Selected quad for the lemma: scripture_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
scripture_n apostle_n doctrine_n rule_n 2,565 5 6.7825 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
A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

There are 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

of Conscience Oh how is a conscientious man intangled in a snare of perplexities surrounded with a maze of distractions Who cannot in his ordinary affairs of life be quieted in his Conscience in the resolution of things lawful and expedient without Scripture proofs to determine it The rule of Reason That is readily applied by a man of ordinary prudence but the rule of Scripture is not to be applied to every action by the ablest Textuary in the World he stands in need to carry a Concordance in his hand who makes the Scripture the onely rule of all his actions and yet not avoid perplexity of Conscience neither Thirdly A seditious contempt of Humane Laws whether Civil or Ecclesiastical This opinion is that which will break the bonds of all subjection and temporal obedience both of children to Parents of servants to Masters and of subjects to Soveraigns who will by influence of this Error question when they should obey and call into dispute when they should put in practice the lawful commands of their Superiors As for these kinde of men who will not obey Magistrates forsooth but in a Gospel-way upon a Scripture proof for every Law I call the whole World to witness whether ever yet they proved themselves good subjects and sure we are according to that maxim of antient and known experience Qui nescit servire nescit imperare He that knows not how to serve knows not how to govern they will never make good Masters who themselves never were good servants Thus having discovered to you the dangerous falshood and evil consequents of this Vulgar Error That the sacred Scriptures are the onely rule of all our actions give me leave to answer the Objections urged by the Brethren of the Separation the first broachers and the continued abettors of this Error Their main Arguments and Objections are drawn from that of the Apostle Whatsoever ye do 1 Cor. 10.21 do all to the glory of God And again that Whatsoever is not of Faith Rom. 14.23 is sin The first Argument is framed thus We must do all to Gods glory but Object 1 that cannot tend to his glory which is not directed by his Law and therefore in every thing we must be directed by his Law seeing in every thing we are to aim at his glory Answer All this is true and yet the Error remains which is this Answ That the sacred Scripture alone is this Law whereas God in his providence hath ordained several Laws distinct in nature and degree but in subordination the lower to the higher and all to him the supream Lawgiver So that to measure all mens actions by one kinde of Law were to confound that sacred Order of divine Providence in which his Government of the World is so eminently glorious Some actions are within the bounds of nature as we are Creatures for these we have a Law natural some are within the limits of Reason as we are men and for these we have a Law rational Some within the verge of Secular community as we are Subjects for these we have a Law politick some within the sphere of Faith as we are Christians and for these we have a Law divine Lastly some within the orbe of External communion as we are visible Members of the Church and for these we have a Law Ecclesiastical And such is the sweet order of these several Laws in the constitution of Providence that neither opposeth other but all consent in an harmonious subordination unto God and Christ in the Government of the World and of the Church So that we may say of Law Mr. Ho●ker Eccles Polit. she is sacred her seat is the Throne of God her voice the Harmony of the World all things in Heaven and in Earth do her homage the very least as feeling her care and the greatest as not exempted from her power Angels and men and the whole number of the Universe though in different manner yet in uniform consent they reverence and admire her they obey and extol her as the Mother and Nurse as the Queen and Patroness of their Peace and Joy Object 2 The second Argument is framed thus Whatsoever is not of Faith is sin Rom. 14.23 but where there is no Word there can be no Faith and therefore whatsoever action hath not warrant from the written Word of God commanding it it must needs be sinful Answ Answer This Argument however it may seem to set forth the perfection of Gods sacred Law yet does it indeed destroy much of Gods sacred Truth For what St. Paul means by Faith we see plainly from the context is neither fides quae creditur nor fides quá credimus neither the object nor the act neither the doctrine nor the belief of Supernatural Revelation Which Revelation we acknowledge perfect in order to eternal life in the sacred Scriptures But by Faith most evident it is the Apostle means an inward perswasion of minde believing That what we do may lawfully be done whereas to do any thing of which we are not thus perswaded it is sin So that by Faith here the Apostle does not mean the doctrine of Scripture but the dictate of Conscience and most certain it is Let the light and information of Conscience be from Reason as well as from Scripture the dictate of Conscience cannot be resisted without sin against God whose Vicegerent it is in the Soul of Man In things then ordinary quotidianae incursionis of daily incursion yea in matters Civil debitae subjectionis of due subjection Our warrant is sufficient as to Conscience if we know no Law of Scripture to contradict it though we know none in particular to confirm it So that it is the inverted order of right Argumentation to say this or that we may not do because Gods Word does not command it whereas we should rather say this or that we may do because Gods Word does not forbid it For observe What things are indifferent in their own nature as being neither directly expressed in the Word nor necessarily deduced from it nor any way opposit to the Word or inconsistent with it those things we acknowledge left to the prudence of Governors for the preservation of order and unity in the Church which things indifferent in their nature do by the command of lawful Authority become necessary in their use And upon this firm ground upon this sure basis are fixt those Ecclesiastical Laws and Ceremonies of our Church which have been so loudly decryed and so hotly pursued 2. 2. Vulgar Error That every private person who pretends to the Spirit may be a fit Interpreter of sacred Scripture From this evil principle it is that as Hilary complained of of old Annuas atque menstuas fides habemus Every year every moneth produceth some new Doctrine of Faith This is somewhat modest and fair to our Factions and Frenzies in which we have Non modo annuas aut menstruas sed vel diurnas fides
hard to finde a Christian among Christians a Protestant among Protestants each Sect condemns the other And amidst those divisions which are so many where shall we finde truth which is but one Indeed we must confess there is too much of truth though too little of Charity in the Objection We cannot but own our unhappiness yet as an object of compassion not as a subject of exprobration To acquit our selves then of the Calumny of our Adversaries though we cannot but bewail the misery of our Brethren know if rightly considered so far is any Church from being Heretical because there Heresies spring up against the truth that it is therefore Orthodox because even then the truth is maintained against Heresies And this is the present condition of the distressed Church of England But we further return upon our Adversaries That the Church of Rome is not therefore the true Church because they suffer not amongst them the Heresies that are amongst us for they have their Errors and those Heretical too onely they maintain and defend what they should acknowledge and reform at least oppose and disclaim The Jesuite indeed he thinks he hath set a sufficient guard upon St. Pauls Oportet And whereas the Apostle says to every Church what he says to that of Corinth There must be also Heresies among you The Jesuite says There shall be no Heresie in Rome and the Popes pretended infallibility shall be their protection But what Do not we know that those very Churches which were as so many Golden Candlesticks Rev. 1. 2. and had Christ walking in the midst of them do not we know that those very Churches had then their blasphemous Heresies and prophane enormities amongst them Which Heresies and enormities did not unchurch those Cities till there ceased to be an holy Seed a remnant of Orthodox Ministers to preach and profess against them Indeed where grow the Tares but in the Lords field where spring up Heresies but in the Church It is not then that the Church of Rome hath no Heresies but wants truth to discover and faithfulness to exterminate them Would they begin to weed their field the Tares would soon appear would they begin to cleanse their Floore the Chaff would easily be discovered Let it then be candidly considered whether does more Christianly and ingenuous we who confess we have Heresies yet publickly profess the tru●h or they who profess they have the truth yet will not confess their Heresies If they will own themselves a Church as Corinth was they must subscribe to St. Pauls Oportet as our Church does That there must be also Heresies and that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among you 3. By way of Comfort And blessed be God that as he foretels us of Heresies for our Caution so he prescribes us remedies for our comfort And amongst those remedies what more soveraign then the truth of his Word well digested by Prayer and Meditation This is a sure preservative for though all Heresies plead Scripture yet I like not that opinion and prescription of taking away the Scriptures from the people least they become Heretical This is a remedy like that of famishing the children because the Dogs eat their Bread or of plucking up the flowers from the Bees because the Spider sucks out poyson or taking away the pasture from the Sheep because the Wolves devour many of the flock This prescription we leave to those of the Roman Church as suitable to their Roman not to our Christian Faith Tert. de Resur Carn c. 47. For our parts we are no Lucifugae Scripturarum as Tertullian speaks of some we shun not the light of Scripture but are willing to bring our Gold to the Touchstone our Line to the Rule our Doctrines of Faith to the Word of God We know well those Gyant-Heresies of Sabellius Arius Nestorius Eutyches Apollinaris and others we know well those Gyant-Heresies were over●hrown by the holy Fathers in the General and Provincial Councils with stones from Davids sling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so Athanasius with Arguments drawn from the sacred Scriptures Athan. cont Arian Orat. 2. We like not then to forbid all Coyn because much is counterfeit nor quite to take away the Scriptures because much is perverted Indeed the Patrons of Heresies are not always nor for the most part of the Plebeian rank but rather of the Ministerial Order they are not such as have not enough of knowledge but such as have too much of perversness True the Heresies of the Anabaptists I think are all the peoples Brats Errors of their bringing forth and nursing up they are the Births of a Proud ignorance And seeing these are now the most infesting the Church I would have all her Sons and Daughters so experienced by the help of a faithful Guide in the Doctrine of the Scriptures that they might be able in their Conference with Hereticks Matth. 4.6 7. to imitate our Saviour in his combate with Satan to repel the Error of Scripture misinterpreted by the Truth of Scripture rightly understood and aptly applied For sure to this end that we should be prepared did the Apostle here premonish saying There must be also Heresies among you 4. Exhortation To joyn to our profession of Faith an holiness of life for the Mysteries of Grace are Mysteries of Godliness 1 Tim. 3.16 they have their holiness as well as their truth And what thinkest thou then O man that thou canst be a fit Judge of the Truth when thou art not acquainted with the holiness of Gospel Mysteries No sure for to instance in some particulars Art thou fit to determine what concerns the dispute of Free-will Rom. 6.20 who art thy self a Servant unto sin a slave unto thy lusts Art thou fit to decide what is the use and efficacy of Grace Jude 4. who thy self dost turn the Grace of God into wantonness Art thou fit to state the nature and necessity of good Works who art thy self to every good work reprobate Tit. 1.16 Art thou fit to prove the Divinity of Christ who thy self feelest nothing of the power of his Divine Spirit Art thou fit to judge what is Truth in doctrine and purity of Faith who dost stain and dishonor the Truth by thy conversation and impurity of life Whosoever of you then Beloved that desire to avoid the guilt that is so great the danger that is so near even Heresies among you do you joyn to your profession of Faith an holiness of life and then though there must be Heresies among you yet shall you be of the number of those who are approved and made manifest among you THE FOURTH SERMON UPON 1 COR. 11.19 There must be also Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you THE INTRODUCTION Introduction THe Church of Christ is the House and Temple of the living God yea the Pillar and ground of sacred Truth 1 Tim. 3.15 even as the Edicts of Kings
