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A66440 The pattern of ecclesiastical ordination, or, Apostolick separation being a discourse upon Acts the 13. 4,5 ... / by Edward Wakeman ... Wakeman, Edward. 1664 (1664) Wing W275; ESTC R5294 23,139 44

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a Blessing upon the expedition they were now about to be imployed in So our Annotator upon the Rhemists interprets it which we might suspect done out of too much heat of contention and that because They had expounded 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the second verse Saying of Mass He would needs find fault too with their construing Imposition of hands in the next verse Giving of orders but that we find the same opinion in some of the Romanists too all of them grounding it upon St. Pauls assertion in the beginning of his Epistle to the Galatians chap. 1. v. the 1. Paul an Apostle not of men neither by man but by Jesus Christ For answer to which it is confess'd not only that Paul had an Immediate calling from God but also that such a Mission was altogether as essential to the Apostleship as to the Prophets in the Old Testament But this Calling or Sending was nothing else properly but the Designation and Appointment of fit persons which while the High-Priest of the New-Covenant was present with them had perhaps annex'd unto it their Inauguration Both however were received immediately from him After his Ascension this latter must needs be left in the hands of the Church Nor doth it any way blemish their Prerogative above the after-Fathers of the Church to own Ordination By man since their Master had vouchsaf'd to receive the sacrament of Baptism from one who he himself had pronounced less than the least of these Prophetical Ordainers So then our Apostle was not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receiving his authority from Men nor is any Presbyter For all are sent by the Holy Ghost neither was he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 designed or chosen by man to this Ministery as all ordinary Pastors are but he might nevertheless be ordained by man and so to omit late Interpreters St. Chrysostom tells us he was in his Homily upon my text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as having no authority to exercise his Apostleship to which he was called by special Direction from the Holy Ghost till he was ordained to it by the laying on of hands So that there is no reason why 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the text urged should be any more then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the 1. to Timothy by the commandment of God or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in almost all the rest of his Epistles by the will of God Nor is it worth the while for them to urge the Letter of the Syriack translation which renders it Not of the sons of man nor by the hand of the son of man for it follows but by the hand of Jesus Christ which is enough methinks to make them forsake the argument and look better into the Propriety of the Language It seems then not improbable that all Apostles after Christs Ascension into Heaven received their Apostleship by Imposition of hands from the Church That Timothy had his office 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the designation of the Spirit is not to be denied 1 Tim. 4.14 But yet that it was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the laying on of hands is clear from the same place and more expresly and particularly from another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the laying on of my hands 2 Tim. 1.6 And do we not read that Timothy was plac'd at Ephesus as Titus was left at Grete to ordain others after the same manner Tit. 1.5 Even Matthias himself of whose choice we find mention without any of his Ordination For though our English in translating 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was numbred with make the text seem to imply him sufficiently instated in his Apostolate by having the lot fallen upon him yet the Original will better bear Erasmus's Cooptatus est or Beza's Communibus calculis allectus after which implying only a Nomination might well follow a solemn Admission though we have no mention of it in this sacred History Here you see we have an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from the Holy Ghost for Barnabas and Saul the Holy Ghost said separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have called them at the second verse Which to say was no more than send away Barnabas and Saul to Cyprus betrayes so much Ignorance in the use of that expression in both Testaments that I think it cannot find much entertainment with any Person of Reason This Separation therefore was nothing else but their Ordination and the conferring that power upon them which the Holy Ghost now call'd them to by an External Extraordinary Call and afterwards ratified by an Internal Ordinary Calling at their laying on of hands upon them And so I come to the First part of my text which represents unto us their Commission and that first from the Holy Ghost expresly given us in these words Being sent forth by the Holy Ghost This is the first particular namely that the Holy Ghost is the Superintendent or the Unction they receiving their Commission from him That by the Holy Ghosts sending is rather to be understood his Inward