelitie as the Iewes are But we are especially to relie vppon that force which the worde of God being plainely and sincerely deliuered hath in turning mens heartes vnto God which will neuer returne emptie but in some measure perfourme the thing for which it was sent Thus much in generall of the meanes of conuerting infidels now of the same in particular The ministerie of the worde which is heere to be vsed hath two partes the first is a preparatiue whereby infidels being of themselues altogether vnfit to heare and vnlike to beleeue the worde are in some measure prepared for this purpose the second is to teach them the doctrine of the gospell The preparing ministerie consisteth in two thinges The first is to purge their mindes from that false worship whereunto they are giuen The second is to conuince their consciences of sin For the first we cānot hope that men being fully perswaded of the trueth of their owne religion and of the deitie power and goodnesse of those false Gods which they worship will imbrace any new and strange religion Thus did Elias 1. King 18.24 bring the people from idolatrie to the true worship of God And likewise Paul dealeth with the idolatrous men of Athens Act. 17.29 and with them of Lystra Act. 14.13 and yet there is great moderation and wisedome to be vsed in this pointe so that we doe not at the first speake so vilely and baselie of their religion as it doth deserue but rather tollerate them in their corruptions and withall instruct them in the trueth that ●o the other false worship may slippe out of their mindes as it were without violence they leauing it of their owne accord For otherwise if they see their Gods and religion wherein they haue beene brought vp and which they haue receaued from their ancestors to be blasphemed and euill spoken off there is greate danger least at the first we so alienate their mindes that they will not heare the worde preached but become vtter enemies vnto it So the towne clarke in the Apologie for Paule Actes 19.37 witnesseth that he in preaching the gospell had not blasphemed their goddesse Diana Secondlie they must be prepared by the ministerie of the law of sinne
God teacheth vs that the ciuil power is a holy ordinance of God instituted by God chiefly for this end to intermeddle with ecclesiasticall matters and not onely to suffer and tolerate religion as it doth in a priuate Church but also to set vp and maintaine it yea wholly to effect it although by the meanes ministerie of others in al places whither the said power doth stretch it self As for the distinction of the ciuil ecclesiastical state although it may be vsed to put a difference betwixt ciuil ecclesiasticall matters yet if therby we meane that in a publicke Church there is added to the ciuill state another full and perfect bodie endued with full authoritie to begin and effect all matters belonging to it self not relying vpon the other but only vsing the help of it against outward violence as whē two distinct nations do ioine themselues in league together for their greater safetie then we thinke farre otherwise of these thinges then the worde of God doth permit according to the which the politicall bodie together with a publicke Church are but one body moued and ordered by one and the same head For as when any people being barbarous rude vnexpert in feates of warre and altogether destitute of humane knowledge and all good litterature become ciuill courteous warlicke wise and learned there are not so many newe estates or bodies added to the common-wealth but onely the first state of it is made so many waies better so it is whenas a people of pagans and infidels become the worshippers of the true God For there is not a newe bodie or state but onely the qualitie of religion is added to the ciuill bodie or rather idolatrie is chaunged into the true worshippe of God The which doth no more make a distinct body then idolatrie doth in a heathenish common-wealth As for the people they can no more be said to be another bodie because they are religious then for that they are a learned and warlicke people but for the ministers and rulers of the Church it may seeme necessarie to be graunted that they doe eyther make a distinct and perfect bodie or that the ministerie is a member of the ciuill bodie Whereunto we answere that the ministerie is not a bodie in it selfe neither is it the head of the body of the Church but onely is a member of the bodie of the commonwealth distinguished from the reste in nature vse and obiecte and excelling the other by a diuine holinesse which it hath more then any other part or function of this body The trueth hereof is to be laide open by declaring first that this whole state consisting of a politicall bodie and of a publicke Church hath but one heade wherby the whole bodie is ordered and euerie member of it moued in their seuerall functions And secondly the offices of these two states may agree together in the same subiect The heade is the ciuill power whereof we speake rather then of the ciuill magistrate for that in many places the power is not wholly in the handes of the magistrate but diuided among the senate the nobilitie and the people But here we speake of the whole power the which wee call the hande of this body by ● vsuall metaphore taken from the naturall bodies wherein we see that the whole motion commeth from the head without the which none of the members can moue it selfe or doe any function Thus all men doe graunt that the ciuill power is the head of this body in regard of ciuill and worldly affaires but that it may be so called in respect of the Church and of ecclesiasticall matters many do doubt or rather flatly deny without any doubting thinking that neither the ciuill power doth stretch it selfe to Church affaires neither if it do