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A61568 The mischief of separation a sermon preached at Guild-Hall Chappel, May 11. MDCLXXX. being the first Sunday in Easter-term, before the Lord Mayor, &c. / by Edw. Stillingfleet ... Stillingfleet, Edward, 1635-1699. 1680 (1680) Wing S5604_VARIANT; ESTC R35206 32,588 67

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such cases and bind Christians to observe them as we find in that famous decree made upon great deliberation in a Council of the Apostles at Ierusalem wherein they determined those things which they knew were then scrupled and continued so to be afterwards whereever the Judaizing Christians prevailed But notwithstanding all their dissatisfaction the Apostles continued the same Rule and S. Paul here requires the most forward Christians to mind their Rule and to preserve Peace and Unity among themselves But doth not S. Paul in the 14th Chapter of his Epistle to the Romans lay down quite another Rule viz. only of mutual forbearance in such cases where men are unsatisfied in conscience I answer that the Apostle did act like a prudent Governour and in such a manner as he thought did most tend to the propagation of the Gospel and the good of particular Churches In some Churches that consisted most of Iews as the Church of Rome at this time did and where they did not impose the necessity of keeping the Law on the Gentile Christians as we do not find they did at Rome the Apostle was willing to have the Law buried as decently and with as little noise as might be and therefore in this case he perswades both parties to Forbearance and Charity in avoiding the judging and censuring one another since they had an equal regard to the honour of God in what they did But in those Churches where the false Apostles made use of this pretence of the Levitical Law being still in force to divide the Churches and to separate the Communion of Christians there the Apostle bids them beware of them and their practices as being of a dangerous and pernicious consequence So that the preserving the Peace of the Church and preventing Separation was the great measure according to which the Apostle gave his directions and that makes him so much insist on this advice to the Philippians that whatever their attainments in Christianity were they should walk by the same Rule and mind the same things II. We take notice of the Duty and obligation that lies upon the best Christians to walk by the same Rule to mind the same things From whence arise two very considerable Enquiries 1. How far the obligation doth extend to comply with an established Rule and to preserve the Peace of the Church we live in 2. What is to be done if men cannot come up to that Rule For the Apostle speaks only of such as have attained so far Whereto we have already attained let us walk by the same Rule 1. How far the obligation doth extend to comply with an established Rule and to preserve the Peace of the Church we live in This I think the more necessary to be spoken to because I cannot perswade my self that so many scrupulous and conscientious men as are at this day among us would live so many years in a known sin i. e. in a state of Separation from the Communion of a Church which in Conscience they thought themselves obliged to communicate with It must be certainly some great mistake in their judgements must lead them to this for I am by no means willing to impute it to passion and evil designs and out of the hearty desire I have if possible to give satisfaction in this matter I shall endeavour to search to the bottom of this dangerous mistake to which we owe so much of our present distractions and fears But for the better preventing all mis-understanding the design of my Discourse I desire it may be considered 1. That I speak not of the Separation or distinct Communion of whole Churches from each other which according to the Scripture Antiquity and Reason have a just Right and Power to Govern and Reform themselves By whole Churches I mean the Churches of such Nations which upon the decay of the Roman Empire resumed their just Right of Government to themselves and upon their owning Christianity incorporated into one Christian Society under the same common ties and Rules of Order and Government Such as the Church of Macedonia would have been if from being a Roman Province it had become a Christian Kingdom and the Churches of Thessalonica Philippi and the rest had united together And so the several Churches of the Lydian or Proconsular Asia if they had been united in one Kingdom and Governed by the same Authority under the same Rules might have been truly called the Lydian Church Just as several Families uniting make one Kingdom which at first had a distinct and independent Power but it would make strange confusion in the world to reduce Kingdoms back again to Families because at first they were made up of them Thus National Churches are National Societies of Christians under the same Laws of Government and rules of Worship For the true notion of a Church is no more than of a Society of men united together for their Order and Government according to the Rules of the Christian Religion And it is a great mistake to make the notion of a Church barely to relate to Acts of Worship and consequently that the adequate notion of a Church is an Assembly for Divine Worship by which means they appropriate the name of Churches to particular Congregations Whereas if this held true the Church must be dissolved assoon as the Congregation is broken up but if they retain the nature of a Church when they do not meet together for Worship then there is some other bond that unites them and whatever that is it constitutes the Church And if there be one Catholick Church consisting of multitudes of particular Churches consenting in one Faith