Selected quad for the lemma: religion_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
religion_n false_a true_a worship_n 4,780 5 7.8086 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A53704 An enquiry into the original, nature, institution, power, order and communion of evangelical churches. The first part with an answer to the discourse of the unreasonableness of separation written by Dr. Edward Stillingfleet, Dean of Pauls, and in defence of the vindication of non-conformists from the guilt of schisme / by John Owen. Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1681 (1681) Wing O764; ESTC R4153 262,205 445

There are 12 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

lies therein To assert this expresly would be to exalt him above Jesus Christ at least to give him power equal unto his though really unto the Institution of the Gospel Church state and the Communication of Graces Offices and Gifts to make it useful unto its end no less than all power in Heaven and Earth be required Some plead that there is no certain Form of Church-Government appointed in the Scripture that there was none ordained by Christ nor exemplifyed by the Apostles and therefore it is in the power of the Magistrate to appoint any such form thereof as is suited unto the publick Interest It would seem to follow more evidently that no Form at all should by any be appointed for what shall he do that cometh after the King what shall any one ordain in the Church which the Lord Christ thought not meet to ordain And this is the proper inference from this consideration Such a Church-Government as men imagine Christ hath not appointed therefore neither may men do so But suppose that the Lord Christ hath appointed a Church-state or that there should be Churches of his Disciples on the Earth let them therein but yeild Obedience unto all that he hath commanded and in their so doing make use of the light of nature and rules of common prudence so as to do it unto their own edification which to deny to be their duty is to destroy their nature as created of God trusting in all things unto the conduct of the promised Divine Assistance of the Holy Spirit if any instance can be given of what is wanting unto the compleat state and Rule of the Church we shall willingly allow that it be added by the Civil Magistrate or whosoever men can agree upon as was before declared If it be said there is yet something wanting to accommodate these Churches and their Rule unto the state of the Publick Interest and Political Government under which they are placed whereon they may be framed into Churches Diocesan and Metropolitical with such a Rule as they are capable of I say 1. That in their Original Constitution they are more accommodated unto the Interest of all righteous Secular Government than any Arbitrary moulding them unto a pretended meetness to comply therewithal can attain unto This we have proved before and shall farther enlarge upon it if it be required And we find it by experience that those Additions Changes and Alterations in the State Order and Rule of the Churches pretended for the end mentioned have proved the cause of endless Contentions which have no good aspect on the publick peace and will assuredly continue for ever so to be 2. It is granted that the Magistrate may dispose of many outward concerns of these Churches may impart of his favour to them or any of them as he sees cause may take care that nothing falls out among them that may occasion any publick disturbance in and by itself may prohibit the publick exercise of Worship Idolatrous or Superstitious may remove and take away all Instruments and Monuments of Idolatry may coerce restrain and punish as there is occasion persons who under pretence of Religion do advance Principles of Sedition or promote any Forreign Interest opposite and destructive to his Government the welfare of the Nation and the Truth of Religion with sundry things of the like nature And herein lies an ample field wherein the Magistrate may exercise his power and discharge his duty It cannot well be denyed but that the present pretences and pleas of some to reduce all things in the practice of Religion into the power and disposal of the Civil Magistrate are full of offence and scandal It seems to be only a design and contrivance to secure Mens secular Interests under every way of the profession of Christian Religion true or false which may have the advantage of the Magistrates Approbation By this device Conscience is set at liberty from concerning itself in an humble diligent enquiry into the mind of God as unto what is its duty in his Worship And when it is so with the Conscience of any it will not be much concerned in what it doth attend unto or observe What is in Divine things done or practised solely on the Authority of the Magistrate is immediately and directly Obedience unto him and not unto God Whatever therefore the Supreme Power in any place may do or will be pleased to do for the accommodation of the outward state of the Church and the exercise of its Rule unto the Political Government of a People or Nation yet these two things are certain 1. That he can form erect or institute no new Church-state which is not ordained and appointed by Christ and his Apostles by vertue of his Authority and what he doth of that nature appoint is called a Church only equivocally or by reason of some resemblance unto that which is properly so called 2. To dissent from what is so appointed by the Supreme Power in and about the State Form Rule and Worship of Churches whatever other evil it may be charged with or supposed liable unto can have nothing in it of that which the Scripture condemns under the name of Schism which hath respect only unto what is stated by Christ himself That which in this place we should next enquire into is what these particular Churches themselves may do by their own voluntary consent and act in a way of Association or otherwise for the accumulation and exercise of a power not formally inherent in them as particular Churches but I shall refer it unto the Head of the Communion of Churches which must be afterwards spoken unto CHAP. VIII The Duty of Believers to joyn themselves in Church-Order UNto some one or other of those particular Congregations which we have described continuing to be the ground and pillar of Truth it is the duty of every Believer of every Disciple of Christ to joyn himself for the due and orderly observation and performance of the commands of Christ unto the glory of God and their own edification Matth. 28.18 19 20. This in general is granted by all sorts and Parties of men the grant of it is the ground whereon they stand in the management of their mutual fewds in Religion pleading that men ought to be of or joyn themselves unto this or that Church still supposing that it is their Duty to be of one or another Yea it is granted also that Persons ought to chuse what Churches they will joyn themselves unto wherein they may have the best advantage unto their Edification and Salvation They are to chuse to joyn themselves unto that Church which is in all things most according to the mind of God This it is supposed is the Liberty and Duty of every Man for if it be not so it is the foolishest thing in the world for any to attempt to get others from one Church unto another which is almost the whole business of Religion that some think
Church and nothing else But it was the Will of God that there should be all those things in the Gospel Church-State also or else why do men contend about them And if this were the Will of God if they were not all revealed appointed prescribed legalized by Christ where is his Faithfulness in Answer to that Moses But no Instance can be given of any Defect in his Institutions that needs any supplement to be made by the best of men as unto the end of constituting a Church-State Order and Rule with rites of Worship in particular 4. How it is derogatory unto the Glory of the Scripture as unto its Perfection shall be elsewhere declared 8. There is no more required to give Authority obliging the Consciences of all that do believe unto any Institution or Observation of Duty or Acts of Rule in the Church but onely that it is made evident in the Scripture to be the Mind and Will of Christ. It is not necessary that every thing of this Nature should be given out unto us in form of a Law or precise Command in express words It is the Mind and Will of Christ that immediately affects the Consciences of Believers unto Obedience by what way or means soever the knowledge of it be communicated unto them in the Scripture either by express words or by just consequence from what is so expressed Wherefore 9. The Example and Practice of the Apostles in the Erection of Churches in the Appointment of Officers and Rulers in them in directions given for their Walking Order Administration of Censures and all other holy things are a sufficient Indication of the Mind and Will of Christ about them We do not say that in themselves they are Institutions and Appointments but they infallibly declare what is so or the Mind of Christ concerning those things Nor can this be questioned without a denial of their Infallibility Faithfulness and Divine Authority 10 The Assertion of some that the Apostles took their Pattern for the State and Rule of the Churches and as unto divers Rites of Worship from the Synagogues of the Jews their Institutions Orders and Rules not those appointed by Moses but such as themselves had found out and ordained is both temerarious and untrue In the pursuit of such bold Conjectures one of late hath affirmed that Moses took most of his Laws and Ceremonies from the Aegyptitians whereas it is much more likely that many of them were given on purpose to alienate the People by Prohibitions from any compliance with the Aegyptians or any other Nation whereof Maimonides in his Mene Nebuchim gives us sundry Instances This Assertion I say is rash and false For 1 As unto the Instances given for its confirmation who shall assure us that they were then in use and practice in the Synagogues when the Apostles gave Rules unto the Churches of the New Testament We have no Record of theirs not one word in all the world of what was their way