Selected quad for the lemma: authority_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
authority_n ceremony_n church_n ordain_v 3,759 5 9.3766 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

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

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Church and nothing else But it was the Will of God that there should be all those things in the Gospel Church-State also or else why do men contend about them And if this were the Will of God if they were not all revealed appointed prescribed legalized by Christ where is his Faithfulness in Answer to that Moses But no Instance can be given of any Defect in his Institutions that needs any supplement to be made by the best of men as unto the end of constituting a Church-State Order and Rule with rites of Worship in particular 4. How it is derogatory unto the Glory of the Scripture as unto its Perfection shall be elsewhere declared 8. There is no more required to give Authority obliging the Consciences of all that do believe unto any Institution or Observation of Duty or Acts of Rule in the Church but onely that it is made evident in the Scripture to be the Mind and Will of Christ. It is not necessary that every thing of this Nature should be given out unto us in form of a Law or precise Command in express words It is the Mind and Will of Christ that immediately affects the Consciences of Believers unto Obedience by what way or means soever the knowledge of it be communicated unto them in the Scripture either by express words or by just consequence from what is so expressed Wherefore 9. The Example and Practice of the Apostles in the Erection of Churches in the Appointment of Officers and Rulers in them in directions given for their Walking Order Administration of Censures and all other holy things are a sufficient Indication of the Mind and Will of Christ about them We do not say that in themselves they are Institutions and Appointments but they infallibly declare what is so or the Mind of Christ concerning those things Nor can this be questioned without a denial of their Infallibility Faithfulness and Divine Authority 10 The Assertion of some that the Apostles took their Pattern for the State and Rule of the Churches and as unto divers Rites of Worship from the Synagogues of the Jews their Institutions Orders and Rules not those appointed by Moses but such as themselves had found out and ordained is both temerarious and untrue In the pursuit of such bold Conjectures one of late hath affirmed that Moses took most of his Laws and Ceremonies from the Aegyptitians whereas it is much more likely that many of them were given on purpose to alienate the People by Prohibitions from any compliance with the Aegyptians or any other Nation whereof Maimonides in his Mene Nebuchim gives us sundry Instances This Assertion I say is rash and false For 1 As unto the Instances given for its confirmation who shall assure us that they were then in use and practice in the Synagogues when the Apostles gave Rules unto the Churches of the New Testament We have no Record of theirs not one word in all the world of what was their way and practice but what is at least 250 years younger and later than the writings of the New Testament and in the first of their writings as in them that follow we have innumerable things asserted to have been the Traditions and Practises of their Forefathers from the days of Moses which we know to be utterly false At that time when they undertook to compose a new Religion out of their pretended Traditions partly by the Revolt of many Apostates from Christianity unto them especially of the Eli●nites and Nazarenes and partly by their own Study and Observation coming to the knowledge of sundry things in the Gospel Churches their Order and Worship they took them in as their own undeniable Instances may be given hereof 2 Wherein there is a real coincidence between what was ordained by the Apostles and what was practised by the Jews it is in things which the light of Nature and the general Rules of the Scripture do direct unto And it is dishonourable unto the Apostles and the Spirit of Christ in them to think or say that in such things they took their Pattern from the Jews or made them their example Surely the Apostles took not the Pattern and Example for the Institution of Excommunication from the Druids among whom there was some things that did greatly resemble it so far as it hath its Foundation in the light of Nature CHAP. III. The Continuation of a Church-State and of Churches unto the end of the world what are the Causes of it and whereon it depends THAT there was a peculiar Church-State Instituted and appointed by Christ and his Apostles acting in his Name and Authority with the infallible guidance of his Spirit hath been declared But it may be yet farther enquired whether this Church-State be still continued by Divine Authority or whether it ceased not together with the Apostles by whom it was erected There was a Church-State under the Old Testament solemnly erected by God himself And although it was not to be absolutely perpetual or everlasting but was to continue onely unto the time of Reformation yet unto that time its continuation was secured in the Causes and means of it The Causes of the continuation of this Church-State unto its appointed period were two 1. The Promise of God unto Abraham that he would keep and preserve his Seed in Covenant with him until he should be the Heir of the World and the Father of many Nations in the coming of Christ whereunto this Church-State was subservient 2 The Law of God it self and the Institutions thereof which God appointed to be observed in all their Generations calling the Covenant the Statutes and Laws of it perpetual and everlasting that is never to cease to be abrogated or disannulled until by his own Soveraign Authority he would utterly change and take away that whole Church-State with all that belonged unto its Constitution and Preservation 2. The Means of its continuance were three 1 Carnal Generation and that on a twofold account For there were two Constituent Parts of that Church the Priests and the People the continuation of each of them depended on the priviledge of Carnal Generation For the Priests were to be all of the Family of Aaron and the People of the Seed of Abraham by the other Heads of Tribes which gave them both their foundation in and Right unto this Church-State And hereunto were annexed all the Laws concerning the Integrity Purity and Legitimacy of the Priests with the certainty of their Pedegree 2 Circumcision the want whereof was a bar against any advantage by the former Priviledge of Generation from those two Springs and hereby others also might be added unto the Church though never with a Capacity of the Priesthood 3 The Separation of the People from the rest of the World by innumerable Divine Ordinances making their Coalition with them impossible From these Causes and by these Means it was that the Church-State under the Old Testament was preserved unto its appointed season Neither
