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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

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Anabaptists subtleties with which we find him to puzzle some of his eminent opposers In that the Apostle says then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The unbelieving husband hath been sanctified by the wife and again 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The unbelieving wife hath been sanctified by the husband the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being in the Praeter-tense hath been sanctified the Apostle speaks of what had been experienc'd that the wife had been a means to sanctifie the unbelieving husband and the husband of sanctifying the unbelieving wife in their converting to the faith of Christ A good reason this why the believer should not separate from the unbelieving upon this hope of gaining him or her unto the Church And this interpretation is apt to what the Apostle subjoins to confirm his judgment and opinion v. 16. What knowest thou O wife whether thou shalt save thy husband or what knowest thou O man whether thou shalt save thy wife Which saving answers so pat to the former sanctifying that to be sanctified seems plainly to be a converting to the faith and so bringing in to the communion of the Church in respect of which communion says the Apostle your children are holy which otherwise were unclean Act. 10.14 And that this is so S. Peter's Vision will resolve us where by unclean is meant not fit to be received into the communion of the Church and so by holy opposite to unclean must be interpreted one already received or fitted to be received into the Churches communion So that from these three Arguments 1. That Infants of believing parents were members of the visible Church under the Jews and that this priviledge is not repealed 2. That our Lord and Saviour hath testified that to such Infants belongs the kingdom of God 3. That S. Paul hath asserted it of all such Infants that they are holy From these three arguments the surest and soundest we can fix upon to plead the Infants cause against the Anabaptists from these I say I may make my infallible inference of holy truth That the Infants of believing parents have a right and interest in the communion of the Church as the Disciples of Christ This I have been the more large in because I intend this my sure foundation whereon according to the method of my Text to build the structure of Infants baptism according to our Saviours commission and instruction Go disciple all Nations Baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost c. 2 Having proved that Infants of believing parents as Disciples of Christ have a right and interest in the communion of the Church I shall now give you the ground and reason of that interest and right which ground and reason is this most sure and firm Their being parties in the same Covenant of grace with their parents upon which Covenant of Grace is founded the Communion of the Church and therefore they who are parties in that Covenant must needs be partakers of this Communion And that children are parties in Covenant with their Parents is most plain from the express words of the Covenant first made with Abraham Gen. 17 7. I will establish my Covenant between me and thee and thy Seed after thee in their Generations for an everlasting Covenant to be a God unto thee and to thy Seed after thee and that this thy Seed after thee doth relate to the Infant posterity of all Believers as well as of Abraham is not onely evident from the Seal of the Covenant-Circumcision Deut. 29.10 11. but also from that renewing of the Covenant to Israel where are present before the Lord to enter into his Covenant not onely the men of Israel but also their wives and their little ones Now this same Covenant which God made with Abraham Jere. 31.31 and established with Israel we finde renewed by the Prophet which is therefore called the New Covenant and as renewed by the Prophet so published and declared by the Apostle Indeed God had told Abraham Heb. 8.10 that he did establish with him an Everlasting Covenant and such as is the Covenant such must be the Communion both Everlasting and therefore Infants admitted in the Jewish Church must not be excluded the Christian And further That children of believing Parents do retain their interest in the Covenant of Grace is confirmed by the doctrine of St. Peter in that his powerful Sermon where he tells the Jews Acts 2.38 39. The promise is to them and to their children as if the Apostle had said Now God hath remembred his Covenant unto Abraham and performed it he hath sent that blessed Seed the promised Messiah in whom all Nations of the Earth are blessed Deprive not then your selves of the Blessing of Grace and Life through obstinacy and unbelief for according to the tenor of the Covenant so runs the promise of the Gospel To you and to your children And that what is here said unto the Jews does also reach the Gentiles and what is spoken to those then present does extend to all that shall come after is fully implied if not plainly exprest in that the Apostle addes And to all that are afar off even as many as the Lord our God shall call Which clause As many as the Lord our God shall call no ways excludes Infants they being called in their Parents And observe the Apostles argument is purposely framed in a regard to that benefit which their children should receive under the Gospels administration of the Covenant by Baptism And if this sense be not purposely intended children will seem but needlesly exprest But the Adversaries urge None but Believers ever had Object or shall have a right to the Covenant of Grace I answer True Answ none but Believers ever had or shall have a right in themselves yet this excludes not Infants for it is the Parents right who is a believer that brings in the infant by vertue of the promise Herein then is the ground of error that men imagine we affirm the childs right to the blessing of the promise is in himself as a child whereas it is in the believing parent who conveys the right in this relation to the infant that it is his child his to whom God hath oblig'd himself by the promise of his covenant that he will be his God and the God of his seed Indeed it is worth our observing that in the right manner of entring covenant with God no parent can enter single but he must stipulate for himself and his children And this is plain both from the condition on mans part and the promise on God's On God's part the promise runs to us and our children that he will be our God and on our part the condition runs from us and our children that we will be his people That as by vertue of the promise God makes it his act of grace that the seed of the godly be blessed so by vertue of the
Many there are then who bear the name of Christians ay and of Catholicks too who yet are in Christ John 15.2 6 but as withered branches in the Vine yea they are in the Church as Wens in the Body not in a vital and internal communion but in a formal and external profession Thus speaking of the Authors of Heresie and Heads of Faction which separated themselves from the communion of the Church They went out from us says the Apostle but they were not of us 1 John 2.19 for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us They went out from us as to the external and accidental form of the Church as it is the visible company of Professors but they were not of us as to the internal and essential form of the Church as it is the invisible Body of Christ Very fitly then is the visible Church compared in Scripture unto a field in which there grows up together Wheat and Tares Matth. 13.29 30. Matth 3.12 Matth. 