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A90276 Of schisme the true nature of it discovered and considered, with reference to the present differences in religion. / By John Owen D.D. Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1657 (1657) Wing O780; Thomason E1664_2; ESTC R203088 121,002 281

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a new Creed invented new wayes of worship given a whole summe and system of their own altogether alien frō the Word of God without an open disclaiming of that word which in innumerable places beares testimony of its own perfection and fulnesse 3. Contrary to common Honesty the first principles of Reason with violence to the evident dictates of the Law of nature they will in confidence of these principles have the word sentence of a Pope though a beast a witch a Conjurer as by their own confession many of them have been to be implicite●y submitted to in about things which he neither knoweth nor loveth nor careth for being yet such in themselves as immediately and directly concerne the everlasting condition of the soules of men And this is our second returne to their pretence of being the Catholick Church to which I adde 3. That their plea is so far from truth that they are and they only the Catholick Church that indeed they belong not to it because they keep not the Vnity of the faith which is required to constitute any person whatever a member of that Church but faile in all the conditions of it For 1. To proceed by way of instance they doe not professe nor believe a Justification distinct from Sanctification and acceptance thereof the Doctrine whereof is of absolu●e indispensable necessity to the preservation of the Vnity of the Faith and so faile in the first condition of professing all necessary Truths I know what they say of Justification what they have determined concerning it in the Councell of Trent what they dispute about it in their books of Controversies But I deny that which they contend for to be a Justification so that they doe not deny only Justification by Faith but positively over and above the infusion of Grace and the acceptance of the obedience thence arising that there is any Justification at all consisting in the free and full absolution of a sinner on the account of Christ 2. They discover principles corrupt and depraved utterly inconsistent with those truths and the receiving of them which in generall by owning the Scriptures they doe professe Herein to passe by the principles of Atheisme wickednesse and profannesse that effectually worke and manifest themselves in the generality of their Priests People that of self ●ighteousnes that is in the best of their Devotionists is utterly inconsistent with the whole Doctrine of the Gospell and all saving Truths concerning the mediation of Jesus Christ therein conteined 3. That in their Doctrine of the Popes supremacy of merits satisfaction the masse the worshipping of Images they adde such things to their profession as enervate the efficacy of all the saving truths they doe professe and so faile in the third condition This hath so abundantly been manifested by others that I shall not need to adde any thing to give the charge of it upon them any farther evidence or demonstration Thus it is unhappily fallen out with these men that what of all men they most pretend unto that of all men they have the least int●erest in A●haeneus tells us of one Thros●●aus an A●henian who being phrenetically distempered whatever ships came into the Pyraeum he looked on them and thought them his own and rejoyced as the Master of so great wealth when he was not the owner of so much as a boate such a distemper of pride and folly hath in the like manner ceased on these persons with whom we have to doe that where ever in Scripture they meet with the name Church presently as though they were intended by it they rejoyce in the priviledges of it when their concernment lyes not at all therein To close this whole discourse I shall bring the grand Argument of the Romanists with whom I shall now in this Treatise have little more to doe wherewith they make such a noise in the world to an ●ssue Of the many formes and shapes whereinto by them it is cast this seems to be the most perspicuously expressive of their intention Voluntarily to forsake the communion of the Church of Christ is Schisme and they that doe so are guilty of it You have voluntarily forsaken the communion of the Church of Christ Therefore You are guilty of the sinne of Schisme I have purposely omitted the interposing of the terme Catholick that the reason of the Argument might runne to its length for upon the taking in of that terme we have nothing to doe but only to deny the Minor Proposition seeing the Roman Church be it what it will is not the Church Catholick but as it is without that limitation called the Church of Christ indefinitely it leaves place for a farther and fuller Answer To this by way of inference they adde that Schisme as it is declared by S. Austin and S Thomas of Aquin being so great and damnable a sinne and whereas it is plain● that out of the Church which as Peter says is as Noahs Arke 1 Pet. 3. 20 21. there is no salvation it is cleare you will be damned This is the summe of their plea. Now as for the forementioned Argument some of our Divines answer to the Minor Prop. and that both as to the tearmes of voluntary forsaking and that also of the Communion of the Church For the first they say they did not voluntarily forsake the communion of the Church that then was but being necessitated by the command of God to reforme themselves in sundry things they were driven out by bell book and Candle cursed out killed out driven out by all manner of violence Ecclesiasticall and Civill which is a strange way of mens becoming Schismatick 2. That they forsook not the communion of the Church but the Corruptions of it or the communion of it in its corruption not in other things wherein it was Lawfull to continue communion with it To give strength to this Answer they farther adde that though they grant the Church of Rome to have been at the time of the first separation a true Church of Christ yet they deny it to be Catholick Church or only visible Church then in the World the Churches in the East claiming that title by as good a right as shee So they Others principally answer to the Major Prop. and tell you that separation is either causeles or upon just ground and cause that t is a causeles separation only from the Church of Christ that is Schisme that there can be no cause of Schisme for if there be a cause of Schisme materially it ceaseth to be Schisme formally and so to strengthen their answer in Hypothesi they fall upon the Idolatrys Heresies Tyranny and Apostacy of the Church of Rome as just causes of Separation from her nor will their plea be shaken to eternity so that being true and popular understood by the meanest though it contain not the whole Truth I shall not in the least impaire it For them who
have found out new ways of justifying our separation from Rome on principles of limiting the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome to a peculiar Patriarchat and granting a power to Kings or Nations to erect a Patriarchate or Metropolitan within their own Territories and the like the Protestant cause is not concerned in their Plea the whole of it on both hands being forraigne to the Scripture relating mostly to humane constitutions wherein they may have liberty to exercise their Witts and Abilities Not receding from what hath by others solidly been pleaded on the Answers above mentioned in answer to the principles I have hitherto evinced I shall proceed to give my account of the Argument proposed That we mistake not I only premise that I take Schisme in this Argument in the notion and sense of the Scripture precisely wherein alone it will reach the Consciences and bear the weight of inferring damnation from it 1. Then I wholly deny the Major Prop. as utterly false in what sense soever that expression True Church of Christ is taken Take it for the Catholick Church of Christ I deny that any one who is once a true member of it can utterly forsake its communion no living member of that body of Christ can perish and on supposition it could doe so it would be madnesse to call that crime Schisme nor is this a meer deniall of the Assertion but such as is attended with an invincible Truth for its maintenance Take it for the generall visible Church of Christ the voluntary forsaking of its communion which consists in the profession of the same faith is not Schisme but Apostacy and the thing it selfe is to be removed from the question in hand And as for Apostates from the faith of the Gospell we question not their damnation it sleepeth not who ever call'd a Christian that turned Jew or Mahumetan a Schismatick Take it for a particular Church of Christ I deny 1. That Separation from a particular Church as such as meerly separation is Schisme or ought to be so esteemed though perhaps such separation may proceed from Schisme and be also attended with other evills 2. That however separation upon jus● cause and ground from any Church is no Schisme This is granted by all Persons living Schisme is causelesse say all men however concerned And herein is a truth uncontroulable Separation upon just cause is a duty and therefore cannot be Schisme which is alwayes a sinne Now there are 500 things in the Church of Rome whereof every one grafted as they are there into the stock principle of imposition on the practice and confession of men is a sufficient cause of separation from any particular Church in the world yea from all of them one after another should they all consent unto the same thing impose it in the same manner if therebe any Truth in that Maxime It is better to obey God then man 2 I wholy deny the Minor Proposition also if spoken in reference to the Church of Rome Though I willingly acknowledge our separation to be voluntary from them no more being done then I would doe over againe this day God assisting me were I called unto it But separation in the sense contended about must be from some s●ate and condition of Christs Institution from communion with a Church which we held by his appointment otherwise it will not be pleaded that it is a Schisme at least not in a Gospell sense Now though our Forefathers in the faith we professe lived in sub ection to the Pope of Rome or his subordinate engines yet they were not so subject to them in any way or state instituted by Christ so that the relinquishment of that State can possibly be no such separation as to be termed Schisme For I wholy deny that the Papacy exercising its power in its supreame and subordinate Officers which with them is their Church is a Church at all of Christs appointment or any such thing And when they prove it is so I will be of it So that when our Forefathers withdrew their neck from his Tyrannicall yoke and forsook the practice of his abominations in the worship of God they forsook no Church of Christs institution they relinquished no communion of Christs appointment A man may possibly forsake Babylon and yet not forsake Sion For the Aggravations of the sinne of Schisme from some Ancient Writer● Austin and Optatus men interested in the contests about it Leo and Innocent gaining by the notion of it then growing in the World Thomas Aquinas and such vassalls of the Papacy we are not concerned in them what the Lord speaks of it that we judge concerning it It is true of the Catholic● Church alwaies that out of it no salvation it being the Society of them that shall be saved and of the visible Church in generall in some sense and cases Seeing with the heart man believeth to Righteousnesse and with the mouth confession is made unto Salvation But of a particular Church in no sense unlesse that of contempt of a known duty and to imagine Peter to speak of any such thing is a fancy The consequence of this devesting the Roman Synogogue of the priviledges of a true Church in any sense arising in the thoughts of some to a denyall of that ministry which we have at this day in England must by the way a little be considered For my part be it spoken without offence If any man hath nothing to plead for his ministry but meerly that successive Ordination which he hath received through the Church of Rome I cannot see a stable bottome of owning him so to be I do not say if he will plead nothing ●lse but if he hath nothing else to plead He may have that which indeed constitutes him a Minister though he will not own● that so it doth Nor doth it come here into enquiry whether there were not a true Ministry in some all along under the Papacy distinct from it as were the thousands in Israell in the days of Elijah when in the ten Tribes as to the publick worship there was no true Ministry at all Nor is it said that any have their Ministry from Rome a● though the Office which is an Ordinance of Christ was instituted by Antichrist But the question is whether this be a sufficient and good basis and foundation of any mans interest in the office of the Ministry that he hath received Ordination in a succession through the administration of not the woman flying into the Wildernesse under the persecution of Antichrist not of the two witnesses prophesying all along under the Roman Apostacy not from them to whom we succeed in doctrine as the Waldenses but the Beast it selfe the persecuting Church of Rome the Pope and his adherents who were certainly Administrators of the Ordination pleaded for So that in doctrine we should succeed the persecuted Woman and in Office the perse●uting Beast I shall not plead this at
