Selected quad for the lemma: religion_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
religion_n church_n england_n rome_n 5,202 5 6.8819 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A53732 The true nature of a Gospel church and its government ... by the late pious and learned minister of the Gospel, John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1689 (1689) Wing O815; ESTC R13410 211,358 294

There are 17 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

21.17 1 Tim. 5.17 They are some of them on other accounts called Bishops Pastors Teachers Ministers Guides but what belongs unto any of them in point of Rule or what interest they have therein it belongs unto them as Elders and not otherwise Act. 20.17 18. SO under the Old Testament where the Word doth not signifie a difference in Age but is used in a moral sence Elders are the same with Rulers or Governours whether in Offices Civil or Ecclesiastical especially the Rulers of the Church were constantly called its Elders And the use of the Word with the abuse of the Power or Office intended by it is traduced to signifie Men in Authority Signeiores Eldermani in all places 2. CHURCH-Power acted in its Rule is called the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven by an expression derived from the Keys that were a sign of Office-Power in the Families of Kings Isa. 22.22 and used by our Saviour himself to denote the communication of Church-Power unto others which was absolutely and universally vested in himself under the Name of the Key of David Revel 3.7 Mat. 16.19 3. THESE Keys are usually referred unto Two Heads namely the one of Order the other of Jurisdiction 4. BY the Key of Order the Spiritual Right Power and Authority of Bishops or Pastors to Preach the Word to Administer the Sacraments Doctrinally to bind and loose the Consciences of Men are intended 5. BY Jurisdiction the Rule Government or Discipline of the Church is designed though it was never so called or esteemed in the Scripture or the Primitive Church until the whole nature of Church-Rule or Discipline was depraved and changed Therefore neither the Word nor any thing that is signified by it or which it is applied unto ought to be admitted unto any consideration in the things that belong unto the Church or its Rule it being expressive of and directing unto that corrupt Administration of things Ecclesiastical according unto the Canon Law by which all Church-Rule and Order is destroyed I do therefore at once dismiss all disputes about it as of things Foreign to the Gospel and Christian Religion I mean as unto the Institutions of Christ in his Church The Civil Jurisdiction of Supreme Magistrates about the externals of Religion is of another consideration But that these Keys do include the two-fold distinct Powers of Teaching and Rule of Doctrine and Discipline is freely granted 6. IN the Church of England as in that of Rome there is a peculiar distribution made of these Keys Unto some that is unto one special sort or order of Men they are both granted both the Key of Order and of Jurisdiction which is unto Diocesan Bishops with some others under various Canonical restrictions and limitations as Deans and Arch-Deacons Unto some is granted the Key of Order only without the least interest in Jurisdiction or Rule by virtue of their Office which are the Parochial Ministers or meer Presbyters without any additional Title or Power as of Commissary Surrogates or the like And unto a third sort there is granted the Key of Rule or Jurisdiction almost plenipotent who have no share in the Key of Order that is were never Ordained Separated Dedicated unto any Office in the Church such as are the Chancellors c. 7. THESE Chancellors are the only Lay-Elders that I know any where in any Church that is Persons entrusted with the Rule of the Church and the Disposition of its Censures who are not Ordained unto any Church-Office but in all other things continue in the Order of the Laity or the People All Church Rulers by institution are Elders To be an Elder of the Church and a Ruler in it is all one Wherefore these Persons being Rulers in the Church and yet thus continuing in the Order of the People are Lay-Elders whom I wonder how so many of the Church came so seriously to oppose seeing this Order of Men is owned by none but themselves The Truth is and it must be acknowledged that there is no known Church in the World I mean whose Order is known unto us and is of any publick consideration but they do dispose the Rule of the Church in part into the hands of Persons who have not the power of Authoritative Preaching of the Word and Administration of the Sacraments committed unto them For even those who place the whole external Rule of the Church in the Civil Magistrate do it as they judge him an Officer of the Church entrusted by Christ with Church-Power And those who deny any such Officers as are usually called Ruling Elders in the Reformed Churches to be of Divine Institution yet maintain that it is very necessary that there should be such Officers in the Church either appointed by the Magistrate or chosen by the people and that with cogent Arguments See Grot. de Jure Potestat Cap. 8. BUT this distribution mentioned of Church-Power is unscriptural nor is there any foot-steps of it in Antiquity It is so as unto the two latter Branches of it That any one should have the power of Order to Preach the Word to Administer the Seals to bind and loose the Conscience Doctrinally or Ministerially to bind and loose in the Court of Conscience and yet by the virtue of that Office which gives them this power not to have a Right and Power of Rule or Discipline to bind and loose in the Court of the Church is that which neither the Scripture nor any example of the Primitive Church doth give countenance unto And as by this means those are abridged and deprived of their power to whom it is granted by the Institution and Law of Christ as it is with all Elders duly called unto their Office so in the Third Branch there is a grant of Church-Power unto such as by the Law of Christ are excluded from any Interest therein The enormity of which constitution I shall not at present insist upon But Enquiry must be made what the Scripture directs unto herein And 1. THERE is a Work and Duty of Rule in the Church distinct from the Work and Duty of Pastoral Feeding by the Preaching of the Word and Administration of the Sacraments All agree herein unless it be Erastus and those that follow him who seem to oppose it But their Arguments lie not against Rule in general which were brutish but only a Rule by external Jurisdiction in the Elders of the Church So they grant the general Assertion of the necessity of Rule for who can deny it only they contend about the subject of power required thereunto A Spiritual Rule by virtue of mutual voluntary confederation for the preservation of Peace Purity and Order in the Church few of that opinion deny at least it is not that which they do oppose For to deny all Rule and Discipline in the Church with all Administration of Censures in the exercise of a Spiritual Power internally inherent in the Church is to deny the Church to be a Spiritual Political
the estate of visible Regeneration doth depend is required of them Herein if they fail they lose all privilege and benefit by their Baptism So speaks the Apostle in the case of Circumcision under the Law Rom. 2.25 For Circumcision verily profiteth if thou keep the Law but if thou be a breaker of the Law thy Circumcision is made uncircumcision It is so in the case of Baptism Verily it profiteth if a Man stand unto the Terms of the Covenant which is tendered therein between God and his Soul for it will give him Right unto all the outward Privileges of a Regenerate State but if he do not as in the sight of God his Baptism is no Baptism as unto the real communication of Grace and acceptance with him so in the sight of the Church it is no Baptism as unto a participation of the external Rights and Privileges of a Regenerate State. 4. God alone is judge concerning this Regeneration as unto its internal real principle and state in the Souls of Men whereon the participation of all the spiritual advantages of the Covenant of Grace doth depend The Church is judge of its evidences and fruits in their external Demonstration as unto a participation of the outward Privileges of a Regenerate State and no farther And we shall hereon briefly declare what belongs unto the forming of a right judgment herein and who are to be esteemed fit Members of any Gospel Church-State or have a Right so to be 1. Such as from whom we are obliged to withdraw or withhold Communion can be no part of the matter constitūent of a Church or are not meet Members for the first constitution of it But such are all Habitual Sinners those who having prevalent habits and inclinations unto Sins of any kind unmortified do walk according unto them Such are profane Swearers Drunkards Fornicators Covetous Oppressors and the like who shall not inherit the Kingdom of God. 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Phil. 3.18 19. 2 Thess. 3.6 2 Tim. 3.5 as a Man living and dying in any known Sin that is habitually without Repentance cannot be saved so a Man known to live in Sin cannot regularly be received into any Church To compose Churches of Habitual Sinners and that either as unto Sins of Commission or Sins of Omission is not to erect Temples of Christ but Chapels unto the Devil 2. Such as being in the fellowship of the Church are to be admonished of any scandalous Sin which if they repent not of they are to be cast out of the Church are not meet Members for the Original Constitution of a Church This is the state of them who abide Obstinate in any known Sin whereby they have given offence unto others without a professed Repentance thereof although they have not lived in it habitually 3. They are to be such as visibly answer the Description given of Gospel Churches in the Scripture so as the Titles assigned therein unto the Members of such Churches may on good grounds be appropriated unto them To compose Churches of such persons as do not visibly answer the character given of what they were of old and what they were always to be by virtue of the Law of Christ or Gospel-constitution is not Church Edification but Destruction And those who look on the things spoken of all Church Members of old as that they were Saints by calling lively stones in the house of God justified and sanctified separate from the World c. as those which were in them and did indeed belong unto them but even deride the necessity of the same things in present Church Members or the Application of them unto those who are so are themselves no small part of that woful Degeneracy which Christian Religion is fallen under Let it then be considered what is spoken of the Church of the Jews in their Dedication unto God as unto their Typical Holiness with the Application of it unto Christian Churches in real Holiness 1 Pet. 2.5 9. with the Description given of them constantly in the Scripture as Faithful Holy Believing as the House of God as his Temple wherein he dwells by his Spirit as the Body of Christ united and compacted by the communication of the Spirit unto them as also what is said concerning their ways walkings and duties and it will be uncontrolably evident of what sort our Church Members ought to be nor are those of any other sort able to discharge the Duties which are incumbent on all Church Members nor to use the Privileges they are intrusted withal Wherefore I say to suppose Churches regularly to consist of such persons for the greater part of them as no way answer the Description given of Church Members in their Original Institution nor capable to discharge the Duties prescribed unto them but giving evidence of Habits and actions inconsistent therewithal is not only to disturb all Church Order but utterly to overthrow the Ends and Being of Churches Nor is there any thing more scandalous unto Christian Religion than what Bellarmine affirms to be the judgment of the Papists in opposition unto all others namely that no internal Vertue or Grace is required unto the Constitution of a Church in its Members Lib. 3. de Eccles. cap. 2. 4. They must be such as do make an open profession of the subjection of their Souls and Consciences unto the Authority of Christ in the Gospel and their readiness to yield Obedience unto all his Commands This I suppose will not be denied for not only doth the Scripture make this Profession necessary unto the participation of any benefit or privilege of the Gospel but the nature of the things themselves requires indispensably that so it should be For nothing can be more unreasonable than that Men should be taken into the privileges attending Obedience unto the Laws and Commands of Christ without avowing or professing that Obedience Wherefore our Enquiry is only what is required unto such a Profession as may render Men meet to be Members of a Church and give them a Right thereunto For to suppose such a confession of Christian Religion to be compliant with the Gospel which is made by many who openly live in Sin being disobedient and unto every good work reprobate is to renounce the Gospel it self Christ is not the High-Priest of such a Profession I shall therefore declare briefly what is necessary unto this Profession that all may know what it is which is required unto the Entrance of any into our Churches wherein our Practice hath been sufficiently traduced 1. There is required unto it a competent knowledge of the Doctrines and Mystery of the Gospel especially concerning the Person and Offices of Christ. The Confession hereof was the ground whereon he granted the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven or all Church Power unto Believers Matth. 16.17 18 19. The first Instruction which he gave unto his Apostles was That they should teach Men by the Preaching of the Gospel