giving them that Power which their Ordination intituled them unto than either his Extraordinary Calling of them before mentioned in the second verse or the Secret Instinct of the Spirit directing them whither they should go though both expositions have their throngs of Assertors I am for my part induced to think because the former Interpretation seems to impose a needless repetition upon the text the latter besides that this Cyprus whither they went was Barnabas's own Countrey as appears plainly at the latter end of the 4. chap. so that he might in all probability be carried thither by his own Affection hath none or very few Parallels in this History or elsewhere either Historical or Grammatical For first how many Journeys of S. Paul and others do we here meet withall without the least mention of the Holy Ghosts sending it being sufficiently known and elsewhere to be collected that they were directed by him in almost all their undertakings And then secondly The spirit of Prophesie except where in general those Extraordinary gifts are express'd in one as St. John 7.39 and the like is not usually called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but barely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not the Holy Ghost but the Spirit as you may see in the 11 19 20 and 21. chap. of this book to name no more whereas this power of Orders is styled the holy Ghost in that very form which the greatest part of the Western Church hath taken up from our Saviours own mouth And in the 20. of this book v. 28. the Presbyters which were ordained by the Apostles are charged by S. Paul at Miletus to take heed unto the Flock over which the Holy Ghost had made them overseers These had no Extraordinary Mission as our Apostle here and yet They were sent by the Holy Ghost and therefore why not These in the same sense For In the 2. v. they were sent by him upon his Immediate choice and
appointment In the text they were sent by him upon his Bestowing that Power which the Prophets at Antioch bid them receive at their laying on of hands So then from the Holy Ghost comes all Power to exercise any sacred Ministerial Office in the Church of God This was the chiefest business of God the Father and God the Sons breathing forth or sending down the Holy Ghost from Heaven to qualify and make some fit for the performance of Church-work with his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his gifts according to their several stations and capacities for when Christ gave the gifts of the Holy Ghost to men Ephes 4.8 He gave some Apostles some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministery verse the 11 And as a learned observer says very well All the reason in the world that he should have a special hand in giving where himself is to be received Receive ye the Holy Ghost Joh. 20.22 Whosoever therefore undertakes this Warfare for so the work of the Levites is often call'd in the book of Numbers without a Commission from him viz. the Holy Ghost though he make pretence of never so plausible Intentions is but a Traytor to the Holy Ghost and can look for no better thanks than Uzzah had for his Officious Prophanation For though there be mention here of Apostles only receiving the Holy Ghost 't is evident they receiv'd not this Gift as Apostles but as entring into an Ecclesiastical Ministery else why did they impart the same afterwards to Bishops and Presbyters which St. Pauls History and Writings do abundantly witness The text then doth as nearly concern Us at present in the Christian Church as if Paul and Barnabas had been now ordained Priests So that I may without offence I hope to the scope of the History take a view of it especially as it represents us with the Priests Ordination the chief business of this present solemnity And that we may be the better ascertain'd that it is the Holy Ghost who gives this Power let us enquire so far as we may what the Power is and how distinguished from other Gifts of the Holy Ghost who thus commissions Not to run too far backwards but to begin with the Apostles themselves You may observe in the Gospel that the Holy Ghost is twice promised by our Saviour to his Apostles once under the promise of the Keys in the 16 of St. Matthew v. the 18. about two years before his Passion afterwards under the promise of a Comforter or as the learned Grotius translates it an Advocate Luke 24.49 after his Resurrection though ye shall find the same Promise made unto them and often repeated the Day before his Passion in the 14 15 and 16. chapters of St. John and some moneths before that to all Beleevers St. John 7.38 and yet sooner to his Apostles in the 10. of St. Mat. v. the 20 The Former of these was performed after his Resurrection S. John 20.22 when he said unto them Receive ye the holy Ghost whose soever sins ye remit they are remitted and whose soever sins ye retain they are retained The Latter was performed upon the day of Pentecost as appears in the second of the Acts of the Apostles when the holy Ghost came down from Heaven in the shape of cloven fiery Tongues which came as it were in a windy rushing Chariot and sate upon each of them yea and inspired them with the Gift of Tongues verse 1 2 3 c. Now Both these gifts had a Power annex'd unto them With the First was a Power of the Keys The Other was a Power from on high a Power of conviction by Miracles When the Comforter is come he shall convince