thus related In quem alium crediderunt Gentes universae nisi in ipsum qui jam venit Cui enim alii Gentes crediderunt Parthi Medi Elamitae qui habitant Mesopotamiam Armeniam Phrygiam immorantes Aegyptum regionem Africae quae est trans Cyrenem Romani incolae tunt in Hierusalem Iudei Gentes caeterae ut jam Getulonum varietates Maurorum nulli fines Hispanarum omnes termini Galliarum diversae Nationes Britanorum inaccessa loca Romanis Christo vero subdita Sarmatarum Dacorum Germanorum Seytharum abditarum multarum Gentium Provinciarum Ins●larum multarum nobis ignotarum quae enumerare non possumus in quibus omnibus locis Christi nomen qui jam venit regna● ad Iudaeos Some have sayd and doe yet say that the Church in this sence is a Visible Organicall Politicall body That its visible is confessed both its matter and farme bespeakes visibility as an unseparable Adjunct of its subsisting That it is a body also in the generall sence wherein that word is used or a society of men embodyed by the profession of the same Faith is also granted Organicall in this businesse is an ambiguous terme The use of it is plainly Metaphoricall taken from the members instruments and Organs of a naturall body Because Paul hath said that in one body there are many members as eyes feet hands yet the body is but one so is the Church It hath been usually said that the Church is an Organicall body What Church Paul speakes of in that place is not evident but what he alludes unto is The difference he speaks of in the individuall persons of the Church is not in respect of Office Power and Authority but gifts or graces and usefullnesse on that account such an Organical body we confesse the Church Catholick visible to be in it are persons indued with varietie of gifts and graces for the benefit and ornament of the whole An Organicall Politicall body is a thing of another nature a Politick body or Common-wealth is a Society of a certain portion of mankind united under some forme of Rule or government whose supreame and subordinate administration is committed to severall persons according to the Tenor of such Laws and Customes as that Society hath or doth consent unto This also is said to be Organicall on a Metaphoricall account because the Officers and Members that are in it and over it hold proportion to the more noble parts of the body Kings are said to be Heads Councellors 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the constitution of such a Common-wealth dist●●ctly as such it is required that the whole hath the same Laws but not that only Two Nations most distinct and different on the account of other ends and interests may yet have the same individuall Laws and customes for the distribution of Justice and preservation of peace among themselves An entire forme of Regiment and government peculiar thereunto is required for the constitution of a distinct Politicall Body In this sence we denie the Church whereof we speake to be an Organicall Politicall Body as not having indeed any of the requisites thereunto Not one Law of Order the same individuall Morall Law or Law for Morall duties it hath but a Law given to the whole as such for Order Polity Rule it hath not All the members of it are obliged to the same Law of Order and Polity in their severall Societies But the whole as such hath no such Law it hath no such head or Governour as such Nor will it suffice to say that Christ is its head for if as a visible Politicall body ●t hath a Politicall Head that Head also must be visible The Commonweal of the Jews was a Politicall body of this God was the Head and King hence their Historian saith their Government was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and when they would choose a King God said they rejected him who was their politicall Head to whom a sickle was paid yearly as Tribute called the sickle of the Sanctuary Now they rejected him not by asking a King simply but a King after the manner of the Nations yet that it might be a visible Politicall Body it required a visible supreame Magistrate to the whole●… which when there was none all Polity was dissolved amongst them Judg. 21. Christ is the head of every particular Church its Lawgiver and Ruler but yet to make a Church a visible Organicall Politicall Body it 's required that it hath visible Governours Rulers and of the whole Nor can it be said that it is a Politicall body that hath a supreame Government Order in it as it is made up and Constituted of particular Churches and that in the Representatives convened doth the supream visible power of it consist for such a Convention in the judgement of all ought to be Extraordinary only in ours is utterly impossible and de facto was not among the Churches for 300 years yea never besides the visible Catholick Church is not made up of particular Churches as such for if so then no man can be member of it but by vertue of his being a Member of some visible Church which is false profession of the Truth as before stated is the formall Reason and Cause of any Persons Relation to the Church visible which he hath thereby whether he belong to any particular Church or no. Let it be evidenced that the Universall Church whereof we speake hath any Law or Rule of Order and Government as such given unto it or that it is in possibility as such to put any such Law or Rule into execution that it hath any homogeneous Ruler or Rulers that have the care of the Administration of the Rule and Government of the whole as such committed to him or them by Jesus Christ that as it hath the same common spirituall and known Orders and Interests and the same Specificall Ecclesiasticall Rule given to all its Members so it hath the same Politicall interest Order and Conversation as such or that it hath any one cause constitutive of a Politicall Body whereby it is such or hath at all the forme of an Instituted Church or is capable of any such forme and they that doe so shall be farther attended to CHAP. VI. Romanists charge of Schisme on the account of separation from the Church Catholick proposed to consideration The importance of this plea on both sides The summe of their charge The Church of Rome not the Church Catholick Not a Church in any sence Of Antichrist in the Temple The Catholick Church how intrusted with interpretation of Scripture Of intepretation of Scripture by Tradition The interest of the Romane Church herein discharged All necessary truths believed by Protestants No contrary principle by them manifested Profane persons no members of the Church Catholick Of the late Romane Proselyts Of the Donatists Their businesse reported and case stated The Present
large professedly disclaiming all thoughts of rejecting those Ministers as Papall and Antichristian who yet adhere to this Ordination being many of them eminently gifted of God to dispense the word and submitted unto by his people in the Administration of the Ordinances and are right worthy Ministers of the Gospell of Christ But I shall only remarke some thing on the plea that is insisted on by them who would if I mistake not keep up in this particular what God would have pull'd downe They aske us why not Ordination from the Church of Rome as well as the Scripture In which enquiry I am sorry that some doe still continue We are so farre from having the Scripture from the Church of Rome by any Authority of it as such that it is one cause of daily praising God that by his providence he kept them from being either corrupted or destroyed by them It i● true the Bible was kept among the people that lived in those parts of the World where the Pope prevailed so was the Old Testament by the Jews the whole by the Easterne Christians By none so corrupted as by those of the Papall Territorie God forbid we should say we ●ad the Scriptures from the Church of Rome as such if we had why doe we not keep them as she delivered them to us in the vulgar Translation with the Apochryphall additions The Ordination pleaded for is from the Authority of the Church of Rome as such The Scriptures were by the providence of God preserved under the Papacy for the use of his People and had they been found by chance as it were like the Law of old they had been the same to us that now they are So that of these things there is not the same Reason It is also pleaded that the granting true Ordination to the Church of Rome doth not prove that to be a true Church This I professe I underst●and not they who ordained had no power so to doe but as they were Officers of that Church as such they did it and if others had ordained who were not Officers of that Church all would confesse that Action to be null But they who will not be contented that Christ hath appointed the Office of the Ministry to be continued in his Churches that he continues to dispense his gifts of the Spirit for the Execution of that Office when men are called thereunto that he prepares the hearts of his people to desire and submit unto them in the Lord that as to the manner of entrance upon the worke they may have it according to the minde of Christ to the utmost in all circumstances so soon as his Churches are shaken out of the dust of Babylon with his Glory shining on them and the Tabernacle of God is thereby once more placed with men shall have leave for me to derive their interest in the ministry through that darke passage wherein I cannot see one step before me if they are otherwise qualified and accepted as above I shall ever pay them that honour which is done to Elders labouring in the word and doctrine CHAP. VII Of a particular Church its nature Frequently mentioned in Scripture Particular Congregations acknowledged the only Churches of the first Institution What ensued on the multiplication of Churches Some things premised to clear the unity of the Church in this sence Every Believer ordinarily obliged to joyne himselfe to some particular Church Many things in instituted worship answering a naturall principle Perpetuity of the Church in this sence True Churches at first planted in England How they ceased so to be How Churches may be again reerected Of the Vnion of a particular Church in its selfe Foundation of that Vnion twofold The Vnion its selfe Of the communion of particular Churchers one with another Our concernment in this Vnion I now descend to the last consideration of a Church in the most usuall Acceptation of that name in the New Testament that is of a particular instituted Church A Church in this sence I take to be a Society of men called by the word to the obedience of the Faith in Christ and joynt performance of the worship of God in the same individuall Ordinances according to the order by Christ prescribed This generall description of it exhibits its nature so farre as is necessary to cleare the subject of our present disquisition A more accurate definition would only administer farther occasion of contesting about things not necessary to be determined as to the enquiry in hand Such as this was the Church at Hierusalem that was persecuted Act. 8. 1. The Church whereof Saul made havock v. 3. The Church that was vexed by Herod Act. 12. 1. Such was the Church at Antioch which Assembled together in one place Act. 13. 14. wherein were sundry Prophets Act. 13 1. As that at Hierusalem consisted of Elders and Bretherren Act. 15. 22. The Apostles or some of them being there then present which added no other consideration to that Church then that we are now speaking of Such were those mens Churches wherein Elders were ordained by Pauls appointment Act. 14. 23. As also the Church of Coesarea Act. 18. 22. at Ephesus Act. 20. 14. 28. As was that at Corinth 1 Cor. 1. 2. c. 6. 4. 11. 12. 14. 4 5. 12. 19. 2 Cor. 1 1. And those mentioned Rev. 1. 2 3. All which Paul calls the Churches of the Gentiles Rom. 16. 4. in contradistinction to those of the Jews and calls them indefinitely the Churches of God v. 16. or the Churches of Christ 1 Cor. 7. 17. 2 Cor. 8 18. 19. 23. 2 Thess 1. 4. and in sundry other places Hence we have mention of many Churches in one Country as in Judaea Act. 9. 1. in Asia 1 Cor. 16. 19. in Macedonia 2 Cor. 8. 1. in Galatia Gal. 1. 2. the seven Churches of Asia Rev. 1. 11. and unto 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act 16. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 answers v. 5. in the same Country I suppose that in this description of a particular Church I have not only the consent of them of all sorts with whom I have now to doe as to what remaines of this discourse but aso their acknowledgment that these were the only kinds of Churches of the first Institution The Reverend Authors of the Jus Divinum Ministerii Anglicani p. 2 c. 6. tell us that in the Beginning of Christianity the number of Believers even in the greatest Citys were so few as that they might all meet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in one and the same place And these are called the Church of the City and the Angell of such a City was Congregationall not Diocesan which discourse exhibits that state of a particular Church which is now pleaded for and which shall afterwards be evinced allowing no other no not in the greatest Cityes In a rejoynder to that Treatise so far at the case of Episcopacy is herein concerned by a person well known
