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A05689 Cartain obseruations of that reuerend, religious and faithfull servant of God, and glorious martyr of Iesus Christ, Mr. Randal Bate, which were part of his daily meditations in the time of his sufferings, whilst he was prisoner in the gatehouse at Westminster Bate, Randal. 1625 (1625) STC 1580; ESTC S117192 109,500 280

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conscience without warrant from the Word You that accuse the truth of God of fa●●ood that oppose ho●●nesse and sincere obedi●nce to the whole word You that make sad the hearts of the righteous and preach●ng pleasing things st●●ngthen the hand of the w cked that none can ret●r● from h●s wickednesse that propound the truths you teach generally and confusedly in frothy eloquence glorying to fill your Sermons with patcht up sentences of heathens Beware and turn and flie from the wrat● to come You lay open the land to m●sery Will not that moue you to pitty And to stir up your selues to preach sincerely and dilligently you bring the bloud of soules upon your heads Ezech. 34. Woe be to you without repentance for the Lo●d will be sanctified in them that come neer him and you shall be despised or destroyed The Lord will raise him a faithfull Samuel in your sted who shall speak his words faithfully to his people Shift it not off saying this is the word of some malicious foolish Puritan for these woes are against such sinnes which whether they be in you I referre it to the Lord your own conscience and all indifferent men to judg This I would not haue thought as spoken against all that conform God forbid But against such as conforming or not conforming liue scandalously and are ●nemies to the Gospell of Christ not enduring others should exceed them ●n g●fts or pa●●s in their M●nistery or in strictnes●e of l●fe Hear you or else the Lord will curse your blessings and your great l●v●ngs shall make you the more miserable SECTION XV. TO proceed without w●tnesses by the oat● ex officio is not lawfull against any especially against M●n●sters For 1 It ●s aga●nst the law of God Deut. 17.4 19.15 this law is confirmed by Chr st and his Apostles in the new T●stament 2 It is aga●nst the law of nature to accuse our selues nature teacheth men to procure their own good 3 It is against the direct command of our Saviour Math. 18 where he would haue no censure of the Church to p●sse upon men except they being admoni●●ed be proved by two or three w●tnesses to bee obstinate 4 It is against common reason that Ministers and Christians that are subj●ct to most vile and false reports should be forced to purge themselues upon every light and vaine persons informat●on 5 It is against the rule of Paul 1 Tim. 5 Against an Elder receiu not an accusation under two or three witnesses 6 It is against the laws of the land both Statute and Common laws 7 It is against the nature of an human law which is but to punish for open sinnes Deut. 17.4 8 It is to search the th●ngs God leaues by his providence to be revealed in their time 1 Tim. 5.24 Some mens sinnes goe before and some follow after 9 It is against all equity For men may be both judges and parties 10 It is against the law of loue to accuse our brethren and it it is to play the divels office 11 No law nor custom of Nations saue the Spanish Inquisition useth this for searching out of true Christians Acts 25.16 12 It is against the speech and solemn profession of Doctor Whitgift that any should haue this oath urged against them in case of life liberty or scandall 13 It is against all conscience that a man should bring himselfe into trouble If the Lord or his Magistrates do inflict a punishment patience may bear and the Lord may giue strength But who can look for such peace when we are our own executioners 14 It is against the pract●se of our Saviour Chr●st who being accus●d and asked many things of scandalls would answer nothing onely he witnessed a good confession touching his person and his office Matth. 26 27. 15 It is to approue of some speciall priviledg in these men which is not in any other of his Majesties officers for just●ce that these ex mero officio should proceed against men 16 From the inconveniences men fall into that take this oath The a●ticles and interrogatories being drawn as snares to intangle men in and to get matter against them when they can finde none apparant 17 It is against the law of friendship to reveal secrets and especially for Ministers 18 As it is now used it will not free men from trouble for they use extremities to them that take it except men forsake their sincerity and yeeld to their wills 19 It is against the nature of an oath which is to end a controversie amongst men in causes criminall before Iudges neither can any use hereof be given 20 It is against the word of the Lord in Ieremy Thou shalt swear in judgment 21 Wisedom in Governours hath other means then this to find out secret offences w●tnesse Solomon Object 1. The woman suspected of adultery was to purge he● self Answ The thing there suspected is very evill such as might dissolue marriage 2 It is Ceremoniall witnesse the Ceremony annexed to it having joyned with it a miraculous event in the guilt e. 3 The thing is known about which shee is to be sworn 4 It is but one particular case not many interrogatories Object 2. Exod. 22.10.11 The man that is suspected of theft ought to clear himself by an oath Answ It was before the Iudges of the land 2 It was in cases criminall that were simply evill and not in cases of conscience 3 There was an open wrong and losse to the one pa●ty 4 It was but to one particular not to ●nsnare him any way 5 His oath ended the controversie Now these things cannot be found in this for it is not b●fore the Iudges of the land though I would not much stand w●th them for it yet it hath ever been of evill report for Ministers to deal by vio●ence in so much as in t●mes of Popery the Clergie so called were abashed themselues to condemn any 2 These things for which they object the oath to us are meerly good and not punishable by any of the laws of the Land It is necessary first to convince the party that to doe such things as are objected suppose to meet together and pray are simply evils and sins 2 to proue them punishable by the laws of the Land 3 Here is no wrong by the exercises of Religion to any but much good what difference there is then any may discern 4 Here are many insnaring interrogatories and men search not so much for the truth as to wring it out after such a manner as may be prejudiciall to him that sweareth there is as much subtilty and uncharitablenesse shewed herein as in any thing 5 In this oath the controversie is not ended but many times begun SECTION XVI HEre it will not be amisse to insert some ●hings of the communion wh ch the 〈◊〉 may haue in private to perfo●m private duties F●●st therfore o●serue these grounds 1 What duties cannot be perform●d in publ●que ought to be performed in p●ivate