believe that in this Context our Lord Jesus Christ designed to set up and erect an Earthly Domination in and over his Churches to be administred by the Rules of the Canon Law and the Rota at Rome They must be spiritually mad and ridiculous who can give the least entertainment unto such an Imagination Nor can the Discipline of any Diocesan Churches administred in and by Courts and Officers foreign to the Scripture both name and thing be brought within the view of this Rule nor can all the Art of the World make any application of it thereunto For what some plead concerning Magistrates or Arbitrators they are things which men would never betake themselves unto but only to evade the force of that Truth which they love not All this is fallen out by mens departing from the Simplicity of the Gospel and a contempt of that sense of the words of the Lord Jesus which is plain and obvious unto all who desire not only to hear his words but also to observe his Commands 3 dly Our third Argument is taken from the Nature of the Churches ●nstituted by the Apostles and their Order as it is expressed in the Scripture For they were all of them Congregational and of no other sort This the ensuing Considerations will make evident 1. There were many Churches planted by the Apostles in very small Provinces Not to insist on the Churches of Galatia Gal. 1.1 concerning which it is no where intimated that they had any one Head or Mother Church Metropolitical or Diocesan Nor of those of Macedonia distinct from that of Philippi whereof we have spoken before upon the first coming of Paul after his Conversion unto Jerusalem which was three years Gal. 1.18 in the Fourth year after the Ascension of Christ there were Churches planted in all Judea and Galilee and Samaria Act. 9.31 Neither of the two latter Provinces was equal unto one Ordinary Diocess Yet were there Churches in both of them and that in so short a time after the first Preaching of the Gospel as that it is impossible they should be conceived to be any other but single Congregations What is excepted or opposed hereunto by the Reverend Dr. St. shall be examined and disproved afterwards by itself that the Progress of our Discourse be not here interrupted 2. These Churches were such as that the Apostles appointed in them Ordinary Elders and Deacons that might administer all Ordinances unto the whole Church and take care of all the poor Act. 14.23 chap. 20.28 Now the Care Inspection and Labour of Ordinary Officers can extend itself no further than unto a particular Congregation No man can administer all Ordinances unto a Diocesan Church And this ordaining Elders in every Church is the same with ordaining them in every City Tit. 1.5 that is in every Town wherein there was a Number converted unto the Faith as is evident from Act. 14.23 And it was in Towns and Cities ordinarily that the Gospel was first preached and first received Such Believers being congregated and united in the Profession of the same Faith and subiection unto the Authority of Christ did constitute such a Church-State as it was the Will of Christ they should have Bishops or Elders and Deacons ordained amongst them and were therefore as unto their State such Churches as he owned 3. It is said of most of these Churches expresly that they respectively met together in one place or had their Assemblies of the whole Church for the discharge of the Duties required of them which is peculiar unto Congregational Churches only so did the Church at Jerusalem on all occasions Act. 15.12 22. ch ●1 22 see ch 5.11 ch 6.1 It is of no force which is objecte● from the Multitude of them that are said to believe and so consequently were of that Church so as that they could not assemble together For whereas the Scripture says expresly that the multitude of the Church did come together it is scarce fair for us to to say they were such a multitude as that they could not come together And it is evident that the great numbers of Believers that are said to be at Jerusalem were there only occasionally and were not fixed in that Church For many years after a small Village beyond Jordan could receive all that were so fixed in it The Church at Antioch gathered together in one Assembly Act. 14.27 to hear Paul and Silas This Church thus called together is called the Multitude chap. 15.30 that is the whole Brotherhood at least of that Church The whole Church of Corinth did assemble together in one place both for solemn Worship and the exercise of Discipline 1 Cor. 8.8 chap. 14.25 26. chap. 11.17 20. It is no way necessary to plead any thing in the illustration or for the Confirmation of these Testimonies They all of them speak positively in a matter of fact which will admit of no debate unless we will put in exceptions unto the Veracity of their Authors And they are of themselves sufficient to establish our Assertion For whatever may be the state of any Church as unto its Officers or Rule into what order soever it be disposed ordinarily or occasionally for its Edification so long as it is its Duty to assemble in and with all its Members in one place either for the exercise of its Power the Performance of its Duty or Enjoyments of its Priviledges it is a single Congregation and no more 4. The Duties prescribed unto all Church Members in the writings of the Apostles to be diligently attended unto by them are such as either in their Nature or the manner of their performance cannot be attended unto and duly accomplished but in a particular Congregation only This I shall immediately speak distinctly unto and therefore only mention it in this place These things being so plainly positively and frequently asserted in the Scripture it cannot be questionable unto any impartial-mind but that particular Churches or Congregations are of Divine Institution and consequently that unto them the whole Power and Priviledge of the Church doth belong for if they do not so whatever they are Churches they are not If therefore any other Church-State be Supposed we may well require that its Name Nature Use Power and Bounds be some or all of them declared in the Scripture Reasonings drawn from the Superiority of the Apostles above the Evangelists of Bishop above Presbyters or from Church Rule in the hands of the Officers of the Church only from the power of the Christian Magistrate in things Ecclesiastical from the Meetness of Union among all Churches are of no use in this case For they are all consistent with the Sole Institution of particular Congregations nor do in the least intimate that there is or needs to be any other Church State of Divine Appointment CHAP. V. The Sate of the First Churches after the Apostles to the end of the Second Century IN Confirmation of the foregoing Argument we urge the President and
which having as they thought unduely enough failed in one or two Instances it became the Destruction of a Church state not only in the Churches where such Mistakes had happened as they surmized but unto all the Churches in the World that would hold Communion with them But in these things we have no concernment Other Notions of Schisme besides those insisted on we acknowledge not nor is any other advanced with the least Probality of Truth Nor are we to be moved with outcries about Schisme wherein without regard to Truth or Charity men contend for their own Interest Of those Notions of it which have been received by men sober and learned we decline a trial by none that only excepted that the Refusal of Obedience unto the Pope and Church of Rome is all that is Schisme in the World which indeed is none at all That which is now so fiercely pleaded by some concerning different Observations of external Modes Rites Customes some more or none at all to make men Schismaticks is at once to judge all the Primitive Churches to be Schismatical Their Differences Varieties and Diversities among them about these things cannot be enumerated and so without any disadvantage unto the Faith or breach of Love they continued to be untill all Church Order and Power was swallowed up in the Papal Tyranny ten thousand times more pernicious then ten thousand such Disputes For a Close unto this whole Discourse concerning the original nature and state of Gospel