Aerium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That order which is Generative of Fathers Presbyters may beget Sons by Baptism but not Fathers by Ordination and Consecration This is the Bishops peculiar as Successor to the Apostles in that full Ministry which is perpetuated in the Church That the Seventy Disciples had not this full Ministry nor Presbyters the Successors to those Disciples who have power to Preach to Baptize and Consecrate the Eucharist that they have not this full Ministry is the evidence of sacred Scripture and Church History And we will now make the evidence clear as to that main particular the power of Ordination in which we have the Doctrine of the Scriptures to approve the practise of the Church and the practise of the Church to interpret the Doctrine of the Scriptures Consult we then 1 The Sacred Scriptures And the first Ordination we meet with is that of those Seven Acts 6. commonly called Deacons and here we finde no hands but those of the Apostles The second Ordination is that of Presbyters Acts 14.23 and this we finde to be by the hands of Barnabas and Paul Which two when separated to the work of the Ministry if we may call it an Ordination it is by the hands of Simeon Lucius and Manaen Apostolick-men Acts 13.1 2 3. Prophets ministring to the Lord who as Church History tells us were Bishops of Syria The last Ordination we meet with in Scripture actually executed it is that of Timothy 1 Tim 4 14. which though by the hands of the Presbytery yet is not that Presbytery without an Apostle even the laying on of the hands of St. Paul 1 Tim. 1.6 From Scripture practise pass we on to Scripture precept and for this consult we the Epistles to Timothy and Titus in which we have the exact platform of the Churches Ministry as communicated and perpetuated from the Apostles Behold we then the Church of Ephesus and the Churches of Creet in them we finde many Presbyters and above those Presbyters in dignity and office Timothy and Titus and that Timothy and Titus were in dignity and office above those Presbyters appears plainly by that power they had of enacting Ecclesiastical Laws of passing Church censures and of ordaining by imposition of hands in which is the work and the office proper and peculiar to Timothy and Titus above those Presbyters which were in their Churches And observe those instructions given by St. Paul to Timothy and Titus in their particular persons have been and yet are continued in the Church as sacred Rules to regulate for ever the Function and Office of an Episcopal presidency 1 Tim. 5.22 Tit. 1.5 1 Tim. 5.19 Tit. 3.10 which Function and Office extends it self not onely to the ordaining of Presbyters but also to the exercising a Disciplinary power and an Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction over them as appears by many plain Texts given by the Apostle But 2 from the Scriptures Authority pass we on to take a short view of the Churches History Which History from the most sacred and inviolable Records tells us of many Bishops seated by the Apostles yea many successively continued during the lives of the Apostles And strange it were that St. John who tells us of so many Antichrists 1 Joh. 2.18 should not tell us of Episcopacy being Antichristian if he had had the Spirit of our present times to have believed it such which ●rer l. 3. c 3. sure we are he did not believe for that Irenaeus assures us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his yonger years he saw Polycarpe Bishop of Smyrna whom he knew to be so constituted by the Apostles and amongst those Apostles Tertullian Tert. de P aescript c. 32. is express that St. John himself was one After Tertullian consult we St. Basil and he calls Episcopacy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Apostolical prefecture and presidency August Ep. 44. yea St. Augustine he informs us That Radix Christianae societatis per sedes Apostolorum successiones Episcoporum certa per orbem propagatione diffunditur the Root of Christian communion hath branched and spread it self in a certain propagation throughout the world by the Apostolical Seats and Episcopal Successions which propagation to the spreading Church-fellowship and communion how hath it been transmitted but by Ministerial Ordination Which Ordination was so universally and assuredly owned and acknowledged to be proper to the Episcopal order that Aerius pertinaciously asserting the contrary was by St. Augustine yea by the Catholick Church says Epiphanius condemned of Heresie Further they are known examples which we have of Musaeus and Eutychianus two Grecian Presbyters who having ordained without the Bishop and themselves not being Bishops their Ordination is declared by the Council of Sardis about eleven years after Constantine the Great to be null Concil Sard. can 19. and those they had ordained are reduced to the state and condition of Laicks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as such who had dissembled and forged their Ordination Again we read of Ischyras ordained by Colluthus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one who strongly yet vainly fancied himself a Bishop being indeed a meer Presbyter But as concerning Ischyras the Synod of Alexandria reduceth him to Lay-communion and determines concerning Colluthus that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whatsoever Ordinations he had made they should be all void and invalid To close then we have made good unto you by infallible proofs that imposition of hands in Ordination so plain and evident in the planting is requisit and necessary in the propagating the Church of Christ as being productive of issue and succession in the Ministry which Ministry shall continue in the Church whilest the Church continues in the world And now seeing that onely Apostles and Apostolick-men did ordain and that no meer Presbyters in all the Scriptures are exprest nor in all Church History allowed we see by what Ordination we receive our Saviours Mission here of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them c. But before we pass this point it will be some further confirmation and much more illustration of the truth that we give you some plea of Divine Reason to make good the equity of our present assertion Know then in the Apostles times and Infant-state of the Church Parishes were not divided nor Congregations with their particular Ministers fixt and setled but in one City there were many Presbyters and still as Believers increased their Meetings and Assemblies being in several places they had several persons assigned them for the service of the Ministry which how could it be well ordered without confusion but by the Authority and Presidency of some one above the rest Which Presidency the Apostles during their over-sight over the Churches they retained in themselves but upon their remove they committed to some Apostolick-men as their Successors And indeed it is most agreeable to right reason that that office should not expire whose end did continue
the Holy Ghost and so though three immersions yet but one Baptism for that B●nav l 4. disp 3. as Bonaventure well observes Non est completum Sacramentum quousque terminatum sit verbum The Sacrament in its administration is not perfected till the word of Institution be ended And now where Baptism is thus rightly administred as to the application of the Word and Water there it is certainly valid and good though administred by an Heretick Even an Heretical Church like a diseased Mother may bring forth sound Children though indeed their health and life too be presently hazarded by the infection of her Milk the corruption of her Doctrine Which rightly considered proves that we are discipled unto Christ not so properly by doctrine as by baptism But how are we assured Object that the Apostles baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Act. 2 38. 8.16 19.5 seeing the Scripture so often speaks of their baptizing in the name of the Lord Jesus Answ I answer To baptize in the name is to baptize according to the institution with the invocation and in the confession of the Lord Jesus And so that the Apostles notwithstanding they are said to baptize in the name of Jesus did baptize expressly in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost besides the precept of Christs institution which they could not violate and besides the witness of universal Tradition which we may not reject hear one Scripture-proof which none can evince which proof is taken from that passage in the Acts Act. 19.2.3 c. concerning the Ephesian Disciples of John who tell S. Paul that they had not so much as heard whether there were any Holy Ghost Which seeming strange to the Apostle he asks with wonder Unto what then were ye baptized intimating that Christian baptism did certainly admit them into the faith of the Holy Ghost being administred in his name and he supposing they had been baptized with the Baptism of Christ did not question their believing but their receiving the Holy Ghost And therefore having rightly instructed them in John's Baptism as differently administred from that of Christ's he gives them Confirmation after Baptism and by his imposition of hands they then receive what they were taught to believe and in Baptism to profess even the Holy Ghost This that genuine and clear interpretation of that Text consenting with the Judgment of the Antient Fathers which will bear up against all that forced and wrested sense which is urged by Modern Opponents And so hereby we make good Scripture-practice as well as sacred precept confirming the right manner and form of Baptisms administration to be in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost 2. Having done with the Administration of Baptism in what is necessary as to the essence of the Sacrament we proceed to the second particular What is requisite as to the Solemnity of the Church viz. Especially that the Infant baptiz'd make its abrenunciation of sin and Satan and its profession of the faith of Christ by the mouth of its Sureties According to that of S. Augustine speaking of Infants Baptism Accommodat illis mater Ecclesia aliorum pedes ut veniant