then why may there not be one National Church from the consent in the same Articles of Religion and the same Rules of Government and Order of Worship Nay If it be mutual consent and agreement which makes a Church then why may not National Societies agreeing together in the same Faith and under the same Government and Discipline be as truly and properly a Church as any particular Congregation For is not the Kingdom of France as truly a Kingdom consisting of so many Provinces as the Kingdom of Ivetot once was in Normandy which consisted of a very small territory Among the Athenians from whom the use of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 came into the Christian Church it was taken for such an Assembly which had the Power of Governing and determining matters of Religion as well as the affairs of State For the Senate of 500 being distributed into fifties according to the number of the Tribes which succeeded by course through the year and was then called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one of these had 4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Regular Assemblies in the last of which an account of the Sacrifices was taken and of other matters which concerned Religion as in the Comitia Calata at Rome From whence we may observe that it was not the meeting of one of
Wrinkle And if men will set themselves only to find faults it is impossible in this state of things they should ever be pleased And if they separate where they see any thing amiss they must follow his example who pursued this Principle so far till he withdrew from all Society lest he should communicate with them in their Sin in which condition he continued till his Children lay dead in the house and he became utterly unable to help himself and because no humane inventions were to be allowed about the worship of God he had cut out of his Bible the Contents of the Chapters and Titles of the Leaves and so left the bare Text without Binding or Covers This is the Case the rigid and impracticable principles of some would bring our Churches to by cutting off all Rules of Order and Decency as encroachments on the Institutions of Christ. 2. I desire them to consider how impossible it is to give satisfaction to all and how many things must be allowed a favourable interpretation in publick Constitutions and General Laws which it is hardly possible so to frame but there will be room left for Cavils and Exceptions Yea when the wisest and best men have done their utmost some of themselves confess there may be dissatisfaction still and if Christian Humility Charity and Discretion will then advise persons to acquiesce in their private security and freedom and not to unsettle the publick Order for their private satisfaction Why should not men practise the same vertues themselves which they do confess will be necessary for some at last Wise and Good men will consider the difficulties that always attend publick Establishments and have that esteem for Peace and Order that they will bear with anything tolerable for the sake of it It is a very hard case with a Church when men shall set their Wits to strain every thing to the worst sense to stretch Laws beyond the intention and design of them to gather together all the doubtful and obscure passages in Calendars Translations c. and will not distinguish between their approbation of the Use and of the Choice of things for upon such terms as these men think to justifie the present Divisions I much question whether if they proceed in such a manner they can hold Communion with any Church in the Christian world If men be disposed to find faults no Church can be pure enough for something will be amiss either in Doctrine or Discipline or Ceremonies or Manners but if they be disposed to Peace and Union then Charity will cover a multitude of failing and then according to S. Paul's advice with all lowliness and meekness with long-suffering forbearing one another in Love they will be endeavouring to preserve the Unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace And without the practice of the former Vertues no Metaphysical Discourses of Unity will signifie any thing to the Churches Peace 3. They would do well to consider How Separation of the People from our Churches comes to be more lawful now than in the days of our Fathers It hath been often and evidently proved that the most sober and learned Non-conformists of former times notwithstanding their scruples in some points yet utterly condemned Separation from our Churches as unlawful And they looked upon this not as a meer common sin of humane infirmity but as a wilful and dangerous sin in that it is so far from tending to the overthrow of Antichrist that it upholds and maintains him calling it a renting the Church the disgrace of Religion the advancement of Pride Schism and Contention the Offence of the Weak the grief of the Godly who be better settled the hardening of the Wicked and the recovery or rising again of Antichristianism nay even persecuting the Lord Iesus in his Hoast which they revile in his ordinances which they dishonour and in his Servants whose footsteps they slander whose Graces they despise whose Office they trample upon with disdain These are the very words of one of the most learned and judicious Nonconformists before the Wars And surely the mischiefs that followed after could not make Separation to appear less odious Was it a sin was it such a sin then And is it none now Either our Brethren at this day do believe it to be a Sin for the People to separate or they do not If not it must either be that there are new and harder terms of Communion which were not then which is so far from being true that they confess them to be rather easier for the People or it must be that they are gone off from the peaceable principles of