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B20727 The keyes of the kingdom of heaven and power thereof according to the word of God / by Mr. Iohn Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1644 (1644) Wing C6437 60,953 71

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Church discerns the same and hath no just exception against it but condescendeth thereto it is a further act of the Elders power to give sentence against the offender Both these acts of power in the Ministers of the Gospel are foretold by Ezekiel Chap. 44.23 24. They shall teach my people the difference between holy and prophane and cause them to discerne between the uncleane and the cleane And in controversie they shall stand in judgement and they shall judge it according to my judgement c. 8. The Elders have power to dismisse the Church with a blessing in the name of the Lord Num. 6.23 to 26. Heb. 7.7 9. The Elders have received power to charge any of the people in private that none of them live either inordinately without a calling or idlely in their calling or scandalously in any sort 2 Thes 3.6 ver 8 10 11 12. The Apostles command argueth a power in the Elders to charge these duties upon the people effectually 10. What power belongeth to the Elders in a Synod is more fitly to be spoken to in the Chapter of Synods 11. In case the Church should fall away to blasphemy against Christ and obstinate rejection and persecution of the way of grace and either no Synod to be hoped for or no helpe by a Synod the Elders have power to withdraw or separate the Disciples from them and to carry away the Ordinances with them and therewithall sadly to denounce the just judgement of God against them Act. 19.9 Exod. 33.7 Mark 6.11 Luk. 10 11. Act. 13.46 Obj. But if Elders have all this power to exercise all these acts of Rule partly over the private members partly over the whole Church how are they then called the servants of the Church 2 Cor. 4.5 Answ The Elders to be both servants and Rulers of the Church may both of them stand well together For their rule is not lordly as if they ruled of themselves or for themselves but stewardly and ministeriall as ruling the Church from Christ and also from their call and withall ruling the Church for Christ and for the Church even for their spirituall everlasting good A Queene may call her servants her mariners to pilot and conduct her over the Sea to such an Haven yet they being called by her to such an office shee must not rule them in steering their course but must submit her selfe to be ruled by them till they have brought her to her desired Haven So is the case between the Church and her Elders CHAP. VI. Of the Power and Authoritie given to Synods SYnods wee acknowledge being rightly ordered as an Ordinance of Christ Of their Assembly wee find three just causes in Scripture 1. When a Church wanting light or peace at home desireth the counsell and helpe of other Churches few or moe Thus the Church of Antioch being annoyed with corrupt teachers who darkned the light of the truth and bred no small dissension amongst them in the Church they sent Paul and Barnabas and other messengers unto the Apostles and Elders at Hierusalem for the establishment of Truth and Peace In joyning the Elders to the Apostles and that doubtlesse by the advise of Paul and Barnabas it argueth that they sent not to the Apostles as extraordinary and infallible and authenticall Oracles of God for then what need the advise and helpe of Elders but as wise and holy guides of the Church who might not onely relieve them by some wise counsell and holy order but also set a Precedent to succeeding ages how errours and dissensions in Churches might be removed and healed And the course which the Apostles and Elders tooke for clearing the matter was not by publishing the counsell of God with Apostolick authoritie from immediate revelation but by searching out the truth in an ordinary way of free disputation Act. 15. v. 7. which is as fit a course for imitation in after ages as it was seasonable for practice then 2. Just consequence from Scripture giveth us another ground for the assembly of many churches or of their messengers into a Synod when any church lyeth under scandall through corruption in doctrine and practice and will not be healed by more private advertisements of their own members or of their neighbour Ministers or Brethren For there is a brotherly communion as between the members of the same church so between the churches We have a little sister saith one church to another Cant. 8.8 therefore churches have a brotherly communion amongst themselves Look then as one brother being offended with another and not able to heal him by the mouth of two or three brethren privately it behooveth him to carry it to the whole church so by proportion if one church see matter of offence in another and be not able to heal it in a more private way it will hehove them to procure the Assembly of many churches that the offence may be orderly heard and judged and removed 3. It may so fall out that the state of all the churches in the countrey may be corrupted and beginning to discern their corruption may desire the concurse and counsell of one another for a speedy and safe and generall reformation And then so meeting and conferring together may renew their covenant with God and conclude and determine upon a course that may tend to the publike healing and salvation of them all This was a frequent practice in the old Testament in the time of Asa 2 Cron. 15.10 to 15. in the time of Hezekiah 2 Chron. 29.4 to 19. In the time of Josiah 2 Chron. 34.29 to 33. and in the time of Ezra Ezra 10.1 to 5. These and the like examples were not peculiar to the Israelites as one intire nationall church For in that respect they appealed from every Synagogue and Court in Israel to the nationall high Priest and Court at Jerusalem as being all of them subordinate thereunto and therefore that precedent is usually waved by our best Divines as not appliable to Christian churches but these examples hold forth no superiority in one church or court over another but all of them in an equall manner give advice in common and take one common course for redresse of all And therefore such examples are fit precedents for churches of equall power within themselves to assemble togegether and take order with one accord for the reformation of them all Now a Synod being assembled three questions arise about their power 1. What is that power they have received 2. How far the fraternity concurreth with the Presbyterie in it the brotherhood with the Eldership 3. Whether the power they have recieved reacheth to the injoyning of things both in their nature and in their use indifferent For the first we dare not say that their power reacheth no farther then giving counsell for such as their ends be for which according to God they do assemble such is the power given them of God as may attain those ends As they meet to minister light