the guiding and governing of the Church They are called Elders in respect of their age and office which was to govern with the Ministers and perform all private duties for the good of the congregation as necessity required as to pray w●th the sick to admonish reprou and joyn with the Minister in excommunication to ordain officers for the congregation and to provide by all good means for the outward good of the Church That these ought to be●n eve●y Congregation we hold firmly aga●●st the maintainers of this strange and uncouth discipline And it may appear first out of Math. 18 where Christs institutes what is needfull for the Church whereof this is one secondly the Church doth what it doth not confusedly but by the ministry of some thirdly the promise is made ●n binding and roosing to two or three which imposts that though the right of the keyes bee in the whole Church yet the Ministery therof is in some few selected and chosen out for that purpose Our Saviour alludes to the custome of the Iewish Synagogues wherein there were Eld●rs But howsoever this place may seem too weak at first sight to build the erection of this office upon yet the practise of the Apostles withall compared and the directions they haue left to the Church in this case will put all out of doubt to him that wrangles not for himselfe and to please men To goe along therfore in the Scripture and first the Acts of the Apostles which conta ns a type and map of the prim●tiue times and purest Chu●ches that ever were in the world ment●on these Acts 15.4 22 wh●ch place cannot be understood but of such ●u●ing Elders of the people as were amongst the ●ewes not of teaching Elders For the Apostles were as the Ministe●s and did perform all Ministeriall duties having none their Curats under th●m as Bishops had afterward For Evangelist were to accompany the Apostles in planting Churches neither ●s there any mention of any such here 2 They are d●stinguished here both from the Church called the brethren and Apostles Neither can this title be understood of Pastors because the Apostles were wont to appoint them onely when Churches were gathered and they were to leaue them as may appear Acts 14.23 Tit. 1.5 3 These here mentioned are as assistants to the Apostles governing and ordering the Churches businesse as both here and Acts 21 where they are present with the Apostles and in none other office nor use imployed but onely this Lastly Paul and Barnabas and some others came up to Ierusalem to the Apostles and Elders which had ca●e of the Discipline and Religion with them The third place is Rom. 12.8 he that rules in or with dilligence where first the Apostle distinguisheth this ruling both from the ministery of the Word and from distributing and shewing mercy Hence therfore there must be some to rule in the church 2 Men are charged according to their callings and measure of gifts received to exercise themselues for the churches good who sees not plainly that the Regiment of the church is not in one Lord Bishops hand since Bishops are not in each congregation where they rule 2 That this ought to be where the Ministry of the Word is 3 This diligence cannot be meant of a three yeares visitation nor yearly Synods wherein presentments are Rece ved what bold and impudent face once dare think so wickedly of the Apostles but of that continuall care and oversight which they should shew towards the sheep of Christ which ever need some spirituall med●cine and Phisick for their soules 4 A fourth place is 1 Cor. 12.28 where the Apostle reckons up the severall gifts and offices which God himselfe hath set and appointed in his church Apostles are chiefe then Prophets and Governments There the Apostle distinguisheth Governments from the Ministry of the word 2 Being appointed by the Lord none can remoue them but he againe 3 The Lord giues extraordinary meanes for soule and body in extraordinary times when a church is to be planted because there want ordinary means 2 to procure the more authority and respect to the church then and ever he giues sufficient 4 The Lord hath s●t government in the church which the Magistrate cannot alter 5 The church is a perfect body that hath members sufficient to uphold and m●n●ster to all its own necessities neither is this to be neglected that the holy Ghost both here and Rom. 12 sets Government after Deaconship as though hee saw how some would arise and conjoyn things severed by the Lord which to prevēt he shews these are not to be so conjoyned as though the Minister should haue all the government in his own hands but some speciall persons are to be assi●n●d wh●ch may govern the Minister themselues 5 1 Tim. 4.14 with imposition of hands of the Presbytery which is to be understood of the Colledge of Presbyters contayning these amongst others For these had a speciall hand in electing and ordaining all church-officers 2 these joyned in making decrees for the government of the church Act. 15 therfore much more in executing of them 3 Timothy was called ordinarily at first not to be an Evangelist as appears Acts 16 Paul called him to that after the Churches had witnessed of him 4 The Apostle Paul Acts 20 speaks to them amongst others that they ●●ould tend the Church and they hav ng government in their hands were to suffer no wolues to come in But because men of a contentious spirit whose greatest hopes depend upon the contrary discipline will ha●dly yeeld t●ll plain force driue them nay force of the word will not till the sword of the Magistrate compells therfore the next place is 1 Tim. 5.17 in deluding of which place many sweat much in vaine for the Apost●e being to giue direction to Timothy how to carry himselfe in the Church of God shews h m his duty towards every condition as widdows in the beginning of th s chapter next Elders and such as rule well are worthy of double honour especially such as labour in the word and doctrine which first words implyes necessarily that there were then in the Church Elders that did govern the Churches which did not labour in the word and doctrine 2 Such ought to be had in speciall account that doe rule well 3 Such as labour in the word and doct●ine ought more to be respected then they that onely governe 4 That all M●n●sters are to haue a spec●all hand in the governing of the Churches commuted to them I will not much insist upon this place more for I know some adversaries need not so much conv●ct on as to haue their h●a●ts perswaded Pray thou that readest that the Lord would perswade them to dwell in the t●nts of Shem and be content to suffer here with their brethren that th●y may ●a●gn with Christ hereafter Many adversaries will not set themselues to learn the t●●th but being drunk with selfe-concert th●nk nothing good
served but mens amb tious thoughts never furthered the Kingdom of Christ Now this office is meerely devised by man For they deny them to be Elders mentioned in the Scriptures and how far different they be any man may see that compares them together Churchwardens haue no stroke in the disc●pline or excommunication Elders were to tend mens soules and procure their good by admonition reproofe c. Churchwardens are to tend the church walls and see that there be a fair surplus prov●ded and such Trumpery Elders sprung from Christ and m●ght look for a b●essing and protection in their calling These are from Rome and cannot expect any such blessing or protection from God in their course Elders were not annuall as these are 5 These officers uphold an unlawfull Hierarchy and Government they receiue their oaths wh ch is their enstalment from them wheras the church and congregat●on ought to choose and ordain them 2 They present all to them again giving them the power to punish and censure 3 They must obey every edict and precept that comes from them or the rurall deanes poore ignorant sotts more unlawfull officers then themselues This argument is firm against them since they that maintain Christs enemies are justly to be reproved and accursed if they doe not repent 6 Churchwardens as the government stands