latter sence also The plea about Metropoliticall Churches I suppose will be thought very impertinent to what I have now in hand so it shall not at present be insisted on That the state of Churches in after Ages was moulded and framed after the patterne of the civill Goverment of the Roman Empire is granted And that conformity without offence to any be it spoken we take to be a fruit of the working of the mystery of Iniquity But that there was any such order instituted in the Churches of Christ by the Apostles or any instituted by the Authority from the Lord and Ruler is utterly denyed nor is any thing but very uncertaine conjectures from the sayings of men of after Ages produced to attest any such order or constitution When the order spirituality beauty and glory of the Church of Christ shall returne and men obteine a light whereby they are able to discerne a beauty and excellency in the inward more noble spirituall part indeed life and soul of the worship of God these disputes will have an issue Chrysostome sayes indeed that Corinth was the Metropolis of Achaia but in what sence he sayes not the Politicall is granted the Ecclesiasticall not proved nor are we enquiring what was the state of the Churches of Christ in the dayes of Chrysostome but of Paul But to returne If any one now shall say will you conclude because this evill mentioned by the Apostle is Schisme therefore nothing else is so I Answer that having before asserted this to be the chiefe and only seat of the Doctrine of Schisme I am inclinable so to do and this I am resolved of that unlesse any man can prove that something else is termed schisme by some divine writer or blamed on that head of account by the Holy Ghost elsewhere and is expressly reproved a● another crime I will be at Liberty from admitting it so to be But yet for what may hence by a parity of Reason be deduced I shall close with and debate at large as I have professed The Schisme then here described by the Apostle and blamed by him consists in causelesse differences and contentions amongst the members of a particular Church contrary to that of love prudence and forbearance which are required of them to be exercised amongst themselves and towards one another which is also termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 15. 21. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 16. 13. And he is a Schismatick that is guilty of this sinne of Schisme that is who raiseth or entertained or persisteth in such differences nor are these termes used by the Divine writers in any other sence That any men may fall under this guilt it is required 1. That they be members of or belong to some one Church which is soe by the institution and appointment of Jesus Christ And we shall see that there is more required hereunto then the bare being a Believer or a Christian 2. That they either raise or entertaine and persist in causelesse differences with others of that Church more or lesse to the interruption of that Exercise of love in all the fruits of it which ought to be amongst them and the disturbance of the due performance of the duties required of the Church in the worship of God As Clement in the forementioned Epistle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. That these differences be occasioned by and do belong to some things in a remoter or nearer distance appertaining to the worship of God their differences on a Civill account are elsewhere mentioned and reproved 1 Ep. cap. 6. for therein also there was from the then state of things an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 7. This is that Crime which the Apostle rebukes blames condemnes under the name of Schisme and tells them that were guilty of it that they shewed themselves to be carnall or to have indulged to the flesh and the corrupt principle of selfe and their own wills which should have been subdued to the obedience of the Gospell Mens definitions of things are for the most part Arbitrary and loose fitted and suited to their severall apprehensions of Principles and conclusions so that nothing cleare or fixed is generally to be expected from them from the Romanists description of Schisme who violently without the least colour or pretence thrust in the Pope and his Head ship into all that they affirme in Church matters least of all I can allow men that they may extend their definitions of things unto what they apprehend of an alike nature to that which gives rise to the whole disquisition and is the first thing defin'd But at this I must professe my selfe to be somewhat entangled that I could never yet meet with a definition of Schisme that did comprize that was not exclusive of that which alone in the Scripture is affirmed so to be Austins Definition contains the summe of what hath since been insisted on saith He Schisma ni fallor est eadem opinantem eodem ritu utentem solo Congregationis delectari dissidio G●n Faust lib. 20. cap. 3. by dissidium congregationis he intends separation from the Church into a peculiar Congregation a definition directly suited to the cause he had in hand and was pleading against the Donatists Basil in Epist ad Amphiloch Con. 44. distiguisheth between 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and as he makes Schisme to be a division arising from some Church controversies suitable to what those dayes experienced and in the substance true so he tells us that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is when either Presbyters or Bishops or Laicks hold unlawfull meetings Assemblyes or Conventicles which was not long since with us the only Schisme Since those days Schisme in generall hath passed for a causelesse separation from the communion and worship of any true Church of Christ the Catholick Church saith the Papist with a relinquishment of its society as to a joynt celebration of the ordinances of the Gospell how farre this may passe for Schisme and what may be granted in this description of it the processe of our discourse will declare In the mean time I am most certain that a Separation from some Churches true or pretended so to be is commanded in the Scriptures so that the withdrawing from or relinquishment of any Church or society whatever upon the plea of its corruption be it true or false with a mind and resolution to serve God in the due observation of Church institutions according to that light which men have received is no where called Schisme or condemned as a thing of that nature but is a matter that must be tryed out whether it be good or evill by vertue of such generall rules and directions as are given us in the Scriptures for our orderly and blamelesse walking with God in all his wayes As for them who suppose all Church power to be invested in some certain Church Officers originally I meane that
in union and Peace in those Societies wherein they were joyned for the Worship of God were his Endeavours and Exhortations Of these things he is utterly silent Let them who aime to recover themselves into the like state and condition consider his commands exhortations and reproofes Things are now generally otherwise stated which furnisheth men with objections against what hath been spoken to whose removall and farther clearing of the whole matter I shall now addresse my selfe CHAP. III. Objections against the former discourse proposed to consideration Separation from any Church in the Scripture not called Schisme Grounds of such separation Apostacy irregular walking sensuality Of separation on the account of Reformation Of commands for separation No Example of Churches departing from the communion of one another Of the common notion of Schisme and the use made of it Schisme a breach of Vnion That Vnion instituted by Christ THat which lyes obvious to every man against what hath been delivered and which is comprehensive of all the particular objections to which it seemes lyable and obnoxious is that according to this description of Schisme separation of any man or men from a true Church or of one Church from others is not Schisme Seeing that is an evill only amongst the members of one Church whilest they continue so to be which is so contrary to the judgement of the generality of Christians in this businesse that it ought to be rejected as fond and absurd Of what hath been the judgement of most men in former Ages what it is in this what strength there is in an Argument deduced from the consent pretended I am not as yet arrived to the consideration of Nor have I yet manifested what I grant of the Generall notion of Schisme as it may be drawn by way of Analogie or proportion of Reason from what is delivered in the Scripture concerning it I am upon the precise signification of the word and description of the thing as used and given by the Holy Ghost In this sence I deny that there is any relinquishment departure or separation from any Church or Churches mentioned or intimated in the Scripture which is or is called Schisme or agreeth with the description by them given us of that terme Let them that are contrary minded attempt the proof of what they affirme As farre as a negative Proposition is capable of evidence from any thing but the weakenesse of the opposition made unto it that layed down will receive it by the ensuing considerations All blameable departure from any Church or Churches or relinquishment of them mentioned in the Gospell may be reduced to one of these three Heads or Causes 1. Apostacy 2. Irregularity of walking 3. Professed sensuality 1. Apostacy or falling away from the faith of the Gospell and thereupon forsaking the Congregations or Assemblyes for the worship of God in Jesus Christ is mentioned Heb. 10. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not wholy deserting the assembling our selves as is the manner of some A separation from and relinquishment of the Communion of that Church or those Churches with whom men have assembled for the worship of God is the guilt here charged on some by the Apostle Upon what account they so separated themselves is declared v. 26. they sinned willfully after they had received the knowledge of the truth thereby shipping out their necks from the yoke of Christ v. 28. and drawing back to perdition v. 29. that is they departed off to Judaisme I much question whether any one would think fit to call these men Schismaticks or whether we should so judge or so speake of any that in these dayes should forsake our Churches and turne Mahumetans Such a departure makes men Apostates not Schismaticks Of this sort many are mentioned in the Scriptures Nor are they accounted Schismaticks because the lesser crime is swallowed up and drowned in the greater but because their sin is wholly of another nature Of some who withdraw themselves from Church communion at least for a season by their disorderly and irregular walking we have also mention The Apostle calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thes 5. 14. unruly or disorderly persons not abiding in obedience to the order prescribed by Christ in and unto his Churches and sayes they walked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thess 3 6. out of all Church order whom he would have warned and avoided so also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Th. 3 2. persons that abide quietly in no place or station but wandred up down whom whatever their profession be he denies to have faith That there were many of this sort in the Primitive times who through a vaine and slight spirit neglected and fell off from Church Assemblyes when yet they would not openly renounce the faith of Christ is known Of such disorderly persons we have many in our dayes wherein we live whom we charge not with Schisme but vanity folly disobedience to the Precepts of Christ in generall Men also separated themselves from the Churches of Christ upon the account of sensuality that they might freely indulge to their lusts and live in all manner of pleasure all their dayes Jude 19. these are they that separate themselves sensuall having not the spirit Who are these they that turne the grace of God into lasciviousnesse and that deny the Lord God and our Saviour Jesus Christ v. 4. that defile the flesh after the manner of Sodom and Gomorrah v. 7 8. that spoke evill of things they knew not and in things they knew naturally as bruit beasts they corrupted themselves v. 10. Sinning openly like beasts against the light of nature so v. 12 13 16. these saith the Apostle are they that separate themselves men given over to worke all uncleannesse with delight and greedinesse in the face of the Son abusing themselves and justifying their Abominations with a pretence of the grace of God That there is any blameable separation from or relinquishment of any Church or Churches of Christ mentioned in the Scripture but what may be referred to one of those heads I am yet to learne Now whether the men of these Abominations are to be accounted Schismaticks or their crime in separating themselves to be esteemed Schisme it is not hard to judge If on any of these accounts any persons have withdrawn themselves from the Communion of any Church of Christ if they have on any motives of feare or love apostatized from the faith of the Gospell if they doe it by walking disorderly and loosely in their conversations if they give themselves up to sensuality and uncleannesse and so be no more able to beare the society of them whom God hath called to holinesse and purity of life and worship they shall assuredly beare their own burthen But none of these instances are comprehensive of the case inquired after so that for a close of them I say for a man to withdraw or withhold himselfe from the communion externall