Churches I shall use that Liberty which Love of the Truth puts into my Possession Churches mentioned in the Scripture ordained and appointed by the Authority of Jesus Christ were nothing but a certain number of Men and Women Converted to God by the preaching of the Gospel with their baptized seed associating themselves in Obedience unto Christs Commands and by the Direction of his Apostles for the common Profession of the same Faith the Observance and Performance of all Divine Institutions of Religious Worship unto the Glory of God their own Edification and the Conversion of others These Believers thus associated in Societies knowing the Command and Appointment of Jesus Christ by his Apostles for that End did choose from among themselves such as were to be their Rulers in the Name and Authority of Christ according to the Law and Order of his institutions who in the Scripture are called on various Considerations Elders Bishops Pastors and the like names of Dignity Authority and Office who were to administer all the solemn Ordinances of the Church among them Unto this Office they were solemnly appointed ordained or set apart by the Apostles themselves with fasting Prayer and imposition of hands or by other ordinary Officers after their decease This was the way and method of the Call and setting apart of all Ordinary Officers in the Church both under the Old Testament and in the New It is founded in the Light of Nature In the first Institution of ordinary Church Rulers under the Law the People looked out and chose fit Persons whom Moses set apart to the Office Deut. 1.13 14 15. And in the Call of Deacons Acts 6. The Apostle uses the same Words or words of the same importance unto the Church as Moses did to the People Acts 6.31 asserting the Continuation of the same way and order in their Call And whereas he who was first to be called to Office under the New Testament after the Ascension of Christ fell under a double Consideration namely of an Officer in general and of an Apostle which office was extraordinary there was a threefold Act in his Call the People chose two one of which was to be an Officer Acts 1.23 Gods immediate Determination of one as he was to be an Apostle ver 24. and the obedient Consent of the People in compliance with that Determination ver 26. The Foundation of these Churches was generally in a small number of Believers But their Church state was not compleat until they were supplyed with all ordinary Officers as Bishops and Deacons The former were of of several sorts as shall be proved hereafter And of them there were many in every Church whose number was encreased as the Members of the Church were multiplied So God appointed in the Church of the Jews that every ten Families should have a peculiar Ruler of their own Choice Deut. 1.13 14 15 For there is no mention in the New Testament of any one single Bishop or Elder in any Church of any sort whatever either Absolutely or by way of Preheminence But as the Elders of each Church were many at least more thenone so there was a parity among them and an Equality in Order Power and Rule Nor can any Instance be given unto the Contrary Of these Churches one onely was originally planted in one City Town or Village This way was taken from Conveniency for Edification and not from any positive Institution and it may be otherwise where Conveniency and Opportunity do require it The Number in these Churches Multiplying dayly there was a necessity of the Multiplication of Bishops or Elders among them Hereon the Advantage of some one Person in Priority of Conversion or of Ordination in Age Gifts and Graces especially in Ability for Preaching the Gospel and administring the Holy Ordinances of the Church with the Necessity of preserving Order in the Society of the Elders themselves gave him peculiar Dignity Preheminence and Title He was soon after the Bishop without any disadvantage to the Church For in those Churches in some of them at least Evangelists continued for a long Season who had the Administration of Church Affairs in their hands And some there were who were of Note among the Apostles and eminently esteemed by them who had eminent yea Apostolical Gifts as to Preaching of the Word and Prayer which was the peculiar work of the Apostle These were the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mentioned by Clemens Of the many other Elders who were associated in the Rule of the Church it may be not many had Gifts for the constant Preaching of the Word nor were called thereunto Hence Justin Martyr seemes to assign the constant publick Administration of Sacred Ordinances unto one President And this also promoted the constant presidency of one in whom the Apostolical Aid by Evangelists might be supplyed These Churches thus fixed and settled in one place each of them City Town or Village were each of them intrusted with all the Power and Priviledges which the Lord Christ hath granted unto or endued his Church withal This Power is called the power of the Keys or of binding and loosing which hath respect only unto the Consciences of Men as unto things Spiritual and Eternal being meerly Ministerial Every one of these Churches were bound by the Command of Christ to live in Peace and Vnity through the Exercise of Peculiar sincere and fervent Love among all their Members as also to walk in Peace and useful Communion with all oth●● Churches in the
World according as they had opp●●tunity of Converse with them And when on any occasion any Division or Schisme fell out among any of their Members in this Church state it was severely rebuked by the Apostles All these Churches and all the Members of them were obliged by vertue of Divine Institution to obey their Guides to Honour and Reverence them and by their voluntary Contribution to provide for their Honourable Subsistence and maintenance according to their Ability Other Church state neither the Scripture nor Antiquity unto the End of the second Century do know any thing of which I shall hereafter more fully manifest Neither was there any thing known then to be Schisme or so esteemed but a Division falling out in some one of these Churches which hapned for the most part if not onely by some of their Teachers falling into heresie and drawing away Disciples after them Acts 20.30 or by various opinions about their Guides 1 Cor. 1.12 or the Ambition of some in seeking the Power and Authority of office among them To seek for any thing among those Churches wherein our present Contest about Schisme is concerned is altogether in vain There was then no such subordination of Churches of many unto one as is now pleaded No such distinction of Officers into those who have a plenary and those who have a partiary power onely in the Rule of the Church No Church with a single Officer over it Comprehending in a Subjection unto its Jurisdiction a multitude of other Churches No Invention no Imposition of any Orders Form● of Prayer or Ceremonies of Worship not of Divine Institution were once thought of and when any thing of that Nature was first attempted it caused great troubles amongst them In a Word the things on the account of a Non-compliance wherewithal we are vehemently charged with Schisme were then neither laid nor hatch'd neither thought of nor invented To Erect new kinds of Churches to introduce into them new Orders new Rules Rites and Ceremonies to impose their Observation on all Churches and all Members of them and to charge their dissent with the guilt of Schisme that Schisme which is prohibited and condemned in the Scripture hath much of an assumed Authority and Severity in it nothing of Countenance from the Scripture or Primitive