now are bound to most unlawfull conditions to present the true Min ster for not using superstitious rit●s to keep other Min●sters from preaching there except they haue licence to present men for not joyning with a dumb Minister and in a word to see that their Canons be exec●ted to the full and herein they are inst●uments of sin and m●anes of troubling the s ●vants of God which brings woe upon men This cannot be denyed The serpent was accursed for b●ing but the instrument of sinne 7 This is a great stumbling block to the Separation making them th●nk all our Church is and stands subject to Ant●christian government For these depend of the Bishop a●d Deanes and haue a k●nde of Regency in the Church Wherfore considering these things brethren who haue been through ignorance or want of consideration hitherto m slead hearken and leaue off hence forth Your witnessing of the truth of Ch●ists Government without all doubt will bring more true rest and peace to your soules then you can finde comfort in your outward peace which you may reap by conforming to mens wills and pleasures Consider how you undertake the profession of Chr●st with a full pu●pose to ●eau all to enjoy him Let me int●●at you for your own good that you will throughly and seriously consider of these things in your own hearts and cover not your selues with some fig leaues that you or others may find for you What a daunt ng will it to be the opposits when the peopl● stand against their courses And goe they cannot that want legges or feet which you are to them Think what every age hath given for Christ and his pure worship and shall wee giue nothing So metimes reformation and discipline beginnes with the servants who for shame driue others from their unlawfull courses Howsoever keep your selues that no unclean th●ng touch you and that you k●ep nothing unclean to defile others withall SECTION X. HAving shewed in the former Treatise what Officers are unlawfull springing up with Antichrist and therfore in all reason to die with him Now lest any should conceiu we herein would put all o●t of order It will be exped●ent to shew such offices as Chr●●s t hath left ●n his Church for the good of mens bodi●s which are a cording unto the●r necessities to be dis●●●buted ●nto E ther men want outward meanes for wh ch D●acons are appointed or are weak and sickly or t●avelling strangers and need attendance for tha● end the Lord hath appointed Widdows 1 For D●acons Act. 6 we haue the institution div●nely expressed the Apostles though carefull to still all complaints yet having greater care of mens soules would not be hindr●d in the Ministery of the Word know●ng and affirming that the preaching of the Gospell is the highest work of the Ministery Where men may obserue that consc●onable and w●se Min●st●●s that seek to doe the r duty to the Lords l●king w ll not ad●oyn other offices to the M●n●stery of the Word For men receiue grace but for th s or that Calling and one will hinder an other be men never so provident But by the way lest any should think Constables or Churchwardens or the like suffic●ent enough for this businesse as the Apostles we●e most carefull of their own Call ng so doe they teach an excellent course for the provision of the poore to choose men of good report full of the Holy Ghost and of wi●edom which they might set over this businesse Thi● being very gratefull and acceptable to the whole Assembly they set seven before the Apostles who by imposition of hands and p●ayer ordained them and admitted them into this office which greatry and wonderfully furthereth the Gospell as it is the nature and property of all Gods ordinances that comming together they may further one another the cōmon good which men receiu by thē whence we haue the necessity of this ordinance of God lest the Minist●r should be hindred in his calling 2 The institution by the cōmon co●sent of the Apostles which now b●nds all in the new Test they being the foundation of the church of the Gentils 3 Election by the church and ordination by the Apostles and 4 the benefit ar●sing hence This place is so plain that me thinks an ingenuous heart that loues the truth wayes of Chr●st reverenceth the min●stry of the Apostles shold not cav●l● but yeeld willingly hereunto For what the Apostles taught the people to doe Christ had cōmanded afore Mat. 28.21 For they in their Ministe●y could not erre Onely one exc●ption may be made That if this were so n●●dfull an Ordinance then why did they not teach ●t the ch●rch afore The Answer is plain 1 Because the Lord would haue men to see the want of this ordinance of God that so they m●ght discern the necessity of it and not think they were burthened with more Officers then need requires 2 H th●●to the church was but newly gathe●ed and as soon as ●t came to be inc●eas●d so soon t●ey appoint●d this Office A second g●ound is that 1 Tim. 3.8 where the Apostle sets down as of Ministers so of Deacons what men they ought to be honest c. Th●s belongs to us as well as the former of Minist●rs 2 The Apostle directly affirmes that T●mothy according to his direct on should carry himse●se in the house of God which is the Church of the living God and the pillar and ground of truth v. 15 which glorious titles why are they added but to shew that no man should dare to come and ex●cute any office in the house of God saue such as were called and fitted therunto 2
2 Resolu that if you doe forsake all for Christ to giue his Gospell passage you shall haue all and more then you haue 3 God will finde out all the shifts and fair pretences wherby wrong to the brethren is done Our Ceremonies are farre worse now then they were at the first For 1 Because the danger was not then so discerned 2 Question was not made of them nor did the light then appear in these things 3 They had not been so abused a man though he like a stranger and could be content to marry her a virgin yet having plaid the whore openly who of any honest disposition would take her to wife 4 Now it is more scandalous to Papists 5 Then it brought no such losse of Ministers to the Church as now it doth Further it will not be amisse to explicate such grounds as those holy men haue brought to light in this matter especially since my chiefest indevour in this whole Treatise and aim is to inform the weake and ignorant Numb 15.37 to the end Where the Lord having taught the people his whole will before now addes some helps wherby they may keep in remembrance the things delivered whence we may note 1 The property of those times was to be taught by Ceremonies and shadows they being then children 2 The priviledg and care of the Lord that when his people are to bee taught by Ceremonies hee appoints and institutes them 3 The Lord institutes such Ceremonies as are in civill use to put his children in remembrance of good duties 4 The Lord appoints in Ceremonies the matter and manner both leaving nothing to man 5 Man may not appoint what helps hee will but must stick to the helps ordained by God which are sufficient 6 The Lord when he appoints Ceremonies of remembrance institutes such as are continually before us in sight or hearing 7 The Lord teacheth the signification and use of his Ceremonies so as hee appoints no Ceremony but for some speciall good unto man 8 Men in religion must not follow their affection to frame such a form of Religion as pleaseth nature 9 Men are directly forbidden to make their own wisedom any guide and leader in the things of God 10 It is spirituall whoring in the service of God to doe any