13 47. to a floor on which there lies together Corn and Chaff to a draw not in which are contained good Fish and bad for that in the Church as it is visible there are Hypocrites mixt with true Believers the wicked with the godly And therefore the Apostle compares the visible Church to a great house 2 Tim. 2.20 where there are not onely Vessels of Gold and of Silver but also of Wood and of Earth yea Some to honor and some to dishonor Thus in the visible Church there are not onely strong Believers but also weak Christians not onely those who are more eminent in the gifts and graces of the Spirit but also those who are weaklings and of less spiritual abilities then others Yea further as there are some to honor that is some who through the Election of Grace shall at last inherit eternal glory so some to dishonor Rom. 2.5 that is some who through their impenitence and hardness of heart treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath and shall be plunged in eternal misery And thus ye have seen in its several particulars What the Church is of which Christ is said to be the Head 3. How the Church of which Christ is the Head is said to be a Body viz. Especially from the communion of the faithful as Members Eph. 4.4 a communion so near that they are all said to have but one Spirit Acts 4.32 yea one heart and one soul and all this from the efficacy of love Col. 3.14 that bond of perfectness and knot of unity A Sacramental representation of this Mystical Communion 1 Cor 10.17 is given us in the holy Eucharist according to that of the Apostle We being many are one Bread and one Body for we are all partakers of that one Bread That Bread which exhibites to us the flesh of Christ our quickning and enlivening Food Food not which we convert by any carnal digestion into the nature of our body but which converts us by a spiritual operation into the nature of Christs Body making us to be heavenly and spiritual as he is spiritual and heavenly We change not it but it changeth us for so is the powerful operation of spiritual Food to convert into the nature of its self action still following the stronger force and spirituals are more powerful then corporals grace more active then nature By vertue of this communion of the Faithful the Church is said to be Corpus compactum connexum Eph. 4.16 a Body fitly joyned together and compacted no rents of Schism but every member hath its proper place Vers 13. and its peculiar connexion in the whole and this Till we all meet in the unity of the Faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ Unto a perfect man this does intimate the near and full communion of Christs Church all the Faithful being as one political person in Christ Gal. 3.28 according to that There is neither Jew nor Greek there is neither bond nor free there is neither male nor female but all are one in Christ Jesus and it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one Body but one Person Now to grow up to a perfect man according to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ is the increase of the Church till consummate in its communion of Members and fulness of perfection which shall be at the last day when the whole number of the Elect is gathered and so Christ in the Church and the Church in Christ have mutually their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their compleat growth like that of the Head in the Body and the Body in the Head and all in one political person and perfect man To close then such is the communion of the Faithful one with another as Members and all in Christ as their Head that he who by Schism separates from the Church though never so seeming a Saint he cuts himself off from Christ and in the prosecution of this separation though he should zealously give up his life unto death his goods unto the spoil his body unto the fire 1 Cor. 13.2 3. yet all this would not be fidei corona Cypr. de Unit Eccles n. 12. but paena perfidia as St. Cyprian speaks not a crown of Faith but a punishment of unfaithfulness the suffering not of a Martyr but of a Malefactor For let the cause be what it will to die in Schism without the Pale of the Church is to perish in sin without the Gate of Heaven Indeed as the Branch withers which is broken off from the Root the River dries up which is cut off from the Fountain so the Soul shall perish which is divided from Christ And that Soul is certainly divided from Christ the Head which separates from the Church which is his Body His Body in a communion of the faithful as Members Here it will be a seasonable service to resolve you these four Questions 1. Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall away 2. What is meant by that common saying That out of the Church there is no Salvation 3. What have we to answer those who say We have no Church 4. Seeing we are to hold communion with the Church how may we know which is a true Church with which we may hold communion First Whether the Church of Christ on Earth may totally fall Quest 1 away We see in the World such a general defection from truth and holiness that some may haply propose this Question as well worthy our present resolution Indeed Polutheism a worshipping many gods hath ever been an argument for Atheism a not worshipping any God And in these our days whilst men see so many
manifestation of himself to his Saints In this Sanctuary is the Golden Pot of Manna even an abundant fulness of Divine Joy whose sweetness is incorruptible and everlasting yea here is Aarons Rod which being withered after budded flowred and brought forth ripe Almonds that is the dead bodies of Gods Saints raised to life are cloathed with immortality and glory Or further By the Tabernacle and Sanctuary was represented not onely the Mystical but also the Natural Body of Christ not onely his Church but also himself He the Ark of the Testament as the Word of the Father placed in the Tabernacle as cloathed with flesh He the Table of Shew-bread as our Life and Food in the Eucharist he the Candlestick as our Spiritual Light he the Incense in the sweet savor of his Merits he the Sacrifice in the sufferings of his Cross he the Altar in the efficacy of his Mediation by which ou● persons and our Prayers our selves and our services become accepted of the Father Further yet The Tabernacle and Sanctuary was a Map of the Universe the greater World and of Man the lesser World 1. A Map of the Universe the greater World the outward Court representing the outmost Creation the holy Place the Church of Christ and the Holy of Holies the Heavenly Presence 2. A Map of Man the lesser World consisting of Body Soul and Spirit the outward Court that 's the Body 1 Thess 5.23 the inward Tabernacle that 's the Soul and the holy Sanctuary that 's the Spirit by which Spirit we have our communion yea and our communication too with our God And well may the Temple of God be compared unto man 1 Cor. 3.16 1 Cor. 6.16 seeing man so often in Scripture is called The Temple of God Now how well might David in all these Representations of the Sanctuary contemplate a Beauty and that Beauty divine even the Beauty of the Lord No wonder then if David be so importunate in his suit to have his dwelling in so pleasant a seat as the House of the Lord an Habitation which hath Heaven for its prospect the beauty of the Lord for the object of the eye and delight of the Soul But however David doth behold the beauty of the Lord in the Sanctuary yet where is that beauty in our Churches what is that glory of his presence as may denominate them his Houses Why see it in our Churches sacred Liturgy both as to the decency and order of her daily Service and Sacramental Administrations First As to the decency and order of her daily Service There being nothing in Devotion nothing in Doctrine nothing in Substance nothing in Circumstance but what Gods Word either explicitely commands or implicitely allows O lovely Order of holy Worship right a form of Divine Service as being a continued Exercise of all the parts of holy Worship taking up the whole minde and soul of the Spiritual man In this Divine service the Church by an orderly progress of Piety and performance of Devotion sometimes makes confession of sin sometimes deprecations of wrath sometimes Petitions of mercy sometimes intercessions for all men even all estates and conditions of men whatsoever from the highest Prince to the meanest Peasant from the holiest Saint to the vilest sinners Turks and Infidels not excepted Yea in this Form of Divine service and Publick worship see how the Church of Christ doth sometimes adore Gods sacred Majesty sometimes extol his glorious attributes sometimes commemorate his famous acts sometimes recount his gracious blessings sometimes denounce his severe judgments sometimes declare his Fatherly promises sometimes set forth his heavenly praises Sometimes the Church makes profession of her Faith sometimes she publisheth the commands of her God