aliorum cor ut credant aliorum linguam ut fateantur The Church as an indulgent Mother accommodates them with anothers feet that they may come with anothers heart that they may believe with anothers tongue that they may confess And this the Church does upon a sure perswasion that it is agreeable to the grace and goodness of the Almighty ut qui aliena culpa cecidit aliena fide resurgat that he who fell by anothers fault should rise again by anothers faith Et ad verba aliena sanetur Aug. serm 14. de verb. Apost c. 11. qui ad factum alienum vulnaretur and he might be healed by anothers profession who was wounded by anothers sin so S. Augustine intending the sin of Adam As for the original of Sureties in Baptism the Learned deduce it from Apostolical tradition sure we are very near the Apostles times we read plainly this custom setled in the Church and the same piety and prudence which first instituted this ceremony does still perswade its continuance For as formerly to preserve from Heathenism so now to preserve from Heresie it is the pious and prudent care of the Church to engage the promise of Sureties with the duty of Parents to secure their Childrens instruction and education in the Faith Enquir ng into the original of Suretiship in the behalf of Infants we find it commonly known and used of old among the Jews The Rulers of the Consistory taking the care and charge of the young Proselytes and the House of Judgment that is the Congregation entring promise to instruct them in the knowledge of what they had undertaken And passing from the Jewish Synagogue to the Christian Church we find Higinius the eighth Bishop of Rome whose seat was in the time of Antoninus Pius Eus●b hist eccles so Eusebius about an hundred and forty years after Christ long before Popery was entred that Sea This Higinius I say we find to have first enacted this pious and prud ntial order of Godfathers and Godmothers But however this Bishop may be said to have regulated yet sure methinks he cannot be said to have first introduced this custom which whether it be of Apostolical tradition or Ecclesiastical constitution we may well esteem it as Peter Martyr stiles it utile institutum a profitable ordination Pet. Mart. loc com and as profitable so just and reasonable too For the abrenunciation of Satan and the reciting of the Creed made in the Infants name by the Sureties is no egregious prevarication as the Adversaries call it but a Christian reception as the Church intends it like the interest of Minors and Pupils undertaken by their Guardians So that the Questions Doest thou forsake and Doest thou believe are Interrogatories pro more fori according to the manner of Civil Courts known and allowed by the prudent derided and despised only by the ignorant And know we do not catechise the Infants when we interrogate the Sureties Lomb. l. 4. dist 6 c. 1. but require a profession of repentance and faith in their names ut obligentur non ut instruantur so the Schools for their obligation not their instruction to bind them to act and perform in their persons what their Sureties do promise and vow in their names Which Promise and Vow made in their names Children catechised take upon themselves when confirm'd by the Bishop Which Confirmation if stript of the rags of Romish superstition and vindicated from the disrepute of Vulgar misapprehension is certainly of excellent use for the furthering the benefit of religious education for the restraining the enormities of licentious youth and for the preserving the unity of our holy faith That Confirmation
2 Tim. 3.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Doctrine and Instruction secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Argument and Conviction thirdly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Correction and Reformation For Doctrine and Instruction in what concerns God and Christ Creation and Redemption Sin and Grace Death and Life Mercy and Blessedness For Argument and Conviction in discovering and refuting Errors in discerning and confirming Truth For Correction and Reformation in what concerns minde and manners the inward and the outward man in thoughts in words and in works And of these three does consist the Apostles perfect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his Form of Institution in Righteousness That the Man of God even the Preacher of the Gospel may be perfect yea thorowly furnished unto all good works especially that of his Ministry And needs must the Scriptures be abundantly sufficient for the people if such for the Preacher Acts 20.27 whose office it is to declare unto them the whole Councel of God 2. It s sacred Authority this especially for the proving deciding and determining all Controversies in Doctrines of Faith And therefore to the Law and to the Testimony is the challenge of the Prophet Isa 8.20 from the command of God and they Who speak not according to this Word have no Light of truth and righteousness in them From this full sufficiency and self authority it is That the Word of God is the Canon and Rule of Faith The Canon I say and Rule for seeing we are commanded to prove the doctrines 1 John 4.1 whether they be of truth and try the Spirits whether they are of God and seeing it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 prove by tryal as the Goldsmith does his Gold by the Touchstone or the Carpenter his work by the Rule if thus prove and try some Touchstone and Rule there must be of tryal and proof Gal. 1.8 and what is this but the Word of God For If any man or an Angel from Heaven preach any other Gospel then that which we the Apostles of the Lord have preached let him be accursed is that dreadful Anathema pronounced by St. Paul And thus the holy Scriptures being the Rule of Faith as a Rule hath its just measure inherent in its self not depending upon the hand of the Artificer so the Scriptures have their infallible truth in themselves not depending upon the judgment of the Church Yet we must know withal that though the Church does not give yet does she declare the authority of the Scriptures and so by ●er testimony with John Baptist points us unto Christ in the infallible truth of his Word 1 Tim. 1.15 Thus that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners we come to hear it because the Church doth so teach us but we believe it because the Scriptures so teach the Church And this is right the Apostles determination against Papist and Sectary both Rom. 10.17 That Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the Word of God We are to hear the Church but the Word of God is the object of our Faith and this the Church proposeth to be believed to be believed upon this ground of Faith Dominus dixit the Lord hath said or Christus mandavit Christ hath commanded it This for the inherent attributes of Gods Word full sufficiency and self authority 2. It s transient operations viz. By a divine light and sacred power 1. It s divine Light the Word like the Sun it carries with it that brightness whereby it enlightens and that influence whereby it quickens the inward man As light it discovers the hidden things of darkness the Souls guilt the hearts deceitfulness Satans subtleties sins enormities As light it distinguisheth betwixt good and evil truth and falshood faith and heresie Yea as a light it guides and directs the whole man Psal 119.105 Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a lanthorn to my paths a lamp unto my feet for the instructing my minde and ordering my affections and a lanthorn to my paths for the leading my judgment and the directing my conversation 2. It s sacred power either governing what is under its command or subduing what is against its dominion First Governing what is under its command Jam. 2.8 Therefore a Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Royal a soveraign a supream Law regulating the affections restraining the lusts conforming each faculty of the Soul to its self Secondly Subduing what is against its dominion Discomfiting Satan in his assaults 2 Cor. 10.4 5. overthrowing sin in its strong holds breaking down the Bulwarks of the flesh and leading into captivity the corruptions of nature Such such the light and power of the Word through the Spirit as convinceth man of sin in himself humbling him in repentance and withal discovering righteousness in Christ by Faith by Faith to believe and in believing to finde rest unto his Soul However then rational discourses rhetorical flourishes Scholastical disputes may please the fancy raise admiration astonish the minde yet in this is the vigor and life of Religion and Faith to quiet the Conscience and give rest to the Soul the sole property and power of Gods Word This the first particular chiefly considerable in our Saviours instruction the object of our Faith the Word of God in which we have whatsoever hath been commanded of Christ to be taught 2. The means of communicating this object and declaring this word the Ministry of the Church by which we are taught whatsoever Christ hath commanded And therefore saith our Saviour expresly to his Disciples and in them Luke 10.16 to the whole Ministry of his Church he that heareth you heareth me And by this St. John gives us to know the Spirit of Truth from the Spirit of Error 1 John 4.6 even by a conformity to the doctrine of Christs Church He who is of God heareth us In which Church Christ hath given some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists Eph. 4.11 14. and some Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry and all to this end to preserve the unity of the Faith Where observe to a confutation of the Popes infallibility on the one hand and the factious Enthusiasm on the other the Apostle does not say as doubtless he would had he been of the Jesuites belief that for the preserving of the one Faith Christ had given one Head and so with some Apostles had ordained St. Peter the chief Apostle and with some Pastors had ordained one Universal Pastor to whom all Doctors and Teachers yea all Nations and Languages should repair for the resolutions of Faith and ultimate determinations of the Truth Again the Apostle does not say as doubtless he would had he been of the factious humor that for the work of the Ministry and perfecting the Saints he had ordained as some Pastors and Doctors so distinct from them some gifted Tradesmen some illuminated Mechanicks Who is it