in the knowledge of the Truth revealed by him The knowledge required in the Members of the Judaical Church that they might be Translated into the Christian was principally if not solely that of his Person and the acknowledgment of him to be the true Messiah the Son of God. For as on their unbelief thereof their Eternal ruine did depend as he told them if you believe not that I am he you shall die in your sins so the confession of him was sufficient on their part unto their Admission into the Gospel Church State. And the Reasons of it are apparent With others an Instruction in all the Mysteries of Religion especially in those that are fundamental is necessary unto the Profession we enquire after So Justin Martyr tells us what pains they took in those Primitive Times to instruct those in the Mysteries of Religion who upon a general Conviction of its Truth were willing to adhere unto the Profession of it And what was their judgment herein is sufficiently known from the keeping a multitude in the state of Catechumens before they would admit them into the Fellowship of the Church They are not therefore to be blamed they do but discharge their Duty who refuse to receive into Church-Communion such as are ignorant of the fundamental Doctrines and Mysteries of the Gospel or if they have learned any thing of them from a form of words yet really understand nothing of them The promiscuous driving of all sorts of persons who have been Baptized in their Infancy unto a participation of all Church privileges is a profanation of the holy Institutions of Christ. This knowledge therefore belonging unto profession is it self to be professed 2. There is required unto it a professed subjection of Soul and Conscience unto the Authority of Christ in the Church This in general is performed by all that are Baptized when they are Adult as being by their own actual consent Baptized in the Name of Christ. And it is required of all them who are Baptized in their Infancy when they are able with Faith and Understanding to profess their consent unto and abiding in that Covenant whereinto they were initiated 3. An Instruction in and consent unto the Doctrine of Self-denial and bearing of the Cross in a particular manner For this is made indispensably necessary by our Saviour himself unto all that will be his Disciples And it hath been a great disadvantage unto the Glory of Christian Religion that Men have not been more and better instructed therein It is commonly thought that who ever will may be a Christian at an easie rate it will cost him nothing But the Gospel gives us another account of these things For it not only warns us that Reproaches Hatred Sufferings of all sorts oft-times to Death it self are the common lot of all its Professors who will live Godly in Christ Jesus but also requires that at our initiation into the Profession of it we consider aright the dread of them all and engage cheerfully to undergo them Hence in the Primitive Times whilst all sorts of miseries were continually presented unto them who Embraced the Christian Religion their willing engagement to undergo them who were Converted was a firm Evidence of the sincerity of their Faith as it ought to be unto us also in times of Difficulty and Persecution Some may suppose that the Faith and Confession of this Doctrine of Self-denial and readiness for the Cross is of use only in time of Persecution and so doth not belong unto them who have continually the countenance and favour of publick Authority I say it is at least as they judge well for them with others it is not so whose outward state makes the publick avowing of this Duty indispensably necessary unto them And I may add it as my own thoughts though they are not my own alone That notwithstanding all the Countenance that is given unto any Church by the publick Magistracy yet whilst we are in this World those who will faithfully discharge their Duty as Ministers of the Gospel especially shall have need to be prepared for sufferings To escape sufferings and enjoy worldly advantages by sinful compliances or bearing with Men in their Sins is no Gospel Direction 4. Conviction and Confession of Sin with the way of deliverance by Jesus Christ is that answer of a good Conscience that is required in the Baptism of them that are Adult 1 Pet. 3. 5. Unto this Profession is required the constant performance of all known Duties of Religion both of Piety in the publick and private Worship of God as also of Charity with respect unto others Shew me thy Faith by thy Works 6. A careful Abstinence from all known Sins giving scandal or offence either unto the World or unto the Church of God. And the Gospel requires that this Confession be made with the Mouth Confession is made unto Salvation against 1. Fear 2. Shame 3. The Course of the World 4. The Opposition of all Enemies whatever Hence it appears that there are none excluded from an Entrance into the Church State but such as are either 1. grosly Ignorant or 2. Persecutors or reproachers of those that are Good or of the ways of God wherein they walk or 3. Idolaters or 4. Men scandalous in their Lives in the Commission of Sins or Omission of Duties through vitious Habits or Inclinations or 5. such as would partake of Gospel-Privileges and Ordinances yet openly avow that they will not submit unto the Law and Commands of Christ in the Gospel concerning whom and the like the Scripture Rule is peremptory From such turn away And herein we are remote from exceeding the example and care of the Primitive Churches Yea there are but few if any that arrive unto it Their endeavour was to Preach unto all they could and rejoiced in the multitudes that came to hear the Word But if any did essay to join themselves unto the Church their diligence in their Examination and Instruction their severe Enquiries into their Conversation their disposing of them for a long time into a state of Expectation for their Trial before their Admittance were remarkable And some of the Ancients complain that their promiscuous Admittance of all sorts of persons that would profess the Christian Religion into Church Membership which took place afterwards ruined all the Beauty Order and Discipline of the Church The things ascribed unto those who are to be esteemed the proper Subject Matter of a Visible Church are such as in the judgment of Charity entitle them unto all the Appellations of Saints Called Sanctified that is Visibly and by Profession which are given unto the Members of all the Churches in the New Testament and which must be answered in those who are admitted into that Privilege if we do not wholly neglect our only Patterns By these things although they should any of them not be real living Members of the Mystical Body of Christ unto whom he is
an Head of spiritual and vital influence yet are they meet Members of that Body of Christ unto which he is an Head of Rule and Government as also meet to be esteemed Subjects of his Kingdom And none are excluded but such as concerning whom Rules are given either to withdraw from them or to cast them out of Church Society or are expresly excluded by God himself from any share in the Privileges of his Covenant Psal. 50.16 17. Divines of all sorts do dispute from the Scripture and the Testimonies of the Ancients that Hypocrites and persons unregenerate may be true Members of Visible Churches And it is a matter very easie to be proved nor do I know any by whom it is denied But the only Question is That whereas undoubtedly Profession is necessary unto all Church Communion whether if Men do profess themselves Hypocrites in State and Unregenerate in Mind that Profession do sufficiently qualify them for Church Communion And whereas there is a double Profession one by Words the other by Works as the Apostle declares Tit. 1.16 Whether the latter be not as interpretative of the Mind and state of Men as the former other contest we have with none in this matter Belarmine de Eccles. lib. 3. cap. 2. gives an account out of Augustine and that truly from Brevec Collat. Col. 3. of the state of the Church It doth saith he consist of a Soul and Body The Soul is the internal Graces of the Spirit The Body is the Profession of them with the Sacraments All true Believers making Profession belong to the Soul and Body of the Church Some as believing Catechumens belong to the Soul but not to the Body Others are of the Body but not of the Soul namely such as have no internal Grace or true Faith and they are like the Hair or the Nails or evil Humours in the Body And thereunto adds That his Definition of the Church comprizeth this last sort only which is all one as if we should define a Man to be a Thing constituted and made up of Hair Nails and ill Humours and let others take heed that they have not such Churches There is nothing more certain in matter of Fact than that Evangelical Churches at their first constitution were made up and did consist of such Members as we have described and no other Nor is there one Word in the whole Scripture intimating any Concession or Permission of Christ to receive into his Church those who are not so Qualified Others have nothing to plead for themselves but Possession which being malae fidei ill obtained and ill continued will afford them no real advantage when the time of trial shall come Wherefore it is certain that such they ought to be No Man as I suppose is come unto that profligate sense of Spiritual things as to deny That the Members of the Church ought to be visibly Holy. For if so they may affirm that all the promises and privileges made and granted to the Church do belong unto them who visibly live and die in their Sins which is to overthrow the Gospel And if they ought so to be and were so at first when they are not so openly and visibly there is a declension from the Original Constitution of Churches and a Sinful Deviation in them from the Rule of Christ. This Original Constitution of Churches with respect unto their Members was for the substance of it as we observed preferred in the Primitive Times whilst Persecution from without was continued and Discipline preserved within I have in part declared before what great care and circumspection the Church then used in the Admission of any into their Fellowship and Order and what trial they were to undergo before they were received and it is known also with what severe Discipline they watched over the Faith walking conversation and manners of all their Members Indeed such was their care and diligence herein that there is scarce left in some Churches at present the least Resemblance or Appearance of what was their State and manner of Rule Wherefore some think it meet to Ascend no higher in the imitation of the Primitive Churches than the times of the Christian Emperours when all things began to rush into the fatal Apostasie which I shall here speak a little farther unto For Upon the Roman Emperours Embracing Christian Religion whereby not only outward Peace and Tranquility was secured unto the Church but the Profession of Christian Religion was countenanced encouraged honoured and rewarded the Rule Care and Diligence of the Churches about the Admission of Members were in a great measure relinquished and forsaken The Rulers of the Church began to think that the Glory of it consisted in its numbers finding both their own Power Veneration and Revenue encreased thereby In a short time the Inhabitants of whole Cities and Provinces upon a bare outward Profession were admitted into Churches And then began the outward Court that is all that which belongs unto the outward Worship and Order of the Church to be trampled on by the Gentiles not kept any more to the measure of Scripture Rule which thenceforth was applied only to the Temple of God and them that Worshipped therein For this corruption of the Church as to the matter of it was the occasion and means of introducing all that corruption in Doctrine Worship Order and Rule which ensued and ended in the great Apostacy For whatever belonged unto any of these things especially these that consist in practice were accommodated unto the state of the Members of the Churches And such they were as stood in need of superstitious Rites to be mixed with their Worship as not understanding the Power and Glory of that which is Spiritual such as no interest in Church Order could be committed unto seeing they were not qualified to bear any share in it such as stood in need of a Rule over them with Grandeur and Power like unto that among the Gentiles Wherefore the Accommodation of all Church concerns unto the state and condition of such corrupt Members as Churches were filled with and at length made up of proved the Ruine of the Church in all its Order and Beauty But so it fell out that in the Protestant Reformation of the Church very little regard was had thereunto Those great and worthy Persons who were called unto that Work did set themselves principally yea solely for the most part against the false Doctrine and Idolatrous Worship of the Church of Rome as judging that if they were removed and taken away the people by the Efficacy of Truth and Order of Worship would be retrived from the evil of their ways and Primitive Holiness be again reduced among them For they thought it was the Doctrine and Worship of that Church which had filled the people with Darkness and corrupted their Conversations Nor did they absolutely judge amiss therein For although they were themselves at first introduced in compliance with the ignorance and wickedness