sometimes she is humbled in larger yet not long winded supplications sometimes she is exercised in shorter yet piercing and pathetical ejaculations All which hang together not as mens extemporary non-sense like ropes of Sand but in an orderly composure like a chain of Gold one part still linkt within another to become a fit ornament to set off the Churches beauty whereby she is the more comely and fair in the eyes of her beloved Secondly View we the Beauty of holy Worship in the Churches Publick Administrations to instance in that one of the blessed Sacrament of the Eucharist O how does Divine Order Reverence and Devotion mutually contend which shall give greatest lustre to the Beauty of this solemnity First the judgment is rightly informed from sacred Scripture in the Mysteries of that blessed Sacrament And the judgment being rightly informed by instruction the affections are divinely raised by exhortation set on with that perswasive argument and inforcing motive the riches of grace and promises of life which God hath vouchsafed unto his chosen through Christ This done the Church proceeds to an oral confession of sins and upon that a Ministerial absolution of the penitent and after with heart and hands and eyes lift up to Heaven all joyn together in the devout Harmony of Prayers and Praises Then the Faithful Pastor of the Flock having offered unto God the Sacrifice of his own Rev. 8.3 and others Devotion ascending up before the Throne of Grace as sacred Odors made acceptable through the Incense of Christs merits he proceeds with fear and reverence to the Consecration of the Sacramental Elements and how is this why observe It is with a most pathetical commemoration of Gods love of Christs passion and of mans redemption yea with an obediential and Eucharistical acknowledgement of Christs holy Institution with the Order and End of the blessed Sacrament Upon which is pronounced the Word of blessing with Prayer consecrating the Bread and Wine to be the Sacramental signs and seal of Christs Body and Blood The Consecration ended View we the Administration in which the dearest pledges of Divine love are delivered with a Summary Recapitulation of the whole Sacraments mystery That so the Soul of the receiver may have a present impression of renewed Devotion in the very act of receiving This Ministration being performed the close of the whole service is applicatory of the whole solemnity in most devout and pathetical Prayers with Heavenly and Evangelical praises which being ended the Congregation is dismist with a Ministerial Benediction Now ex pede Herculem know ye the Eagle by its Feather the Diamond by its spark the excellency of the Churches Liturgy by this one part of her Publick service the solemnity of the Eucharist of which Sacraments administring I may say what St. Paul said of the Corinthians prophesying 1 Cor. 14.25 That if an unbeliever or any one except a pertinacious Separatist come into the Congregation of Gods people while they are exercised in this solemn service of Divine Order Reverence and Devotion he will be ready to fall down upon his face and worship God reporting that God is in them of a truth I may confidently affirm That so lovely is the Beauty of the Churches Order
77.5 mancipia praesentium captived in our judgment to things present but do with David consider the days of old and the years of antient times the Church presents us with a view of that her so glorious a deliverance from under the bondage of Egypt and from under the captivity of Babylon and these so eminent before Christs coming in the flesh And since his ascension to heaven the Church presents us with that her so glorious deliverance from under the Roman tyranny and after from under the Arian fury and of later years from under the Anabaptists frensie These the deliverances of the Church Oecumenical But which is more full to our present and particular comfort the Church presents us with her deliverances here at home which have been national as that from the Danish inundation of Idolatry that from the Romish infatuation of Popery and that from the Marian deluge of blood and flames of violent persecution Thus God having delivered this his Church from the conspiracies and violence of forein and homebred enemies from the fire and sword the wit and malice of cruel persecutors From these experiments of deliverance she raiseth her faith to an humble assurance that he will in the end of all deliver her from the compendium of all the present rage of Heresie and furious zeal of Schism 3. The pleadings of Gods providence thereby justifying the cause of his Church and discovering the wickedness of her enemies Thus it was of old Corah and his company mov'd with malice and envy conspire against Moses and Aaron Num. 16.1 c. thereby striking at the root of Magistracy and Ministry But see the event cleer contrary to their design and expectation God so orders the matter in the pleadings and disposings of his providence that thereby Moses becomes more honorable and Aaron more eminent both the Kingly and Priestly office more illustrious in the eyes of the People And if we pass from the sacred Scripture to Ecclesiastical History we find that whilst the cruel Persecutors of the Primitive Saints thought to have drowned Christianity in a sea of blood yet then was sanguis martyrum semen ecclesiae the blood of the Martyrs the seed of the Church which became enlarg'd not destroyed by the sufferings of the Saints In all those flames of persecutions the Church like Moses bush Exod 3 2. Num 17 8. it consumed not but like Aarons rod after her night of distress she became more fresh and flourishing more eminent for the purity of her faith and holiness Christs conquest over his enemies is not only military by a potent and prevailing force but especially it is judiciary by just and righteous pleadings Jer. 2 9. Mic. 6 9. and therefore he first strikes with the rod of his mouth to conviction and then with the rod of his hand to destruction God in the execution of his judgments upon the wicked he likes well that mens consciences subscribe to the equity of his proceedings their own practises witnessing against themselves and their own witness and law too condemning them Open we our eyes then and see In the Churches distress whilst God frowns upon his people in correcting their sin how does he still own them in pleading their cause justifying their profession of righteousness and faith by the very cross actings of their enemies designs Yea it is worthy our observation That whereas the Enemies of Christs Church have urg'd Gods owning them and their cause by a continued series of temporal successes though this in its self a Turkish argument and so not fit to overthrow or stagger a Christians faith how does God retort the argument by giving such signal and remarkable passages of his Providence that they seem very near giving up to a reprobate sense who after the voice of Gods word shall stop their ear to the voice of his providence in which he brings the pens and tongues and practises of the Churches adversaries to make good her cause and justifie what she hath taught and profest Look we upon the present estate of the Church of England and how do we find it too unhappily like that of the Church of Judah For that we may say of our several Factions and Schisms what they say of the children of Ammon Moab and Mount Seir 2 Chro. 20.10 we may truly say of them that the Church not invading and subduing not quelling and suppressing them when we came out of Egypt even when by a religious Reformation we forsook the Romish superstition Behold how they reward us even to cast us out of our possessions v. 11. not only the possession of our own temporal estates but even of Gods holy worship Now in the depth of this calamity in which we seem to be forsaken of God herein does God own his people that he lays upon their adversaries the curse of the Midianites Ammonites and Edomites v. 23. even one to defeat and destroy another True it is Gods power is invincible Ps 44 4. his wisdom unsearchable and his judgment unavoidable so that he can command deliverance for Jacob or if that will not do it he can create help for his people Yet such is the wonder of his providence that he orders seeming casualties particular unexpected and unthought of emergencies to bring forward his