and practice but what is at least 250 years younger and later than the writings of the New Testament and in the first of their writings as in them that follow we have innumerable things asserted to have been the Traditions and Practises of their Forefathers from the days of Moses which we know to be utterly false At that time when they undertook to compose a new Religion out of their pretended Traditions partly by the Revolt of many Apostates from Christianity unto them especially of the Eli●nites and Nazarenes and partly by their own Study and Observation coming to the knowledge of sundry things in the Gospel Churches their Order and Worship they took them in as their own undeniable Instances may be given hereof 2 Wherein there is a real coincidence between what was ordained by the Apostles and what was practised by the Jews it is in things which the light of Nature and the general Rules of the Scripture do direct unto And it is dishonourable unto the Apostles and the Spirit of Christ in them to think or say that in such things they took their Pattern from the Jews or made them their example Surely the Apostles took not the Pattern and Example for the Institution of Excommunication from the Druids among whom there was some things that did greatly resemble it so far as it hath its Foundation in the light of Nature CHAP. III. The Continuation of a Church-State and of Churches unto the end of the world what are the Causes of it and whereon it depends THAT there was a peculiar Church-State Instituted and appointed by Christ and his Apostles acting in his Name and Authority with the infallible guidance of his Spirit hath been declared But it may be yet farther enquired whether this Church-State be still continued by Divine Authority or whether it ceased not together with the Apostles by whom it was erected There was a Church-State under the Old Testament solemnly erected by God himself And although it was not to be absolutely perpetual or everlasting but was to continue onely unto the time of Reformation yet unto that time its continuation was secured in the Causes and means of it The Causes of the continuation of this Church-State unto its appointed period were two 1. The Promise of God unto Abraham that he would keep and preserve his Seed in Covenant with him until he should be the Heir of the World and the Father of many Nations in the coming of Christ whereunto this Church-State was subservient 2 The Law of God it self and the Institutions thereof which God appointed to be observed in all their Generations calling the Covenant the Statutes and Laws of it perpetual and everlasting that is never to cease to be abrogated or disannulled until by his own Soveraign Authority he would utterly change and take away that whole Church-State with all that belonged unto its Constitution and Preservation 2. The Means of its continuance were three 1 Carnal Generation and that on a twofold account For there were two Constituent Parts of that Church the Priests and the People the continuation of each of them depended on the priviledge of Carnal Generation For the Priests were to be all of the Family of Aaron and the People of the Seed of Abraham by the other Heads of Tribes which gave them both their foundation in and Right unto this Church-State And hereunto were annexed all the Laws concerning the Integrity Purity and Legitimacy of the Priests with the certainty of their Pedegree 2 Circumcision the want whereof was a bar against any advantage by the former Priviledge of Generation from those two Springs and hereby others also might be added unto the Church though never with a Capacity of the Priesthood 3 The Separation of the People from the rest of the World by innumerable Divine Ordinances making their Coalition with them impossible From these Causes and by these Means it was that the Church-State under the Old Testament was preserved unto its appointed season Neither
AN ENQUIRY Into the Original Nature Institution Power Order and Communion of Evangèlical CHURCHES The First Part. With AN ANSWER To the Discourse of the Unreasonableness of SEPARATION Written by Dr. Edward Stillingfleet Dean of Pauls And in Defence of the Vindication of Non-conformists from the Guilt of SCHISME By JOHN OWEN D. D. Stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the Good way and walk therein and ye shall find rest for your Souls JER 6.16 LONDON Printed by J. Richardson for Nath. Ponder at the Peacock in the Poultrey And Sam. Lee at the Feathers in Lumbardstreet 1681. TO THE READER 〈…〉 omitted the Consi●●ration 〈…〉 of Dr. Stilling●●●●● 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 the 〈◊〉 of 〈…〉 by Non 〈…〉 passed it by 〈◊〉 the 〈…〉 I supposed 〈…〉 assign it 〈◊〉 the provocation which he 〈…〉 received from those who answered his Sermon or 〈◊〉 and so have ●●ssed it by among such other excursions as Di●●●es are incident unto in their Controversal Writings For that no Countenance was given unto it either from Truth or any useful End as unto the present state of 〈…〉 the 〈…〉 the Times or rather 〈…〉 rest of some then any just rational projections For what other success this Book hath had I know not nor am solicitous Certain it is that many of the same mind and perswasion with himself have been encouraged and emboldened by it Confidently to report t●●●●●e Non-Conformists are great promoters 〈…〉 Papal ●●terest● ye● 〈…〉 to facilitate its Introdu●t●●● 〈…〉 evident in the 〈…〉 Topi●●● 〈…〉 import●●● 〈…〉 need 〈…〉 were 〈…〉 from amongst 〈…〉 it came in as 〈…〉 not●●●● will 〈…〉 influenced ●y 〈…〉 ●●vantages to de●●●● 〈…〉 ●●cessary that such an 〈…〉 true Reason●●nd Means of the advance of Popery in this Na●●on as shall give them occasion to consider themselves and their own ways For we are to look for the Causes of such Effects in things and means that are suited and fitted to be productive of them so as that they cannot but follow on their being and operation and not in Cold Stories Surmizes and far fetch'd or feigned Inferences And if we do reckon that the real advancement of Religion depends onely on the secular advancement of some that do profess it we may be mistaken in our measures as others have been before us But at present the Insinuations of that Preface do seem to prevail much with those of the same Party with its Author who want nothing at any time but the Countenance of such a Pen and Story to vent their ill will against Non-Conformists Report say they and we will Report it But also as he said Mendacium mendacio tegendum ne perpluat First evil Inventions alway tend unto and stand in need of new Additions to render them useful unto their End without which they quickly evaporate Wherefore least the Insinuations of this worthy Person should not be sufficiently subservient unto the Uniting of all Protestants in one common Interest against Popery which was the original Design of the Drs. Sermon some have added unto it that which is Homogeneal as unto Truth and so easily mixing with the other Discourse that the Non-Conformists some of them at least do receive or have received Money from the Papists to act their Affairs and promote their Interest And although this be such a putid Calumny such a malicious falshood such a frontless Lye as Impudence it self would blush at being made an instrument to vent it and withal extreamly ridiculous Yet because it seems useful unto the Good End of Uniting Protestants and Opposing Popery it hath not onely been reported by sundry of the Clergy but embraced and divulged also by some of their weak and credulous Followers who seem to believe that other mens Advantage is their Religion But when the utmost bounds of Modesty are passed nothing but an outrage in Lying and Calumny out of hopes that something will stick at last can give Countenance to men in such false Accusations And those by whom they are first whispered probably understand better than the Non-formists what Influence Money or the things which they know how to turn into it hath into their Profession and actings in Religion It seems to me that some such men are afraid lest the present opposition unto Popery should issue in such an establishment of the Protestant Religion as that hereafter it should not be in the disposal of any nor in their power to make a bargain of it either for their Advantage or in their Necessity For unless we should suppose such a defect in common Prudence as is not chargeable on men of Understanding in other affairs it is hard to judge that these things can proceed from any other ground but a design to encrease distrusts and Jealousies amongst Protestants to heighten their Differences to exasperate and provoke them to Animosities to weaken the hands of each Party by a disbelief of the Sincerity of each other in the same common Cause whence whether it be designed or no it will follow that we shall be all made a prey unto our restless Adversaries For what else but a strong inclination thereto can give the least Credit or Reputation to such vile insinuations false Surmizes and Fables I do not say in the Preface but in the Reports that have been occasioned thereby wherein Folly and Malice Rival one another against that plain open uncontroulable evidence which the Non-conformists alwayes gave and yet continue to give of their faithful cordial adherence unto the Protestant Religion and interest in the Nation And what now if in way of Retaliation a charge should be laid and mannaged against those of the Episcopal way that they should contribute their assistance whether knowingly or being deluded it is all one to the Introduction of Popery would not all things be cast into an admirable posture amongst us for an opposition thereunto But let none mistake nor deceive themselves neither the past Sufferings of the Non-conformists nor their present hopes of Liberty nor the reproaches cast upon them shall shake them in their Resolutions for a Conjunction with all sincere Protestants in the preservation of their Religion and opposition unto all Popish Designs whatever And to speak with Modesty enough as they have hitherto in all Instances of Zeal and Duty for the preservation of the Protestant Religion been as ready and forward as any other sort of men so whatever may befall them however they may be traduced or falsly accused they do and will continue in giving the highest security that Conscience Profession Principles Interest and Actions can give of their stability in the same Cause Onely they desire to be excused if they make not use of this notable Engine for opposing of Popery namely the stirring up at this present time of Jealousies Fears and Animosities amongst Protestants which others judge serviceable unto that End But that which animates all these insinuations charges and Reports is our Thankful acceptance of
