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A66445 The blovdy tenent, of persecution, for cause of conscience, discussed, in a conference betweene trvth and peace vvho, in all tender affection, present to the high court of Parliament, as the result of their discourse, these, amongst other passages, of highest consideration. Williams, Roger, 1604?-1683.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1644 (1644) Wing W2758; ESTC R2405 232,471 275

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the principall Contents of the Booke TRuth and Peace their rare and seldome meeting Page 15 2 Great complaints of Peace 16 Persecutors seldome plead Christ but Moses for their Authour 17 Strife Christian and unchristian ibid A threefold dolefull cry ibid. The wonderfull providence of God in the writing of the argument●s against persecution 18 A definition of persecution discussed 19 Conscience will not be restrained from its owne worship nor constrained to another 20 A chaste soule in Gods worship compared to a chaste wife ibid. Gods people have erred stom the very fundamentalls of visible worship ibid 4 Sorts of spirituall foundations in the New Testament 21 The 6 fundamentalls of the Christian Religion ibid. The comming out of Babel not Iocall but mysticall ibid. The great ignorance of Gods people concerning the nature of a true Church ibid. Common-Prayer written against by the New English Ministers 23 Gods people have worshipped God with false worships ibid. God is pleased sometimes to convey good unto his people beyond a promise ibid. A notable speech of King James to a great Nonconformist turned persecutor 24 Civill peace discussed ibid. The difference between Spirituall and civill state 25 Six cases wherein Gods people have been usually accounted arrogant and peace breakers but most unjustly 26 The true causes of breach and disturbance of civill peace 29 A preposterous way of suppressing errours 30 Persecutors must needs oppresse both erroneous and true consciences ibid. All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him ibid. What is meant by the Hereticke Tit. 3. Pag. 33 The word Heretick generally mistaken 34 Corporall killing in the Law typing out Spirituall killing in the Gospell 36 The cariage of a Soule sensible of mercy towards others in their blindness c. 38 The difference between the Church and the World wherein it is in all places 38 The Church and civill State confusedly made all one 39 The most peaceable accused for peace-breaking 40 A large Examination of what is meant by the Tares and letting of them alone ibid. Sathans subtletic about the opening of Scripture 41 Two sorts of Hypocrites 44 The Lord Iesus the great Teacher by Parables and the only Expounder of them 44 Preaching for conversion is properly out of the Church 45 The tares proved properly to signifie Antichristians ibid. Gods Kingdome on Earth the visible Church 46 The difference between the Wheat and the Tares as also betweene these Tares and all others 46 A civill Magistracie from the beginning of the world 47 The Tares are to be tolerated the longest of all sinners 48 The danger of infection by permitting of the Tares assoyled ibid. The civill Magistrate not so particularly spoken to in the New Testament as Fathers Masters c. and why 50 A two-fold state of Christianitie Persecuted under the Romane Emperours and Apostated under the Romane Popes ibid. 3 Particulars contained in that prohibition of Christ Iesus concerning the Tares Let them alone Mat. 13. 51 Accompanying with Idolaters 1 Cor. 5. discussed 52 Civill Magistrates never invested by Christ Iesus with the power and title of Defenders of the Faith 54 Gods people ever earnest with God for an Arme of Flesh. 55 The 〈◊〉 punishment of the blind Pharises in 4 respects ibid. The point of seducing infecting or Soule killing examined 57 Strange consusions in punishments 59 The blood of Soules Acts 20. lies upon such as professe the Ministrie the blood of Bodies only upon the State ibid. ●surpers and true Heires of Christ Iesus Page 60 The Civill Magistrate bound to preserve the bo●●s of their subjects and not to destroy them for conscience sake 61 The fire from heaven Rev. 13. 13. 2 Tim. 2. 25 26. examined 62 The originall of the Christian name Acts 11. 63 A Civill sword in Religion makes a Nation of hypocrites Isa. 10 64 A difference of the true and false Christ and Christians 65 The nature of the worship of unbeleeving and naturall persons ibid. Antoninus Pius his famous act concerning Religion 66 Isa. 24. Mic. 4. 3. concerning Christs visible Kingdome discussed ibid. Acts 20 29. The suppressing of Spirituall wolves discussed 67 It is in vaine to decline the name of the head of the Church and yet to practise the headship 68 Titus 1. 9. 10 discussed 69 Vnmercifull and bloody doctrine 70 The Spirituall weapons 2 Cor. 10. 4. discussed ibid. Civill weapons most improper in Spirituall causes 71 The Spirituall artillerie Eph. 6. applied 72 Rom. 13. concerning Civill Rulers power in Spirituall causes largely examined 73 Pauls appeale to Caesar examined 77 And cleared by 5 arguments ibid. 4 Sorts of swords 79 What is to be understood by evill Rom. 13. 4. 81 Though evill be alwayes evill yet the permission of it may sometimes be good 83 2 Sorts of commands both from Moses and Christ. 84 The permission of diverce in Israel Mat. 19. 17 18. ibid. Usury in the Civill state lawfully permitted 85 Seducing teachers either Pagan Iewish Turkish or Antichristian way yet be obedient subjects to the Civill Laws 86 Scandalous livers against the Civill state 87 Toleration of Jesabel and Balaam Rev. 2 14. 20. examined 88 The Christian world hath swallowed up Christianity 89 Christ Iesus the deepest polititian that ever was yet commands be a toleration of Antichristians 91 The Princes of the world seldome take part with Christ Iesus 93 Buchanans items to King James ibid. King James his sayings against persecution ibid. King Steven of Poland his sayings against persecution Page 93 Forcing of conscience a soule rape 94 Persecution for conscience hath been the launcet which hath let blood the Nations All Spirituall whores are bloody ibid. Poligamie or the many wives of the Fathers ibid. David advancing of Gods worship against order 95 Constantine and the good Emperours confest to have done more hurt to the Name and Crowne of Christ then the bloody Noroes did ibid. The language of persecuters 96 Christs Li●●ies may flourish in the Church notwithstanding the weeds in the world permitted 97 Queen Elizabeth and King James their persecuting for cause of Religion examined ibid. Queen Elizabeth confessed by Mr. Cotton to have almost fired the world in civill combustions 98 The Wars between the Papists and the Protestants ibid. The Wars and successe of the Waldensians against three Popes 99 Gods people victorious ●ver commers and with what weapons ibid. The Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted ibid. The nature of excommunication 100 The opinion of ancient Writers examined concerning the doctrine of persecution 101 Constraint upon conscience in Old and New England ibid. The Indians of New England permitted in their worshipping of devils 102 In 2 cases a false Religion will not hurt 103 The absolute sufficiencie of the Sword of the Spirit 104 A Nationall Church not instituted by Christ. ibid. Man hath no power to make Lawes to binde conscience 105 Hearing of the word in a Church estate a part of Gods worship 107 Papists plea for
civill sword I have at large there answered CHAP. LXIX Peace IN the next place he selecteth one passage out of Hilarie although there are many golden passages there exprest against the use of Civill Earthly Powers in the Affaires of Christ. The passage is this It is true also what he saith that neither the Apostles nor We may propogate Christian Religion by the Sword but if Pagans cannot he won by the Word they are not to be compelled by the Sword Neverthelesse this hindreth not saith he but if they or any other should blaspheme the true God and his true Religion they ought to be severely punished and no lesse doe they deserve if they seduce from the Truth to damnable Heresie or Idolatrie Truth In which Answer I observe first his Agreement with Hilarie that the Christian Religion may not be propagated by the Civill Sword Unto which I reply and aske then what meanes this passage in his first answer to the former speeches of the Kings viz. We acknowledge that none is to be constrained to beleeve or professe the true Religion till he be convinced in judgement of the Truth of it implying 2 things First that the Civill Magistrate who is to constraine with the Civill Sword must judge all the Consciences of their Subjects whether they be convinced or no. Secondly when the Civill Magistrate discerns that his Subjects consciences are convinced then he may constraine them vi armi● hostily And accordingly the Civill State and Magistracie judging in spirituall things who knowes not what constraint lies upon all consciences in Old and New England to come to Church and pay Church duties which is upon the point though with a sword of a finer gilt and trim in New England nothing else but that which he confesseth Hilarie saith true should not be done to wit a propagation of Religion by the Sword Againe although he confesseth that propagation of Religion ought not to be by the sword yet he maintaineth the use of the sword when persons in the judgement of the Civill State for that is implied blaspheme the true God and the true Religion and also seduce others to damnable Heresie and Idolatrie Which because he barely affirmeth in this place I shall defer my Answer unto the after Reasons of Mr Cotton and the Elders of New English Churches where Scriptures are alleadged and in that place by Gods assistance they shall be examined and answered CHAP. LXX Peace THe Answerer thus proceeds Your next Writer is Tertullian who speaketh to the same purpose in the place alleadged by you His intent is only to restraine Scapula the Roman Governour of Africa from persecuting the Christians for not offering sacrifice to their Gods and for that end fetcheth an Argument from the Law of Naturall equity not to compell any to any Religion but permit them to believe or not to believe at all Which we acknowledge and accordingly we judge the English may permit the Indians to continue in their unbeliefe neverthelesse it will not therefore be lawfull to tolerate the worship of Devils or Idols to the seduction of any from the Truth Truth Answ. In this passage he agrees with Tertullian and gives instance in America of the English permitting the Indians to continue in their unbeleefe yet withall he affirmeth it not lawfull to tolerate worshipping of Devils or seduction from the Truth I answer that in New England it is well known that they not onely permit the Indians to continue in their unbeliefe which neither they nor all the Ministers of Christ on Earth nor Angels in Heaven can helpe not being able to worke beleefe but they also permit or tolerate them in their Paganish worship which cannot be denied to be a worshipping of Devils as all false Worship is And therefore cons●quently ●ccording to the same practice did they walke by Rule and impartially not onely the Indians but their Countrymen French Dutch Spanish Persians Turkes Iewes c. should also be permitted in their Worships if correspondent in civill obedience Peace He addes further when Tertullian saith That another mans Religion neither hurteth nor profiteth any It must be understood of private worship and Religion professed in private otherwise a false Religion professed by the members of the Church or by such as have given their names to Christ will be the ruine and desolation of the Church as appeareth by the threats of Christ to the Churches● Revel 2. Truth I answer passing by that unsound distinction of members of the Church or those that have given their Names to Christ which in point of visible profession and Worship will appeare to be all one it is plaine First that Tertullian doth not there speake of private but of publike Worship and Religion Secondly Although it be true in a Church of Christ that a false Religion or Worship permitted will hurt according to those threats of Christ Revel 2. Yet in 2 cases I believe a false Religion will not hurt which is most like to have been Tertullians meaning First a false Religion out of the Church will not hurt the Church no more then weedes in the Wildernesse hurt the inclosed Garden or poyson hurt the body when it is not touched or taken yea and antidotes are received against it Secondly a false Religion and Worship will not hurt the Civill State in case the worshippers breake no civill Law and the Answerer elswhere acknowledgeth that the civill Lawes not being broken civill Peace is not broken and this only is the Point in Question CHAP. LXXI Peace YOur next Authour saith he Ierome crosseth not the Truth nor advantageth your Cause for we grant what he saith that Heresie must be cut off with the sword of the Spirit but this hinders not but being so cut down● if the Heretick will persist in his Heresie to the seduction of others he may be cut off also by the Civill Sword to prevent the perdition of others And that to be Ieromes meaning appeareth by his note upon that of the Apostle A little Leaven leaveneth the whole lumpe Therefore saith he a sparke as soon as it appeareth is to be extinguished and the leaven to be removed from the rest of the dough Rotten pieces of flesh are to be cut off and a scabbed beast is to be driven from the sheepfold lest the whole House Body masse of Dough and Flock be set on fire with the sparke be putrified with the rotten slesh sowred with the leaven perish by the scabbed beast Truth I answer first he granteth to Tertullian that Heresie must be cut off with the sword of the Spirit yet withall he maintaineth a cutting off by a second sword the sword of the Magistrate and conceiveth that Tertullian so meanes because he quoteth that of the Apostle A little leaven leaveneth the whole lumpe Answ. It is no Argument to prove that Tertullian meant a civill sword by alleadging 1 Cor. 5. or Gal. 5. which properly and only
type out a Civill but a Spirituall Sword of the Christian Church No man should be bound to worship nor maintaine a Worship against his own consent Christs labourers worthy of their hire but from them that hire them What maintenance Christ hath appointed his Ministers in the Gospell Universities of Europe a cause of universall sins plagues yet Schooles honourable for Tongues and Arts. Christs church his Schoole and all Believers Scholars Who knowes but God may againe powre forth the gifts of Tongues Tongues attainable out of Oxford or Cambridge Mr. Ainsworth King Henry the 8. set down●● the Popes chaire in England If the Mgistrate must punish in Spirituall 〈◊〉 he must 〈◊〉 be judge 〈◊〉 Spirituall causes also Apocripha Common-Prayer and Homilies pretious to our forefa●hers A case Reformations are fallible Bloudy conclusions 11 Head The argument from the Babylonian and Persian kings re-minded The president of the Kings and Governo●●s of Israel and Iudah examined The state of Israel relating to spirituall matters proved typicall The Persian Kings make evidently against such as produce them for maintenance of the doctrine of persecution The Land of Canaan chosen by God to be the seat of the Church but under the New Testament all Nations alike The inhabitants of Canaans Land every soule to be put to death that the Israelites might enjoy their possessions not so now The very 〈◊〉 silver of Cara●aes● Images 〈◊〉 to be abhorred The Land of Canaan ceremonially holy Greater holynesse in the Antitype under the Gospel then in the types under the Law The Land of Canaan Jehorahs Land Emanuels Land so no Land or country more then another The Blasphe m●us titles of the Christned and Christian World The materiall Land of Ca●a●n was to keep her Sabboths so no materiall land or Country now God feedeth his sometimes immediately The J●bilee of Canaan a type of restitution and redemption in the Gospell Canaans land a type of 〈◊〉 Kingdome of God on Earth and in Heaven Why Naboth refused to part with a Garden plot to his King upon hazard of his life The difference of the people of Israel and all other Peoples The people of Israel the seed of one man Only made good in the Spirituall seed the regene●ate or new-borne The people of Israel separate from all Nations in Sp●●● all and in some Civill things No Nation so s●parated to God in the Gospel but only the new borne Israel that feare God in every Nation The whole people of Israel 〈…〉 of Egypt Not so any whole Nation now Pope●y not so easily turned from as i● conceived Wonderfull turnings in Religion in 12 yeares conpasse in England The Pope not unlike to recover his Monarchie over Europe before his downfall Who are now the true Seed of Abraham The people of Israel all holy in a typicall 〈◊〉 All Nations now alike since the comming of the Lord Jesus The children of Israel a figure of the Israel or people of God only u●der the Gospel The people of Israel 〈◊〉 rent from all the world in their figurative and ceremoniall worships Israel Gods only Church might well renew that Nationall Covenant and ceremoniall worship which other Nations cannot imitate The hypocrisies prophanations and slaughters which such imitation now in the Gospell produce The difference of the Kings and Governours of Israel from al Kings Governors of the world First they were all members of the Church Excellent Talents vouchsafed by God to unregenerate persons A doctrine contrary to all true Piety and Humanity it selfe The Papists doctrine of deposing Magistrates confessed in effect to be true by the P●●cestants No civill Magistrate Christian in Christs time Five demonstrative arguments proving the unsoundnesse of that Maxime The Church and Common-wealth are like Hypocrates twins Many flourishing States without a true Church Many of Gods people 〈…〉 from a true Church state Yet ●it for civill services Gods people permitted and favoured by Idolaters Christs church gathered and governed with out the helpe of an arme of flesh Christs true ●pouse 〈◊〉 and faithfull to Christ J●sus in the 〈…〉 or 〈◊〉 from the World The 10 horns Revel 13. 17. The great mysterie of Persecution unfolded Christian Naboths slaughtered 2. Difference The mysterie of the anointing the Kings of Israel and Judah The Name Christian or Anointed A Sacrilegious Monopolie of the Name Christian. The Crown of Christs Kingly power 3. The Kings of Israel and Judah invested with a● Spirituall power David immeately inspired by the Spirit of God in his ordering of Church ma●ters Salomons deposing Abiathar ● Kings 2. 26. 27● discussed Salomon his putting Abiathar from the Priesthood examined A case put upon occasion of Abiathars case Another ●ase The liberties of Christs Churches in the choice of their officers A civill influence dangerous to the Saints liberties Jehosaphats ●ast examined If civill powers may inj●y●e the time o● the Churches w●rship the may also forbid her times God will not wrong Caesar and Caesar should not wrong God The famous acts of 〈◊〉 examined M●gistracy in generall from God the particular formes from the people Israel confirmed in a Nationall Covenant by revelations signes and miracles but so not England Henry 8. the first head and governour of the Church of England The wonderfull formings and reformings of Religion by Englands Kings Kings and States often plant and often pluck up Religions A Nationall Church ever subject to turne and returne c. A woman Papissa or head of the Church The Papists neerer to the Truth concerning the government of the Church then most Protestants The Kingly power of the Lord Jesus troubles all the Kings and Rulers of the Wo●ld A twofold exaltation of Christ. The world ●●o●meth at both A fourth difference Kings of Israel ●ypes They wore a double Crown The Saviours of the Jewes ●igures of the Saviour of the World The Monarchicall and Ministeriall power of Christ. 3 Great Competitours for the Ministeriall power of Christ. The Popes great pretenders fo● the Ministeriall power of Christ. They also upon the point chalenge the Monarchicall also The second great pretender the Civill Magistrate 3 Great factions chalenging an Arme of Flesh. 1. The Pre●aci● 2. The Presbyterie The Pope and Presbyte●i● make use of the Civill Magistrate but as of an Executio●er 3. Independents The Independents who come neerest to the Bishops The third competition of those that seperate Their neerer conformitie to Christ. The Churches of the Seperation ought in Humanitie and Subjects Libertie not to be oppressed but at least permitted ● Reasons proving that the Kings of Israel and Judah cannot have any other but a Spirituall Antitype Civill Types and figures must needs be answered by Spirituall Antitypes Civill compulsion was proper in the Nationall Church of the Jewes but most improper in the Christian which is not Nationall Neither Christ Jesus nor his Messengers have made the Civill Magistrate Israels Antitype but the contrary Civill Magistracie essentially civill and the same in
toleration of conscience ibid. Protestant partiality in the cause of persecution 108 Pills to purge out the bitter humour of persecution ibid. Superstition and persecution have had many votes and suffrages from Gods owne people 109 Soul-killing discussed ibid. Phineas his act discussed 111 Eliah his slaughters examined ibid Dangerous consequences flowing from the civill Magistrates power in Spirituall cases 114 The world turned upside downe Page 114 The wonderfull answer of the Ministers of New England to the Ministers of Old ibid. Lamentable differences even amongst them that feare God 115 The doctrine of persecution ever drives the most godly out of the world 116 A Modell of Church and Civill power composed by Mr. Cotton and the Ministers of New England and sent to Salem as a further confirmation of the bloody doctrine of persecution for cause of conscience examined and answered 118 Christs power in the Church confest to be above all Magistrates in Spirituall things 119 Isa. 49. 23. lamentably wrested ibid. The civill Commonweale and the Spirituall Commonweale the Church not inconsistent though independent the one on the other 120 Christ ordinances put upon a whole city or Nation may civilize them and moralize but not Christianize before repentance first wrought 121 Mr. Cottons and the New English Ministers confession that the Magistrate hath neither Civill nor Spirituall power in Soul matters 122 The Magistrates and the Church by Mr. Cottons grounds in one and the same cause made the Iudges onthe Bench and delinquents at the Bar. 123 A demonstrative illustration that the Magistrate cannot have power over the Church in Spirituall or Church causes 124 The true way of the God of Peace in differences between the Church and the Magistrate 125. The tearms Godlinesse and Honesty explained 1 Tim. 2. x. and honesty proved not to signifie in that place the righteousnes of the second Table 127 The forcing of men to Gods worship the greatest breach of civill peace 129 The Roman Caesars of Christs time described ibid. It pleased not the Lord Iesus in the institution of the Christian Church to appoint and raise up any Civill Governours to take care of his worship 130 The true custodes utriusque Tabulae and keepers of the Ordinances and worship of Iesus Christ. ibid. The Kings of Aegypt Moah Philistia Assyria Ni●●vch were not charged with the worship of God as the Kings of Iudah were 131 Masters of families not charged under the Gospel to force all the consci●uces of their families to worship 132 Gods people have then shined brightest in Godlines when they have enjoyed least quietnesse pag. 134. Few Magistrates few Men spiritually good yet divers sorts of commendable Goodnes beside spirituall ibid. Civill power originally and fundamentally in the People Mr. Cotton and the New English give the power of Christ into the hands of th● Commonweale 137 Lawes concerning Religion of two sorts 138 The very Indians abhor to disturbe any Conscience at Worship 139 Canons and constitutions pretended Civill but indeed Ecclesiasticall ibid. A threesold guilt lying upon Civill powers commanding the Subjects Soule in Worship 143 Persons may with lesse sinne be forced to marry whom they cannot love then to worship where they cannot beleeve ibid. As the cause so the weapons of the Beast and the La●● be are infinitely different 146 A●taxerxes his Dicree examined 147 The summe of the Examples of the Gentile Kings decrees concerning Gods worship in Scripture 149 The Doctrine of putting to death Blasphemers of Christ cuts off the hopes of the Iewes partaking in his blood 18● The direfull effects of fighting for Conscience 151 Errour is confident as well as Truth 152 Spirituall prisons 153 Some Consciences not so easily healed and cured as men imagine 154 Persecuters dispute with Hereticks as a tyrann call Cat with the poore Mouse And with a true Witnes as a roaring Lyon with an innocent Lambe in his paw 155 Persecuters endure not tho name of Persecuters 156 Psal 101 concerning cutting off the wicked examined 158 No difference of Lands and Countries since Christ Iesus his comming ib. The New English seperate in America but not in Europe 159 Christ Iesus forbidding his followers to permit Leaven in the Church doth not forbid to permit Leaven in the World 160 The Wall Cant. 8. 9. discussed 161 Every Religion commands its professors to heare only its own Priests or Ministers 162 Ionah his preaching to the Ninevites discussed 162 ●●aring of the Word discussed ibid. Eglon his rising up to Ehuds message discussed ibid. A two-fold Ministrie of Christ First Apostolicall properly converting Secondly Feeding or Pastorall pag. 162 The New English forcing the people to Church and yet not to Religion as they say forcing them to be of no Religion all their dayes 163 The Civill State can no more lawfully compell the Consciences of men to Church to heare the Word then to receive the Sacraments 164 No president in the word of any people converting and baptizing themselves 166 True conversion to visible Christianitie is not only from sins against the second Table but from false Worships also ibid. The Commission Mat. 28 discussed 167 The Civill Magistrate not be trusted with that Commission ibid. Iehosaphat 2 Chron. 1● a figure of Christ Iesus in his Church not of the Civill Magistrate in the State 168 The maintenance of the Ministrie Gal. 6. 6. examined ibid. Christ Iesus never appointed a maintenance of the Ministrie from the i●penitent and unbelieving 169 They that compell men to heare compell them also to pay for their hearing and conversion ibid. Luc. 14. Compell them to come in examined ibid. Naturall men can neither truly worship nor mainteine it 170 The Nationall Church of the Iewes might well be forced to a setled maintenance but not so the Christian Church 171 The maintenance which Christ hath appointed his Ministrie in the Church 172 The Vniversities of Europe causes of universall sins and plagues yet Schooles are honourable for tongues and Arts. 173 The true Church is Christs Schoole and Believers his Scholars ibid. Mr. Ainsworth excellent in the Tongues yet no Vniversitie man 174 K. Henry the 8. set down in the Popes chaire in England 175 Apocrypha Homilies and Common Prayer precious to our forefathers ib. Reformation proved fallible 176 The president of the Kings of Israel Iudah largely examined 178 The Persian Kings example make strongly against the doctrine of Persecution 179 1. The difference of the hand of Canaan from all lands and countries in 7 particulars ibid. 2. The difference of the people of Israel from all other peoples in 7 particulars 183 Wonderfull turnings of Religion in England in twelve yeares revolution Page 185 The Pope not unlike to recover his Monarchy over Europe before his dow●fall ibid. Israel Gods only Church might well renew that Nationall Covenant and ceremoniall worship which other Nations cannot doe 187 ● The difference of the Kings and Governours of Israel from all Kings and Governours of the world