thing by changing adding or detracting for to please our selues or by our own understanding 11 Men are exceeding prone both to invent and follow others inventions in the service of God wherby their hearts are turned from God It is a most dangerous practice and can never be justified to bring human ceremonies into the service of the Lord speaking against them will not prevail nor suffice to keep men from abusing them 1 While men teach the use of these their own inventions they leau untaught the doctrine of God 2 The most teach very seldom wheras these Ceremonies are used continually 3 Teaching and avoiding occasions of sin must goe together 4 Men are set on fire with lust after these before doctrine come and the heart being fixed upon them will not hear 5 Though teaching might prevail with those of understanding conscience and sound heart yet in every Congregation there are many ignorant and carnall both yong and old Who would say that it were wisedom charity or conscience to bring a whoremonger an harlot into the room with him and such a harlot as he delighted in onely bidding him not abuse her what though hee should not commit the fact which were strange there being great lust in one and no resistance in the other For human Ceremonies haue no divine power in them to hinder spirituall fornication but rather power to draw men on to commit this sin Yet would not the heart be stirred up For is it not the nature of the objects to stir up the faculties and bring to act what else should ly dead Wherfore without question this is a tempting of God when there is no necessity of these things that are so dangerous that they should be used and imposed with such necessity Further men so extoll them for the most part that with their praysing of them the simple are bewitched and their corrupt nature which should be mort fied is the more increased Plain experience witnesseth that this is not able to ●oot out that religious respect and kinde of holines men put in these Ceremonies Obje● If men affirm these and the like places are not to us but to the Israelits I Answer they are for us Rom. 15. 2 We haue the same corrupt nature and disposition 3 The Lord is as strict for himselfe as careful to prevent sin in us as in the Israelits 4 These are morall and therfore common to all 5 We haue the sins of these set down expresly in the new Testament which are equivalent to them 2 Cor. 6. 6 These are expositions of the second commandement therfore appertain to us Ezech. 43.7.8 The Holy Ghost brings in and describes the practise of men truely repenting and turning unto God 1 Shewing that their former evil courses begin to be utterly loathed especially corruption in Gods worship which is his Name Hence obseru that the Lord accounts nothing his but what he himselfe institutes 2 That mans institutions though intended to Gods honour defiles his name 3 Men truely turning from Popery should not nor wil not defile Gods worship with their devises 4 All human devises joyned to the word worship of God are abominable in his sight 5 Conjoyning of mens devised Ceremonies to the Lord though men retain the worship of God and his institutions defiles the name of Gods holinesse 6 Adjoyning of mens devises makes a separation twixt the Lord and his people 1 It remoues Ministers 2 It lessens Gods gifts in many 3 It withdraws the peoples hearts from the pure worship of God 4 It grieues the spirit of the Lord in his children 7 Mens joyning of inventions brings down the wrath of the Lord upon a people 8 The full removing of mens corrupt inventions brings the Lords continuall presence 9 When men are ashamed of their own devises then the Lord will shew them how he will be worshipped All which are strong Arguments to an heart tendring the good of his own and others soules to root out and cast far away all these devised Ceremonies of man therfore as Eliah said to Ahab It is not I that trouble Israel but thou and thy fathers house that forsake the commandement of the Lord. So I say from God that it is not we that trouble the land but it is these men that will haue on foot their own devises as though the Lord should haue no lights in his Sanctuary It is they that bring in Popery they that provoke the Lords anger it is they that fight and speak against heaven they hinder a learned and able Ministery they rent in sunder Pastour and people they make the Altar of the Lord and his worship either to be despised or to be covered
Monarchy and the H●erarchy of Rome to be erected and established when Bis●ops began to haue civill authority granted them and Bishops were chosen some of Magistrates and great Lords as histories ment●on wherfore this was and is a property of Antichrist to arrogate such high glorious titles 5 Bishops haue no authority over Ministers nor are capable of civill authority by the Canons and Lawes of Christ wherfore they are not to haue any title For the Argument is firm Titles being symbols and notes of the things are to bee denyed to such as haue not the nature of the things 6 Wordly and earthly titles make men to be thought onely of the world and so procures but worldly reverence looseth the true respect which is due to the Ministers of the Gospell SECTION VII THus thou hast been lead Christian Reader a long time to see the nakednesse of these men that vaunt it out so glor●ously in the world wherby may many questions be resolved Quest 1. Whether it stands more for the glory of God and the good of Church and Kingdom to suffer these men to hold the government in their hands and not permit the Ministers to preach and exe●cise discip●ine or econtra To this it is plain that the Magistrate is to doe to them as our Saviour Christ dealt Ioh. 2 in whipping out buyers and sellers and money-changers these might better come into the Temple then these Bishops into the Churches of God and had more necessary use but they had abused holy things and made it a den of theeues First consider a little gentle Reader and the Lo●d remoue prejudicate opinion f●om thee what these doe to the Church and Common-wealth I appeal to every mans conscience wh●ther they are not and doe not shew themselues enemies to the sincere preaching of the Gospell the scepter of Christs Kingdom and the glory of our land Secondly doe they not lay heavy burthens upon Authority laying all the wrong they doe upon his Majesty and so work a hard conceit of his Majesty in the hearts of his best loving subjects as though it were his will men should bee put out and silenced not convinced before by Scripture which was his Majesties pleasure Thirdly doe they not cause great profanenesse in the land which weakens any K●ngdom 1 By their own preaching seldom cold generall unfitting the times and seasons calling good evill making sad the hearts of Gods people and st●engthning the hands of the wicked that none can return from his wickednesse 2 By their disgracing and troubling the most zealous servants of God which causeth gr●at offence and they in this case are guilty of the overthrow of many a soule which by such persecutions is turned out of the way 3 By sending forth such a rude Ministry as cannot deliver the counsell of the Lord nor giue every one their portion in due season but a●e blinde guides making many fall into the ditch with them 4 By enacting and continuing such Canons in force as keep out many able Ministers thrust out those that Christ himselfe hath sent as they cannot deny themselues make many a one break peace of conscience to undergoe them and to loose his gifts in