FOR whereas there are three things required unto a Covenant between God and Man. 1. That it be of Gods appointment and institution 2. That upon a prescription of Duties there be a solemn engagement unto their performance on the part of Men. 3. That there be especial promises of God annexed thereunto in which consists the matter of Confederation whereof mutual express Restipulation is the form they all concurr herein 9. THIS Covenant which we intend is not the Covenant of Grace absolutely considered nor are all the Duties belonging unto that Covenant prescribed in it but the principal of them as Faith Repentance and the like are presupposed unto it nor hath annexed unto it all the promises and privileges of the New Covenant absolutely considered but it is that which is prescribed as a Gospel Duty in the Covenant of Grace whereunto do belong all the Duties of Evangelical Worship all the powers and privileges of the Church by virtue of the especial promise of the peculiar presence of Christ in such a Church 10. WHEREAS therefore in the constitution of a Church Believers do give up themselves unto the Lord and are bound solemnly to engage themselves to do and observe all the things which Christ hath commanded to be done and observed in that state whereon he hath promised to be present with them and among them in an especial manner which presence of his doth interest them in all the Rights Powers and Privileges of the Church their so doing hath the nature of a Divine Covenant included in it which is the Formal Cause of their Church Sate and Being 11. BESIDES as we have proved before there are many mutual Duties required of all which join in Church Societies and Powers to be exercised and submitted unto whereunto none can be obliged without their own consent They must give up themselves unto one another by the will of God. That is they must agree consent and engage among themselves to observe all those mutual Duties to use all those Privileges and to exercise all those Powers which the Lord Christ hath prescribed and granted unto his Church See Jerem. 50.4 5. 12. THIS compleats the confederation intended which is the Formal Cause of the Church and without which either expresly or virtually performed there can be no Church State. 13. INDEED herein most Men deceive themselves and think they do not that nor that it ought to be done and dispute against it as unlawful or unnecessary which for the substance of it they do themselves and would condemn themselves in their own Consciences if they did it not For unto what end do they join themselves unto Parochial Churches and Assemblies To what end do they require all Professors of the Protestant Religion so to do declaring it to be their Duty by penalties annexed unto its neglect Is it not that they might yield obedience unto Christ in their so doing Is it not to profess that they will do and observe all whatsoever he commands them Is it not to do it in that Society in those Assemblies whereunto they do belong Is there not therein virtually a mutual Agreement and Engagement among them unto all those ends It must be so with them who do not in all things in Religion fight uncertainly as Men beating the Air. 14. NOW whereas these things are in themselves and for the substance of them known Gospel Duties which all Believers are indispensably obliged unto the more express our engagement is concerning them the more do we glorify Christ in our Profession and the greater sense of our Duty will abide on our Consciences and greater encouragement be given unto the performance of mutual Duties as also the more evident will the warranty be for the exercise of Church Power Yet do I not deny the Being of Churches unto those Societies wherein these things are virtually only observed especially in Churches of some continuance wherein there is at least an implicit consent unto the first Covenant-Constitution 15. THE Lord Christ having instituted and appointed Officers Rulers or Leaders in his Church as we shall see in the next place to look unto the discharge of all Church Duties among the Members of it to administer and dispense all its Privileges and to exercise all its Authority the consent and engagement insisted on is expresly required unto the constitution of this Order and the preservation of it For without this no Believer can be brought into that Relation unto another as his Pastor Guide Over-seer Ruler unto the ends mentioned wherein he must be subject unto him partake of all Ordinances of Divine Worship administred by him with Authority in obedience unto the will of Christ They gave their own selves to us saith the Apostle by the will of God. 16. WHEREFORE the Formal Cause of a Church consisteth in an Obediential Act of Believers in such numbers as may be useful unto the ends of Church Edification jointly giving up themselves unto the Lord Jesus Christ to do and observe all his Commands resting on the promise of his especial presence thereon giving and communicating by his Law all the Rights Powers and Privileges of his Church unto them and in a mutual Agreement among themselves jointly to perform all the Duties required of them in that State with an especial subjection unto the Spiritual Authority of Rules and Rulers appointed by Christ in that State. 17. THERE is nothing herein which any Man who hath a conscientious sense of his Duty in a professed subjection unto the Gospel can question for the substance of it whether it be according to the mind of Christ or no. And whereas the nature and essential properties of a Divine Covenant are contained in them as such it is a Foundation of any Church State. 18. THUS under the Old Testament when God would take the post●rity of Abraham into a new peculiar Church State he did it by a Solemn Covenant Herein as he prescribed all the Duties of his Worship to them and made them many blessed promises of his presence with powers and privileges innumerable so the people solemnly Covenanted and engaged with him that they would do and observe all that he had Commanded them whereby they coalesced into that Church State which abode unto the time of Reformation This Covenant is at large declared Exod. 24. For the Covenant which God made there with the people and they with him was not the Covénant of Grace under a legal dispensation for that was established unto the Seed of Abraham Four Hundred years before in the Promise with the Seal of Circumcision nor was it the Covenant of Works under a Gospel dispensation for God never renewed that Covenant under any consideration whatever But it was a peculiar Covenant which God then made with them and had not made it with their Fathers Deut. 5.2 3. whereby they were raised and erected into a Church State wherein they were intrusted with all the Privileges and enjoined all the Duties which God had
in charge THIS Work and Duty therefore as was said is essential unto the Office of a Pastor A Man is a Pastor unto them whom he feeds by Pastoral Teaching and to no more And he that doth not so feed is no Pastor Nor is it required only that he Preach now and then at his leisure but that he lay aside all other Employments though lawful all other Duties in the Church as unto such a constant attendance on them as would divert him from this work that he give himself unto it that he be in these things labouring to the utmost of his Ability Without this no Man will be able to give a comfortable account of the Pastoral Office at the last day THERE is indeed no more required of any Man than God giveth him Ability for Weakness Sickness Bodily Infirmities may disenable Men from the actual discharge of this Duty in that assiduity and frequency which are required in ordinary cases And some may through Age or other incapacitating Distempers be utterly disabled for it in which case it is their Duty to lay down and take a dismission from their Office or if their disability be but partial provide a suitable supply that the Edification of the Church be not prejudiced But for Men to pretend themselves Pastors of the Church and to be unable for or negligent of this Work and Duty is to live in open defiance of the Commands of Christ. WE have lived to see or hear of reproachful scorn and contempt cast upon laborious Preaching that is labouring in the Word and Doctrine and all manner of discouragements given unto it with endeavours for its suppression in sundry instances Yea some have proceeded so far as to declare that the work of Preaching is unnecessary in the Church so to reduce all Religion to the Reading and Rule of the Liturgy The next attempt so far as I know may be to exclude Christ himself out of their Religion which the denial of a necessity of Preaching the Gospel makes an entrance into yea a good Progress towards SUNDRY things are required unto this Work and Duty of Pastoral Preaching As 1. Spiritual Wisdom and Understanding in the Mysteries of the Gospel that they may declare unto the Church the whole counsel of God and the unsearchable Riches of Christ see Act. 20.27 1 Cor. 2.4 5 6 7. Ephes. 3.8 9 10 11. The generality of the Church especially those who are grown in knowledge and experience have a spiritual insight into these things And the Apostle prays that all Believers may have so Ephes. 1.17 18 19. And if those that instruct them or should so do have not some degree of Eminency herein they cannot be useful to lead them on to perfection And the little care hereof or concernment herein is that which in our days hath rendred the Ministry of many fruitless and useless 2. Experience of the power of the Truth which they Preach in and upon their own Souls Without this they will themselves be lifeless and heartless in their own work and their labour for the most part unprofitable towards others It is to such Men attended unto as a task for their advantage or as that which carries some satisfaction in it from ostentation and supposed Reputation wherewith it is accompanied But a Man Preacheth that Sermon only well unto others which Preacheth it self in his own Soul. And he that doth not feed on and thrive in the Digestion of the Food which he provides for others will scarce make it savoury unto them Yea he knows not but the food he hath provided may be poyson unless he have really tasted of it himself If the Word doth not dwell with power in us it will not pass with power from us And no Man lives in a more wofull condition than those who really believe not themselves what they perswade others to believe continually The want of this Experience of the power of Gospel-Truth on their own Souls is that which gives us so many lifeless sapless Orations queint in Words and dead as to Power instead of Preaching the Gospel in the Demonstration of the Spirit And let any say what they please it is evident that some Mens Preaching as well as others not Preaching hath lost the credit of their Ministry 3. Skill to divide the Word aright 2 Tim. 2.15 And this consists in a practical Wisdom upon a diligent attendance unto the Word of Truth to find out what is real substantial and meet food for the Souls of the Hearers to give unto all sorts of persons in the Church that which is their proper portion And this requires 4. A prudent and diligent consideration of the state of the Flock over which any Man is set as unto their strength or weakness their growth or defect in knowledge the measure of their attainments requiring either Milk or strong Meat their Temptations and Duties their Spiritual Decays or Thrivings and that not only in general but as near as may be with respect unto all the Individual Members of the Church Without a due regard unto these things Men Preach at random uncertainly fighting like those that beat the Air. Preaching Sermons not designed for the advantage of them to whom they are Preached insisting on general Doctrines not levelled to the condition of the Auditory speaking what Men can without consideration of what they ought are things that will make Men weary of Preaching when their minds are not influenced with outward advantages as much as make others weary in hearing of them And 5. All these in the whole discharge of their Duty are to be constantly accompanied with the evidence of zeal for the glory of God and compassion for the Souls of Men. Where these are not in vigorous exercise in the Minds and Souls of them that Preach the Word giving a Demonstration of themselves unto the Consciences of them that hear the quickening Form the Life and Soul of Preaching is lost ALL these things seem common obvious and universally acknowledged But the ruine of the Ministery of the most for the want of them or from notable defects in them is or may be no less evidently known And the very naming of them which is all at present which I design is sufficient to evidence how great a necessity there is incumbent on all Pastors of Churches to give themselves unto the Word and Prayer to labour in the Word and Doctrine to be continually intent on this Work to engage all the faculties of their Souls to stir up all their Graces and Gifts unto constant exercise in the discharge of their Duty For who is sufficient for these things And as the consideration of them is sufficient to stir up all Ministers unto fervent Prayer for supplies of Divine Aids and Assistance for that Work which in their own strength they can no way answer so is it enough to warn them of the avoidance of all things that would give them a Diversion or Avocation from the constant
Office are vain whence it is that the whole Work of it is much neglected 2. TO be ready and willing to attend unto the especial cases that may be brought unto them and not to look on them as unnecessary Diversions whereas a due Application unto them is a principal part of their Office and Duty To discountenance to discourage any from seeking relief in perplexities of this nature to carry it towards them with a seeming moroseness and unconcernedness is to turn that which is Lame out of the way to push the Diseased and not at all to express the care of Christ towards his Flock Isa. 40.11 Yea it is their Duty to hearken after them who may be so exercised to seek them out to give them their Counsel and Directions on all occasions 3. TO bear patiently and tenderly with the weakness ignorance dulness slowness to believe and receive satisfaction yea it may be Impertinencies in them that are so tempted These things will abound amongst them partly from their natural Infirmities many being weak and perhaps froward but especially from the nature of their Temptations which are suited to disorder and disquiet their Minds to fill them with perplexed Thoughts and to make them jealous of every thing wherein they are spiritually concerned And if much patience meekness and condescention be not exercised towards them they are quickly turned out of the way IN the discharge of the whole Pastoral Office there is not any Thing or Duty that is of more importance nor wherein the Lord Jesus Christ is more concerned nor more eminently suited unto the nature of the Office it self than this is But whereas it is a Work or Duty which because of the Reasons mentioned must be accompanied with the exercise of Humility Patience Self-denial and Spiritual Wisdom with Experience with wearisome Diversions from other occasions those who had got of old the conduct of the Souls of Men into their management turned this whole part of their Office and Duty into an Engine they called Articular Confession whereby they wrested the Consciences of Christians to the promotion of their own Ease Wealth Authority and oft-times to worse ends 7. A compassionate suffering with all the Members of the Church in all their trials and troubles whether internal or external belongs unto them in the discharge of their Office. Nor is there any thing that renders them more like unto Jesus Christ whom to represent unto the Church is their principal Duty The