the Apostle of our Lord teacheth 2 Tim. 24. 2. That the servant of the Lord must not strive but must be gentle toward all Men suffering the Evill Men instructing them with meeknesse that are contrary minded proving if God at any time will give them repentanco that they may acknowledge the Truth and come to amendment out of that snare of the devill c. According to these blessed Commandements the holy Prophets foretold that when the Law of Moses concerning Worship should cease and Christs Kingdome be established Esa. 2. 4. Mic. 4. 3 4 They shall breake their Swords into Mathookes and their Speares into Sithes And Esa. 11. 9. Then shall none hurt or destroy in all the Mountaine of my Holinesse c. And when he came the same he taught and practised as before so did his Disciples after him for the Weapons of his Warfare are not carnall saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 10 4. But he chargeth straitly that his Disciples should be so far from persecuting those that would not bee of their Religion that when they were persecuted they should pray Matth. 5. when they were cursed they should blesse c. And the Reason seemes to bee because they who now are Tares may hereafter become Wheat they who are now blinde may hereafter see they that now resist him may hereafter receive him they that are now in the devils snare in adversenesse to the Truth may hereafter come to repentance they that are now blasphemers and persecutors as Paul was may in time become faithfull as he they that are now idolators as the Corinths once were 1 Cor. 6. 9. may hereafter become true worshippers as they they that are now no people of God nor under mercy as the Saints sometimes were 1 Pet. 2. 20. may hereafter become the people of God and obtaine mercy as they Some come not till the 11. houre Matth. 20. 6. if those that come not till the last houre should be destroyed because they come not at the first then should they never come but be prevented All which premises are in all humility referred to your godly wise consideration Because this persecution for cause of conscience is against the profession and practice of famous Princes First you may please to consider the speech of King Iames in his Majesties Speech at Parliament 1609. He saith it is a sure Rule in divinity that God never loves to plant his Church by violence and bloodshed And in his Highnesse Apologie pag. 4. speaking of such Papists that tooke the Oath thus I gave good proofe that I intended no persecution against them for conscience cause but onely desired to bee secured for civill obedience which for conscience cause they are bound to performe And pag. 60. speaking of Blackwell the Arch-priest his Majesty saith It was never my intention to lay any thing to the said Arch-Priests charge as I have never done to any for cause of conscience And in his Highnesse Exposition on Revel 20. printed 1568. and after 1603. his Majesty writeth thus Sixthly the compassing of the Saints and the besieging of the beloved City declareth unto us a certaine note of a false Church to be Persecution for they come to seeke the faithfull the faithfull are them that are sought the wicked are the besiegers the faithfull are the besieged Secondly the saying of Stephen King of Poland I am King of Men not of Consciences a Commander of Bodies not of Soules Thirdly the King of Bohemia hath thus written And notwithstanding the successe of the later times wherein sundry opinions have beene hatched about the subject of Religion may make one clearly discerne with his eye and as it were to touch with his Finger that according to the veritie of Holy Scriptures and a Maxime heretofore told and maintained by the ancient Doctors of the Church That mens consciences ought in no sort to bee violated urged or constrained and whensoever men have attempted any thing by this violent course whether openly or by secret meanes the issue hath beene pernicious and the cause of great and wonderfull Innovations in the principallest and mightiest Kingdomes and Countries of all Christendome And further his Majesty saith So that once more we doe professe before God and the whole World that from this time forward wee are firmly resolved not to persecute or molest or suffer to be persecuted or molested any person whosoever for matter of Religion no not they that professe themselves to be of the Romish Church neither to trouble or disturbe them in the exercise of their Religion so they live conformable to the Lawes of the States c. And for the practice of this where is persecution for cause of conscience except in England and where Popery reignes and there neither in all places as appeareth by France Poland and other places Nay it is not practised amongst the Heathen that acknowledge not the true God as the Turke Persian and others Thirdly because persecution for cause of conscience is condemned by the ancient and later Writers yea and Papists themselves Hilarie against Auxentius saith thus The Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted And lamentable it is to see the great folly of these times and to sigh at the foolish opinion of this world in that men thinke by humane aide to helpe God and with worldly pompe and power to undertake to defend the Christian Church I aske you Bishops what helpe used the Apostles in the publishing of the Gospel with the aid of what power did they preach Christ and converted the Heathen from their idolatry to God When they were in prisons and lay in chaines did they praise and give thankes to God for any dignities graces and favours received from the Court Or do you thinke that Paul went about with Regall Mandates or Kingly authority to gather and establish the Church of Christ sought he protection from Nero Vespasian The Apostles wrought with their hands for their owne maintenance travailing by land and water from Towne to Citie to preach Christ yea the more they were forbidden the more they taught and preached Christ. But now alas humane helpe must assist and protect the Faith and give the same countenance to and by vaine and worldly honours Doe men seek to defend the Church of Christ as if hee by his power were unable to performe it The same against the Arrians The Church now which formerly by induring misery and imprisonment was knowne to be a true Church doth now terrifie others by imprisonment banishment and misery and boasteth that she is highly esteemed of the world when as the true Church cannot but be hated of the same Tertull. ad Scapulam It agreeth both with humane reason and naturall equity that every man worship God uncompelled and beleeve what he will for it neither hurteth nor profiteth any one another mans Religion and Beleefe Neither beseemeth it any Religion to compell another to be of their Religion which willingly and freely should be
Christians are to be exhorted not compelled But this hundreth not that Christians sinning against light of Faith and Conscience may justly be censured by the Church with Excommunication and by the Civill Sword also in case they shall corrupt others to the perdition of their Soules As for the Testimony of the Popish Book we weigh it not as knowing whatsoever they speake for Toleration of Religion where themselves are under Hatches when they come to sit at Sterne they judge and practise quite contrary as both their Writings and Iudiciall proceedings have testified to the World these many yeares To shut up this Argument from Testimonie of Writers It is well known Augustine retracted this Opinion of yours which in his younger times he had held but in after riper age reversed and refuted as appeareth in the second Book of his Retractations chap. 5. and in his Epistles 48. 50. And in his 1. Book against Parmenianus cap. 7. he sheweth that if the Donatists were punished with death they were justly punished And in his 11 Tractate upon Iohn They murther saith he Soules and themselves are afflicted in Body They put men to everlasting death and yet they complaine when themselves are put to suffer temporall death Optatus in his 3. book justifieth Macharius who had put some Hereticks to death that he had done no more herein then what Moses Phincas and Elias had done before him Bernard in his 66 Sermon in Cantica Out of doubt saith he it is better that they should be restrained by the Sword of Him who beareth not the Sword in vaine then that they should be suffred to draw many others into their Errour For he is the Minister of God for Wrath to every evill doer Calvins judgement is well knowne who procured the death of Michael Servetus for pertinacie in Heresie and defended his fact by a Book written of that Argument Beza also wrote a Booke de Haereticis Morte plectendis that Hereticks are to be punished with Death Aretius likewise tooke the like course about the Death of Valentinus Gentilis and justified the Magistrates proceeding against him in an History written of that Argument Finally you come to answer some maine Objections as you call them which yet are but one and that one objecteth nothing against what we hold It is say you no prejudice to the Common-wealth if Libertie of Conscience were suffred to such as feare God indeed which you prove by the examples of the Patriarchs and others But we readily grant you Libertie of Conscience is to be granted to men that feare God indeed as knowing they will not persist in Heresie or turbulent Schisme when they are convinced in Conscience of the sinfulnesse thereof But the Question is Whether an Heretick after once or twice Admonition and so after conviction or any other scandalous and heynous offender may be tolerated either in the Church without Excommunication or in the Common-wealth without such punishment as may preserve others from dangerous and damnable infection Thus much I thought needfull to be spoken for avoyding the Grounds of your Errour I forbeare adding Reasons to justifie the Truth because you may finde that done to your hand in a Treatise sent to some of the Brethren late of Salem who doubted as you doe The Lord Jesus lead you by a Spirit of Truth into all Truth through Jesus Christ. A REPLY to the aforesaid ANSWER of Mr. Cotton In a CONFERENCE betweene TRVTH and PEACE CHAP. I. Truth IN what darke corner of the World sweet Peace are we two met How hath this present evill World banished Me from all the Coasts Quarters of it and how hath the Righteous God in judgement taken Thee from the Earth Rev. 6. 4. Peace 'T is lamentably true blessed Truth the foundations of the World have long been out of course the Gates of Earth and Hell have conspired together to intercept our joyfull meeting and our holy kisses With what a wearied tyred Wing have I flowne over Nations Kingdomes Cities Townes to finde out precious Truth Truth The like enquiries in my flights and travells have I made for Peace and still am told she hath left the Earth and fled to Heaven Peace Deare Truth What is the Earth but a dungeon of darknesse where Truth is not Truth And what 's the Peace thereof but a fleeting dreame thine Ape and Counterfeit Peace O where 's the Promise of the God of Heaven that Righteousnes and Peace shall kisse each other Truth Patience sweet Peace these Heavens and Earth are growing Old and shall be changed like a Garment Psal. 102. They shall melt away and be burnt up with all the Works that are therein and the most high Eternall Creatour shall gloriously create New Heavens and New Earth wherein dwells Righteousnesse 2 Pet. 3. Our kisses then shall have their endlesse date of pure and sweetest ioyes till then both Thou and I must hope and wait and beare the furie of the Dragons wrath whose monstrous Lies and Furies shall with himselfe be cast into the lake of Fire the second death Revel 20. Peace Most precious Truth thou knowest we are both pursued and laid for Mine heart is full of sighes mine eyes with teares Where can I better vent my full oppressed bosome then into thine whose faithfull lips may for these few houres revive my drooping wandring spirits and here begin to wipe Teares from mine eyes and the eyes of my dearest Children Truth Sweet daughter of the God of Peace begin powre out thy sorrowes vent thy complaints how joyfull am I to improve these precious Minutes to revive our Hearts both thine and mine and the hearts of all that love the Truth and Peace Zach. 8. Peace Deare Truth I know thy birth thy nature thy delight They that know thee will prize thee farre above themselves and lives and sell themselves to buy thee Well spake that famous Elizabeth to her famous Attorney Sir Edward Coke Mr. Attourney goe on as thou hast begun and still plead not pro Domina Regina but pro Domina Veritate Truth 'T is true my Crowne is high my Scepter 's strong to breake down strongest holds to throw down highest Crownes of all that plead though but in thought against me Some few there are but oh how few are valiant for the Truth and dare to plead my Cause as my Witnesses in sack-cloth Revel 11. While all mens Tongues are bent like Bowes to shoot out lying words against Me Peace O how could I spend eternall dayes and endlesse dates at thy holy feet in listning to the precious Oracles of thy mouth All the Words of thy mouth are Truth and there is no iniquity in them Thy lips drop as the hony-combe But oh since we must part anon let us as thou saidst improve our Minutes and according as thou promisedst revive me with thy words which are sweeter then the honey and the honey-combe CHAP. II. DEare Truth I have two sad Complaints First The most sober
sonnes of men in this point To illustrate this The Church or company of worshippers whether true or false is like unto a Body or Colledge of Physitians in a Citie like unto a Corporation Society or Company of East-Indie or Turkie-Merchants or any other Societie or Company in London which Companies may hold their Courts keep their Records hold disputations and in matters concerning their Societie may dissent divide breake into Schismes and Factions sue and implead each other at the Law yea wholly breake up and dissolve into pieces and nothing and yet the peace of the Citie not be in the least measure impaired or disturbed because the essence or being of the Citie and so the well-being and peace thereof is essentially distinct from those particular Societies the Citie-Courts Citie-Lawes Citie-punishments distinct from theirs The Citie was before them and stands absolute and intire when such a Corporation or Societie is taken down For instance further The City or Civill state of Ephesus was essentially distinct from the worship of Diana in the Citie or of the whole city Againe the Church of Christ in Ephesus which were Gods people converted and call'd out from the worship of that City unto Christianitie or worship of God in Christ was distinct from both Now suppose that God remove the Candlestick from Ephesus yea though the whole Worship of the Citie of Ephesus should be altered yet if men be true and honestly ingenuous to Citie-covenants Combinations and Principles all this might be without the least impeachment or infringement of the Peace of the City of Ephesus Thus in the Citie of Smirna was the Citie it selfe or Civill estate one thing The Spirituall or Religious state of Smirna another The Church of Christ in Smirna distinct from them both and the Synagogue of the Iewes whether literally Iewes as some thinke or mystically false Christians as others called the Synagogue of Sathan Revel 2. distinct from all these And notwithstanding these spirituall oppositions in point of Worship and Religion yet heare we not the least noyse nor need we if Men keep but the Bond of Civility of any Civill breach or breach of Civill peace amongst them and to persecute Gods people there for Religion that only was a breach of Civilitie it selfe CHAP. VII Peace NOw to the second Quaerie What it is to hold forth Doctrine or Practice in an arrogant or impetuous way Truth Although it hath not pleased Mr. Cotton to declare what is this arrogant or impetuous holding forth of Doctrine or Practice tending to disturbance of Civill peace I cannot but expresse my sad and sorrowfull observation how it pleaseth God to leave him as to take up the common reproachfull accusation of the Accuser of Gods children to wit that they are arrogant and impetuous which charge together with that of obstinacie pertinacie pride Troublers of the Citie c. Sathan commonly loads the meekest of the Saints and Witnesses of Iesus with To wipe off therefore these fowle blurs and aspersions from the faire and beautifull face of the Spouse of Iesus I shall select and propose 5 or 6 cases for which Gods witnesses in all Ages and Generations of Men have been charged with arrogance impetuousnes c. and yet the God of Heaven and Iudge of all men hath graciously discharged them from such crimes and maintained and avowed them for his faithfull and peaceable servants First Gods people have proclaimed taught disputed for divers months together a new Religion and Worship contrary to the Worship projected in the Towne City or State where they have lived or where they have travelled as did the Lord Iesus Himselfe over all Galile and the Apostles after Him in all places both in the Synagogues and Market-places as appeares Acts 17. 2. 17. Acts 18. 48. Yet this no Arrogance nor Impetuousnesse Secondly Gods servants have been zealous for their Lord and Master even to the very faces of the Highest and concerning the persons of the Highest so far as they have opposed the Truth of God So Eliah to the face of Ahab It is not I but thou and thy Fathers house that troublest Israel So the Lord Iesus concerning Herod Goe tell that Fox So Paul God delivered me from the mouth of the Lion and to Ananias Thou whited wall and yet in all this no Arrogance nor Impetuousnesse Thirdly Gods people have been immoveable constant and resolved to the death in refusing to submit to false Worships and in preaching and professing the true worship contrary to expresse command of publicke Authority So the three famous Worthies against the command of Nobilchadnezzar and the uniforme conformity of all Nations agreeing upon a false worship Dan. 3. So the Apostles Acts 4 and 5 chap. and so the witnesses of Iesus in all ages who loved not their lives to the death Rev. 12. not regarding sweet life nor bitter death and yet not Arrogant nor Impetuous Fourthly Gods people since the comming of the King of Israel the Lord Iesus have openly and constantly profest that no Civill Magistrate no King nor Caesar have any power over the Soules or Consciences of their Subjects in the matters of God and the Crowne of Iesus but the Civill Magistrates themselves yea Kings and Keisars are bound to subject their owne soules to the Ministery and Church the Power and Government of this Lord Iesus the King of Kings Hence was the charge against the Apostles false in Civill but true in spiritualls that they affirmed that there was another King one Iesus Acts 17. 7. And indeed this was the great charge against the Lord Iesus Himself which the Iews laid against Him and for which he suffered Death as appears by the Accusation written over His Head upon the Gallows Iohn 9. 19. Iesus of Nazareth King of the Iewes This was and is the summe of all true preaching of the Gospell or glad newes viz. That God anointed Jesus to be the sole King and Governour of all the Israel of God in spirituall and soule causes Psal. 2. 6. Acts 2. 36. Yet this Kingly power of His he resolved not to manage in His owne Person but Ministerially in the hands of such Messengers which he sent forth to preach and baptise and to such as beleeved that word they preached Iohn 17. And yet here no Arrogance nor Impetuousnesse 5. Gods people in delivering the Minde and Will of God concerning the Kingdomes and Civill States where they have lived have seemed in all shew of common sense and rationall policie if men looke not higher with the eye of saith to endanger and overthrow the very Civill State as appeareth by all Ieremses preaching and counsell to King Zedechia his Princes and people insomuch that the charge of the Princes against Ieremiah was that he discouraged the Army from fighting against the Babylonians and weakned the Land from its own defence and this charge in the eye of reason seemed not to be unreasonable
them by bloody and cruell Persecution CHAP. XVI Peace THe third Conclusion is In points of lesser moment there ought to be a Toleration Which though I acknowledge to be the Truth of God yet 3 things are very observable in the manner of laying it down for Sathan useth excellent arrowes to bad markes and sometimes beyond the intent and hidden from the eye of the Archer First saith he such a person is to be tolerated till God may be pleased to reveale his Truth to him Truth This is well observed by you for indeed this is the very ground why the Apostle calls for meekenesse and gentlenesse toward all men and toward such as oppose themselves 2 Tim. 2. because there is a peradventure or it may be It may be God may give them Repentance That God that hath shewen mercy to one may shew mercy to another It may be that eye-salve that anointed one mans eye who was blinde and opposite may anoint another as blinde and opposite He that hath given Repentance to the husband may give it to his wise c. Hence that Soule that is lively and sensible of mercy received to it selfe in former blindnesse opposition and enmitie against God cannot but be patient and gentle toward the Iewes who yet deny the Lord Iesus to be come and justifie their Fore-fathers in murthering of him Toward the Turkes who acknowledge Christ a great Prophet yet affirme lesse than Mahomet Yea to all the severall sorts of Antichristians who set up many a false Christ in stead of him And lastly to the Pagans and wildest sorts of the sons of men who have not yet heard of the Father nor the Son And to all these sorts Iewes Turkes Antichristians Pagans when they oppose the light presented to them In sense of its ow● former opposition and that God peradventure may at last give repentance I adde such a Soule will not onely be patient but earnestly and constantly pray for all sorts of men that out of them Gods elect may be called to the fellowship of Christ Iesus And lastly not only pray but endeavour to its utmost abilitie their participation of the same grace and mercy That great Rock upon which so many gallant Ships miscarrie viz. That such persons false Prophets Hereticks c. were to be put to death in Israel I shall with Gods assistance remove as also that fine silken covering of the Image viz. that such persons ought to be put to death or banished to prevent the infecting and seducing of others I shall with Gods assistance in the following discourse pluck off Secondly I observe from the Scriptures he quoteth for this Toleration Phil. 3. Rom. 14 how closely yet I hope unadvisedly he makes the Churches of Christ at Philippi and Rome all one with the Cities Philippi and Rome in which the Churches were and to whom onely Paul wrote As if what these Churches in Philippi and Rome must tolerate amongst themselves that the Ci●ies Philippi and Rome must tole rate in their citizens and what these Churches must not tolerate that these Cities Philippi and Rome must not tolerate within the compasse of the City State and Jurisdiction Truth Upon that ground by undeniable consequence these Cities Philippi and Rome were bound not to tolerate themselves that is the Cities and Citizens of Philippi and Rome in their own Civill life and being but must kill or expell themselves from their own Cities as being Idolatrous worshippers of other gods then the true God in Iesus Christ. But as the Lilie is amongst the Thornes so is Christs Love among the Daughters and as the Apple-tree among the Trees of the Forrest so is her Beloved among the Sons so great a difference is there between the Church in a Citie or Country and the Civill state City or Country in which it is No lesse then as David in another case Psal. 103. as far as the Heavens are from the Earth are they that are truly Christs that is anointed truly with the Spirit of Christ from many thousands who love not the Lord Iesus Christ and yet are and must be permitted in the World or Civill State although they have no right to enter into the gates of Ierusalem the Church of God And this is the more carefully to bee minded because when ever a toleration of others Religion and Conscience is pleaded for such as are I hope in truth zealous for God readily produce plenty of Scriptures written to the Church both before and since Christs comming all commanding and pressing the putting forth of the uncleane the cutting off the obstinate the purging out the Leaven rejecting of Heretickes As if because brians thornes and phistles may not be in the Garden of the Church therefore they must all bee pluckt up out of the Wildernesse whereas he that is a Briar that is a Iew a Turke a Pagan an Antichristian to day may be when the Word of the Lord runs freely a member of Iesus Christ to morrow cut out of the wilde Olive and planted into the true Peace Thirdly from this toleration of persons but holding lesser errours I observe the unmercifulnesse of such doctrines and hearts as if they had forgotten the Blessednesse Blessed are the mercifull for they shall obtaine mercy Math. 5. He that is sleightly and but a little hurt shall be suffered and meanes vouchsafed for his cure But the deepe wounded sinners and leprous ulcerous and those of bloudy issues twelve yeares together and those which have been bowed down 38. years of their life they must not be suffered untill peradventure God may give them repentance but either it is not lawfull for a godly Magistrate to rule and governe such a people as some have said or else if they be under government and reforme not to the State Religion after the first and second admonition the Civill Magistrate is bound to persecute c. Truth Such persons have need as Paul to the Romanes Chap. 12. 1. to be besought by the mercy of God to put on bowels of mercy toward such as have neither wronged them in body or goods and therefore justly should not be punished in their goods or persons CHAP. XVII Peace I Shall now trouble you deare Truth but with one conclusion more which is this viz. That if a man hold forth errour with a boysterous and arrogant spirit to the disturbance of the civill Peace he ought to be punished c. Truth To this I have spoken too confessing that if any man commit ought of those things which Paul was accused of Act. 25. 11. he ought not to be spared yea he ought not as Paul saith in such cases to refuse to dye But if the matter be of another nature a spirituall and divine nature I have written before in many cases and might in many more that the Worship which a State professeth may bee contradicted and preached against and yet no breach of Civill Peace
viz. That tares must needs signifie hypocrites or doctrines or practices who are like Gods children Truth c. I answer first The Parable holds forth no such thing that the likenesse of the tares should deceive the servants to cause them to suppose for a time that they were good wheat but that as soone as ever the tares appeared ver 26. the servants came to the housholder about them ver 27. the Scripture holds forth no such time wherein they doubted or suspected what they were Peace It may be said they did not appeare to be tares untill the co●ne was in the blade and put forth its fruit Truth I answer The one appeared as soone as the other for so the word clearly carries it that the seed of both having been sowne when the wheat appeared and put forth its blade and fruit the tares also were as early and put forth themselves as appeared also Secondly there is such a dissimilitude or unlikenesse I say such a dissimilitude that as soone as tares and wheat are sprung up to blade and fruit every husbandman can tell which is wheat and which are tares and cockle c. Peace It may be said true So when the hypocrite is manifested then all may know him c. but before hypocrites be manifested by fruits they are unknowne I answer search into the Parable and aske when was it that the servants first complained of the tares to the housholder but when they appeared or came in sight there being no interim wherein the servants could not tell what to make of them but doubted whether they were wheat or tares as the Answerer implies Secondly when was it that the housholder gave charge to let them alone but after that they appeared and were known to be tares which should imply by this interpretation of the Answerer that when men are discovered and knowne to be Hypocrites yet stil●●uch a generation of Hypocrites in the Church must be let alone and tolerated untill the harvest or end of the world which is contrary to all order piety and safety in the Church of the Lord Iesus as doubtlesse the Answerers will grant so that those Tares being notoriously knowne to be different from the Corne I conclude that they cannot here be intended by the Lord Iesus to signifie secret Hypocrites but more open and apparent Sinners CHAP. XXI THe second reason why these tares cannot signifie hypocrites in the Church I take from the Lord Iesus His own Interpretation of the field in which both wheat and tares are sowne which saith he is the World out of which God chooseth and calleth His Church The World lyes in wickednesse is like a Wildernesse or a Sea of wilde Beasts innumerable fornicators covetous Idolaters c. with whom Gods people may lawfully converse and cohabit in Cities Townes c. else must they not live in the World but goe out of it In which world as soone as ever the Lord Iesus had sowne the good seed the children of the Kingdome true Christianity or the true Church the Enemy Sathan presently in the night of security Ignorance and Errour whilest men slept sowed also these tares which are Antichristians or false Christians These strange Professours of the Name of Iesus the Ministers and Prophets of God beholding they are ready to runne to Heaven to fetch fiery judgements from thence to consume these strange Christians and to pluck them by the roots out of the world But the Son of Man the meek Lamb of God for the Elect sake which must be gathered out of Iew and Gentile Pagan Antichristian commands a permission of them in the World untill the time of the end of the World when the Goats and Sheep the Tares and Wheat shall be eternally separated each from other Peace You know some excellent Worthies dead and living have laboured to turne this Field of the World into the Garden of the Church Truth But who can imagine that the Wisdome of the Father the Lord Iesus Christ would so open this Parable as He professedly doth as that it should be close shut up and that one difficulty or locke should be opened by a greater and harder in calling the World the Church contrary also to the way of the Light and Love that is in Jesus when he would purposely teach and instruct His scholars contrary to the nature of Parables and similitudes And lastly to the nature of the Church or Garden of Christ. CHAP. XXII IN the former Parable the Lord Iesus compared the Kingdome of Heaven to the sowing of Seed The true Messengers of Christ are the Sowers who cast the Seed of the Word of the Kingdome upon foure sorts of ground which foure sorts of ground or hearts of men cannot be supposed to be of the Church nor will it ever be proved that the Church consisteth of any more sorts or natures of ground properly but one to wit the honest and good ground and the proper worke of the Church concernes the flourishing and prosperity of this sort of ground and not the other unconverted●●ree ●●ree sorts who it may be seldome or never come 〈◊〉 the Church unlesse they be forced by the Civill sword which the patern● or first sowers never used and being forced they are put into a way of Religion by such a course if not so they are forced to live without● Religion for one of the two must necessarily follow as I shall prove afterward In the field of the World then are all those sorts of ground high way hearers stony and thorny ground hearers as well as the honest and good ground and I suppose it will not now be said by the Answerer that those three sorts of bad grounds were hypocrites or tares in the Church Now after the Lord Iesus had propounded that great leading Parable of the Sower and the Seed He is pleased to propound this Parable of the Tares with admirable coherence and sweet consolation to the honest and good ground who with glad and honest hearts having received the word of the Kingdome may yet seem to be discouraged and troubled with so many Antichristians and false Professours of the Name of Christ. The Lord Iesus therefore gives direction concerning these tares that unto the end of the World successively in all the sorts and generations of them they must be not approved or countenanced but let alone or permitted in the World Secondly he gives to His owne good seed this consolation that those heavenly Reapers the Angells in the harvest or end of the World will take an order and course with them to wit they shall binde them into bundles and cast them into the everlasting burnings and to make the cup of their consolation run over He addes vers 4. Then then at that time shall the Righteous shine as the Sun in the Kingdome of their Father These tares then neither being erronious doctrines nor corrupt practises nor hypocrites