3. This therefore is that which he opposeth namely that there was a Deviation in various degrees and falling of from the Original Institution Order and Rule of the Church until it issued in a fatal Apostasie This is that which on the present Occasion must be further spoken unto For if this be not true I confess there is an end of this contest and we must all acquiesce in the State Rule and Order that was in the Church of Rome before the Reformation But we may observe something yet farther in the Vindication and Confirmation of this Truth which I acknowledge to be the Foundation of all that we plead for in point of Church Reformation As 1. That the Reasons and Arguings of the Doctor in this Matter the Necessity of his Cause compelling him thereunto are the same with those of the Papists about the Apostacy of their Church in Faith Order and Worship wherewith they are charged namely when where how was this Alteration made who made opposition unto it and the like When these Enquiries are multiplyed by the Papists as unto the whole Causes between them and us he knows well enough how to give satisfactory Answers unto them and so might do in this particular unto himself also but I shall endeavour to ease him of that trouble at present Only I must say that it is fallen out somewhat unexpectedly that the Ruins of the principle Bulwark of the Papacy which hath been effectually demolished by the Writings of Protestants of all sorts should be endeavoured to be repaired by a Person justly made eminent by his Defence of the Protestant Religion against those of the Church of Rome 2. But it may be pleaded that although the Churches following the first Ages did insensibly degenerate from the Purity and simplicity of Gospel Faith and Worship yet they neither did nor could do so from an Adherence unto and abiding in their Original constitution or from the due Observation of Church Order Rule and Discipline least of all could this happen in the Case of Diocesan Episcopacy I Answer 1. That as unto the Original of any thing that looks like Diocesan Episcopacy or the Pastoral Relation of one Person of a distinct order from Presbiters unto many particular compleat Churches with Officers of their own with Power and Jurisdiction in them and over them unto the Abridgement of the exercise of that Right and Power unto their own Edification which every true Church is entrusted withal by Jesus Christ it is very uncertain and was introduced by insensible Degrees according unto the effectual working of the Mistery of Iniquity Some say that there were two distinct Orders namely those of Bishops and Presbyters instituted at first in all Churches planted by the Apostles But as the contrary may be evidently proved so a supposition of it would no way promote the cause of Diocesan Episcopacy until those who plead for it have demonstrated the State of the Churches wherein they were placed to be of the same nature with those now called Diocesan Wherefore this Hypothesis begins generally to be deserted as it seems to be by this Author Others suppose that immediately upon or at or after the Decease of the Apostles this new Order of Bishops was appointed to succeed the Apostles in the Government of the Churches that were then gathered or planted But how when or by whom by what Authority Apostolical and Divine or Ecclesiastical only and humane none can declare seeing there is not the least footstep of any such thing either in the Scripture or in the Records that remain of the primitive Churches Others think this new Order of Officers took its occasional Rise from the Practice of the Presbyters of the Church at Alexandria who chose out one among themselves constantly to preside in the Rule of the Church and in all matters of Order unto whom they ascribed some kind of Preheminence and Dignity peculiarly appropriating unto him the nam● of Bishop And if this be true as unto matter of Fact I reckon it unto the Beginnings of those less harmful Deviations from their Original Constitution which I assigned unto Primitive Churches But many Additions must be made hereunto before it will help the Cause of Diocesan Episcopacy What other occasions hereof were given or taken what Advantages were made use of to promote this Alteration shall be touched upon afterwards 2. Why may not the Churches be supposed to have departed from their original Constitution Order and Rule as well as from their first Faith and Worship which they did gradually in many successive Ages until both were utterly corrupted The Causes Occasions and Temptations leading unto the former are to the full as pregnant as those leading unto the latter For 1. There was no vicious corrupt disposition of Mind that began more early to work in Church Officers nor did more grow and thrive in the Minds of many then Ambition with desire of Preheminence Dignity and Rule It is not to be supposed that Diotrephes was alone in his Desire of ●reheminence nor in the irregular actings of his unduly ●ssumed Authority However we have one signal Instance in him of the Deviation that was in the Church with him from the Rule of its Original Constitution For he prevailed so far therein as by his own single Episcopal Power to reject the Authority of the Apostles and to cast them out of the Church who complyed not with his humour How effectually the same Ambition wrought afterwards in many others possessing the same Place in their Churches with Diotrephes is sufficiently evident in all Ecclesiastical Histories It is far from being the only Instance of the Corruption of Church Order and Rule by the Influence of this Ambition yet it is one that is pregnant which is given us by Am●rose for saith he Ecclesia ut Synagoga Seniores habu●● quorum sine consilio nihil agebatur in Ecclesia quod qua negl●gentia obsoleverit nescio nisi forte doctorum desidia aut magis superbia dum soli volunt aliquid videri In 1. ad Timoth. cap. 5. It seems there was some alteration in Church Rule and Order in his Time whose Beginning and Progress he could not well discover and trace but knew well enough that so it was then come to pass And if he who lived so near the Times wherein such Alterations were made could not yet discover their first Insinuation nor their subtle Progress it is unreasonable to exact a strict account of us in things of the same nature who live so many Ages after their first Introduction But this he judgeth that it was the Pride or Ambition of the Doctors of the Church which introduced that Alteration in its Order Whereas therefore we see in the Event that all Deviations from the Original Constitution of Churches all Alterations in their Rule and Order did issue in a compliance with the Ambition of Church Rulers as it did in the Papal Church and this Ambition was signally noted
as one of the first depraved Inclinations of Mind that wrought in Ecclesiastical Rulers and which in the fourth and fifth Centuries openly proclaimed itself unto the scandal of Christian Religion there was a greater disposition in them unto a Deviation from the Original Institution Rule and Order of the Church no way suited unto the satisfaction of that Ambition then unto a Defection from the Purity of Faith and Worship which yet also followed 2. As the Inclination of many lay towards such a Deviation so their Interests lead them unto it and their Temptations cast them upon it For to acknowledge the Truth unto our Author and Others the Rule and Conduct of the Church the Preservation of its Order and Discipline according unto its first Institution and the Directions given in the Scripture about it are according unto our Apprehension of these things a Matter so weighty in itself so dangerous as unto its Issue attended with so many Difficulties Trials and Temptations laid under such severe Interdictions of Lordly Power or seeking either of Wealth or Dignity that no wise men will ever undertake it but meerly out of a sense of a Call from Christ unto it and in compliance with that Duty which he owes unto him It is no pleasant thing unto Flesh and Blood to be ingaged in the conduct and oversight of Christs Volunteers to bear with their manners to exercise all Patience towards them in their Infirmities and Temptations to watch continually over their walkings and conversation and thereon personally to exhort and admonish them all to search diligently and scrupulously into the Rule of the Scripture for their Warranty in every Act of their Power and Duty under all their Weaknesses and Miscarriag●s continuing an high valuation of them as of the Flock of God which he hath purchased with his own Blood with sundry other things of the like kind all under an abiding sense of the near approach of that great Account which they must give of the whole Trust and Charge committed unto them before the Judgment seat of Christ for the most part peculiarly exposed unto all manner of Dangers Troubles and Persecutions without the least encouragement from Wealth Power or Honour It is no wonder therefore if many in the Primitive times were willing gradually to extricate themselves out of this uneasie condition and to embrace all occasions and opportunities of introducing insensibly another Rule and Order into the Churches that might tend more unto the Exaltation of their own Power Authority and Dignity and free them in some measure from the weight of that important charge and continual care with labour which a diligent and strict Adherence unto the first institution of Churches and Rules given for their Order and Government in the Scripture would have obliged them unto And this was done accordingly until in the fourth and fifth Centuries and so onward the Bishops under various Titles began by their Arbitrary Rules and Canons to dispose of