discendum quod de Deo intelligendum as Hilary speaks we must learn from God what we may understand of God even as we discover the Body of the Sun by the light of its own beams yea God it is who prepares the eye of the practical judgment and proportions the palate of the rectified will to discern the evidence and rellish the sweetness of supernatural Truths and he does it in this order The Church by a Ministerial Manuduction and Ecclesiastical dispensation to those matriculated by Baptism born in her Lap and bred in her Bosom tutored to a reverend esteem of her Maternal Authority to them she transmits this indubitate principle of Christian Verity That the sacred Scriptures are the Word of God But to them who are without the Infidel and Heathen the Church hath her arma praelusoria her preparatory Arguments of Right Reason to fit the minde for a candid reception and diligent examination of the Scriptures And upon this the Spirit of Truth comes in with Conviction to the Conscience perswading the Soul to this assent of Faith that they are the Word of God Wherefore besides the Ministry and Manuduction of the Church there must be an illuminating power of the Spirit yea a power rectifying and raising the minde to a capacity of supernatural light otherwise the Mysteries of Grace to the Natural man will be as the varieties of colours to the blinde the colours are not discerned till the faculty be restored nor are those Mysteries understood till the minde be healed And when thus by the Spirit of God the minde is fitted to the Word and the Word revealed unto the minde then does the Soul discern an excellency in the sacred Scriptures above what is in Humane Writings with as sure a distinction though not so clear an evidence as the eye does discern a beam of the Sun from the blaze of a Candle Quest 3 Thirdly In doubtful cases how may we best interpret the sacred Scriptures Answ I answer That Interpretation of Scripture is best which holds conformity to the Analogy of Faith and consent with the judgment of the Church two sure rules of Scripture interpretation approved and observed by the ablest Expositors of Gods Word 1. Which holds conformity to the Analogy of Faith Rom 12 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which Analogy of Faith is none other thing then that summary and fit proportion which is in the general principles of Christianity and cheif mysteries of Grace plainly set down in the sacred Scriptures A sum whereof we have in our publick Confessions of Faith the Decalogue the Lords Prayer and the Doctrine of the Sacraments seeing then it is the Scripture phrase to be built up in our holy Faith As that stone Jud. 20. which holds not proportion with the rest of the building is either fitted or rejected by the Architect so that interpretation of Scripture which holds not Analogy with the received Doctrines of Faith it must be either amended or cast away by the Religious And in doing this the Faithful of Christs Church they shall according to St. Pauls precept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3 16. walk orderly by one and the same rule and so preserve the unity and peace of the Church in being of one and the same minde 2. Consent with the Judgment of the Church For that no Scripture is of private interpretation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.20 to be interpreted by a mans own wit fancy or reason but by the enlightning power of the Spirit of Truth for as the Scriptures came not by the proper will Vers 21. so nor are they to be interpreted by the private judgment of men but the same Spirit who is the Author must also be the Interpreter And where may we with more confidence rest assured that this holy Spirit is then where Christ did expresly promise he should ever be with his Church Matth. 28.20 John 16.13 And especially with the Pastors of his Church to whom our Lord gives the promise that His Spirit should lead them into all truth But here it may be demanded what I call the Judgment of the Church I answer The antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine received at all times in all places and of all the faithful But especially do we fix upon that judgment of the Church in the antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine collected out of the most consonant Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the sacred Decrees of the first Councils For that without controversie even by confession of all parties in that time were the most Eminent Saints for holiness of life excellency of learning purity of doctrine and constancy of martyrdom And he that will think to go to Heaven in any other path then what these blessed Saints have trod before him I say to him as Constantine to Acesius Erige scalam ascende solus Raise thy self O man a Ladder and climb up alone Now this antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine collected out of the most consonant Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the sacred Decrees of the first Councils This is that we may call in the language of St. Ambrose Liber Sacerdotalis Ambr. de fid ad Grat. l. 3. c. 7. That Sacerdotal Book signatus a confessoribus multorum Martyrio consecratus signed by the confessions of the most eminent Saints and consecrated by the blood of the holiest Martyrs As then the Authority of the sacred Scriptures gives us the sure rule of Faith so the judgment of the Universal Church gives us the right line of interpretation according to which two it is well worthy our observation the Church of England did exactly draw the platform of her Reformation And this is evident in her Doctrine and Practice 1 In her Doctrine Art 20. amongst many other instances see it in her Book of Articles expresly acknowledging the Church to be the witness and keeper of the sacred Oracles and in her Book of Canons as expresly denying any doctrine necessary to be religiously held and believed which the Catholick Fathers and old Bishops of the Primitive Church have not collected out of the Scriptures And 2 that her practice is suitable to her Doctrine appears by her owning the four General Councils the Apostles Nicen and Athanasian Creeds And in all her disputes against the now silent adversary otherwise too busily employed the Jesuite justifying her reformed estate as conformed to the Primitive Church within the first five Centuries of years And here give me leave to observe unto you how the Presbytery laid the way to their own and our Churches ruine even by setting up private interpretation of Scripture in opposition to the received judgment of the Universal Church For do not the Brownists the Anabaptists under the name and notion of Independents presently beat them with their own weapon The Presbyterian abolisheth the Publick Liturgy and takes away Regular Ordination
brings in the Directory and sets up Lay Elders and all upon this ground That what they did was conformed to the Doctrine of the Scriptures of whose interpretation themselves would be Judges But at the heels of the Presbyterian follows close the Independent and treading in his steps at last over-teacheth him in his design and carries away his Helena from him he pulls down the Classes and the Synod as humane inventions and remains of Antichrist denying That by the Scripture any Presbyters or persons whatsoever ought to have power over the Churches of Christ which are by Scripture-rule Independent in their Government to any Secular or Ecclesiastical power whatsoever And for this they urge their Scripture Texts with much heat of contention against the Presbytery pleading this their common ground of interpretering Scripture by the Spirit whose inspirations and revelations they pretend to above what the Presbytery dare own or acknowledge As then in joyning the Authority of the Scripture with the judgment of the Church was our Reformation so is it Satans subtlety and the Jesuites design both acting by the Enthusiast That in dividing the judgment of the Church from the authority of the Scriptures may be our ruine To the prevention whereof what God hath joyned together let no man put asunder The Word of God and the Ministry of the Church for so faith Christ in Instruction to his Apostles Go ye disciple all Nations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baptising and teaching Teaching whatsoever I have command●d you 2 Having resolved you the three seasonable Questions we proceed to clear unto you two Vulgar Errors no less dangerous then epidemical as mischievous in their consequents as spreading in their infections First That the sacred Scriptures are the onely rule of all mens actions Secondly That every man may be an Interpreter of sacred Scripture Which two make up that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that grand and primary falshood which laid the ground for all that division and disobedience which hath of late broken forth into violence and blood both in Church and State 1. That the sacred Scriptures are the onely rule of all mens actions 1. Vulgar Error An opinion however made plausible yet is it indeed pernicious To state the case right That the Sacred Scriptures are our perfect rule of direction as to the knowledge of supernatural Truths in the objects of divine Faith and the exercise of supernatural Graces in the duties of Evangelical obedience we willingly acknowledge and therefore reject all humane Traditions urged by the Romanist as supplements to the Doctrine of Faith and Codicils to the Testament of Christ But now that the sacred Scriptures are our onely rule of direction in matters Civil or Natural especially as extended by the Brethren of the Separation to indifferent actions whereas indeed this opinion makes no actions to be indifferent all being commanded by the Word of God This we can by no means admit of it being an opinion which makes an in●et to all Schism and Sedition For Beloved upon diligent search and judicious observation you may finde That in the Controversies of this last age since the Reformation they who have so earnestly preached printed and what not for the change of Church Discipline and Government they have certainly made this the head Theorem of all their Pulpit discourse the very Corner stone of all their Babel-argumentation That simply whatsoever we do and are not thereto commanded and directed by the Word of God it is sin As if when God gave his Scriptures he then made null the Law of Nature and of Right Reason which Law of Nature and Right Reason imprinted in our hearts is as truly and indeed the Law and Word of God as that written and printed in our Bibles And therefore Non differet Scripturâ an ratione consistat Tert. de cor Mi● c. 4. so Tertullian it will not matter much whether our warrant be from Scripture or from Reason both being the Word of God onely with this difference That Humane Reason is subordinate to Divine Revelation Besides if the Scriptures are the onely rule of all our actions then where there is no Scripture there should be no rule and where no rule no Law But to the Gentiles having no Law written in Tables there is a Law written in their hearts Rom. 2.15 and according unto this Law their Consciences do either accuse or excuse them And thus If the Gentiles have a Law then have they a rule of their actions and that to excuse too and so not every thing which is done without direction of the Scriptures is therefore sin nor yet the written Word the onely rule of what is Natural and Civil To say as some do to mitigate the rigidness and harshness of this opinion to say That the Scriptures are the rule of all mens actions in those general maxims dispersedly and occasionally set down of doing unto others Matth. 7.12 as we would they should do unto us and of doing all things decently 1 Cor. 14.40 Rom. 15.2 Phil. 4.8 orderly and to edification and the like especially of doing whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are honest whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are pure whatsoever things are lovely whatsoever things are of good report c. This were indeed to the purpose if those maxims known principles of Nature and Reason had never been heard of but by Scripture Revelation But in that holy Scripture points us expresly to those maxims in general it withal directs us implicitely to the use of Nature and Reason in all ordinary affairs in particular To convince you more fully of the great danger see the evil consequents of this Erroneous opinion which are especially these three 1. An unavoidable guilt of Superstition 2. A vexatious perplexity of Conscience 3. A seditious contempt of Humane Laws whether Civil or Ecclesiastical First An unavoidable guilt of Superstition For that this opinion takes away the indifferency of things and actions making all necessary as commanded or else to be sinful So that it is well observed the Romanist and Separatist as they go upon contrary grounds yet both false so they run into quite contrary errors yet both superstitious The error and superstition Affirmative on the one hand that 's the Romanists who cutting short the Scriptures perfection impose Humane tradition with an opinion of absolute necessity and divine authority The Error and Superstition Negative on the other hand that 's the Separatists who extending too long or rather laying too low the Scriptures perfection they condemn Natural and Civil Actions with a censure of being sinful which yet the Word of God condemneth not And thus to take away what is indifferent in its self by commanding it as absolutely necessary or forbidding it as absolutely unlawful is Superstitious By commanding it as necessary when Gods Word requires it not and by forbidding it as unlawful when Gods Word condemns it not Secondly A vexatious perplexity