in some respect that it ought therefore or may lawfully be called the head of the Church As touching this point we are to consider howe both the function and also the name of a head agreeth to the ciuill power for the first in the building of the Church it pleaseth God to vse the helpe and the ministerie of men and that two diuerse waies according to the two diuerse kindes of building his Church whereof the one is inward secrete and spirituall whenas by the ministerie of the word and the sacremenes the Church is edified in knowledge faith loue obedience and in all manner of spirituall graces in this parte of the building Christ is the first and cheife mouer yea the head of his Church vnto the which he giueth spirituall motion by his ministers as by instruments vnto whom he giueth spirituall graces fit for this purpose Ephe. 4.11 He gaue some to be Apostles some Euangelistes some Pastors and doctours for the gathering of his saintes and for the building of the body of Christ. Thus Christ onlie is the head of the whole visible church for no creature can either appoint ecclesiasticall functions or giue spirituall graces either to the ministers or to the people But whenas the Church commeth to be built in any particular place there must be added an other parte of this building more outward apparant and sensible then the other to wit whenas this spirituall building together with the ministerie of the word which is the meanes of it is not onely receaued whē as it is offered but also diligently sought after when it is wan●●ng and carefully preserued after that it is gotten This kinde of building also is to be performed by the ministerie of man but yet it doth not come from the same head or fountaine For that spirituall building commeth from Christ as he is Lord and king of his Church but this commeth from God the father the maker and preseruer of mankinde who in great mercie and wisdome hath not left men in vtter confusion but hath giuen vnto them the meanes of hauing a Church and his true worshippe This meanes is his owne power and authority communicated to certaine men for the good of the rest to whome he hath giuen this charge that they do as by all other meanes so cheifly by building his church in those places which are within the compas of their authority procure the good of men so that all whosoeuer haue the rule of any place whether it be kingdome or countrie prouince or citie towne or family are bound by the word of God and namely by the generall lawes of magistracie to build the Church in the said places the which thing if they doe neglect as most of all the magistats in the world in all ages haue done then they do sinne against God no lesse then the minister being lawfully called to the function who doth neglect the inward and spirituall edifying of the Church This the prophet foretolde saing that kinges and Queenes should be nourse fathers and nurse mothers to the Ch. Not that they should be the ministers of the word and of the spirituall nourishment vnto them but onely that they should
them and nothing more shameful and ignominious by the generall consent of all men then for any people to be blockish in diuine matters and not able to discerne which is the right worshippe of the true God Nowe let vs see what the Church gaineth by this bargaine and couenant made with the ciuill state First by this meanes she becommeth safe from outward daungers and from the violence of malitious persecutours by whom priuate Churches are continually troubled and often quite ouerthrowen being neither willing to resist by force of armes their owne magistrates labouring to deface the true worshippe of God neith●r for the most part able to with-stand forrain inuasion And therefore they may fitly be compared to a vinyard which wanteth a hedge or fence so that all the wilde beastes of the forrest do enter in and root it vp but a publick Church is garded by the ciuill power against all daungers not onely outward but also inward arising of the stubburn wilfulnesse of those who will not submit themselues to the orders of the Chur●h Hence it is that those ciuill states which are well ordered are farre more fit harbours for the Church then confused common-wealthes are For whenas men are not taught to yeeld obedience to ciuill gouernment which forbidding only hainous offences is more gentle and remisse howe shall they beare the yoke of ecclesiasticall gouernment which looketh more narrowly into the liues of men and is farre more streite and seuere So that a people subdued to ciuill obedience are as horses broken and wilde beastes tamed and may more easely be brought into the form● of a Church We do confesse that the power of the word of God preached is of sufficient force and power to make the most lawlesse and barbarous men good Christians and as tame as lambes and that without the helpe of this ciuill power as we see in priuate Churches yet for the preseruation of the outward order of these publick Churches this meanes is of great force Lastly the encrease of number which commeth by this meanes is to be counted no small commoditie being simply considered howsoeuer vsually it bringeth with it confusion and imperfect state and sundrie such discommodities Sect. 6. Of the first mouer in the planting of a publick Church NOwe we are to come to the specials which are in planting of a publick Church and first to the beginner or first mouer in this worke For the declaring of the trueth hereof we are to consider the verie originall and first planting of churches the which were founded by the Apostles and Euangelists in many places yea they also committed the care of continuing those Churches vnto faithfull men that they might prouide for the time to come But neither the Apostles could bring to passe that all the world should