peoples deliverance Of which we have ample testimony in the history of Ioseph's advancement by Pharoah and Esther's by Ahasuerus the one to preserve Israel in the cradle and the other to restore him from the grave Things independent in their relation unsubordinate in their being God oftentimes makes them concur in the order of his providence for his Church's restauration that the World may know it is the counsel of his will and the work of his hand acted to this end even the greater glorification of his own name and the clearer justification of his peoples cause Let the providence of God frame the Argument of Divine conviction in what mood or figure he please sure I am God will so order the Premises that the Conclusion shal be his own glory and his Church's good which two are never more eminent then when in the pleadings of his providence God justifies the cause of his Church and discovers the wickedness of her adversaries The Rules of Direction Ps 73.17 1. With David enter the Sanctuary of God Interiora veritatis penetralia so S. Ambrose Search the more secret mysteries of Gods truth So shalt thou find the ground of thine impatience is thine ignorance v. 22. that thou art velut jumentum as a beast before the Lord As a beast thou look'st upon the affairs of this life in their outward appearance with the eye of sense thou doest not so well view them in their secret providence by the eye of faith For that thus viewing the ungodly in their prosperity we understand their latter end 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we become spectators of their last Scene and thereby see their sad
approved may be made manifest among you THE INTRODUCTION The Introduction WHen I see the greatest Lights of Learning have their Mists of Error I cannot think Ignorance shall go free Enter we the Schools and there we have Aquinas Doctor Angelicus Bonaventure Doctor Seraphicus Scotus Doctor Subtilis and Alexander Hales Doctor Irrefragabilis but enter we the Congregation and there instead of Angelical Aquine Seraphical Bonaventure Subtile Scotus and Irrefragable Hales Instead of these we meet with what I blush to tell you the Illuminated Cobler the Sublime Coachman the Profound Skinner the Inspired Waterman and the like And now finding so much Error in the Prophets Schools shall we seek for truth in the Separate Congregations No sure their many new lights what are they but so many antiently exploded Heresies Those very Errors which lay urned and buried with their Founders are raked up by the hand of a proud ignorance and their dust thrown in the eyes of the vulgar to a blinding them with folly that they cannot see the truth Whilest then we view the learned Schools or the illuminated Congregations with those in Melancthons time Quos fugiamus habemus sed quos sequamur non intelligimus We have whom we may flie but understand not whom we may follow Seeing therefore with the travailing woman the Churches embleme seeing with her we are driven into the Wilderness Revel 12.1 2 6. what shall be our guide that we loose not our way where shall we finde our Cynosure our Polestar to direct us in our passage that we miss not of life and salvation by Jesus Christ Why see see I point you to our Book of Articles that Summary of Faith that Star of Truth borrowing its Sacred Light from the Sun of Righteousness in the Gospel of our Jesus This this Commentary of our Creed it hath had the Gospel Testimony that of Martyrdom and being published to the view of the whole world it hath been approved by the judgment of Reformed Churches and justified here at home by the ablest Pens against all the arguments of Popish and Heretical opposers Now then Beloved seeing these are your days of great tryal hold fast to this form of sound Doctrine keep close to this Pillar of saving truth what St. Paul foretold is now come to pass and this Scripture is this day fulfilled in your ears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There must be also Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you 2. The quantity of guilt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 even or also Heresies Explic. Whereby the Apostle doth denote unto us the more hainous guilt of Heresie being above that of Schism for so relating to the former verse whereas the Apostle had heard that there were Schisms among them he receives the report with a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I partly believe it Vers 18. And as a Reason of this his facility and easiness of belief he addes this Premonition For there must be also Heresies among you As if he had said That I am so easily perswaded there are Schisms is from hence That I certainly know there shall be Heresies among you even Heresies which are of a more hainous guilt to the Soul and a more destructive danger to the Church And thus this Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as in Gal. 5.12 it is added 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and by way of an Auxesis intimating the aggravation of Heresie from its comparison with Schism Now how horrid a sin Schism is may appear from the judgment of St. Cyprian founded upon the Testimony of St. Paul Cypr. de Uni●a● Eccles n●m 12. Macula ista nec sauguine abluitur gravis haec culpa nec passione purgatur It is a stain upon the Soul not washt of with our blood a guilt upon the Conscience not expiated by Martyrdom And this Cyprians Assertion is founded upon St. Pauls Doctrine in 1 Cor. 13.3 Though I give my body to be burned and have not charity it profiteth me nothing Schism as violating the Bond of Charity destroyes the Churches Unity but Heresie beside the breach of the Churches Unity as violating the Foundation of Faith destroyes the Churches Being the very Essential Form of the Church consists in Union the Bond of which Union is Faith which Faith Heresie destroyes both in the Object and in the Act both as to Doctrine and as to Grace Matth. 18.17 Observe our Saviour He that will not hear the Church let him be to thee Velut Ethnicus as an Heathen that is Let him be excommunicate and cast out of the Church This for the Schismatick but hear Tertullian Tertul. de Pulic c. 19. Apud nos Ethnico par super Ethnicum haereticus habetur With us the Heretick is accounted not onely as but even worse then the Heathen And if we ask Epiphanius the reason his answer is ready Epiphan in Anchorat n. 9. and resolute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A perverse faith is worse then Infideiity and so the Heretick is worse then the Heathen Both indeed have their Infidelity onely with this difference the Heathens infidelity is Negative and the Hereticks is Positive Now as sins of Commission exceed in guilt sins of Omission so the Hereticks infidelity which is Positive exceeds in guilt the Infidelity of the Heathen which is Negative Besides open enmity is not so hateful as secret treachery nor a profest adversary so odious as a perjur'd friend If we consult the writings of the sacred Scriptures and of the antient Fathers we finde an holy zeal pursuing Heresie with the blackest characters of guilt and heaviest sentence of doom ask St. Peter and he will tell us 2 Pet. 2.1 2. Heresies they are pernicious destructive damnable Tit. 1.11 Ezek. 22.25 they subvert whole houses they devour souls they seize the heart and life of Religion corrupting the minde and stupifying the Conscience 1 Tim. 4.2 2 Tim. 3.8 Revel 8.11 to a making blinde hardened seard reprobate This the wormwood which makes bitter the waters of the Sanctuary this the leaven that sowres the whole lump Matth. 16.11 the whole Doctrine of the Gospel Matth. 13.38 this the tares which choak the good Wheat in Christs field this the canker that so deeply eats 2 Tim 2.17 the gangreen that so dangerously spreds in the Body of the Church Rev. 9.1 this the smoak of the furnace and of the infernal pit that darkens the Sun and infects the Air that clouds the Truth and corrupts the Word of Grace These the black characters of Heresie in the writings of the sacred Scriptures and the like we finde in the writings of the antient Fathers Cyril in Joan. l. 1. c. 4. Cyril he calls Hereticks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Devils journeymen in the works of destruction Nazian Orat. 42. and gins of death Nazianzen he calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Satans