Not onely yearly or monethly but even daily new Doctrines of Faith and all from the pretended new Revelations and new discoveries of the Spirit Yea from the influence of this Vulgar Error it is That the meanest Artisans become the chief Preachers the Day-laborer in the Brick a Master builder of the Temple from hence it is That Sacriledge is expunged the Decalogue the Lords Prayer and the Creed banished the Church and all disorder and confusion breaks in like a flood That you may know then we heartily desire to preserve your common right and special blessing of reading the sacred Scriptures against the Papists as well as prevent the particular abuse and fatal mischief of corrupting the holy Word by the Factious Observe We acknowledge that the holy Scriptures in Truths absolutely necessary to Salvation they are plain and easie but 2 Pet. 3.16 in Mysteries excellently profitable for edification they are in many places dubious and difficult to be understood Wherefore we allow every private person a Judgment of Discretion to apply what is easie and plain but not a Power of Interpretation to expound what is difficult and dubious Certainly John 5.39 2 Pet 3.18 every man is bound to search the Scriptures that he may know and improve that knowledge too of Gods will Yea bound he is to apply what he reads and reading understands for the ordering his conversation in Truth and Holiness in Faith and obedience Thus then you see we by no means like that Popish stupidity that you should live like Horse and Mule without understanding No more then we like that factious frenzy that every man should think himself more then Doctor of the Chair to interpret Scripture by his private Spirit Wherefore for the true Interpretation of Scripture observe We admit the Judgment of the Church as a Trusty Guide and the Opinion of the Learned as a Rational Argument but we approve the Scripture it self as an Infallible Rule clearing those Texts which are dark and doubtful by those places which are more plain evident being still careful to keep close to the Analogy of Faith consisting in those principles of Christianity which are clearly set forth in Scripture and generally receiv'd of the Church What think you now then Beloved he who is not acquainted with the Judgment of the Church and so wants his Trusty Guide he who is not acquainted with the Opinions of the Learned and so wants his Rational Argument he who is not well instructed in the Principles of Religion and so knows not the Analogy of Faith he who is not skilled in the Language and Phrase and Method of the Scripture and so wants his Infallible Rule is such a person however he may pretend to the Spirit is such a person think you fit to be an Interpreter of the Word Wherefore to interpret Scriptures by the Spirit not being qualified as to the use of means for right Interpretation it is certainly most certainly plain Enthusiasm A phanatick presumption the greatest evidence of the Spirit of Error being so opposit in act and operation to the order and method of the Spirit of Truth Object But here the Enthusiast to prove his interpeting Scripture by the Spirit to be lawful and right he urgeth that of St. Paul as his Herculean Argument 1 Cor. 2.14 That the Spiritual man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 intelligit ac discernit as Beza renders it he understands and discerns Judicat as the Vulgar Latin and our English he judgeth and that all things in matters of Faith and of Manners of Doctrine and of Conversation So that what needs more to interpret Scripture then to have the Spirit the case seems clear if St. Paul may decide the Question Answ But stay no Triumph before Victory To this I answer The same Apostle who saith The spiritual man judgeth all things says also 1 Cor. 14.32 The Spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophets where by Prophets are especially intended the Interpreters of the Scriptures and that the Enthusiast himself will readily acknowledge Now then observe If the Spiritual man will interpret Scripture by the Spirit he must remember That his spirit must be subject to the Prophets submit unto the Judgment of the Church in those holy Interpreters which have gone before him or which are now surviving with him Otherwise he is not spiritual but carnal carnally puft up with the pride of his own spirit which he blasphemously calls the Motion of Gods Spirit Thus then to interpret Scripture by the Spirit according to St. Pauls direction taking the Church for our Guide holy Expositors for our Instruction there can be no just quarrel at our Interpretation For that we keep to the right Rule and Line to the Polar Star and the skilful Pilot the happy Union of what the Text hath joyned the Word of God and the Ministry of the Church for so is the Instruction of our Saviour in his Commission to his Apostles Go ye disciple all Nations Teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you 1. By vertue of our Ministerial charge we do here Applic. in foro Conscientiae in the Court of Conscience arraign and condemn the Heresies and Schisms of our present times of that so horrid though so common sin of Scripture-Sacriledge men surreptitiously stealing away the true meaning or prophanely corrupting the proper phrase of Gods Word thereby making the Delphick Oracle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the sacred Scriptures I mean to speak that sense which the Spirit of Error hath imposed not the Spirit of Truth revealed Church-Sacriledge and Scripture-Sacriledge they commonly go together they who will prophane the House of God will not stick to corrupt the Word of Christ and they who will not spare to defile his Worship will not care to pervert his Truth Wherefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz o●at 36. Rev. 22.18 19. as for the Sacrilegious invaders of the Holy Scriptures whether they be such as violate the Letter or such as pervert the Sense let them see the guilt of their sin in the horror of its punishment denounced by St. John saying I testifie unto everyman that heareth the words of the Prophecy of this Book If any man shall adde unto these things God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this Book And if any man shall take away from the words of the Book of this Prophecy God shall take away his part out of the Book of Life and out of the Holy City and from the things which are written in this Book O dreadful Commination God will assuredly cut him off from benefit by the Testament of Christ who shall by Heretical forgery either detract or corrupt it The Gospel of Christ is his Testament and if it be but a Mans Testament how much more when it is The Testament of God being confirmed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being by Legal Authority ratified and declared Authentick No man disannulleth Gal.
practice and pattern of Gods Saints the grace and mercy which God hath vouchsafed to them in Christ not being only for their own salvation but also for others instruction For this cause saith the Apostle I obtained mercy that in me first Jesus Christ might shew forth all long-suffering for a pattern to them which should hereafter believe on him to life everlasting For a pattern 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a compleat Image in whom men might view as most lively drawn forth the exceeding abundant grace of Christ in receiving to mercy so cruel a Persecutor of his Church and so horrid a Blasphemer of his Truth that so humble Penitents being more invited with the riches of Christs mercy and merits then discourag'd with the hainousness of their own pollution and guilt might believe on Christ the Saviour of the World unto everlasting life Indeed we soonest convince by argumen s drawn from our own experience Ps 27 13 14. Ps 34.11 Thus we make it an ordinary Medium and Method of perswasion to one in sickness saving Make use of such a Physitian for when I was taken with the like desperate disease he administred to me safe Physick and by Gods blessing hath wrought upon me an unexpected cure Luk. 22 32. Thus S. Paul converted David repenting Peter restored and others of Gods holy and now blessed Ones they seem to comfort and raise the dejected Sinner and relapsed Saint with arguments drawn from their own experience Why vain man dost thou delay to seek cure for thy wounds healing for thy sickness Take a Physitian upon our recommendation of whose grace and goodness of whose ability and skill we our selves have had so long and so large an experience and let not the distemper of thy disease make thee despair of cure our filthiness hath been as great as thine yet the blood of Christ hath cleansed us our wounds as deep as thine yet his balm hath cured us our souls as fainting as thine yet his grace hath revived us Do thou then exercise faith and repentance according to our example and thou shalt partake of grace and salvation according to our experience 3. Observe the most soveraign and sacred Restorative left us by Christ a worthy partaking the blessed Eucharist What can be a more divine Cordial to the fainting soul what more soveraign remedy to a wounded Conscience then the Covenant of Grace firmly seal'd the merits of Christs death really exhibited and the earnest of the heavenly inheritance visibly convey'd The whole sum of that Tremendum Mysterium that dreadful mysterie as the Antients call it the blessed Eucharist it is this the Communion of the body and blood of Christ 1 Cor. 10.16 in which Communion our Lord Jesus Christ powres forth h himself in the abundance of his mercy and riches of his merits He communicates himself as the Treasury of all Goodness the Fulness of all Graces Joh. 1.16 the Fountain of all Blessedness Wherefore then O thou afflicted soul having raised thy faith and renewed thy repentance attend the sacred solemnity of the blessed Eucharist thereby to have thy pardon seal'd thy weakness strengthened thy Corruptions subdued thy Peace of Conscience restored thy Joy of the Spirit enlarged and thine assurance of Gods love confirmed The Objections answered Here several Objections are made by the distrustful and doubting souls 1. Obj. Against the immutability of Gods love and stability Obj. 1 of his Covenant That sure God is not bound to perform the Promise when man neglects to fulfill the Condition and therefore though God do not forsake us yet we leaving him he may justly cast us off and reject us Ans True yet know concerning the faithful whom God hath received into his Covenant of grace Answ as he hath obliged himself never to depart from them so likewise to communicate that grace whereby he is ready to support and sustain them that they shall not totally and finally fall away from him Jer. 32.40 Heb. 8.10.12 And hereby it is that their backslidings though many yet are not perpetual but that fear God puts into their hearts doth restore them and that love he bears unto their persons doth accept them Wherefore as the house and ground stands firm though to distempered brains they seem to totter so the grace and covenant of God stands unmoveable though to distrustful hearts they seem to waver Lippientibus singularis lucerna numerosa est says Tertullian A fit allusion here As to a weak eye the candle which is single seems to have a double light so to a weak faith the Covenant of God which bears a single truth seems to carry a double sense So that notwithstanding all the doubtful Quaere's of a troubled heart and distrustful mind this remains as the surest and safest comfort