be brought to the profession of the faith neither the care of those ordinary ministers to whom the preseruation of the said Churches was committed could so preuaile but that euen in those places where the Apostles planted Churches religion afterwards was by the malice of Sathan not onely defaced but euen so rooted out as in most of those places there remaneth not any shadow of a church The Apostles and other extraordinary ministers being dead their offices and calling which were to plant Churches in all places did cease after whom there remained in the Church ordinary ministers to accomplish that worke which they had begun namely to build out those Churches which they had planted Yet they had no calling to build churches in all countries but in some one place where vnto they were appointed for if ordinary ministers which are nowe in those places where the Church is had this calling to preach in diuerse countries and to diuers nations then they should haue gifts needfull for this worke as the gifts of discerning spirits the gifts of tongues without the which none can preach to a straunge people But these gifts are ceased as also these callings neither hath any ordinary minister by his calling any charge of any other people and countries to bring them to be a Church And as for extraordinary men although God may raise vp such when he will yet we are not to looke for any such in these daies As for the bishope of Rome who challengeth vnto himselfe the care of the whole world as being christs vicar general we know that his authority in the Ch. is but vsurped and his allegations friuolous he hath destroyed the Church therefore we are not to looke that he should be the cheife doer in the building and planting of Churches whom then shall we make to be the first mouer in the planting or repairing of a publick Church in a citie common-wealth or kingdome euen the cheife rulers and magistrates of those places as hath been declared in the second section of this chapter So then the first thing in the planting of a publick Church in any countrie is this that we suppose the ciuill ruler willing and desirous to take this work in hand and that by the meanes of some of his subiects making humble supplication to him in this behalfe or by some neighboure Churches stirring him vp by their example to erect the church within his dominions and commending this worke vnto him as the most excellent and happie thing as it is indeed Sect. 7. Of the speciall manner of planting a publick Church THe next thing to be considered is how the ciuil ruler being willing to plant the Ch· should knowe the manner of this worke and the right frame of it whereof at the first we must suppose both him and his people to be ignorant The meanes which God hath appointed for this end is this Although at the first he did not send his apostles to all countries to plant Churches neither doth since that time send any other as Apostles yet in that he did by them at the first preach the gospel and plant Churches in most partes of the world and doth continually preserue the fame in one place or other he giueth sufficient meanes of hauing the knowleege of his true worshippe to those that wil imbrace it and leaueth the rest inexcusable The first building of Churches in so many places was so conspicuous euen as a citie set on the top of an hill that it might easely be seene of all men So that euen as the gentiles which dwelt farre off from hierusalem hearing of the fame of it were moued many of them to repaire thither to learne the knowledge of the true God so all they nowe euen the Iewes also when God shall turne their hartes and open their eyes to see some glimmering of the Gospell ought to resort to those places where the Church is there to get the word of God the manner of his true worshippe and all other meanes which may further their purpose And this is to be done by procuring men of knowledge and wisdome to come and instruct both rulers and people how
by the fame of the true religiō some haue bene conuerted so was Rahab liuing in Iericho of whome it is saide Heb. 11. that she beleeued or by reading bookes containing the doctrine of religion Lastly it may please God to vse for this purpose that knowledge which remaineth in the minds of men since the fall of Adam and which is stirred vp by the contemplation of the creatures and all those meanes which naturall men haue for the attaining of knowledge These or any other meanes God may vse extraordinarily yea he may doe it without any meanes but in his ordinarie working none of these aforesaid meanes are auailable for faith is gotten ordinarely onely by hearing the worde preached and therefore we are to esteeme and iudge of them who haue not the ministerie of the worde that they wante the ordinarie meanes of attaining a true and sauing faith alwaies excepting the power and extraordinarie worke of God the which is not tyed to any meanes CHAP. III. Of a particular Church Sect. 1. Of the originall of particular Churches THus much of the dispersed mēbers of the catholicke Church the which state God doth accept where it cannot be amended but so that he wil haue al his seruantes to indeauour by al means possible to come liue together for their mutuall edification and therefore as for the more commodious maintaining of our temporall liues he hath appointed ciuill societies so for the beginning and maintaining of spirituall strength and life in vs he hath appointed holy assemblies which are particular Churches out of the which a christian may liue this spirituall life but yet in great weakenesse and danger euen as a man may preserue his naturall life in a desert place but he cannot haue perfect strength and health vnlesse he liue in some place frequented by men and replenished with thinges needfull for that