the Church-Catholick visible 3. For a particular Church of some place wherein the instituted worship of God in Christ is celebrated according to his minde From the Rise nature of the things themselves doth this distinction of the signification of the word Church arise for whereas the Church is a society of men called out of the world It is evident there is mention of a twofold call in Scripture one effectuall according to the purpose of God Rom. 8. 28. the other only externall The Church must be distinguished according to its answer and obedience to these calls which gives us the two first states and considerations of it And this is confessed by the ordinary glosse ad Rom. 8. Vocatio exterior fit per Praedicatores est communis bonorum malorum interior vero tantum est Electorum And whereas there are Lawes and externall rules for joynt communion given to them that are called which is confessed the necessity of Churches in the last acceptation wherein obedience can alone be yeilded to those Laws is thereby established In the first sence the Church hath as such the properties of perpetuity invisibility infallibility as to all necessary meanes of Salvation attending of it not as notes whereby it may be known either in the whole or any considerable part of it but as certaine Adjuncts of its nature and existence Neither are there any signes of lesse or more certainty whereby the whole may be discerned or known as such though there are of the Individualls whereof it doth consist In the second the Church hath perpetuity visibility infallibility as qualifyed above in a secondary sence namely not as such not as visible and confessing but as comprizing the individualls whereof the Catholick Church doth consist For all that truely believe professe though all that professe doe not truely believe Whether Christ hath had alwayes a Church in the last sence and Acceptation of the word in the world is a most needlesse enquiry nor are we concerned in it any farther then in other matters of fact that are recorded in story though I am apt to believe that although very many in all Ages kept up their station in Relation to the Church in the two former acceptations yet there was in some of them scarce any visible Society of worshippers so far answering the institution of Christ as to render them fit to be owned and joyned withall as a visible particular Church of Christ but yet though the notions of men were generally corrupt the practice of all professours throughout the world whereof so little is recorded at least of them that did best is not rashly to be determined of Nor can our Judgement be censured in this by them who think that when Christ lay in the Grave there was no Believer left but his Mother and that the Church was preserved in that one person So was Bernard minded Tractat. de pass Dom. ego sum vitis s●la per illud triste sabbathum stetit in fide salvata fuit Ecclesia in ipsa sola Of the same minde is Marsilius in Sent. Quaest 20. Art 3. as are also others of that sort of men see Bannes in 2. 2. Thom. Quaest. 1. Art 10. I no way doubt of the perpetuall existence of innumerable Believers in every age and such as made the profession that is absolutely necessary to salvation one way or other though I question a regular association of men for the celebration of instituted worship according to the mind of Christ The 7000 in Israel in the dayes of Elijah were members of the Church of God and yet did not constitute a Church state among the ten Tribes But these things must be farther spoken to I cannot but by the way reminde a learned Person with whom I have formerly occasionally had some debate in print about Episcopacy and the state of the first Churches of a mistake of his which he might have prevented with a little enquiry into the judgement of them whom he undertook to confute at a venture I having said that there was not any ordinary Church Officer instituted in the first times relating to more Churches in his Office or to any other Church then a single particular Congregation He replyes that this is the very same which his memory suggested to him out of the Saints Beliefe printed 12 or 14 yeares since where instead of that Article of the Apostolick Symbole the holy Catholick Church this very Hypothesis was substituted If he really believed that in professing I owned no instituted Church with Officers of one denomination in Scripture beyond a single sence v. 24. saith the Apostle I fill up that Congregation I renounced the Catholick Church or was any way necessitated so to doe I suppose he may by what hath now been expressed be rectifyed in his Apprehension If he was willing only to make use of the advantage wherewith he supposed himselfe accommodated by that expression to presse the perswasion owned in the minds of ignorant men who could not but startle at the noyse of denying the Catholick Church it may passe at the same rate that most of the reports in such discourses are to be allowed at But to proceed In the first sence the word is used Mat. 16. 28. upon this rock will I build my Church and the gates of Hell shall not prevaile against it this is the Church of the Elect redeemed justifyed sanctifyed ones that are so built on Christ and these only and all these are interested in the promise made to the Church as such in any sence but is peculiarly made therein to every one that is truely properly a part member of that Church Who and who only are interested in that promise Christ himselfe declares Joh. 6. 40. Joh. 10 28 29. Joh. 17. 20 24. they that will apply this to the Church in any other sence must know that it is incumbent on them to establish the promise made to it unto every one that is a true member of the Church in that sence which whatever be the sence of the promise I suppose they will find difficult worke of Eph. 5. 25 26 27. Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the word that he might present it to himselfe a Glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing He speakes only of those whom Christ loved antecedently to his dying for them whereof his love to them was the cause who they are is manifest Joh. 10. 15. Joh. 17. 17. And those on whom by his death he accomplished the effects mentioned of washing cleansing and sanctifying bringing them into the Condition promised to the bride the Lambs wife Rev. 19. 8. which is the new Jerusalem Rev. 21. 2. of elected saved ones v. 27. Col. 1. 18. containes an expression of the same light and evidence Christ is the head of the body the
Church not only a governing head to give it Rules and Lawes but as it were a Naturall head unto the body which is influenced by him with a new spirituall life which Bellarmine professeth against as any requisite condition to the members of the Catholick Church which he pleadeth for In that same which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church which assertion is exactly paralell to that of 2 Tim. 2. 10. Therefore I endure all things for the Elects sake that they may obtaine Salvation so that the Elect and the Church are the same persons under severall considerations and therefore even a particular Church on the account of its participation of the nature of the Catholick is called Elect 1 Pet. 5. 13. and so the Church Mat. 16. 18. is expounded by our Saviour himselfe Mat. 22. 24. But to prove at large by a multiplication of Arguments and testimonies that the Catholick Church or Mysticall body of Christ consists of the whole number of the Elect as Redeemed Justifyed Sanctifyed Called Believing and yeilding obedience to Christ throughout the world I speake of it as Militant in any one Age and of them only were as needlessly actum agere as a man can well devise It is done already and that to the purpose uncontroulably terque quaterque And the substance of the doctrine is delivered by Aquinas himselfe p. 3. Q. 8. A. 3. In briefe the summe of the inquiry upon this head is concerning the matter of that Church concerning which such glorious things are spoken in Scripture namely that it is the Spouse the Wife the Bride the Sister the only one of Christ his D●ve undefiled his Temple Elect Redeemed his Sione his Body his new Jerusalem concerning which inquiry the Reader knowes where he may abundanly find satisfaction That the asserting the Catholick Church in this sence is no new Apprehension is known to them who have at all looked backward to what was past before us Omnibus consideratis saith Austin puto me non temere dicere alios ita esse in domo dei ut ips● etiam sint eadem domus Dei quae dicitur aedificari supra petram quae unica columba appellatur quae sponsa pulchra sine macula ruga hortus conclusus fons signatus patens aquae vivae paradisus cum fructu pomorum alios autem ita constat esse in domo ut non pertineant ad compagem domus Sed sicut esse palea dicitur in frumentis de Bapt. lib. 1. cap. 51. who is herein followed by not a few of the Papists hence saith Biel. accipitur etiam Ecclesia pro tota multitudine praedestinatorum in Canon Miss Lec 22. In what sence this Church is invisible was before declared Men elected redeemed justifyed as such are not visible for that which makes them so is not But this hinders not but that they may be so upon other Consideration sometimes to more sometimes to fewer yea they are so alwayes to some Those that are may be seen and when we say they are visible we do not intend that they are actually seen by any that we know but that they may be so Bellarmine gives us a description of this Catholick Church as the name hath of late been used at the pleasure of men and wrested to serve every designe that was needfull to be carryed on to the interest which he was to contend for but in it self perfectly ridiculous He tells us out of Austine that the Church is a living Body wherein is a body and a soule thence saith he the soule is the internall graces of the spirit Faith Hope and Love the body is the externall profession of Faith some are of the soul and body perfectly united to Christ by faith and the profession of it some are of the soule that are not of the body as the Catechumeni which are not as yet admitted to be members of the visible Church but yet are true believers Some saith he are of the body that are not of the soul who having no true grace yet out of hope or temporall feare doe make profession of the faith and these are like the haire nailes and ill humours in an humane body Now saith Bellarmine our definition of a Church comprizeth only this last sort whilst they are under the head the Pope which is all one as if he had defined a man to be a dead creature composed of haire nailes and ill humours under an hat but of the Church in this sence so farre It remaineth then that we enquire what is the Vnion which the Church in this sense hath from the wisdome of its head Jesus Christ That it is one that hath an union with its head and in it selfe is not questioned It is one sheepfold one Body one spouse of Christ his only one as unto him and that it might have onenesse in it selfe with all the fruits of it our Saviour praies Joh. 17. 19 20 21 22 23. the whole of it is described Eph. 4. 15 16. may grow up into him in all things which is the head even Christ from whom the whole body fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every joynt supplieth according to the effectuall working in the measure of every part maketh increase of the body to the edifying it selfe in love And of the same importance is that of the same Apostle Col 2. 19. not holding the head from which all the body by joynts and bands having nourishment ministred and knit together increaseth with the increase of God Now in the union of the Church in every sense there is considerable both the formalis ratio of it whence it is what it is and the way and meanes whereby it exerts it selfe and is usefull and active in communion The first in the Church as now stated consists in its joynt holding the head and growing up into him by vertue of the communication of supplies unto it therefrom for that end purpose That which is the formall Reason and cause of the Union of the members with the Head is the formall Reason and Cause of the Union of the members with themselves The Originall Vnion of the members is in and with the Head and by the same have they union with themselves as one body Now the inhabitation of the same Spirit in him and them is that which makes Christ Personall and his Church to be one Christ mysticall 1 Cor. 12. 12. Peter tells us that we are by the promises made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have communion with it that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is no more but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I cannot easily consent Now it is in the person of the Spirit whereof we are by the promise made partakers he is the Spirit of promise Eph. 1. 13. promised by God to Christ Act. 2. 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
and by him to us Joh. 14. 16. being of old the great promise of the Covenant Is 59. 21. Ezek. 11. 17. cap. 26. 36. Now in the participation of the Divine nature consists the Vnion of the Saints with Christ Ioh. 6. 5. our Saviour tells us that it arises from eating his flesh and drinking his Blood he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him This he expounds v. 63. it is the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth not By the quickning Spirit inhabitation in Christ and Christ in it is intended And the same he manifests in his prayer that his Church may be one in the Father and the Sonne as the Father is in him and he in the Father Ioh. 17. 21. for the Spirit being the Love of the Father and of the Son is vinculum Trinitatis and so here of our Union in some resemblance The unity of members in the body naturall with one head is often chosen to set forth the union of the Church 1 Cor. 12. 12. 1 Cor. 11. 3. Eph 5. 23. Col. 1. 19. now every man can tell that union of the head and members whereby they become all one body that and not another is onenesse of soule whereby the whole is animated which makes the body be it lesse or greater to be one body That which answers hereunto in the mysticall body of Christ is the animation of the whole by his spirit as the Apostle fully 1 Cor. 15. 45. The union between husband and wife is also chosen by the Holy Ghost to illustrate the union between Christ and his Church For this cause shall a man forsake his Father and his Mother and cleave to his Wife and they two shall be one flesh this is a great mystery but I speake concerning Christ and his Church Eph. 5. 31 32. The union between man and wife we have Gen. 2. 24. they be no more twaine but one flesh of Christ and his Church that they are one spirit For he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit 1 Cor. 6. 17. See also another similitude of the same importance Ioh. 15. 5. Rom. 11. 16 17. This I say is the fountain radicall union of the Church Catholick in its selfe with its head and formall reason of it Hence flowes a double consequentiall Vnion that it hath also 1. Of Faith All men united to Christ by the inhabitation of the same Spirit in him and them are by it from and according to the word taught of God Is 54. 13. Ioh. 6. 45. so taught every one of them as to come to Christ v. 46. that is by bilieving by faith They are so taught of God as that they shall certainly have that measure of knowledge and faith which is needfull to bring them to Christ and to God by him And this they have by the unction or Spirit which they have received 1 Ioh. 2. 21 27. accompaning the Word by vertue of Gods Covenant with them Is 59. 29. And hereby are all the members of the Church Catholick however divided in their visible profession by any differences among themselves or differenced by the severall measures of gifts and graces they have received brought to the perfection aymed at to the unity of the Faith to the acknowledgement of the Son of God to a perfect man to the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Eph. 4. 