the world of Sin of Righteousness of Judgment St. John 16.8 A Power of Answering for themselves without taking thought before hand When they should be brought before Governours for the name and the cause of Christ St. Mat. 10.18 19 20. And a Power of knowledge of the truth St. John 14.26 The Comforter which is the holy Ghost whom the Father will send in my name he shall teach you all things You shall find a third Power given by Christ to his Apostles immediately upon having created them Apostles a power of Miracles St. Mat. 10.1 He gave them Power against unclean Spirits to cast them out and to heal all manner of Sickness and all manner of Disease There is Lastly another sort of Gifts of the Holy Ghost which though they were always in the Church of God yet Now first came under that name And those are such as the Apostle reckons up in the 12 of his Epistle to the Rom. v. the 8. He that giveth let him do it with simplicity He that ruleth with diligence He that sheweth mercy with cheerfulness Together with several other graces which he reckons up and calls Gifts in the 6. verse Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us and Fruit of the Spirit in his 5. to the Gal. v. the 22. That these Ghostly Gifts of the fourth kind of Sanctifying Graces are perpetually to be enjoyed by the faithful is confess'd on all hands That the Power of Miracles which the Apostles exercised while Christ was upon the Earth was a Gift Extraordinary and not to out-last their own times will be easily admitted among us and the same of that which was given at the Feast of Pentecost excepting that part of it mentioned in the 14. of St. John The Gift of knowledge which we must warily distinguish what it was in the Apostles and what in the succeeding Church They had in its Fulness they were taught all things by it but after ages had only that Proportion which seemed good to the Author and Disposer of it For Should we leave this wholly among the Extraordinary Gifts of the Apostles we had quite relinquishd our interest in the Comforter and should have no more reason to look for him at our Veni Creator than to expect the mighty rushing Wind or the Sound from Heaven or the Cloven Tongues as of Fire The controversie then lies in the Gift first named which is the same we enquire after some making it the same with Sanctifying Grace some the same with Grace Enabling for the Performance which I take to be nothing else but that Gift of Knowledge under the second kind of Graces mentioned and of these some there are in our own Church I mean who think it nothing inferiour to that which the Apostles had A plain Infallibility The rest confound it with that Gift of the Comforter as it belongs to the Universal Church They that think it the same with Sanctifying Grace to say no more must needs forget that Judas Iscariot in whom was little or no sign rather of Sanctifying Grace when he betrayed his Master was one of the twelve and if we may draw any parallel from the Law that Caiaphas the High Priest prophesied St.
in Mr. Durels excellent Treatise of the Conformity of other reformed Churches with the reformed Church of England that when some religious Protestants in the Churches of Bohemia were in great straits and under strange Persecutions and resolved to betake themselves unto the Woods and Mountains and Caverns of the Earth where they might serve God securely Nothing so troubled them in this their sad condition as how to supply the Defect and Mortality of their lawful Ministery For they thought they should in vain expect any Romish Bishop to come amongst them for the Gospel sake Doubts and Fears did arise in their minds Whether such an Ordination by which a Presbyter and not a Bishop should create another Presbyter would be lawfull and how they should be able to maintain such an Ordination as well against others when opposed as to their own people if by them questioned Quassabat animos met us an sat is legitima foret Ordinatio si Presbyter Presbyterum crearet non vero Episcopus Et quomodo talem Ordinationem si lis moveatur defensuri essent sive apud alios sive apud suos says Commenius in Fratr Bohem historia Sect. 59. The Result of their Doubts and Fears was this in short They sent one Michael Zambergius a Minister with two others to the confines of Moravia and Austria whither they heard some of the Waldenses were fled for Conscience sake to acquaint them with their condition and with what pass'd amongst them about the Election of their Ministers by Lot and having found Stephanus their Bishop after they had imparted to each other their sufferings and declared their Faith and Doctrine the said Michael Zambergius with his two Collegues were consecrated Bishops by Stephanus and another Bishop with some Presbyters whom they call'd and joynd with them in that work and so returned home with Episcopal power which was by them transmitted to their Successors until this day Thus Mr. Durel pag. 13. If the Authority of the Scriptures the Practice of the Primitive Church the Testimony of the Ancient Fathers the Confession of such as have been shrewdly suspected to be Adversaries and the Decrees and Canons of General Councils be of any validity herein we are well enough and might hope to give sufficient satisfaction to all that have not Abandon'd their Sense and Reason and shew them cleerly that to Bishops only belongs the Office of Ordination Nor is it strange that