quam temeraria scientia Better is a modest and faithful ignorance then a rash and confident knowledge 4. Strict watchfulness Knowing this that Hereticks by their subtle pretences and hypocritical shews do inescare animas Jer. 5.26 Ezek. 13 13. catch souls as the fowler does Birds the fowler he straws some good Corn to entice but withal sets a snare to entangle Thus the Heretick he will teach some truth to allure but withal much error to deceive Wherefore when St. Paul forewarns the Church of Ephesus Act 20.29 That grievous wolves not sparing the flock should enter in among them He gives this Premonition with his prediction Attendite vobis ipsis toti gregi Take heed to your selves and to all the flock vobis ipsis to your selves in the first place for there lies the cheif spight and malice of Heresie and Schism it is against the Pastors of the Church the Shepherds of the flock the flock they aim at for the fleece and those they strive to seduce by flattery but the Shepherds they aim at in malice and those they strive to fright with fear or throw out with violence Wherefore seeing the Heart of man is deceitful above all things Jer. 17 9. So that we can never be confident enough of our sincerity never assured enough of our constancy do we therefore keep a strict watch over our hearts least Heresie by pretences deceive us by flattery allure us by fears affright us by distresses discourage us from owning ptofessing and maintaining the Faith and truth of Jesus Christ and that we may be thus watchful over our selves keep we a waking eye fixt upon our reward with God knowing this that if our reward were from men we might then fear their frown and seek their favor But seeing God is our reward Gen. 15.1 his promises must be our comfort his grace our strength his love our joy and his heavenly presence our eternal happiness 5. And lastly Holy Zeal Zeal in profession of the Faith declaring our high value and esteems of the truth Thus Margaret de Valois Queen of Navarre was wont to say That she received it as a greater act of favor from God that she was Orthodox and Reformed in the Truth then that she was Wife Sister and Aunt to Kings and Scultetus he tells us of Henry Duke of Saxony Scultet Exercit Evangel l. 2. c. 5. that when he received this message from Duke George his elder Brother That either he must renounce his Interest in the Protestant Faith or loose his right of succession to the inheritance of Misnia he returned this answer Pluris se aestimare Jesum quam omnem Misniam That he esteemed more of Jesus then of all Misnia Thus in Zeal to the Faith of Christ resolve we yea profess we rather to be with Truth in a dungeon then with Heresie in a Palace with Truth in bonds then with Heresie in robes with Truth on the Gibbet then with Heresie on the Throne Yea not onely Zeal in professing but also Zeal in pleading for the Truth Observe we St. Judes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jude 3. Earnestly to contend for the Faith which was once delivered unto the Saints yet contend not in Passion but with Prudence to justifie not to disgrace the Truth and in our Zeal to the Faith as Athanasius and the Antients refused to receive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Letters pacificatory from the Arians so do we refuse all Church-fellowship and communion with those who by their doctrines of Heresie overthrow the Foundation of Christianity Thus we have resolved how we are approved and how made manifest There must be also Heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you Applic. Let us recount with gratitude and extol with praise the Divine wisdom grace and goodness of our God who brings to his chosen light out of darkness good out of evil ordering the poyson of the Serpent to be an Antidote unto his Church The mist of Error for a clearing of the Truth the malice of the Heretick for the honor of the Orthodox Thus as we of the same Letters differently transposed do make far different words So God of the same causes differently ordered he makes as far different effects The Blasphemy of Ebion and Cerinthus kindles an holy flame in St. John's Brest occasioning by their Heretical doctrine his Seraphical Gospel which hath worthily stiled him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 St. John the Divine Had it not been for the irritating impudence and importunity of Heresie and Schism how many eminent lights had either hid their Candle under a Bushel Mark 4.21 or under a Bed either covered their gifts with a vail of modesty or of sloth Thus by the manifold grace of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ Quod inimicus Machinatur in perniciem Aug. ep 105. ad Sixt. Presb. Deus convertit in adjutorium so St. Augustine What the enemy deviseth and designeth for ruine and destruction God orders and turns to succor and salvation According to that his promise Rom. 8.28 All things work together for good to them that love God to them who are called according to his purpose From whence was it that such an holy vigor of divine learning and devout Holiness did inflame the Brests and instruct the Pens of Athanasius Basil and Augustine was it not raised from an holy Zeal against those blasphemous Heresies and Heretical blasphemies of Arius Eunomius and Pelagius And now as long as Piety and Learning do live the memory of those holy and learned Fathers shall not die though this prophane and illiterate age would seem to give them their deaths wound And now comfort your selves Beloved in the midst of Heresies rage it cannot pluck up the Root though it break off some Branches of the Church it cannot throw down the solid Stock though shake off some rotten fruit Though the number of true Professors be the less yet the worth is greater And let them have more of our esteems of love who have more of the stamp of truth approved and manifested as firm and setled in the Faith Tert de P aescript ● 3. Avolent quantum volant paleae levis fidei Let the flitting chaff of a light Faith flie whither it will with every breath of Satans or the Worlds temptation Eo purior massa frumenti in horreo domini reponetur so Tertullian The more pure heap of Corn is laid up in the Lords Barn Goshen's light was the more illustrious for Egypts darkness and the Worlds Apostacy sets a lustre upon the Churches Constancy Wherefore Beloved that ye be not carried about with every wind of doctrine yea that you be not removed from your stedfastness but may be preserved sound in the unity of the Faith take the Apostles prescription To hold fast to the Apostles Prophets Eph 4. and Evangelists yea the Pastors and Teachers wh ch Christ hath ordained in his Church hold
fast to them and to their doctrine keep firm to that profession of Faith which the Orthodox Clergy have preached in their Sermons and still preach in their sufferings such as never yet renounced or contradicted their subscriptions The sum of our Churches Doctrine Worship Discipline and Government contained in the Liturgy in the Thirty nine Articles the Book of Homilies and of Ordination These every Minister did subscribe to even those Ministers did set to their hands in subscription to justifie them who after lift up their hands in Covenant to destroy them But God grant them Repentance and us Perseverance them Repentance of their Revolt and us Perseverance in the Faith that at the last day the Church may say to us what Christ said to his Apostles Lu● ● 28 Ye are they which have continued with me in my temptations and then shall Christ in the view of the whole World reward our Patience and crown our Constancy making it manifest fully manifest That we are approved Thus have we done with the several particulars of the Explication and of the Application what remains but your practice Halleluiah THE FIRST SERMON UPON Matth. 28. V. 19. and part of the 20. Go ye therefore and teach all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you Introduction IF we who serve in the Sanctuary do as men intrusted in greatest Affairs and Imployments should do often view our Commission from our Saviour as his Ministers 1 Cor. 4.1 Matth. 