view and consideration by Faith of the Glory of Christ in his compassion with his suffering Members is the principal spring of Consolation unto the Church in all its Distresses And the same Spirit the same Mind herein ought according to their measure to be in all that have the Pastoral Office committed unto them So the Apostle expresseth it in himself Who is weak and I am not weak Who is offended and I burn not 2 Cor. 11.29 And unless this compassion and goodness do run through the discharge of their whole Office Men cannot be said to be Evangelical Shepherds nor the Sheep said in any sense to be their own For those who pretend unto the Pastoral Office to live it may be in wealth and pleasure regardless of the Sufferings and Temptations of their Flock or of the poor of it or related unto such Churches as wherein it is impossible that they should so much as be acquainted with the state of the greatest part of them is not answerable unto the institution of their Office nor to the design of Christ therein 8. CARE of the Poor and visitation of the Sick are parts of this Duty commonly known though commonly neglected 9. THE principal care of the Rule of the Church is incumbent on the Pastors of it This is the second general head of the Power and Duty of this Office whereunto many things in particular do belong But because I shall treat afterwards of the Rule of the Church by it self distinctly I shall not here insist upon it 10. THERE is a Communion to be observed among all the Churches of the same Faith and Profession in any Nation Wherein it doth consist and what is required thereunto shall be afterwards declared The principal care hereof unto the Edification of the Churches is incumbent on the Pastors of them Whether it be exercised by Letters of mutual advice of congratulation or consolation or in testimony of Communion with those who are called to Office in them or whether it be by convening in Synods for consultation of their joint concernments which things made up a great part of the Primitive Ecclesiastical Polity their Duty it is to attend unto it and to take care of it 11. THAT wherewith I shall close these few instances of the Pastoral Charge and Duty is that without which all the rest will neither be useful unto Men nor be accepted with the great Shepherd Christ Jesus And that is an humble holy exemplary conversation in all Godliness and Honesty The Rules and Precepts of the Scripture the Examples of Christ and his Apostles with that of the Bishops or Pastors of the Primitive Churches and the nature of the thing it self with the Religion which we do profess do undeniably prove this Duty to be necessary and indispensable in a Gospel Ministry It were an easie thing to fill up a Volume with ancient Examples unto this purpose with Testimonies of the Scripture and first Writers among Christians with Examples of publick and private miscarriages herein with evident demonstration that the ruine of Christian Religion in most Nations where it hath been professed and so of the Nations themselves hath proceeded from the Ambition Pride Luxury Vncleanness Profaneness and otherways vitious Conversations of those who have been called the Clergy And in daily observation it is a thing written with the Beams of the Sun that whatever else be done in Churches if the Pastors of them or those who are so esteemed are not Exemplary in Gospel Obedience and Holiness Religion will not be carried on and improved among the people If Persons light or prophane in their Habits Garbs and Converse corrupt in their Communication Unsavoury and Barren as unto Spiritual Discourse if such as are Covetous Oppressive and Contentious such as are negligent in holy Duties in their own Families and so cannot stir up others unto diligence therein much more if such as are openly sensual vitious and debauched are admitted into this Office we may take our leave of all the Glory and Power of Religion among the people committed unto their charge TO handle this property or adjunct of the Pastoral Office it were necessary distinctly to consider and explain all the Qualifications assigned by the Apostle as necessary unto Bishops and Elders evidenced as previously necessary unto the orderly Call of them unto this Office 1 Tim. 3.2 3 4 5 6 7. Tit. 2.6 7 8 9. which is a Work not consistent with my present design to engage in THESE are
such cases this Remedy by the Pastors laying down his Office is not to be made use of otherwise all things are to be done for Edification 5. IT may be lawful where the Church is wholly negligent in its Duty and persists in that negligence after admonition in providing according to their Abilities for the outward necessity of their Pastor and his Family But this Case cannot be determined without the consideration of many particular Circumstances 6. WHERE all or many of these causes concurr so as that a Man cannot cheerfully and comfortably go on in the discharge of his Office especially if he be pressed in point of Conscience through the Churches non-compliance with their Duty with respect unto any of the Institutions of Christ And if the Edification of the Church which is at present obstructed may be provided for in their own judgment after a due manner there is no such grievous yoke laid by the Lord Christ on the necks of any of his Servants but that such a Person may peaceably lay down his Office in such a Church and either abide in a private station or take the care of another Church wherein he may discharge his Office being yet of Ability unto his own Comfort and their Edification CHAP. VI. Of the Office of Teachers in the Church or an Enquiry into the State Condition and Work of those called Teachers in the Scripture THE Lord Christ hath given unto his Church Pastors and Teachers Ephes. 4.11 He hath set in the Church First Apostles Secondarily Prophets Thirdly Teachers 1 Cor. 12.28 In the Church that was at Antioch there were Prophets and Teachers Act. 13.1 And their Work is both described and assigned unto them as we shall see afterwards BUT the thoughts of learned Men about those who in the Scripture are called Teachers are very various nor is the Determination of their State and Condition easie or obvious as we shall find in our Enquiry IF there were originally a distinct Office of Teachers in the Church it was lost for many Ages But yet there was always a Shadow or Appearance of it retained First in publick Catechists and then in Doctors or Professors of Theology in the Schools belonging unto any Church But this as unto the Title of Doctor or Teacher is but a late Invention For the occasion of it rose about the year of Christ 1135. Lotharius the Emperor having found in Italy a Copy of the Roman Civil Law and being greatly taken with it he Ordained that it should be publickly Taught and Expounded in the Schools This he began by the direction of Imerius his Chancellor at Bononia and to give encouragement unto this Employment they Ordained that those who were the publick Professors of it should be solemnly created Doctors of whom Bulgarus Hugolinus with others were the First Not long after this Rite of creating Doctors was borrowed of the Lawyers by Divines who publickly taught Divinity in their Schools And this imitation first took place in Bononia Paris and Oxford But this Name is since grown a Title of Honour to sundry sorts of Persons whether unto any good use or purpose or no I know not but it is in use and not worth contending about especially if as unto some of them it be fairly reconcileable unto that of our Saviour Matth. 23.8 BUT the custom of having in the Church Teachers that did publickly explain and vindicate the principles of Religion is far more Ancient and of known usage in the Primitive Churches Such was the Practice of the Church of Alexandria in their School wherein the famous Panlaenus Origen and Clemens were Teachers an imitation whereof was continued in all Ages of the Church AND indeed the continuation of such a peculiar Work and Employment to be discharged in manner of an Office is an evidence that Originally there was such a distinct Office in the Church For although in the Roman Church they had instituted sundry Orders of Sacred Officers borrowed from the Jews or Gentiles which have no resemblance unto any thing mentioned in the Scripture yet sundry things abased and corrupted by them in Church-Officers took their occasional rise from what is so mentioned THERE are Four Opinions concerning those who are called by this Name in the New Testament 1. SOME say that no Office at all is denoted by it it being only a general Appellation of those that taught others whether constantly or occasionally Such were the Prophets in the Church of Corinth that spake occasionally and in their turns 1 Cor. 14. Which is that which all might do who had ability for it v. 5.24 25. 2. SOME say it is only another name for the same Office with that of a Pastor and so not to denote any distinct Office of which mind Hierom seems to be Ephes. 4. 3. OTHERS allow that it was a distinct Office whereunto some were called and set apart in the Church but it was only to Teach and that in a peculiar manner the Principles of Religion but had no Interest in the Rule of the Church or the Administration of the Sacred Mysteries so the Pastor in the Church was to Rule and Teach and Administer the Sacred Mysteries The Teacher to Teach or Instruct only but not to Rule nor Dispense the Sacraments and the Ruling Elder to Rule only and neither to Preach nor Administer Sacraments which hath the appearance of Order both useful and beautiful 4. SOME judge that it was a distinct Office but of the same nature and kind with that of the Pastor endowed with all the same Powers but differenced from it with respect unto Gifts and a peculiar kind of Work allotted unto it But this Opinion hath this seeming disadvantage that the difference between them is so small as not to be sufficient to give a distinct denomination of Officers or to constitute a distinct Office. And it may be such a distinction in Gifts will seldom appear as that the Church may be guided thereby in their choice of meet Persons unto distinct Offices But Scripture-Testimony and Rule must take place and I shall briefly examine all these Opinions 1. THE First is That this is not the name of any Officer nor is a Teacher as such any Officer in the Church but it is used only as a general Name for any that Teach on any account the Doctrine of the Gospel I do not indeed know of any who have in particular contended for this Opinion but I observe that very many Expositors take no farther notice of them but as such This seems to me to be most remote from the Truth IT is true that in the First Churches not only some but all who had received Spiritual Light in the Gifts of knowledge and utterance did teach and instruct others as they had opportunity 1 Pet. 5.8 9 10 11. Hence the Heathen Philosophers as Celsus in particular objected to the Christians of old that they suffered Sutlers and Weavers and Coblers to teach among them which they
who knew that Paul himself their great Apostle wrought at a Trade not much better were not offended at Of this sort were the Disciples mentioned Act. 8.4 So was Aquila Act. 18.26 and the many Prophets in the Church of Corinth 2 Epist. Chap. 1.14 But 1. THE Name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not used in the New Testament but for a Teacher with Authority The Apostle John tells us that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chap. 20.16 or as it is written 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark 10.51 which in mixed dialect was the same with Rabbi And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were then in use for the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which see Job 36.22 Isa. 30.20 Now the constant signification of these words is a Master in Teaching a Teacher with Authority Nor is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used in the New Testament but for such a one And therefore those who are called Teachers were such as were set apart unto the Office of Teaching and not such as were so called from an occasional Work or Duty 2. TEACHERS are numbred among the Officers which Christ hath given unto and set in the Church Ephes. 4.11 1 Cor. 12.28 So that Originally Church-Officers were intended by them is beyond contradiction 3. THEY are mentioned as those who with others did preside in the Church and join in the publick ministrations of it Act. 15.1 2. 4. THEY are charged to attend unto the Work of Teaching which none can be but they whose Office it is to Teach Rom. 12.7 It is therefore undeniable that there is such an Office as that of a Teacher mentioned in the Scripture THE Second Opinion is that although a Teacher be a Church-Officer yet no distinct Office is intended in that denomination It is say they only another Name for a Pastor the Office being one and the same the same Persons being both Pastors and Teachers or called by these several Names as they have other Titles also ascribed unto them SO it is fallen out and so it is usual in things of this nature that Men run into extreams Truth pleaseth them not In the First Deviation of the Church from its Primitive Institution there were introduced sundry Offices in the Church that were not of Divine Institution borrowed partly of the Jews and partly of the Gentiles which issued in the Seven Orders of the Church of Rome They did not utterly reject any that were of a Divine Original but retained some kind of Figure Shadow or Image of them But they brought in others that were meerly of their own invention In the rejection of this Exorbitancy some are apt to run into the other extreme They will deny and reject some of them that have a Divine Warranty for their Original Howbeit they are not many nor burthensome Yea they are all such as without the continuation of them the Edification of the Church cannot be carried on in a due manner For unto the Beauty and Order of the Church in its Rule and Worship it is required not only that there be many Officers in each Church but also that they be of sundry sorts all Harmony in things Natural Political and Ecclesiastical arising from variety with proportion And he that shall with Calmness and without Prejudice consider the whole Work that is to be done in Churches with the end of their institution will be able to understand the necessity of Pastors Teachers Ruling-Elders and Deacons for those ends and no other And this I hope I shall demonstrate in the consideration of these respective Offices with the Duties that belong unto them as I have considered one of them already Wherefore as unto the opinion under present consideration I say 1. IN the Primitive Church about the end of the Second Century before there was the least attempt to introduce new Officers into the Church there were Persons called unto the Office and Work of publick Teaching who were not Pastors nor called unto the Administration of other Ordinances Those of this sort in the Church of Alexandria were by reason of their extraordinary Abilities quickly of great fame and renown Their constant Work was publickly unto all comers Believers and Unbelievers to explain and teach the Principles of Christian Religion defending and vindicating it from the opposition of its Heathen Adversaries whether Atheists or Philosophers This had never been so exactly practised in the Church if it had not derived from Divine Institution And of this sort is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Catechist intended by the Apostle Gal. 6.6 For it is such an one as constantly labours in the Work of Preaching and hath those who depend upon his Ministry therein 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that are Taught or Catechised by him For hence alone it is that Maintenance is due unto him for his Work. Let the Catechised communicate unto the Cathechist the taught unto the Teacher in all good things And it is not the Pastor of the Church that he intends for he speaks of him in the same case in another manner and no where only with respect unto teaching alone 2. THERE is a plain distinction between the Offices of a Pastor and a Teacher Ephes. 