Christ hath left this Power with the Angels only of his Church since this laying on of hands is no Naked or Empty Solemnity but the Real conveyance of that Commission from the Holy Ghost Which brings me to The third particular to be handled which is by way of Deduction the Joynt concurrence of the Internal with the External Commission or the certain effect of this Imposition of hands The giving of the Holy Ghost Of which briefly You read before that God hath solemnly engaged himself to his Church to accompany their outward Donation with the Gift of his Holy Spirit in as much as he directed and commanded his Apostles to leave us this pattern of Ordination which is as it were an Ecclesiastical Procreation and to continue as long as God hath a Church in the world Now that God made good this promise in their own Ordinations it appears in the forecited place at the 20. of this book v. 28. Take heed unto the Flock over which the Holy Ghost hath made you Overseers like an Unction as it were poured forth by Hands Which unless it had reached farther than the Apostles St. Paul had never commanded Titus to Ordain Elders in every City Now whatsoever belonged unto Titus why may not the whole Church lay claim unto it not doubting but that God who always was so Jealous of the least Pollution of the Priests under the darkness of the Law will not leave his Holy Mysteries to be disspensed by common hands for no more they would be if they were not sanctified by the Holy Ghost as well as by the Bishop now in the Light of his Glorious Gospel So that Mr. Calvin hath no reason while he reckons up some of Christs inimitable Actions to put together his saying to Lazarus Lazare veni foràs and his saying to his Disciples Accipite Spiritum Sanctum One of these being a Miracle necessary only at the first Publishing of the Gospel the other an Act of perpetual use in the Church to the worlds end See Calvins Instit the 4. book 19. chap. 29. Sect. Thus I have done with the Doctrine of the first part of my Text namely The Commission Internal from the Holy Ghost and External from the Church I proceed now to the 2. and the last part namely to shew you that the duty of such as are Commissioned by the Holy Ghost and the Church is Preaching and what that Preaching was is or ought to be which is the 4. particular That St. Paul and Parnabas were to Preach the word of God seeing they were Apostles is I suppose denied by none and therefore shall not trouble the Reader with any further Argumentation than two or three places of Scripture whereby to prove that this was their Business Says Jesus to the Disciples St. Matthew 28. verse 18. All power is given unto me in Heaven and in Earth verse 19. Goe ye therefore and teach all Nations c. And verse 20. Teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you St. Mark the 16. verse 15. Go ye into all the World and Preach the Gospel to every creature And in St. Luke the 24. verse 47 c. you may find somewhat to the same purpose that they were to do so and here in my text as well as in other places we find they did so from this time forward to the day of their death The Jewish High-Priest was call'd the Messenger or Angel of the Lord of Hosts namely because he executed Gods commands in giving of the Law to the People and teaching them what they should do Mal. the 2. v. the 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Diodorus Siculus hath it And thus under the New Testament too such as are to dispense the Word and Sacraments are called and therefore called Messengers of God or The Churches Angels For look what the duty of an Ambassador or Messenger upon Earth of an Earthly Potentate is the same is the Business of the Ministers of God viz. to declare his Will and to treat about matters of concernment which is done as by other ways so by this too of Preaching Which what it was then and what it is or ought to be now comes next to be discours'd of The Preaching then and indeed such it ought to be Now was the declaration of the Gospel of Christ or the glad tidings of Salvation whereby men were secured of eternal happiness upon condition of Repentance from dead works and a stedfast Faith in all Gods Attributes and wheresoever there is defect as there is
St. Chrysostom who was as great and as golden a Preacher as ever spake with Tongue yet his Writings tell us that it grieved his very soul to see men Flock and Crowd more to hear his Pulpit Discourses than they did to hear the Scriptures Read in time of Divine Service a Fault too common in this our age I shall quote you his own words make the best you can of them where he tells you that All things that are necessary to Salvation are plain and obvious to the eyes cleerly layed down in the Scriptures so that reading is sufficient to convey the knowledge of them to us and as for other things it is sufficient that they are not Necessary and that it is mens Curiosity or Slothfulness I may add their Invincible Ignorance that makes them so greedy of so much Pulpit Preaching The good Fathers words are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If you look into the Council of Vase you will find that the Fathers of that Council say The Priests being absent or troubled with Infirmity do Preach by their Deputies who are appointed in their stead to read the Homilies Lector personat verbà sublimia saith St. Cyprian Evangelium Christi legit à fratribus conspicitur cum