alone First lest the good Wheat bee pluckt up and rooted up also out of this Field of the World if such combustions and fightings were as to pluck up all the false professours of the name of Christ the good wheat also would enjoy little peace but be in danger to bee pluckt up and torne out of this world by such bloody stormes and tempests And therefore as Gods people are commanded Ier. 29. to pray for the peace of materiall Babell wherein they were captivated and 1 Time 2. to pray for all men and specially Kings and Governors that in the peace of the civill State they may have peace So contrary to the opinion and practice of most drunke with the Cup of the Whores fornication yea and of Gods owne people fast asleepe in Antichristian Dalilahs laps obedience to the command of Christ to let the tares alone will prove the onely meanes to preserve then Civill Peace and that without obedience to this command of Christ it is impossible without great transgression against the Lord in carnall policy which will not long hold out to preserve the civill peace Beside Gods people the good Wheat are generally pluckt up and persecuted as well as the vilest idolaters whether Jewes or Antichristians which the Lord Jesus seemes in this Parable to foretell The second Reason noted in the Parable which may satisfie any man from wondring at the patience of God is this when the world is ripe in sinne in the sinnes of Antichristianisme as the Lord spake of the sinnes of the Amorites Gen. 12. then those holy and mighty Officers and Executioners the Angels with their sharpe and cu●ting sickles of eternall vengeance shall downe with them and bundle them up for the everlasting burnings Then shall that Man of Sin 2 Thess. 2. be consumed by the breath of the mouth of the Lord Iesus and all that worship the Beast and his picture and receive his mark into their forehead or their hands shall drink of the Wine of the wrath of God which is poured out without mixture into the Cup of his indignation and he shall be tormented wit●●i●e and brimstone in the presence of the holy Angels and in the presence of the Lambe and the smoake of their torment shall ascend up for ever and ever Rev. 14. 10. 11. CHAP. XXVII Peace YOu have beene larger in vindicating this Scripture from the violence offered unto it because as I said 〈…〉 such great consequence as also because so many excellent 〈◊〉 have not rightly ●●vided it to the great misguiding of many precious 〈◊〉 which otherwise might have beene turned into the paths of more peaceablenesse in themselves and towards others Truth I shall be briefer in the Scriptures following Peace Yet before you depart from this I must crave your patience to satisfie one Objection and that is These servants to whom the Housholder answereth seem to be the Ministers or Messengers of the Gospel not the Magistrates of the civill State and therfore this charge of the Lord Jesus is not given to Magistrates to let alone false worshippers and idolaters Againe being spoken by the Lora Iesus to his Messengers it seemes to concern Hypocrites in the Church as before was spoken and not false worshippers in the State or World Truth I answer first I beleeve I have sufficiently and abundantly proved that these tares are not offenders in the civill State Nor secondly Hypocrites in the Church when once discovered so to bee and that therefore the Lord Iesus intends a grosser kinde of Hypocrites professing the name of Churches and Christians in the field of the World or Commonwealth Secondly I acknowledge this command Let them alone was expresly spoken to the Messengers or Ministers of the Gospel who have no civill power or authority in their hand and therefore not to the civill Magistrate King or Governour to whom it pleased not the Lord Iesus by himselfe or by his Apostles to give particular Rules or directions concerning their behaviour and carriage in Civill Magistracy as they have done expresly concerning the duty of fathers mothers children masters servants yea and of Subjects towards Magistrates Ephes. 5. 6. Colos. 3. 4. c. I conceive not the reason of this to be as some weakly have done because the Lord Jeus would not have any followers of his to hold the place of civill Magistracy but rather that he foresaw and the Holy Spirit in the Apostles foresaw how few Magistrates either in the first persecuted or apostated state of Christianity would imbrace his yoake in the persecuted state Magistrates hated the very name of Christ or Christianity In the state apostate some few Magistrates in their persons holy and precious yet as concerning their places as they have professed to have beene Governours or Heads of the Church have beene so many false Heads and have constituted so many false visible Christs Thirdly I conceive this charge of the Lord Jesus to his Messengers the Preachers and Proclaimers of his minde is a sufficient declaration of the minde of the Lord Iesus if any civill Magistrate should make question what were his duty concerning spirituall things The Apostles and in them all that succeed them being commanded not to pluck up the Tares but let them alone received from the Lord Iesus a threefold charge First to let them alone and not to plucke them up by prayer to God for their present temporall destruction Ieremie had a Commission to plant and build to pluck up and destroy Kingdomes Ier. 1. 10. therefore hee is commanded not to pray for that people whom God had a purpose to pluck up Jer. 14 11. and he plucks up the whole Nation by prayer Lament 3. 66. Thus Elijah brought fire from heaven to consume the Captaines and the ●ifties 2 King 1. and the Apostles desired also so to practise against the Samaritanes Luc. 9. 54. but were reproved by the Lord Iesus For contrarily the Saints and Servants and Churches of Christ are to pray for all men especially for all Magistrates of what sort or Religions soever and to seeke the peace of the City what ever City it be because in the peace of the place Gods people have peace also Ier. 297. 2 Tim. 2. c. Secondly Gods Messengers are herein commanded not to prophesie or denounce a present destruction or extirpation of all false professours of the name of Christ which are whole Townes Cities and Kingdomes full Ieremy did thus pluck up Kingdomes in those fearfull Prophecies hee poured forth against all the Nations of the World throughout his Chap. 24. 25. 26. c. as did also the other Prophets in a measure though none comparably to Ieremy and Ezekiel Such denunciations of present temporall judgements are not the Messengers of the Lord Iesus to poure forth T is true many fore and fearfull plagues are poured forth upon the Romane E●●perours and Romane Popes in the Revelation yet not to their utter extirpation
in His Church His spirituall judicature and executes this sentence in part at present and hereafter to all eternity Such a sentence no Civill Iudge can passe such a Death no Civill sword can in●lict I answer secondly Dead men cannot be infected the civill state the world being in a naturall state dead in sin what ever be the State-Religion unto which persons are forced it is impossible it should be infected Indeed the living the beleeving the Church and spirituall state that and that onely is capable of infection for whose helpe we shall presently see what preservatives and remedies the Lord Iesus hath appointed Moreover as we see in a common plague or infection the names are taken how many are to dye and not one more shall be strucke then the destroying Angel hath the names of So here what ever be the soule infection breathed out from they lying lips of a plague-sicke Pharisee yet the names are taken not one elect or chosen of God shall perish Gods sheep are safe in His eternall hand and counsell and he that knowes his materiall knows also his mysticall stars their numbers and calls them every one by name none fall into the Ditch on the blinde Pharises backe but such as were ordained to that condemnation both guid and followers 1 Pet. 2. 8. Iude 4. The vessells of wrath shall breake and split and only they to the praise of Gods eternall justice Rom. 9. CHAP. XXXIV Peace BUt it is said be it granted that in a common plague or infection none are smitten and dye but such as are appointed yet it is not only every mans duty but the common duty of the Magistrate to prevent infection and to preserve the common health of the place likewise though the number of the Elect be sure and God knowes who are His yet hath He appointed meanes for their preservation from perdition and from infection and therefore the Angel is blamed for suffering Balaams doctrine and Iesabel to seduce Christ Jesus His servants Rev. 2. Tit. 3. 10. Rom. 16. 17. Truth I answer Let that Scripture and that of Titus reject an Hereticke and Rom. 16. 17. avoid them that are contentious c. let them and all of like nature be examined and it will appeare that the great and good Physitian Christ Iesus the Head of the Body and King of the Church hath not been unfaithfull in providing spirituall antidotes and preservatives against the spirituall sicknesses sores weaknosses dangers of his Church and people but he never appointed the civill sword for either antidote or remedy as an addition to those spiritualls which he hath left with his wife his Church or People Hence how great is the bondage the captivity of Gods owne People to Babylonish or confused mixtures in Worship and unto worldly and earthly policies to uphold State Religions or Worships since that which is written to the Angel and Church at Pergamus shall be interpreted as sent to the Governour and City of Pergamus and that which is sent to Titus and the Church of Christ at Creet must be delivered to the civill officers and City thereof But as the Civill Magistrate hath his charge of the bodies and goods of the subject So have the spirituall Officers Governours and overseers of Christs City or Kingdome the charge of their souls and soule safety Hence that charge of Paul to Tim. 1 Tim. 5. 20. Them that sinne rebuke before all that others may learne to fear This is in the Church of Christ a spirituall meanes for the healing of a soule that hath sinned or taken infection and for the preventing of the infecting of others that others may learne to feare c. CHAP. XXXV Peace IT is said true that Titus and Timothy and so the Officers of the Church of Christ are bound to prevent soule infection But what hinders that the Magistrate should not be charged also with this duty Truth I answer many things I have answered and more shall at present I shall only say this If it be the Magistrate duty or office then is he both a Temporall and Ecclesiasticall officer contrary to which most men will affirme and yet we know the policie of our owne Land and Country hath established to the Kings and Queens thereof the supreme heads or governours of the Church of England That doctrine and distinction that a Magistrate may punish an Heretick civilly will not here availe for what is Babel if this be not confusedly to punish corporall or civill offences with spirituall or Church censures the offendour not being a member of it or to punish soule or spirituall offences with corporall or temporall weapons proper to Delinquents against the temporall or civill state Lastly woe were it with the civill Magistrate and most intolerable burthens do they lay upon their backs that teach this doctrine if together with the common care and charge of the Commonwealth the peace and safety of the Towne City State or Kingdome the bloud of every soule that perisheth should cry against him unlesse he could say with Paul Acts 20. in spirituall regards I am clear from the blould of all men that is the bloud of soules which was his charge to looke after so far as his preaching went not the bloud of bodies which belongeth to the civill Magistrate I acknowledge he ought to cherish as a foster-father the Lord Iesus in his truth in his Saints to cleave unto them himselfe and to countenance them even to the death yea also to breake the teeth of the Lions who offer Civill violence and injury unto them But to see all his Subjects Christians to keepe such Church or Christians in the purity of worship and see them doe their duty this belongs to the Head of the Body Christ Iesus and such spirituall Officers as he hath to this purpose deputed whose right it is according to the true paterne Abimelech Saul Adonijah Athalia were but usurpers David Salomon Ioash c. they were the true heires and types of Christ Iesus in His true Power and Authority in His Kingdome CHAP. XXXVI Peace THe next Scripture brought against such persecution is Luke 9. 54 55. where the Lord Jesus reproved His Disciples who would have had fire come downe from Heaven and devoure those Samaritanes● that would not receive Him in these words You know not of what spirit you are the Son of Man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them With this Scripture Mr. Cotton joynes the fourth and answers both in one which is this 2 Tim. 2. 24. The servant of the Lord must not strive but must be gentle toward all men suffering the evill men instructing them with meeknesse that are contrary minded and oppose themselves proving if God peradventure will give them repentance that they may acknowledge the truth and that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the Divell who are taken captive by him at his will
be so farre from striving to subdue their opposites with the civill sword that they are bound with patience and meeknesse to wait if God peradventure will please to grant repentance unto their opposites So also it pleaseth the Answerer to acknowledge in these words It becomes not the Spirit of the Gospel to convert Aliens to the Faith such as the Samaritanes and the unconverted Christians in Crete with Fire and Brimstone Secondly be they oppositions within and Church members as the Answerer speakes become scandalous in doctrine I speake not of scandals against the civill State which the civill Magistrate ought to punish it is the Lord onely as this Scripture to Timothy implyes who is able to give them repentance and recover them out of Sathans snare to which end also he hath appointed those holy and dreadfull censures in his Church or Kingdome True it is the Sword may make as once the Lord complained Isa. 10. a whole Nation of Hypocrites But to recover a Soule from Sathan by repentance and to bring them from Antichristian doctrine or worship to the doctrine or worship Christian in the least true internall or externall submission that only works the All-powerfull God by the sword of his Spirit in the hand of his Spirituall officers What a most wofull proofe hereof have the Nations of the Earth given in all Ages And to seeke no further then our native Soyle within a few scores of yeeres how many wonderfull changes in Religion hath the whole Kingdome made according to the change of the Governours thereof in the severall Religious which they themselves imbraced Henry the 7. finds and leaves the kingdome absolutely Popish Henry the 8. casts it into a mould half Popish halfe Protestant Edward the 6. brings forth an Edition all Protestant Queene Mary within few yeares defaceth Edwards worke and renders the Kingdome after her Grandfather Hen. 7. his pattern all Popish Maries short life and Religion ends together and Elizabeth reviveth her Brother Edwards Modell all Protestant And some eminent Witnesses of Gods Truth against Antichrist have enclined to believe that before the downfall of that Beast England must once againe how down her faire Neck to his proud usurping yoake and foot Peace It hath been Englands sinfull shame to fashion change their Garments and Religions with wondrous ease and lightnesse as a higher Power a stronger Sword hath prevailed after the ancient patterne of Nebuchaanezzars bowing the whole world in one most solemne uniformitie of worship to his Golden Image Dan. 3. CHAP. XL. BUt it hath been thought or said Shall oppositions against the Truth escape unpunished will they not prove mischievous c. Truth I answer as before concerning the blinde Guides in case there be no Civill offence committed the Magistrates all men that by the mercy of God to themselves discerne the miserie of such Opposites have cause to lament and bewaile that fearfull condition wherein such are entangled to wit in the snares chains of Satan with which they are so invincibly caught and held that no power in Heaven or Earth but the Right hand of the Lord in the meeke and gentle dispensing of the Word of Truth can release and quit them Those many false Christs of whom the Lord Jesus forewarnes Mat. 24. have sutably their false bodies faith spirit Baptisme as the Lord Jesus hath his true body faith spirit c. Ephes. 4. correspondent also are their weapons and the successe issue or operation of them A carnall weapon or sword of steele may produce a carnall repentance a shew an outside an uniformitie through a State or Kingdome But it hath pleased the Father to exalt the Lord Iesus only to be a Prince armed with power and meanes sufficient to give repentance to Israel Acts 5. 31. Accordingly an unbelieving Soule being dead in sinne although he be changed from one worship to another like a dead man shifted into severall changes of apparell cannot please God Heb. 11. and consequently whatever such an unbelieving unregenerate person acts in Worship or Religion it is but sinne Rom. 14. Preaching sinne praying though without beads or booke sinne breaking of bread or Lords supper sinne yea as odious as the oblation of Swines blood a Dogs neck or killing of a Man Isa. 66. But Faith it is that gift which proceeds alone from the Father of Lights Phil. 1. 29. and till he please to make his light arise and open the eyes of blind sinners their soules shall lie fast asleep and the faster in that a sword of steele compells them to a worship in hypocrisie in the dungeons of spirituall darknesse and Sathans slavery Peace I adde that a civill sword as wofull experience in all ages hath proved is so far from bringing or helping forward an opposite in Religion to repentance that Magistrates sinne grievously against the worke of God and blood of Soules by such proceedings Because as commonly the suffrings of false and Antichristian Teachers harden their followers who being blind by this meanes are occasioned to tumble into the ditch of Hell after their blind leaders with more inflamed zeale of lying confidence So secondly violence and a sword of steele begets such an impression in the sufferers that certainly they conclude as indeed that Religion cannot be true which needs such instruments of violence to uphold it so that Persecutors are far from soft and gentle commiseration of the blindnesse of others To this purpose it pleased the Father of Spirits of old to constraine the Emperour of Rome Antoninus Pius to write to all the Governours of his Provinces to forbeare to persecute the Christians because such dealing must needs be so far from converting the Christians from their way that it rather begat in their mindes an opinion of their crueltie c. CHAP. XLI Peace THe next Scripture against such persecution is that of the Prophet Isa. 24. together with Mic. 4. 3. they shall break their swords into plough-shares and their speares into pruning-hookes Isa. 11. 9. There shall none hurt or destroy in all the mountaine of my Holinesse Unto which it pleased Mr. Cotton to say That these predictions doe onely shew first with what kinde of weapons he should subdue the Nations to the obedience of the faith of the Gospell not by fire and sword and weapons of War but by the power of the Word and Spirit of God which faith he no man doubts of Secondly those predictions of the Prophets shew what the meeke and peaceable temper will be of all true converts to Christianity not Lyons or Leopards not cruell oppressors nor malignant opposers or biters one of another but doth not forbid them to drive ravenous wolves from the sheep-fold and to restraine them from devouring the sheep of Christ. Truth In this first excellent and truly Christian Answer me thinks the Answerer may heare a voyce from Heaven Out of thine owne
16 And if so how should Paul appeale in spirituall things to Caesar or write to the Churches of Iesus to submite in Christian or Spirituall matters Fifthly if Paul had appealed to Caesar in spirituall respects hee had greatly prophaned the holy name of God in holy things in so improper and vaine a prostitution of spirituall things to carnall and naturall judgements which are not able to comprehend spirituall matters which are alone spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. And yet Caesar as a civill supreme Magistrate ought to defend Paul from Civill violence and sta●derous accusations about sedition mutiny civill disobedience c. And in that sense who doubts but God's people may appeale to the Romane Caesar an Egyptian Pharach a Philistian Abimelecke an Assyrian Nabuchadnezzar the great M●gol Prester Iohn the great Turke or an Indian Sachim CHAP. L. Peace WHich is the third Argument against the civill Magistrates power in spirituall and soule matters out of this Scripture Rom. 13 Truth I dispute from the nature of the Magistrates weapons vers 4. He hath a sword which hee beares not in vaine delivered to him as I acknowledge from Gods appointment in the free consent and choice of the subjects for common good We must distinguish of swords We finde foure sorts of swords mentioned in the New Testament First the sword of persecution which Herod stretched forth against Iames Act. 12. Secondly the sword of Gods Spirit expresly said to be the Word of God Ephes. 6. A sword of two edges caried in the mouth of Christ Rev. 1. which is of strong and mighty operation piercing betweene the bones and the marrow betweene the soule and the spirit Heb. 4. Thirdly the great sword of War and Destruction given to him that rides that terrible Red Horse of War so that he takes Peace from the Earth and men kill one another as is most lamentably true in the slaughter of so many hundred thousand soules within these few yeares in severall parts of Europe our owne and others None of these 3 swords are intended in this Scripture Therefore fourthly there is a Civill sword called the Sword of Civill justice which being of a materiall civill nature for the defence of Persons Estates Families Liberties of a City or Civill State and the suppressing of uncivill or injurious persons or actions by such civill punishment It cannot according to its utmost reach and capacitie now under Christ when all Nations are meerly civill without any such typicall holy respect upon them as was upon Israel a Nationall Church I say cannot extend to spirituall and Soul-causes Spirituall and Soule punishment which belongs to that spirituall sword with two edges the soule-piercing in soule-saving or soule-killing the Word of God CHAP. LII Truth A Fourth Argument from this Scripture I take in the 6. verse from Tribute custome c. which is a meerly civill Reward or Recompence for the Magistrates worke Now as the wages are such is the worke But the wages are meerely civill Custome Tribute c. not the contributions of the Saints or churches of Christ proper to the Spirituall and Christian state and such work only must the Magistrate attend upon as may properly deserve such civill wages reward or recompence Lastly that the Spirit of God never intended to direct or warrant the Magistrate to use his Power in spirituall affaires and Religious worship I argue from the terme or title it pleaseth the wisedome of God to give such Civill officers to wit vers 6. Gods Ministers Now at the very first blush no man denies a double Ministerie The one appointed by Christ Iesus in his Church to gather to governe receive in cast out and order all the affaires of the Church the House Citie or Kingdome of God Ephes. 4. 1 Cor. 12. Secondly a Civill Ministery or office meerely humane and civill which Men agree to constitute called therefore an humane creation 1 Pet. 2. and is as true and lawfull in those Nations Cities Kingdomes c. which never heard of the true God nor his holy Sonne Iesus as in any part of the World beside where the Name of Iesus is most taken up From all which premises viz. that the scope of the Spirit of God in this Chapter is to handle the matters of the second Table having handled the matters of the first in the 12. since the Magistrates of whom Paul wrote were naturall ungodly persecuting and yet lawfull Magistrates and to be obeyed in all lawfull Civill things Since all Magistrates are Gods Ministers essentially civill bounded to a civill work with civill weapons or instruments and paid or rewarded with civill rewards From all which I say I undeniably collect that this Scripture is generally mistaken and wrested from the scope of Gods Spirit and the nature of the place and cannot truly be alleadged by any for the Power of the Civill Magistrate to be exercised in spirituall and Soule-matters CHAP. LII Peace AGainst this I know many object out of the 4. verse of this Chapter that the Magistrate is to avenge or punish Evill from whence is gathered that Heresie false Christs false Churches false Ministeries false Seales being evill ought to be punished Civilly c. Truth I answer that the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is generally opposed to Civill Goodnesse or Virtue in a Common-wealth and not to Spirituall Good or Religion in the Church Secondly I have proved from the scope of the place that here is not intended Evill against the Spirituall or Christian Estate handled in the 12 Chap. but Evill against the Civill State in this 13. properly falling under the cognizance of the Civill Minister of God the Magistrate and punishable by that civill sword of his as an incivilitie disorder or breach of that civill order peace and civility unto which all the Inhabitants of a City Town or Kingdome oblige themselves Peace I have heard that the Elders of the New-English Churches who yet out of this 13 Rom. maintaine Persecution grant that the Magistrate is to preserve the peace and welfare of the State and therefore that he ought not to punish such sinnes as hurt not his peace In particular they say the Magistra●e may not punish secret sinnes in the Soule Nor such sinnes as are yet handling in the Church in a private way Nor such sinnes which are private in Families and therefore they say the Magistrate transgresteth to prosecute complaints of children against their parents servants agai●st masters wives against husbands and yet this proper to the Civill State Nor such sinnes as are between the Members and Churches themselves And they confesse that if the Magistrate punish and the Church punish there will be a greater Rent in their Peace Truth From thence sweet Peace may we well observe First the Magistrate is not to punish all Evill according to this their confession The distinction of private and publike Evill will not here availe because such as urge