the Flock of Christ to part and divide them among themselves without their own knowledge or consent as if they had conquered them by the sword This Bishop shall have such a share and number of them under his Power and that other so many so far shall the Jurisdiction of one extend and so far that of another was the subject of many of their Decrees and Laws for the Rule of the Church But yet neither did they long keep within those Bounds and Limits which their more modest Ambition had at first prescribed unto them but took occasion from these Beginnings to contend among themselves about Preheminence Dignity and Power in which contest the Bishop of Rome at length remained Master of the Field thereby obtaining a second Conquest of the World 3. That there was such a gradual Deviation from the Original Institution of Churches their Order and Rule is manifest in the Event For the change became at length as great as the distance is between the Gospel and the Rule of Christ over his Church on the one hand and the Canon Law with the Pope or Antichrist set over the Church on the other This change was not wrought at once not in one Age but by an insensible Progress even from the Days of the Apostles unto those dark and evil times wherein the Popes of Rome were exalted into an absolute Tyranny over all Churches unto the satiety of their Ambition For 4. This Mistery of Iniquity began to work in the days of the Apostles themselves in the suggestions of Satan and the Lusts of Men though in a manner latent and imperceptible unto the wisest and best of Men. For that this Mistery of the Iniquity consisted in the effectual Workings of the Pride Ambition and other Vices of the Minds of Men excited enticed and guided by the craft of Satan until it issued in the Idolatrous persecuting State of the Church of Rome wherein all Church Rule Order and Worship of Divine Institution was utterly destroyed or corrupted we shall believe until we see an Answer given unto the learned Writings of all sorts of Protestants whereby it hath been proved These things are sufficient to Vindicate the Truth of the Assertion which the Doctor opposeth and to free it from his Exceptions But because as was observed before the supposition hereof is the foundation of all our present contests about Church Order and Rule I shall yet proceed a little farther in the Declaration of the Way and Manner whereby the Apostacy asserted was begun and carried on And I shall not herein insist on particular Instances nor make a Transcription of Stories out of antient Writers giving Evidence unto the Truth because it hath been abundantly done by others especially those of Magdeburg in the sixth and seventh Chapters of their Centuries unto whose Observations many other Learned men have made considerable Additions but I shall only treat in general of the Causes Ways and Manner of the Beginning and Progress of the Apostacy or Declension of Churches from their first Institution which fell out in the successive Ages after the Apostles especially after the End of the second Century until when Divine Institutions as unto the substance of them were preserved entire Decays in any kind even in things Natural and Political are hardly discernable but in and by their effects When an Hectick Distemper befalls the Body of any man it is oftimes not to be discerned until it is impossible to be cured The Roman Historian gives this advice unto his Readers after he hath considered the ways and means whereby the Empire came to its Greatness labente deinde disciplina velut dissidentes primo mores sequatur animo deinde ut magis magisque lapsi sint tum ire caeperint praecipites donec ad haec tempora anibus nec vitia nostra nec remedia pati possumus periculu● est Liv. Praefat. His words do not give us a more graphical Description of the Rise and Decay as unto Vertue and Vice
least that any other Person had undertaken or would undertake the Consideration of the Drs. Sermon I thought that My endeavour for the removal of the Obstacle cast in the way unto a sincere Coalition in the Vnity of Faith among all sorts of Protestants might not be unacceptable Neither did I see any other way whereby this might be done but only by a Vindication of the Dissenters from the Guilt of that state which if it be truly charged on them must render our Divisions irreconcileable And continuing still of the same Mind I have once more renewed the same Defensative with no other Design but to maintain hopes that Peace and Love may yet be preserved among us during the continuation of these Differences And whereas it is a work of Almighty Power to reduce Christian Religion unto its first Purity and Simplicity which will not be effected but by various providential Dispensations in the World and renewed Effusions of the Holy Spirit from above which are to be waited for and seeing that all endeavours for National Reformation are attended with insuperable Difficulties few Churches being either able or willing to extricate themselves from the Dust of Traditions and Time with the Rust of Secular Interests I would hope that they shall not be always the Object of publick Severities who keeping the Vnity of the Spirit in the Bond of Truth and Peace with all sincere Disciples of Christ every where do design nothing but a Reformation of themselves and their ways by an universal compliance with the Will and Word of Christ alone whom God hath commanded them in all things to hear and obey The Reduction I say of the Profession of Christianity in general unto its Primitive Purity Simplicity Separation from the World and all Implication with Secular Interests so as that it should comprize nothing but the Guidance of the Souls of Men in the Life of God towards the Enjoyment of him is a Work more to be prayed for to come in its proper season then to be expected in this Age. Nor do any yet appear fitted in the least Measure for the undertaking or attempting such a Work any farther then by their own Personal Profession and Example And whilst things continue amongst Protestant Churches in the State wherein they are under the Influence of divided secular Interests and advantagious Mixtures with them with the Reliques of the Old General Apostasie by differences in points of Doctrine in Rules of Discipline in Orders of Divine Worship it is in vain to look for any Union or Communion among them in a compliance with any certain Rule of Vniformity either in the Profession of Faith or in the Practice of Worship and Discipline Nor would such an Agreement among them could it be attained be of any great Advantage unto the important ends of Religion unless a Revival of the Power of it in the Soules of Men do accompany it In the mean time the Glory of our Christian Profession in Righteousness Holiness and a visible Dedication of its Professors unto God is much lost in the World innumerable Souls perishing through the want of effectual means for their Conversion and Edification To attempt publick National Reformation whilst things Ecclesiastick and Civil are so involved as they are the one being riveted into the legal constitution of the other is neither the Duty nor Work of Private men Nor will as I suppose Wise Men be over forward in attempting any such thing unless they had better Evidence of means to make it effectual then any that do as yet appear For the Religion of a Nation in every form will answer the Ministry of it What is the present Duty in this State of things of those private Christians or Ministers who cannot satisfie their Consciences as unto their Duty towards God without endeavouring a Conformity unto the Will of Christ in the Observance of all his Institutions and Commands confining all their Concerns in Religion unto things Spiritual and Heavenly is the Enquiry before us CHAP. I. Of the Original of Churches WHEN any thing which is pleaded to belong unto Religion or the Worship of God is proposed unto us Our first Consideration of it ought to be in that Enquiry which our Lord Jesus Christ made of the Pharisees concerning the Baptism of John Whence is it from Heaven or of Men He distributes all things which come under that Plea or Pretence into two heads as unto their Original and Efficient cause namely Heaven and Men. And these are not only different and distinct but so contradictory one unto another that as unto any thing wherein Religion or the Worship of God is concerned they cannot concur as partial causes of the same effect What is of Men is not from Heaven and what is from Heaven is not of Men. And hence is his determination concerning both sorts of these things Every plant which my Heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted up Mat. 15.13 Designing therefore to treat of Churches their Original Nature Vse and End my first Enquiry must be whether they are from Heaven or of Men that is whether they are of a Divine Original having a Divine Institution or whether they are an Ordinance or Creation of Men For their Pedigree must be derived from one of these singly they never concurred in the Constitution of any part of Divine Worship or any thing that belongs thereunto This would seem a case and enquiry of an exceeding easie determination For the Scripture every where makes mention of the Church or Churches as the Ordinances and Institutions of God But such things have falln out in the World in latter Ages as may make men justly question whether we understand the mind of God aright or no in what is spoken of them At least if they should allow that the Churches so mentioned in the Scripture were of Divine Appointment yet it might be highly questionable whether those which have since been in the World be not a meer product of the invention and power of men 1. For many Ages such things alone were proposed unto the world and imposed on it for the only Church as were from Hell rather than from Heaven at least from Men and those none of the best For all men in these Western parts of the world were obliged to believe and profess on the penalties of Eternal and Temporal Destruction that the Pope of Rome and those depending on him were the only Church in the World If this should be granted as it was almost universally in some Ages and in this is earnestly contended for there would be a thousand evidences to prove that the institution of Churches is not from Heaven but from Men. Whether the inventions of men in the mystery of iniquity be to be received again or no men of secular Wisdom and Interest may do well to consider but he must be blind and mad and accursed in his mind and understanding who can think of receiving it as from