13. Nor was this hidden from some of the Papists themselves Ecclesia sancta corpus est Christi una spiritu vivificata unita fide una sanctificata saith Hugo de Victore de sacram lib. 2. as he had said before in the former Cap. sicut scriptum est qui non habet Spiritum Christi hic non est ejus qui non habet Spiritum Christi non est membrum Christi in corpore uno Spiritus unus nihil in corpore mortuum nihil extra corpus vivum See to the same purpose Enchirid. Concil Colon in Symbol With peculiar reference to the members themselves there is another necessary consequence of the union mentioned and that is the mutuall love of all those united in the head as before towards one another and of every one towards the whole as so united in the head Christ Jesus There is an increase made of the body to the edifying it selfe in love Eph. 4. 16. And so it becomes the bond of perfectnesse to this body of Christ I cannot say that the members or parts of this Church have their union in themselves by Love because they have that with and in Christ whereby they are one in themselves Ioh. 17. 21 23. they are one in God even in Christ where their life is hid Col. 3. 3. but it is the next and immediate principle of that communion which they severally have one with another and the whole body in and with it selfe I say then that the communion which the Catholick Church the mysticall body of Christ hath with and in it selfe springing from the union which it hath in and with Christ and in it selfe thereby consists in love exerting it selfe in inexpressible variety according to the present state of the whole its relation to Christ to Saints and Angells with the conditions and occasions of the members of it respectively 1 Cor. 12. 26 27. What hath been spoken concerning the union and communion of this Church will not I suppose meet with any contradiction Granting that there is such a Church as that we speake of Coetus praedestinatorum credentium the Papists themselves will grant that Christ alone is its head and that its union ariseth from its subjection to him and dependance on him Their modesty makes them contented with constituting the Pope in the roome of Christ as he is as it were a politicall head for government they have not as yet directly put in their claime to his office as a mysticall Head influencing the body with Life and Motion though by their figment of the Sacraments communicating grace ex opere operato and investing the originall power of dispencing them in the Pope only they have contended faire for it But if any one can informe me of any other union or communion of the Church described as above then these laid downe I shall willingly attend unto his instructions In the mean time to carry on the present discourse unto that which is aimed at it is manifest that the breach of this union must consist in these two things 1. First the casting out expelling and looseing that spirit which abiding in us gives us this union 2. The losse of that love which thence flowes into the body of Christ and believers as parts and members thereof This being the state of the Church under the first consideration of it certainly it would be an extravagancy scarcely to be parallel'd for any one to affirme a breach of this union as such to be Schisme under that notion of it which we
are enquiring after But because there is very little security to be enjoyed in an expectation of the sobriety of men in things wherein they are or suppose they may be concerned that they may know before hand what is farther incumbent on them if in reference to us they would prevaile themselves of any such notion I here informe them that our perswasion is that this union was never utterly broken by any man taken into it or ever shall be to the end of the World and I suppose they esteeme it vaine to dispute about the Ad●uncts of that which is denyed to be But yet this perswasion being not common to us with them with whom we have to doe in this matter I shall not farther make use of it as to our present defence That any other union of the Catholick Church as such can possibly be fancyed or imagined by any as to the substance of what hath been pleaded leaving him a plea for the ordinary so●ndnes of his Intellectualls is denyed Let us see now then what is our concernment in this discourse unlesse men can prove that we have not the spirit of God that we do not savingly believe in Jesus Christ that we doe not sincerely love all the Saints his whole body and every member of it they cannot disprove our interest in the Catholick Church It is true indeed men that have so great a confidence of their own Abilities and such a contempt of the World as to undertake to dispute them out of conclusions from their naturall sences about their proper Objects in what they see feele and handle and will not be satisfied that they have not proved there is no motion whilst a man walks for a conviction under their eye may probably venture to disprove us in our spirituall sense and experience also and to give us Arguments to perswade us that we have not that communion with Christ which we know we have every day Although I have a very meane perswasion of my own Abilities yet I must needs say I cannot think that any man in the world can convince me that I doe not love Jesus Christ in sincerity because I doe not love the Pope as he is so Spirituall Experience is a security against a more cunning Sophister then any Jesu●●te in the world with whom the Saint● of God have to deale all their lives Eph. 6. 12. And doubtlesse through the rich grace of our God helpe will arise to us that we shall never make a Covenant with these men for peace upon conditions for worse then those that Nahash would have exacted on the men of Jabesh Gilead● which were but the losse of one eye with an abiding reproach they requiring of us the deprivation of whatsoever we have to see by whether as men or Christians and that with a reproach never to be blotted out But as we daily put our Consciences upon triall as to this thing 1 Cor. 13. 5. and are put unto it by Sathan so are we readie at all times to give an account to our Adversaries of the hope that us in us Let them sift us to the utmost it will be to our advantage Only let them not bring frivolous objections and such as they know are of no weight with us speaking as is their constant manner about the Pope and their Church things utterly forraigne to what we are presently about miserably begging the thing in Question Let them weigh if they are able the true nature of Vnion with Christ of faith in him of Love to the Saints consider them in their proper Causes Adjuncts and Effects with a sprituall eye laying aside their prejudices and intolerable impositions if we are found wanting as to the truth and sincerity of these things if we cannot give some account of our translation from death to life of our implantation into Christ and our participation of the Spirit we must beare our own burthen if otherwise we stand fast on the most noble and best account of Church Vnion what ever and whilest this shield is safe we are lesse ●mxious about the issue of the ensuing contest Whatever may be the apprehensions of other men I am not in this thing sollicitous I speake not of my selfe but assuming for the present the person of one concerning whom these things may be spoken whilest the efficacy of the Gospell accomplisheth in my heart all those divine and mighty effects which are ascribed unto it as peculiarly it workes towards them that believe whilest I know this one thing that whereas I was blind now I see whereas I was a servant of sinne I am now free to righteousnesse at liberty from bondage unto death instead of the fruits of the flesh I find all the fruits of the Spirit brought forth in me to the praise of Gods glorious grace whilest I have an experience of that powerfull work of conversion and being borne againe which I am able to mannage against all the accusations of Satan having peace with God upon justification by faith with the love of God shed abroad in my heart by the Holy Ghost investing me in the priviledges of Adoption I shall not certainly be moved with the disputes of men that would perswade me I doe not belong to the Catholick Church because I doe not follow this or that or any part of men in the world But you will say this you will allow to them also with whom you have to doe that they may be members of the Catholick Church I leave other men to stand or fall to their own Master only as to the Papall multitude on the account of severall inconsistencies between them and the members of this Church I shall place some swords in the way which will reduce their number to an invisible scantling I might content my selfe by affirming at once that upon what hath been spoken I must exclude from the Catholick Church all and every one whom Bellarmine intends to include in it as such namely those who belong to the Church as hairs and ill humours to the body of a man But I adde in particular 1. All wicked and prophane persons of whom the Scripture speakes expressly that they shall not enter into the Kingdome of God are indisputably cut off Whatever they pretend in shew at any time in the outward duties of Devotion they have neither faith in Christ nor love to the Saints and so have part and fellowship neither in the union nor communion of the Catholick Church How great a proportion of that Synogogue whereof we are speaking will be taken off by this sword of their Popes Princes Prelates Clergie Votaries and people and that not by a rule of private surmises but upon the visible issue of their being servants to sin ●aters of God and good men is obvious to all Persons of really so much as reformed lives amongst them are like the berries after the shaking of an Olive tree 1 Cor 6. 7 8
state of things unsuited to those of old Apostacy from the Vnity of the Church Catholick charged on the Romanists Their claime to be that Church sanguinary false Their plea to this purpose considered The blasphemous mannagement of their plea by some of late The whole dissolved Their inferences on their plea practically prodigious Their Apostacy proved by instances Their grand Argument in this cause proposed Answered Consequences of denying the Roman Church to be a Church of Christ weighed LEt us see now what as to conscience can be charged on us Protestants I meane who are all concerned herein as to the breach of this union The Papists are the persons that undertake to mannage this Charge against us To lay aside the old Plea subesse Romano Pontifici and all those ●eats wherewith they jugled when the whole world sa●e in darknesse which they doe not now use at the entrance of their charge The summe of what they insist upon firstly is The Catholick Church is intrusted with the interpretation of the Scriptures and declaration of the Truths therein contained which being by it so declared the not receiving of them implicitely or explicitely that is the disbelieving of them as so proposed and declared cuts off any man from being a member of the Church Christ himselfe having said that he that heares not the Church is to be as an Heathen man or Publican which Church they are that is certaine It is all one then what we believe or doe not believe seeing that we believe not all that the Catholick Church proposeth to be believed and what we doe believe we believe not on ha● account Ans Their insisting on this plea so much as they doe is sufficient to evince their despair of making good by instance our faylure in respect of the way and principles by which the unity of the visible Church may be lost or broken Faile they in this they are gone and if they carrie this plea we are all at their disposall The summe of it is the Catholick Church is intrusted with sole power of delivering what is truth and what is necessary to be believed This Catholick Church is the Church of Rome that is the Pope or what else may in any juncture of time serve their interest But as it is known 1. We deny their Church as it is stiled to be the Catholick Church or as such any part of it as particular Churches are called or esteemed So that of all men in the World they are least concerned in this Assertion Nay I shall goe farther Suppose all the members of the Roman Church to be found in the Faith as to all necessary Truths and no way to prejudice the Advantages and priviledges which acc●●e to them by the profession thereof whereby the severall individualls of it would be true members of the Catholick Church yet I should not only deny it to be the Catholick Church but also abideing in its present Order and Constitution being that which by themselves it is supposed to be to be any particular Church of Christ at all as wanting many things necessary to constitute them so and having many things destructive utterly to the very Essence and being of that Order that Christ hath appointed in his Churches The best plea that I know for their Church state is that Antichrist sits in the Temple of God Now although we might justly omit the Examination of this pretence untill those who are concerned in it will professedly owne it as their plea yet as it lyes in our way in the thoughts of some I say to it that I am not so certaine that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies to sit in the Temple of God seeing a Learned man long agoe thought it rather to be a setting up against the Temple of God Aug. de Civitate Dei lib. 10. cap. 59. But grant the sence of the expression to be as it 's usually received it imports no more but that the man of sinne shall set up his power against God in the midst of them who by their outward visible profession have right to be called his Temple which intitles him and his Copartners in Apostacy to the name of the Church as much as changing of mony and selling of Cattle were Ordinances of God under the old Temple when by some mens practising of them in it it was made a den of Theeves 2. Though as to the plea of them and their