a great measure Besides discomfo●t in his calling and grieving others making many also to spend all their study to just●fie the ceremonies which are now cont●overted and setting a fire the house of God and making way for Antichrists return 5 They bring the ordinance of God into contempt through their slubbering coveteous and profane handling of them Who respects the Sabboths ministry of the word o● c●nsures of the Church 6 Doe they not take authority from his Majesty to execute statutes against Papists and yet suffer them contrary to his Majesties pleasure and to the indangering of his royall person and State 7 Then bad example in specches seeking the world c. and their servants profane licentiousnesse Fourthly they haue much living which they prodigally mispend and ryot out in pompe and vanity to their own hurt and othe●s Fifthly doe they not oppose and directly deale against the Statute Laws of the Kingdom and seek to bereaue his Majesty and loyall subjects of their inheritance Sixthly doe they not impoverish many of the Kings subjects by their proceed●ngs wh●ch h●nders them in their Callings the common serv●ce all owe to the K●ng and Countrey and disables them from such taxes as otherw●se they might be able to discharge The Mag●st●ate ●s bound to keep and see kept both Tables and to remoue what hinders the observation of either which these men doe in every mans judgement well weighing things Wherfore the conclusion is easie I doubt not and will be assented unto For what good heart can endure such a heavy burthen to lie upon his Majesty as these men lay upon him howsoever they would seem to be his onely friends and please him in every thing like Baals false Prophets Quest 2. Whether a man may yeeld obedience unto them Answ Not in that authority which is proper to them and comes from themselues as they are Bi●hops 1 This is an acknowledging of them 2 Men must stand fast in their Chr●st●an l●berty Gal. 5.1 and not suffer men to rule over t●em at their pleasure Col. 2. Quest 3. Whether are Minist●rs to be ordained by them Answ 1 One man onely hath no authority but rather many together ought to lay on their hands 2 All Ministers may ordayn as well as a Diocesan Bishop having the like authority and succeeding the Apostles one as well as the other which in the primitiue times was usuall 3 None may receiue their authority from them so as they should be their substitutes 4 Every congregation hath power from Christ as hath been shewed and was practized in the primitiue church 5 They require both canonicall obedience and subscription to their decrees 6 It is doubtfull whether they are Ministers or no since they are not elected by any people nor haue any particular flock neither doth the holy Ghost set any such over his people 7 Ordination ought to be performed with fasting and prayer All which he that considers well and makes conscience will discerne easily what is best to be done Qu. 4. Whether may men giue titl●s unto them or no Answ Consider well the former grounds and to this adde 1 This is a confession of the mouth And 2 it is an acknowledgment of subjection due unto them 3 It is a lye when they are not Lords and we know it 4 Though their Lordship seem to bee civill yet the ground is spirituall their Bishoprick authority following the same SECTION VIII NOw lest any should think wee rob the Church of much good and bring in confusion with abolition of these Diocesan Bi●hops therfore ●t shall be requ site in the next place to treat a l tt●e of these officers which the Scriptures mention in the t●m● of the new Testament which are chiefly the Elders which are to assist the Ministers in
wine but what they draw then selues But the Lord reveales himselfe to the humble There was never doctrine so vile but preferment and riches made ●t finde favor●tes Th●s the pract●ce of the Church and test mony of the ancient witnesseth Ciprian Ambrose Tertullian c. By all wh●ch may be understood Hebr. 13.17 Where obedience to their leaders is injoyned now these were Elders preaching and lay which had the government then of the Church therfore Christians are bound to subject to these 2 That of Iam. 5.14 send for the Elders of the Church may well be understood of this order of Elders being to perform many private duties specially ●f the Ministers should either be publiquely imployed or necessarily hindred 3 That Rev. 4.4 l●ving creatures having six wings full of eyes wh●ch vision is of the ●●●b●e Church and fitly expounded For by wings are the helps meant which are spoken of 1 Cor. 12.28 and eyes that are within are the Elders which are as eyes for the people to see by and informing the Minister of their estate they fit him the better to speak unto the people which place so expounded is far more forcible to per●wade for this discipline then Apoc. 2 so expounded for Lordbishops for that exposition agrees not with the Scripture it wants all proofe of holy Wr●t to uphold ●t It agrees not with the practise of the Apostles who in Ephesus and Philippi set many that had the name and nature of Bishops as is plain both in Acts 20.28 and Phil 1.1 This agrees not with the word Angell who in this place signifies all that labour in word and d●scipline be●ng sent of God to the churches as the context proues in all the churches And as this po●nt hath testimony of Scriptures and of the Ancient so may it appear in all sound reason to be most fit for the church of Christ 1 To omit that this was in use amongst the Iewes in time of the old Testament and no way ceremoniall nor jud●ciall but morall which the light of nature taught the Gentils after a sort in their civil government who with their Consuls had their Senate 2 Because the Apostles would not haue Ministers hindred in their study but to take heed to reading and med tat●on that they may by searching the Scriptures be made w●se to salvation and perfectly be furnished to every good work Therfore it is fitting there should be men of wisedom gravity and respect chosen to oversee the people and obserue their manners and doe lesse businesses in admonition and correctien 3 This best benefits the simplicity of the Gospell and of the Church now in the time of the new Testament where all outward pompe ceaseth which was used before in the Leviticall Priesthood to figure o●t Christs heavenly and wonderfull graces 4 To haue Churches so combined and consociated under one high Priest is meerly Iewish which was to signifie all ought to be subject to Christ the great high Priest who is come and alike in all if there be equall gifts All congregations are equall none having power one over an other and therfore each is to haue its Governours 5 Every congregation being a true church and so a perfect body should and must haue power to preseru it selfe by expelling and removing the dissolute and electing n●w officers 6 God hath given gifts unto men for this end which being so imployed bring great good and benefit to men further the Ministery keep all in good order and prevent dangers in the b●g nning 7 The Question being betwixt Lordbishops and these the expulsion of them is the introduction of these 8 There is no such danger in this government of corrupt on as where one man hath al in his hands he may corrupt a whole D●ocesse nay Kingdom but th●se though evill corrupt but their own congregations 2 Here men are prone to be over-carried with antiquity the place being so eminent and the power so great but experience testifieth that where this government is used there is a more speciall blessing