their Predecessors which they are unwilling to own If they do believe it to be a Sin why do they suffer the People to live in a known Sin Why do they encourage them by Preaching in Separate Congregations For their Predecessor did not think it lawful much less a Duty to preach when forbidden by a Law neither did they understand what warrant any ordinary Minister hath in such a case by Gods word so to draw any Church or People to his private Ministery in opposition to the Laws and Government he lived under They understood the difference between the Apostles cases and theirs and never thought the Apostles Woe be unto me if I preach not the Gospel did extend to them but thought that silenced Ministers ought to live as private Members of the Church till they were restored and the People bound to learn Of which there can be far less ground to dispute when themselves acknowledge the Doctrine by Law established to be true and found 4. Lastly Let me beseech them to consider the common danger that threatens us all by means of our Divisions We have Adversaries subtile and Industrious enough to make use of all advantages to serve their own ends and there is scarce any other they promise themselves more from than the continuance of these breaches among our selves This some of our Brethren themselves have been aware of and on that account have told the People of the danger of the Principles of Separation as to the interest of Religion in general and the Protestant Religion in particular among us Certainly Nothing would tend more to our common security than for all true and sincere Protestants to lay aside their prejudices and mistakes and to joyn heartily in Communion with us which many of their Teachers at this day allow to be lawful And how can they satisfie themselves in hazarding our Religion by not doing that which themselves confess lawful to be done 2. But if we are not yet ripe for so great a mercy as a perfect Union yet I would intreat our Brethren to make way for it by hearkning to these following Advices 1. Not to give encouragement to rash and intemperate zeal which rends all in pieces and makes reconciliation impossible Those who see least into things are usually the
Clayton Mayor Martis quarto die Maij 1680. Annoque Regis Caroli secundi Angliae c. xxxii THis Court doth earnestly desire the Reverend D r. Stillingfleet Dean of S t. Pauls to Print his Sermon Preached at the Guild-Hall Chappel on Sunday Morning last with what further he had prepared to deliver at that time Wagstaff THE Mischief of Separation A SERMON Preached at GUILD-HALL CHAPPEL May II. MDCLXXX Being the First Sunday in EASTER-TERM Before the Lord Mayor c. By Edw. Stillingfleet D. D. Dean of S t. Paul's and Chaplain in Ordinary to His Majesty LONDON Printed for Henry Mortlock at the Phoenix in St. Pauls Church-yard and at the White Hart in Westminster Hall 1680. TO THE Right Honourable S r. Robert Clayton LORD MAYOR of the City of LONDON My Lord IN obedience to Your Lordships Order I now present to Your hands not only the Sermon You lately heard but those Additions which the straits of time would not then permit me to deliver In all which I was so far from intending to stir up the Magistrates and Judges to a Persecution of Dissenters as some ill men have reported that my only design was to prevent any occasion of it by finding out a certain foundation for a lasting Union among our selves Which is impossible to be attained till men are convinced of the Evil and Danger of the present Separation it being carried on by such Principles as not only overthrow the present Constitution of our Church but any other whatsoever For if it be lawful to separate on a pretence of greater Purity where there is an Agreement in Doctrine and the substantial Parts of Worship as is acknowledged in our Case then a bare difference of opinion as to some circumstances of Worship and the best constitution of Churches will be sufficient ground to break Communion and to set up new Churches Which considering the great variety of mens fancies about these matters is to make an infinite Divisibility in Churches without any possible stop to farther Separation But if after themselves are pleased with condescensions to their own minds any think it fit that others should be tied up notwithstanding their dissatisfaction the world will judge it too great partiality in them to think that none ought to separate but themselves and that the same Reason will hold against themselves in the judgement of others it thereby appearing that it is not Uniformity they dislike but that they do not prescribe the Terms of it But my Lord I intend not to argue the Case of Separation here which is at large done in the following Discourse but only to shew how necessary it was in order to the laying a Foundation for Peace and Unity to have this matter throughly discussed And if once the People be brought to understand and practise their duty as to Communion with our Churches other Difficulties which obstruct our Union will be more easily removed I have endeavoured to pursue my design in a way suitable to the nature of it without sharp and provoking reflections on the Persons of any which often set Friends at distance but never reconciled or convinced Adversaries However I must expect the Censures of such who either make our Divisions or make use of them for their own ends but I am contented to be made a sacrifice if thereby I might close up the Breaches among us God Almighty bless this great City and Your Lordships care in the Government of it and grant that in this our day we may yet know the things that belong to our Peace and to the Preservation of the true Protestant Religion among us I am my Lord Your Lordships most faithful and obedient Servant Edward Stillingfleet PHIL. III. 16. Nevertheless whereto we have