the sins of these Churches But we see neither is Pergamus blamed for tolerating Jezabel nor Thyatira for tolerating Balaam nor Smyrna for tolerating either Indeed what Christ writeth to any one Church his Spirit calleth all the Churches to hearken unto and so he doth our Churches also at this day not because he blamed them for the toleration of sins in other Churches but because he would have them beware of the like remissenesse in tolerating the like offences amongst themselves and also would provoke them to observe notorious offences amongst their Sister-Churches and with brotherly love and faithfulnesse to admonish them thereof It is an unsound body that wanteth strength to purge out his own vicious and malignant humours And every Church of a particular congregation being a bodie even a body of Christ in it self it were not for the honour of Christ nor of his body if when it were in a sound and athletick constitution it should not have power to purge it self of its own superfluous and noysome humors IV. Proposition In case a particular Church be disturbed with error or scandall and the same maintained by a faction amongst them Now a Synod of Churches or of their messengers is the first subject of that power and authoritie whereby error is judicially convinced and condemned the truth searched out and determined and the way of truth and peace declared and imposed upon the Churches The truth of this Proposition may appear by two Arguments 1. Argum. From the want of power in such a particular church to passe a binding sentence where error or scandall is maintained by a faction For the promise of binding and loosing which is made to a particular church Mat. 18.18 is not given to the church when it is leavened with error and variance It is a received maxime Clavis errans non ligat and it is as true Ecclesia litigans not ligat And the ground of both ariseth from the estate of the Church to which the promise of binding and loosing is made Mat. 18.17 18. which though it be a particular church as hath been shewed yet it is a Church AGREEING together in the name of Christ Mat. 18.19 20. If there want agreement amongst them the promise of binding and loosing is not given to them or if they should agree and yet agree in an error or in a scandall they do not then agree in the name of Christ For to meet in the name of Christ implyeth they meet not only by his command and authority but also that they proceed according to his Lawes and Will and that to his service and glory If then the church or a considerable part of it fall into error through ignorance or into faction by variance they cannot expect the presence of Christ with them according to his promise to passe a binding sentence And then as they fall under the conviction and admonition of any other sister church in a way of brotherly love by vertue of communion of churches so their errors and variance and whatsoever scandals else do accompany the same they are justly subject to the condemnation of a Synod of churches 2. A second Argument to prove that a Synod is the first subject of power to determine and judge errors and variances in particular churches is taken from the pattern set before us in that case Act. 15.1 to 28. when certain false Teachers having taught in the church of Antioch a necessity of circumcision to salvation and having gotten a faction to take part with them as appeareth by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Paul and Barnabas against them the church did not determine the case themselves but referred the whole matter to the Apostles and Elders at Jerusalem Act. 15.1 2. Not to the Apostles alone but to the Apostles and Elders The Apostles were as the Elders and Rulers of all churches and the Elders there were not a few the Believers in Jerusalem being many thousands Neither did the Apostles determine the matter as hath been said by Apostolicall authority from immediate revelation but they assembled together with the Elders to consider of the matter v. 6. and a multitude of Brethren together with them v. 12.22 23. and after searching out the cause by an ordinary means of disputation v. 7. Peter cleered it by the witnesse of the Spirit to his Ministery in Cornelius his family Paul and Barnabas by the like effect of their Ministerie among the Gentiles ● Iames confirmed the same by the testimony of the Prophets wherewith the whole Synod being satisfied they determine of a judiciall sentence and of a way to publish it by letters and messengers in which they censure the false Teachers as troublers of their Church and subverters of their soules they reject the imposition of circumcision as a yoak which neither they nor their fathers were able to beare they impose upon the churches none but some necessary observations and them by way of that authority which the Lord had given them v. 28. Which pattern cleerly sheweth us to whom the key of authority is committed when there groweth offence and difference in a church Look as in the case of the offence of a faithfull brother persisted in the matter is at last judged and determined in a church which is a Congregation of the faithfull so in the case of the offence of the church or congregation the matter is at last judged in a congregation of churches a Church of churches for what is a Synod else but a Church of churches Now from all these former Propositions which tend to cleare the first subject of the power of the keys it may be easie to deduce certain corollaries from thence tending to clear a parallel Question to this to wit In what sense it may and ought to be admitted that a church of a particular congregation is independent in the use of the power of the keys and in what sense not For in what sense the Church of a particular congregation is the first subject of the power of the keys in the same sense it is independent and in none other We taking the first subject and the independent subject to be all one 1. Corollary The Church is not independent on Christ but dependent on him for all church-power The Reason is plain because he is the first subject of all church-power by way of soveraigne eminency as hath been said And therefore the church and all the Officers thereof yea and a Synod of churches is dependent upon him for all ministeriall church-power Ministery is dependent upon soveraigntie yea the more dependent they be upon Christ in all the exercise of their church-power the more powerfull is all their power in all their adminstrations 2. Corollary The first subject of the ministeriall power of the keys though it be independent in respect of derivation of power from the power of the sword to the performance of any spirituall administration yet it is subject to the