of Gods children that He who is their Father is unchangeable in his love and constant in his promise 2. Obj. Against the merit of Christs passion and the benefit of his Obj. 2 intercession Some languishing and dejected soul may be so far from making the former testimonies of Gods love to be an encouragement for his rising that the thoughts thereof the more deject and cast him down and the merits of Christs passion with the vertue of his intercession are so far from administring him comfort that through despair they increase his sorrow and horror of soul Objecting that of the Apostle when he says Heb. 10.26 If we sin wilfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sin and if so what will avail us Christs passion and intercession Answ To explain the true meaning of this Scripture is to repel the force of this objection Wherefore know Ans that if we examine the circumstances of this Text it will plainly appear that by sin here the Apostle doth mean the sin of Apostacie forsaking Christ and falling away to Judaisme a sin frequently committed in those times and sharply reproved in this Epistle And that this is meant of the sin of Apostacie the very Greek word does hint it somewhat to us which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word which denotes a defect on and falling away and that being as the Apostle expresseth it after the receiving the truth it can be rightly interpreted of none other sin but that of Apostacie And indeed the Apostle here speaks after the manner of the Hebrews with whom Apostacie was called sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As a fall ng away to Idolatry then with the Hebrews so falling away to Judaism with the Apostle is peculiarly called sin as indeed the sin most hateful and abominable And to them that thus sin by Apostacie v. 29. there remains no more sacrifice for their attonement for that they have counted the blood of the Covenant an unholy thing and have done despight to the Spirit of grace Yet more pla●n They who denied their Christian profession and fell off to Judaism could
are fastned unto Pillars so the Word of Truth the Gospel of Christ is committed to the Church to be held forth to the veiw and proposed to the faith of all 1 John 4.6 Wherefore St. John he gives this infallible note of true Doctrine that it holds fast a conformity to and a communion with the Church of Christ Hereby says the Apostle hereby know we the Spirit of truth and the spirit of error the spirit of error that seeks a separation from and the Spirit of truth that holds a communion with the holy men of God in the several parts of the World and the several ages of the Church both as to the practise of Holiness and Doctrines of Faith To establish us then against those Impostures which withdrawing us from the Church Seduce us into Heresie To establish us I say against those impostures observe we the Apostles seasonable admonition That we be not soon shaken in minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thes ● 2 not removed from our judgement and faith in the Scriptures to which we have been directed in which we have been instructed by the Church of Christ not thus removed by Spirit or Word however pretended to be Apostolical and Holy yea however asserted to be Angelical and Divine 2 Cor. 11.14 for that Satan the Prince of Darkness is oftentimes transformed in the Hypocritical pretences of truth and holiness into an Angel of light But O Beloved that which heightens the sin and shall heighten the condemnation of our days Apostates is this That they joyn themselves to those works and workers of darkness which have not so much as the appearance and shew of light For that now wicked men they have fronted themselves with Judah s impudence They declare their sin as Sodom they hide it not Isa 3.9 And though Heresie and Schism with their so inseparable concomitants Sacriledge and Prophaneness though they have put of their mask of truth and holiness yet are not men affrighted with their ugliness but as if the Hellish deformity were some heavenly beauty they are woed and won to an embracing those Doctrines and a pursuing those practises which even startle and amaze the souls and mindes of the truly religious Rev. 12.4 But blessed be God the Dragons Tail is not so long as to sweep away all the Stars of Heaven amidst the thickest of Heresies and Schisms God does and will preserve himself a remnant John 4 24. to worship him in spirit and in truth a remnant approved in the faith and manifest by their works For so says our Apostle There must be also Heresies among you but by the wisdom of Gods providence ordered to this end That they which are approved may be made manifest among you 2. General part the Premunition Explic. and therein of the first particular the Apostles fore-arming them with constancy in the Faith that they be approved Mercy and Justice they are the two Pillars of Gods Throne of Majesty whereon he sits as King in the Supremacy of his will to govern by the wisdom and power of his providence all things in Heaven and in Earth So that of all humane actions God he is no bare spectator but an All-powerful and an All-wise disposer what is good he working it by his grace rewards it with his bounty and what is evil he permitting it with patience he revengeth it by his justice but whether good or evil as he sways all by his power so he disposeth all by his wisdom ordering it to these sacred ends his peoples spiritual advantage and his own eternal glory Wherefore that Heresies permitted of God do spring up spread themselvs in the Church Chrysost in Act. Apost Hom 33 Aug E●chirid c. 61 de Cor. Grat. c. 10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the language of St Chrysostome it comes to pass by Providential dispensation The wisdom of God having determined it more suitable to the glory of his providence ex malis hona elicere quam nulla esse permittere as St. Augustine more suitable to the glory of his providence to bring good out of evil then not to suffer evil at all to be And therefore the Schools in their Tracts of Gods providence tell us aright That if God did not suffer some evil we should want much good Aquin. 1. q. 21. art 2. Non enim esset vita Leonis si non esset occisio animalium If there were no slaughter of Beasts there would be no life of the Lyon and so were there no persecution of Tyrants there would be no patience of Martyrs were there no opposition of Heresie there would be no honor or reward in the approbation of the truth Now as Persecution doth exercise the Patience so does Heresie try the Faith of Gods chosen and to this end doth God order this That Faith having its tentation and tryal Vt fides habendo tentationem haberet etiam probationem Tert. de Praescript Aug Serm. 98. de temp may have its approbation and reward Yea as St. Augustine speaks God suffers the Catholick Faith to be impugned and opposed by Heretical Doctrine Ut fides nostra non otio Torpescat sed multis exercitationibus Elimetur That our Faith may not grow sluggish and rusty with ease but become more quickened and polished by exercise And hereby indeed are exercised all the edifying gifts and sanctifying graces of the Orthodox their edifying gifts of knowledge of prophecy of tongues c. Their sanctifying graces of humility meekness charity c. All which as they are opposed so are they exercised and as they are exercised so are they improved by the subtleties hypocrisies and pertinacies of the Heretical As for the Doctrine of Faith Chrysost in Act. Apost hom 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Trees shaken with the winds more firmly fix their Roots in the Earth so the doctrines of Faith discussed by the oppositions of Heresie more deeply fix their truth in the Church But what is it not a seeming Paradox that the doctrines of Faith should be the more clean for the foul hands of Heresie Why for this know it is as Brass Inscriptions appear the better by foul feet not from the dirt but from the rubbing Thus the doctrines of Faith become the more dilucide and clear not from the Error but from the examinations of Heresie For whilst the subtlety and pertinacy of Hereticks do stir up the wisdom and industry of the Orthodox Theological Verities and Gospel Mysteries Aug. de Civi● Dei l. 16. c. ● Et considerantur diligentius intelliguntur clariùs They are more strictly examined and more clearly understood And therefore does St. Augustine the Hammerer of Hereticks whose Pen was of all the Fathers the most imployed against Heresies and Schisms even he professeth himself to be of the number of those Qui proficiendo scribunt scribendo proficiunt Aug. ep 7. ad Marcel who in improving their
publick Teaching be a proper office may any enter it without Admission To do this were an absurdity against the very light of nature and Law of Nations which will have no man to admit himself into office but he must receive his admission from some intrusted with power and authority and in this case of publick Teaching the power and authority is intrusted with those who admit not but by Imposition of hands in Ordination Object 2 But it may be further objected That the Brethren dispersed upon the persecution raised about Stephen Acts 8.4 11.19 they are said To go about preaching the Word To this I give a twofold answer Answ and either of them full and satisfactory 1 I say they were such as had received the Holy Ghost Chap. 3 31. and so their call as well as their work was extraordinary and this witnessed by their gift of healing intimated in Chap. 11. 21. where it is said The hand of the Lord was with them to which some Copies adde says learned Diodate for to heal them Or 2 observe What is here said of these scattered Brethren extends not to publick Teaching in the Church which publick Teaching is peculiarly Ministerial but to publish declare divulge the Gospel where Christ was not yet known no Church yet gathered no Disciples yet made And this we deny not to be lawful to any man yea we acknowledge it a duty where God so gives the opportunity To declare the Gospel then to unbelievers is common to all as Christians but to make Disciples by Baptism and to instruct the discipled and baptized by publick Doctrine is proper to the Minister of the Word by vertue of his Mission and Commission from Christ the same which he gave here to his Apostles Go ye disciple all Nations Baptising them c. Again one Objection more there is which appears big Object 3 but its strengths but small 1 Cor. 14.31 viz. The Apostle seems to tell the whole Corinthian Congregation That they may all prophesie one by one I answer True indeed all may prophesie Answ yet can it not then be understood but of those that were Prophets Vers 6. as he instanceth in himself that he speaks in the Church as by knowledge so by prophesying Knowledge that is doctrine obtained by premeditation Prophesying here is doctrine delivered by sudden inspiration as appears Vers 30. Prophesying was of old Preaching moved by divine rapture now Preaching is prophesying attained by diligent study Even by attending unto reading and to meditation 1 Tim. 4.13 15. as St. Paul exhorts Timothy These Prophets St. Paul speaks of were a peculiar office in the Church so reckoned with Apostles and Evangelists Eph 4.11 and of those there were many at Corinth as we finde many at Antioch Acts 13.2 and these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 too Ministring unto the Lord. Now to these Prophets saith the Apostle to preserve order in the Church Ye may all prophecy one by one And thus is the Giant slain the great Argument and Objection cleared from what some would pretend to a liberty of prophesying to all in the publick Congregation 3. To admit into the Ministry By Imposition of hands in Ordination was never in the power of any meer Presbyter Our Lord and Saviour did constitute Twelve Apostles Matth. 