of God more purity and beauty in the face of these Churches wicked men are sooner found and more terrified But of this more hereafter Here one Question may be propounded that is why is not the duty of these set down in the Scriptures nor their names Answ A description of the Bishop and Presbyter is a discription of these Elders that are Bishops 1 Overseers of the flocks for these places contain rather a descript on of their sufficiency and morall part and holy conversation which ought to be in these though in a more excellent measure in the Pastors and Teachers then of the applying of them to these ministeriall duties which are proper to the Pastors This is plaine to all that considerately peruse the Texts And this answer is grounded on that 1 Tim. 5.17 where the Apostle intimats the work is an excellent work of them that rule well else why are they to haue double honour 2 Cals them by the same name that Pastors are stiled by as in the former places of Scripture If it be said their duty is not assigned the Answer is plain their office is to rule by the sword of the Spirit Word and churches censures reproofe and excommunication The rule and lawes are the word the manner is to be according to the practise of these duties in Scriptures being admonition reproof and excōmunication of each wherof we haue severall and manifold examples Object 2. This brings men into base subjection which ●s not fit nor that men of state should be subject to such mean officers Answ 1 No Officer that Christ hath appointed ought to be accounted mean or b●se 2 It is not a subjection unto men but to the ordinance of Christ 3 Men are no more subject to these Elders then they are to be to the Ministry of the Word 4 It is nothing impairing the state or dign●ty of any one whatsoever for they are not to meddle w th these things but as Phisitians Surgeons seek the curing of diseases in the soules Ob. 3. If ●t be said now men are petty Popes there being none to over rule them The answer is plain here are many to rule Pastor Teacher Elder 1 These are bound strictly to the rule of the Word 2 Besides the Church may say to Archippus Take heed c. Col. 4.17 3 Other neighbour churches may ought to admonish them which if it take no place they are altogether to declare their judgment touching such a Congregation 4 The civill Magistrate is and ought to punish every congregation the leaders especially into sin and errour according to the quality and degree of their offence if they doe not conform to the right manner of worshipping God SECTION IX FRom this wh●ch hath been shewed both against Diocesan Bishops and in just fying the wis●dom of God in lay Elders as they are called each may see what we are to judge of the Officers now in use amongst
us I will speak of two as being both the cheif and containing under them all the rest The first is the Chancellour under whom there are Archdeacons Offic●als and all that rout springing up with the beast about which I need not spend so long time in confuting of their office considering the former grounds against this Diocesan Discipline Before I come to handle the arguments against them consider well these grounds 1 The name of a Church doth belong to every congregation not properly to the clergy as they are now called so the holy Ghost speaks in the Scripture 2 That such callings are Antichristian which sprung up w th Ant christ and served ●●m a long time onely and uphold such a government as his is though they maintaine not such doctrine So though Cardinalls should professe the Gospell yet their office is Antichristian because of the former ground which is plain for Antichrist is not a person but a succession of men opposing Christ in his Ordinances and Offices as well as otherwise 3 Some good use that a calling may haue and some benefit that it brings is no sufficient ground to warrant it in the church of God 1 Because there is nothing but at least is well intended and carryes a shew of good when it is brought into the church 2 It may be that keeps out some other calling that would bring farre more profit and benefit to the church 3 It may be it hath some inseparable evill annexed or coupled with it Now upon these grounds sufficient and weighty reasons may be founded from the Scriptures to proue the unlawfulnes of this office which is for one in a Diocess to haue authority for keeping courts to proue wills to right men for disorders and scandalous sinnes especially breach of their traditions and to censure men with their kinde of penance and excommunication Arg. 1. Every man in the Scriptures tha● hath office in the church must be able to justifie it by the Word So Iohn Baptist Mat. 3 Ioh. 1. So the Apostles themselues Act. 2 out of Ioel 2 Gal. 1.1 In the old Testament the very porters of the house of God and singers were ordered by the Spirit of God in David and in the new Testament Deacons and Widdows are mentioned but these men haue no pattent from the Lord there is no place once to mention their name nor the like in all the Scriptures therfore their place and calling is not from God 2 Discipline belongs to every particular congregation without which though men may be a church desiring it after they are convinced of it yet they lye open to miserable dangers of their spirituall enemies and cannot be so compacted and knit together as a congregation and church of Christ ought to be This is plain in those churches Revel 2 3 that are each both commended or dispraysed for their exercising of discipline 2 Christ hath given the keies to every particular congregation that hath the Ministery of Word and power to use them Mat. 18. Therfore these mens office is sacriledg for it steals the holy things of God from each congregation wherby their soules are miserably impove●●●ed 3 It is a thing most absurd inconvenient and burdensom that the Pastor in each congregation should haue authority from Chr●st to absolue and remit in the Ministery of the Word and retain and binde and having part cular knowledge in his own congregation of the manners of men according to which hee propounds the doctrine of the Gospell releasing some and adjudging others yet that this man must stand to the arbitrament of a st●anger that never happily saw any in his congregation who shall be absolved who retained by whom for the most part hee is enjoyned not to admit such as wholly clean to the Lord and suffered and forced to admit such as he in his Ministery hath condemned and the world seeth to be filthy swine This argument is grounded upon the sentence and maxime of our Saviour Christ What God hath conjoyned let no man sever He hath joyned the ministry of the Word and the exercise of Discipline together therfore no man should sever them 4 These came in with Antichrist and are part of that Hierarchy When that Prelats had gotten that spirituall sword into their hands and backed with Princes authority had established themselues and made their kingdom like the Princes of the world as in other things so in this they must for their state haue their Chancellours and Officialls c. This is plain in Historie and the Argument is firm against them because all mans inventions Antichrists especially are abon inable unprofitable and exceeding hurtfull to the church of God and contrary to Christs own Ordinances 5 These chancellors men cannot bring into the church being meerly secular as they are termed and civill and therfore no such power belongs to them to cast out and excommunicate especially since they never proceed by the rules of