gaudio fraternitatis auditur The fourth Council of Toledo calls the usual Reading of the Gospel Preaching And I meet with the same Opinion and expression divers times in Rupertus and Isidore in their Pooks de Officiis divinis Ecclesiasticis Isid lib. 1. chap. 10. Rupert lib. 1. ch 12 13. But if these authorities be not sufficient hear what the Scriptures themselves doe say Deuteron 31. v. 13. Ye shall Read this Law before all Israel that ye may learn to Fear the Lord. Blessed is he that Reads the Words of this Prophecy saith St. John and they that Hear and keep those things which are Written therein Revel 1. ver 3. and Acts 15. ver 21. Moses of old time hath them that Preach him in that he was Read or being Read every Sabbath day And surely good reason there is that the Scriptures and the Reading thereof should be preferr'd before that thing we call Preaching in the Pulpit For the One is the Immediate word of God who is Infallible the Holy Ghost did Preach it The Other are the words of a Mortal Red Earth who knows not the thousand part of what he is ignorant Humanum est errare Our Sermons are no farther pious and religious than that they are derived from the salutary Fountains of Holy Scripture They never were confirmed by Miracles from Heaven nor shall they be as the Scriptures have been And then for the Matter delivered and the Manner of the Delivery how Poor and Jejune and Shallow will the best shapen Words and Narratives of the best Rhetoricians Orators Poets or Historians appear when compared with the sacred Oracles of God Would you have the Efficacy of Preaching to consist in Derivation from Antiquity in the substance of Matter in Appositeness of Sentences in Elegancy of Style Evidence of things in validity of Proofs in the Authority of the Author and the Power it hath to effect that end for which it was ordain'd Take up the Scriptures then and fall to Reading and Frequent the Temple where it will be Preach'd i. e. Read unto you and the Lord give you a good and a right understanding By searching the Scriptures we look for life so said our Blessed Saviour They have Moses and the Prophets let them hear them For These things are written that ye might beleeve in him i. e. Christ and that Beleeving ye might have life through his name You know who said it Cursed is he that Adds or Diminishes I only say The bringing in of so many Sermons into the Church was the thrusting out of the Bible not long since The Church both can and doth Preach without Sermons namely when by her carefull order the books of Holy Writ are solemnly Read And truly for ought I know as the Learned Mr. Thornedike in his Just Weights and Measures page 101. says and most wise men believe they that never heard many Sermons may have heard more and better Preaching than hundreds and thousands of Sermons dangerous if not destructive to Salvation a thing which experience proves more than possible can furnish them who shall do nothing else but run from Sermon to Sermon I grant it was a just complaint at the Reformation that the People were not taught their duty But I do not grant either that they cannot be taught their Duty without two Sermons every Lords Day or that they are like to be taught their Duty by two sermons every Lords day It is not possible to have men for all Churches fit to preach twice a day to the edifying of the People It will never be possible to maintain their Preaching to be such as may be accounted an Office of Gods service Thus He and consequently not a Discharge of the Holy Ghosts and the Churches Commission so I. But you may read more concerning this point in the 5 book of the Judicious Mr. Hooker Thus I have done with the Explication of the parts or Doctrines deducible from the Text. Let us now look upon them in the Use of them and from the Four particulars named we shall receive especially Four Cautions towards the better performance of our Duty in order to the sacred charge undertaken One for the Bishop three for the Priests First From the Grant of our Commission from the Holy Ghost Not to dare to enter upon this Employment except we find our selves in some measure fit for the discharge of it Second From the Grant of our Commission from the Church Not to forget what Obedience we owe to our Spiritual Fathers in God Third From the efficacy of Imposition of Holy Hands towards the conferring of the Holy Ghost That Bishops use all possible care as they shall one day answer it not only for themselves but for all those whom they may by their own neglect or theirs whom they intrust for them suffer to run upon their own Perdition not to dispense this sacred Gift of the Holy Ghost but to the Glory of God and the Improvement and Benefit of the Church And lastly From their careful applying themselves to the Execution of their charge in Preaching the word That we prove diligent followers of so good an Example Each of these are very Weighty and might be very worthy Consideration I shall but touch upon each of them as far as is necessary and so conclude For to say true if the First and the Last only were well observ'd the Rest might be Spared Were All that come for Holy Orders fit for the Execution of their charge they would be better acquainted with their Duty to the Church than to smother or to spurn at her Commands and were all both Able and Likely to be Diligent in the use of their Abilities afterwards the Bishops choice would be made to his