already attained let us walk by the same rule let us mind the same things ALthough the Christian Religion doth lay the greatest obligations on mankind to Peace and Unity by the strictest commands the highest examples and the most prevailing arguments yet so much have the passions and interests of men overswai'd the sense of their duty that as nothing ought to be more in our wishes so nothing seems more remote from our hopes than the universal Peace of the Christian World Not that there is any impossibility in the thing or any considerable difficulty if all men were such Christians as they ought to be but as long as men pursue their several factions and designs under the colour and pretence of zeal for Religion if they did not find Names and Parties ready framed that were suitable to their ends the difference of their designs would make them So that till mens corruptions are mortified and their passions subdued to a greater degree than the world hath yet found them it is in vain to expect a state of peace and tranquillity in the Church We need not go far from home for a sufficient evidence of this for although our differences are such as the wiser Protestants abroad not only condemn but wonder at them yet it hath hitherto puzzled the wisest persons among us to find out wayes to compose them not so much from the distance of mens opinions and practices as the strength of their prejudices and inclinations What those divisions of Reuben of old were which caused such thoughts and searching of heart we neither well understand nor doth it much concern us but the continuance if not the widening of these unhappy breaches among our selves do give just cause for many sad reflections When neither the miseries we have felt nor the calamities we fear neither the terrible judgements of God upon us nor the unexpected deliverances vouchsafed to us nor the common danger we are yet in have abated mens heats or allayed their passions or made them more willing to unite with our established Church and Religion But instead of that some rather stand at a greater distance if not defiance and seem to entertain themselves with hopes of new revolutions others raise fresh calumnies and reproaches as well as revive and spread abroad old ones as though their business were to make our breaches wider and to exasperate mens spirits against each other at such a time when Reason and common security and above all our Religion obligeth us to follow after the things that make for peace and things wherewith one may edifie another and not such as tend to our mutual destruction as most certainly our divisions and animosities do Yet all parties pretend to a zeal for Peace so they may have it in their own way by which it appears that it is not Peace they aim at but Victory nor Unity so much as having their own wills Those of the Roman Church make great boasts of their Unity and the effectual means they have to preserve it but God deliver us from such cruel wayes of Peace and such destructive means of Unity as Treachery and Assassinations and an Inquisition Their feet are swift to shed blood destruction and
misery are in their wayes and the way of Peace they have not known But it were happy for us if all those who agree in renouncing the Errors and Corruptions of the Roman Church could as easily join together in the great duties of our common Religion that is in our Prayers and Praises and Sacraments and all solemn acts of Divine Worship For this would not only take off the reproach of our Adversaries who continually upbraid us with our Schisms and Separations but it would mightily tend to abate mens passions and to remove their prejudices and to dispose their inclinations and thereby lay a foundation for a blessed Union among our selves Which would frustrate the great design of our enemies upon us who expect to see that Religion destroyed by our own folly which they could not otherwise hope to accomplish by their utmost care and endeavour And we may justly hope for a greater blessing of God upon us when we offer up our joint Prayers and Devotions to him lifting up as St. Paul speaks holy hands without wrath and disputing This is therefore a thing of so great consequence to our Peace and Union that tends so much to the Honour of God and our common Safety and Preservation that no person who hath any real concernment for these things can deny it to be not only just and fitting but in our circumstances necessary to be done if it can be made appear to be lawful or that they can do it with a good Conscience And this is the subject I design to speak to at this time and for that purpose have made choise of these words of the Apostle Nevertheless whereto we have already attained let us walk by the same rule let us mind the same things For our better understanding the full scope and meaning of the Apostle in these words we are to consider that an unhappy Schism or wilful breach of the Churches Unity had begun in the Apostles times upon the difference that arose concerning the necessity of keeping the Law of Moses And that which made the Schism the more dangerous was that the first beginners of it pretended a Commission from the Apostles themselves at Ierusalem and were extreamly busie and industrious to gain and keep up a party to themselves in the most flourishing Churches planted by the Apostles At Antioch they bore so great a sway that St. Peter himself complied with them and not only other Iews but Barnabas also was carried away with their dissimulation Insomuch that had it not been for the courage and resolution of St. Paul all the Gentile Christians had been either forced to a compliance with the Jews or to a perpetual Schism of which St. Peter had been in probability the Head and not of the Churches Unity if St. Paul had not vigorously opposed so dangerous a compliance