10.1 2. Luke 10 1. in degree and office above the Seventy Disci●les Which holy Apostles that they were to have their Successors is evident from the promise here of Christ Behold I am with you unto the end of the World Which promise extends to the whole Ministry of the Church the Apostles having all authority Ecclesiastical and every office Ministerial virtually and eminently in themselves Most certain and plain it is our Saviours promise could not be meant of the Apostles persons it must be then interpreted of their Function And of their Function not in its extraordinary priviledges but its ordinary Ministrations not in its extraordinary Priviledges as that their Mission was immediate from Christ their operations miraculous by the Spirit and their jurisdiction unlimitted as to place These were all temporary expiring with their persons being necessary onely to the planting not the perpetuating of the Church But the sacred Apostleship in its ordinary Ministrations as Preaching the Word Discipling by Baptism Consecrating the Eucharist Excommunicating the Scandalous Absolving the Penitent Governing by Discipline and Ordaining to the Priesthood These even all these received by Commission from Christ were to be continued by Succession in the Church as without which the welbeing of the Church in its Ministry and Government could not stand Successors then there must be to the Apostles invested with the Authority and Office of the foregoing Ministrations Now our inquiry then is who these Successors are And for this we finde in Scripture Acts 12.17 15.13 21.28 1 Tim. 1.3 3.15 2 Tim. 1.6 Tit. 1.5 Rev. 2. 3. James Bishop of Jerusalem Timothy of Ephesus Titus of Creet yea the seven Angels Presidents and Bishops of the seven Churches spoken of in the Revelations Besides these we finde in the undoubted History of the Church Mark Bishop of Alexandria Epaphroditus of Philippi Archippus of Coloss Clemens of Rome Ignatius of Antioch these and others too in the Apostles times and ordained by the Apostles hands were the received Successors in the ordinary Ministry of the Apostleship And that this was so Theodor. in Phil. 2●25 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is evident from that which is given us by Theodoret 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Those very persons were called Apostles whom by usage of speech the Church now calls Bishops And why was this but because they were generally owned by the Church as the Apostles Successors in the ordinary Ministrations of their Apostleship But now Time the great mint and master of words least community of names should beget a confusion in things Time I say did appropriate the name of Apostle to the immediate Apostles of Christ and the name of Bishop to their Successors whose particular Succession in their full Ministry and Office incommunicable to any meer Presbyters though of never so eminent abilities and high esteems is upon undeniable record in the Churches Histories And though I might heap up the unquestionable testimonies of the Ancients yet that one full witness and quaint expression of Tertullian may be here sufficient Who writing within one hundred years after St. John and so the Succession of Ministry not very long setled in the Church after the Apostles he tells us Tert. de Praescript c. 32. speaking of some Metropolitan Churches Exhibent quos ab Apostolis in Episcopatum constitutos Apostolici seminis traduces habent They exhibite and produce those persons constituted by the Apostles to be Bishops who by vertue of an Apostolical Seed do transmit a Succession of Ministry in the Church And thus Episcopacy becomes what Epiphanius elegantly stiles it Epiph Haeres 75. cont
condition the godly make it their duty of obedience that their children be given up unto God and tutour'd to fear him Thus apparent it is that our infant-children have an interest in the covenant of grace for that the tenor of the covenant in promise and condition so takes in the children with the parents that the parents cannot covenant either excluding or not including their children This then remains as a firm ground and sure reason of infants being parties in the communion of the Church that they are parties in the covenant of grace And thus we have done with the second particular of the Text the Apostles Commission Disciple all nations Where we have shewed you what it is to disciple and who they are that are to be discipled What it is to disciple even to receive into Church communion and Who they are that are to be discipled and receiv'd into the communion of the Church ev●n all Nations as many as believe and the believing parents bringing in with them their infant-children We proceed to Application Applic. 1. Do we here sharply reprove and seriously admonish those who deny Infants Church communion whereby as much as in them lies they do separate them from Christ and as it were pluck them out of his arms offering them greater injury then to dash them against the stones Know ye not vain men that either Infants are Christs disciples and servants or the Devils pupils and slaves That they are Christs disciples and servants you loudly deny That they are the Devils pupils and slaves you are loth to declare Can you then tell us a medium 2 Cor. 6.14 15. No sure for what communion hath light and darkness Christ and Belial Certainly to deny Infants Church-communion is to deprive us of all sound hope of their salvation For where can we find a sacred promise and therefore how can we have any found hope of any being saved that are not of the Church the Church the treasury of Christs promises and blessings to which God is said to adde such as shall be saved Act. 2 47. not saved without the Church but in being added to the Church so that without her communion we know no salvation On how do the Anabaptists in cutting off Infants from the Church how do they like those which in their heat cut off a tribe from Israel Judg. 20 21. And though with Benjamin this be the youngest tribe yet it is not the least the Infant age making up a chief part of the body of Christ For this Oh that our Brethren would with Israel sit down and weep yet at length repenting of their indiscreet and blind if not malicious and proud zeal drenching themselves with a baptism of tears for denying the Church the baptism of Infants 2. Comfort we those parents whose children God shall please to pass ab utero ad uterum from the womb to the grave yea that shall make their grave in the womb the place of conception the place of dissolution Here O ye afflicted parents mourning over the untimely deaths of your tender babes know ye that our Lord Jesus Christ owns your Infants as parties in the Covenant of grace and thereby partakers of his fulness in a communion with his Church And though they have not the seal they have the promise yea though not the outward sign as to the visible ministration yet the inward grace as to the invisible dispensation Though they have not actual baptism yet they have intentional in voto parentum Ecclesiae Eph. 1.22 23. in that desire and devotion of their parents and the Church which is accepted of God to account them as Disciples of Christ who took upon him the several states of humane being was conceived and lay in the womb was born and nurs'd up an Infant did grow up to youth and manhood Mat. 18.3 And thus did he take upon himself every age that he might sanctifie every age unto himself Even he when an Infant was Head of the Church that Infants might be members of that Church whereof He is Head 3. See we to our duty as Disciples of Christ and this by imitating our pattern even little children without which our Saviour is express we cannot enter the kingdom of heaven Except ye be converted and become as little children How is this why by self-denial in being harmless without malice innocent without guile humble without haughtiness contented without murmurings Yea in this imitate we our pattern as children submitting our understanding and judgment unto God Ps 131.3 in the mysteries of his grace and the truth of his promises Submit we our wills and affections unto him in the precepts of his Word and the dispensations of his Providence Yea further as Infants and tender Babes ordered by the Nurses hand in the day and by the same hand got to bed at night do neither question nor quarrel at the time or place or manner of their disposal but quietly fall asleep in the Nurses lap Ps 131 3. Thus O that we could with David we an our affections from the world that we might become as Children resigning up our selves to our heavenly Father submitting with all contentedness of humility and faith to the order of his wisdom and providence whether for day or for night for life or for death And when we go to bed and hasten to the grave O that we could fall asleep in Christs lap depart this life in his arms in his love as being of the number of his Disciples by vertue of his Commission here given his Apostles Go ye Disciple all Nations c. THE THIRD SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye Disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. THough they are not the dictates of men Introduction nor the definitions of Councils no nor the Revelations of Angels but the Word of God and of Christ into which we make the ultimate resolution of our Faith yet sure I am in Controversies of Religion we have most reason next Christ to trust his Spouse his Church Universal and next her or rather with her our Mother this Church National Whose judgment and practise is most Orthodox and Religious in that great question and dispute of our present times the doctrine and duty of Infants Baptism And to justifie the judgment and practise of our Church into whose communion we have been baptised when Infants I shall keep me to the matter and method I have begun in giving you the evidence of divine Reason the authority of sacred Scripture and the consent of the Universal Church Remembring that sure rule of St. Austines Aug. de Trin. l 4 c. 6. Contra rationem nemo sobrius contra Scripturam nemo Christianus contra Ecclesiam nemo pacificus senserit No man that is a sober man will oppose reasons evidence no man that is a