10.24 2 Cor. 5.20 from our Lord as his Stewards from our Master as his Servants yea from our King as his Ambassadors This frequent view will animate our Ministry with a zealous vigor encouraged in our Service by the authority and presence of our Lord and Master See the Preface to my Text and we finde our Saviour victoriously risen from the Grave and before he triumphantly ascends into Heaven he orders the affairs of his Church on Earth speaking unto his Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things concerning the Kingdom Acts 1.3 The Kingdom of which he is Soveraign All power being given unto him in Heaven and in Earth which power he hath promised shall never fail his Church For so says Christ unto his Apostles and all their Successors in the close and compline of the Text Behold I am with you unto the end of the World I am with you in the work of your Ministry with you to prosper your labors and protect your persons To prosper your labors making Disciples not to your selves but to me You I have deputed to the Office of Preaching my Word and administring my Sacraments and therefore they who own me their Master shall acknowledge you my Ministers But further I am with you Matth. 10.40 as to prosper your labors so to protect your persons I will plead your right vindicate yo r authority punish your contempt and avenge your injury If any sleight and despise the office of your ministry if any question or doubt the efficacy of mine Ordinances my Word my Sacraments see my power behold my presence maugre all the malice and rage of men and devils of earth and hell the ministry of my Gospel and Grace shall stand let this then be your encouragement and comfort let this be your assurance and establishment I will justifie your Office and make good your Commission for All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth and lo I am with you unto the end of the World And therefore 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye teach all Nations c. The words they are the very basis and foundation of the Gospels Ministry to us Gentiles Observe in them three parts a Mission Division a Commission and particular Instructions for the exercising that Commission First The Mission delivered in an usual Grecism of the Participle for the Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye Secondly The Commission not barely no nor properly teach but more fully 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 make Disciples Dìscipulas facìte omnes gentes as Beza Disciple ye all Nations Thirdly The particular instructions for the exercising this Commission 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baptising and Teaching admitting into the School and Church of Christ by Baptism and then tutoring and training up by Doctrine which Baptism is instituted as to the form of its ministration to be In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost and the Doctrine is prescribed as to the extent of its object to be All things whatsoever Christ hath commanded the end of wh ch Doctrine is obedience even to observe and do Thus Go ye disciple all Nations baptising them in the Name of th● Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you 1. The Mission Go ye The three Offices of Christ as Mediator Explic. his Prophetick Priestly and Regal Office These he now exerciseth in his Church on Earth in the outward Ministry by her Pastors and in the inward Ministra●ion by his Spirit In the outward Ministry of the Church her Pastors do expound the Word of God Preach the Gospel of Truth unfold the Mysteries of Grace which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Prophetical Office Again they offer up the Sacrifices of Prayers and Thanksgivings Baptize and bless in the Name of Christ and celebrate the Sacramental solemnity of the holy Eucharist which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Priestly Office Further yet they bind the unbelieving and loose the Believer they excommunicate the scandalous and absolve the penitent they govern by Discipline and correct by censure which is that part of their Ministry committed to them of Christ in the execution of his Regal Office Now no part nor portion of this Ministry may any man take upon him Heb. 5.4 but being called as was Aaron that is called even with an inward and outward call as thus A man hath been brought up in the Schools of the Prophets or else where devoted himself to the study of Divinity whereby he is become in a competent measure fitted for the service of the Church 1 Pet. 5.2 when now he findes St. Peter's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a willingness of spirit and readiness of minde to employ his gifts this is the inward call of God But further to testifie and declare this there must be the outward call of the Church Christ receiving him into the Office of the Ministry by the regular Ordination of his Substitutes who alone in this representing his person can give us our Mission of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye But alas the disorder and confusion of Sacriledge and Schism What was the Prophets complaint is now our Churches groan
Ministers of Error and Schisms Teachers of Heresie and Blasphemy They go before they are sent Jer. 14.14 23.21 they will run before they are bid go But stop we them here in their haste and question we their Commission Dear Brethren ye that are so hasty to be Preachers tell us by what hand are you sent You will say by the Spirits Mission I ask then What is the outward Testimony and Warrant You answer You look not further then the inward call Strange that men dare pretend to a call beyond that of Timothy and Titus yea of Paul and Barnabas who though inwardly called yea extraordinarily immediately yet they had their outward Testimony their Ecclesiastical Warrant Acts 13.2 3. their Apostolical Mission and this by imposition of hands But further Some others there are who will not go but as sent and sent by Ordination too but tell us Dear Brethren by what hands are you ordained by what authority are you sent The former go without Mission you go but is it not by a forged Mission Those usurpe the Office Ministerial in execution do not you in execution and ordination too And where then is the greater guilt of iniquity but in the greater violation of the Ministry Wherefore to give you our Explication full I have three particulars to insist upon First That our Lord Jesus Christ did constitute a Ministry to be perpetuated in the Church Secondly That there is no admission into this Ministry but by imposition of hands in Ordination Thirdly That this admission into the Ministry by imposition of hands in Ordination was * Viz For the space of above 500 years after Christ never in the power of any meer Presbyter And these being proved it will easily appear from what hand to receive Ordination our lawful Mission into the Ministry our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye 1. Our Lord Jesus Christ did constitute a Ministry to be perpetuated in the Church Our Lord and Saviour as it was prophesied of him so it was performed by him the Government was upon his shoulder Isa 9.6 He the founder of Ecclesiastical polity the constitutor of Order and Government in his Church as being our Apostle sent from God our Prophet our great High Priest the Shepherd and Bishop of our souls the Head and King of his Church whose Ministerial Government shall continue 1 Cor. 15.24 till he come to give up the Kingdom unto his Father and God be all in all Now as the Father sent Christ Joh. 20.21 so Christ hath sent his Apostles and sent them to be a standing Ministry by a communicated power not seated in the people but in the Pastors of the Church who are to continue unto the end of the World even to the fulness of Christ and his Church as in the close of my Text and in the Epistle to the Ephesians Eph. 4.11 12 13. is most plain and evident If a Gospel Ministry was not established successive in the Church to what purpose did the Apostles themselves ordain and leave in charge to those Apostolick-men which came after them that they should ordain For so St. Paul left in charge with Titus for Creet and Timothy for Ephesus yea to what purpose hath the Spirit dictated St. Paul penned and the Church preserved the particular instructions who are to be admitted to Ordination if none were to be ordained How frivolous and useless were the Apostles setting down the Deacons and Bishops qualifications 1 Tim. 3. Tit. 1. Rev. 2.1 if they were to receive no Ordination And sure the Angels of