interest with whom we have to do we have nothing requiring our Judgements in the case yet ex abundanti we adde that we deny that by the will and appointment of Jesus Christ the Catholick Church visible is in any sence intrusted with such an interpretation of Scripture as that her declaration of Truth should be the measure of what should be believed or that as such it is intrusted with any power of that nature at all or is inabled to propose a Rule of Faith to be received as so proposed to the most contemptible individuall in the world or that it is possible that any voice of it should be heard or understood but only this I believe the necessary saving Truths contained in the Scripture or that it can be consulted with all or is as such intrusted with any Power Authority or Jurisdiction nor shall we ever consent that the Office and Authority of the Scriptures be actually taken from it on any pretence As to that of our Saviour of telling the Church it is so evidently spoken of a particular Church that may immediately be consulted in case of difference between Brethren and does so no way relate to the businesse in hand that I shall not trouble the Reader with a debate of it But doe we not receive the Scripture it selfe upon the Authority of the Church I say if we did so yet this concernes not Rome which we account no Church at all That we have received the Scripture from the Church of Rome at first that is so much as the Book its selfe is an intollerable figment But it is worse to say that we receive and own their Authority from the Authority of any Church or all the Churches in the World It is the expression of our Learned Whitaker Qui Scriptur●●● non credit esse divinam nisi propter Ecclesiae vocem Christianus non est To deny that the Scripture hath immediate force and efficacy to evince its own Authority is plainly to deny them on that account being brought unto us by the providence of God wherein I comprize all subservient helps of humane Testimony we receive them and on no other But is not the Scripture to be interpreted according to the Tradition of the Catholick Church and are not those interpretations so made to be received I say among all the figments that these latter Ages have invented I shall adde amongst the true stories of Lucian there is not one more remote from Truth then this Assertion That all that any one Text of
of his institutions ceaseth or that he doth not now dispense the gifts and graces of his Spirit to render them usefull is a difficult taske for any man to undertake to evince There is indeed in the institutions of Christ much that answers a naturall principle in men who are on many accounts formed and fitted for society A Confederation and consultation to carrie on any designe wherein the concernment of the individualls doth lye within such bounds and in such order as lyes in a ready way to the end aymed at is exceeding suitable to the principles whereby we are acted and guided as men But he that would hence conclude that there is no more but this and the acting of these principles in this Church constitution whereof we speake and that therefore men may be cast into any prudentiall forme or appoint other wayes and formes of it then those mentioned in the Scripture as appointed and owned takes on himselfe the demonstrating that all things necessarily required to the Constitution of such a Church society are commanded by the Law of nature and therefore allowed of and approved only by Christ so to be wholy morall and to have nothing of instituted worship in them and also he must know that when on that supposition he hath given a probable Reason why never any persons in the world fixed on such societies in all Essentiall things as those seeing they are Naturall that he leaves lesse to the Prudence of men and to the ordering and disposing of things concerning them then those who make them of pure institution all whose circumstances cannot be derived from themselves as those of things purely morall may But this is not of my present consideration 2. Nor shall I consider whether perpetuity be a property of the Church of Christ in this sence that is not whether a Church that was once so may cease to be so which it is known I plead for in the instance of the Church of Rome not to mention others but whether by vertue of any promise of Christ there shall alwayes be somewhere in the world a visible Church visibly celebrating his Ordinances Luc. 1. 33. He shall raigne over the house of Jacob for ever and of his Kingdome there shall be no end is pleaded to this purpose But that any more but the spirituall raigne of Christ in his Catholick Church is there intended is not proved Mat. 16. 18. upon this Rock will I build my Church is also urged but to intend any but true Believers and that as such in that promise is wholly to enervate it and to take away its force and efficacy Mat. 18. 18 20. declares the presence of Christ with his Church where ever it be not that a Church in the regard treated of shall be To the same purpose are other expressions in the Scripture As I will not deny this in Generall so I am unsatisfyed as to any particular instance for the making of it good It is said that true Churches were at first planted in England how then or by what means did they cease so to be How or by what Act did God unchurch them They did it themselves Meritoriously by Apostacy and Idolatry God Legally by his Institution of a Law of rejection of such Churches If any shall aske How then is it possible that any such Churches should be raised a new I say that the Catholick Church mysticall and that visibly professing being preserved entire he that thinketh there needs a miracle for those who are members of them to joyne in such a Society as those now spoken of according to the Institution of Christ is a person delighting in needlesse scruples Christ hath promised that where two or three are gathered together in his name he will be in the midst of them Mat. 18. 20. It is now supposed with some hope to have it granted that the Scripture being the power of God to Salvation hath Rom. 1. 16. a sufficient efficacy and energie in it selfe as to its own kind for the conversion of Soules yea let us till opposition be made to it take it for granted that by that force and efficacy it doth mainly and principally evince its own Divinity or divine Originall Those who are contented for the honour of that word which God delighteth to magnify to grant this Supposition will not I hope think it impossible that though all Church state should cease in any place and yet the Scripture by the providence of God be there in the hand of individualls preserved two or three should be called converted and regenerated by it For my part I think he that questions it must doe it on some corrupt principle of a secondary dependent Authority in the word of God as to us with which sort of men I doe not now deale I aske whether these converted persons may nor possibly come together or assemble themselves in the name of Jesus may they not upon his command and in Expectation of the accomplishment of his promise so come together with Resolution to doe his will and to exhort one another thereto Zech. 3. 10. Mal. 3. 10. Truly I believe they may in what part of the world soever their lot is fallen Here lye all the difficulties whether being come together in the name of Christ they may doe what he hath commanded them or no whether they may exhort and stirre up one another to doe the will of Christ Most certain it is that Christ will give them his presence therewithall his Authority for the performance of any duty that he requireth at their hands Were not men angry troubled and disappointed there would be little difficulty in this businesse But of this elsewhere 3. Upon this supposition that particular Churches are Institutions of Jesus Christ which is granted by all with whom I have to doe I proceed to make enquiry into their Vnion and Communion that so we may know wherein the bonds of them doe consist 1. There is a double foundation fountain or cause of the Vnion of such a Church the one externall procuring commanding the other internall inciting directing assisting The first is the Institution of Jesus Christ before mentioned requiring Peace and Order Vnion Consent and Agreement in and among all the members of such a Church all to be regulated ordered and bounded by the Rules Laws Prescripts which from him they have received for their walking in those Societies The Latter is that Love without dissimulation which alwaies is or which alwaies ought to be between all the members of such a Church exerting it selfe in their respective duties one towards another in that holy combination whereunto they are called and enter'd for the Worship of God whether they are those which lye in the levell of the equality of their common interest of being Church-members or those which are required of them in the severall differences whereby on any account whatever they are distinguished one from another
amongst themselves for love is the bond of perfectnesse Col. 3. 14. Hence then it appears what is the Vnion of such a Church and what is the communion to be observed therein by the appointment of Jesus Christ The joynt consent of all the members of it in obedience to the command of Christ from a principle of Love to walk together in the universall celebration of all the Ordinances of the worship of God instituted and appointed to be celebrated in such a Church and to performe all the duties and offices of Love which in reference to one another in their respective stations and places are by God required of them and doing so accordingly See Phil. 2. 1 2 3. cap. 4. 1 2 3. 1 Cor 1. 10. 2 Cor. 13. 11. Rom. 15. 5. Whereas there are in these Churches some Rulers some Ruled some eyes some hands in this Body some parts visibly comely some uncomely upon the account of that variety of gifts and graces which is distributed to them in the performance of duties regard is to be had to all the particular Rules that are given with respect to men in their severall places and distributions Herein doth the Vnion of a particular Church consist herein have the members of it communion among themselves and with the whole 4. I shall farther grant and adde hereunto Over and above the Vnion that is between th● members of severall particular Churches by vertue of their interest in the Church Catholick which draws after it a necessity of the occasionall exercise of duties of Love one towards another and that Communion they have as members of the generall Church visible in the profession of the Faith once delivered unto the Saints There is a Communion also to be observed between these Churches as such which is sometimes or may be exerted in their Assemblies by their Delegates for declaring the sense and determining things of joynt concernment unto them Whether there ought to be an ordinary combination of the Officers of these Churches invested with the Power for the disposall of things Persons that concerne one or more of them in severall subordinations by the institution of Christ as it is not my judgement that so there is so it belongs not unto my present undertaking at all to debate That which alone remaines to be done is to consider what is our concernment as to the breach of this Vnion which we professe to be appointed by Jesus Christ and that both as we are Protestants as also farther differenced according to the intimations given at the entrance of this Discourse What hath already been delivered about the nature of Schisme and the Scripture Notion of it might well suffice as to our Vindication in this businesse from any charge that we are or seem obnoxious unto But because I have no● reason to suppose that some men will be so favourable unto us as to take paines for the improvement of principles though in themselves clearely evinced on our behalfe The application of them to some present cases with the removall of objections that lye against my intendment must be farther added Some things there are which upon what hath been spoken I shall assume and suppose as granted in Thesi untill I see them otherwise disproved then as yet I have done Of these the first is That the departing or secession of any man or men from any particular Church as to that communion which is peculiar to such a Church which he or they have had therewith is no where called Schisme nor is so in the nature of the thing it selfe as the generall signification of the word is restrained by its Scripture use but is a thing to be judged receive a little according to the causes and circumstances of it 2. One Churches refusing to hold that communion with another which ought to be between them is not Schisme properly so called 3. The departure of any man or men from the Society or Communion of any Church whatever so it be done without strife variance judging and condemning of others because according to the light of their Consciences they cannot in all things in them worship God according to his minde cannot be rendred evill but from circumstances taken from the persons so doing or the way and manner whereby and wherein they doe it Unto these I adde that if any one can shew and evince that we have departed from and left the communion of any particular Church of Christ with which we ought to walke according to the order above mentioned or have disturbed and broken the Order and Vnion of Christs Institution wherein we are or were inwrapped we put our selves on the mercy of our judges The Consideration of what is the charge on any of us on this account was the first thing aymed at in this Discourse and as it was necessary from the Rules of the method wherein I have proceeded comes now in the last place to be put to the issue and triall which it shall in the Next Chapter CHAP. VIII Of the Church of England The charge of Schisme in the name thereof Proposed and considered Severall considerations of the Church of England In what sence we were members of it Of Anabaptisme The subjection due to Bishops Their power examined It s orginall in this Nation Of the Ministeriall power of Bishops It s present continuance Of the Church of England what it is It s description Forme peculiar and constitutive Answer to the charge of Schisme on separation from it in its Episcopall constitution How and by what means it was taken away Things necessary to the constitution of such a Church proposed and offered to proofe The second way of constituting a nationall Church Considered Principles agreed on and consented unto between the parties at variance on this account Judgement of Amiraldus in this case Inferences from the common principles before consented unto The case of Schisme in reference to a Nationall Church in the last sense debated Of particular Churches and separation from them On what accounts Justifiable No necessity of joyning to this or that Separation from some so called required Of the Church of Corinth The duty of its members Austins Judgement of the practice of Elijah The last objection waved Inferences upon the whole THat which first presents it selfe is a plea against us in the name of the Church of England and those intrusted with the Reiglment thereof as it was setled and established some yeares since the summe whereof if I mistake not amounts to thus much You were sometimes members and Children of the Church of England lived in the communion thereof professing obedience thereunto according to its Rules and Canons you were in an orderly subjection to the Arcsh-Bishops Bishops and those acting under them in the Hierarchie who were officers of that Church in that Church you were baptized and joyned in the outward worship celebrated therein but you have now voluntarily