Antiquity But after that Churches began to depart from this original Constitution by the wayes and means before declared every alteration produced a new supposition of Church Unity and peace whereto every Church of a new Constitution layed claim New sorts of Schisme were also coyned and framed For there was a certain way found out and carried on in a Mistery of Iniquity whereby those Meek Holy Humble Churches or Societies of Christs Institution who as such had nothing to do with the things of the World in Power Authority Dignity Jurisdiction or Wealth in some Instances wherein they got the Advantage one of another became in all these things to equal Kingdomes and Principalities yea one of them to Claim a Monarchy over the whole World During the Progression of this Apostacy Church Unity and Schisme declined from their Centre and varied their state according unto the present Interest of them that prevailed Whoever had got Possession of the name of the Church in a prevailing Reputation though the state of it was never so Corrupt made it bite and devour all that disliked it and would swear that submission unto them in all things was Church-Unity and to dissent from them was Schisme Unto that state all the World know that things were come in the Church of Rome Howbeit what hath been disputed about or contended for of Power Priviledges Authority Preheminence Jurisdiction Catholicisme wayes of Worship Rule and Discipline which the World is filled with such a noise about and in the dispute whereof so many various Hypotheses are advanced that cannot be accommodated unto such Christian Congregations as we have described are but the Effects of the Prudence or Imprudence of men and what it will prove the Event will shew Things of this Nature being once well understood will deliver the World from innumerable fruitless endless Contests Sovereign Princes from all disturbance on the account of Religion and private Persons from the fatal Mistake of entrusting the eternal Concernments of their Souls unto their Relation unto one Church and not unto another I am not so vain as at this time to expect the Reduction of Christian Religion unto its primitive Power Purity and Simplicity nor do I reflect blame on them who walk Conscientiously in such a Church state and Order as they approve of or suppose it the best they can attain unto onely I think it Lawful for all Christs Disciples at all times to yield Obedience unto all his Commands and to abstain from being Servants of Men in what he hath not enjoyned An Answer to Dr. Stillingfleets Book of the Unreasonableness of Separation in Defence of the Vindication of Non-Conformists from the Guilt of Schisme THE Preceding Discourse was written for the most part before the publishing of the Treatise of the Reverend Dr. Stillingfleet Entituled the Vnreasonableness of Separation Yet was it not so without a Prospect at least a probable Conjecture that something of the same kind and tendency with the Doctors Book would be published in Defence of the Cause which he had undertaken And I was not without hopes that the whole of it might have been both finished and communicated unto publick view before any thing farther were attempted against our Cause whereby many Mistakes might have been prevented For as I was willing yea very desirous if it were the Will of God that I might see before my departure out of this World the Cause of Conformity as things are now stated between us and the Church of England pleaded with Judgment Moderation and Learning with the best of those Arguments whereby our Principles or Practises are opposed so considering on what hand that work was now like to fall I thought si pergania dextra c. and am of the same Mind still But my expectation being frustrate of representing our whole Cause truly stated for the Prevention of Mistakes by the coming out of this Book against all sorts of Nonconformists I thought it convenient to publish this first Part of what I had designed and to annex unto it the ensuing Defence of the Vindication of Non-conformists from the charge of Schisme For although I do know that there is nothing material in the whole Book of the Vnreasonableness of Sepaeration but what is obviated or answered before hand in the preceeding Discourse so as that the Principles and Demonstrations of them contained therein may easily be applyed unto all the Reasonings Exceptions and Pleas in and of that Book to render them useless unto the End designed which is to reinforce a charge of Schisme against us Yet I think it necessary to shew how unsuccessful from the disadvantage of his Cause the Doctor hath been
differences of lesser Moment whilst the general Rule of Faith and Love is attended unto 4. To be quiet and wait for further Instruction is the Direction given unto both Parties whilst the Differences did continue between them and that in opposition unto mutual Impositions 5. A Church that is really so or so esteemed may break the Peace with its own Members and others as well as they with it and where the fault is must be determined by the Causes of what is done 6. For what is added about gathering of Churches it shall be considered in its proper place But as unto the Application of these things unto the present Case there lies in the bottom of them such an unproved Presumption of their being the Church that is according unto Divine Institution for in their being so in any other sense we are not concerned of their Church Power and Authority by whom such Orders and Rules are made as we can by no means admit of I can more warrantably give this as the Apostles Rule than that of our Author What you have attained unto in the Knowledge of the Doctrine and Misteries of the Gospel walk together in holy Communion of Faith and Love but take heed that you multiply not new Causes of Divisions and Differences by inventing and imposing new Orders in Divine Worship or the Rule of the Church casting them out who agree with you in all things of divine Revelation and Institution He adds from my Words If the Rule reach our Case it must be such as requires things to be observed as were never divinely appointed as National Churches Ceremonies and Modes of worship to which he Replies And so this Rule doth in Order unto Peace require the Observation of such things which although they be not particularly commanded of God yet are enjoyned by lawful Authority provided that they be not unlawful in themselves nor repugnant unto the Word of God Answ. 1. Let the Reader if he please consult the place whence these Words are taken in my Discourse and he will find this Evasion obviated 2. What is intended by this Rule is it the Rule given by the Apostle Who that reads the Words can possibly pretend unto any such conception of their meaning If he understand a Rule of his own I know not what it may or may not include 3. I deny and shall for ever deny that the Rule here intended by the Apostle doth give the least countenance unto the Invention and Imposition of things not divinely instituted not prescribed not commanded in the Word on the Pretence that those who so invent and impose them judged them lawful and that they have Authority so to do He Objects again unto himself out of my Discourse that the Apostles never gave any such Rules themselves about outward Modes of Worship with Ceremonies Feasts Fasts Liturgies c. Whereunto he Replies What then I say then 1. It had been happy for Christians and Christian Religion if those who pretended to be their Successors had followed their Example and made no such Rules at all that they would not have thought themselves wiser than they or more careful for the Good of the