those Churches were approved in their Ministry by Christ who held them as Stars in his right hand And that of the Psalmist Psal 45.16 St. Hierom. in loc Instead of thy Fathers shall be thy children St. Hierome applies to the Apostolical prefecture and presidency in Bishops Quia Apostolis à mundo recessis habes pro illis Episcopos filios Because the Apostles as Fathers being dead the Church hath her Bishops as Sons surviving in their stead 2. No admission into this Ministry but by imposition of hands in Ordination We read of Paul and Barnabas Acts 14.23 that they ordained Elders in every Church And for this purpose Tit. 1.5 St. Paul left Titus in Creet that he should ordain Elders in every City And that this Ordination had its outward ceremony of Imposition of hands nothing is more plain from Apostolical practise in Scripture and the continued custom of Christs Church But because men little regard the Churches custom we will wave that to insist upon the Apostolical practice Act. 6.6 Thus those seven persons commonly called the seven Deacons they are ordained to their intended Ministration by the Apostles And how Why by Prayer and Imposition of hands Acts 13.3 Again Paul and Barnabas are separated to the work of the Ministry and how with Fasting and Prayer and laying on of hands Again Timothy is received into the Ministry and though it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by prophecy 1 Tim. 4.14 yet is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the laying on of hands Object 1 But some may say True as to the higher acts and offices of the Ministry as Baptism and the Lords Supper to be admitted to the dispensing of these Ordination may be requisite but not to the Preaching of the Word Answ I answer If Commission and Ordination be required for Baptism much more for Preaching the Word 1 Cor. 1.17 for this St. Pauls prefers before Baptism as being the more honorable and more weighty part of the Ministry And indeed most needful it is that none be admitted to publick Teaching but he that can declare his lawful Call and Ordination seeing upon this depends so very much the truth and peace the life and health the being and the welbeing of the Church yea of Christianity it self For if the office of publick Teaching lie open to all invaders and who pretends to the Spirit may take upon him to Minister the Word it will soon appear what Harvest we shall reap from such Seedsmen what mischiefs and miseries what Heresies and Schisms shall arise from such Teachers whose ignorance and boldness qualifies them for nothing more then Errors and Impieties Such as is the Teaching such will be the Church a Synagogue of Satan if taught by a spirit of Error and the spirit of Error still accompanies the spirit of Pride and a broaching of Heresie attends an invading the Ministry I ask the question then Is Publick Teaching a proper office of the Ministry that it is so sacred Scripture the Churches authority and divine Reason all prove and evidence St. Pauls testimony is plain and full when he tells us of publick offices given by Christ unto the Church Eph. 4.11 12. amongst which are Pastors and Teachers and these For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ Now if
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
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
and such is the end of the Apostolical Presidency even the preventing Schism and the preserving Order and Unity in the Church A Prudential Experience doth tell us it is with Christs Church as with Davids Harp in all a parity of office is as far from peace as the unison of strings is from harmony subordination in some and superiority in others is as requisit to Ecclesiastical as Civil Polity without which Schism becomes as fatal to the Church as Rebellion is to the State So that we must subscribe to the grave sentence and judgment of St. Hierome unless the Episcopal pre-eminence of Authority and Office be preserved Hieron Dialog Adv. Luciferian Tot in Ecclesiis efficientur Schismata quot Sacerdotes There will be as many Schisms in the Church as there are Presbyters especially if every Presbyter hath power of Ordination intrinsecal to his Office by the Divine Right of Apostolical Institution For what then would be the use of Ordination but chiefly to propagate Schism But some may say to prevent this Though the power of Ordination be common to all yet the act of ordaining is restrained to a few Presbyters But I ask by what Authority of Scripture they do it and what Primitive patte●n they have for their practise Besides to exclude their Brethren from the exercise of what they acknowledge is proper and intrinsecal to their office is a manifest injury and violation and if all should exercise what is their right of office and cannot be taken from them this would be a strange disorder and confusion Wherefore Beloved in what we have asserted the Apostolick Constitution and the Churches practise doth engage our consent of judgment and conformity of obedience upon a double tye of Reason and of Religion So that if we be either prudent men or pious Christians we must submit to the truth of this assertition That by imposition of hands to ordain into the Ministry is not in the power nor belongs to the office of any meer Presbyter Acts 20.17 28. Phil. 1.1 But what do we not finde that frequently in sacred Scripture Presbyters are called Bishops and are they not therefore one in office being one in name and not to be differenced in the Church not being distinguished in the Scripture To this so specious an Argument we answer our adversaries That as we are not so ignorant as from the name to prove the office of Bishop so nor should they be so erroneous as from the community of name to prove the identity of office in Bishop and Presbyter We finde in the Acts and Epistles those sacred Records which give us the first path of Ecclesiastical Government not so obvious to the eye as when Church practise had trod it out into a beaten road we finde I say in the Acts and Epistles the same persons sometimes called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ministers sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Presbyters sometimes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bishops so that by the signification of name it is clear we have not the distinction of office 1 Pet. 5.1 2 John 1. And therefore Presbyter being spoken of the Apostles as well as Bishop of Presbyters As from hence That the Apostles were called Presbyters we may not conclude That Presbyters are no less then Apostles so nor from this That Presbyters were called Bishops may we conclude That Bishops are no more then Presbyters It is easie to observe how words common at the first became appropriate in their use and so in some process of time even within one Century of years after Christ the distinction of office became commonly known by distinction of name Bishop being appropriate unto him who had an Apostolical presidency of Ordination and Jurisdiction in the Church We close then with this sure inference from the premisses That this late Schism in our Church of meer Presbyters ordaining to the Ministry as it hath not any clear Text of Scripture to warrant it nor any allowed practise of the Church to approve it so nor hath it any argument of Reason to abet it as being contrary to that Mission constituted by our Saviour in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye disciple all Nations Baptising them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of thy Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you Applic. 