4.11 Some Pastors and Teachers This is one of the instances wherein Men try their Wits in putting in exceptions unto plain Scripture Testimonies as some or other do in all other cases which if it may be allowed we shall have nothing left us certain in the whole Book of God. The Apostle enumerates distinctly all the Teaching Officers of the Church both extraordinary and ordinary It is granted that there is a difference between Apostles Prophets and Evangelists but there is none say some between Pastors and Teachers which are also named distinctly Why so Because there is an interposition of the Article 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 between those of the former sort and not between Pastors and Teachers a very weak consideration to controul the evidence of the design of the Apostle in the Words We are not to prescribe unto him how he shall express himself But this I know that the discretive and copulative conjunction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and between Pastors and Teachers doth no less distinguish them the one from the other than the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before made use of And this I shall confirm from the words themselves 1. THE Apostle doth not say Pastors or Teachers which in congruity of speech should have been done if the same Persons and the same Office were intended And the discretive Particle in the close of such an enumeration of things distinct as that in this place is of the same force with the other notes of distinction before used 2. AFTER he hath named Pastors he nameth Teachers with a note of distinction This must contain either the addition of a New Office or be an interpretation of what went before as
even the Word Command and Direction of Christ himself alone the Acts and Exercise of it in binding and loosing in remitting and retaining Sin in opening and shutting the Kingdom of Heaven are all Spiritual meerly and only Neither can there be an Instance given of any thing belonging unto the Rule of the Church that is of another nature Yea it is sufficient eternally to exclude any Power or Exercise of it any Act of Rule or Government from any Interest in Church-Affairs that it can be proved to be Carnal Political Despotical of external Operaration or not entirely Spiritual 5. THE Change of this Government of the Church fell out and was introduced gradually upon an advantage taken from the unmeetness of the People to be lead under this Spiritual Rule For the greatest part of them that made up Christian Churches being become ignorant and carnal that Rule which consists in a spiritual influence on the Consciences of Men was no way able to retain them within the bounds of outward obedience which was at last only aimed at There was therefore another kind of Rule and Government judged necessary to retain them in any Order or Decorum And it must be acknowledged that where the Members of the Church are not in some degree Spiritual a Rule that is meerly Spiritual will be of no great use unto them But principally this change was introduced by those that were in possession of the Rule it self and that on two grounds 1. Their unskilfulness in the management of this Spiritual Rule or weariness of the Duties which are required thereunto This made them willing to desert it with that perpetual labour and exercise of all sorts of Graces which are required in it and to embrace another more easie and more suited unto their Inclinations 2. A desire of the Secular advantages of Profit Honour and Veneration which tendered themselves unto them in another kind of Rule By these means was the Original Government of the Church which was of Divine Institution utterly lost and a Worldly Domination introduced in the room thereof But the brief delineation given of it before with what shall now be added will demonstrate sufficiently that all these Disputes and Contests which are in the World between the Church of Rome and others about Church-Power and Rule are utterly foreign unto Christian Religion 6. I SHALL therefore briefly enquire into these three things 1. What is the Skill and Polity that is required unto the Exercise or Administration of the Government of the Church 2. What is the sole Law and Rule of it 3. What are the Acts and Duties of it What it is conversant about especially those wherein the Office of Ruling Elders doth take place 1. THE Polity of Church-Government subjectively considered is generally supported to consist 1. In a skill learning or understanding in the Civil and especially the Canon Law with the additional Canons accomodating that Law unto the present state of things of the Nation to be interpreted according unto the general Rules of it 2. Knowledge of and Acquaintance with the Constitution Power Jurisdiction and Practice of some Law Courts which being in their original grant of Power manner of Proceeding Pleas and Censures meerly Secular are yet called Ecclesiastical or Spiritual 3. A good Discretion to understand a-right the extent of their Power with the bounds and limits of it that on the one hand they let none escape whom they can reach by the discipline of their Courts and on the other not entrench so far on the Civil-Power and the Jurisdiction of other Courts according to the Law of the Land as to bring themselves into charge or trouble 4. An acquaintance with the Table of Fees that they may neither lose their own profit nor give advantage unto others to question them for taking more than their due But in these things we are not at present concerned 8. THE skill then of the Officers of the Church for the Government of it is a spiritual Wisdom and Vnderstanding in the Law of Christ for that end with an Ability to make application of it in all requisite Instances unto the Edification of the whole Church and all its Members through a ministerial Exercise of the Authority of Christ himself and a due Representation of his Holiness Love Care Compassion and Tenderness toward his Church 1. THE sole Rule and Measure of the Government of the Church being the Law of Christ that is the Intimation and Declaration of his Mind and Will in his Institutions Commands Prohibitions and Promises an Vnderstanding herein with Wisdom from that Understanding is and must be the whole of the Skill enquired after How this Wisdom is bestowed as a spiritual Gift how it is to be acquired in a way of Duty by Prayer Meditation and study of the Word hath been intimated before and shall fully be declared in our Discourse of spiritual Gifts All Decrees and Decretals Canons and Glosses come properly in this matter under one Title of them namely Extravagant The utmost Knowledge of them and Skill in them will contribute nothing unto this Wisdom Neither are any sort of Men more strangers unto it or unacquainted with it than they are for the most part who are eminently cunning in such Laws and the Jurisdiction of Ecclesiastical Courts But Wisdom in the knowledge of the Will of Christ as revealed in the Scripture is that alone which is of use in the Government of the Church 2. A PART of this Wisdom consisteth in an Ability of Mind to make Application of the Law of Christ in all requisite Instances unto the Edification of the Church in general and all the Members of it respectively This Wisdom is not notional only but practical It consists not in a speculative comprehension of the sence of the Rule or of the Mind of Christ therein only though that be required in the first place but in an Ability of Mind to make Application of it whereunto Diligence Care Watchfulness and spiritual Courage are required Some are to be Admonished some to be Rebuked sharply some to be cut off in which and the like cases a spirit of Government acting it self in Diligence Boldness and Courage is necessary And this is one reason why the Lord Christ hath appointed many Elders in each Church and those of several sorts For it is seldom that any one Man is qualified for the whole work of Rule Some may have a good understanding in the Law of the Churches Government yet through a natural Tenderness and an insuperable kind of Modesty not be so ready and prompt for that part of this Discipline which consists in Reproofs and Severity of Censures Some may not have so great an Ability for the Indagation of the sence of the Law as others have who yet upon the knowledge of it being discovered unto them have readiness and boldness in Christ to apply it as occasion doth require All Elders therefore in their variety of Gifts are to be
the whole Church in all its concernments is principally committed unto the Pastors Teachers and Elders it is the Duty of the Deacons in the discharge of their Office 1. To acquaint them from time to time with the state of the Church and especially of the Poor so far as it falls under their Inspection 2. To seek and take their Advice in matters of greater importance relating unto their Office. 3. To be assisting unto them in all the outward concerns of the Church 6. MAY Deacons Preach the Word and Baptize authoritatively by virtue of their Office Ans. 1. THE Deacons whose Office is instituted Act. 6. and whose Qualifications are fixed 1 Tim. 3. have no call unto or Ministerial Power in these things The limitation of their Office Work and Power is so express as will not admit of any debate 2. Persons once called unto this Office might of old in an extraordinary manner may at present in an ordinary way be called unto the preaching of the Word but they were not then they cannot be now authorized thereunto by vrtue of this Office. 3. If a new Office be erected under the name of Deacons it is in the will of them by whom it is erected to Assign what Power unto it they please CHAP. X. Of EXCOMMVNICATION THE Power of the Church towards its Members for it hath nothing to do with them that are without may be referred unto Three Heads 1. The Admission of Members into its Society 2. The Rule and Edification of them that belong unto it 3. The Exclusion out of its Society of such as obstinately refuse to live and walk according unto the Laws and Rules of it And these things belong essentially and inseparably unto every free Society and are comprehensive of all Church-Power whatever THE Second of these hath been treated of in the Discourse concerning Church Offices and Rule And all that belongs unto the first of them is fully declared in the Chapters of the Essential Constituent parts of Gospel Churches namely their Matter and Form. The Third must be now spoken unto which is the Power of Excommunication THERE is nothing in Christian Religion about which the contest of Opinions hath been more fierce than this of Excommunication most of them proceeding evidently from false Presumptions and secular Interests And no greater instance can be given of what the Serpentine wits of Men ingaged by the desire of Domination and Wealth and assisted by opportunities may attain unto For whereas as we shall see immediately there is nothing more plain simple and more exposed unto the common understanding of all Christians yea of all Mankind than is this Institution of Christ both as unto its Nature Form and Manner of Administration nothing more wholesome nor useful unto the Souls of Men nothing more remote from giving the least disturbance or prejudice to Civil Society to Magistrates or Rulers unto the Personal or Political Rights or Concernments of any one individual in the World It hath been Metamorphosed into an hideous Monster an Engine of Priestly Domination and Tyranny for the Deposition or Assassination of Kings and Princes the Wasting of Nations with bloody Wars the Terror of the Souls of Men and the destruction of their Lives with all their Earthly Concerns unto the Erection of a Tyrannical Empire no less pernicious unto the Christian World than those of the Saracens or the Turks He is a stranger unto all that hath passed in the World for near a Thousand Years who knows not the Truth of these things And to this very day the greatest part of them that are called Christians are so supinely Ignorant and Doating or so infatuated and blinded by their Prejudices and Corrupt Interests as to suppose or to say That if the Pope of Rome do Excommunicate Kings or Princes they may be lawfully deposed from their Rule and in some cases killed and that other persons being rightly Excommunicated according unto certain Laws Rules and Processes that some have framed ought to be Fined Punished Imprisoned and so Destroyed And about these things there are many Disputes and Contests when if Men were awakned out of their Lethargy they would be laughed at as the most ridiculous and contemptible Mormo's that ever appeared in the World though they are no laughing matter at