the Word but by their own will and canons Th●s is his Maj●st●es argument in the conference against their practise which is one speciall part of their office This is grounded upon th s that no man hath any authority but hee that is elected and assigned by the Church to that governm●nt he exerciseth in the same But these are not elected nor approved by the church 2 To bring in and cast out belong to one and the same calling 3 It is reb●llion against God for to innovate any thing in the government of the church established by God th●s was Corah and h●s complices sin that not content with the office of the Levits they would come neerer the Lord then the Lord called them by taking that upon them which he committed not unto them Therfore reproof ●ame great punishment shall be their best reward 6 As Christ is the onely K●ng of his Church so it is his instituting of any Calling that makes it a member of h●m and the church and that union and dependance which a Calling hath w th Christ puts life into it makes it effectuall for the good of the church Now this call ng hath no un●on with Christ being not a member instituted by him of his body the Church therfore it is not nor can be profitable This is pla n in sense for the member that is not united to the head and heart can receiue neither life nor sense from them And 2 as men cannot make any one member of his body nor couple any to the principall member the originall of life and motion much lesse can they adde to Christs body they may as men doe put to a wodden leg or a glaifie eie when they cut off the strong and proportioned members that would haue carryed the body surely quickly and easily 7 Their call ng is maintained by the censures of the church turning them into pecuniary mulcts which ought not to be these things not being saleable This causeth so great corruption and sin to be so
Testament wherin there is more abundance of spirit promised and more plentifull declation of Gods will the Ministers ought to be able to teach Gods people twixt good and evill This argument holds firm since the Lord hath as great care of his Church now as then and is as carefull to haue them avoide sin 2 Where vision faileth the people perish Prov. 29.18 these men are no Seers nor haue any vision but darknesse and night 3 They are dumb doggs Isa 56 that cannot barke blinde watchmen shepheards that cannot understand What a liuely description of a reading Minister here is He cannot understand what pasture is good or fitting for the people he is a blind Watchman that can foresee no danger nor plague comming when they doe hear Wolues are towards and amidst the flock yet they haue no mouthes to bark and fright them away Let no man be so bold as to cavill at the Scriptures which are so plain that he which runnes may reade them 4 They cannot divide the Word rightly which is the chiefe work of the Minister of the Word 2 Tim. 2.15 which who so cannot doe at all is none of Gods workmen they who cannot nor will study to doe well and righteously are none of the Lords servants 5 They cannot defend the truth nor stop the mouths of gain-sayers which every Minister ought to doe Tit. 1. Else how shall errours and heresies be prevented and to runne to others in this case will yeeld small releefe considering the unwillingnesse of the most to be taught or take any paines at least to seek instruction 6 The Lord thrusts out Labourers not Loyterers into the Harvest such men as doe some execellent work for the good of his Church Math. 9 Eph. 4 1 Tim. 3.1 These men are idle their work is not so excellent nor is it speciall and proper 7 The Shepheard that hath nothing more then the Sheep haue cannot possibly keep the sheep well for then sheep might keep themselues and the calling of God is unprofitable These haue not so much as many sheep 8 They are not fit to meddle with the soule to seek it in time being distempred they cannot shew man Gods righteousnesse neither pray for him they cannot seek that which is lost nor bring back that which is driven away nor heale the sick Now Ministers are chiefly sent thus to benefit the soule And if they cannot help in time of distresse they are miserable comforters like Iobs friends 9 A Min●ster must preach and be instant in season and out of season 2 Tim. 4.2 Hence it is plain what preaching is namely an expounding and applying of the word of God to build up the people of God improving errour rebuking sin and exhorting upon sound doctrine Are men so blind that they cannot see the truth in this but would make reading preaching 10 2 Tim. 2.25.26 Ministers must instruct with meeknesse such as are contrary minded proving c. It is plain hence the Minister must be able to instruct all that are misled through errour and instruct them in the right way 2 That mens salvat●on depends upon the right applying of the Word 11 The word thus barely read hath not the power and majesty that is mentioned in Scripture neither that efficacy and power in converting soules which argues it is not the arm of God 12 Ministers are the Lords Embassadours and Stewards these men cannot speak nor sue to the soules for Christ to beseech men to receiu him neither can they be faithfull unto their Lord. They are the shame and dishonour of Christian Churches as though the Spirit of God were not purchased by Christ for the furnishing of men for his Church It is in effect to deny Christs victory over the enemy of our salvation 1 Pet. 5.1.2.3 13 He that winneth soules is wise these are not wise I suppose none will vouchsafe to Reply for these that haue any spark of piety to God or pitty towards his people Onely some Non-residents that keep poore underlings or greedy Patrones or Popish Atheists that would haue the light of the Gospell die or poore ignorant people that never knew what the Gospell meant or men that would liue at their own wils in all licentiousnesse these happily would undertake the plea against Christ But it were better their tongue should cleau to the roof of their mouth then they should once dare goe about the overthrow of Christs Ministry Heare therfore and consider that it may goe well with you Having shewed the insufficiency now follows the nullity of these men which the rather I insist upon because many would be content if they were insufficient being Ministers carnall men never so much regarding how the Lord is served But being no Ministers in Gods acceptance I hope it will work upon them 1 Therfore Hos 4.6 God pronounceth them none to him that is in his acceptance they are none whom God pronounceth to be none reading M●nisters are pronounced none in the sense mentioned by the Lords own mouth wh●ch cannot lie Who are you therfore oh ye Prelats that ye dare admit of such Or who are you ô yee people that ye are contented with such as cannot come to the Lord for you whose prayers are not accepted by the Lord for you This Argument is firm and cannot be gainsaid For if the authority of man be enough to displace whom God hath sent shall not the Lords authority much more displace whom man onely hath sent 2 He which wants either the nature or essentiall property of a Minister is not a true Minister for the nature and property of things cannot be severed from the things themselues But reading Ministers want either the nature or at least the essentiall property of a Minister This appears because the Minister is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2.7 and his lipps should preserue knowledge To teach the people is an essentiall property and difference twixt the Minister and people Whence it also appears that there is no difference amongst Gods Ministers for the substance of their Calling For each one is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts 2 He which is not a Messenger is no Minister for that is common to all 3 He whose lippes doe not preseru knowledge is no Messenger Who sees not that the Reading Minister differs in the substance of his Calling 2 That he hath no Message 3 That his lippes doe not preseru knowledg but loose it rather How dare yee counterfeit therfore the Lords place any of you whom the Lord hath not sent 3 Christ hath not gifted nor appointed for the good of his Church Reading Ministers therfore they are none of his For he is the King of his Church and men can no more bring in Readers then Friers amongst the people of God 2 Ministers run because they are sent by him 3 Christ will blesse none but such as he sends That reading Ministers are not gifted nor appointed it is plain from Eph. 4 where all