Words and the Interpretation of them so many various and opposite Opinions about them and those debated in such long and Operous Discourses that some would take an Argument from thence that nothing can be directly proved from them nor any certain account of the State and Duty of the Church be thence collected But nothing can be insinuated more false and absurd nor which more directly tendeth to the overthrow of the whole Authority of the Scripture For if when men are seduced by their Interests or otherwise to multiply false Expositions of any place of Scripture and to contend earnestly about them that thereon as unto us they lose their instructive Power and certain Determination of the Truth we should quickly have no Bottom or Foundation for our Faith in the most important Articles of Religion nor could have so at this day But all the various Pretences of men some whereof would have the Pope others a General Councel some the Civile Magistrate some the Jewish Synagogue some a Company of Arbitrators are nothing but so many Instances of what Interest Prejudice corrupt Lusts ambitious Designs with a dislike of the Truth will bring forth To me it seems strange that any impartial man reading this Context can take the Church in this place in any other sense but for such a Society as whereunto an offending and offended Brother or Disciple of Christ might and ought to belong to the Body whereof they might address themselves for Relief and Remedy or the Removal of Offences by vertue of the Authority and Appointment of Jesus Christ. It were an endless Task and unsuited unto our present Design to examine the various pretensions unto the Church in this place enough also if not too much hath been written already about them I shall therefore observe only some few things from the context which will sufficiently evidence what sort of Church it is that is here intended 1. The Rule and Direction given by our Saviour in this place unto his Disciples doth not concern civil Injuries as such but such Sins as have Scandal and Offence in them either causing other men to Sin or giving them Grief and Offence for Sin whereby the exercise of Love in mutual Communion may be impeded Private Injuries may be respected herein but not as Injuries but so far as they are scandalous and matter of Offence unto them unto whom they are known And this appears 1 From the proper Signification of the Phrase here used 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If thy Brother Sin against thee Doing of an injury is expressed by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and to be injured by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 6.8 9. that is to be wronged to be dealt unjustly withal and to be defrauded or deprived of our Right But 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not so used but only so to sin as to give scandal unto them against whom that Sin is said to be 1 Cor. 8.11 12 To be guilty of Sin against Christ in the light of their consciences is to sin against them 2. It is evident in the context Our Saviour is treating directly about all sorts of scandals and offences or sins as occasions of falling stumbling and sinning and so of perishing unto others giving Rules and Directions about them from 8th verse unto these words wherein Direction is given about their Cure and Removal And two things he ascribes unto these scandals 1. That weak Christians are despised in them ver 10. 2. That they are in danger to be destroyed or lost for ever by them ver 14. which gives us a true account of the nature of scandalous Offences Wherefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to sin is used here in the same sense with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before to give offence by a scandalous miscarriage 3. Where the same Rule is again recorded the words used enforce this application of them Luk. 17.1 2 3. The Lord Christ foretells his Disciples that scandals and offences would arise with the nature and danger of them v. 1. And because that they obtain their pernicious effects mostly on them that are weak he gives caution against them with especial respect unto such among his Disciples better any one were cast into the Sea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then that he should give scandal or offence unto one of these little ones ver 2. And what he expresseth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 2. he expresseth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 3. sin against thee and this is plain from th● direction which he gives hereon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rebuke him The word is never used with respect unto private Injuries but as they are sins or faults so is it joyned with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Tim. 4.2 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the only word used for the Rebuke given or to be given unto a scandalous Offender 2 Cor. 2.6 4 Another Rule is given in case of private Injuries that are only such and that is that we immediately forgive them 5. It doth not seem a Direction suited unto that intense Love which the Lord Christ requireth in all his Disciples one towards another nor the nature of that Love in its Exercise as it is described 1 Cor. 13. that for a private Injury done unto any man without respect unto sin against God therein which is the scandal he should follow his Brother so far as to have him cast ●ut of the Communion of all Churches and Believers which yet in case of Sin unrepented of is a necessary Duty 2dly The Rule here prescribed and the Direction given were so prescribed and given for the use of all the Disciples of Christ in all Ages and are not to be confined unto any present case or the present season For 1. There was no such case at present no mutual offence among any of his Disciples that should require this Determination of it only respect is had unto what might afterwards fall out in the Church 2. There was no need of any such Direction at that time because Christ himself was then constantly present with them in whom all Church Power did reside both eminently and formally Accordingly when any of them did offend unto scandal he did himself rebuke them Matth. 16.22 23. And when any thing of mutual Offence fell out among them he instructed them and directed them into the way of Love doing what any Church could do and much more also Mat. 20 24 25 26 27.28 3 This was a case which our Saviour foreknew and foretold that it would fall out in the Church in futu●e generations even unto the end of the world It doth so every day and will do so whilst men are in an imperfect state here below Nor is there any thing wherein the Church as unto its Order ●urity and Edification is more concerned Nor can any of them be preserved without a certain Rule for the cure and healing of offences nor are so in any Church where such a Rule is
this constant total Communion doth not only include a conscientious Observance of all things appointed to be done by the Rules or Canons in those Assemblies but a Renunciation also of all other ways and means of Edification by joint Communion as unlawful and Evil. And it will be hard to prove that on a Concession of the Lawfulness of Communion in some Acts of Divine Worship it Will be necessary for men to oblige themselves unto total constant Communion with a Renunciation and Condemnation of all other ways and means of joint Edification It may also be lawful to do a thing with some respects and Limitations at some times which it may not be lawful to do absolutely and alwayes It may be necessary from outward circumstances to do that Sometimes which is lawful in itself though not necessary from itself it can never be necessary to do that which is unlawful Of the first sort they esteem occasional Communion and the other of the latter Some time is spent in taking off an Exception unto this Inference from the Practise of our Saviour who had occasional Communion with the Jews in the Temple and Synagogues which he proves to have been constant and perpetual and not occasional only and that he prescribed the same Practise unto his Disciples But I think this labour might have been spared For there is nothing more clear and certain then that our Lord Jesus Christ did joyn with the Jews in the Observance of Gods Institutions among them on the one hand and on the other that he never joyned with them in the observance of their own Traditions and Pharasaical Impositions but warned all his Disciples to avoid them and refuse them whose Example we desire to follow for concerning all such Observances in the Church he pronounced that sentence Every plant that my Heavenly Father hath not planted shall be rooted up But the Doctor proceeds unto a second Argument pag. 163 to the same Purpose from as he calls it the particular force of that Text Phil. 3.16 As far as we have already attained let us walk by the same Rule mind the same things This is the Text which gave the first occasion unto this whole Dispute The Doctors Intention is so indefensible from this place that I thought however he might persist in the Defence of the Cause he had undertaken he would have forborn from seeking Comtenance unto it from these Words of the Apostle But it is fallen out otherwise and I am here in the first place called unto an Account for the Exceptions I put in unto his Application of these Words of the Apostle in my Vindication of the Non-conformists I will spare the Reader as much as is possible in the Repetition of things formerly spoken and the Transcription of his Words or my own without prejudice unto the Cause itself After a Reflection of some Obscurity and Intricacy on my Discourse he repeates my sense of the Words according unto his Apprehension under four Heads about which I shall not contend seeing whether he hath apprehended my Mind aright or no or expressed the whole of what I declared belongs