present unto them that are concerned in them SUPPOSING then Ecclesiastical Excommunication as I at present suppose and shall immediately prove it to be an appointment of our Lord Jesus Christ these things are plain and evident concerning it not capable of any modest Contradiction 1. That there is no Divine Evangelical Institution that is more suited unto the Light of Nature the Rules of common Equity and Principles of unseared Consciences as unto the Nature Efficacy and Rule of it than this is 2. That the way of the Administration and Exercise of the Power and Acts of it is so determined described and limited in the Scripture and the Light of Nature as that there can be no gross error or mistake about it but what proceeds from Secular Interests Pride Ambition Covetousness or other vitious Habits and Inclinations of the minds of Men. 3. That the whole Authority of it its Sentence Power and Efficacy are meerly Spiritual with respect unto the Souls and Consciences of Men only and that to extend it directly or indirectly immediately or by consequences unto the temporal hurt evil or damage of any in their Lives Liberties Estates Natural or Legal Privileges is opposite unto and destructive of the whole Government of Christ in and over his Church All these things wilfully appear in the account which we shall give of it IT is therefore evident as was intimated that nothing in Christian Practice hath been or is more abused corrupted or perverted than this of Excommunication hath been and is The Residence of the Supream Power of it to be exercised towards and over all Christians Rulers and Subjects in the Pope of Rome or in other single Persons absolutely over less or greater Distributions of them the Administration of it by Citations Processes Pleadings and Contentions in wrangling Law Courts according unto Arbitrary Canons and Constitutions whose Original is either known or unknown the Application of it unto the Hurt Damage Evil or Loss of Men in their Temporal Concerns are utterly and openly foreign unto the Gospel and expresly contrary unto what the Lord Christ hath appointed therein It would require a whole Volume to declare the horrible abuses that both in point of Right and in matter of Fact with the pernicious consequences that have ensued thereon which the corruption of this Divine Institution hath produced But to make a Declaration hereof doth not belong to my present design besides it hath in some good measure been done by others In brief it is so come to pass that it is made a meer Political Engine of an external forcible Government of the Persons of Men unto the ends of the Interests of some who have
got a pretence of its Power administred by such ways and means as wherein the Consciences of Men neither of those by whom it is Administred nor of those unto whom it is Applied are any way concerned with respect unto the Authority or any Institution of Jesus Christ. FROM an observation hereof and a desire to vindicate as well Christian Religion from such a scandalous Abuse as Mankind from Bondage to such a monstrous fiction as is the present power and exercise of it some have fallen into another extream denying that there is any such thing as Excommunication appointed or approved by the Gospel But this neither is nor ever will be a way to reduce Religion nor any thing in it unto its Primitive Order and Purity To deny the Being of any thing because it hath been abused when there could have been no abuse of it but upon a supposition of its Being is not a rational way to reprove and convince that abuse And when those who have corrupted this Institution find the insufficiency of the Arguments produced to prove that there never was any such Institution it makes them secure in the practice of their own Abuses of it For they imagine that there is nothing incumbent on them to justify their present possession and exercise of the Power of Excommunication but that Excommunication it self is appointed in the Church by Christ whereas the true consideration of this Appointment is the only means to divest them of their power and practice For the most effectual course to discharge and disprove all corruptions in the Agenda or Practicals of Religion as the Sacraments publick Worship Rule and the like is to propose and declare the things themselves in their Original simplicity and purity as appointed by Christ and recorded in the Scriptures A real view of them in such a Proposal will divest the minds of Men not corrupted and hardened by Prejudice and Interest of those erroneous conceptions of them that from some kind of Tradition they have been prepossessed withal And this I shall now attempt in this particular of Excommunication THERE hath been great enquiry about the nature and exercise of this Ordinance under the Old Testament with the Account given of it by the latter Jews For the Right and Power of it in general belongs unto a Church as such every Church and not that which is purely Evangelical only This I shall not enquire into it hath been sifted to the bran already and intermixed with many Rabbinical conjectures and mistakes In general there is nothing more certain than that there was a doubl● Removal of Persons by Church-Authority from the communion of the whole Congregation in Divine Worship The one for a Season the other for Ever whereof I have given Instances elsewhere But I intend only the consideration of what belongs unto Churches under the New Testament And to this end we may observe 1. THAT all lawful Societies constituted such by voluntary confederation according unto peculiar Laws and Rules of their own choice unto especial Duties and Ends have a Right and Power by the Light of Nature to receive into their Society those that are willing and meet ingaging themselves to observe the Rules Laws and Ends of the Society and to Expel them out of it who wilfully deviate from those Rules This is the life and form of every lawful Society or Community of Men in the World without which they can neither coalesce nor subsist But it is required hereunto 1. THAT those who so enter into such a Society have Right or Power so to do And many things are required unto this end As 1. That those who enter into such a Society be sui Juris have a lawful Right to dispose of themselves as unto all the Duties and Ends of such a Society Hence Children Servants Subjects have no power in themselves to enter into such Societies without the interposition of and obligation from a power Superior unto that of Parents Masters or Princes namely that of God himself 2. That the Rules Laws and ends of the Society be lawful good and useful unto themselves and others For there may be a confederation in and for evil which is a combination that gives no Right nor Power over one another or towards others that enter into it 3. That it contains nothing that is prejudicial unto others in things Divine or Humane 4. Nor oblige unto the omission or neglect of any Duty that Men by virtue of any Relations Natural Moral or Political do owe unto others Nor 5. Is hurtful unto themselves in their Lives Liberties Names Reputation usefulness in the World or any thing else unto whose preservation they are obliged by the Law of Nature Nor 6. Can be or are such Persons obliged to forsake the conduct of themselves in things Divine and Humane by the Light of their own Consciences by an Ingagement of blind obedience unto others which would render every Society unlawful by the Law of God and Light of Nature 7. Least of all have any Persons Right or Power to oblige themselves in such Societies unto things Evil Sinful Superstitious or Idolatrous THESE things are plain and evident in themselves and every way sufficient to divest all the Religious Societies and Fraternities that are erected in the Church of Rome of all that Right and Power which belongs unto lawful Societies constituted by voluntary confederation And if any thing inconsistent with these principles of Natural Light be pretended in Churches it divests them of all Power as to the exercise of it by virtue of any compact or confederation whatever 2. IT is required that a Society by voluntary consent vested with the Right and Power mentioned do neither give nor take away any Right Privilege or Advantage to or from any Members of the Society which belong unto them Naturally or Politically but their Power is confined unto those things alone wherein Men may be benefited and advantaged by the Society And this is the foundation of all political Societies Men for the sake and benefit of them may and ought to forego many particular Advantages which without them they might make unto themselves But they cannot forego any of those Rights which in their several Relations are inseparably annexed unto them by the Law of Nature nor give power over themselves in such things unto the Society So is it with Churches the power of expulsion out of their Society extends only unto the Benefits and Advantages which the Society as such doth afford and communicate Now these are only things Spiritual if Churches be an institution of him whose Kingdom is not of this World. The power then that is in Churches by virtue of their being what they are extends not it self unto any outward concernments of Men as unto their Lives Liberties Natural or Political Privileges Estates or Possessions unless we shall say that Men hold and possess these things by virtue of their Relation unto the Church which is to overthrow
unto such mistakes where they are not under the guidance of the holy Spirit which is to be obtained by Prayer only 2. In or together with the Administration of it that what is done on Earth may be ratified in Heaven by the approbation of Christ and be made effectual unto its proper End. 3. It must be followed with the Prayer of the Church unto the same purpose all with respect unto the Humiliation Repentance Healing and Recovery of the Offender 2 ly IT is to be accompanied with Lamentation or Mourning So the Apostle reproving the Church of Corinth for the omission of it when it was necessary tells them That they had not mourned that the offender might be taken away from among them 1 Cor. 5.2 It is not to be done without mourning And himself calls the Execution of this Sentence from this Adjunct his bewailing of them I shall bewail many that have sinned already 2 Cor. 12.2 Compassion for the person offending with respect unto that dangerous condition whereinto he hath cast himself the Excision of a Member of the same Body with whom they have had Communion in the most holy Mysteries of Divine Worship and sate down at the Table of the Lord with a due sense of the Dishonour of the Gospel by his fall ought to ingenerate this Mourning or Lamentation in the Minds of them who are concern'd in the Execution of the Sentence Nor is it advisable for any Church to proceed thereunto before they are so affected 3 ly IT is to be accompanied with a due sence of the future Judgment of Christ. For we herein Judge for Christ in the matters of his House and Kingdom And woe to them who dare pronounce this Sentence without a perswasion on good grounds that it is the Sentence of Christ himself And there is a Representation also in it of the future Judgment when Christ will Eternally cut off and separate from himself all Hypocrites and impenitent Sinners This is well expressed by Tertullian Ibidem etiam Exhortationes Castigationes Censura Divina speaking of the Assemblies of the Church nam judicatur magno cum pondere ut apud certos de Dei conspectu summumque futuri judicii praejudicium est si quis ita d liquerit ut a Communicatione Orationis Conventus omnis sancti commercii relegetur Apol. cap. 39. Were this Duty observed it would be a preservative against that inter-mixture of corrupt Affections and corrupt Ends which often impose themselves on the Minds of Men in the exercise of this Power Lastly THE Nature and End of this Judgment or Sentence being Corrective not Vindicative for Healing not Destruction what is the Duty of the Church and those principally concerned in the pursuit of it to render it effectual is plainly evident Of what use a Significavit and Capias may be in this case I know not they belong not unto Christian Religion much less do Fire and Faggot do so Prayer for the person cut off Admonition as occasion is offered Compa●sion in his distressed Estate which is so much the more deplorable if he know it not forbearance from common Converse with readiness for the Restauration of Love in all the fruits of it contain the principal Duties of the Church and all the Members of it towards them that are justly Excommunicate WHAT farther belongeth unto this Head of Church-Rule or Order shall be spoken unto in the Resolution of some Cases or Enquiries wherein also some Things only mentioned already shall be more fully explained I HAVE made some enquiry before whether Excommunication be an act of Authority and Jurisdiction in the Officers of the Church or an act of Power in the Fraternity of the Church But for the sake of some by whom it is desired I shall a little more distinctly enquire after the Truth herein though I shall alter nothing of what was before laid down And 1. IT is certain it hath been proved and I now take it for granted That the Lord Christ hath given this Power unto the Church Wherefore in the exercise of this Power both the Officers and Members of the Church are to act according unto their respective Interests For that Exercise of Power in the Church towards any which is not an act of Obedience unto Christ in them that exercise it it is in it self null There is therefore no Distinction or Distribution of Power in the Church but by the interposition of especial Duty 2. THE Institution of Christ with respect unto a Church as it is a peculiar Society for its especial Ends do not deprive it of its natural Right as it is a Society There is in every Community by voluntary Confederation a natural Right and Power to expel those from its Society who will not be ruled by the Laws of its Constitution And if the Church should by the Institution of a Power new as unto the way manner and ends of its Exercise be deprived of its Original radical Power with respect unto the general End of its own Preservation it would not be a gainer by that Institution It may be easily understood that the Lord Christ should in particular appoint the Way and Manner of the Exercise of this Power or Administration of this Sentence committing the care thereof unto the Officers of the Church But it cannot be well understood that thereby he should deprive the Church of its Right and forbid them their Duty in preserving their Society entire and pure Neither can it be so in an especial manner committed unto any as that upon their neglect whereby those who by the Law and Rule of Christ ought to be cast out of the Churches Communion are continued in it unto its Sin and Defilement the Church it self should be free from guilt Wherefore the Apostle expresly chargeth the whole Church of Corinth with Sin and neglect of Duty in that the incestuous person was not put away from among them This could not be if so be the Power of it were so in the Hands of a few of the Officers that the Church had no Right to act in it For none can incurr a Guilt meerly by the defect of others in the Discharge of their Duty 3. THE Church essentially considered is before its ordinary Officers for the Apostle ordained Officers in every Church But the Church in that State hath Power to put away from among them and their Communion an obstinate Offender They have it as they are a Society by voluntary confederation Wherein this comes short of Authoritative Excommunication will immediately appear 4. WHERE a Church is compleat and Organized with its stated Rulers as the Church of Corinth was yet Rules Instructions and Commands are given expresly unto the Fraternity or Community of the Church for their Duty and Acting in the Administration of this Sentence and the cutting off an Offender 1 Cor. 5.2 4 6 7. 2 Cor. 2.7 8. Yea the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or infliction of the Sentence is