to performe ungodly actions nor for ungodly persons for wicked ends to act what in it selfe is good and righteous Abraham Iacob David Salomon c. as well as Lamech Saul c. lived in constant transgression against the institution of so holy and so ratified a Law of Mariage c. and this not against the light and checks of conscience as other sinnes are wont to be recorded of them but according to the dictate and perswasion of a Resolved Soule and Conscience David out of zeale to God with 30 thousand of Israel and Majesticall solemnity carries up the Arke contrary to the Order God was pleased to appoint the issue was both Gods and Davids great offence● 2 Sam. 6. David in his zeale would build an house to entertaine his God what more pious and what more in shew serio●sly consulted when the Prophet Nathan is admitted Councellour 2 Sam. 7. And probable it is that his slaughter of Vriiah was not without a good end to wit to prevent the dishonour of Gods name in the discoverrie of his Adulterie with Bathsheba yet David was holy and precious to God still though like a jewell fallen into the dirt whereas K. Ahab though acting his fasting humiliation was but Ahab still though his Act in it selfe was a duty and found successe with God CHAP. LXIV Peace I Have often heard that Historie reports and I have heard that Mr. Cotton himselfe hat affirmed it that Christianitic fell asleep in Constantines bosome and the laps and bosomes of those Emperours professing the name of Christ. Truth The unknowing zeale of Constantine and other Emperours did more hurt to Christ Iesus his Crowne and Kingdome then the raging fury of the most bloody Neroes In the persecutions of the later Christians were sweet and fragrant like spice pounded and beaten in morters But those good Emperours persecuting some erroneous persons Arrius c. and advancing the professours of some Truths of Christ for there was no small number of Truths lost in those times and maintaining their Religion by the materiall Sword I say by this meanes Christianity was ecclipsed and the Professors of it fell asleep Cant. 5. Babel or confusion was usher'd in and by degrees the Gardens of the Churches of Saints were turned into the wildernesse of whole Nations untill the whole World became Christian or Christendome Revel 12. 13. Doubtlesse those holy men Emperours and Bishops intended and aimed right to exalt Christ but not attending to the Command of Christ Iesus to permit the Tares to grow in the field of the World they made the Garden of the Church and Field of the World to be all one and might not onely sometimes in their zealous mistakes persecute good wheat in stead of Tares but also pluck up thousands of those precious stalkes by commotions and combustions about Religion as hath been since practised in the great and wonderfull changes wrought by such Wars in many great and mighty States and Kingdomes as we heard even now in the Observation of the King of Bohemia CHAP. LXV Peace DEare Truth before you leave this passage concerning the Emperours I shall desire you to glance your eye on this not unworthy observation to wit how fully this worthy Answerer hath learned to speake the roaring language of Lyon-like Persecution far from the purity and peaceablenesse of the Lambe which he was wont to expresse in England For thus he writes More and greater Princes then these you mention saith he have not tolerated Hereticks and Schismaticks notwithstanding their pretence of Conscience and their arrogating the Crown of Martyrdome to their suff●ings Truth Thy tender eare and heart sweet Peace endures not such language 'T is true that these termes Hereticks or wilfully obstinate and Schismaticks or Renders are used in Holy Writ 't is true also that such pretend conscience and challenge the crowne of Martyrdome to their suffrings Yet since as King Iames spake in his Marke of a false Church on Revel 20. the Wicked persecute and besiege and the Godly are persecuted and besieged this is the common clamour of Persecuters against the Messengers and Witnesses of Iesus in all Ages viz. You are Hereticks Schismaticks factious seditious rebellious Have not all Truths witnesses heard such reproaches You pretend conscience You say you are persecuted for Religion You will say you are Martyrs Oh it is hard for Gods children to fall to opinion and practice of Persecution without the ready learning the language thereof And doubtlesse that Soule that can so readily speake Babels language hath cause to fear that he hath not yet in point of Worship left the Gates or Suburbs of it Peace Againe in blaming Iulian and Valens the Arrian for tolerating all weeds to grow he notes their sinfull end that thereby they might choake the vitals of Christianity and seemes to consent in this and other passages foregoing and following on a speech of Ierome that the weeds of false Religions tolerated in the world have a power to choake and kill true Christianity in the Church Truth I shall more fully answer to this on Ieromes speech and shew that if the weeds be kept out of the Garden of the Church the Roses and Lilies therein will flourish notwithstanding that weeds abound in the Field of the Civill State When Christianity began to be choaked it was not when Christians lodged in cold Prisons but Downe beds of ease and persecuted others c. CHAP. LXVI Peace HE ends this passage with approbation of Q. Elizabeth for persecuting the Papists and a reproofe to King Iames for his persecuting the Puritans c. Truth I answer if Queene Elizabeth according to the Answerers Tenent and Conscience did well to persecute according to her conscience King Iames did not ill in persecuting according to his For Mr. Cotton must grant that either King Iames was not fit to be a King had not the essentiall qualifications of a King in not being able rightly to judge who ought to be persecuted and who not or else he must confesse that King Iames and all Magistrates must persecute such whom in their Conscience they judge worthy to be persecuted I say it againe though I neither approve Queen Elizabeth or K. Iames in such their persecutions yet such as hold this Tenent of persecuting for Conscience must also hold that Civill Magistrates are not essentially fitted and qualified for their function and office except they can discerne clearly the difference betweene such as are to be punished and persecuted and such as are not Or else if they be essentially qualified without such a religious spirit of discerning and yet must persecute the Hereticke the Schismaticke c. must they not persecute according to their conscience and perswasion And then doubtlesse though he bee excellent for Civill Government may he easily as Paul did ignorantly persecute the Son of God in stead of the Son of perdition Therefore lastly according to Christ
each others Church or Meeting CHAP. LXXIV Peace THe next passage in the Author which the Answerer descends unto is the testimony of the Papists themselves a lively and shining testimony from Scriptures alledged both against themselves and all that associate with them as power is in their hand in such unchristian and bloody both tenents and practices As for the testimony of the Popish booke saith he we weight it not as knowing what ever they speake for toleration of Religion where themselves are under Hatches when they come to sit at Stern they judge and practise quite contrary as both their writings and judiciall proceedings have testified to the world these many yeares Truth I answer although both writings and practices have been such yet the Scriptures and expressions of truth alledged and uttered by them speake loud and fully for them when they are under the Hatches that for their conscience and religion they should not there be choaked and smothered but suffered to breathe and walke upon the Deckes in the ayre of civill liberty and conversation in the Ship of the commonwealth upon good assurance given of civill obedience to the civill State Againe if this practice bee so abominable in his eyes from the Papists viz. that they are so partiall as to persecute when they sit at Helme and yet cry out against persecution when they are under the Hatches I shall beseech the Righteous Judge of the whole world to present as in a Water or Glasse where face answereth to face the faces of the Papist to the Protestant answering to each other in the samenesse of partiality both of this doctrine and practice When Mr. Cotton and others have formerly been under hatches what sad and true complaints have they abundantly powred forth against persecution How have they opened that heavenly Scripture Cant 4. 8. Where Christ Iesus calls his tender Wife and Spouse from the fellowship with persecutors in their dens of Lions and mountaines of Leopards But comming to the Helme as he speaks of the Papists how both by preaching writing Printing practice doe they themselves I hope in their persons Lambes unnaturally and partially expresse toward others the cruell nature of such Lions and Leopards O that the God of Heaven might please to tell them how abominable in his eyes are a waight and a waight a stone and a stone in the bag of waights one waight for themselves when they are under Hatches and another for others when they come to Helme Nor shall their confidence of their being in the truth which they judge the Papists and others are not in no nor the Truth it selfe priviledge them to persecute others and to exempt themselves from persecution because as formerly First it is against the nature of true Sheep to persecute or hunt the Beasts of the Forrest no not the same Wolves who formerly have persecuted themselves Secondly if it be a duty and charge upon all Magistrates in all parts of the World to judge and persecute in and for spirituall causes then either they are no Magistrates who are not able to judge in such cases or else they must judge according to their Consciences whether Pagan Turkish or Antichristian Lastly notwithstanding their confidence of the truth of their owne way yet the experience of our Fathers errours our owne mistakes and ignorance the sense of our own weaknesses and blindnesse in the depths of the prophesies mysteries of the Kingdom of Christ and the great professed expectation of light to come which we are not now able to comprehend may abate the edge yea sheath up the sword of persecution toward any especially such as differ not from them in doctrines of repentance or faith or holinesse of heart and life and hope of glorious and eternall union to come but only in the way and manner of the administrations of Iesus Christ. CHAP. LXXV Peace TO close this head of the testimony of Writers it pleaseth the Answerer to produce a contrary testimony of Austin Optatus c. Truth I readily acknowledge as formerly I did concerning the testimony of Princes that Antichrist is too hard for Christ at votes and numbers yea and beleeve that in many points wherein the servants of God these many hundred yeares have beene fast asleep superstition and persecution have had more suffrages and votes from Gods owne people then hath either been honourable to the Lord or peaceable to their owne or the soules of others Therefore not to derogate from the pretious memory of any of them let us briefly consider what they have in this point affirmed To begin with Austin They murther saith he soules and themselves are afflicted in body and they put men to everlasting death and yet they complaine when themselves are put to temporall death I answer This Rhetoricall perswasion of humane wisdome seems very reasonable in the eye of flesh and blood but one Scripture more prevailes with faithfull and obedient soules then thousands of plausi●le and eloquent speeches in particular First the Scripture useth soule-killing in a large sense not only for the teaching of false prophets and seducers but even for the offensive walking of Christians in which respect 1 Cor. 8. a true Christian may be guilty of destroying a soule for whom Christ died and therefore by this rule ought to be hanged burned c. Secondly That plausible similitude will not prove that every false teaching or false practice actually kills the soule as the body is slaine and slaine but once for soules infected or bewitched may againe recover 1 Cor. 5. Gal. 5. 2 Tim. 2. c. Thirdly for soule-killings yea also for soule-woundings and grievings Christ Iesus hath appointed remedies sufficient in his Church There comes forth a two edged sword out of his mouth Rev. 1. and Rev. 2 able to cut downe Heresie as is confest yea and to kill the Hereticke yea and to punish his soule everlastingly which no sword of steele can reach unto in any punishment comparable or imaginable and therefore in this case we may say of this spirituall soule-killing by the sword of Christs mouth as Paul concerning the incestuous person 2 Cor. 2. Sufficient is this punishment c. Fourthly Although no Soule-killers nor Soule-grievers may be suffred in the Spirituall State or Kingdome of Christ the Church yet he hath commanded that such should be suffered and permitted to be and live in the World as I have proved on Matth. 13. otherwise thousands and millions of soules and bodies both must be murthered and cut off by civill combustions and bloody warres about Religion Fifthly I argue thus The Soules of all men in the World are either naturally dead in Sin or alive in Christ. If dead in sinne no man can kill them no more then he can kill a dead man Nor is it a false Teacher or false Religion that can so much prevent the means of Spirituall life as one of these
two Either the force of a material sword imprisoning the Soules of men in a State or Nationall Religion Ministery or Worship Or secondly Civill warres and combustions for Religion sake whereby men are immediately cut off without any longer meanes of Repentance Now againe for the Soules that are alive in Christ he hath graciously appointed Ordinances powerfully sufficient to maintaine and cherish that life Armour of proofe able to defend them against men and devils Secondly the Soule once alive in Christ is like Christ himselfe Revel 1. alive for ever Rom. 6. and cannot die a spirituall death Lastly Grant a man to be a false Teacher an Heretick a Balaam a Spirituall Witch a Wolfe a Persecuter breathing out blasphemies against Christ and slaughters against his followers as Paul did Act. 9. I say these who appeare Soule-killers to day by the grace of Christ may prove as Paul Soule-savers to morrow and saith Paul to Timothy 1 Tim. 4. thou shalt save thy selfe and them that heare thee which all must necessarily be prevented if all that comes within the sense of these Soule-killers must as guilty of blood be corporally kill'd and put to death CHAP. LXVI Peace DEare Truth your Answers are so satisfactorie to Austins speech that if Austin himselfe were now living me thinkes he should be of your mind I pray descend to Optatus who saith the Answerer justifies Macharius for putting some Hereticks to death affirming that he had done no more herein then what Moses Phineas and Elias had done before him Truth Th●se are shafts usually drawne from the Quiver of the Ceremoniall and typicall state of the Nationall Church of the Iewes whose shadowish and figurative state vanished at the appearing of the Body and substance the Sun of Righteousnesse who set up another Kingdome or Church Heb. 12. Ministrie and Worship in which we finde no such Ordinance precept or president of killing men by Materiall Swords for Religion sake More particularly concerning Moses I quaerie what commandement or practice of Moses either Optatus or the Answerer here intend Probably that passage of Deut. 13. wherein Moses appointed a slaughter either of a person or a city that should depart from the God of Israel with whom that Nationall Church was in Covenant And if so I shall particularly reply to that place in my Answer to the Reasons hereunder mentioned Concerning Phineas his zealous Act First his slaying of the Israelitish man and woman of Midian was not for spirituall but corporall filthines Secondly no man will produce his fact as presidentiall to any Minister of the Gospel so to act in any Civill state or Commonweale although I believe in the Church of God it is presidentiall for either Minister or people to kill and slay with the two-edged sword of the Spirit of God any such bold and open presumptuous sinners as these were Lastly concerning Eliah There were two famous acts of Eliah of a killing nature First that of slaying 850 of Baals Prophets 1 Kings 18. Secondly of the two Captaines and their Fifties by fire c. For the first of these it cannot figure or type out any materiall slaughter of the many thousands of false Prophets in the World by any materiall sword of Iron or Steele for as that passage was miraculous so finde we not any such commission given by the Lord Iesus to the Ministers of the Gospel And lastly such a slaughter must not only extend to all the false prophets in the World but according to the Answerers grounds to the many thousands of thousands of Idolaters and false worshippers in the Kingdomes and Nations of the World For the second Act of Eliah as it was also of a miraculous nature So secondly when the followers of the Lord Iesus Luc. 9. proposed such a practice to the Lord Iesus for injury offered to his owne person he disclaimed it with a milde checke to their angry spirits telling them plainly they knew not what spirits they were of and addeth that gentle and mercifull conclusion That he came not to destroy the bodies of men as contrarily Antichrist doth alledging these instances from the Old Testament as also Peters killing Anania● Acts 5. and Peters vision and voice Arise Peter kill and eat Acts. 10. CHAP. LXXVII Peace YOu have so satisfied these instances brought by Optatus that me thinks Optatus and the Answerer himself might rest satisfied I will not trouble you with Bernards argument from Rom. 13. which you have already on that Scripture so largely answered But what thinke you lastly of Calvin Beza and Aretius Truth Ans. Since matters of fact and opinion are barely related by the Answerer without their grounds whose grounds notwithstanding in this Discourse are answered I answer if Paul himself were joyned with them yea or an Angel from Heaven bringing any other rule then what the Lord Jesus hath once delivered we have Pauls conclusion and resolution peremptory and dreadfull Gal. 1. 8. Peace This passage finished let me finish the whole by proposing one conclusion of the Author of the arguments viz. It is no prejudice to the Commonwealth if Liberty of Conscience were suffered to such as feare God indeed Abraham abode a long time amongst the Cananites yet contrary to them in Religion Gen. 13. 7. 16. 13. Againe he s●journed in Gerar and King Abimel●ch gave him leave to abide in his Land Gen. 20. 21. 23. 24. Isaack also dwelt in the same Land yet contrary in Religion Gen. 26. Iacob lived 20 yeares in one house with his Unkle Laban yet differed in Religion Gen. 31. The people of Israel were about 430 yeares in that infamous land of Egypt and afterwards 70 yeares in Babylon all which times they differed in Religion from the States Exod. 12. 2 Chron. 36. Come to the time of Christ where Israel was under the Romanes where lived divers Sects of Religion as Herodians Scribes and Pharises Saduces and Libertines Theudaeans and Samaritanes beside the Common Religion of the Jews Christ and his Apostles All which differed from the Common Religion of the State which was like the Worship of Diana which almost the whole World then worshipped Acts 19. 20. All these lived under the Government of Caesar being nothing hurtfull unto the Commonwealth giving unto Caesar that which was his And for their Religion and Consciences towards God he left them to themselves as having no dominion over their Soules and Consciences And when the Enemies of the Truth raised up any tumults the wisedome of the Magistrate most wisely appeased them Acts 18 14. 19. 35. Unto this the Answerer returnes thus much It is true that without prejudice to the Common-wealth Libertie of Conscience may be suffered to such as feare God indeed as knowing they will not persist in Heresie or turbulent Schisme when they are convinced in Conscience of the sinfulnes thereof But the question is whether an Heretick after once or twice Admonition and so after
Church of Christ abideth and secondly the Commonweale may be in perfect peace and quiet notwithstanding the Church the Commonweale of Christ be in distractions● and spirituall oppositions both against their Religions and sometimes amongst themselves as the Church of Christ in Corinth troubled with divisions contentions c. Secondly I observe it is true the Church helpeth forward the prosperity of the Commonweale by spirituall meanes Ier. 29. 7. The prayers of Gods people procure the peace of the City where they abide yet that Christs Ordinances and administrations of Worship are appointed and given by Christ to any Civill State Towne or City as is implied by the instance of Geneva that I confidently deny The Ordinances and Discipline of Christ Iesus though wrongfully and prophanely applied to naturall and unregenerate men may cast a blush of civillity and morality upon them as in Geneva and other places for the shining brightnesse of the very shadow of Christs Ordinances casts a shame upon barbarisme and incivillity yet withall I affirme that the misapplication of Ordinances to unregenerate and unrepentant persons hardens up their soules in a dreadfull sleep and dreame of their owne blessed estate and sends millions of soules to hell in a secure expectation of a false salvation CHAP. LXXXIV The second head concerning Superiority of each Power Peace BEcause contention may arise in future times which of these Powers under Christ is the greatest as it hath been under Antichrist we conceive first That the power of the Civill Magistrates is superiour to the Church policie in place honours dignity earthly power in the World and the Church superiour to him being a member of the Church Ecclesiastically that is in a Church way ruling and ordering him by Spirituall Ordinances according to God for his soules health as any other member so that all the power the Magistrate hath over the Church is temporall not spirituall and all the power the Church hath over the Magistrate is spirituall not temporall And as the Church hath no temporall power over the Magistrate in ordine ad bonum spirituale So the Magistrate hath no Spirituall power over the Church in ordine ad bonum temporale Secondly the delinquencie of either party calleth for the exercise of the power of terrour from the other part for no Rulers ordained of God are a terrour to good works but to evill Rom. 13. 3. So that if the Church offend the offence of the Church c●lleth upon the Civill Magistrate either to seeke the healing thereof as a nursing father by his owne grave advice and the advice of other Churches or else if he cannot so prevaile to put forth and exercise the superiority of his power in redressing what is amisse according to the quality of the offence by the course of civill Justice On the other side if the Magistrate being a member of the Church shall offend the offence calleth upon the Church either to seek the healing thereof in a brotherly way by conviction of his sinne or else if they cannot prevaile then to exercise the superiority of their power in removing of the offence and recovering of the offendour by Church censures If the end of Spirituall or Church power is bonum spirituale a spirituall good and the end of Civill or State power is bonum temporale a temporall good And secondly if the Magistrate have no spirituall power to attaine to his temporall end no more then a Church hath any temporall power to attaine to her Spirituall end as is confest I demand if this be not a contradiction against their owne disputes tenents and practices touching that question of persecution for cause of conscience For if the Magistrate be supreme Iudge and so consequently give supreme judgement sentence and determination in matters of the first Table and of the Church and be custos utriusque Tabule keepers of both Tables as they speake and yet have no Spirituall power as is affirmed how can he determine what the true Church and Ordinances are and then set them up with the power of the Sword How can he give judgement of a false Church a false Ministery a false Doctrine false Ordinances and with a Civil Sword pull them down if he have no Spiritual power authority or commission from Christ Iesus for these ends and purposes Further I argue thus If the civill officers of State must determine judge and punish in Spiritual causes his power authority and commission must be either Spirituall or Civill or else he hath none at all and so acts without a commission and warrant from the Lord Iesus and so consequently stands guilty at the Bar of Christ Iesus to answer for such his practice as a transcendent Delinquent Now for civill power these worthy Authors confesse that the Government of the civill Magistrate extendeth no further then over the bodies and goods of the Subject and therefore hath no civill power over the Soule and therefore say I not in Soule-causes Secondly It is here confest in this passage that to attaine his Civill end or Bonum temporale he hath no Spirituall power and therefore of necessitie out of their own mouths must they be judged for provoking the Magistrate without either Civill or Spirituall power to judge punish and persecute in Spirituall causes and to feare and tremble lest they come neere those frogs which proceed out of the mouth of the Dragon and Beast and false Prophet who by the same Arguments which the Authours here use stirre up the Kings of the Earth to make warre against the Lambe Christ Iesus and his Followers Revel 17. CHAP. LXXXV IN the next place I observe upon the point of Delinquencie such a confusion as Heaven and Earth may stand amazed at If the Church offend say they after advice refused in conclusion the Magistrate must redresse that is punish the Church that is in Church offences and cases by a course of Civill justice On the other side if the Civill Magistrate offend after Admonition used and not prevailing in conclusion the Church proceeds to censure that is to Excommunication as is afterward more largely proved by them Now I demand if the Church be a Delinquent who shall judge It is answered the Magistrate Againe if the Magistrate be a Delinquent I aske who shall judge It is answered the Church Whence I observe which is monstrous in all cases in the World that one person to wit the Church or Magistrate shall be at one time the Delinquent at the Bar and the Iudge upon the Bench. This is cleere thus The Church must judge when the Magistrate offends and yet the Magistrate must judge when the Church offends and so consequently in this case must judge whether she contemne Civill Authority in the Second Table for thus dealing with him Or whether she have broken the rules of the first Table of which say they God hath made him Keeper and Conserver And therefore though the
Church make him a Delinquent at the Bar yet by their confession God hath made him a Iudge on the Bench. What blood what tumults hath been and must be spilt upon these grounds Peace Deare Truth No question but the Church may punish the Magistrate spiritually in spirituall cases and the Magistrate may punish the Church civilly in civill cases But that for one and the same cause the Church must punish the Magistrate and the Magistrate the Church this seemes monstrous and needs explication Truth Sweet Peace I illustrate with this Instance A true Church of Christ of which according to the Authors supposition the Magistrate is a member chooseth and calls one of her members to office The Magistrate opposeth The Church perswaded that the Magistrates exceptions are insufficient according to her priviledge which these Authours maintaine against the Magistrates prohibition proceeds to Ordaine her officer The Magistrate chargeth the Church to have made an unfit and unworthy choice and therefore according to his place and power and according to his conscience and judgement he suppresseth such an officer and makes void the Churches choice Upon this the Church complaines against the Magistrates violation of her priviledges● given her by Christ Iesus and cries out that the Magistrate is turned Persecuter● and not prevailing with admonition she proceeds to Excommunication against him The Magistrate according to his conscience endures not such profanation of Ordinances as he conceives and therefore if no advice and admonition prevaile he proceeds against such obstinate abusers of Christs holy Ordinances as the Authors grant he may in Civill Court of justice yea and I adde according to the patterne of Israel cuts them off by the sword as obstinate usurpers and prophaners of the holy things of Christ. I demand what helpe hath any poore Church of Christ in this case by maintaining this power of the Magistrate to punish the Church of Christ I meane in spirituall and Soule-cases for otherwise I question not but he may put all the members of the Church to death justly if they commit crimes worthy thereof as Paul spake Acts 23. Shall the Church here slie to the Popes Sanctuarie against Emperours and Princes excommunicate to wit give away their crowns kingdomes or dominions and invite forraigne Princes to make War upon them and their Territories The Authors surely will disclaime this and yet I shall prove their Tenents tend directly unto such a practise Or secondly shall she say the Magistrate is not a true Magistrate ' because not able to judge and determine in such cases This their confession will not give them leave to say because they cannot deny unbelievers to be lawfull Magistrates and yet it shall appeare not withstanding their con●ession to the contrary their Tenents imply that none but a Magistrate after their own conscience is a lawfull Magistrate Therefore thirdly they must ingenuously and honestly confesse that if it be the duty of the Magistrate to punish the Church in spirituall cases he must then judge according to his conscience and perswasion whatever his conscience be and then let all men judge into what a wofull state they bring both the civill Magistrate and Church of Christ by such a Church-destroying and State-destroying Doctrine Peace Some will here say in such a case either the Magistrate on the Church must judge either the Spirituall or Civill State must be supreme I answer if the Magistrate be of another Religion First What hath the Church to judge him being without 1 Cor. 5. Secondly If he be a member of the Church● doubtles the Church hath power to judge in spirituall and Soule-cases with spirituall and Church censures all that are within 1● Cor. 5. Thirdly If the Church offend against the civill peace of the State by wronging the bodies or goods of any the Magistrate bears not the sword in vaine Rom. 13. to correct any or all the members of the Church And this I conceive to be the onely way of the God of Peace CHAP. LXXXVI The third head concerns the End of both these Powers FIrst the common and last end of both is Gods glory and Mans eternall felicitie Secondly the proper ends First of Commonwealth is the procuring preserving increasing of externall and temporall peace and felicitie of the State in all Godlines and Honestie 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Secondly of the Church a begetting preserving increasing of internall and spirituall peace and felicity of the Church in all godlinesse and honesty Esay 2. 3 4. and 9. 7. So that Magistrates have power given them from Christ in matters of Religion because they are bound to see that ou●ward peace be preserved not in all ungodlinesse and dishonesty For such peace is Satanicall but in all godlinesse and honesty for such peace God aymes at And hence the Magistrate is custos of both the Tables of godlinesse in the first of Honesty in the second for Peace sake Hee must see that honesty be preserved within his jurisdiction or else the subject will not be bonus Cives Hee must see that godlinesse as well as honesty be preserved else the subject will not be bonus vir who is the best bonus cives Hee must see that godlinesse and honesty be preserved or else himselfe will not bee bonus Magistratus Truth In this passage here are divers particulars affirmed marvellous destructive both to godlinesse and honesty though under a faire ma●ke and colour of both First it will appeare that in spirituall things they make the Garden and the Wildernesse as often I have intimated I say the Garden and the Wildernesse the Church and the World are all one for thus If the Powers of the World or Civill State are bound to propose externall Peace in all godlinesse for their end and the end of the Church be to preserve internall Peace in all godlinesse I demand if their end godlinesse● bee the same is not their power and state the same also unlesse they make the Church subordinate to the Common-wealths and or the Commonweale subordinate to the Churches end which being the governour and setter up of it and so consequently the Iudges of it it cannot be Now i● godlinesse bee the worshipping and walking with God in Christ is not the Magistrate and Commonweale charged more by this tenent with the worship and Ordinances of God then the Church for the Magistrate they charge with the externall peace in godlinesse and the Church but with the internall I aske further what is this internall peace in all godlinesse whether intend they internall within the Soule which onely the eye of God can see opposed to externall or visible which man also can discerne or else whether they meane internall that is spirituall soule matters ma●ters of Gods Worship and then I say that peace to wit of godlinesse or Gods worship they had before granted to the civill State Peace The Truth is as I now perceive the best and most godly of