not unto the Merit of the Cause in hand Nor indeed do I yet know directly what he judgeth this Text doth prove or what it is that he inferrs from it though I know well enough what it is designed to give countenance unto and what is the Application that is made of it And therefore he issues his whole Dispute about it in this Enquiry how far the Apostles Rule hath an influence on this case But whosoever shall come unto a sedate Consideration of this Text and Context without Prejudice without preconceived Opinions without Interest in Parties or Causes will judge it to be a Matter of Art to apply them unto the present Controversie as unto the Imposition of an Arbitrary Rule of walking in Churches on all that are presumed to belong unto them But to clear these things the Doctor proposeth three things to be debated 1. Whether the Apostle speaks of different Opinions or different Practices 2. Whether the Rule he gives be mutual Forbearance 3. How far the Apostle's Rule hath an influence into this case The two first of these belong not at all unto the present Argument and the last is but faintly proposed and pursued though it be the Foundation of his whole Fabrick The Reader if he will put himself to so much trouble as to compare my former Discourse with what is here offered in Answer or Opposition unto it he will easily see that nothing is pleaded that may abate the force of what was insisted on For indeed the Discourse on these things consists for the most part in Diversions from the Argument in hand whereby an Appearance is made of various Arguings and the Proof of sundry things which belong not unto the Case in hand Without any long Deductions artificial Insinuations or diverting Reasonings without wresting the Text or Context these things are plain and evident in them 1. A Supposition of Differences among Believers in and about Opinions and Practises relating unto Religion and the Worship of God So is at present between us and those of the Church of England by whom we are opposed 2. In this state whilst these Differences do continue there is one common Rule according unto which those who so dissent among themselves are to walk in the things wherein they are agreed Such is the Rule of Faith and Love which we all assent unto and are agreed in 3. This Rule cannot consist in a precise Determination of the things in Difference with an Authoritative Prescription of Vniformity in Opinions and Practise because it is directed unto upon a supposition of the continuation of those Differences between Believers 4. That during the continuation of these Differences or different Apprehensions and Practices whilst on all hands they use the means of coming unto the Knowledge of the Truth in all things that they should walk in Love mutually forbearing one another in those things wherein they differed Untill it be manifested that these things are not the Design of the Context and to contain the sense of the Words they are not only useless unto the Doctors Design but opposite unto it and destructive of it But nothing is here attempted unto that Purpose To draw any Argument from these Words applicable unto his Design it must be proved 1. That besides the Rule of Faith Love and Worship given by Divine Institution and Obligatory unto all the Disciples of Christ or all Churches in all times and Ages that the Apostles gave a Rule concerning outward Rites Ceremonies Modes of Worship Feasts and Fastings Ecclesiastical Government Liturgies and the like unto which all Believers ought to conform on the Penalty of being esteemed Schismaticks and dealt withal accordingly For this only is that wherein we are concerned 2. That because the Apostles made such a Rule which we know not what it is or what is become of it that
differences of lesser Moment whilst the general Rule of Faith and Love is attended unto 4. To be quiet and wait for further Instruction is the Direction given unto both Parties whilst the Differences did continue between them and that in opposition unto mutual Impositions 5. A Church that is really so or so esteemed may break the Peace with its own Members and others as well as they with it and where the fault is must be determined by the Causes of what is done 6. For what is added about gathering of Churches it shall be considered in its proper place But as unto the Application of these things unto the present Case there lies in the bottom of them such an unproved Presumption of their being the Church that is according unto Divine Institution for in their being so in any other sense we are not concerned of their Church Power and Authority by whom such Orders and Rules are made as we can by no means admit of I can more warrantably give this as the Apostles Rule than that of our Author What you have attained unto in the Knowledge of the Doctrine and Misteries of the Gospel walk together in holy Communion of Faith and Love but take heed that you multiply not new Causes of Divisions and Differences by inventing and imposing new Orders in Divine Worship or the Rule of the Church casting them out who agree with you in all things of divine Revelation and Institution He adds from my Words If the Rule reach our Case it must be such as requires things to be observed as were never divinely appointed as National Churches Ceremonies and Modes of worship to which he Replies And so this Rule doth in Order unto Peace require the Observation of such things which although they be not particularly commanded of God yet are enjoyned by lawful Authority provided that they be not unlawful in themselves nor repugnant unto the Word of God Answ. 1. Let the Reader if he please consult the place whence these Words are taken in my Discourse and he will find this Evasion obviated 2. What is intended by this Rule is it the Rule given by the Apostle Who that reads the Words can possibly pretend unto any such conception of their meaning If he understand a Rule of his own I know not what it may or may not include 3. I deny and shall for ever deny that the Rule here intended by the Apostle doth give the least countenance unto the Invention and Imposition of things not divinely instituted not prescribed not commanded in the Word on the Pretence that those who so invent and impose them judged them lawful and that they have Authority so to do He Objects again unto himself out of my Discourse that the Apostles never gave any such Rules themselves about outward Modes of Worship with Ceremonies Feasts Fasts Liturgies c. Whereunto he Replies What then I say then 1. It had been happy for Christians and Christian Religion if those who pretended to be their Successors had followed their Example and made no such Rules at all that they would not have thought themselves wiser than they or more careful for the Good of the Church or better acquainted with the Mind of Christ in these things then they were For that Multiplication of Rules Laws Canons about the things mentioned and others of an alike nature which the Apostles never gave any Example of or Encouragement unto which afterwards ensued hath been a principal means of altering the state of the Church from its Original Institution of corrupting its Worship Administring occasion unto scandal and endless Strifes 2. If the Apostles gave no such Rules themselves it may be concluded safely that it was because in their Judgement no such Rule was to be given Other Reason hereof cannot be assigned for if it might have been done according to the Mind of Christ and by vertue of the Commission which they had from him innumerable Evils might have been prevnted by the doing of it They foresaw what Differences would arise in the Church what Divisions the darkness and corrupt Lusts of men would cast them into about such things as these and probably knew much whereunto the Mistery of Iniquity tended yet would they not appoint any Arbitrary Rules about things not ordained by our Lord Jesus Christ which might have given some bounds unto the Inclinations of men in making and multiplying Rules of their own unto the ruine of the Church 3. Then I say we beg the Pardon of all who concern themselves herein that we scruple the Complying with such Rules in Religion and the Worship of God as the Apostles thought not meet to appoint or ordain But he addes It is sufficient that they gave this general Rule that all Lawful things are to be done for the Churches Peace Answ. What is to be done for the Churches Peace we shall afterwards consider To be done is intended of Acts of Religion in the Worship of God I say then the Apostles never gave any such Rule as that pretended the Rule they gave was that all things which Christ hath commanded were to be done and observed and for the doing of any thing else they gave no Rule Especially they gave not such a large Rule as this that might serve the turn and interest of the worst of men in imposing on the Church whatever they esteemed Lawful as not by vertue of any Rule of the Apostles but in an open Rejection of all they gave it afterwards fell out in the Church This is a Rule which would do the Work to the Purpose of all that have the Reputation of Governours in the Church be it the Pope or who it will For they are themselves the sole Judges of what is Lawful the People as it is pretended understand nothing of these things Whatever therefore they have a Mind to introduce into the Worship of God and to impose on the Practice of men therein is to be done by vertue of this Apostolical Rule for the Churches Peace provided they judge it Lawful and surely no Pope was ever yet so stark mad as to impose things in Religion which he himself judged unlawful Besides things may be Lawful in themselves that is Morally which yet it is not Lawful to introduce into the Worship of God because not expedient nor for Edification Yea things may be Lawful to be done sometimes on some occasions in the Worship of God which yet it would be unlawful to impose by vertue of a general binding Rule for all times and seasons Instances may be multiplied in each kind Therefore I say the Apostles never gave this Rule they opened no such Door unto Arbitrary Imposition they laid no such Yoke on the Necks of the Disciples which might prove heavier and did so then that of the Jewish Ceremonies which they had taken away namely that they were to do and observe all that should by their Rulers be imposed on them as lawful in their Judgement This