cases Dubious and Disputable wherein Right and Wrong are not easily determinable unto all unprejudiced persons that know the Will of God in such things Nor is it to be admitted when the matter of Fact stands in need of Testimony and is not proved by Two Witnesses at the least 2. ALL Prejudices all Partiality all Provocations all Haste and Precipitation are most carefully to be avoided in this Administration for the Judgment is the Lords Wherefore 3. WE are continually in all things that tend unto this Sentence and eminently in the Sentence it self to charge our Consciences with the Mind of Christ and what he would do himself in the case considering his Love Grace Mercy and Patience with instances of his Condescension which he gave us in this World. 4. THERE is also required of us herein a constant Remembrance that we also are in the Flesh and liable to Temptation which may restrain and keep in awe that forwardness and confidence which some are apt to manifest in such cases In all these things a watchful Eye is to be kept over the methods of Satan who by all means seeks to pervert this Ordinance unto the Destruction of Men which is appointed for their Edification and too often prevails in that Design And if by the Negligence of a Church in the management and pursuit of this Ordinance he gets advantage to pervert it unto the Ruine of any it is the fault of that Church in that they have not been careful of the Honour of Christ therein Wherefore 1. AS Excommunication by a cursed Noise and Clamor with Bell Book and Candle such as we have instances of in some Papal Councils is an horrible Anti-christian Abomination So 2. IT is an undue Representation of Christ and his Authority for persons openly guilty of profaneness in sinning to Excommunicate them who are blameless in all Christian Obedience 3. ALL Excommunication is Evangelically null where there is wanting an Evangelical frame of spirit in those by whom it is Administred and there is present an Anti-evangelical Order in its Administration 4. IT is sufficiently evident that after all the Contests and Disputes about this Excommunication that have been in the World the Noise that it hath made the horrible Abuses that it hath been put unto the wresting of all Church-Order and Rule to give countenance unto a corrupt Administration of it with the needless Oppositions that have been made against its Institution there is nothing in it nothing belongs unto it nothing required unto its Administration wherein Mens outward Interests are at all concerned and which the smallest number of sincere Christians in any Church-Society may not perform and discharge unto the Glory of Christ and their own Edification IT is the Mystery of Iniquity that hath traversed these things into such a state and posture as is unintelligible unto spiritual Wisdom unpracticable in the Obedience of Faith and ruinous unto all Evangelical Order and Discipline CHAP. XI Of the Communion of Churches CHURCHES so appointed and established in Order as hath been declared ought to hold Communion among themselves or with each other as unto all the ends of their Institution and Order For these are the same in all Yea the general end of them is in Order of Nature considered antecedently unto their Institution in particular This end is the Edification of the Body of Christ in general or the Church Catholick The promotion hereof is committed jointly and severally unto all particular Churches Wherefore with respect hereunto they are obliged unto mutual Communion among themselves which is their consent endeavour and conjunction in and for the promotion of the Edification of the Catholick Church and therin their own as they are Parts and Members of it THIS Communion is incumbent on every Church with respect unto all other Churches of Christ in the World equally And the Duties and Acts of it in all of them are of the same kind and nature For there is no such disparity between them or subordination among them as should make a difference between the Acts of their mutual Communion so as that the Acts of some should be Acts of Authority and those of others Acts of obedience or subjection Where ever there is a Church whether it be at Rome or Egubium in a City or a Village the Communion of them all is mutual the Acts of it of the same kind however one Church may have more Advantages to be useful and helpful therein than another And the abuse of those Advantages was that which wrought effectually in the beginning of that disorder which at length destroyed the Catholick Church with all Church-Communion whatever For some Churches especially that of Rome having many Advantages in Gifts Abilities Numbers and Reputation above many above most Churches for usefulness in their mutual Communion the Guides of it insensibly turned and perverted the Addresses made unto them the Advises and Assistances desired of them in way of Communion or their pretences of such Addresses and Desires into an Usurpation first of a primacy of Honour then of Order then of Supremacy and Jurisdiction unto the utter overthrow of all Church-Order and Communion and at length of the whole nature of the Catholick Church as stated and subsisting in particular Churches as we shall see ALL Churches on their first institution quickly found themselves indigent and wanting though not as unto their Being Power and Order yet as unto their well-being with their preservation in Truth and Order upon extraordinary Occurrences as also with respect unto their usefulness and serviceableness unto the general end of furthering the Edification of the Church Catholick The care hereof and the making provision for this defect was committed by our Lord Jesus Christ unto the Apostles during their Lives which Paul calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 11.28 The care of all the Churches For what was only a pressing care and burden unto them was afterward contended for by others as a matter of Dignity and Power the pretence of it in one especially being turned into a cursed Domination under the Stile and Title of Servus Servorum Dei. BUT if a Thousand pretences should be made of supplying Churches defects after the decease of the Apostles by any other Order Way or Means besides this of the equal Communion of Churches among themselves they will be all found destitute of any Countenance from the Scripture Primitive Antiquity the nature use and end of Churches yea of Christian Religion it self Yet the pretence hereof is the sole foundation of all that disposal of Churches into several stories of Subordination with an Authority and Jurisdiction over one another which now prevails in the World. But there is no place for such Imaginations until it be proved either that our Lord Jesus Christ hath not appointed the mutual Communion of Churches among themselves by their own consent or that it is not sufficient for the preservation of the Vnion and furtherance of the
Edification of the Church Catholick whereunto it is designed WHEREFORE our Lord Jesus Christ in his infinite Wisdom hath constituted his Churches in such a State and Order as wherein none of them are able of themselves always and in all instances to attain all the ends for which they are appointed with respect unto the Edification of the Church Catholick And he did it for this end that whereas the whole Catholick Church is animated by one spirit which is the bond of Union between all particular Churches as we shall see every one of them may Act the Gifts and Graces of it unto the Preservation and Edification of the whole HEREIN then we acknowledge lieth the great difference which we have with others about the state of the Church of Christ in this World we do believe that the mutual Communion of particular Churches amongst themselves in an equality of Power and Order though not of Gifts and Usefulness is the only way appointed by our Lord Jesus Christ after the Death of the Apostles for the attaining the general end of all particular Churches which is the Edification of the Church Catholick in Faith Love and Peace Other ways and means have been found out in the World for this end which we must speak unto immediately Wherefore it behoveth us to use some Diligence in the consideration of the Causes Nature and Vse of this Communion of Churches BUT it must be moreover premised that whereas this Communion of Churches is Radically and Essentially the same among all Churches in the World yet as unto the ordinary actual exercise of the Duties of it it is confined and limited by Divine Providence unto such Churches as the natural means of the discharge of such Duties may extend unto That is unto those which are planted within such Lines of Communication such precincts or boundaries of Places and Countries as may not render the mutual performance of such Duties insuperably difficult Yet is not the World it self so wide but that all places being made pervious by Navigation this Communion of Churches may be visibly professed and in some instances practised among all Churches from the rising of the Sun even unto the going-down of the same where the Name of Christ is known among the Gentiles wherein the true nature of the Catholick Church and its Union doth consist which is utterly overthrown by the most vehement pretences that are made unto it as those in the Church of Rome WHEREFORE such a Communion of Churches is to be enquired after as from which no true Church of Christ is or can be excluded in whose actual exercise they may and ought all to live and whereby the general end of all Churches in the Edification of the Catholick Church may be attained This is the true and only Catholicism of the Church which whoever departs from or substitutes any thing else in the room of it under that Name destroys its whole nature and disturbs the whole Ecclesiastical Harmony that is of Christs Institution HOWEVER therefore we plead for the Rights of particular Churches yet our real Controversy with most in the World is for the Being Union and Communion of the Church Catholick which are variously perverted by many and separating it into Parties and confining it to Rules Measures and Canons of their own finding out and Establishment For such things as these belong neither to the internal nor external Form of that Catholick Church whose Being in the World we believe and whose Vnion we are obliged to preserve And whoever gives any Description of or Limitation to the Catholick Church besides what consist in the Communion of particular Churches intended doth utterly overthrow it and therein an Article of our Faith. BUT this Communion of Churches cannot be duly apprehended unless we enquire and determine wherein their Vnion doth consist For Communion is an Act of Vnion that receives both its Nature and Power from it or by virtue of it For of what Nature soever the Vnion of things distinct in themselves be of the same is the Communion that they have among themselves IN the Church of Rome the Person of the Pope as he is Pope is the Head and Center of all Church Union Nor is there allowed any Vnion of particular Churches with Christ or among themselves but in and through him An Universal subjection unto him and his Authority is the original spring of all Church Vnion among them And if any one Soul fail herein if as unto things of Faith and Divine Worship he do not depend on the Pope and live in subjection unto him he is reputed a Stranger and For●●●ner unto the Catholick Church Yea they affirm that be a Man never so willing for and desirous of an Interest in Christ he cannot have it but by the Pope THE Communion of Churches congenial and suited unto this Union proceeding from it and exercised by virtue of it ariseth from a various contignation of Order or the erection of one story of Church Interest upon another until we come to the Idol placed on the top of this Babel So is this Communion carried on from the obedience and subjection of the lowest rubbish of Ecclesiastical Order unto Diocesans of them to Metropolitans of them to Patriarchs or Cardinals of them to the Pope or an ascent is made from Diocesan Synods by Provincial and National to those that are called Oecumenical whose Head is the Pope YET Two things must be farther observed to clear this Communion of the Roman Catholick Church as 1. That there is no ascent of Church-Order or Power by a vital Act of Communion from the lower Degrees Orders or Consociations and by them to the Pope as though he should receive any thing of Church-Power from them but all the plenitude of it being originally vested in him by these several Orders and Degrees he communicates of it unto all Churches as the Life of their Conjunction and Communion 2. That no Man is so jointed in this Order so compacted in this Body but that he is also personally and immediately subject to the Pope and depends on him as unto his whole profession of Religion AND this is that which constitutes him formally to be what he is that is Antichrist and the Church-State arising from its Union unto him holding him as its Head subsisting in a Communion by virtue of power received through various Orders and Constitutions from him to be Anti-christian For he and it are set up in the room of and in direct opposition unto the Lord Christ as the Head of the Catholick Church and the Church state thereon depending This we have described Ephes. 4.15 16. Speaking the Truth in Love may grow up c. As also Col. 2.19 Where there is a Rejection of them who belong not unto the Church Catholick taken from its Relation unto Christ and the nature of its dependance on him not holding the Head c. WHEN Men shall cease to be wilfully blind or when the powers of