1 Cor. 9.16 1. You see Beloved what is our Mission Christ hath bid us go and a necessity is laid upon us Wo unto us if we preach not the Gospel But then much more wo unto them who stop our mouths that we cannot preach or that binde our feet that we cannot go Let such dread Jeroboams judgment their arm withering 1 King 13.4 their power shrinking and wasting with a curse God did bear long with Judah but when they came to this That they mocked the Messengers of God 2 Chron 36.16 17 c. despised his words and misused his Prophets then there was no remedy his mercy had borne so long that his justice could bear no longer but wrath does arise against his people to captivity and to desolation Oh Beloved the Ministers souls lie at stake for the peoples if we warn you not your perishing through our default is a default whereby we perish Oh the blood of Souls how loud does it cry for vengeance when spilt by the hand of ignorance error slothfulness or cowardice in the Minister See in the course of our Ministry Christ gives us our Mission to go O let us not through your perversness and obstinacy in sin go upon thorns and bryars finde torture and trouble of Soul in our service but in your obedience of Faith to the Gospel of Christ O make beautiful our feet make pleasant our paths Sure there is no greater joy and blessed even thrice blessed be God I can call it much my joy there is no greater joy in the service of our Ministry then to preach the Gospel to a willing and reverent Auditory But oh Beloved and my dearly beloved in the Lord this this is too too much the disparagement of your profession and the discouragement of my Ministry that your holiness of life and righteousness in the world answers not your reverence in the Church your zeal for the Church O that he who gave me my Mission to preach would give you his Grace to practise 2 Cor. 3.3 that I might say of you what St. Paul says of his Corinthians Ye are the Epistle of Christ ministred by us known and read of all men The Epistle of Christ such in whom he hath imprinted the truth and holiness of his Gospel which hath been preached unto you This this would very much seal the lawfulness of my Ministry even its efficacy in your lives which though it is not the most infallible yet is it the more comfortable seal of Christs Mission in his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Go ye disciple all Nations c. 2. As I have shewed
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
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
his power dedicate thy soul to his Worship and submit thy whole man to his sway and government So shall his Spirit of Union be unto thee a Spirit of Unction 1 Joh 2.27 as of Union to incorporate thee into himself so of Unction to consecrate thee to his service yea of Consolation too to assure thee of thine heavenly inheritance by vertue of thy Communion with him in his Fulness 2. Administer we Comfort to the Faithful amidst their private troubles of Soul and amidst the publick calamities of the Church 1. Amidst their private troubles of Soul That Isa 50.10 howsoever they may for a while walk in darkness Mal. 4 2. clouded with some distress of conscience yet shall Christ the Sun of righteousness arise upon their souls with healing in his wings and in a communion of his fulness their souls shall be calm'd with a serenity of peace crown'd with the joy of faith refreshed with the preapprehensions of Gods glorious presence and this as the clusters of the heavenly Canaan Rom 8.23 as the earnest of their future inheritance as the pledge of their eternal redemption In all the faintings and languishings then of soul this is the sustaining comfort of the faithful that they have Christ neer at hand to succor and save them Eph. 3.8 with him they have a sacred communion in his unsearchable riches of grace and love riches unsearchable not as if they could not be found but because they cannot be fathomed an inexhaustible treasure Of which as Christ is the Depositary so is he the Dispenser Jam. 15 6. giving liberally to them that ask by prayer and pray in faith 2. Amidst the publique calamities of the Church of which calamities that of spiritual captivity is the greatest Thus when Jeroboam had usurp'd the Throne this was Israels captivity in their own land 1 King 12.26 27 c. that they must worship the Calves lest going up to Jerusalem worshipping God according to his Word should mind them too much of their revolt and so bring them back in their allegiance to the house of David Yea the slavery of Soul was that made Babylons captivity more grievous to the Jews then that of Egypt In Egypt their Religion was free Dan. 3.15 though their Persons were in bondage In Babylon they must either fall down and worship the Image or be cast into the fiery furnace Now in this or any other publique calamities of the Church behold the comfort of the faithful That sure they are by vertue of the Churches communion with Christ as the Head in his wisdom and power grace and mercy by how much her distress is the more grievous and mournful by so much her deliverance shall be the more glorious and joyous Thus when the Lord brought back the captivity of Sion Ps 126.1 saith the Church in her Song of praise then were we like unto them that dream The deliverance was so sudden and so strange that it seemed to be not a vision of the day but a dream of the night The manner and method of Gods providence so wonderful that as if none could imagine it being awake they are rhetorically said to dream it being in a sleep And as this deliverance of the Church was wonderful and strange so glorious and joyous glorious to the astonishment of her enemies joyous to the exultation of her friends v. 2. these acknowledging with praise those confessing with envy the Lord hath done great things for them 3. Do we hereby declare we have communion with Christ by denying our selves by denying our own strength of reason seeing he is our wisdom denying our own merit of works seeing he is our righteousness denying our own lustful affections seeing he is our Sanctification and denying our whole selves seeing he is our Redemption Yea see we to this that we declare our heavenly communion by our heavenly conversation Live we as such whose life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3 3. live as such who profess a fellowship with the faithful and expect society with the Angels as such who are fellow-citizens with the Saints Eph. 2.19 and of the houshold of God yea live we as such who wait for the glorious appearing of the Son of God and to be received into the heavenly Jerusalem that City of Holiness Rev. 21.27 into which no unclean thing shall enter Lastly do we with enlarged desires and ravished affections even with all the holy vigor of inflamed hearts recount the great love and extoll the due praises of our God and of our Jesus and of the good Spirit of grace for all the great work of our eternal salvation effectually applied in our Spiritual communion with Christ as He is the Head of the body the Church the beginning the first-born from the dead c. THE SECOND SERMON UPON Coloss 1. v. 18 19. He is the Head of the Body the Church who is the beginning the first-born from the dead c. Introduction Acts 1.10 OUR Lord Jesus Christ he is ascended and whilst we in devotion as his Apostles in admiration do gaze after him see the solemnity of his triumph Sin and Satan Death and Hell his and our mortal enemies whom he vanquished in his Passion and whom he scattered in his Resurrection Eph. 4.8 those he leads captive in his Ascension It was indeed the manner of the Nations most frequently and most solemnly practised by the Romans to take the spoil of the enemy in the field and after victory to ride in triumph thorow the City Heb. 2.10 And thus the Apostle speaks of Christ the Captain of our Salvation having spoiled principalities and powers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 2.15 he made a shew of them openly leading them about in publick triumph and then it was that Christ did spoil Satan and the Infernal spirits of all their principality and power when he disarmed them of their weapons and brake in pieces their ensigns even the strength of sin the curse of the Law and the sting of death of these he spoiled them in the open field of his Passion where the battel was fought he not giving up the ghost till he had cancelled the hand-writing of Ordinances Vers 14. and nailed it to his Cross And Christ having thus vanquished and spoiled his enemies in campo victoriae in the field of Victory his Passion he after Triumphs in his Cross as in sella Regia or curru Triumphali his Chair of State or Triumphal Chariot in his Ascension And being Triumphantly ascended see him royally entertained into the heavenly places see a Celestial Chore of holy Angels leading the host of Heaven to the Gates of Sion Where they welcome their Lord and our Jesus into the heavenly Jerusalem with that or the like divine Anthem Lift up your heads O ye gates and be ye lift up Psal 24.7 8 c. ye everlasting doors and the King of Glory