have the conformity of the Universal Church and I know not what more can be required 1. As for the Apostles practice we can have no surer testimony then St. Pauls Argument 1 Cor. 7.14 Therefore are your children holy Holy in a known and common account of the Church which could be none other then that of Church Communion admitted thereunto by Baptism For observe This of the children being holy the Apostle makes a convincing argument That the unbelieving Parent is sanctified by the believing Wherefore this of the childrens holiness must be a known holiness otherwise the Apostles argument were no argument And whereby was the childrens holiness known but in order to Church Communion Into which Communion there is no known entrance and visible admission but by Baptism 2. Pass we from the Scriptures and consult we the very next ages after the Apostles Orig. l. 5. ad Rom. c. 6. in Luc. Hom. 8. For the usage of the Church And here Origen witnesseth That Traditionem ab Apostolis suscepit etiam parvulis dare Baptismum the Church received a Tradition from the Apostles to give Baptism even to children About the next age after Origen for later he could not be the Author of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy attributed to Dionysius the Areopagite he pleads for Infants Baptism 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys Eccles Hier. c. 7. as being of those things which the divine Ministers the Apostles from the beginning had delivered down to the Church I might give you the testimony of those first Fathers and Doctors both of the Greek and Latin Churches Irenaeus Tertullian Nazianzen Basil and others but we will insist awhile upon two Testimonies most full and convincing the one of St. Cyprian the other of St. Augustine Cypr. Epist ad Fid. Presbyt That of St. Cyprian we have in his Epistle to Fidus the Presbyter who propounds the Question Whether Infants might be baptized before the Eighth day urging the Instance and Analogy of Circumcision Cyprian gives his own judgment and that of a Council of Sixty six Bishops for the resolution resolving That Baptism be not deferred any long time and yet not confined to any certain time and if necessity required That there be a present Administration Now St. Cyprian lived within few years more then a hundred of St. John so that he and a Council of Sixty six Bishops could not be ignorant of what was the Apostolical practise as to Infants Baptism seeing some of their Fathers and many of their Grandfathers in all probability yea without all doubt did live in the Apostles times and were baptized by some Apostolical hands Now as for the testimony of St. Augustine it is of the more credit and esteem being spoken against his profest Adversaries the Pelagians who wanted neither wit nor will to have retorted the Error if he had not delivered the truth when he sayes of them Aug. de pecc●t mer. rem l. 1. Parvulos Baptizandos esse concedunt qui contra authoritatem Universae Ecclesiae proeuldubio per Dominum Apostolos traditam venire non possunt They grant children ought to be baptized because they cannot go against the Authority of the Universal Church without all doubt delivered by Christ and his Apostles The Non-Baptism of Infants had been a strong argument for Pelagianism as their Baptism was an invincible argument against it so that either to defend themselves or offend the Orthodox certainly the Pelagians would have denied Infants Baptism had they not well known the practise of the Universal Church was warranted by the Authority of Christ and the Ministry of his holy Apostles I might yet further enlarge and give you infinite Testimonies for Infants Baptism as to the constant practise of the Universal Church for above these One thousand six hundred years that of the Prophet being perfectly fulfilled Isa 49.22 That God having lift up his hand to the Gentiles and set up a standard to the people they have brought unto the Church her sons in their arms she having few Members of her Communion but who were admitted in their Infant-Baptism So that certainly our Saviour was so far from excluding Infants that he chiefly intended them in the commission and instructions he gives his Apostles and in them all the Ministers of his Church saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye disciple all Nations baptising them c. Having given you the original and use of Baptism we proceed to the benefits and effects thereof all applicatory to Infants Know then the Sacraments are no empty and bare signs to signifie but they are sacred and moral Instruments to convey real and effectual Seals to confirm yea gracious and Evangelical pledges to assure For so we are catechised by the Church if we have not forgot our Church-Catechism in which we have this most clear most full definition of a Sacrament That it is an outward visible sign of an inward invisible grace which grace is given and which sign is ordained ordained by Christ himself as a means whereby we receive that grace and a pledge to assure us thereof So that in Baptism then where the subject and person baptized does not ponere obicem put a bar and hinderance as the School speaks from St. Augustine as of Infants we are assured they do not In their Baptism then as the Water gives the outward sign so the Spirit gives the inward grace and when the Minister pronounceth saying I baptize thee in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost then is the power and vertue of the Blessed Trinity present to justifie and to sanctifie to cleanse and renew the inward man as sure as the Sacramental Water is present to sprinkle and to wash to cleanse and to purifie the outward man And now that the Sacraments are thus effectual is not by any natural causality or physical operation in themselves but by vertue of the gracious promise and voluntary institution of Christ whose Spirit still accompanies his Word to the quickning sanctifying and saving of his Church and chosen Tert. de Bapt. c. 8. Very aptly then does Tertullian call the waters Pristinam sedem Spiritus Sancti the ancient Seat of the Holy Ghost by whose quickning power they become prolifical both in nature and in grace For that the renovation of the Church was typified in the Creation of the World as in the Creation The Spirit moved upon the waters Gen. 1.2 and by a quickning power did produce the living Creatures so now in the renovation the Spirit moves upon the waters still in that by a quickning power of the Holy Ghost Tit. 3.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we are renewed by Baptism that Laver of Regeneration to become an holy and heavenly Off-spring alive unto God in Christ Jesus St. Cyril of Jerusalem calls Baptism 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Antitype of Christs sufferings the Water indeed that represents the Image of Death receiving the
truth and holiness thou shalt recover the favour of thy God and renew thy communion with Christ a communion of grace and life conveyed and seal'd thee in thy Baptism Concerning which our Lord and Saviour gave in commission and instruction to his Apostles and in them to all the Ministers of his Gospel Go ye disciple all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. THE FIFTH SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye Disciple all Nations Teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you GOD as he is Alpha so is he Omega too Introduction as he is the efficient so is he the final cause of all his Creatures especially of Angels and Men Rev. 1.11 endued with Understanding and Will who as they issue from God the product of his power so do they return to God the complement of their happiness And therefore whilst the Soul of Man winged with desires hovers over the surface of this Worlds changes like Noahs Dove Gen. 8.9 it findes no footing till it center its restless motions upon this sure Ark of the Almighties fruition But now what is the way which leads to his rest what the path of truth which conducts us safe to the Lord of Life whilst we all stand under one starry roof as Men as Christians our desires tend to the same Heaven yet we seek not to ascend by the same Ladder we all aim at the same Goal yet run not all in the same race In this we agree That God is our rest that happiness is our end yea that truth is the way and Christ is the Truth John 14.6 Yet when we come to the profession of the Truth and Faith of Christ how do we presently part hands and dividing our selves into several Sects we chuse to our selves several paths and all pretend the right way Now what is the reason of all our distraction and division but this That what God hath joyned men put asunder even the Authority of the Scriptures and the Doctrine of the Church Both which are established by Christ in the Commission and Instruction he here gives his Apostles Go ye disciple all Nations teaching them to observe whatsoever I have commanded you Having done with the former part of our Saviours Instruction the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our admitting into the School and Church of Christ by Baptism we proceed to the latter part the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 our tutoring and training up by Doctrine which doctrine is prescribed as to the extent of its object to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things whatsoever Christ hath commanded Here then as the subject matter of our ensuing discourse we will insist upon these two particulars First The object of our Faith the Word of God in which we have Whatsoever hath been commanded of Christ to be taught Secondly The means of communicating this object and preaching this Word the Ministry of the Church by which we are taught whatsoever Christ hath commanded Explic. 1. The object of our Faith the Word of God in which we have Whatsoever hath been commanded of Christ to be taught That there is a natural Theology we willingly acknowledge but that there can possibly be any natural Christianity we utterly deny and therefore that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 1.20 that which may be known of God in the visible things of the world it is not his infinite grace and love as a Redeemer but hi● eternal power and Godhead as a Creator True it is then that a natural knowledge will serve us to understand the Creatures Dialect which loudly and plainly speaks the presence and power of a Deity but Psal 29 2. how to worship this Deity in a beauty of Holiness and so enjoy him in a communion of love must needs be the dictate of a supernatural Revelation especially and eminently called the Word of God Which Word of God the word of life and grace hath been delivered to the Church by the mouth of Moses and the Prophets of Christ and his Apostles registred and recorded in the several Books of the sacred Scriptures both of the Old Testament and of the New The Books of the Old Testament we receive transmitted to us from the Jews by an especial providence and divine appointment made faithful Registers and Bibliothists to the Christian Church for unto them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 But now under the New Testament Heb. 1.1 2. God who at sundry times and in divers manners 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in different measures of light and divers manners of revelation spake in times past to the Fathers by the Prophets hath in these last days in which the Church shall receive no more alteration or innovation from God as to the general form of his Worship and Truth but after this state follows eternity even in these last days God hath spoken unto us by his Son who being the onely begotten in the Bosom of the Father John 1.18 that is most intimately one with him not in a meer conjunction of love but in a near union of Nature and communion of Attributes he hath declared yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath by divine Revelation expounded the Mysteries of the Godhead in his Communications of Grace unto his Church The Service then of God in the Old Testament Heb 9.1 that of the first Tabernacle and worldly Sanctuary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Sanctuary earthly and material this did stand in meats and drinks Vers 10. and divers washings and carnal Ordinances imposed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 laid as a burden upon the Jews till the times of the New Testament the time of Reformation the coming of the Messiah who should reform the Ecclesiastical state by abolishing what was earthly and carnal and by establishing what is heavenly and spiritual So that now Joh. 4.24 now God being a Spirit they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in Truth in Spirit that 's in opposition to the carnal Ordinances and in Truth that 's in opposition to the typical Sacrifices or in Spirit for the purity and in Truth for the sincerity of his Worship which must neither be Superstitious nor Hypocritical Having then shewed you where it is that we have the Word of God even in the Books of sacred Scriptures I shall proceed to describe this Word unto you in its inherent Attributes and its transient operations 1. In its inherent Attributes especially its full sufficiency and its self authority 1. It s full sufficiency The holy Scriptures they are the heavenly store-house from whence the Church of Christ is furnished with all spiritual provision of heavenly Doctrine whether it be of Faith or of manners They are the full treasury in which are laid up for the Church her inestimable riches of divine Promises and spiritual Blessings Profitable they are First