Church or better acquainted with the Mind of Christ in these things then they were For that Multiplication of Rules Laws Canons about the things mentioned and others of an alike nature which the Apostles never gave any Example of or Encouragement unto which afterwards ensued hath been a principal means of altering the state of the Church from its Original Institution of corrupting its Worship Administring occasion unto scandal and endless Strifes 2. If the Apostles gave no such Rules themselves it may be concluded safely that it was because in their Judgement no such Rule was to be given Other Reason hereof cannot be assigned for if it might have been done according to the Mind of Christ and by vertue of the Commission which they had from him innumerable Evils might have been prevnted by the doing of it They foresaw what Differences would arise in the Church what Divisions the darkness and corrupt Lusts of men would cast them into about such things as these and probably knew much whereunto the Mistery of Iniquity tended yet would they not appoint any Arbitrary Rules about things not ordained by our Lord Jesus Christ which might have given some bounds unto the Inclinations of men in making and multiplying Rules of their own unto the ruine of the Church 3. Then I say we beg the Pardon of all who concern themselves herein that we scruple the Complying with such Rules in Religion and the Worship of God as the Apostles thought not meet to appoint or ordain But he addes It is sufficient that they gave this general Rule that all Lawful things are to be done for the Churches Peace Answ. What is to be done for the Churches Peace we shall afterwards consider To be done is intended of Acts of Religion in the Worship of God I say then the Apostles never gave any such Rule as that pretended the Rule they gave was that all things which Christ hath commanded were to be done and observed and for the doing of any thing else they gave no Rule Especially they gave not such a large Rule as this that might serve the turn and interest of the worst of men in imposing on the Church whatever they esteemed Lawful as not by vertue of any Rule of the Apostles but in an open Rejection of all they gave it afterwards fell out in the Church This is a Rule which would do the Work to the Purpose of all that have the Reputation of Governours in the Church be it the Pope or who it will For they are themselves the sole Judges of what is Lawful the People as it is pretended understand nothing of these things Whatever therefore they have a Mind to introduce into the Worship of God and to impose on the Practice of men therein is to be done by vertue of this Apostolical Rule for the Churches Peace provided they judge it Lawful and surely no Pope was ever yet so stark mad as to impose things in Religion which he himself judged unlawful Besides things may be Lawful in themselves that is Morally which yet it is not Lawful to introduce into the Worship of God because not expedient nor for Edification Yea things may be Lawful to be done sometimes on some occasions in the Worship of God which yet it would be unlawful to impose by vertue of a general binding Rule for all times and seasons Instances may be multiplied in each kind Therefore I say the Apostles never gave this Rule they opened no such Door unto Arbitrary Imposition they laid no such Yoke on the Necks of the Disciples which might prove heavier and did so then that of the Jewish Ceremonies which they had taken away namely that they were to do and observe all that should by their Rulers be imposed on them as lawful in their Judgement This
by all the Governours of the Christian Church that the Jewish Christians should be left unto their own Liberty out of respect unto the Law of Moses and out of regard unto the Peace of the Christian Church which otherwise might have been extremely hazarded But 1. The Governours of the Christian Church which made the Determination insisted on were the Apostles themselves 2. There was no such Determination made that the Jews should be left unto their own Liberty in this Matter but there was only a Connivance at their Inclination to bear their old Yoke for a Season The Determination was onely on the other hand that no Imposition of it should be made on the Gentiles 3. The Determination it self was no Act of Church Government or Power but a doctrinal Declaration of the Mind of the Holy Ghost 4. It is well that Church Governours once judged that Impositions in things not necessary were to be forborn for the sake of the Peace of the Church Others I hope may in due time be of the same Mind 2. He says The false Apostles imposing on the Gentile Christians had two circumstances in it which extreamly alter their Case from that of our Dissenters For 1. They were none of their lawful Governours but went about as seducers drawing away the Disciples of the Apostles from them It seems then 1. That those who are lawful Governours or pretend themselves so to be may impose what they please without Controul as they did in the Papacy and the Councils of it But 2. Their Imposition was meerly doctrinal wherein there was no Pretence of any Act of Government or governing Power which made it less grievous then that which the Dissenters have suffered under Were things no otherwise imposed on us we should bear them more easily 2. Saith he They imposed the Jewish Rites as necessary to Salvation and not meerly as indifferent things And the Truth is so long as they judged them so to be they are more to be excused in their doctrinal Impositions of them then others are who by an Act of Government fortified with I know not how many Penalties do impose things which themselves esteem indifferent and those on whom they are imposed do judge to be unlawful Whereas he addes that he hath considered all things that are Material in Discourse which seem to take off the force of the Argument drawn from this Text I am not of his Mind nor I believe will any indifferent Person be so who shall compare what I wrote therein with his exceptions against it though I acknowledge it is no easie thing to discover wherein the force of the pretended Argument doth lye That we must walk according unto the same Rule in what we have attained that wherein we differ we must wait on God for Teaching and Instruction that the Apostles Elders and Brethren at Hierusalem determined from the Scriptures or the Mind of the Holy Ghost therein that the Jewish Ceremonies should not be imposed on the Gentile Churches and Beleivers and that thereon those Churches continued in Communion with each other who did and did not observe those Ceremonies are the only Principles which in Truth the Doctor hath to proceed upon To infer from these Principles and Propositions that there is a National Church of Divine Institution for what is not so hath no Church Power properly so called the nature of its Power being determined by the Authority of its Institution or Erection That this Church hath Power in its Governours and Rulers to invent new Orders Ceremonies and Rites of Worship new Canons for the Observation of sundry things in the Rule of the Church and Worship of God which have no Spring nor Cause but their own Invention and Prescription and is authorized to impose the Observation of them on all particular Churches and Believers who never gave their consent unto their Invention or Prescription and hereon to declare them all to be wicked Schismaticks who yield not full Obedience unto them in these things it requires a great deal of Art and Skil in the Mannagers of the Argument SECT II. PArt 2. Sect. 21. pag. 176. Our Author proceeds to renew his Charge of Schisme