the whole Church as unto Faith in general but only the Belief before described 2. THIS Communion in Faith respects the Church it self as its material Object For it is required hereunto that we believe that the Lord Christ hath had in all Ages and especially hath in that wherein we live a Church on the Earth confined unto no Places nor Parties of Men no Empires nor Dominions or capable of any confinement as also that this Church is Redeemed Called Sanctified by him that it is his Kingdom his Interest his concernment in the World that thereunto and all the Members of it all the Promises of God do belong and are confined that this Church he will save preserve and deliver from all oppositions so as that the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it and after Death will raise it up and glorify it at the last day This is the Faith of the Catholick Church concerning it self which is an Ancient fundamental Article of our Religion And if any one deny that there is such a Church called out of the World separated from it unto which alone and all the Members of it all the Promises of God do appertain in contradistinction unto all others or confines it unto a Party unto whom these things are not appropriate he cuts himself off from the Communion of the Church of Christ. IN the Faith hereof all the true Churches of Christ throughout the World have a comforting refreshing Communion which is the spring of many Duties in them continually 3. THIS Communion of Churches in Faith consists much in the principal Fruit of it namely Prayer So is it stated Ephes. 2.18 For through Christ we have an Access by one Spirit unto the Father And that therein the Communion of the Catholick Church doth consist the Apostle declares in the following Verses 19 20 21 22. Now therefore c. For Prayer in all Churches having one object which is God even the Father God as the Father proceeding in all from one and the same Spirit given unto them as a Spirit of Grace and Supplications to make Intercession for them and all of them continually offered unto God by the same High-Priest who adds unto it the Incense of his own Intercession and by whom they have all an access unto the same Throne of Grace they have all a blessed Communion herein continually And this Communion is the more express in that the Prayers of all are for all so as that there is no particular Church of Christ in the World not any one Member of any of them but they have the Prayers of all the Churches in the World and of all the Members of them every day And however this Communion be invisible unto the eyes of Flesh yet is it glorious and conspicuous unto the eye of Faith and is a part of the glory of Christ the Mediatour in Heaven This Prayer proceeding from or wrought by one and the same Spirit in them all equally bestowed on them all by virtue of the Promise of Christ having the same object even God as a Father and offered unto him by the same High-Priest together with his own Intercession gives unto all Churches a Communion far more glorious than what consists in some outward Rites and Orders of Mens devising BUT now if there be any other Persons or Churches who have any other Object of their Prayers but God even the Father and as our Father in Christ or have any other Mediators or Intercessors by whom to convey or present their Prayers unto God but Christ alone the only High-Priest of the Church or do renounce the Aid and Assistance of the Holy Spirit as a Spirit of Grace and Supplications they cut themselves off from all Communion with the Catholick Church herein 4. THE Vnity of Faith in all Churches affecteth Communion among them in the Administration of the same Sacraments of Baptism and the Supper of the Lord. These are the same in unto and amongst them all Neither do some variations in the outward manner of their Administration interrupt that Communion But where-ever the continuation of these Ordinances is denied or their nature or use is perverted or Idolatrous Worship is annexed unto their Administration there Communion with the Catholick Church is renounced 5. THEY have also by Faith Communion herein in that all Churches do profess a subjection unto the Authority of Christ in all things and an obligation upon them to do and observe all whatsoever he hath Commanded OTHER instances of the like nature might be given but these are sufficient to manifest how unscriptural the Notion is That there is no proper Communion with or among Churches but what consists in a compliance with certain Powers Orders and Rites the pressing whereof under the Name of Vniformity hath cast all thoughts of real Evangelical Church Communion into Oblivion SECONDLY Churches Ordained and Constituted in the way and manner and for the Ends declared in our former Discourse on this Subject and by virtue of their Union unto Christ and among themselves living constantly in all places of the World in the actual exercise of that Communion which consists in the performance of the same Church-Duties towards God in Christ unto their own Continuation Encrease and Edification have also an especial Vnion among themselves and a mutual Communion thence arising THE Bond of this Vnion is Love not the common regulated Affection of Humane nature so called not meerly that Power and Duty which is engraven on the Hearts of Men by the Law of Creation towards all of the same kind and blood with themselves but an especial Grace of the Holy Spirit acting in the Church as the Principle and Bond of its Union unto its self whence the command of it is called a New Commandment because in it self as unto the only Example of it in the Person of Christ the Causes and Motives unto it with its peculiar Ends and proper Exercise it was absolutely New and Evangelical An Explanation of the Nature of it belongs not unto this place although it be a Grace and a Duty of so much importance wherein so much of the Life Power and peculiar Glory of Christian Religion doth consist and is either so utterly lost or hath such vile Images of it set up in the World that it deserves a full Consideration which it may receive in another place I SAY the Holy Spirit of Grace and Love being given from Christ the Fountain and Center of all Church-Union to dwell in and abide with his Church thereby uniting it unto himself doth work in it and all the Members of it that mutual Love which may and doth animate them unto all those mutual Acts which are proper unto the Relation wherein they stand by virtue of their Union unto Christ their Head as Members of the same Body one with another HEREIN consists the Union of every Church in it self of all Churches among themselves and so of the whole Catholick Church their Communion consisting
of the Church For the first Three Hundred years they were nothing but voluntary conventions of the Officers or Elders Bishops and Presbyters with some others of neighbouring Churches on the occasion of Differences or Heresies among them In and from the Council of Nice there were Assemblies of Bishops and others called together by the Authority of the Roman Emperours to advise about matters of Faith. In after Ages those which were called in the Western parts of the World in Italy Germany France and England were of a mixt nature advising about things Civil and Political as well as Sacred and Religious especially with respect unto mutual contests between Popes and Princes In them the whole nature of Ecclesiastical Synods was lost and buried and all Religion almost destroyed THUS this laudable practice of Churches acting their mutual Communion by meeting in Synods or Assemblies by their Delegates or Messengers to advise about things of their common concernment and joint Edification as occasion should require founded in the Light of Nature and countenanced by Primitive Apostolical Example was turned by the designing Interests and Ambition of Men unto the enstating of all Church-Power in such Synods and the Usurpation of a Power given unto no Churches nor all of them together as might be made evident by instances innumerable AND whereas they have made such a noise in Christian Religion and have filled so many Volumes with their Acts and doings yet some of them who under the Pope would place all Religion in them do grant and contend that they are a meer Humane Invention So Bellarmine affirms Pighius to have done in his Book de Coelest Hierarch Lib. 6. Cap. 1. But for his part he judgeth that it is more probable that they have a Divine Original by virtue of that Word Where Two or Three are gathered together in my Name there I will be in the midst of them Matth. 18. De Concil Lib. 1. Cap. 3. which will not bear the least part of the superstructure pretended to be built upon it OF these Delegates and Messengers of the Church the Elders or Officers of them or some of them at least ought to be the principal For there is a peculiar care of publick Edification incumbent on them which they are to exercise on all just occasions They are presumed justly to know best the state of their own Churches and to be best able to judge of matters under consideration And they do better represent the Churches from whom they are sent than any private Brethren can do and so receive that Respect and Reverence which is due to the Churches themselves As also they are most meet to report and recommend the Synodal Determinations unto their Churches and a contrary practice would quickly introduce confusion BUT yet it is not necessary that they alone should be so sent or Delegated by the Churches but many have others joined with them and had so until Prelatical Vsurpation overturned their Liberties So there were others beside Paul and Barnabas sent from Antioch to Jerusalem and the Brethren of that Church whatever is impudently pretended to the contrary concurred in the Decree and Determination there made 5. THAT which is termed the calling of these Synods is nothing but the voluntary consent of the Churches concerned to meet together by their Delegates and Messengers for the ends before declared I NO way deny but that a Christian Magistrate may convene by his Authority the Bishops Pastors or Ministers with such others as he shall think meet within his own Territories yea and receive into his Convention meet Men out of the Territories of others by their consent to advise among themselves and to give him Advice about such concernments of Religion and of the Church under his Dominion and Regulate himself accordingly It hath been practised with good success and may be with bad also And I do deny that Churches have Power without the consent and Authority of the Magistrate to convene themselves in Synods to exercise any Exterior Jurisdiction that should affect the Persons of his Subjects any otherwise than by the Law of the Land is allowed BUT whereas the Synods whereof we Treat and which are all that belong unto the Church can take no cognizance of any Civil Affairs wherein the Persons of Men are outwardly concerned have no Jurisdiction in any kind can make no determination but only Doctrinal Declarations of Divine Truth of the same nature with the Preaching of the Word there is no more required unto their calling beyond their own consent but only that they may meet in external peace by the permission of the Magistrate which when they cannot obtain they must deport themselves as in case of other Duties required of them by the Law of Christ. 6. IN the last place I shall speak briefly of the Power and Authority of these Synods in what measures extent and numbers soever they are assembled For although this may be easily Collected from what hath been declared concerning their Original Nature Causes Use and Ends yet it may be necessary to be more particularly enquired into because of the many differences that are about it THERE is a three-fold Power ascribed unto Synods The First is declarative consisting in an Authoritative Teaching and declaring the Mind of God in the Scripture The Second is constitutive appointing and ordaining things to be believed or done and observed by and upon its own Authority And Thirdly executive in Acts of Jurisdiction towards Persons and Churches THE Persons whom the Authority pleaded may affect are of Two sorts 1. Such as have their proper Representatives present in such Synods who are directly concerned in its conciliary determinations 2. Such as have no such Representatives in them who can be no otherwise concerned but in the Doctrine materially considered declared in them WHEREFORE the ground of any Churches receiving complying with or obeying the Determinations and Decrees of Synods must be either 1. The evidence of Truth given unto those Determinations by the Synod from the Scripture or 2. The Authority of the Synod it self affecting the Minds and Consciences of those concerned IN the First way wherein the Assent and Obedience of Churches is resolved ultimately into the evidence of Truth from the Scripture upon the judgment which they make thereof not only the discovery of Truth is to be owned but there is an Authoritative Proposal of it by virtue of the promised presence of Christ in them if duly sought and regarded whence great Respect and Reverence is due unto them THE Power of a Synod for the execution of its Decrees respects either 1. The Things or Doctrines declared and is recommendatory of them on its Authority from the presence of Christ or 2. Persons to Censure Excommunicate or punish those who receive them not THESE things being premised the just Power of Synods may be positively and negatively declared in the two following Assertions 1. THE Authority of a Synod declaring the mind of God