was that the Scripture the Word of God is a perfect Rule of Faith and Religious Worship so as that nothing ought to be admitted which is repugnant unto it in its general Rule or especial Prohibitions nothing imposed that is not prescribed therein but that every one is at liberty to refuse and reject any thing of that kind This they all contended for and confirmed their Assertion by the express Testimonies of the Writers of the Primitive Churches To prove this to have been their Principle in their Separation from the Church of Rome were to light as they say a Candle in the Sun It were easie to fill up a Volume with Testimonies of it After a while this Principle began to be weakned when the Interest of men made them except from this Rule things of outward Order with some Rites and Ceremonies the ordaining whereof they pleaded to be left unto Churches as they saw Good Hereby this Principle I say was greatly weakened For no certain bounds could ever be assigned unto those things that are exempted from the Regulation of the Scripture And the same Plea might be mannaged for many of the Popish Orders and Ceremonies that were rejected as forcibly as for them that were retained And whereas all the Reformed Churches agreed to abide by this Principle in Matters of Faith there fell out an admirable Harmony in their confessions thereof But leaving the Necessity of attending unto this Rule in the Matter of Order Ceremonies Rites and Modes of Worship with the state of Churches in their Rule and Polity those Differences and Divisions ensued amongst them which continue unto this day But this Perswasion in some places made a farther Progress namely that it was lawful to impose on the Consciences and Practises of men such things in Religious Worship provided that they concerned outward Order Rites Rule and Ceremonies as are no where prescribed in the Scripture and that on severe Penalties Ecclesiastical and Civil This almost utterly destroyed the great fundamental Principle of the Reformation whereon the first Reformers justified their Separation from the Church of Rome For whereas it is supposed the Right of them who are to be the imposers to determine what doth belong unto the Heads mentioned they might under that pretence impose what they pleased and refuse those whom they imposed them on the Protection of the aforesaid Principle namely that nothing ought to be so imposed that is not prescribed in the Scripture This hath proved the Rise of all endless Differences and Schismes amongst us nor will they be healed until all Christians are restored unto their Liberty of being obliged in the things of God only unto the Authority of the Scripture The Words of Mr. Chillingsworth unto this purpose are Emphatical which I shall therefore transcribe though that be a thing which I am very averse from Require saith he of Christians only to believe Christ and to call no man Master but him only let those leave claiming of Infallibity who have no Right unto it and let them that in their Words disclaim it disclaim it likewise in their Actions In a word take away Tyranny which is the Devils Instrument to support Errors and Superstitions and Impieties in the several Parts of the World which could not otherwise long withstand the Power of Truth I say take away Tyranny and restore Christians to their just and full Liberty of captivating their understandings to the Scripture only that universal Liberty thus moderated may quickly reduce Christendom to Truth and Vnity Part 1. chap. 4. Sect. 16. This fundamental Principle of the first Reformation we do not only firmly adhere unto rejecting all those Opinions and Practises whereby its force is weakened and impaired but also do willingly suffer the things that do befal us in giving our Testimony thereunto Neither will there ever be Peace among the Churches of Christ in this World until it be admitted in its whole Latitude especially in that Part thereof wherein it excludes all Impositions of things not prescribed in the Scripture For there are but few Persons who are capable of the subtilty of those Reasonings which are applied to weaken this Principle in its whole extent All men can easily see this that the sufficiency of the Scripture in general as unto all the ends of Religion is the only Foundation they have to rest and build upon They do see actually that where Men go about to prescribe things to be observed in Divine Worship not appointed in the Scripture that no two Churches have agreed therein but endless contentions have ensued that No man can give an Instance in particular of any thing that is necessary unto the Rule of the Church or the Observance of the commands of Christ in the Worship of God that is not contained in the Scripture and hereon are ready to resolve to call no man Master but Christ and to admit of nothing in Religion but what is warranted by his Word Secondly The second Principle of the Reformation whereon the Reformers justified their Separation from the Church of Rome was this That Christian People were not tyed up unto blind Obedience unto Church Guides but were not only at Liberty but also obliged to judge for themselves as unto all things that they were to believe and practise in Religion and the Worship of God They knew that the whole Fabrick of the Papacy did stand on this Basis or Dunghil that the Mistery of Iniquity was cemented by this Device namely that the People were ignorant and to be kept in Ignorance being obliged in all things unto an implicite Obedience unto their pretended Guides And that they might not be capable of nor fit for any other condition they took from them the only means of their Instruction unto their Duty and the Knowledge of it that is the Use of the Holy Scripture But the first Reformers did not only vindicate their Right unto the Use of the Scripture itself but insisted on it as a Principle of the Reformation and without which they could never have carried on their Work that they were in all concernments of Religion to judge for themselves And Multitudes of them quickly manifested how meet and worthy they were to have this Right restored unto them in laying down their Lives for the Truth suffering as Martyrs under the Power of their Bishops This Principle of the Reformation in like manner is in no small degree weakened by many and so the Cause of it Dr. Still himself pag. 127 128. denies unto the People all Liberty or Ability to choose their own Pastors to judge what is meet for their own Edification what is Heresie or a pernitio●● Error and what is not or any thing of the like nature This is almost the same with that of the Pharisees concerning them who admired and followed the Doctrine of our Saviour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 7.49 This Rabble which knows not the Law Yet was it this People whom the Apostles directed
can have that respect and Devotion unto them as they would have unto hereditary Rulers long Succession in Rulers being the great cause of Veneration in the People especially such as had a Succession one unto another by a Natural Descent through Divine Appointment as the Preists had under the Law or as unto those whom on the account of their Worth Ability and Fitness for the work of the Ministry among them they do choose themselves they may do well to consider who are concerned The necessity there is of maintaining a Reputation and Interest by secular Grandeur Pomp and Power of Ruling the People of the Church in Church Matters by external force with many other Inconveniences do all proceed from this Order of things or rather disorder in the Call of men unto the Ministry And hence it is that the City of God and the People of Christ therein which is indeed the only true free Society in the World have Rulers in it and over them neither by a Natural Right of their own as in Paternal Government nor by hereditary Succession nor by Election nor by any way or means wherein their own consent is included but are under a Yoke of an Imposition of Rulers on them above any Society on the Earth whatever Besides there is that Relation between the Church and its Guides that no Law Order or Constitution can create without their mutual voluntary Consent And therefore this Right and Liberty of the People in every Church to choose their own Spiritual Officers was for many Ages preserved sacredly in the primitive times But hereof there is no shadow remaining in our Parochial Churches sundry Persons as Patrons and Ordinaries have a concurring Interest into the imposing of a Minister or such whom they esteem so upon any such Church without the Knowledge Consent or Approbation of the Body of the Church either desired or accepted If there be any who cannot comply with this Constitution of things relating unto the Ministry because it is a Part of their Profession of the Gospel which they are to make in the World which yet really consists only in an avowed subjection unto the Commands of Christ they can be no way obnoxious unto any charge of Schisme upon their refusal so to do For a Schisme that consists in giving a Testimony unto the Institutions of Christ and standing fast in the Liberty wherewith he hath made Disciples free is that whose Guilt no man need to fear 5. What remaineth of those Reasons whereon those who cannot comply with the Conformity under Consideration are cleared in point of Conscience from any Obligation thereunto and so from all Guilt of Schisme whatever belongs unto the Head of Impositions on their Consciences and Practise which they must submit unto These being such as many whole Books have been written about the chief whereof have no way been answered unless railings and scoffings with contempt and fierce Reproaches with false Accusations may pass for Answers I shall not here again insist upon them Some few things of that Nature I shall only mention and put an end unto this Dispute 1. The Conformity required of Ministers consists in a publick Assent and Consent unto the Book of Common Prayer with the Rubrick in it which contains all the whole Practise of the Church of England in its commands and Prohibitions Now these being things