or sinful Separation against those who though they agree with us saith he in the substantials of Religion yet deny any Communion with our Church to be lawful But apprehending that the state of the Question here insinuated will not be admitted and that it would be difficult to find them out who deny any Communion with the Church of England to be lawful he addes that he doth not speak of any improper Acts of Communion which Dr. O. calls Communion in Faith and Love which they allow to the Church of England But why the Acts hereof are called improper Acts of Communion I know not Add unto Faith and Love the Administration of the same Sacraments with Common Advice in things of Common concernment and it is all the Communion that the true Churches of Christ have among themselves in the whole World Yea this Church Communion is such as that 1. Where it is not there is no Evangelical Communion at all whatever Acts of Worship or Church Order men may agree in the Practise of if the Foundation of that Agreement be not laid in a joint Communion in Faith and Love they are neither accepted with God nor profitable unto the Souls of men For 2. These are the things namely Faith and Love which enliven all joint Duties of Church Order and Worship are the Life and Soul of it and how they should be only improperly that which they alone make other things to be properly I cannot understand 3. Where there is no defect in these things namely in Faith and Love the Charge of Schisme on dissenting in things of lesser Moment is altogether unreasonable It is to be desired that an overweening of our Differences make us not overlook the things wherein we are agreed This is one of the greatest Evils that attend this Controversie Men are forced by their Interest to lay more weight on a few outward Rites and Ceremonies which the World and the Church might well have spared had they not come into the Minds of some Men none know how than upon the most important Graces and Duties of the Gospel Hence Communion in Faith and Love is scarce esteemed worth taking up in the streets in comparison of Vniformity in Rites and Ceremonies Let Men be as void of and remote from true Gospel Faith and Love as is imaginable yet if they comply quietly with and have a little Zeal for those outward things they are to be approved of as very orderly Members of the Church And whatever Evidences on the other hand any can or do give of their Communion in Faith and Love with all that are of that Communion yet if they cannot in Conscience comply in the Observance of those outward things mentioned they are to be judged Schismaticks and Breakers of the Churches Unity whereas no
Indeed as when the Israelites came out of Egypt there came along with them a mixed multitude of other People Exod. 12.38 which fell to lusting for Meat when they came into the Wilderness Numb 11.4 to the danger of the whole Congregation So when Christianity was first Preached and received in the world besides those who embraced it sincerely and were added unto the Church there was a great mixture of stubborn Jews as the Ebionites of Philosophical Greeks as the Valentinians and the Marcionites of plain Impostors such as Simon Magus and Menander who all of them pretended to be Christians but they fell a lusting and exceedingly troubled and perplexed the Churches with an endeavour to sedu●e them unto their Imaginations Yet none of their Abominations could force an entrance into the Churches themselves which by the means insisted on were preserved But when this Church-state and Order was changed and another gradually introduced in the room of it Errours and Heresies got new advantages and entered into the Churches themselves which before did only assault and perplex them For 1. When Prerogative and Preheminence of any single Person in the Church began to be in esteem not a few who failed in their attempts of attaining it to revenge themselves on the Church made it their business to invent and propagate pernicious Heresies So did Thebulis at Hierusalem Euseb. lib. 4. cap. 22. and Valentinus Tertul. ad Valentin cap. 4. and Marcion at Rome Epiphan Haeres 42. Montanus fell into his dotage on the same account so did Novitianus at Rome Euseb. lib. 7. cap. 43. and Arius at Alexandria Hence is that censure of them by Lactantius lib. 4. cap. 30. Ii quorum fides fuit lubrica cùm Deum nosse se colere simularent augendis opibus honori studentes affectabant Maximum Sacerdotium à potioribus victi secedere cum suffragatoribus maluerunt quàm eos ferre praepositos quibus concupierant ips● ante praeponi 2. When any of their Bishops of the new Constitution whether Patriarchal or Diocesan fell into Heresies which they did frequently and that numbers of them they had so many advantages to diffuse their poyson into the whole Body of their Churches and such Political Interests for their Promotion as that the Churches themselves were throughly infected with them It is true the Body of the People in many places did oppose them withdraw and separate from them but it cannot be denied but that this was the first way and means whereby the Churches ceased to be the Ground and Pillar of Truth many destructive Errours being received into them which did only outwardly assault them whilst they abode in their first Institution And had not the Churches in process of time utterly lost their Primitive State and Order by coalescing into one Papal pretended Vniversal Church the Faith itself could never have been so utterly corrupted depraved and lost among them as in the issue it was 3. To propagate the Gospel is in like manner required hereunto This I acknowledge doth more immediately concern the Duty of Persons in any Church-Order than the Order itself For it must be the work of some particular persons dedicating themselves unto their Ministry as it was in the first Churches 3 Joh. 5 6 7 8. The like may be said of any other publick acknowledged end of the Institution of Churches If the Way pleaded for be not consistent with them all and the proper means of attaining them if it be not suited unto their accomplishment let it be discarded I shall insist on one more only 3. Our Lord Jesus Christ hath given that state unto his Churches hath instated them in that Order as that his Interest Kingdome and Religion might be carried on in the world without prejudice or disadvantage unto any of the lawful Interests of men especially without any opposition unto or enterfering with the Civil Authority or Magistracy which is the Ordinance of God and no Church-way that doth so is of his Institution Wherefore I shall briefly declare what are the Principles of those of this Way in these things which are the Principles of the Way itself which they do profess 1. Our first general Assertion unto this purpose is this The Lord Jesus Christ taught no Doctrine appointed no Order in his Church gave it no Power that is opposite unto or inconsistent with any righteous Government in this world of what sort soever it be of those whereunto Government is distributed in Reason and Practice His Doctrine indeed is opposed unto all Unrighteousness in and of all men Magistrates and others but not to the legal Rule of Magistrates that are unrighteous men And this Opposition is Doctrinal only confirmed with Promises and Threatnings of eternal things refusing and despising all outward aids of force and restraint This Rule we allow for the trial of all Churches and their state whether they be according unto the minde of Christ. But whereas the Lord Jesus Christ hath taught commanded appointed nothing that is contrary unto or inconsistent with righteous Governments of any sort if Rulers or