from them according to their office as it pleased God alwayes to send to the Kings of Israel and Judah in the like case Peace Some will here object Pauls appealing to Caesar. Truth And I must refer them to what I formerly answered to that Objection Paul never appealed to Caesar as a Judge appointed by Christ Jesus to give definitive sentence in any spirituall or Church controversie but against that civill violence and murther which the Iewes intended against him Paul justly appealed For otherwise if in a spirituall cause he should have appealed he should have overthrowne his owne Apostleship and Power given him by Christ Iesus in spirituall things above the highest Kings or Emperors of the world beside CHAP. XC Peace BLessed Truth I shall now remember you of the fourth Quaerie upon this place of Timothy to wit whether a Church of Christ Iesus may not live in Gods worship and comelinesse notwithstanding that the civill Magistrate professe not the same but a contrary Religion and Worship in his owne person and the Country with him Truth I answer the Churches of Christ under the Roman Emperours did live in all godlinesse and christian gravity as appeares by all their holy and glorious practices which the Scripture abundantly testifies Secondly this ●lowes from an institution or appointment of such a power and authority left by the Lord Iesus to his Apostles and Churches that no ungodlinesse or dishonesty in the first appearance of it was to be suffered but supprest and cast out from the Churches of Christ even the little Leaven of doctrine or practice 1 Corinth 5. Gal. 5. Lastly I adde that although sometimes it pleaseth the Lord to vouchsafe his servants peace and quietnesse and to command them here in Timothy to pray for it for those good ends and purposes for which God hath appointed civill Magistracy in the world to keepe the world in peace and quietnesse Yet Gods people have used most to abound with godlinesse and honesty when they have enjoyed least peace and quietnesse Then like those spices Cant. 4. Myrrhe Frankincense Saffron Calamus c. they have yeelded the sweetest favour to God and man when they were pounded and burnt in cruell persecution of the Romane Censors then are they as Gods Venison most sweet when most hunted Gods Stars shining brightest in the darkest night more heavenly in conversation more mortified more abounding in love each to other more longing to be with God when the inhospitable and salvage World hath used them like strangers and forced them to hasten home to another Country which they professe to seeke CHAP. XCI Peace DEare Truth it seemes not to be unseasonable to close up this passage with a short descant upon that Assertion viz. A subject without godlinesse will not be bonus vir a good man nor a Magistrate except he see godlinesse preserved will not be bonus Magistratus Truth I confesse that without godlinesse or a true w●rshipping of God with an upright heart according to Gods Ordinances neither Subjects nor Magistrates can please God in Christ Iesus and so be spiritually or christianly good which few Magistrates and few men either come to or are ordained unto God having chosen a little ●lock out of the world and those generally poore and meane 1 Cor. 1. Iam. 2. Yet this I must remember you of that when the most High God created all things of nothing he saw and acknowledged divers sorts of goodnesse which must still be acknowledged in their distinct kindes a good Ayre a good Ground a good Tree a good Sheepe c. I say the same in Artificialls a good Garment a good House a good Sword a good Ship I also adde a good City a good Company or Corporation a good Husband Father Master Hence also we say a good Physitian a good Lawyer a good Sea-man a good Merchant a good Pilot for such or such ● shoare or Harbour that is Morally Civilly good in their severall Civill respects and imployments Hence Psal. 133. the Church or Citie of God is compared to a Citie compact within it selfe which compactnes may be found in many Townes and Cities of the World where yet hath not shined any spirituall or supernaturall goodnesse Hence the Lord Iesus Matth. 12. describes an ill state of an house or kingdome viz. to be divided against it selfe which cannot stand These I observe to prove that a Subject a Magistrate may be a good Subject a good Magistrate in respect of civill or morall goodnes which thousands want and where it is it is commendable and beautifull though Godlines which is infinitely more beautifull be wanting and which is onely proper to the Christian state the Commonweale of Israel the true Church the holy Nation Ephes. 2. 1 Pet. 2. Lastly however the Authors deny that there can be Bonus Magistratus a good Magistrate except the see all Godlines preserved yet themselves confesse that civill honesty is sufficient to make a good Subject in these words viz. He must see that Honestie be preserved within his jurisdiction else the Subject will not be Bonus civ●s a good citizen and doubtlesse if the Law of Relations hold true that civill honestie which makes a good citizen must also together with qualifications sit for a Commander make also a good Magistrate CHAP. XCII Peace THe 4. head is The proper meanes of both these Powers to attaine their ends First the proper meanes whereby the Civill Power may and should attaine its end are onely Politicall and principally these Five First the erecting and establishing what forme of Civill Government may seeme in wisedome most meet according to generall rules of the Word and state of the people Secondly the making publishing and establishing of wholesome Civill Lawes not only such as concerne Civill Justice but also the free passage of true Religion for outward Civill Peace ariseth and is maintained from them both from the latter as well as from the former Civill peace cannot stand intire where Religion is corrupted 2 Chron. 15. 3. 5. 6. Iudg. 8. And yet such Lawes though conversant about Religion may still be counted Civill Lawes as on the contrary an Oath doth still remaine Religious though conversant about Civill matters Thirdly Election and appointment of Civill officers to see execution of those Lawes Fourthly Civill Punishments and Rewards of Transgressors and Observers of these Lawes Fifthly taking up Armes against the Enemies of Civill Peace Secondly the meanes whereby the Church may and should attaine her ends are only ecclesiasticall which are chiefly five First setting up that forme of Church Government only of which Christ hath given them a pattern in his Word Secondly acknowledging and admitting of no Lawgiver in the Church but Christ and the publishing of his Lawes Thirdly Electing and ordaining of such officers onely as Christ hath appointed in his Word Fourthly to receive into their fellowship them that are approved and in●licting Spirituall censures against them that offend
Fifthly Prayer and patience in suffering any evill from them that be without who disturbe their peace So that Magistrates as Magistrates have no power of setting up the Forme of Church Government electing Church officers punishing with Church censures but to see that the Church doth her duty herein And on the other side the Churches as Churches have no power though as members of the Common-weale they may have power of erecting or altering formes of Civill Government electing of Civill officers inflicting Civill punishments no not on persons excommunicate as by deposing Magistrates from their Civill Authoritie or withdrawing the hearts of the people against them to their Lawes no more then to discharge wives or children or servants from due obedience to their husbands parents or masters or by taking up armes against their Magistrates though he persecute them for Conscience for though members of Churches who are publique officers also of the Civill State may suppresse by force the violence of Usurpers as Iehoiada did Athaliah yet this they doe not as members of the Church but as officers of the Civill State Truth Here are divers considerable passages which I shall briefly examine so far as concernes o●r controversie First whereas they say that the Civill Power may erect and establish what forme of civill Government may seeme in wisedome most meet I acknowledge the proposition to be most true both in it self and also considered with the end of it that a civill Government is an Ordinance of God to conserve the civill peace of people so farre as concernes their Bodies and Goods as formerly hath beene said But from this Grant I infer as before hath been touched that the Soveraigne originall and foundation of civill power lies in the people whom they must needs meane by the civill power distinct from the Government set up And if so that a People may erect and establish what forme of Government seemes to them most meete for their civill condition It is evident that such Governments as are by them erected and established have no more power nor for no longer time then the civill power or people consenting and agreeing shall betrust them with This is cleere not only in Reason but in the experience of all common-weales where the people are not deprived of their naturall freedome by the power of Tyrants And if so that the Magistrates receive their power of governing the Church from the People undeniably it followes that a people as a people naturally considered of what Nature or Nation soever in Europe Asia Africa or America have fundamentally and originally as men a power to governe the Church to see her doe her duty to correct her to redresse reforme establish c. And if this be not to pull God and Christ and Spirit out of Heaven and subject them unto naturall sinfull inconstant men and so consequently to Sathan himselfe by whom all peoples naturally are guided let Heaven and Earth judge Peace It cannot by their owne Grant be denied but that the wildest Indians in America ought and in their kind and severall degrees doe to agree upon some formes of Government some more civill compact in Townes c. some lesse As also that their civill and earthly Governments be as lawfull and true as any Governments in the World and therefore consequently their Governors are Keepers of the Church or both Tables if any Church of Christ should arise or be amongst them and therefore lastly if Christ have betrusted and charged the civill Power with his Church they must judge according to their Indian or American consciences for other consciences it cannot be supposed they should have CHAP. XCIII Truth AGaine whereas they say that outward Civill peace cannot stand where Religion is corrupted and quote for it 2 Chron. 15. 3. 5. 6 Iudges 8. I answer with aam●ration how such excellent spirits as these Authors are furnished with not only in heavenly but earthly affaires should so forget and be so fast asleep in things so palpably evident as to say that outward civill peace cannot stand where Religion is corrupt When so many stately Kingdomes and Governments in the world have long and long enjoyed civill peace and quiet notwithstanding their Religion is so corrupt as that there is not the very Name of Iesus Christ amongst them And this every Historian Merchant Traveller in Europe● Asia Africa America can testifie for so spake the Lord Iesus himselfe Ioh. 16. The world shall sing and rejoyce Secondly for that Scripture 2 Chron. 15. 3 c relating the miseries of Israel and Iudah and Gods pla●es upon the people for corruption of their Religion it must still have refere●ce 〈◊〉 peculiar state unto which God called the seed of one man Abraham in a figure dealing so with them as he dealt not with any Nation in the World Psal. 1. ●6 Rom. 9. The Antitype to this State I have proved to be the Christian Church which consequently hath been and is ●fflict●d 〈◊〉 spirituall plagues desolations and captiviti●s for cor●upting of that Religion which hath been revealed unto them This appeares by the 7 Churches and the people of God now so many ●u●dre● yeares in wofull bondage and slaverte to the mysticall Babel untill the time of their joyfull deliverance Peace Yea but they say that such Lawes as are conversant about Religion may still be account●d Civill Lawes as on the contrary an Oath doth still remaine Religious though conversant about Civill matters Truth Lawes respecting Religion are two-fold First such as concerne the acts of Worship and the Worship it self the Ministers of it their fitnes or unfitnes to be suppressed or established and for such Lawes we find no footing in the New Testament of Jesus Christ. Secondly Lawes respecting Religion may be such as meerly concerne the Civill State Bodies and Goods of such and such persons professing these and these Religions viz● that such and such persons notorious for Mutinies Treasons● Rebellions Massacres be disarmed Againe that no persons Papists Iewes Turkes or Indians be disturbed at their worship a thing which the very Indians abhor to practice toward any Also that imanitie and freedome from Tax and Toll may be granted unto the people of such or such a Religion as the Magistrate pleaseth Ezra 7. These and such as are of this nature concerning only the bodies and goods of such and such Religious persons I confesse are meerely Ci●ill But now on the other hand that Lawes restraining persons from such and such a Worship because the Civill state judgeth it to be false That Laws constraining to such such a worship because the Civill State judgeth this to be the only ●rue way of worshipping God That such and such a Reformation of Worship be submitted unto by all Subjects in such a Iurisdiction That such and such Churches Ministers Ministries be pull● downe and such and such Churches Ministries and Ministrations set up That such
Lawes properly concerning Religion● God the Soules of men should be Civill Lawes and Constitutions is as far from Reason as that the Commandements of Paul which he gave the Churches concerning Christs worship 1 Cor. 11. 1 Cor. 14. were Civill and Earthly constitutions Or that the Canon and Constitutions of either oecum●nicall or Nationall synods concerning Religion should be Civill and State-conclusions and agreements To that instance of an Oath remaining rel●gious though conversant about civill things I answer and acknowledge an Oath may be spirituall though taken about earthly businesse and accordingly it will prove and onely prove what before I have said that a Law may be civill though it concerne persons of this and of that religion that is as the persons professing it are concerned in civill respects of b●dies or goods as I have opened whereas if it concerne the soules and religions of men simply so considered in reference to God it must of necessity put on the nature of a religious or spirituall ordinance or constitution Besides it is a most improper and fallacious instance for an oath being an invocation of a true or false God to judge in a case is an action of a spirituall and religious nature what ever the subject matter be about which it is taken whether civill or religious but a law or constitution may be civill or religious as the subject about which it is conversant is either civill meerly concerning bodies or goods or religious concerning soule and worship CHAP. XCIV Peace THeir fifth Head is concerning the Magistrates power in making of Lawes First they have power to publish and apply such Civill Lawes in a State as either are exprest in the Word of God in Moses Judicialls to wit so far as they are of generall and morall equity and so binding all Nations in all Ages to bee deducted by way of generall consequence and proportion from the word of God For in a free State no Magistrate hath power over the bodies goods lands liberties of a free people but by their free consents And because free men are not free Lords of their owne estates but are onely stewards under God therefore they may not give their free consents to any Magistrate to dispose of their bodies goods lands liberties at large as themselves please but as God the soveraigne Lord of all alone And because the Word is a perfect rule as wel of righteousnes as of holines it will be therefore necessary that neither the people give consent nor that the Magistrate take power to dispose of the bodies goods lands liberties of the people but according to the Lawes and Rules of the Word of God Secondly in making Lawes about civill and indifferent things about the Commonweale First he hath no power given him of God to make what laws he please either in restraining from or constraining to the use of indifferent things because that which is indifferent in its nature ma● sometimes bee inexpedient in its use and consequently unlawfull 1 Cor. 2. 5. it having been long since defended upon good ground Quicquid non expeait quatenus non expedit non licet Secondly he hath no power to make any such Lawes about indifferent things wherein nothing good or evill is shewne to the people but onely or principally the meere authority or wil of the imposer for the observance of them Colos. 2. 21 22. 1 Cor. 7. 23 compared with Ephes. 6. 6. It is a prerogative proper to God to require obedience of the sonnes of men because of his authority and will The will of no man is Regula recti unlesse first it bee Regula recta It is an evill speech of some that in some things the will of the Law not the ratio of it must be the Rule of Conscience to walke by and that Princes may forbid men to seeke any other reason but their authority yea when they command frivola dura And therefore it is the duty of the Magistrate in all lawes about indifferent things to shew the Reasons not onely the Will to shew the expediency as well as the indifferency of things of that nature For we conceive in Lawes of this nature it is not the will of the Lawgiver onely but the Reason of the Law which bindes Ratio est Rex Legis Lex est Rex Regis Thirdly because the judgement of expedient and inexpedient things is often difficult and diverse it is meet that such Lawes should not proceed without due consideration of the Rules of Expediency set downe in the Word which are these three First the rule of Piety that they may make for the glory of God 1 Cor. 10. 31. Secondly the rule of Charity that no scandall come hereby to any weake brother 1 Cor. 8. 13. Thirdly the Rule of Charity that no man be forced to submit against his conscience Rom. 14. 14. 23. nor be judged of contempt of lawfull Authority because he is not suddenly perswaded of the expediency of indifferent things for if the people be bound by God to receive such Lawes about such things without any triall or satisfaction to the conscience but must judge them expedient because the Magistrate thinkes them so then the one cannot be punished in following the other in case he shall sinne in c●lling Inexpedient Expedient but Christ saith the contrary If the blinde lead the blinde they shall both fall Truth In this passage these worthy Men lay downe such a ground as the gates of Hell are not able to shake concerning the Magistrates walking in indifferent things And upon which ground that Towre of Lebanon may be raised whereon there hang a thousand shields and bucklars Cant 4. to wit that invincible Truth That no man is to be persecuted for cause of conscience The ground is this The Magist●ate hath not power to make what Lawes he please either in restraining or constraining to the use of indifferent things And further he confesseth that the reason of the Law not the will of it must be the rule of conscience And they adde this impregnable reason viz. If the people be bound to receive such Lawes without satisfaction to conscience then one cannot be punished for following the other in case he shall sinne contrary to Christ Jesus who saith If the blinde lead the blinde they shall both fall Hence I argue If the Civill Magistrate have no power to restraine or constraine their subjects in things in their owne nature indifferent as in eating of meats wearing this or that garment using this or that gesture but that they are bound to try and examine his commands and satisfie their owne reason conscience and judgement before the Lord and that they shall sinne if they follow the Magistrates command not being perswaded in their owne soule and conscience that his commands are according to God! It will be much more unlawfull and heynous in the Magistrate to compell the subjects unto that which according to their consciences perswasion is
and Cities out of which all false worshippers and wicked persons were to be cut Rev. 2. 3. The Divells throne was in the City of Pergamus in respect of the state and persecution of it and yet there was also the Throne of the Lord Iesus set up in His Church of worshippers in Pergamus out of which the Balaamites and Nicholaitans and every false worshipper was to be cast though not out of the City of Pergamus for then Pergamus must have beene throwne out of Pergamus and the World out of the World CHAP. CI. Peace OH that my head were a fountaine and mine eyes River● of teares to lament my children the children of peace and light thus darkning that and other lightsome Scriptures with such darke and direfull clouds of bloud Truth Sweet Peace thy teares are seasonable and precious and botled up in the Heavens but let me adde a second consideration from that Scripture If that Scripture may now literally be applied to Nations and Cities in a parallel to Canaan and Ierusalem since the Gospel and this Psal. 101. be literally to be applied to Cities Townes and Countries in Europe and America not only such as assay to joyne themselves as they here speake in a corrupt Church estate but such as know no Church estate nor God nor Christ yea every wicked person and evill doer must be hanged or stoned c. as it was in Israel and if so how many thousands and millions of men and women in the severall Kingdomes and governments of the World must be cut off from their Lands and destroyed from their Cities as this Scripture speakes Thirdly since those persons in the New English plantations accounted unfit for Church estate yet remaine all members of the Church of England from which New England dares not separate no not in their Sacraments as some of the Independents have published what riddle or mysterie or rather fallacie of Sathan is this Peace It will not be offence to charity to make conjecture First herein New England Churches secretly call their Mother whore not daring in America to joyne with their owne Mothers children though unexcommunicate no nor permit them to worship God after their consciences and as their Mother hath taught them this secretly and silently they have a minde to doe which publickly they would seem to disclaime and professe against Secondly If such members of Old England should be suffered to enjoy their consciences in New however it is pretended they would profane Ordinances for which they are unfit as true it is in that naturall persons are not fit for Spirituall worship yet this appears not to be the bottome for in Old England the New English joyne with Old in the ministrations of the Word Prayer singing contribution maintenance of the Ministrie c. if I say they should set up Churches after their conscience the greatnesse and multitudes of their owne Assemblies would decay and with all the contributions and maintenance of their Ministers unto which all or most have beene forced Truth Deare Peace These are more then conjectures thousands now espie and all that love the purity of the worship of the living God should lament such halting I shall adde this not only doe they partially neglect to cut off the wicked of the Land but such as themselves esteemed beloved and goldy have they driven forth and keep out others which would come unto them eminently godly by their owne confession because differing in conscience and worship from them and consequently not to be suffered in their holy Land of Canaan But having examined that Scripture alledged let us now weigh their Reasons First say they the not cutting off by the sword but tolerating many Religions in a State would provoke God unto which I answer first and here being no Scripture produced to these Reasons shall the sooner answer that no proofe can be made from the Institutions of the Lord Iesus that all Religions but one are to be cut off by the Civill Sword that Nationall Church in that typicall Land of Canaan being abolished and the Christian Commonweale or Church instituted Secondly I affirme that the cutting off by the Sword other Consciences and Religions is contrarily most provoking unto God expressely against his will concerning the Tares Matth. 13. as I have before proved as also the bloudy mother of all those monstrous mischiefes where such cutting off is used both to the soules and bodies of men Thirdly let conscience and experience speake how in the not cutting off their many Religions it hath pleased God not only not to be provoked but to prosper the state of the united Provinces our next neighbours and that to admiration Peace The second reason is such tolerating would leaven divide and destroy the peace of the Churches Truth This must also be denied upon so many former Scriptures Reasons produced proving the power of the Lord Iesus and the sufficiencie of his Spirituall power in his Church for the purging forth and conquering of the least evill yea and for the bringing every thought in subjection unto Christ Iesu 2 Cor. 10. I adde they have not produced one Scripture nor can to prove that the permitting to leaven of false doctrine in the World or Civill State will leaven the Churches only we finde that the permission of leaven in persons doctrines or practices in the Church that indeed will corrupt and spread 1. Cor. 5. Gal. 5. but this Reason should never have been alledged were not the particular Churches in New England but as so many implicite Parish Churches in one implicite National Church Peace Their third Reason is it will dissolve the continuity of the State especially theirs where the walls are made of the stones of the Churches Truth I answer briefly to this bare affirmation thus that the true Church is a wall spirituall and mysticall Cant. 8. 9. Then consequently a false Church or Company is a false or pretended wall and none of Christs The civill State Power and Government is a civill wall c. and Lastly the walls of Earth or stone about a City are the naturall or artificiall wall or defence of it Now in consideration of these foure wals I desire it may be proved from the Scripture of Truth how the false spirituall wall or company of false worshippers suffred in a City can be able to destroy the true Christian wall or company of beleevers Againe how this false spirituall wall or false Church permitted can destroy the civill wall the State and Government of the City and Citizens any more then it can destroy the naturall or artificiall wall of earth or stone Spirituall may destroy spirituall if a stronger and victorious but spirituall cannot reach to artificiall or civill Peace Yea but they feare the false spirituall wall may destroy their civill because it is made of the stones of Churches Truth If this have reference to that practice amongst them