But finding so good success in his endeavours at Antioch he pursues those false Apostles who made it their business to divide and separate the Christians from each others Communion through all the Churches where they had or were like to make any great impression He writes his Epistle to the Galatians purposely against them he warns the Christians at Rome of them Now I beseech you Brethren mark them which cause Divisions and Offences contrary to the Doctrine which you have learned and avoid them And because he had understood they had been busie at Philippi to make a party there too therefore the Apostle to prevent their designs makes use of this following method 1. He exhorts the Philippians to an unanimous and constant resolution in holding fast to the faith of the Gospel in spight of all the threats and malice of their enemies That ye stand fast in one spirit with one mind striving together for the faith of the Gospel and in nothing terrified by your adversaries If once the fears of troubles and persecutions make men afraid to own and maintain their Religion it will be an easie matter for their enemies first to divide and then to subdue them But their courage and unanimity in a good Cause baffles the attempts of the most daring Adversaries and makes them willing to retreat when they see they can neither disunite them nor make them afraid 2. He beseeches them in the most vehement and affectionate manner not to give way to any differences or divisions among them If there be therefore any consolation in Christ if any comfort of love if any fellowship of the spirit if any bowels and mercies fulfil ye my joy that ye be like minded having the same love being of one accord of one mind As though he had said unto them I have seen the miserable effects of divisions in other Churches already how our Religion hath been reproached the Gospel hindred and the Cross of Christ rendred of little or no effect by reason of them let me therefore intreat you if you have any regard to the Peace and Welfare of your own souls if you have any sense of your duty you owe to one another as members of the same body if you have any tenderness or pity towards me avoid the first tendencies to any breaches among you entertain no unjust suspicions or jealousies of each other shew all the kindness you are able to your fellow members live as those that are acted by the same soul 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 carry on the same design and as much as possible prevent any differences in opinions amongst you 3. He warns them and gives cautious against some persons from whom their greatest danger was viz. such as pretended a mighty zeal for the Law And very well understanding the mischief of their designs under their specious pretences he bestows very severe characters upon them vers 2. Beware of Dogs beware of evil workers beware of the Concision All which Characters relate to the breaches and divisions which they made in the Christian Churches which like Dogs they did tear in pieces and thereby did unspeakable mischief and so were evil workers and by the Concision St. Chrysostom understands such a cutting in pieces as tends to the destruction of a thing and therefore saith he the Apostle called them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because they endeavoured to cut in pieces and thereby to destroy the Church of God But lest they should give out that St. Paul spoke this out of a particular pique he had taken up against the Law of Moses he declares that as to the spiritual intention and design of the Law it was accomplished in Christians vers 3. For we are the Circumcision which worship God in the spirit and rejoyce in Christ Iesus and have no confidence in the flesh And for his own part he had as much reason to glory in legal priviledges as any of them all vers 4 5 6. but the excellency of the Gospel of Christ had so prevailed upon his mind that he now despised the things he valued before and made it his whole
the single Tribes was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the General Meeting of the Magistrates of the whole City and the People together And in this sense I shall shew afterwards the word was used in the first Ages of the Christian Church as it comprehended the Ecclesiastical Governours and the People of whole Cities and why many of these Cities being united under one Civil Government and the same Rules of Religion should not be called one National Church I cannot understand Which makes me wonder at those who say they cannot tell what we mean by the Church of England in short we mean that Society of Christian People which in this Nation are united under the same Profession of Faith the same Laws of Government and rules of Divine Worship And every Church thus constituted we do assert to have a just Right of Governing it self and of reforming Errors in Doctrine and Corruptions in Worship On which Ground we are acquitted from the imputation of Schism in the separation from the Roman Church for we only resume our just Rights as the Brittish Nation did as to Civil Government upon the Ruine of the Roman Empire 2. I do not intend to speak of the Terms upon which Persons are to be admitted among us to the Exercise of the Function of the Ministry but of the Terms of Lay-communion i. e. those which are necessary for all Persons to joyn in our Prayers and Sacraments and other Offices of Divine Worship I will not say there hath been a great deal of Art used to confound these two and it is easie to discern to what purpose it is but I dare say the Peoples not understanding the difference of these two Cases hath been a great occasion of the present Separation For in the Judgement of some of the most impartial men of the Dissenters at this day although they think the case of the Ministers very hard on the account