Magistrates shall forbid the observance of what he hath commanded appointed and ordered and then charge it on him or his Way that his Disciples cannot dare not will not comply with that Prohibition and accuse them thereon of Sedition and Opposition unto Government they deal injuriously with him whereof they must give an account For whereas all Power is given unto him in Heaven and Earth all Nations are his Inheritance all People in his absolute Disposal and it is his pleasure to set up his Kingdom in the Earth without which the Earth itself would not be continued He could not deal more gently with the righteous Rulers of this world and he did it because righteous Rule is the Ordinance of God than to order all things so that whether they receive his Law and Doctrine or no nothing should be done in opposition unto them or their Rule And if any of them are not contented with this measure but will forbid the observance of what he commands wherein he alone is concerned and not they this is left to be determined between him and them In the mean time when Rulers are not able to fancy much less give a real instance of any one Principle Doctrine or Practice in any of the Churches of Christ or any belonging unto them that is contrary unto or inconsistent with the Rights or exercise of their Rule and Government and yet shall not only prohibit the doing of those things which he hath commanded merely with respect unto the Spiritual and Eternal ends of his Kingdom but shall also punish and destroy those who will not disown his Authority and comply with their Prohibition it doth scarce answer their Interest and Prudence For to what purpose is it for any to provoke him who is mightier than they when they have no appearance of necessity for their so doing nor advantage thereby 2. In particular
the Lord Christ hath ordained no Power nor Order in his Church no Office or Duty that should stand in need of the Civil Authority Sanction or force to preserve it or make it effectual unto its proper ends It is sufficient to discharge any thing of a pretence to be an appointment of Christ in his Church if it be not sufficient unto its own proper End without the help of the Civil Magistrate That Church-state which is either constituted by humane Authority or cannot consist without it is not from him That Ordinance which is in its own Nature divine or is pretended so to be so far as it is not effectual unto its end without the aid of Humane Authority is not of him he needs it not he will not borrow the assistance of Civil Authority to rule in and over the Consciences of men with respect unto their living to God and coming unto the enjoyment of himself The way of requiring the Sanction of Civil Authority unto Ecclesiastical Orders and Determinations began with the use of General Councils in the days of Constantine And when once it was engaged in and approved so far as that what was determined in the Synods either as to Doctrine or as unto the Rule of the Church should be confirmed by the Imperial Authority with penalties on all that should gainsay such Determinations It is deplorable to consider what mutual havock was made among Christians upon the various Sentiments of Synods and Emperours Yet this way pleased the Rulers of the Church so well and as they thought eased them of so much trouble that it was so far improved amongst them that at last they left no Power in or about Religion or Religious Persons unto the Civil Magistrate but what was to be exercised in the execution of the Decrees and Determinations of the Church It is necessary from this Institution of particular Churches that they have their Subsistence Continuation Order and the efficacy of all that they act and do as Churches from Christ himself For whereas all that they are and do is Heavenly Spiritual and not of this world that it reacheth nothing of all those things which are under the Power of the Magistrate that is the Lives and Bodies of Men and all Civil Interests appertaining to them and affect nothing but what no Power of all the Magistrates under Heaven can reach unto that is the Souls and Consciences of men no trouble can hence arise unto any Rulers of the world no Contests about what they ought and what they ought not to confirm which have caused great Disorders among many 3. In particular also There neither is nor can be in this Church-state the least pretence of Power or Authority to be acted towards or over the Persons of Kings or Rulers which should either impeach their Right or impede the exercise of their just Authority For as Christ hath granted no such Power unto the Church so it is impossible that any pretence of it should be seated in a particular Congregation especially being gathered on this Principle that there is no Church Power properly so called but what is so seated and that no Concurrence Agreement or Association of many Churches can adde a new greater or other Power or Authority unto them than what they had singly before And what Power can such Churches act towards Kings Potentates or Rulers of Nations Have they not the highest Security that it is uttterly impossible that ever their Authority or their persons in the exercise of it should be impeached hindered or receive any detriment from any thing that belongs to this Church-state These Principles I say are sufficient to secure Christian Religion and the State Order and Power of Churches instituted therein from all reflections of Inconsistency with Civil Government or of influencing men into Attempts of its Change or Ruine The summe is Let the outward frame and order of righteous Government be of what sort it will nothing inconsistent with it nothing entrenching on it nothing making opposition unto it is appointed by Jesus Christ or doth belong unto that Church-state which he hath ordained and established Two things only must be added unto these Principles that we may not seem so to distinguish the Civil State and the Church as to make them unconcerned in each other For 1. It is the unquestionable Duty of the Rulers and Governours of the World upon the Preaching of the Gospel to receive its Truth and so yield Obedience unto its Commands And whereas all Power and Offices are to be discharged for God whose Ministers all Rulers be they are bound in the discharge of their Office to countenance supply and protect the Profession and Professours of the Truth that is the Church according unto the degrees and measures which they shall judge necessary 2. It is the Duty of the Church materially considered that is of all those who are Members of it in any Kingdom or Commonwealth to be usefully subservient even as Christians unto that Rule which is over them as Men in all those ways and by all those means which the Laws Usages and Customs of the Countries whereof they are do direct and prescribe But these things are frequently spoken unto There are sundry other Considerations whereby it may be evinced not only that this Order and State of Gospel-Churches is not only consistent with every righteous Government in the world I mean that is so in its Constitution though as all other Forms it be capable of Male-Administration but the most useful and subservient unto its righteous Administrations being utterly uncapable of immixing itself as such in any of those occasions of the world or State-Affairs as may create the least difficulty or trouble unto Rulers With others it is not so It is known that the very Constitution of the Papal Church as it is stated in the Canons of it is inconsistent with the just Rights of Kings and Rulers and oft-times in the exercise of its Power destructive unto their Persons and Dominions And herein concurred the Prelatical Church-state of England whilst it continued in their Communion and held its dependance on the Roman Church For although they had all their Power originally from the Kings of this Realm as the Records and Laws of it do expressly affirm That the Church of England was founded in Episcopacy by the King and his Nobles yet they claimed such an addition of Power and Authority by vertue of their Office from the Papal Omnipotency as that they were Ringleaders in perplexing the Government of this Nation under the pretence of maintaining of what they called the Rights of the Church And hereunto they were inabled by the very Constitution of their Church-Order which gave them that Power Grandeur with Political Interest that were needful to effectuate their Designe And since they have been taken off from this foundation of contesting Kings and Princes on their own Ecclesiastical Authority and deprived of their dependance on the Power