that concern the Worship of God in Christ the whole entire State Order Rule and Government of the Gospel Church whoever gives solemnly this Assent and Consent unless he be allowed to enter his Protestation against those things which he dislikes and of the sense wherein he doth so assent and consent which by Law is allowed unto none the said Assent and Consent is his publick Profession that all these things and all contained in them are according to the Mind of Christ and that the Ordering of them as such is part of their professed Subjection unto his Gospel Blessed be God most Ministers are too wise and honest to delude their Consciences with Distinctions Equivocations and Reservations and do thereon rather choose to suffer Penury and Penalty then to make the least entrenchment upon their own Consciences or the honour of the Gospel in their Profession What they do and declare of this Nature they must do it in Sincerity as in the sight of God as approving what they do not only as pardonable effects of Necessity but as that which is the best they have or can do in the Worship of God with a solemne Renunciation of whatever is contrary unto what they do so approve And whether this be a meet Imposition on the Consciences of Ministers with reference unto a great Book or Volume of a various composition unto things almost without number wherein exceptions have been given of old and lately not answered nor answerable with Rules Laws Orders not pretending to be Scriptural Prescriptions is left unto the Judgment of all who have due thoughts of their approaching Account before the Judgment Seat of Jesus Christ. 2. The Conformity that is required of others being precisely and without Power of Dispensation in them by whom it is required to answer the Rule or Law of it before declared every Man by his so conforming doth thereby take it on his Conscience and make it Part of his Christian Profession that all which he so conformes unto is not only what he may do but what he ought to do both in matter and manner so farre as the Law or any Part of it doth determine or enjoyn them No man is allowed to make either distinction or Protestation with respect unto any thing contained in the Rules and therefore whatever he doth in compliance therewith is interpretable in the sight of God and Man as an Approbation of the whole Sincerity and Openness in Profession is indispensibly required of us in order unto our Salvation And therefore to instruct men as unto the Worship of God to do what they do not judge to be their Duty to do but only hope they may do it without Sin or to joyn themselves in and unto that Performance of it which either they approve not of as the best in the whole or not lawful or approveable in some Parts of it is to instruct them unto the Debauching of their Consciences and Ruine of their own Souls Let every one be perswaded in his own Mind for what is not of Faith is Sin 3. There is in this Conformity required a Renunciation of all other ways of publick Worship or means of Edification that may be made use of For they are all expresly forbidden in the Rule of that Conformity No Man therefore can comply with that Rule but that a Renunciation of all other publick wayes of Edification as unlawful is part of the visible Profession which they make Video meliora proboque deteriora sequor is no good Plea in Religion It is uprightness and Integrity that will preserve Men and nothing else He that
shall endeavour to cheat his Conscience by Distinctions and mental Reservations in any concernments of Religious Worship I fear he hath little of it if any at all that is good for ought On these suppositions I say the Imposition of the things so often contended about on the Consciences and Profession of Christians as namely the constant sole use of the Liturgie in all Church Administrations in the Matter and Manner prescribed the Use and Practice of all Canonical Ceremonies the Religious Observation of stated Holidays with other things of the like Nature is sufficient to warrant any sober peaceable Disciple of Christ who takes care of his own Edification and Salvation to refrain the Communion required in this Rule of Conformity unless he be fully satisfied in his own Mind that all that it requires is according to the Mind of Christ and all that it forbids is disapproved by him And whereas the whole entire matter of all these Impositions are things whereof the Scripture and the Primitive Churches know nothing at all nor is there any rumour of them to be imposed in or on any Church of Christ for some Centuries of years I can but pity poor men who must bear the charge and Penalties of Schisme for dissenting from them as well as admire the fertility of their Inventions who can find out Arguments to mannage such a charge on their Account But whereas the Dissent declared from that Communion with Parochial Assemblies is that whereon we are so fiercely charged with the Guilt of Schisme and so frequently called Schismaticks I shall divert a little to Enquire into the Nature and true Notion of Schisme itself and so much the rather because I find the Author of the Vnreasonableness of Separation omit any Enquiry thereinto that he might not loose the Advantage of any pretended Description or Aggravation of it CHAP. XI Of Schisme ALthough it be no part of my present Design to treat of the Nature of Schisme yet with respect unto what hath already been discoursed and to manifest our inconcernment in the Guilt of it I shall as was said divert to give a plain and brief Account of it And in our Enquiry I must declare my self wholly unconcerned in all the Discords Divisions and Seditions that have fallen out among Christians in the latter Ages about things that were of their own Invention Schisme is a Sin against Christian Love with reference unto the deportment of men in and about the Institutions of Christ and their Communion in them As for Contentions Divisions or Separations amongst men about that Order Agreement Unity or Uniformity which are of their own Appointment whatever Moral Evil they have had in them they do not belong unto that Church Schisme which we enquire after Such have been the horrid Divisions and Fightings that have prevailed at Seasons in the Church of Rome a departure from whose self-constituted State Order and Rule hath not the least Affinity unto Schisme It will not therefore be admitted that any thing can fall under the note and Guilt of Schisme which hath not respect unto some Church state Order Rule Unity or Uniformity that is of Christs Institution There are three Notions of Schisme that deserve our Consideration 1. The first is that of Divisions among the Members of the same Church all of them abiding still in the same outward Communion without any Separation into distinct Parties And unto Schisme in this Notion of it three things do concur 1. Want of that mutual Love Condescension and Forbearance which are required in all the Members of the same Church with the Moral Evils of Whisperings Back-bitings and evil surmizes that ensue thereon 2. An undue Adherence unto some Church Officers above others causing disputes and janglings 3. Disorder in the Attendance unto the Duties of Church Assemblies and the Worship of God performed in them This is the only Notion of Schisme that is exemplified in the Scripture the only evil that is condemned under that name This will appear unto any who shall with heedfulness read the Epistles of Paul the Apostle unto the Corinthians wherein alone the nature of this Evil is stated and exemplified But this Consideration of Schism hath been almost utterly lost for many Ages whatever men do in Churches so that they depart not from the outward Communion of them it would be accounted ridiculous to esteem them Schismaticks Yet this is that which if not only yet principally the Consciences of Men are to regard if they will avoid the Guilt of Schisme But this Notion of it as was said being not suited unto the Interest or Advantages of any sort of men in the charge of it on others nor any way subservient to secure the Inventions and Impositions of the most is on the matter lost in the World 2. The second Instance of Ecclesiastical Schisme was given us in the same Church of the Corinthians afterwards an account whereof we have in the Epistle of Clemens or of the Church of Rome unto them about it the most eminent Monument of primitive Antiquity after the Writings by Divine Inspiration And that which he calls Schisme in that Church he calls also strife contention sedition tumult And it may be observed concerning that Schisme as all the Antients call it 1. That the Church continued its state and outward Communion There is no mention of any that separated from it that constituted a New Church only in the same Church they agreed not but were divided among themselves Want of Love and Forbearance attended with strife and contention among the Members of the same Church abiding in the same outward Communion was the Schisme they were Guilty of 2. The Effect of this Schisme was that the Body of the Church or Multitudes of the Members by the Instigation of some few disorderly Persons had deposed their Elders and Rulers from their Offices and probably had chosen others in their places though that be not mentioned expresly in the Epistle 3. That the Church itself is not blamed for assuming a Power unto themselves to depose their Elders much less that they had done it without the Consent Advice or Authority of any Bishop or other Church but only that they had dealt unjustly with those whom they had deposed who in the Judgement of the Church of Rome unto which they had written for Advice were esteemed not only innocent but such as had laudably and profitably discharged their Office whereon the whole blame is cast on those who had instigated the Church unto this Proceedure 4. There was not yet nor in an hundred and fifty years after the least mention or intimation of any Schisme in a dissent from any humanely invented Rules or Canons for Order Government or Worship in any Church or Religious Ceremonies imposed on the Practise of any in divine Service that is on any Church or any of the Members of it There is not the least Rumour of any such things in primitive Antiquity no Instance