of Subscriptions and Declarations required of them yet they confess very little is to be said on the behalf of the People from whom none of those things are required So that the People are condemned in their Separation by their own Teachers but how they can preach lawfully to a People who commit a fault in hearing them I do not understand 3. I do not confound bare suspending Communion in some particular Rites which persons do modestly scruple and using it in what they judge to be lawful with either total or at least ordinary forbearance of Communion in what they judge to be lawful and proceeding to the forming of Separate Congregations i. e. under other Teachers and by other Rules than what the established Religion allows And this is the present case of Separation which I intend to consider and to make the sinfulness and mischief of it appear But that I may do it more convincingly I will not make the difference wider than it is but lay down impartially the state of the present Controversie between us and our dissenting Brethren about Communion with our Churches 1. They unanimously confess they find no fault with the Doctrine of our Church and can freely subscribe to all the Doctrinal Articles nay they profess greater zeal for many of them than say they some of our own Preachers do Well then The case is vastly different as to their separation from us and our separation from the Church of Rome for we declare if there were nothing else amiss among them their Doctrines are such as we can never give our assent to 2. They generally yield that our Parochial Churches are true Churches and it is with these their Communion is required They do not deny that we have all the essentials of true Churches true Doctrine true Sacraments and an implicite Covenant between Pastors and People And some of the most eminent of the Congregational way have declared that they look upon it as an unjust calumny cast upon them that they look on our Churches as no true Churches 3. Many of them declare that they hold communion with our Churches to be lawful Yea we are told in Print by one then present that A. D. 1663. divers of their Preachers in London met to consider how far it was lawful or their duty to communicate with the Parish-Churches where they lived in the Liturgy and Sacraments and that the Relator brought in twenty Reasons to prove that it is a duty to some to join with some Parish-Churches three times a year in the Lords Supper after he had not only proved it lawful to use a form of Prayer and to join in the use of our Liturgy but in the participation of the Sacrament with us and no one of the Brethren he adds seemed to dissent but to take the Reasons to be valid Such another meeting we are told they had after the Plague and Fire at which they agreed that Communion with our Churches was in it self lawful and good Who could have imagined otherwise than that after the weight of so many Reasons and such a general consent among them they should have all joyned with us in what themselves judged to be lawful and in many cases a duty But instead of this we have rather since that time found them more inclinable to courses of separation filling the people with greater prejudices against our Communion and gathering them into fixed and separate Congregations which have proceeded to the choice of new Pastors upon the death of old ones and except some very few scarce any either of their Preachers or People here come ordinarily to the publick Congregations And this is that which at present we lament as a thing which unavoidably tends to our common ruine if not in time prevented for by this means the hearts of the People are alienated from each other who apprehend the differences to be much greater than their Teachers will allow when they are put to declare their minds and our common enemies take as much advantage from our differences as if they were really far greater than they are But you may ask what then are the grounds of the present Separation for that there is such a thing is discernible by all but what the reasons of it are is hard to understand after these concessions yet it is not conceivable that conscientious men can in such a juncture of affairs persist in so obstinate and destructive a course of separation unless they had something at last fit to answer the twenty Reasons of their own Brethren against it I have endeavoured to give my self satisfaction in a matter of so great moment to the Peace and Preservation of this Church and consequently of the Protestant Religion among us which I never expect to see survive the destruction of the Church of England And the utmost I can find in the best Writers of the several Parties amounts to these two things 1. That although they are in a state of separation from our Church yet this separation
and yet think themselves bound in Conscience to do them I do not hence infer that the pretence of Conscience is not to be regarded because it may be abused to so ill purposes for no man that hath any Conscience will speak against the Power of it and he that declares against it hath no reason to be regarded in what he saith But that which ought to be inferred from hence is that men ought not to rest satisfied with the present dictates of their Consciences for notwithstanding them they may commit very great sins I am afraid the common mistating the Case of an Erroneous Conscience hath done a great deal of Mischief to conscientious men and betray'd them into great security while they are assured they do act according to their Consciences For the question is generally put How far an Erroneous Conscience doth oblige And when men hear that they must not act against their Consciences though they be mistaken they think themselves safe enough and enquire no further But if they would consider that no mans Conscience