viz. that none but members of Churches enjoy civill freedome amongst them ordinarily in imitation of that Nationall Church and State of the Iewes then I answer they that follow Moses Church constitution which the New English by such a practice implicitely doe must cease to pretend to the Lord Iesus Christ and his institutions Secondly we shall finde lawfull civill State both before and since Christ Iesus in which we finde not any tidings of the true God our Christ. Lastly their civill New English State framed out of their Churches may yet stand subsist and flourish although they did as by the word of the Lord they ought permit either Iewes or Turkes or Antichristians to live amongst them subject unto their Civill Government CHAP. CII Peace ONe branch more viz. the third remaines of this Head and it concerns the hearing of the Word unto which say they all men are to be compelled because hearing of the word is a duty which even Nature leadeth Heathens to for this they quote the practice of the Ninevites hea●ing Ionah and Eglo● King of Moab his rising up to Ehuds pretended message from God Iudg 3. Truth I must deny that position for light of Nature leadeth men to heare that onely which Nature conceiveth to be good for it and therefore not to heare a Messenger Minister or Preacher whom conscience perswades is a false messenger or deceiver and comes to deceive my soule as Millions of men and women in their severall respective religions and consciences are so perswaded conceiving their owne to be true Secondly as concerning the instances Ionah did not compell the Ninevites to heare that message which he brought unto them Besides the matter of compulsion to a constant worship of the world in Church estate which is the Question comes not neare Ionahs case Nor did Christ Iesus or any of his Embassadours so practice but if persons refused to heare the command of the Lord Iesus to his Messengers was onely to depart from them shaking off the dust of their feet with a denunciation of Gods wrath against them Math. 10. Act. 14. Concerning Eglon his rising up First Eh●d compelled not that King either to heare or reverence and all that can bee imitable in Eglon is a voluntary and willing reverence which persons ought to expresse to what they are perswaded comes from God But how doe both these instances mightily convince and condemne themselves who not onely professe to turne away from but also persecute or hunt all such as shall dare to professe a Ministry or Church estate differing from their owne though for personall godlinesse and excellency of gifts reverenced by themselves Thirdly to the point of compulsion It hath pleased the Lord Iesus to appoint a two fold Ministry of his Word First for unbeleevers and their conversion according to Math. 28. 19. Marc. 16 15 16. and the constant practice of the Apostles in the first preaching of the Gospel Secondly a Ministry of feeding and nourishing up such as are converted and brought into Church estate according to Ephes. 4. c. Now to neither of these doe we finde any compulsion appointed by the Lord Iesus or practised by any of his The compulsion preached and practised in New England is not to the hearing of that Ministry sent forth to convert unbeleevers and to constitute Churches for such a Ministry they practise not but to the hearing of the word of edification exhortation consolation dispenced onely in the Churches of worshippers I apply When Paul came first to Corinth to preach Christ Iesus by their Rule the Magistrates of Corinth ought by the Sword to have compelled all the people of Corinth to heare Paul Secondly after a Church of Christ was gathered by their rule the Magistrates of Corinth ought to have compelled the people still even those who had refused his Doctrine for the few onely of the Church embraced it to have heard the Word still and to have kept one day in seven to the Christians God and to have come to the Christians Church all their dayes And what is this but a setled formality of Religion and Worship unto which a people are brought by the power of the sword And however they affirme that persons are not to be compelled to be members of Churches nor the Church compelled to receive any Yet if persons be compelled to forsake their Religion which their hearts cleave to and to come to Church to the worship of the Word Prayers Psalmes and Contributions and this all their dayes I aske whether this be not this peoples Religion unto which submitting they shall be quiet all their dayes without the inforcing them to the practice of any other Religion And if this bee not so then I aske Will it not inevitably follow that they not onely permit but enforce people to bee of no Religion at all all their dayes This toleration of Religion or rather irreligious compulsion is above all tolerations monstrous to wit to compell men to bee of no Religion all their dayes I desire all men and these worthy Authors of this Modell to lay their hands upon their heart and to consider whether this compulsion of men to heare the Word as they say whether it carries men to wit to be of no Religion all their dayes worse then the very Indians who dare not live without Religion according as they are perswaded Lastly I adde from the Ordinance of the Lord Iesus and practice of the Apostles Acts 2. 42. where the Word and Prayer is joyned with the exercise of their fellowship and breaking of Bread in which Exercises the Church continued constantly that it is apparent that a Civill State may as lawfully compell men by the civill sword to the breaking of bread or Lords Supper as to the Word or Prayer or Fellowship For first they are all of the same nature Ordinances in the Church I speake of the feeding Ministrie in the Church unto which persons are compell'd and Church Worship Secondly every conscience in the World is fearfull at least shie of the Priests and Ministers of other Gods and Worships and of holding Spirituall fellowship in any of their Services Which is the case of many a Soule viz. to question the Ministers themselves as well as the Supper it selfe CHAP. CIII Peace DEare Truth This pressing of men to the Spirituall Battels of Christ Jesus is the cause why as it is commonly with prest Souldiers that so many thousands flie in the day of Battell But I present you with the 9. Question viz. What power the Magistrate hath in providing of Church-Officers First say they the Election of Church officers being the proper Act of the Church therefore the Magistrate hath no power either as Prince or Patron to assume such power unto himselfe When Christ sends to preach by his supreme power the Magistrate may send forth by his power subordinate to gather Churches and may force people to heare
Christs mouth a sword with two edges But more particularly the contributions of Christs Kingdome are all holy and spirituall though consisting of materiall earthly substance as is Water in Baptisme Bread and Wine in the Supper and joyned with prayer and the Lords Supper Act. 2. 42. Hence as Prayer is called Gods sacrifice so are the contributions and mutuall supplyes of the Saints sacrifices Phil. 4. Hence also as it is impossible for naturall men to bee capable of Gods worship and to feed be nourished and edified by any spirituall ordinance no more then a dead childe can sucke the breast or a dead man feast So also is it as impossible for a dead man yet lodged in the grave of Nature to contribute spiritually I meane according to Scriptures rule as for a dead man to pay a reckoning I question not but naturall men may for the outward act preach pray contribute c. but neither are they worshippers suitable to him who is a Spirit Iohn 4. nor can they least of all bee forced to worship or the maintenance of it without a guilt of their hypocrisie Peace They will say what is to be done for their soules Truth The Apostles whom wee professe to imitate preached the Word of the Lord to unbeleevers without mingling in worship with them and such Preachers and preaching such as pretend to be the true Ministry of Christ ought to be and practise Not forcing them all their dayes to come to Church and pay their duties either so confessing that this is their Religion unto which they are forced or else that as before they are forced to be of no Religion all their dayes The way to subdue Rebels is not by correspondence and communion with them by forcing them to keepe the City Watches and pay sessements c. which all may be practised upon compulsion treacherously the first work with such is powerfully to subdue their judgments and wills to lay downe their weapons and yeeld willing subjection then come they orderly into the City and so to Citie priviledges CHAP. CVI. Peace PLease you now deare Truth to discusse the Scriptures from the Old Testament Nehem 13. and 2 Chron. 31. Truth God gave unto that Nationall Church of the Jewes that excellent Land of Canaan and therein Houses furnished Orchards Gardens Vineyards Olive yards Fields Wells c. they might well in this settled abundance and the promised continuation and increase of it afford a large temporall supply to their Priests and Levites even to the Tenth of all they did possesse Gods people are now in the Gospel brought into a spirituall land of Canaan flowing with spirituall milk and honey and they abound with spirituall and heavenly comforts though in a poore and persecuted condition therefore an inforced setled maintenance is not sutable to the Gospel as it was to the Ministry of Priests and Levites in the Law Secondly in the change of the Church estate there was also a change of the Priesthood and of the Law Heb. 7. Nor did the Lord Iesus appoint that in his Church and for the maintenance of his Ministrie the Civill sword of the Magistrate but that the Spirituall Sword of the Ministrie should alone compell 3. Therefore the compulsion used under Hezekiah and Nehemiah was by the civill and corporall Sword a type in that typicall State not of another materiall and corporall but of an heavenly and spirituall even the sword of the Spirit with which Christ fighteth Revel 3. which is exceeding sharpe entring in between the soule and spirit Heb. 4. and bringing every thought into captivitie to the obedience of Christ Iesus He that submits not at the shaking of this sword is cut off by it and he that despiseth this sword all the power in the World cannot make him a true worshipper or by his purse a mainteiner of Gods worship Lastly If any man professing to be a Minister of Christ Iesus shall bring men before the Magistrate as the practice hath been both in Old and New England for not paying him his wages or his due I aske if the voluntarie consent of the party hath not obliged him how can either the officers of the Parish Church or of the Civill State compell this or that man to pay so much more or lesse to maintaine such a Worship or Ministrie I ask further if the determining what is each mans due to pay why may they not determine the tenth and more as some desired others opposing in New England and force men not only to maintenance but to a Iewish maintenance Peace Yea but say they is not the Labourer worthy of his hire Truth Yes from them that hire him from the Church to whom he laboureth or ministreth not from the Civill State no more then the Minister of the Civill State is worthy of his hire from the Church but from the Civill State in which I grant the persons in the Church ought to be assistant in their Civill respects Peace What maintenance say they shall the Ministrie of the Gospell have Truth We finde two wayes of maintenance for the Ministrie of the Gospell proposed for our direction in the New Testament First the free and willing contribution of the Saints according to 1 Cor. 16. Luc. 8. 3. c. upon which both the Lord Jesus and his Ministers lived Secondly the diligent worke and labour of their owne hands as Paul tells the Thessalonians and that in two cases 1. Either in the inabilities and necessities of the Church 2. Or for the greater advantage of Christs truth as when Paul saw it would more advantage the name of Christ he denies himselfe and falls to worke amongst the Corinthians and Thessalonians Let none call these cases extraordinary for if persecution be the portion of Christs sheep and the busines or worke of Christ must be dearer to us then our right eyes or lives such as will follow Paul and follow the Lord Iesus must not thinke much at but rejoyce in poverties necessities hunger cold nakednesse c. The Stewards of Christ Iesus must be like their Lord and abhorre to steale as the evill Steward pretending that the shamed to beg but peremptorily dig he could not CHAP. CVII Peace ONe and the last branch deare Truth remaines concerning Schooles The Churches say they much depend upon the Schooles and the Schooles upon the Magistrates Truth I honour Schooles for Tongues and Arts but the institution of Europes Universities devoting persons as is said for Scholars in a Monasticall way forbidding Mariage and Labour to I hold as far from the mind of Iesus Christ as it is from propagating his Name and Worship We count the Universities the Fountaines the Seminaries or Seed-plots of all Pietie but have not those Fountaines ever sent what streames the Times have liked and ever changed their taste and colour to the Princes eye and Palate For any depending of the Church of Christ upon such Schooles
I finde not a little in the Testament of Christ Iesus I finde the Church of Christ frequently compared to a Schoole All Beleevers are his Disciples or Scholars yea women also Acts 9. 36. There was a certaine Disciple or Scholar called Dorcas Have not the Universities sacrilegiously stole this blessed name of Christs Scholars from his people Is not the very Scripture language it selfe become absurd to wit to call Gods people especially Women as Dorcas Scholars Peace Some will object how shall the Scriptures be brought to ●ight from out of Popish darknesse except these Schooles of Prophets convey them to us Truth I know no Schooles of Prophets in the New Testament but the particular Congregation of Christ Iesus 1 Cor. 14. And I question whether any thing but Sinne stopt and dried up the current of the Spirit in those rare gifts of tongues to Gods sons daughters serving so admirably both for the understanding of the Originall Scriptures and also for the propagating of the name of Christ. Who knowes but that it may please the Lord againe to cloath his people with a spirit of zeale and courage for the name of Christ yea and powre forth those fiery streames againe of Tongues and Prophecie in the restauration of Zion If it be not his holy pleasure so to doe but that his people with daily study and labour must dig to come at the Originall Fountaines Gods people have many wayes besides the Universitie lazie and Monkish to attaine to an excellent measure of the knowledge of those tongues That most despised while living and now much honoured Mr. Ainsworth had scarce his Peere amongst a thousand Academians for the Scripture Originalls and yet he scarce set foot within a Colledge walls CHAP. CVIII Peace I Shall now present you with their 10. Head viz. concerning the Magistrates power in matters of Doctrine That which is unjustly ascribed to the Pope is as unjustly ascribed to the Magistrates viz. to have power of making new Articles of Faith or Rules of Life or of pressing upon the Churches to give such publike honour to the Apocrypha writings or Homilies of men as to read them to the people in the roome of the Oracles of God Truth This Position simply considered I acknowledge a most holy truth of God both against the Pope and the Civill Magistrates challenge both pretending to be the Vicars of Christ Iesus upon the Earth Yet two things here I shall propose to consideration First since the Parliament of England thrust the Pope out of his chaire in England and set downe King Henry the 8. and his Successours in the Popes roome establishing them supreme Governours of the Church of England since such an absolute government is given by all men to them to be Guardians of the first Table and worship of God to set up the true worship to suppresse all false and that by the power of the Sword and therefore consequently they must judge and determine what the true is and what the false And since the Magistrate is bound by these Authours principles to see the Church the Church officers and members doe thair duty he must therefore judge what is the Churches duty and when she performes or not performes it or when she exceeds so like wise when the Ministers performe their duty or when they exceed it And if the Magistrate must judge then certainly by his owne eye and not by the eyes of others though assembled in a Nationall or Generall Councell Then also upon his judgement must the people rest as upon the minde and judgement of Christ or else it must be confest that he hath no such power left him by Christ to compell the soules of men in matters of Gods worship Secondly concerning the Apocrypha writings and Homilies to be urged by the Magistrate to be read unto the people as the Oracles of God I aske if the Homilies of England contain not in them much pretious and heavenly matter ● Secondly if they were not 〈◊〉 at least many of them by excellent men for learning holinesse and witnesse of Christs Truth incomparable Thirdly were they not authorised by that most rare and pious Prince Ed. 6. then head of the Church of England With what great solemnity and rejoycing were they received of thousands Yet now behold their children after them sharply censure them for Apocrypha writings and Homilies trust into the roome of the Word of God and so falling into the consideration of a false and counterfeit Scripture I demand of these worthy men whether a servant of God might then lawfully have refused to read or heare such a false Scripture Secondly if so whether King Edward might have lawfully compelled such a man to yeeld and submit or else have persecuted him yea according to the Authors principles whether he ought to have spared him because after the admonitions of such pious and learned men this man shall now prove an Hereticke and as an obstinate person sinning against the light of his owne conscience In this case what shall the conscience of the subject doe awed by the dread of the most High What shall the conscience of the Magistrate do zealous for his glorious Reformation being constantly perswaded by his Clergy of his Lieutenantship received from Christ Again what priviledge have those worthy servants of God either in Old or New England to be exempted from the mistakes into which those glo●ious Worthies in K. Edwards time did fall and if so what bloudy conclusions are presented to the World perswading men to plucke up by the Roots from the Land of the living all such as seem in their eyes hereticall or obstinate CHAP. CIX Peace DEare Truth What darke and dismall bloudy paths doe we walke in How is thy name and mine in all ages cried up yet as an English Flag in a Spanish bottome not in truth but dangerous treachery and abuse both of Truth and Peace We are now come to the 11 Head which concernes the Magistrates power in worship First they have power say they to reforme things in the worship of God in a Church corrupted and to establish the pure worship of God defending the same by the power of the sword against all those who shall attempt to corrupt it For first the reigning of Idolatry and corruption in Religion is imputed to the want of a King Iudges 17. 5 6. Secondly Remissenes in Reforming Religion is a fault imputed to them who suffered the High Places in Israel and in Gallio who cared not for such things Acts 18. Thirdly Forwardnesse this way is a duty not only for Kings in the Old Testament but for Princes under the New 1 Tim 2. 2. Rom. 13. 4. Esay 49. 23. Neither did the Kings of Israel reforme things amisse as types of Christ but as Civill Magistrates and so exemplary to all Christians And here Reformation in Religion is commendable in a Persian King Ezra 7.
God the Spirituall Iewes Christs true followers in all parts and quarters of the World Beside all these without Israel is betraied within her owne bowells bloudy Sauls Absaloms She●aes Adonljahs Ieroboams Athal●ahs raising insurrections conspiracies tumults in the Antitype and Parallell the Spirituall state of the Christian Church Secondly consider we the famous and wonderfull battells victories captivities deliverances which it pleased the God of Israel to dispence to that people and Nation and let us search if they can be paralleld by any State or people but mystically and Spiritually the true Christian Israel of God Gal. 6. How famous was the bondage and slavery of that people and Nation 430 yeares in the Land of Aegypt and as famous glorious and miraculous was their returne through the Red Sea a figure of Baptisme 1 Corinth 10. and Aegypt a figure of an Aegypt now Rev. 11. 8 How famous was the 70 yeares captivity of the Iewes in Babel transported from that Land of Canaan and at the full period returned againe to Ierusalem a type of the captivity of Gods people now Spiritually captivated in mysticall Babel Rev. 18. 4 Time would faile me to speake of Ioshua's conquest of literall Canaan the slaughter of 31 Kings of the miraculous taking of Iericho and other Cities Gideon his miraculous battell against the Midianites Ionathan and his Armour bearer against the Philistims David by his 5 smooth stones against Goliah Asa Iehosaphat Hezechia their mighty and miraculous victories against so many hundred thousand Enemies and that sometimes without a blow given What State what Kingdome what warres and combats victories and deliverances can parallel this people but the Spirituall and mysticall Israel of God in every Nation and Country of the World typed out by that small typicall handfull in that little spot of ground the land of Canaan The Israel of God now men and women fight under the Great Lord Generall the Lord Iesus Christ Their Weapons Armour and Artillery is like themselves Spirituall set forth from top to toe Ephes. 6. So mighty and so potent that they breake downe the strongest holds and Castles yea in the very soules of men and carry into captivity the very thoughts of men subjecting them to Christ● Iesus They are Spirituall conquerours as in all the 7 Churches of Asia He that overcommeth He that overcommeth Rev. 2. 3. Their victories and conquests in this are contrary to those of this World for when they are slaine and slaughtered yet then they conquer So overcame they the Divell in the Roman Emperours Rev. 12. By the bloud of the Lambe 2. By the word of their Testimony 3. The cheerfull spilling of their owne bloud for Christ for they loved not their lives unto the death And in all this they are more then Conquerors through him that loved them Rom. 8. This glorious Armie of white Troopers horses and harnesse Christ Iesus and his true Israel Rev. 19. gloriously conquer and overcome the Beast the false Prophet and the Kings of the Earth up in Armes against them Rev. 19. and lastly raigning with Christ a thousand yeares they conquer the Divell himselfe and the numberlesse Armies like the sand on the Sea shoare of Gog and Magog and yet not a tittle of mention of any sword helmet breastplate shield or horse but what is Spirituall and of a heavenly nature All which Warres of Israel have been may be and shall be fulfilled mystically and Spiritually I could further insist on other particulars of Israels unparalled state and might display those excellent passages which it pleaseth God to mention N●hem 9. CHAP. CXXIII Peace YOu have deare Truth as in a glasse presented the face of Old and New Israel and as in water face answereth to face so doth the face of typicall Israel to the face of the Antitype between whom and not between Canaan and the Civill Nations and Countries of the World now there is an admirable consent and harmony But I have heard some say was not the civill state and Judicialls of that people presidentiall Truth I have in part and might further discover that from the King upon his Throne to the very Beasts yea the excrements of their bodies as we see in their going to War Deut 23. 12● their civills moralls and naturalls were carried on in types and however I acknowledge that what was simply morall civill and naturall in Israels state in their constitutions Lawes punishments may be imitated and followed by the States Countries Cities and Kingdomes of the World Yet who can question the lawfulnesse of other formes of Government Lawes and punishments which differ since civill constitutions are mens Ordinances or creation 2. Pet. 2. 13. unto which Gods people are commanded even for the Lords sake to submit themselves which if they were unlawfull they ought not to do Peace Having thus far proceeded in examining whether God hath charged the Civill State with the establishing of the Spirituall and Religious what conceive you of that next assertion viz It is well knowne that the remissenes of Princes in Christendome in matters of Religion and Worship divolving the care thereof only to the Clergie and so setting the● Ho●●es upon the Churches head hath been the cause of 〈◊〉 invention usurpation and corruption in the Worship and Temple of God Truth It is lamentably come to passe by Gods just permission Sathans policie the peoples sinne and the malice of the wicked against Christ and the corruption of Princes and Magistrates that so many inventions 〈◊〉 and corruptions are 〈◊〉 in the Worship and Temple of God throughout that part of the World which is called Christian and may most properly be called the Popes Christendome in opposition to Christ Iesus his true Christian Common-weale or Church the true Christendome But that this hath arisen from Princes remissenesse in not keeping their watch to establish the Purity of Religion Doctrine and Worship and to punish according to Israels patterne all false Ministers by rooting them and their worships out of the World that I say can never bee evinced and the many thousands of glorious Soules under the Altar whose blood hath beene spilt by this position and the many hundred thousand soules driven out of their bodies by Civill Warres and the many millions of soules forced to hypocrisie and ruine eternall by inforced Vniformities in Worship will to all Eternity proclaime the contrary Indeed it shewes a most injurious idlenes and unfaithfulnes in such as professe to be Messengers of Christ Iesus to cast the heaviest weight of their care upon the Kings and Rulers of the Earth yea upon the very Common-weales Bodies of People that is the World it selfe who have fundamentally in themselves the Root of Power to set up what Government and Governours they shall agree upon Secondly it shewes abundance of carnall diffidence and distrust of the glorious power and gracious presence of the Lord Iesus who hath given his promise and
Word to bee with such his messengers to the end of the world Matth. 28. That Dog that feares to meet a man in the path runnes on with boldnes at his masters comming and presence at his backe Thirdly what imprudence and indiscretion is it in the most common affaires of Life to conceive that Emperours Kings and Rulers of the earth must not only be qualified with politicall and state abilities to make and execute such Civill Lawes which may concerne the common rights peace and safety which is worke and businesse load and burthen enough for the ablest shoulders in the Commonweal but also furnished with such spirituall and heavenly abilities to governe the Spirituall and Christian Commonweale the flocke and Church of Christ to pull downe and set up Religion to judge determine and punish in Spirituall controversies even to death or banishment And beside that not only the severall sorts of civill Officers which the people shall choose and set up must be so authorised but that all respective Commonweales or Bodies of people are charged much more by God with this worke and busines radically and fundamentally because all true civill Magistrates have not the least i●ch of civill power but what is measured out to them from the free consent of the whole even as a Committee of Parliament cannot further act then the power of the House shall arme and enable them Concerning that Objection which may arise from the Kings of Israel and Iudah who were borne members of Gods Church and trained up therein all their dayes which thousands of lawfull Magistrates in the world possibly borne and bred in false Worships Pagan or Antichristian never heard of and were therein types of the great anointed the King of Israel I have spoken sufficiently to such as have an eare to heare and therefore Lastly so unsutable is the commixing and intangling of the Civill with the Spirituall charge and Government that except it was for subsistence as we see in Paul and Barnabas working with their owne hands the Lord Iesus and his Apostles kept themselves to one If ever any in this world was able to manage both the Spirituall and Civill Church and Commonweale it was the Lord Jesus wisedome it selfe Yea hee was the true Heire to the Crowne of Israel being the Sonne of David yet being sought for by the people to be made a King Joh. 5. he refused and would not give a president to any King Prince or Ruler to manage both swords and to assume the charge of both Tables Now concerning Princes I desire it may bee remembred who were most injurious and dangerous to Christianity whether Nero Domitian Iulian c. Persecuters or Constantine Theodosius c. who assumed this Power and Authority in and over the Church in Spirituall things It is confest by the Answerer and others of note that under these later the Church the Christian State Religion and Worship were most corrupted under Constantine Christians fell asleepe on the beds of carnall ease and Liberty insomuch that some apply to his times that sleepe of the Church Cant. 5. 2. I sleep though mine heart waketh CHAP. CXXIV Peace YEs but some will say this was not through their assuming of this power but the ill managing of it Truth Yet are they commonly brought as the great Presidents for all succeeding Princes and Rulers in after Ages and in this very controvesi● their practices are brought as presidentiall to establish persecution for conscience Secondly those Emperours and other Princes and Magistrates acted in Religion according to their consciences perswasion and beyond the light and perswasion of conscience can no man living walk in any feare of God Hence have they forced their subjects to uniformitie and conformitie unto their own consciences what ever they were though not willing to have been forced themselves in the matters of God and Conscience Thirdly Had not the light of their eye of conscience and the consciences also of their Teachers been darkned they could not have been condemned for want of heavenly affection rare devotion wonderfull care and diligence propounding to themselves the best patternes of the Kings of Iudah David Salomon Asa Iehosaphat Iosiah Hezekiah But here they lost the path and themselves in perswading themselves to be the parallels and antytipes to those figurative and typicall Princes whence they conceived themselves bound to make their Cities Kingdomes Empires new holy lands of Canaan and themselves Governours and Iudges in spirituall causes compelling all consciences to Christ and persecuting the contrary with fire and sword Upon these rootes how was how is it possible but that such bitter fruits should grow of corruption of Christianitie Persecution of such godly who happily see more of Christ then such Rulers themselves their Dominions and Jurisdictions being overwhelmed with inforced dissimulation and hypocrisie and where power of resistance with flames of civill combustion as at this very day he that runs may read and tremble at Peace They adde further that the Princes of Christendome setting their Hornes upon the Churches head have been the cause of Antichristian inventions c. Truth If they mean that the Princes of Europe giving their power and authoritie to the seven-headed and ten-horned Beast of Rome have been the cause c. I confesse it to be one concurring cause yet withall it must be remembred that even before such Princes set their hornes or authoritie upon the Beasts head even when they did as I may say but lend their hornes to the Bishops even then rose up many Antichristian abominations And though I confesse there is but small difference in some respect betweene the setting their hornes upon the Priests heads whereby they are inabled immediately to push and gore whoever crosse their doctrine and practice and the lending of their hornes that is pushing and gori●g such themselves as are declared by their Bishops and Priests to be hereticall as was and is practised in some Countries before and since the Pope rose yet I confidently affirme that neither the Lord Iesus nor his first ordained Ministers and Churches gathered by such Ministers did ever weare or crave the helpe of such hornes in Spirituall and Christian affaires The spirituall power of the Lord Iesus in the hands of his true Ministers and Churches according to Balaams prophesie Num. 23. is the horne of that Vnicorne or Rhinocerot Psal 92. which is the strongest horne in the world in comparison of which the strongest hornes of the Bulls of Basan breake as sticks and Historie●ells ●ells us how that Vnicorne or one-horned Beast the Rhinocerot tooke up a Bull like a Tennis ball in the Theater at Rome before the Emperour according to that record of the Post Quant●●s erat cornu cui pila Taurus erat Unto this Spirituall power of the Lord Iesus the soules and thoughts of the highest Kings and Emperours must subject Math. 16. 18. 1 Cor. 5.