purpose And therefore we are now to declare what a particular Church is Sect. 2. Of the definition of a parlicular Church A Particular Church is a company of men separated from the infidels of the world to serue God vnder al the same diuine and humane lawes or vnder the same ecclesiasticall gouernment both diuine and humane This definition doth in some sort comprehend in it the whole nature and essence of a particular Church and therefore a great part of this treatise is to be spent in the explication of it wherein that we may proceede in some distinct and plaine order we haue these three heads to obserue First the separating of those of whom the Church is to consist from the infidels of the world Secondly the diuine lawes by the which they thus brought together are to be ordered And lastly the humane lawes which are added to the lawes of God For euen as it is in the establishing of a common wealth or kingdome first men must be brought together who are to be the inhabitantes of that citie or country Secondly there must certaine generall and fundamentall lawes be made containing the very state and forme of gouernment and of subiection which must stand in force continually without any alteration and lastly there must be added some speciall positiue lawes which are often to be changed as present occasion shall require so is it in the establishing of a Church First men are called from infidelity to faith as from barbarisme to ciuility then they haue giuen vnto them the lawes which God in 〈◊〉 word hath made for the gouernment of his Church till the end of the world and lastly the changeable ecclesiasticall lawes of men Againe as we see men doe in the building of a house first they prepare stones then they ioyne them together in some fourme of a house till by little and little they set vp the whole frame of it and lastly they adde doores windowes fenses and whatsoeuer may serue for the vse of the dweller in like manner the calling of men to the knowledge of Christ is the preparing of the matter of a Church secondly the establishing of the gouernment of the Church the māner of seruing God is a setting vp of the frame of it an lastly the making of ecclesiasticall constitutions is the applying of this gouernment to the speciall vse of those men whome we woulde bring vnto the fourme of a Church that it may be a fit dwelling place for them This latter similitude we desire the reader to marke the rather for that we are to vse it throughout this whole treatise And that because it hath pleased the spiritte of GOD to teach vs so to doe who in the scripture doth for the most parte compare the Church to a house and to the buylding of it as we may see 1. Cor. 3.11.12 1. Tim. 3.15 1. Pet. 4.17 In this definition the last wordes onely the rest being of themselues plaine enough neede this explication that by humane lawes we doe not meane ciuill lawes but ecclesiasticall constitutions added to the lawes of GOD appointed in the worde by the which humane lawes being alwaies in some pointe or other differing from the lawes of other Churches particular Churches haue their difference and distincte limittes appointed to them For therefore we haue inserted this partickle all in the definition because many yea all the Churches in the worlde may agree in some ecclesiasticall constitutions but not in all So that the same gouernment maketh one and the same Church yea although they be distinguished into diuerse congregations and haue many distinct places of seruing God As if the lawes of any towne doe stretch to the suburbes and villages aboute there is but one corporation or ciuill bodie And to vse our accustomed similitude as that is one familie which hath the same gouernour ouer it the same orders in it although they be in diuerse roomes so it is in this behalfe a distincte gouernment maketh a distinct Church The gouernment is then distincte when eyther the humane Church lawes are diuerse or at the least the rulers and gouernours of the companie haue in their handes authoritie to make diuers lawes in that manner which we are afterwardes to declare So that where we see many distinct and diuerse assemblies or congregations of christians all to depend vpon one company hauing in their handes the saide authoritie and from thence to fetch all their constitutions and determinations of causes they are to be accounted not many but one onely particular Church which notwithstanding if they did no waie depend vpon any other were to be accounted so many distinct Churches So the Church of Israell although it did consist of many distinct townes and cities the which had their proper leuites and gouernours yet because for gouernment they did all depend vpon the high priest and the other priestes which did offer sacrifice in the temple at Ierusalem they all made but one Church So that those christians are to be accounted a particular Church which are ioyned together not onely in the same faith as the