alters the nature of Good and Evil in things that what God hath made a Duty or a Sin remains so whatever a mans Conscience doth judge concerning them that no mans Conscience can strictly oblige him either to omit a Duty or to commit a sin the utmost Resolution of the Case comes to this That a man may be so perplexed and entangled by an erroneous Conscience that he may be under a necessity of sinning if he acts either with or against it Not that God ever puts a man under the necessity of sinning for then it would be no sin to him if it were unavoidable but that by their own neglect and carelesness without looking after due information and running on with violent Prejudices which was the case of S. Paul and the Iews and I wish it were not of many Christians they may make false and rash judgements of things and so sin either in doing or not doing what their Consciences tell them they are bound to do The most material Question then in the case of an erroneous Conscience is What Error of Conscience doth excuse a man from Sin in following the Dictates of it For if the Error be wholly involuntary i. e. if it be caused by invincible Ignorance or after using the best means for due information of his Conscience though the Act may be a fault in it self yet it shall not be imputed to him as a Sin because it wanted the consent of the Mind by which the Will is determined but if men fall into Wilful Errors of Conscience i. e. if they form their Iudgements rather by Prejudice and Passion and Interest than from the Laws of God or just Rules of Conscience if they do not examine things fairly on both sides praying for divine direction if they have not patience to hear any thing against their opinion but run on blindly and furiously they may in so doing Act according to their Consciences and yet they may be in as great danger of committing heinous sins as S. Paul and the Iews were Thus if men through the Power of an Erroneous Conscience may think themselves bound to make Schisms and Divisions in the Church to disobey Laws and to break in pieces the Communion of that Church which they are or ought to be members of they may satisfie themselves that they pursue their Consciences and yet for want of due care of informing themselves and judging aright those very Actions may be Wilful and Damnable Sins Nothing now remains but to make Application of what hath been said to our own Case And that shall be to two sorts of Persons 1. to those who continue in the Communion of our Church 2. to those who dissent from it I. To those who continue in the Communion of our Church Let us walk by the same Rule and mind the same things Let us study the Unity and Peace and thereby the Honour and Safety of it While we keep to one Rule all People know what it is to be of our Church if men set up their own fancies above the Rule they charge it with imperfection if they do not obey the Rule they make themselves wiser than those that made it It hath not been either the Doctrine or Rules of our Church which have ever given advantage to the Enemies of it but the indiscretion of some in going beyond them and the inconstancy of others in not holding to them Such is the Purity of its Doctrine such the Loyalty of its Principles such the Wisdom and Order and Piety of its Devotions that none who are true Friends to any of these can be enemies to it Let us take heed we do not give too much occasion to our enemies to think the worse of our Church for our sakes It is easie to observe that most quarrels relating to Constitutions and Frames of Government are more against Person than things when they are unsatisfied with their management then they blame the Government but if themselves were in place or those they love and esteem then the Government is a good thing if it be in good mens hands Thus do mens judgements vary as their interests do And so as to Churches we find Uniformity and Order condemned as Tyrannical till men come into Power themselves and then the very same things and arguments are used and thought very good and substantial which before were weak and sophistical Those who speak now most against the Magistrates Power in matters of Religion had ten substantial Reasons for it when they thought the Magistrate on their own side Those who now plead for Toleration did once think it the Mother of Confusion the Nurse of Atheism the inlet of Popery the common Sink of all Errors and Heresies But if there be not much to be said against the Churches Constitution then they are ready to lay load upon the Persons of the Governours and Members of it and thence pretend to a necessity of Separation for a purer Communion Let us endeavour to remove this objection not by recrimination which is too easie in such cases but by living suitably to our holy Religion by reforming our own lives and redressing what in us lies the Scandals and Disorders of others Let us by the innocency and unblameableness of our lives the life and constancy of our devotions the meekness and gentleness of our behaviour in our own Cause our Zeal and Courage in Gods add a lustre to our Religion and bring others to a Love of our Church II. To those who dissent from our Communion Whether they hear or whether they will forbear I cannot dismiss this subject without offering some things to them 1. By way of Consideration 2. By way of Advice 1. I shall offer these things to their Consideration 1. Let them consider How many things must be born with in the Constitution of a Church which cannot be expected in this World to be without Spot or