administring the holy ordinances of the Gospell in and to their ●wn flock and whatever else of duty and ratione officii belongs to a rightly constituted Bishop and ●et all that have disturbed this course so duly ●●tled in this Church and in all Churches of Christ ●●nce the Apostles planting them discerne their ●●●rour and returne to that peace and Vnity of the Church from whence they have causelesly and inexcusably departed Though I was not then speaking of the Bishops of England yet I am contented with the application to them there being amongst them men of piety and learning whom I exceedingly honour reverence Amongst all the Bishops He of Oxford is I suppose peculiarly instanced in because it may be thought that living in this place I may belong to his Jurisdiction But in the condition wherein I now am by the providence of God I can plead an exemption on the same foot of account as he can his Jurisdiction So that I am not much concerned in his exercise of it as to my own person If he have a particular flock at Oxon which he will attend according to what before I required he shall have no let or hindrance from me but being he is as I heare he is a Reverend and Learned person I shall be glad of his Neighbourhood acquaintance But to suppose that the Diocesse of Oxon as legally constituted and bounded is his particular flock or Church that such a Church is instituted by Christ or hath been in Being ever since the Apostles times that in his presidency in this Church he is to set up Courts and exercise a Jurisdiction in them and therewith a power over all the inhabitants of this Diocesse or Shire excepting the exempt peculiar jurisdiction although gathered into particular Congregations and united by a participation of the same Ordinances and all this by the will and appointment of Jesus Christ is to suppose what will not be granted I confesse as before there was once such an Order in this place that it is now removed by Lawes on which foundation alone it stood before And this is that where in I am not concerned Whether we have causelesly inexcusably departed frō the Vnity of the Church is the matter now in enquiry I am sure unles the Vnity can be fixed our departure will not be proved A law Vnity I confesse an Evangelicall I am yet in the disquisition of But I confesse it will be to the prejudice of the cause in hand if it shall be thought that the determination of it depends on the controversy about Episcopacy for if so it might be righteously expected that the Arguments produced in the behalfe and defence thereof should be particularly discussed But the truth is I shall easily acknowledge all my labour to no purpose if have to deale only with men who suppose that if it be granted that Bishops as commonly esteemed in this Nation are of the appointment of Christ it will thence follow that we have a Nationall Church of Christs appointment between which indeed there is no Relation or connexion Should I grant as I said diocesan Bishops with Churches answerable to their supportment particled into severall Congregations with their inferiour Officers yet this would be remote enough from giving subsistence and Vnion to a Nationall Church What then it is which is called the Church of England in respect whereto we are charged with Schisme is nextly to be considered Now there are two wayes whereby we may come to the discoverie of what is intended by the Church of England or there are two ways whereby such a thing doth arise 1. Descendendo which is the way of the Prelates 2. Ascendendo which is the way of the Presbyterians For the first to constitute a Nationall Church by descent it must be supposed that all Church power is vested in Nationall Officers viz. Arch-Bishops and from them derived to severall Diocesians by a distribution of power limited in its exercise to a certaine portion of the Nation and by them communicated by severall engines to Parochiall Priests in their severall places A man with halfe an eye may see that here are many things to be proved Thus their first Church is Nationall which is distributed into severall greater portions termed Provinces those againe into others now called Diocesses and those againe subdivided into Parochiall or particular Congregations Now the Vnion of this Church consisteth in the due observance of the same worship specifically by all the members of it and subjection according to Rules of their own appointment which were called commonly Canons by way of distinction unto the Rulers before mentioned in their severall capacities And this is that which is the peculiar forme of this Church That of the Church Catholick absolutely so called is its Vnity with Christ and in its selfe by the one Spirit whereby it is animated That of the Church Catholick visibly professing the Unity of the Faith which they doe professe as being by them professed That of a particular Church as such its observance and performance of the same Ordinances of worship numerically in the confession of the same faith and subjection to the same Rules of Love for edification of the whole Of this Nationall as it is called in the subjection of one sort of Officers unto another within a precinct limited Originally wholy on an account forraigne to any Church state whatever So that it is not called the Church of England from its participation of the nature of the Catholick Church on the account of its most noble members nor yet from its participation of the nature of the invisible Church in the world on the account of its profession of the Truth in both which respects we professe our Unity with it nor yet from its participation of the nature of a particular Church which it did not in its selfe nor as such but in some of its particular Congregations but from a peculiar forme of its owne as above described which is to be proved to be of the Institution of Jesus Christ In this description given of their Church state with whom we have now to doe I have purposely avoided the mention of things odious exposed to common obloquy which yet were the very ●ies ligaments of their order because the thing as it is in its selfe being nakedly represented we may not be prejudiced in judging of the strength and utmost of the charge that lyes against any of us on the account of a departure from it The communion of this Church they say we have forsaken and broken its Vnity and therefore are Schismaticks I answer in a word laying aside so much of the Iurisdiction of it mentioned before and the severall ways of its administration for which there is no colour or pretence that it should relate to any Gospell institution passe by also the consideration of all those things which the men enjoying Authority in or exercising
out of it like Pauls Mariners out of the ship when the storme grew hazardous It being the duty of all the members of such a Church untainted with the evills and corruptions of it upon many accounts to attempt and labour the remedie of those disorders and rejection of these abuses to the uttermost which was that which Paul advised the Corinthians all and some unto in obedience whereunto they were recovered But yet this I say had the Church of Corinth continued in the condition before prescribed that notorious scandalous sinnes had went unpublished unreproved drunkennesse continued and practised in the Assemblies men abiding by the denyall of the Resurrection so overturning the whole Gospell and the Church refusing to do her duty and exercise her Authority to cast all those disorderly persons upon their obstinacy out of her communion It had been the duty of every Saint of God in that Church to have withdrawn from it to come out from among them and not to have been partaker of their sinnes unlesse they were willing to partake of their plague also which on such an Apostacy would certainly ensue I confesse Austin in his single booke against the Donatists post collationem cap. 20. affirmes that Elijah and Elisha communicated with the Israelites in their worship when they were so corrupted as in their dayes and separated not from their Sacraments as he calls them but only withdrew sometimes for feare of persecution a mistake unworthy so great and wise a person as he was The publick worship of those 10 Tribes in the dayes of those Prophets was Idolatrous erected by Jeroboam confirmed by a Law by Omri and continued by Ahab That the Prophets joyned with them in it is not to be imagined But earnestnesse of desire for the attaining of any end sometimes leaves no roome for the examination of the Medium's offering their service to that purpose Let us now see the sum of the whole matter and what it is that we plead for our discharge as to this crime of Schisme allowing the Terme to passe in its large and usuall acceptation receding for the sake of the Truths farther ventilation from the precise propriety of the word annexed to it in the Scripture The summe is we have broken no bond of Vnity no order instituted or appointed by Jesus Christ have causelessly deserted no station that ever we were in according to his mind which alone can give countenance to an accusation of this Nature That on pure grounds of conscience we have withdrawn or doe withhold our selves from partaking in some wayes engaged into upon meer grounds of Prudence we acknowledge And thus from what hath been said it appeares in what a faire capacity notwithstanding any principle or practice owned by us we are to live peaceably and to exercise all fruits of Love towards those who are otherwise minded There is not the least necessity on us may we be permitted to serve God according to our light for the acquitting our selves from the charge which hath made such a noise in the world to charge other men with their failings great or small in or about the ways and worship of God This only is incumbent on us that we manifest that we have broken no bond no obligation or tye to communion which lay upon us by the will appointment of Jesus Christ our Lord and Master what is prudentially to be done in such a Nation as this in such a time as this as to the worship of God we will treate with men at farther leisure and when we are lawfully called thereto It may be some will yet say because it hath been often said there is difference between reforming of Churches already gathered and raised and raising of Churches out of meer materialls The first may be allowed but the latter tends to all manner of Confusion I have at present not much to say to this objection because as I conceive it concernes not the businesse we have in hand Nor would I have mentioned it at all but that it s insisted on by some on every turne whether suited for the particular cause for which it is produced or no. In briefe then 1. I know no other reformation of any Church or any thing in a Church but the reducing of it to its primitive Institution and the order allotted to it by Jesus Christ If any plead for any other Reformation of Churches they are in my judgement to blame And when any society or Combination of men whatever hitherto it hath been esteemed is not capable of such a Reduction and Renovation I suppose I shall not provoke any wise and sober person if I professes I cannot look on such a society as a Church of Christ and thereupon advise those therein who have a due right to the priviledges purchased for them by Christ as to Gospell Administrations to take some other peaceable course to make themselves partakers of them 2. Were I fully to handle the things pointed to in this Objection I must mannage Principles which in this Discourse I have not been occasioned to draw forth at all or to improve Many things of great weight and importance must come under debate and consideration before a cleare account can be given of the case stated in this Objection as 1. The true nature of an instituted Church under the Gospell as to the matter forme and all other necessary constitutive causes is to be investigated and found out 2. The nature and forme of such a Church is to be exemplifyed from the Scripture and the stories of the first Churches before sensibly infested with the poyson of that Apostacy which ensued 3. The extent of the Apostacy under Antichrist as to the ruining of instituted Churches making them to be Babylon and their worship Fornication is duely and carefully to be examined Hic labor Hoc opus Here lyes our disorder and division hence is our darknesse and pollution of our garments which is not an easy thing to free our selves of though we may arise yet we shall not speedily shake our selves out of the dust 4. By what way and meanes God begat anew and kept alive his Elect in their severall Generations when Antichristian darknesse covered the Earth and thick darknesse the Nations supposing an intercision of instituted Ordinances so farre as to make a nullity in them as to what was of simple and pure Institution what way might be used for the fixing the Tabernacle of God againe with men and the setting up of Church worship according to his minde and will And here the famous case of the united Brethren of Bohemia would come under consideration who concluding the whole Papacy to be purely Antichristian could not allow of the Ordination of their Ministers by any in communion with it and yet being perswaded of a necessity of continuing of that Ordinance in a way of succession sent some to the Greek and Armenian Churches who observing