Soveraignity over their Consciences was reserved by the Apostles unto the Authority of Christ alone and their Obedience was required by them only unto his commands This is that which I see some would be at To presume themselves to be the Church at least the only Rulers and Governours of it To assume to themselves alone the Judgement of what is Lawful and what is unlawful to be observed in the Worship of God To avow a Power to impose what they please on all Churches pretended to be under their Command so that they judge it lawful be it never so useless or trifling if it hath no other End but to be an Instance of their Authority and then assert that all Christian People must without further Examination submit quietly unto this state of things and comply with it unless they will be esteemed damned Schismaticks But it is too late to advance such Principles a second time He addes from my Paper or as my sense the Apostles gave Rules inconsistent with any determining Rule viz. of mutual Forbearance Rom. 14. But then saith he the meaning must be that whatever Differences happen among Christians there must be no Determination either way But this is direstly contrary to the Decree of the Apostles at Hierusalem upon the Difference that happened in the Christian Churches But they are not my Words which he reports I said not that the Apostles gave Rules inconsistent with any determining Rule but with such a Rule and the Imposition of the things contained in it on the Practise of men in things not determined that is whilst Differences about them do continue as he contends for And 1. Notwithstanding this Rule of Forbearance given by the Apostle expresly Rom. 14. Yet as unto the Right and Truth in the things wherein men are at difference every private Believer is to determine of them so far as he is able in his own Mind Every one is to be fully perswaded in his own Mind in such things so far as his own Practise is concerned 2. The Church wherein such Differences do fall out may doctrinally determine of the Truth in them as it is the Ground and Pillar of Truth supposing them to be of such weight as that the Edification of the Church is concerned in them For otherwise there is no need of any such Determination but every one may be left unto his own Liberty There are Differences at this day in the Church of England in Doctrine and Practice some of them in my Judgement of more importance then those between the same Church and us yet it doth not think it necessary to make any Determination of them no not Doctrinally 3. If the Church wherein such Differences fall out be not able in and of it self to make a Doctrinal Determination of such Differences they may and ought to crave the Counsel and Advice of other Churches with whom they walk in Communion in Faith and Love And so it was in the Case whereof an Account is given us Act. 15. The Determination or Decree there made concerning the necessary Observance of the Jewish Rites by the Gentiles converted unto the Faith by the Apostles Elders and Brethren under the guidance of the Holy Ghost as his Mind was revealed in the Scripture gives not the least Countenance unto the making and imposing such a Rule on all Churches and their Members as is contended for For 1. It was only a Doctrinal Determination without Imposition on the Practise of any 2. It was a Determination against Impositions directly And whereas it is said that it was a Determination contrary to the Judgment of the Imposers which shews that the Rule of Forbearance where Conscience is alledged both ways is no standing Rule I grant that it was contrary to the Judgment of the Imposers but imposed nothing on them nor was their Practice concerned in that erronious Judgement They were not required to do any thing contrary to their own Judgment and the not doing whereof did reflect on their own Consciences Wherefore the whole Rule given by the Apostle and the whole Determination made is that no Impositions be made on the Consciences or Practice of the Disciples of Christ in things relating to his Worship but what were necessary by vertue of Divine Institution They added hereunto that the Gentiles enjoying this Liberty ought to use it without offence and were at Liberty by vertue of it to forbear such things as wherein they had or thought they had a natural Liberty in case they gave Offence by the use of them And the Apostles who knew the state of things in the Minds of the Jews and all other Circumstances give an Instance in the things which at that season were to be so forborn And whereas this Determination was not absolute and obligatory on the whole Case unto all Churches namely whether the Mosaical Law were to be observed among Christians but some Churches were left unto their own Judgement and Practise who esteemed it to be still in force as the Churches of the Jews and others left unto their own Liberty and Practise also who judged it not to oblige them both sides or Parties being bound to continue Communion among them in Faith and Love there is herein a perpetual establishment of the Rule of mutual Forbearance in such Cases nothing being condemned but Impositions on one another nothing commended but an Abstinence from the use of Liberty in the case of Scandal or Offence I had therefore Reason to say that the false Apostles were the only Imposers that is of things not necessary by vertue of any divine Institution And if the Author insinuate that the true Apostles were such Imposers also because of the Determination they made of this Difference he will fail in his Proof of it It is true they imposed on or charged the Consciences of men with the observance of all the Institutions and Commands of Christ but of other things none at all The last things which he endeavours an Answer unto on this occasion lies in those words The Jewish Christians were left unto their own Liberty provided they did not impose on others and the Dissenters at this day desire no more then the Gentile Church did viz. not to be imposed on to observe those things which they are not satisfied it is the Mind of Christ should be imposed on them So is my sense in the places referred unto reported Nor shall I contend about it so as that the last Clause be change for my Words are not they are not satisfied it is the Mind of Christ that they should be imposed on them but they were not satisfied it is the Mind of Christ they should Observe This respects the things themselves the other only their Imposition And one Reason against the Imposition opposed is that the things themselves imposed are such as the Lord Christ would not have us observe because not appointed by himself But hereunto he answers two things 1. That it was agreed