open to let in all our friends And then think with your selves what advantages they will have above others considering some mens coldness and indifferency in Religion others uncertainty and running from one extreme to another others easiness in being drawn away by the hopes and fears of this world which have a wonderful influence upon changing mens opinions even when they do not think it themselves So that those seem very little to understand mankind who do not apprehend the dangerous consequences of a general Toleration Those who pretend there is no danger because by this means the Folly of their Religion will be exposed do not consider what a catching disease folly is and how natural it is for men that are fanciful in Religion to exchange one folly for another If all men were wise and sober in Religion there would need no Toleration if they are not we must suppose if they had what they wished they would do as might be expected from men wanting Wisdom and Sobriety i. e. All the several Parties would be striving and contending with each other which should be uppermost and gain the greatest interest And what would the fruit of all such contentions be but endless disputes and exposing the follies of one another till at last Religion it self be sunk into the greatest contempt or men through meer weariness of contending be willing even to submit to Papal Tyranny because it pretends to some kind of Unity So that upon the whole matter if we would consult the Honour of God and Religion the Peace and Tranquillity of the Church we live in if we would prevent the great Designs of our enemies and leave the Protestant Religion here established to Posterity we ought to follow the Apostles Advice in walking by the same Rule and in minding the same things The End Published by the same Author SEveral Conferences between a Romish Priest a Fanatick Chaplain and a Divine of the Church of England concerning the Idolatry of the Church of Rome Being a full Answer to the late Dialogues of T. G. Judges 5. 15 16. Rom. 14. 19. Rom. 3. 15 16 17. 1 Tim. 2. 8. Act. 15. 2● Gal. 2. 12 13 ●om 16. 17. ●hil 1. 27 28. ●hil 2. 1 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Iliad 3. 1 Cor. 11. 34. 1 Cor. 7. 17. Act. 15. 28 Rom. 14. ● 6 10. Rob. Coenalis Hist. Gallic l. 2. p. 126. Iul. Pollux Onomast l. 8. c. 9. Schol. in Arist Acharn Act. 1. s. 1. Sacrilegious desertion p. 35. Separation yet no Schism p. 59. Peace-offering in the name of the Congregational party A. D. 1667. p. 10 11. Baxters Defence of his Cure p. 64. Separation yet no Schism p. 60. * Discourse concerning Evangelical Love Church-Peace and Unity 1672. p. 84 85 86. See Corbet of Schism p. 41. Baxters Defence of his Cure p. 38. ●●●a for ●●ace p. 〈◊〉 Discourse concerning-Evangelical Love Church-Peace and Unity p. 68. Baxters true and only way of Concord A. D. 1680. p. 111. Evangelical Love c. p. 49. 52. p. 54. p. 59. Rom. 16. 3. 5. Colos. 4. 15 Philem. v. 2. Clem. Ep. ad Corinth p. 55. Vnicuique civitati erat attri●uta certa regio quae Presby●eros inde sumeret velut corpori Ecclesiae illius accense●etur Calvin Instit. l. 4. c. 4. ● 2. Petav. not in Epiphan haer 69. n. 1. Canon Nicaen 6. 15 16. Constan. c. 6. Chalced. 17. 20 26. Antioc c. 2. Codex Eccl. Afric c. 53. c. 55. Concil Gangr c. 6. Concil Const. c. 6. Concil Carthag c. 10 11. Cyprian Ep. 40 42. Theod. Eccl. hist. l. 1. c. 22. l. 2. c. 24. c. 17. Vincent c. 16. Baron A. D. 404. n. 41. 412. n. 47. Joh. 13. 14. Mat. 12. 7. Rom. 14. 19. 1 Thess. 4. 11. Phil. 3. 15. 2. 3. Eph. 4. 2 3. Heb. 13. 17. True way of Concord part 3. ch 1. Sect. 40. Papers for Accommodation printed 1648. p. 16. p. 20 21. P. 22. P. 25. P. 28 29 30. P. 47. P. 55. P. 56. P. 71. Gal. 1. 10. Papers for Accommodation p. 51. V. p. 61. p. 66. p. 68. p. 73. p. 68. p. 73. p. 111. p. 113 114. p. 115. ibid. p. 116. p. 117. Act. 26. 9. 1 Tim. 1. 13 15. S. Joh. 16. 2. ●nsw to 2 Questions 6 9. They that are ruled must consider that the best Policy or Constitution so far as it is of mans regul●ting hath defects and inconveniences and affairs will be complicated an● therefore they must not be too unyielding but bear with what is tolerable a●● not easily remediable Corbett of the sound State of Religion p. 75. 1679. Ball against Can. p. 13. A discourse of the Religion of England in its due Latitude Sect. 19. Such is the complicated condition of humane affairs that it is exceeding difficult to devise a Rule or Model that shall provide for all whom Equity will plead for Therefore the prudent and sober will acquiesce in any constitution that is in some good sort proportionable to the ends of Government A Discourse of the Religion of England c. Sect. 14. Printed 1667. See Baxters Cure of Divisions p. 264. Eph. 4. 2 3. Papers of Accommodation p. 52. Ball against Can. Pref. p. 2. Bradshaw against Iohnson S. 40. 91. Gouges whole Armour of God p. 570. Nothing that I know of in the world doth so strongly tempt some sober conscientious men to think Popery necessary for the Concord of Churches and a violent Church Government necessary to our Peace as the woful experience of the Errors and Schisms the mad and manifold Sects that arise among those that are most against them Baxters last Answ. to Bagshaw p. 30. You little know what a pernicious design the Devil hath upon you in perswading you to desire and endeavour to pull down the interest of Christ and Religion which is upheld in the Parish-Churches of this Land and to think that it is best to bring them as low in reality or reputation as you can and to contract the Religious interest all into private meetings Id. p. 31. n. 25. Judg. 1. 7 See Clarks Narrative of New-Englands Persecution A. D. 1651. See Spirit of the Hat ● 12 c. And verily you will keep up the Papists hope that by an Universal Toleration they may at last come in on equal Terms with you or by connivence be endured as much as you And if they be equal in England with you their transmarine advantages will make them more than equal notwithstanding their disadvantages in their cause and their contrariety to Kingly interest Baxters last Answ. to Bagshaw p. 31.