ciuil affaires the princes of the families tribes and of the people of Israel are called the heades of them because they did first moue in all publicke actions and yet the person of the ciuill ruler whether of the king of senatours or of any other in particular is to be counted a member of the Church as other men are Thus we see that the Church together with the ciuill state make not t●o but one bodie vnder one and the same head Sect. 4. Ciuill and ecclesiasticall callinges may be in the same subiect NOW we are to see how these two states may also agree in subiect that is be ordered by the same persons For this false distinction of the body of the Church from the body of the common wealth as it hath sprung from a false opinion of two distinct supreame heades the one ouer the Church the other ouer the ciuill state so it hath beene confirmed by a false difference which hath beene put betwixt ciuill and eclesiasticall persons as if the hauing of any function in the one state did quite cut a man off from medling with the other and that by reason of the contrary natures of these two states and of the functions belonging vnto them But according to the worde of God these ciuil and ecclesiasticall callinges doe not so fight but that they may meete together in one man without iarring For it is not vnlawfull for one who beareth some publicke function or is in any degree or place of honour in the commonwealth to meddle with the ordering of the Church if he haue giftes from God and a lawfull calling from men or yet for him who is alreadie an ecclesiasticall person to haue retaine or take vpon him any ciuill calling The trueth of this doctrine may be plainely seene in the scripture which sheweth that both ciuil ecclesiastical callings may lawfully concurre in the same person when the state of the Church doth so require For if we doe consider the Church before the law we shal find that the first borne of the family was to the rest both a magistrate and a minister so that although the examples of the Church being in her infancie and imperfect estate ought not wholly to be applied to the Church in the time of the gospell yet we may hereby know that there is no such contrariety in the natures of these callings but that they may be in the same person Likewise we read that in the time of the law many who were appointed by God to his seruice did beare ciuill callings Thus did Samuel Eli and the rest of the priestes and elders who were vnto the people as iudges lawiers did gouerne them euen in the ciuill affaires Lastly if it be obiected that these functions ought to be laid vpon diuerse men forasmuch as one man cannot be able to attend vpon many callinges we answere confessing this to be true that for the better discharging of these callings they ought ordinarelie to be committed to diuers men yet that it is no more vnlawful for one man to haue a ciuil and an ecclesiasticall calling then to haue two ciuill callinges and that some men are endued with so greate a measure of knowledge wisedome diligence and other giftes that they may be imployed in both these kindes of callinges By that which hath beene said of this second point we may easely gather the resolution of the third question to wit that in this coniunction the Church hath not the vpper hand neyther can commaund and ouerrule but is subiect to the ciuill power as to her superiour by whose leaue she came into the commonwealth and by the which she is maintained vpholden yea in great part ordered as hereafter will appeare Yea further we may know in part by the same conclusion what to thinke of the fourth point to wit how these states do meddle the one with the other and namely that the ciuil power doth many waies intermeddle with the Church euen as the heade doth with the body for it doth not onely suffer or procure the building of it but also effect it not onely plant it but also establish and maintaine yea repaire it being fallen purge it being corrupt and order it by ecclesiasticall lawes as the processe of this treatise will declare in particular As for the Church it doth not meddle with the ciuil state or gouernment of the commonwealth but ought to leaue it wholly to the ciuill magistrate Sect. 5. Of the chaunges happening eyther to the Church or the commonwealth by their coniunction LAstly we are to consider what chaunges commodities or discommodities do arise either to the Church or to the commonwealth by this coniunction of them in one body And first that form or kind of ciuil gouerment whether it were the rule of one of a few or of many whether the authoritie were absolute and great or conditionall moderate and limitted which was in vse amongest any people before they did beleeue is not by this meanes alter●d but remaineth in full force as before For a publicke Church may stand with any forme of gouernment and be subiect vnto it without making any alteration Yet it cutteth off whatsoeuer is in the ciuill state in the lawes customes or offices of it vnlawfull and repugnant to the worde of God for the Church cannot possibly agree and be ioyned with that which doth not agree with the worde Other chaunge it maketh none saue onely that the ciuill state becommeth by this meanes more happie sure and firme yea more glorious and flourishing for besides the secrete blessing which God doth many waies poure vpon those countries the which doe honour him by professing the name of his sonne Christ and so doe giue not onely a poore harbour but euen publicke and sol●mne entertainement to his Church as he did blesse the house of Obed Edome 2. Sam. 6.11 for that the Arke remained there for a season there are euident and necessarie reasons why it shoulde so be For there is no humane law●s no feare of punishment or hope of rewarde whatsoeu●r that can binde men so sure to the perfourmance both of faithfull and loyall obedience to their rulers as also of all dueties to their neighbours as doth religion and the feare of God in the heartes of men And although it ●e not to be hoped especially in these publicke Churches that the heartes of all men generallie shoulde be truelie possessed with the feare GOD yet the worde of God being preached leaueth euen in the consciences of hypocrites a feare of committing hainous crimes the which for the most part ciuil lawes do forbid yea in the Church the ministery of the word reproueth and also correcteth the least faultes which are incident into the life of man whereby it commeth to passe that theft mur●her and al other such grosse crimes are not once named Lastly there is nothing so honorable and glorious for any people as to haue the true religion established amongst