by his labours in that cause this is acknowledged to be so Believers saith he in great Cityes were not at first divided into Parishes whilst the number of Christians was so small that they might well assemble in the same place Ham Vind. p. 16. Of the Believers of one City meeting in one place being one Church we have the like grant p. 18. In this particular Church He sayes there was one Bishop which had the Rule of it and of the Believers in the villages adjacent to that City which as it sometimes was not so Rom. 16. 1 2. so for the most part it seemed to have been the case and distinct Churches upon the growth of the number of Believers were to be erected in severall places of the Voisinage And this is the state of a particular instituted Church which we plead for Whether in processe of time believers multiplying those who had been of one Church met in severall Assemblies by a setled distribution of them to celebrate the same Ordinances specifically and so made many Churches or met in severall places in parties still continuing one body and were governed in common by the Elders whom they increased and multiplied in proportion to the increase of believers or whether that one or more Officers Elders or Bishops of that first single Congregation taking on him or them the care of those inhabiting the City wherein the Church was first planted designed and sent some fitted for that purpose upon their desire choice or otherwise to the severall lesser companies of the Region adjacent which in processe of time became dependent on subject to the Officer and Officers of that first Church from whence they came forth I dispute not I am satisfied that the first plantation of Churches was as hath been pleaded And I know what was done afterwards on the one hand or the other must be examined as to our concernment by what ought to have been done But of those things afterwards Now according to the course of procedure hitherto insisted on a Declaration of the Vnity of the Church in this sense what it is wherein it doth consist with what it is to be guilty of the breach of that Unity must ensue and this shall be done after I have premised some few things previously necessary thereunto I say then 1. A man may be a member of the Catholick Church of Christ be united to him by the inhabitation of his Spirit and participation of his life from him who upon the account of some providentiall hinderance is never joyned to any particular Congregation for the participation of Ordinances all his daies 2. In like manner may he be a member of the Church considered as professing visibly Seeing that he may doe all that is of him required thereunto without any such conjunction to a visible particular Church But yet 3. I willingly grant that every believer is obliged as in a part of his duty to joyne himselfe to some one of those Churches of Christ that therein he may abide in Doctrine and Fellowship and breaking of Bread and Prayer according to the order of the Gospell if he have advantage and opportunity so to doe for 1. There are some duties incumbent on us which cannot possibly be performed but on a supposition of this duty previously required and submitted unto Math. 18. 15 16 17. 2. There are some Ordinances of Christ appointed for the good and benefit of those that believe which they can never be made partakers of if not related to some such society As publick Admonition Excommunication Participation of the Sacraments of the Lords Supper 3 The care that Jesus Christ hath taken that all things be well ordered in these Churches giving no direction for the performance of any duty of worship meerly and purely of soveraigne Institution but only in them and by them who are so joyned sufficiently evidence his mind and our duty herein Rev. 2. 7. 11. 29. Rev. 3. 6. 7. 12. 1 Cor. 11. 4. The gathering planting and setling of such Churches by the Apostles with the care they took in bringing them to perfection leaving none whom they converted out of that Order where it was possible for them to be reduced unto it is of the same importance Act. 14. 23. Tit. 1. 5. 5. Christs institution of Officers for them Eph. 4. 11. 1 Cor. 11. 28. calling such a Church his Body v. 29. exactly assigning to every one his duty in such Societies in respect of the place he held in them with his care for their preservation from confusion and for Order evinces from whom they are and what is our duty in reference unto them 6. The judging and condemning them by the Holy Ghost as disorderly blameable persons who are to be avoided who walk not according to the Rules and Order appointed in these Churches his care that those Churches be not scandalized or offended with innumerable other considerations evince their institution to be from Heaven not of men or any prudentiall considerations of them whatever That there is an instituted worship of God to be continued under the New Testam untill the second coming of Christ I suppose needs not much proofe With those with whom it hath soe I am not now treating and must not make it my businesse to give it evidence by the innumerable Testimonies which might be alleadged to that purpose That for the whole of his worship matter or manner or any part of it God hath changed his way of proceeding and will now allow the will and Prudence of Man to be the measure and rule of his Honour and Glory therein contrary to what he did or would allow under the Law is so prejudiciall to the perfection of the Gospell infinite Wisdome and All-sufficiency of Christ and so destructive to the whole obligation of the second Commandement having no ground in the Scripture but being built meerly on the conceit of men suited to one carnall interest or other I shall unwillingly debate it That as to this particular under consideration there were particular Churches instituted by the Authority of Jesus Christ owned and approved by him that Officers for them were of his appointment and furnished with gifts from him for the Execution of their employment that Rules Cautions and Instructions for the due settlement of those Churches were given by him that these Churches were made the only seat of that worship which in particular he expressed his will to have continued untill he came is of so much light in Scripture that he must wink hard that will not see it That either he did not originally appoint these things or he did not give out the gifts of his Spirit in reference to the right ordering of them and exalting of his Glory in them or that having done so then yet that his institutions have an end being only for a season and that it may be known when the efficacy of any
their wayes returned with little satisfaction so that at the last committing themselves and their cause to God they chose them Elders from among themselves and set them apart by fasting and prayer which was the foundation of all those Churches which for piety zeale and suffering for Christ have given place to none in Europe What was the way of the first Reformation in this Nation and what principles the Godly Learned men of those daies proceeded on how farre what they did may be satisfactory to our Consciences at the present as to our concurrence in them who from thence have the Truth of the Gospell derived downe to us Whether ordinary officers be before or after the Church and so whether a Church state is preserved in the preservation of Officers by a power forraigne to that Church whereof they are so or the Office be preserved and consequently the Officers inclusively in the preservation and constitution of a Church These I say with sundry other things of the like importance with inferences from them are to be considered to the bottome before a full Resolution can be given to the enquiry coucht in this objection which as I said to do is not my present businesse This taske then is at its issue and close some Considerations of the manifold miscarriages that have insued for want of a due and right apprehension of the thing we have now been exercised in the Consideration of shall shut it up It is not impossible that some may from what hath been spoken begin to apprehend that they have been too hasty in judging other men Indeed none are more ready to charge highly then those who when they have so done are most unable to make good their charge si accusasse sufficiat quis erit innocens what reall Schismes in a morall sense have ensued among brethren by their causelesse mutuall imputation of Schisme in things of institution is knowne And when men are in one fault and are charged with another wherein they are not it is a ready way to confirme them in that wherein they are There is more darknesse and difficulty in the whole matter of instituted worship then some men are aware of not that it was so from the beginning whilst Christianity continued in its naked simplicity but it is come occasionally upon us by the customes darknesse and invincible prejudices that have taken hold on the minds of men by a secret diffusion of the poyson of that grand Apostacy It were well then that men would not be so confident nor easily perswaded that they presently know how all things ought to be because they know how they would have some things to be which suite their temper and interest Men may easily perhaps see or think they see what they doe not like and crie out Schisme and Separation but if they would a little consider what ought to be in this whole matter according to the mind of God and what evidences they have of the grounds and principles whereon they condemne others it might make them yet swift to heare but slow to speake and take off from the number of Teachers among us some are readie to think that all that joyne not with them are Schismaticks and they are so because they goe not with them and other reason they have none being unable to give any solid foundation of what they professe what the cause of Unity among the people of God hath suffered from this sort of men is not easily to be expressed 2. In all differences about Religion to drive them to their rise and spring and to consider them as stated originally will ease us of much trouble and labour Perhaps many of them will not appeare so formidable as they are represented He that sees a great River is not instantly to conclude that all the water in it comes from its first rise spring the addition of many brookes showers and landfloods have perhaps swelled it to the condition wherein it is every difference in Religion is not to be thought to be as big at its rise as it appeares to be when it hath passed through many Generations and hath received additions and aggravations from the disputings and contendings of men on the one hand and the other ingaged What a flood of Abominations doth this businesse of Schisme seem to be as rolling down tous through the writings of Cyprian Austin and Optatus of old the Schoolemen decrees of Popish Councells with the contrivances of some among our selves concerned to keep up the swelled notion of it Goe to its rise and you will find it to be though bad enough yet quite another thing then what by the pre●udices accrewing by the addition of so many generations it is now generally represented to be The great maxime To the Law and to the Testimonie truly improved would quickly cure all our distempers in the meane time let us blesse God that though our outward man may possibly be disposed of according to the apprehension that others have of what we doe or are our Consciences are concerned only in what he hath appointed How some men may prevaile against us before whom we must stand or fall according to their corrupt notion of Schisme we know not the Rule of our Consciences in this as in all other things is eternall and unchangable Whilst I have an uncontrolable faithfull witnesse that I transgresse no limits prescribed to me in the Word that I doe not willingly break or dissolve any Vnity of the Institution of Jesus Christ my minde as to this thing is filled with perfect peace Blessed be God that hath reserved the sole soveraingty of our Consciences in his hand and not in the least parcelled it out to any of the sons of men whose tender mercies being oftentimes cruelty it selfe they would perhaps destroy the soule also when they doe so to the body seeing they stay there as our Saviour witnesseth because they can proceed no farther Here then I professe to rest in this doth my Conscience acquiesce whilst I have any comfortable perswasion on grounds infallible that I hold the Head and that I am by faith a member of the mysticall body of Christ whilst I make profession of all the necessary saving Truths of the Gospell whilst I disturbe not the peace of that particular Church whereof by my own consent I am a member nor doe raise up nor continue in any causeles differences with them or any of them with whom I walke in the fellowship and order of the Gospell whilst I labour to exercise faith towards the Lord Jesus Christ and love towards all the Saints I doe keep the Unity which is of the appointment of Christ and let men say from principles utterly forraigne to the Gospell what they please or can to the contrary I am no Schismatick 3. Perhaps the discoverie which hath been made how little we are many of us concerned in that which having mutually charged it on