10. chapters CHAP. CXXV Peace DEare Truth You know the noyse is made from those prophecies Isa. 46. Kings and Queenes shall be nursing Fathers c. and Revel 21. the Kings of the Earth shall bring their Glory and Honour to new Ierusalem c. Truth I answer with that mournfull Prophet Psal. 74. I see not that man that Prophet that can tell us how long How many excellent Pen-men fight each against other with their pens like swords in the application of those prophecies of David Isa. Ier. Ezekiel Daniel Zacharie Iohn when and how those Prophecies shall be fulfilled Secondly When ever those prophecies are fulfilled yet shall those Kings not be Heads Governours and Judges in Ecclesiasticall or Spirituall causes but be themselves judged and ruled if within the Church by the power of the Lord Jesus therein Hence saith Isaiah those Kings and Queenes shall lick the Dust of thy feet c. Peace Some will here aske What may the Magistrate then lawfully doe with his Civill horne or power in matters of Religion Truth His horne not being the horne of that Vnicorne or Rhinocerot the power of the Lord Iesus in Spirituall case● his sword not the two-edged sword of the Spirit the word of God hanging not about the loines or side but at the lips and proceeding out of the mouth of his Ministers but of an humane and Civill nature and constitution it must consequently be of a humane and Civill operation for who knowes not that operation followes constitution and therefore I shall end this passage with this consideration The Civill Magistrate either respecteth that Religion and Worship which his conscience is perswaded is true and upon which he ventures his Soule or else that and those which he is perswaded are false Concerning the first if that which the Magistrate believeth to be true be true I say he owes a threefold dutie unto it First approbation and countenance a reverent esteeme and honorable Testimonie according to Isa. 49. Revel 21. with a tender respect of Truth and the professours of it Secondly Personall submission of his owne Soule to the power of the Lord Iesus in that spirituall Government and Kingdome according to Mat. 18. 1. Cor. 5. Thirdly Protection of such true professours of Christ whether apart or met together as also of their estates from violence and injurie according to Rom. 13. Now secondly if it be a false Religion unto which the Civill Magistrate dare not adjoyne yet he owes First permission for approbation he owes not to what is evill and this according to Matthew 13. 30. for publike peace and quiet sake Secondly he owes protection to the persons of his Subjects though of a false worship that no injurie be offered either to the persons or goods of any Rom. 13. Peace Deare Truth in this 11 head concerning the Magistrates power in Worship you have examined what is affirmed that the Magistrate may doe in point of Worship there remaines a second to wit that which they say the Magistrate may not doe in Worship They say The Magistrate may not bring in set formes of prayer● Nor secondly bring in significant ceremonies Nor thirdly not governe and rule the acts of worship in the Church of God for which they bring an excellent similitude of a Prince or Magistrate in a ship where he hath no governing power over the actions of the mariners and secondly that excellent propheci● concerning Christ Iesus that his government should be upon his shoulders Isa. 9. 6 7. Truth Unto all this I willingly subscribe Yet can I not passe by a most injurious and unequall practice toward the Civill Magistrate Ceremonies Holy dayes Common Prayer and what ever else dislikes their consciences that the Magistrate must not bring in Others againe as learned as godly as wise have conceived the Magistrate may approve or permit these in the Church and all men are bound in obedience to obey him How shal the Magistrates conscience be herein between both torn and distracted if indeed the power either of establishing or abolishing in Church matters bee committed to him Secondly me thinkes in this case they deale with the Civill Magistrate as the Souldiers dealt with the Lord Iesus First they take off his owne clothes and put upon him a purple Robe plat a Crowne of Thornes on his head bow the knee and salute him by the name of King of the Iewes They tell him that he is the Keeper of both Tables he must see the Church doe her duty he must establish the true Church true Ministry true Ordinances he must keepe her in this purity Againe hee must abolish superstition and punish false Churches false Ministers even to banishment and death Thus indeed doe they make the blood run downe the head of the civill Magistrate from the thorny vexation of that power which sometimes they crowne him with whence in great States Kingdoms or Monarchies necessarily arise delegations of that spirituall power High Commissions c. Anon againe they take off this purple robe put him into his own clothes and tell him that he hath no power to command what is against their conscience They cannot conforme to a set form of prayer nor to Ceremonies nor Holy dayes c. although the civill Magistrate that most pious Prince Edw 6. ● and his famous Bishops afterwards burnt for Christ were of another conscience● which of these two consciences shall stand if either Magistrate must put forth his civill power in these cases the strongest arme of flesh and most conquering bloody sword of Steele can alone decide the Question I confesse it is most true that no Magistrate as no other superiour is to be obeyed in any matter displeasing to God yet when in matters of worship we ascribe the absolute headship and government to the Magistrate as to keepe the Church pute and force her to her duty Ministers and People and yet take unto our selves power to judge what is right in our owne eyes and to judge the Magistrate in and for those very things wherein we confesse he hath power to see us doe our duty and therefore consequently must judge what our duty is what is this but to play with Magistrates with the soules of men with Heaven with God with Christ Iesus c. CHAP. CXXVI Peace PAsse on holy Truth to that similitude whereby they illustrate that Negative Assertion The Prince in the Ship say they is governour over the bodies of all in the Ship but hee hath no power to governe the Ship or the Mariners in the Actions of it If the Pilot manifestly erre in his Action the Prince may reprove him and so say they may any Passenger if hee offend against the life or goods of any the Prince may in due time and place punish him which no private person may Truth Although deare Peace wee both agree that civill powers may not
injoyne such devices no nor inforce on any Gods Institutions since Christ Iesus his comming Yet for further illustration I shall propose some Quaeries concerning the civill Magistrates passing in the ship of the Church wherein Christ Iesus hath appointed his Ministers and Officers as Governours and Pilots c. If in a ship at Sea wherein the Governour or Pilot of a ship undertakes to carry the ship to such a Port the civill Magistrate suppose a King or Emperour shall command the Master such and such a course to steere upon such or such a point which the Master knowes is not their course and which if they steere he shall never bring the Ship to that Port or harbour what shall the Master doe Surely all men will say the Master of the Ship or Pilot is to present Reasons and Arguments from his Mariners Art if the Prince bee capable of them or else in humble and submissive manner to perswade the Prince not to interrupt them in their course and duty properly belonging to them to wit governing of the ship steering of the course c. If the Master of the Ship command the Mariners thus and thus in cunning the ship managing the ●elme trimming the saile and the Prince command the Mariners a different or contrary course who is to be obeyed It is confest that the Mariners may lawfully disobey the Prince and obey the governour of the ship in the actions of the ship Thirdly what if the Prince have as much skill which is rare as the Pilot himselfe I conceive it will be answered that the Master of the ship and Pilot in what concernes the ship are chiefe and above in respect of their office the Prince himselfe and their commands ought to be attended by all the Mariners unlesse it bee in manifest errour wherein t is granted any passenger may reprove the Pilot. Fourthly I aske if the Prince and his Attendants be unskilfull in the ships affaires whether every Sayler and Mariner the youngest and lowest be not so farre as concernes the ship to be preferred before the Princes followers and the Prince himselfe and their counsell and advice more to be attended to and their service more to bee desired and respected and the Prince to bee requested to stand by and let the businesse alone in their hands Fifthly in case a wilfull King and his Attendants out of opinion of their skill or wilfulnesse of passion would so steere the course trim sayle c. as that in the judgement of the Master and Seamen the ship and lives shall bee indangered whether in case humble perswasions prevaile not ought not the Ships company to refuse to act in such a course yea and in case power be in their hands resist and suppresse these dangerous practices of the Prince and his followers and so save the ship Lastly suppose the Master out of base feare and cowardise or covetous desire of reward shall yeeld to gratifie the minde of the Prince contrary to the rules of Art and Experience c. and the ship come in danger and perish and the Prince with it if the Master get to shore whether may he not be justly questioned yea and suffer as guilty of the Princes death and those that perished with him These cases are cleare wherein according to this similitude the Prince ought not to governe and rule the actions of the ship but such whose office and charge and skill it is The result of all is this The Church of Christ is the Ship wherein the Prince if a member for otherwise the case is altred is a passenger In this ship the Officers and Governours such as are appointed by the Lord Jesus they are the chiefe and in those respects above the Prince himselfe and are to bee obeyed and submitted to in their works and administrations even before the Prince himselfe In this respect every Christian in the Church man or woman if of more knowledge and grace of Christ● ought to be of higher esteeme concerning Religion and Christianity then all the Princes in the world who have either none or lesse grace or knowledge of Christ although in civill things all civill reverence honour and obedience ought to be yeelded by all men Therefore if in matters of Religion the King command what is contrary to Christs rule though according to his perswasion and conscience who sees not that according to the similitude he ought not to be obeyed yea and in case boldly with spirituall force and power he ought to be resisted And if any Officer of the Church of Christ shall out of basenesse yeeld to the command of the Prince to the danger of the Church and soules committed to his charge the soules that perish notwithstanding the Princes command shall be laid to his charge If so then I rejoyne thus How agree these truths of this similitude with those former positions viz. that the Civill Magistrate is keeper of both Tables That he is to see the Church doe her duty That he ought to establish the true Religion suppresse and punish the false and so consequently must discerne judge and determine what the true gathering and governing of the Church is what the dutie of every Minister of Christ is what the true Ordinances are and what the true Administrations of them and where men faile correct punish and reforme by the Civill Sword I desire it may be answered in the feare and presence of him whose eyes are as a flame of fire if this be not according to the similitude though contrary to their scope in proposing of it to be Governour of the Ship of the Church to see the Master Pilot and Mariners do their duty in setting the course steering the ship trimming the sailes keeping the watch c. and where they faile to punish them and therefore by undeniable consequence to judge and determine what their duties are when they doe right and when they doe wrong and this not only in manifest Errour for then they say every passenger may reprove but in their ordinary course and practice The similitude of a Physitian obeying the Prince in the Body politick but prescribing to the Prince concerning the Princes body wherein the Prince unlesse the Physitian manifestly erre is to be obedient to the Physitian and not to be Iudge of the Physitian in his Art but to be ruled and judged as touching the state of his body by the Physitian I say this similitude and many others suiting with the former of a ship might be alleadged to prove the distinction of the Civill and Spirituall estate and that according to the rule of the Lord Iesus in the Gospel the Civill Magistrate is only to attend the Calling of the Civill Magistracie concerning the bodies and goods of the Subjects and is himselfe if a member of the Church and within subject to the power of the Lord Iesus therein as any member of the Church is 1
the power of Christ to censure sufficiently an offendour on whom yet they have executed the deepest censure in the world to wit cutting off from Christ shutting out of Heaven casting to the Divell which offendours crime reacheth not to hurt the good of the civill state but that she is forced to make complaint to the civill state and the Officers thereof for their helpe O let not this be tole in Gath nor heard in Ashkalon and O! how dimme must needs that eye be which is blood shot with that blo●dy and cruell Tenent of Persecution for cause of Conscience Peace But what should be meant by this passage viz. That they cannot give liberty to the Magistrate to punish without exception all excommunicate persons within so many months Truth It may be this hath reference to a Law made formerly in New England that if an excommunicate person repented not within as I have heard three months after sentence of excommunication then the Civill Magistrate might proceed with him These worthy men see cause to question this Law upon good reasons rendred though it appears not by their words that they wholly condemne it only they desire a longer time implying that after some longer time the Magistrate may proceed and indeed I see not but according to such principles if the Magistrate himselfe should be cast out he ought to be proceeded against by the Civill state and consequently deposed and punished as the Pope teacheth yea though happily he had not offended against either bodies or goods of any subject Thirdly from this true confession that the Magistrate ought not to punish for many sinnes above mentioned I observe how they crosse the plea which commonly they bring for the Magistrates punishing of false Doctrines Heretiques c. viz. Rom. 13. The Magistrate is to punish them that doe evill and when it is answered True evill against the Second Table which is there onely spoken of and against the Bodies and Goods of the Subject which are the proper object of the Civill Magistrate as they confesse It is replied why is not Idolatry sinne Heresie sinne Schisme and false Worship sinne Yet heere in this passage many evils many sins even of Parents against their Children Masters against their Servants Husbands against their Wives the Magistrate ought not to meddle with Fourthly I dare not assent to that assertion That even originall sinne remotely hurts the civill State T is true some doe as inclinations to murther theft whoredome slander disobedience to Parents and Magistrates but blindnes of minds hardnes of heart inclination to choose or worship this or that God this or that Christ beside the true these hurt not remotely the civill state as not concerning it but the spirituall Peace Let me in the last place remind you of their charge against the Magistrate and which will necessarily turne to my wrong and prejudice They say the Magistrate in hearing and prosecuting the complaints of children against their parents of servants against their masters of wives against their husbands without acquainting the Church first transgresseth the rule of Christ. Truth Sweet Peace they that pretend to be thy dearest friends will prove thy bitter enemies First I ask for one rule out of the Testament of the Lord Iesus to prove this deepe charge and accusation against the Civill Magistrate Secondly This is built upon a supposition of what rarely falls out in the World to wit that there must necessarily be a true Church of Christ in every lawfull State unto whom these complaints must goe whereas how many thousand Common-weales have been and are where the name of Christ hath not or not truly been founded Thirdly The Magistrates office according to their own grant properly respecting the bodies and goods of their Subjects and the whole body of the Common-weale being made up of Families as the members constituting that body I see not how according to the rule of Christ Rom. 13 the Magistrate may refuse to heare and helpe the just complaints of any such petitioners Children Wives and Servants against oppression c. Peace I have long observed that such as have been ready to ascribe to the Civill Magistrate and his Sword more then God hath ascribed have also been most ready to cut off the skirts and in case of his inclining to another conscience then their owne to spoile him of the robe of that due Authoritie with which it hath pleased God and the People to invest and cloath him But I shall now present you with the 13. Head whose Title is CHAP. CXXIX What power Magistrates have in publike Assemblies of Churches FIrst say they the Churches have power to assemble and continue such Assemblies for the performance of all Gods Ordinances without or against the consent of the Magistrate renuente Magistratu because Christians are commanded so to doe Matth. 28. 18. 19. 20. Also because an Angel from God commanded the Apostles so to doe Acts 5. 20 Likewise from the practice of the Apostles who were not rebellious or seditious yet they did so Act. 4. 18. 19. 20. Act. 5. 27 28. Further from the practice of the Primitive Church at Jerusalem who did meet preach pray minister Sacraments censures Act. 4. 23. renuente Magistratu Moreover from the exhortation to the Hebrewes 10. 25. not to forsake their Assemblies though it were in dangerous times and if they might doe this under professed Enemies then we may much more under Christian Magistrates else we were worse under Christian Magistrates then Heathen therefore Magistrates may not hinder them herein as Pharaoh did the people from sacrificing for Wrath will be upon the Realme and the King and his Sons Ez●● 7. 23. Secondly it hath been a usurpation of forraigne Countries and Magistrates to take upon them to determine times and places of Worship rather let the Churches be left herein to their inoffensive Libertie Thirdly concerning their power of Synod Assemblies First in corrupt times the Magistrate desirous to make Reformation of Religion may and should call those who are most fit in severall Churches to assemble together in a Synod to discusse and declare from the Word of God matters of Doctrine and Worship and to helpe forward the Reformation of the Churches God Thus did Iosiah Secondly in the reformed times he ought to give Libertie to the Elders of severall Churches to assemble themselves by their owne mutuall and voluntary agreement at convenient times as the meanes appointed by God whereby he may mediately reform matters amisse in Churches which immediately he cannot nor ought not to doe Thirdly Those meetings for this end we conceive may be of two sorts 1. Monthly of some of the Elders and Messengers of the Churches 2. Annuall of all the Messengers and Elders of the Churches First monthly of some First those members of Churches which are neerest together and so may most conveniently assemble together may by mutuall agreement once in a
their native Country where the Magistrate consented not they forbore to practice such Ordinances as now they doe and intended to doe so soone as they got into another place where they might set up Magistrates of their owne and a Civill Sword c. How much is it to be feared that in case their Magistracie should alter or their persons be cast under a Magistracie prohibiting their practice whether they would then maintaine their separate meetings without and against the consent of the Magistrate renuente Magistratu Lastly it may be questioned how it comes to passe that in pleading for the Churches liberty more now under the Christian Magistrate since the Christians tooke that liberty in dangerous times under the Heathen why he quotes to prove such liberty Pharaohs hindring the Israelites from worship and Ezra 7. 23. Artaxerxes his feare of wrath upon the Realme Are not all their hopes and arguments built upon the Christian Magistrate whom say they the first Christians wanted and yet do they scare the Christian Magistrate whom they account the governour of the Church with Pharaoh and Artaxerxes that knew not God expecting that the Christian Magistrate should act and command no more in Gods worship then they But what can those instances of Pharaohs evill in hindring the Israelites worshipping of God and Artaxerxes giving liberty to Israel to worship God and build the Temple what can they prove but a duty in all P●●ces and Civill Magistrates to take off the yoake of bondage which commonly they lay on the necks of the soules of their subjects in matters of Conscience and Religion CHAP. CXXXI Peace IT is plausible but not reasonable that Gods people should considering the drift of these positions expect more liberty under a Christian then under a Heathen Magistrate Have Gods people more liberty to breake the command of a Christian then an Heathen governour and so to set up Christs Church and Ordinances after their owne conscience against his consent more then against the consent of an Heathen or unbeleeving Magistrate what is become of all the great expectation what a Christian Magistrate may and ought to doe in establishing the Church in reforming the Church and in punishing the contrary 'T is true say men in Christs time and in the time of the first Ministers and Churches there were no Christian Magistrates and therefore in that case it was in vaine for Christians to seeke unto the Heathen Magistrates to governe the Church suppresse Hereticks c. but now we enjoy Christian Magistrates c. Truth All Reason and Religion would now expect more submission therefore in matters concerning Christ to a Christian Magistrate then to a Pagan or Antichristian rule●● But deare Peace the day will discover the fire will trie 1 Cor. 3. what is but wood hay and stubble though built in mens upright intention on that foundation Iesus Christ. But to winde up all as it is most true that Magistracy in generall is of God Rom. 13. for the preservation of Mankinde in civill order and peace the World otherwise would bee like the Sea wherein Men● like Fishes would hunt and devoure each other and the greater devour the lesse So also it is true that Magistracy in speciall for the severall kindes of it is of Man 1. Pet. 2. 13. Now what kinde of Magistrate soever the people shall agree to set up whether he receive Christianity before he be set in office or whether he receive Christianity after hee receives no more power of Magistracy then a Magistrate that hath received no Christianity For neither of them both can receive more then the Commonweal the Body of People and civill State as men communicate unto them and betrust with them All lawfull Magistrates in the World both before the comming of Christ Iesus and since excepting those unparaleld typicall Magistrates of the Church of Israel are but Derivatives and Agents immediately derived and employed as eyes and hands serving for the good of the whole Hence they have and can have no more Power then fundamentally lies in the Bodies or Fountaines themselves which Power Might or Authority is not Religious Christian c. but naturall humane and civill And hence it is true that a Christian Captaine Christian Merchant Physitian Lawyer Pilot Father Master and so consequently Magistra●e c. is no more a Captaine Merchant Physitian Lawyer Pilot Father Master Magistrate c. then a Captaine Marchant c. of any other Conscience or Religion T is true Christianity teacheth all these to act in their severall callings to an higher ultimate end from higher principles in a more heavenly and spirituall manner c. CHAP. CXXXII Peace O that thy Light and Brightnes deare Truth might shine to the darke World in this particular let it not therefore be grievous if I request a little further illustration of it Truth In his season God will glorifie himselfe in all his Truths but to gratifie thy desire thus A Pagan or Antichristian Pilot may be as skilfull to carry the Ship to its desired Port as any Christian Mariner or Pilot in the World and may performe that worke with as much safety and speed yet have they not command over the soules and consciences of their passengers or mariners under them although they may justly see to the labour of the one and the civill behaviour of all in the ship A Christian Pilot he performes the same worke as likewise doth the Metaphoricall Pilot in the ship of the Commonweale from a principle of knowledge and experience but more then this he acts from a roote of the feare of God and love to mankind in his whole course Secondly his aime is more to glorifie God then to gaine his pay or make his voyage Thirdly he walkes heavenly with Men and God in a constant observation of Gods hand in stormes calmes c. So th●t the thread of Navigation being equally spun by a believing or unbelieving Pilot yet is it drawn over with the gold of Godlines and Christianitie by a Christian Pilot while he is holy in all manner of Christianitie 1 Pet. 1 15. But lastly the Christian Pilots power over the Soules and consciences of his Sailers and Passengers is not greater then that of the Antichristian otherwise then he can subdue the soules of any by the two-edged sword of the Spirit the Word of God and by his holy demeanour in his place c. Peace I shall present you with no other consideratioon in this first part of the Picture but this only Although the tearme Heathen is most commonly appropriated to the wilde naked Americans c. yet these worthy men justly apply it even to the civilized Romanes c. and consequently must it be applied to the most civilized Antichristians who are not the Church and people of God in Christ. Truth The Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Hebrew and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in
the Greeke signifie no more then the Gentiles or Nations of the Earth which were without and not within the true typicall nationall Church of the Iewes before Christ and since his comming the Gentiles or Nations of the World who are without that one holy Nation of the Christian Israel the Church gathered unto Christ Iesus in particular and distinct congregations all the World over Translatours promiscuously render the words Gentiles Heathens Nations whence it is evident that even such as professe the Name of Christ in an unregenerate and impenitent estate whether Papist or Protestant are yet without that is Heathen Gentiles or of the Nations CHAP. CXXXIII Peace DEare Truth it is now time to cast your eye on the second part of this Head or picture uncomely and deformed Truth It containes two sorts of Religious meetings or assemblies First more extraordinary and occasionall for which he quotes the practice of Iosiah An. Iosiah was in the type so are not now the severall Governours of Commonweales Kings or Governours of the Church or Israel whose state I have proved to be a None-such and not to bee parallel'd but in the Antitype the particular Church of Christ where Christ Iesus alone sits King in his owne most holy Government Secondly they propound meetings or assemblings ordinary stated and constant yearly and monthly unto which the civill Magistrate should give liberty For these meetings they propound plausible arguments from the necessity of them from Christian fellowship from Gods glory from the experience of the benefit of them and from the good report of them as also those two Scriptures 1 Cor. 10. 32. 2 Cor. 11. 38. To these I answer If they intend that the civill Magistrate should permit liberty to the free and voluntary Spirituall meetings of their Subjects I shall subscribe unto them but if they intend that the Magistrate should give liberty only unto themselves and not to the rest of their subjects that is to desire their owne soules only to be free and all other soules of their subjects to be kept in bondage Secondly if they intend that the Magistrate should inforce all the Elders of such Churches under their Iurisdiction to keepe correspondencie with them in such meetings then I say as before it is to cause him to give Libertie with a partiall hand and unequall Ballance for thus I argue If the Civill State and Civill officers be of their Religion and Conscience it is not proper for them to give libertie or freedome but to give honourable testimonie and approbation and their own personall submission to the Churches But if the civill State and Officers be of another conscience and worship and shall be bound to grant permission and libertie to them their consciences and meetings and not to those of his own Religion and Conscience also how will this appeare to be equall in the very eye of Common peace and righteousnesse For those yearely and monthly meetings as we find not any such in the first Churches So neither will those generall arguments from the plausible pretence of Christian fellowship Gods glory c. prove such particular wayes of glorifying God without some precept or president of such a kind For those Scriptures 1 Cor. 10. 33. 2 Cor. 11. 38. expressing the Apostle Paul his zeale for glorifying God and his care for all the Churches it is cleere they concerne such as are indeed Pauls successors sent forth by Christ Iesus to preach and gather Churches● but those Scriptures concerne not the Churches themselves nor the Pastours of the Churches properly least of all the Civill State and Commonwealth neither of which the Churches the Pastours or Commonwealth doe goe forth personally with that commission Matth. 28. to preach and baptize that is to gather Churches unto Christ. For as for the first the Churches are not Ministers of the Gospel the Angels or Messengers of the Churches and the Churches themselves were distinct Revel 2. 3. As for the second the pastours and Elders of the Church their worke is not to gather Churches but to governe and feed them Acts 20. 1 Pet. 5. As for the civill Magistrate it is a Ministry indeed Magistrates are Gods Ministers Rom. 13. but it is of another Nature and therefore none of these the Churches of Christ the Shepherds of those Churches nor the civill Magistrate succeeding the Apostles or first Messengers these Scriptures alleadged concerne not any of these to have care of all the Churches Peace Deare Truth who can heare this Word but will presently cry out Who then may rightly challenge that commission and that promise Math. 28. c. Truth Sweet Peace in due place and season that Question may be resolved but doubtles the true successours must precede or goe before the Church making Disciples and baptizing as the Apostles did who were neither the Churches nor the Pastors and fixed Teachers of them but as they gathered so had the care of the Churches CHAP. CXXXIV Peace I Cease to urge this further and in the last place marvell what should be the reason of that Conclusion viz. There is no power of determination in any of these meetings but that all must be left to the particular determination of the Churches Truth At the meeting at Ierusalem when Paul and Barnabas and others were sent thither from the Church of Christ at Antioch the Apostles and Elders did not only consult and advise but particularly determined the Question which the Church of Antioch sent to them about Acts 15. and send their particular determinations or decrees to the Churches afterward So that if these Assemblies were of the nature of that pattern or president as is generally pretended and had such a promise of the assistance and concurrence of the Spirit as that Assembly had they might then say as that Assembly did Acts 15. It seemeth good to the holy Spirit and to us and should not leave particular determinations to the particular Churches in which sometimes are very few able Guides and Leaders Peace But what should be the Reason to perswade these worthy men to conceive the particular Congregations or Churches to be more fit and competent Iudges in such high points then an Assembly of so excellent and choice persons who must only consult and advise c. Truth Doubtlesse there is a strong conviction in their Soules of a professed promised presence of the Lord Iesus in the midst of his Church gathered after his mind and will more then unto such kind of Assemblies though consisting of far more able persons even the flower and creame of all the Churches Peace It is generally conceived that the promise of Christs presence to the end of the World Matth. 28. is made to the Church Truth There is doubtlesse a promise of Christs presence in the midst of his Church and Congregation Matth. 18. but the promise of Christs presence Matth. 28. cannot properly and immediately belong to