Lord to anger That you s●ould dare to send such a l●me and bl nde m●ss●nger to the Lord of Frosts and such sacr●fices withall comming from the drowned in ignorance and superst●t●on and that you should put the Lords name upon such a M●nister which is not s●●t nor allowed by him Doe you n●t depriue your selu●s of those excellent and p●ec●ous treasures in the Gospell of Christ because you want a man to preach them Ep●es 3 Doe you not hereby ●ndanger and loose your soules which liue in ignorance 2 Thess 2. Doe you know the anger of the Lord will be upon you for this Hos 6. Would you chuse for the bodies sake such a Physitian as hath no skill at all nor any good report to haue cured any under his hand Or such a Counsellour as could not advise but reade you a statute or book-case at all adventures Would you trust your sheep with an Idoll-shepheard that cannot tend them And will ye make so small account of your soules thus to passe them over O return and seek the Lord ye haue hitherto sitten in ignorance and in the shadow of death you never knew what the Gospell meant nor what a God the Lord is witnesse the base and wicked conceiving of him and carriage towards him in publique and private Wherfore let this moue you to provide you a man of understanding that may be able to f●ed you Turn you therfore from all your evill wa●es that yee may be brought to Sion the place where the Lord will be found and seen of all his people Let none be so hardy as to maintain these in their Callings SECTION XIIII THe next sort of Min●sters wherof some doubt whether they may hear them or no are such as conforme to these ceremonies now controverted Which howsoever it come in them from an utter hatred of Popish devises and an heart carefull to keep themselues unspotted of the world yet without all quest●on they erre Concerning th●s therfore that mor● clearly the truth may be boulted out we will propound some grounds to stay upon 1 The Ordinances of God remain pure and holy though men be corrupt that administer them and so are like the Lord. 2 Private men are bound to try the doctrine of M●n●sters and look to that rather then be examin●ng of their entrance into that Calling they are in this all the Scriptures run upon 3 God doth good to his Church by the gifts he hath given to wicked men for his people For they are f●om the Holy Ghost given to restore the Saints and for the work of the Ministry These things considered it may appear upon sufficient grounds that men may lawfully hear 1 Such as are conscionable in their Ministery though they erre in judgement for the Ceremonies and be ordained according to the manner of the times For first these haue the substance of a lawfull calling elect●on and approbation from the people 2 Dissention in lesser matters hath never hindred either Communion nor est●em●ng one of another twixt the servants of God Phil. 3. 3 These are sent of God though not by this way they are not unlike to Iacob whose the blessing was though he should not haue sought ●t by lying 4 Their sin in admission is their own personall sin and cannot hurt others not partaking with it 5 Men may and ought to receiue their send●ng not from men but from the Lord of the Harv●st Object It seemes to approue thei● sinne since men pertake with them in their Ministery which they haue gotten unlawfully Is it not to communicate in stollen goods Answ No for they ought to be admitted and the Ministery is the●rs and the Congregations choosing them onely it is their errour to come in by a wrong way Now to st●al is to take from men that which doth not belong unto them which cannot be applyed to them A second sort of Ministers are bad and corrupt in doctrine and manners these preaching many truths from God may be heard For 1 They sit in Moses chair Matth. 23.2 Moses chair is the doctrine of Moses otherwis● they should haue sit in Aarons chair if he had spoken of the Calling 2 Otherwise we should not yeeld absolute obedience to the doctrine taught except it were Moses doctrine 3 The main cause why the people should hear these is manif●sted by our Saviour but this is not so much succession in Calling as succession in Doctrine 1 These Pharisies had corrupted their Call●ng 2 They perverted the Law with their Glosses 3 Were ignorant of the righteousnesse of faith 4 Hipocrites in life and bitter enemies to the Kingdom of Christ 5 They preached the Word without authority coldly as did not stir affections 2 Argu● Doctrine and gifts are the Churches who may take their own from a very theife Yet these Cautions must be observed 1 That we be able in some measure to discern and try the spirits 2 That w● be compelled by necessity 3 That we b● careful to get what p●ivate and pub●●que help possibly we can 4 That we hunger after other powerfull meanes and as soon as the Lord offers any we remoue and follow the light 5 Refuse private conversing with them 6 Contend for the truth in any pa●t oppu●ned by them Object May not Popish Iesuits or the like then be heard Answ Th●se are the professed servants of the beast not of Ch●●st for they haue quite changed the Ministery into a Pri●s●hood 2 We are quite separated from this false Church by the commandement of the Lord and the Magist●ate and all Chu●ches assenting to the same 3 Th●se doe plainly seek to seduce us and withd●aw us from the wor●h●p of the true God all which cannot be found ●n these of our own Church from which wee haue ●o such warrant to seperate nor doe seeke to draw us qu●te from Christ in fa th Yet thus far let me speak to you of the Ministry thus corrupted that are negligent and doe not sorwa●n the peop●e of God of danger You that look to your own wayes and make your belly your God You that preach as they Ier. 5 that other Lords may ●ule over the flock of Chr st Consid●r what you are Are you not men of God Should not you be holy that draw neer to the Lord Should you trouble the waters with your T●aditions that none can drink almost w th a good consc●ence Should you make the sacrifices of God abhorred by your d●ssol●tenesse Should you smite with your tongues your fellow s●rvants whose Min●stery and conversation you know is better then your own Should you use the flock of Chr●st as you doe never visiting of them many of you If woe be to them that joyn house to house what shall become of you that joyn Congregation to Congregation and to these prebenships D●anries c. Should you be terrible to the humbled and afflicted soules Surely the Lord will judge for his people Hear you that force men to things against their