l. 22. his perilous soule p. 43. l. 20. r. or l. ult Answeres p. 44. l. 2● b● closer p. 49. l. 1. last p 57. l. 22. cut l. 24. l ●●rme that Justice p. 58. l. 5. the lying p 98. l. 6. road or doe these p. 114. l. 29. r the 31 question p. 119 l. 10. remembers p. 139. l. 9. immunitie p. 161. l. 28. or Christ. p. 214. l. 36. delt shall p. 225. l. 19. the Churches of God 225. l. 25. not might not The famous saying of a late King of Bohemia Essay of Religion It is rarely seen that ever persons were pers●●●ed for their 〈…〉 3. Reas. Truth and Peace rarely and seldom meet a great complaints of Peace Persecutors seldom plead Christ but Moses for their Author Strife distinguished 1. Ungodly strife 2. Godly strife A threefold dolefull cry Christs worship is his bed Cant. 1. 16. False worship therefore is a false bed The cry of the soules under the Altar A cry of the whole earth The wonderfull providēce of God in the writing of the Arguments against persecution in Milke The Answer writ in Bloud The first distinctiō discussed Desinition of persecution discussed Conscience will not be restrained from its own worship nor constrained to another A chaste soule in Gods worship like a chast wife The second distinction discussed● Gods people may erre from the very fundamentals of visible worship 4 sorts of spirituall Foundations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sixe Foundations of the Christian Religion or Worship Comming out of Babell not locall but mysticall The great Ignorance of Gods people concerning the Nature of the true Church Mr. Cotton all the Halfe Seperates halting between true fals Churches and consequently not yet clear in the fundamentall matter of a Christiā Church The true Ministrie a Fundamentall The New English Ministers examined Common Prayer cast off written against by the New-English Gods people have worshipped God with false worships It pleaseth God sometimes beyond his promise to convey blessings comfort to His in false worships Fundamentals of Christian worship not so easie and cleare A notable speech of K. Iames to a great non-conformist turned persecuter The 4. distinctiō discussed What civill peace is Gods people must be Nonconformitants to Evill The difference between Spirituall and Civill Peace The difference between the Spirituall and Civill State The Civil State the Spirituall estate and the Church of Christ distinct in Ephesus The Answerer too obscure in generalls Gods meekest servants use to be counted arrogant and impetuous 6 cases wherein Gods people have been bold zealous yet not arrogant Christ Jesus and his Disciples teach publikely a new Doctrine fundamentally different from the Religion professed Gods servants zealous and bold to the faces of the Highest Gods people constantly immoveable to death Gods people ever maintained Christ Jesus the only Lord and King to the conscience That Christ is King alone over conscience is the sum of all true preaching Gods people have see men the disturbers of Civill State Gods word and people the occasion of tumults The instances proposed carry a great shew of impe●●ousnesse yet all are pure and peaceable The true cause of tumults at the preaching of the Word A preposterous way of suppressing errours Light only can expell fogs and darknesse Persecutors oppresse both true and erroneous consciences All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him What is meant by Hereticke in Titus The word Hereticke generally mistaken Checks of conscience What is the first second admonition What the rejecting of the Heretick was Corporall killing in the Law typing out Spirituall killing by Excommunication in the Gospell The third Conclusiō discussed Sathans policie The Answerer granteth a Toleration Patience to be used toward the opposite The cariage of a Soule sensible of mercy toward other sinners in their blindnesse and opposition The Answerer cōfounds the Churches in Philippi and Rome with the Cities Philippi and Rome Difference between 〈◊〉 the Church and the World The Church and Civill Scare confusedly made all one Persecutors have forgotten the blessednesse promised to the mercifull Math. 5. What persons are guilty of breach of civil peace The most peaceable wrongfully accused of peace-breaking The examination of what is meant by the Tares and the command of the L. Jesus to let them alone The Answerers fallacious exposition that Tares signifie either Persons Doctrines or Practices The Answerer ba●ely affirming a most strange interpretation Sathans subtlet●e about the opening of Scripture Toleration in Rom. 14. considered Toleratiō of Jew●sh ceremonies for a time upon some grounds in the Jew●sh Church proves not toleration of Popish and Anti christian Ceremonies in the Christian Church although in the State Tares proved not to signifie hypocrites Hence were the witnesses of Christ 〈◊〉 and others in H. 4. his reigne called Lo●lards as some say from 〈◊〉 weeds known well enough hen●e taken for signe of barrenesse Ius●lix 〈◊〉 sterll●● do●●●an●u● a v●●a others conceive they were so called from one Lolla●d c. but all Papis●s accounted them as Tares because of their profession * The false and counterfeit Christians appeare as soon as the true and faithfull Hypocriticall Christians The Tares cannot signifie Hypocrites Two sorts of Hypoc●ites 1. In the Church as Iudas St. ●o● M●g●● and these must be to le●ated untill discovered and no longer 2. Hypocrites in the world which a●e false Christians ●a●●e Churches these the Lord Iesus wi● have let alone unto Harvest The Field by most generally but falsely interpreted the Church The Lord Iesus the great teacher by Parables and the only expounder of them The scope of the Parable Fou●e sorts of ground or hearers of the word in the world and but one properly in the Church the rest seldome come or acciden●ally to hear the word in the Church which word ought to be ●itted for the feed●ng of the Church or flocke preaching for conversion is properly out of the Church The scope of the Parable of the Tares The Lord Iesus in this ●arable of the Ta●es gives direction and consolation to His servants The Tares proved properly to signifie Antichristians Math. 8. 12 Mat. 21. 43 Gods kingdome on Earth the visible Church The difference between the Wheat the Tares as also between these Tares and all other Civill Magistracie from the beginning of the World Offenders against the Civill lawes not to be perpetually tolerated Nor offenders in the Church of Christ Jesus to be su●●red The great Reapers are the Angels The Tares to be tolerated the longest of any sinners The danger of infection by these tares assoyled Lamentable experience hath proved this true of late in Europe and lamentably true in the sl●ughter of some hundred thousands of the English The great dreadfull Harvest The charge of Christ Jesus Let alone the Tares was not spoken to Magistrates Ministers of the civill state but to
Ministers of the Gospel The civill Magistrate not so particularly spoken to as Fathers and Masters in the New Testamēt and why Eph. 5. 6. Col. 3. 4. c. A twofold state of Christianity the persecuted under the Roman Emperors and the Apostate ever since Christs Messengers receive a threefold charge in that prohibition of Christ Let them alone Gods people not to pray for ●h● present ruine and destruction of idolaters although their persecutors but for their peace and salvations The word of God ●●ghtly de●ounced plucks up k●ng●●ms Gods Ministers are 〈◊〉 to provoke 〈…〉 1 ●et 2. 9. 1 Cor. 5. Companying with 〈…〉 1 Cor. 5 discussed Lawfull converse with idolaters in civill but not in spirituall things Dangerous and ung●ounded zeale M●●th 15. 14. the se●●●● Scripture controv●rted in this cause Christ Jesus never directed his Disciples to the civill Magistrate for help in his cause Pauls appealing to Caesar. Civill Magistrates never appointed by God Dfenders of the Faith of Jesus Every o●● is bound to put forth him selfe to his utmost power in Gods businesse wh●re it stops the guilt will lie Christ could have easily been furnished with godly Magistrates if he had so appointed Gods Israel earnest with God for in Arme of Flesh which God gives in his anger and takes away in his wrath The punishment of blind Pharises though let alone yet is greater then any corporall punishment in the world in 4 respects The eye of the 〈◊〉 struck out is worse then for both right and left eye of the body to be 〈◊〉 out tenne thousand times Some soules incurable whom not only corporall b●● spirituall phys●●ke can nothing availe The bottom 〈…〉 blind ●all Soul killing the ch●efest murder No Magistrate can execute true justice in killing soule for soule but christ Jesus who by typicall death in the Law typed out spirituall in the Gospel A great mistake in most to conceive that dead men that is soules dead in sin may be infected by false doctrine All naturall men being dead in sin yet none die everlastingly but such as are thereunto ordained The Lord Jesus hath not lest his Church without spirituall antidotes and remedies against infection The miserable bondage Gods people live in The Kings and Queens of England Governours of the Church Strange confusion in punishments Woe were it with the civill Magistrate if he bloud of soules beside the ordinary care of the bo●ies ●●d goods ●f 〈…〉 sh●uld ●●ry 〈◊〉 him The Magistrates duties toward the Church the Sp●●se of Christ. Usurpers and true heires of the spirituall Crowne of Jesus Luke 9. 54. 55 discussed An excellent saying of persecutors themselves● The Answerer when he should speake to toleration in the State ●unnes to punishments in the Church which none can deny If the Civill Magistrate be a Christian he is bound to be like Christ in saving not destroying mens bodies The civill Magistrate bound not to inflict nor to suffer any other to inflict violence stripes or any corporall punishment for evill against Christ. Revel 13. 13. Fire from heaven What the fire from heaven is which the fals Prophet bringeth downe 2 Tim. 3. 25. 26. examined A quaere what the Answerer meanes by his unconverted Christian in Crete The originall of Christians The Answerer yet in the unconverted Churches and worships Gods people sleepy in the matters of Christs Kingdome Cant. 5. 2. 1 Cor. 14. Patience and ●eeknesse required in all that open Christs mysteries The civill Sword may make a Nation of Hypocrites Antichristians but not one Christian Wonderfull changes of Religion in England Englands changes in point of Religion The miserie of opposites against the Truth A difference between the true and false Christ and Christians The worship of unbelieving unregenerate persons The danger mischiefe of a civill sword in Soule matters which makes the civill Magistrate deeply guilty of all those evils which he aims to suppresse That cannot be a true Religion which needs carnall weapons to uphold it Persecutors beget a perswasion of their crueltie in the hearts of the persecuted Antoninus Pius his golden act Isa. 2. 4. Mic. 4. 3. Isa. 11. 9. concerning Christs peace able Kingdom discussed Mr. Cottons excellent interpretation of those Prophecies His doctrine and practice condemned by that interpretation Spirituall and mysticall Wolves Act. 20. 29. opened What those Wolves were Act. 20. 29. Charges directed to Ministers of the spiritual kingdome fasly applyed to the Magistrates of the civill No word of Christ to the civill Magistrate to feed his flock but to his Ministers who if true have spirituall power sufficient against spirituall Wolves Magistrates decline the name of Head of the Church and yet practise the headship or government The Elect shall not be devoured Christ Jesus furnisheth his Shepherds with power sufficient to drive away Wolves Tit. 1. 9. 10. opened Job 26. 1 2. Unmercifull and bloody doctrine John 6. 15. 2. Cor. 10. 4. discussed The difference of the civill spirituall estate Civill weapons most improper in spirituall causes fitly exemplified by that similitude 2 Cor. 10. 4. Spirituall weapons only effectuall in spirituall soule causes Civill weapons not only improper but unnecessary in spirituall causes No earthly Kings or Governours will be so served as we pretend to serve the King of Kings Psal. 45. The white Troopers Spirituall Ammunition Eph. 6. applied Materiall and Spirituall ●●htly joyned together An alarme to civill or earthly Rulers Concerning the civill Rulers power in spirituall causes discust Rom. 13. speakes not at all of spirituall but civill affaires The scope of Rom 13. Love to man the duty of the whole second Table How love fulfilleth the Law Rom. 13 so interpreted even by them that held persecution for conscience Calvins judgement of Rom. 13. Gods people loath to be found yet proved persecutors Caelvin confesseth that the first Table concerning Gods worship is not here in Rom. 13. touched Beza upon Rom. 13. Paul writes not to the Romane Governors to defend the truth and to punish hereticks Pauls appeale to Caesar discussed If Paul had appealed to Caesar in spirituall things he had committed 5. evils Imperours than them selves if Christians subject to the Apostles and Churches in spirituall things Lawfull appeales in civill things to Civill Magistrates Foure sorts of swords mentioned in the New Testament The Civill Sword Tribute Custome c. meerly civill recompences for civil work Magistrates called by God Gods Ministers The spirituall Ministery The civill Ministery or service What is to b● understood b● Evill Rom. 13 4. Some give to the Magistrate what is not his and take from him that which is proper to him Toleration discussed Upon this point hath Mr. John Goodwin excellently of late discoursed Evill is always Evill yet permission of it may in case be good Deut. 24. Two sorts of commands both by Moses and Christ. Math 16. 17. 18. The permission of divorce in Israel Usurie in a Common-weale or Civill State lawfully permitted
Timothy Gods people must pray for and endeavour the peace of the State they live in Although Pagan or Pop●sh Forcing of men to godlinesse or Gods worship the greatest cause of breach of Civill peace The Roman Caesars described Not appointed by Christ Jesus keepers and guardians of his Church It pleased not the Lord Jesus in the first institution of his Church to furnish himselfe with any such Civill Governours as unto whom hee might commit the care of his worship The true Keepers which Christ Jesus appointed of his O●dinances and Worship The Kings of the Assyrians c. not charged with Gods worship as the Kings of Judah in that Nationall and typicall church Constantine Theodosius c. mis●●formed Masters of families under the Gospel not charged to force all under him from their owne consciences to his If the charge of Gods worship was left with the Romane Emperour then was he bound to turne the whole world into the Garden Flock and Spouse of Christ. Millions put to death Christ never sent any of his Ministers or Servants to the Civil Magistrate for help in spirituall matters Christ Jesus hath left power in his Church to preserve her selfe pure though in an idolatrous Countrey Gods people have used to shine in brightest godlinesse when they have enjoyed least quietnes Few M●gistrates few men spiritually and christianly good Yet divers sorts of goodnesse n●turall artificiall ci●vill c. The Civill Goodnes of Cine● Kingdomes Subj●cts M●gistrates must be owned although Spirituall goodnes proper to the Christian State or Church be wanting Civill power originally and fundamentally in the people Mr. Cotton and the New-English Ministers give the Government of Christs Church or Spouse into the hands of the people or Common-weale The very Indian Americans made Governours of the Church by the Authors of these Positions Many Civill States in flourishing peace and quiet where ●he Lord Jesus is not ●ounded Lawes concerning Religion either Religious o● Civill The very Indians abhor to disturbe any Conscience at Worship Canons and Constitutions p●etended Civill but indeed Ecclesiasticall Laws meerely concerning spirituall things must needs be spirituall The Authors large confession of the liberty of conscience from the Laws of Civill authority in spirituall cases Civill Magistrates confessed not to have power to urg the conscience in indifferent things A threefold guilt●ly●ng upon Civil powers commanding the subjects 〈◊〉 worship Persons may 〈◊〉 sin 〈◊〉 to many whom t●●y 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to worship where they cannot beleeve Gods Israel des●o●s of Saul●arme of flesh The 7 headed Beast and the Lambe differ in their weapons Naboths case typicall Civill Powers abused as a Guard about the Bed of Spirituall whoredomes ●zra 7. 23. discussed Gods people not subject to ●he Kings of Babell or Per●● in Spirituals Tyrants hearts sometimes wonderfully mo●●ified towards Gods people Nabuchadnezzar D●ri●us and A●ta ●erxes th●ir decrees examined Ezra's thanksgiving for the Kings decree examined The duty of all Civill States toward the Consciences of their Subjects Christ needs no humane confirmations The sum of the Examples of Gentile Kings decreeing for Gods Worship in Scripture The Law of putting to death blasphe●● of Christ cuts off I hopes from the Jewes of part ki●g in his blou● The dir●full effects of sighting for conscience E●lour is confident as well as Truth Gods people as well as others will be found obstinate in fundamentall errors in which sufferings and persecution doth harden Strong delusions Spirituall prisons Christ Jesus appointed no materiall prisons for Blasphemers of him c. The Bishops prisons Like mother like daughter Conscience not so easily healed and cared Wounding instead of healing of Consciences Christs Spouse able and willing to be ●e wounded cons●●●nces A persecuting Church disputes with an Heretick as a Cat with the Mouse and with a true Witnes as a Lyon with a Limbe in his paw Persecutours endure not so to be called Psal. 101. 8. concerning the cutting off the wicked examined No Land of Canaan nor holy City now No difference of Lands and Cities since the comming as was before the comming of the Lord Jesus The bloudy interpretation of Psal. 101. The New Engl●sh seperate in America but not in Europe The New Eng●ish permit not their brethren of Old England to enjoy their consciences left th●ir owne numbers might exceed their owne or at least the greatnesse of their owne Assemblies maintenances decrease Christ Jesus never appointed all Religions but his owne to be cut off by the Civill Sword A bloudy mother Christ Spirituall power most powerfull Christ forbidding his followers to permit leaven in the Church doth not for●bid to permit leaven in the World The Wall Cant. 8. 9. discussed A spirituall wall cannot properly impaire the civil Many flourishing Civill States where true Churches are not found Hearing discussed Every Religion prefers its owne Priests and Ministers before all other Jonahs preaching to the Ninevites and their hearing of his message examined Eglon his rising up to Ehuds message examined A two fold Ministry of Christ converting and feeding Paul never used any civill compulsion The New English forcing their subjects to church all their daies and yet forcing them not to any Religion as they say they force the people then to be of no religion all their dayes The Civill State can no more lawfully compell the Consciences of men to Church to heare the Word then to receive the Sacraments In the first patterne there is a converting Ministrie to gather the Church or Flo●k of Christ. No president of any people in the Gospell converting gathering themselves without some Messenger sent from the Lord to effect those ends Professed publique conversion is not onely from sinnes against the second Table in personall Repentance but from false worship also A true Ministery necessary before conversion and therefore before the Church in the first patterne The true way of the M●●●st●y sent with that commission Ma●●h 28. discussed The Civill Magistrate not betrusted with gathering of Churches If the Magistrate then much more the people of the world from whom the Magistrates receive their power Iehosaphat 2 Chron. 17. a figure of Christ Jesus in his Church not of the Civill Magistrate in the State Gal. 6. 6. Concerning the maintenance of the Ministry examined Christ Jesus never appointed a maintenance of his Ministers from the unconverted and unbeleeving They that compell men to heare compell men also to pay for their hearing and conversion Two sorts of compulsion Morall and Civill Compulsion The Ministers of Christ Jesus compell with no other sword then that of Christs mouth the sword of the Spirit with two edges The maintenance of the Ministry spirituall Naturall men can neither truly worship nor maintain it Rebels not subdued by compliance but resistance The nationall Church of the Jewes might well be forced to a settled maintenance of their priests but not so the Christian Church The Civill Sword of the Nationall Church of the Jewes could not
beleeve in conscience to be the truth or for practising some worke which you beleeve in conscience to be a religious dutie Truth I acknowledge that to molest any person Iew or Gentile for either professing doctrine or practising worship meerly religious or spirituall it is to persecute him and such a person what ever his doctrine or practice be true or false suffereth persecution for conscience But withall I desire it may bee well observed that this distinction is not full and complete For beside this that a man may be persecuted because he holdeth or practiseth what he beleeves in conscience to be a Truth as Daniel did for which he was cast into the Lyons den Dan. 6. and many thousands of Christians because they durst not cease to preach and practise what they beleeved was by Go● commanded as the Apostles answered Acts 4 5. I say besides this a man may also be persecuted because hee dares not be constrained to yeeld obedience to such doctrines and worships as are by men invented and appointed So the three famous Iewes were cast into the fiery furnace for refusing to fall downe in a non-conformity to the whole conforming world before the golden Image Dan. 3. 21. So thousands of Christs witnesses and of late in those bloudy Marian dayes have rather chose to yeeld their bodies to all sorts of torments then to subscribe to doctrines or practise worships unto which the States and Times as Nabuchadnezzar to his golden Image have compelled and urged them A chaste wife will not onely abhorre to be restrained from her husbands bed as adulterous and polluted but also abhor if not much more to bee constrained to the bed of a stranger And what is abominable in corporall is much more loathsome in spirituall whoredome and defilement The Spouse of Christ Iesus who could not finde her soules beloved in the wayes of his worship and Ministery Cant. 1. 3. and 5. Chapters abhorred to turne aside to other Flockes Worships c. and to imbrace the bosome of a false Christ Cant. 1. 8. CHAP. IV. Peace THe second distinction is this In points of Doctrine some are fundamentall without right beleefe whereof a man cannot be saved others are circumstantiall and lesse principall wherein a man may differ in judgement without prejudice of salvation on either part Truth To this distinction I dare not subscribe for then I should everlastingly condemne thousands and ten thousands yea the whole generation of the righteous who since the falling away from the first primitive Christian state or worship have and doe erre fundamentally concerning the true matter constitution gathering and governing of the Church and yet farre be it from any pious breast to imagine that they are not saved and that their soules are not bound up in the bundle of eternall life We reade of foure sorts of spirituall or Christian foundations in the New Testaments First the Foundation of all foundations the Corner-stone it selfe the Lord Iesus on whom all depend Persons Doctrines Practices 1. Cor. 3. 2. Ministriall foundations The Church is built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Ephel 2. 20. 3. The foundation of future rejoycing in the fruits of Obedience 1 Tim. 6. 4. The foundation of Doctrines without the knowledge of which there can be no true profession of Christ according to the first institution Heb. 6. The foundation or principles of Repentance from dead works Faith towards God the Doctrine of Baptisme Laying on of Hands the Resurrection and Eternall Iudgement In some of these to wit those concerning Baptismes Laying on of Hands Gods people will be found to be ignorant for many hundred yeares and I yet cannot see it proved that light is risen I mean the light of the first institution in practice Gods people in their persons Heart-waking Cant. 5. 2. in the life of personall grace will yet be found fast asleep in respect of publike Christian Worship Gods people in their persons are His most deare and precious yet in respect of the Christian Worship they are mingled amongst the Babylonians from whence they are called to come out not locally as some have said for that belonged to a materiall and locall Babell and literall Babell and Ierusalem have now no difference Iohn 4. 21. but spiritually and mystically to come out from her sins and Abominations If Mr. Cotton maintaine the true Church of Christ to consist of the true matter of holy persons call'd out from the World and the true forme of Vnion in a Church Covenant And that also neither Nationall Provinciall nor Diocesan Churches are of Christs institution how many Thousands of Gods people of all sorts Clergie and Laitie as they call them will they finde both in former and later times captivated in such Nationall Provinciall and Diocesan Churches yea and so far from living in yea or knowing of any such Churches for matter and forme as they conceive now only to be true that untill of late yeares how few of Gods people knew any other Church then the Parish Church of dead stones or timber It being a late marvailous light revealed by Christ Iesus the Sun of Righteousnesse that his people are a Company or Church of living stones 1 Pet. 2 9. And however his own Soule and the soules of many others precious to God are perswaded to separate from Nationall Provinciall and Diocesan Churches and to assemble into particular Churches yet since there are no Parish Churches in England but what are made up of the Parish bounds within such and such a compasse of houses and that such Churches have beene and are in constant dependance on and subordination to the Nationall Church how can the New-English particular Churches joyne with the Old English Parish Churches in so many Ordinances of Word Prayer Singing Contribution c. but they must needs confesse that as yet their Soules are farre from the knowledge of the foundation of a true Christian Church whose matter must not only be living stones but also separated from the rubbish of Antichristian confusions and desolations CHAP. V. Peace WIth lamentation I may adde How can their Soules be cleare in this foundation of the true Christian matter who persecute and oppresse their own acknowledged Brethren presenting Light unto them about this Point But I shall now present you with Mr. Cottons third distinction In point of Practice saith he some concerne the weightier duties of the Law as What God we worship and with what kind of Worship whether such as if it be Right fellowship with God is held if false fellowship with God is lost Truth It is worth the inquirie what kind of Worship he intendeth for Worship is of various signification whether in generall acceptation he meane the rightnesse or corruptnesse of the Church or the Ministry of the Church or the Ministrations of the Word Prayer Seales c. And because it pleaseth the Spirit
of God to make the Ministry one of the foundations of the Christian Religion Heb. 6. 12. and also to make the Ministrie of the Word and Prayer in the Church to be two speciall works even of the Apostles themselves Acts 6. 2. I shall desire it may be well considered in the feare of God First concerning the Ministery of the Word The New-English Ministers when they were new elected ordained Ministers in New Englād must undeniably grant that at that time they were no Ministers notwithstanding their profession of standing so long in a true Ministry in Old England whether received from the Bishops which some have maintained true or from the People which Mr. Cotton others better liked and which Ministrie was alwayes accounted perpetuall and indelible I apply and aske Will it not follow that if their new Ministry and Ordination be true the former was false and if false that in the exercise of it notwithstanding abilities graces intentions labours and by Gods gracious unpromised extraordinary blessing some successe I say will it not according to this distinction follow that according to visible rule Fellowship with God was lost Secondly concerning Prayer The New English Ministers have disclaimed and written against that worshipping of God by the Common or set formes of Prayer which yet themselves practised in England notwithstanding they knew that many servants of God in great sufferings witnessed against such a Ministrie of the Word and such a Ministrie of Prayer Peace I could name the persons time and place when some of them were faithfully admonished for using of the Common prayer and the Arguments presented to them then seeming weake but now acknowledged sound yet at that time they satisfied their hearts with the practice of the Author of the Councell of Trent who used to read only some of the choicest selected Prayers in the Masse-booke which I confesse was also their own practice in their using of the Common-Prayer But now according to this distinction I ask whether or no fellowship with God in such prayers was lost Truth I could particularize other exercises of Worship which cannot be denied according to this distinction to be of the waightier points of the Law to wit What God we Worship and with what kind of worship wherein fellowship with God in many of our unclean and abominable Worships hath been lost Only upon these premises I shall observe First that Gods people even the standard-bearers and leaders of them according to this distinction have worshipped God in their sleepy ignorance by such a kind of Worship as wherein fellowship with God is lost yea also this it is possible for them to do after much light is risen against such Worship and in particular brought to the eyes of such holy and worthy persons Secondly there may be inward and secret fellowship with God in false Ministeries of Word and Prayer for that to the eternall prayse of Infinite Mercy beyond a word or promise of God I acknowledge when yet as the distinction saith in such worship not being right fellowship with God is lost and such a service or ministration must be lamented and forsaken Thirdly I observe that Gods people may live and die in such kindes of worship notwithstanding that light from God publikely and privately hath beene presented to them able to convince yet not reaching to their conviction and forsaking of such wayes contrary to a conclusion afterward exprest to wit That fundamentals are so cleere that a man cannot but be convinced in Conscience and therefore that such a person not being convinced he is condemned of himselfe and may be persecuted for sinning against his conscience Fourthly I observe that in such a maintaining a clearnesse of fundamentals or waightier points and upon that ground a persecuting of men because they sinne against their consciences Mr. Cotton measures that to others which himselfe when he lived in such practices would not have had measured to himselfe As first that it might have beene affirmed of him that in such practices he did sinne against his conscience having sufficient light shining about him Secondly that hee should or might lawfully have beene cut off by death or banishment as an Hereticke sinning against his owne conscience And in this respect the Speech of King Iames was notable to a great Non-conformitant converted as is said by King Iames to conformity and counselling the King afterward to persecute the Non-conformists ev●n unto death Thou Beast quoth the King if I had dealt so with thee in thy non-conformity where hadst thou beene CHAP. VI. Peace THe next distinction concerning the manner of persons holding forth the aforesaid practices not onely the waightier duties of the Law but points of doctrine and worship lesse principall Some saith he hold them forth in a meeke and peaceable way some with such arrogance and impetuousnesse as of it selfe tendeth to the disturbance of civill peace Truth In the examination of this distinction we shall discusse First what is civill Peace wherein we shall vindicate thy name the better Secondly what it is to hold forth a Doctrine or Practice in this impetuousnesse or arrogancy First for civill peace what is it but pax civitatis the peace of the Citie whether an English City Scotch or Irish Citie or further abroad French Spanish Turkish City c. Thus it pleased the Father of Lights to define it Iorem. 29. 7. Pray for the peace of the City which peace of the City or Citizens so compacted in a civill way of union may be intire unbroken safe c. notwithstanding so many thousands of Gods people the Iewes were there in bondage and would neither be constrained to the worship of the Citie Babell nor restrained from so much of the worship of the true God as they then could practice as in plaine in the practice of the 3 Worthies Shadrach Misach and Abednego as also of Daniel Dan. 3. Dan. 6. the peace of the City or Kingdome being a far different Peace from the Peace of the Religion or Spirituall Worship maintained professed of the Citizens This Peace of their Worship which worship also in some Cities being various being a false Peace Gods people were and ought to be Nonconformitants not daring either to be restrained from the true or constrained to false Worship and yet without breach of the Civill or Citie-peace properly so called Peace Hence it is that so many glorious and flourishing Cities of the World maintaine their Civill peace yea the very Americans wildest Pagans keep the peace of their Towns or Cities though neither in one nor the other can any man prove a true Church of God in those places and consequently no spirituall and heavenly peace The Peace spirituall whether true or false being of a higher and farre different nature from the Peace of the place or people being meerly and essentially civill and humane Truth O how lost are the