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A86197 A sermon preached before the Right Honourable House of Lords, in the Abbey-Church at Westminster, Wednesday the 28. of May 1645. Being the day appointed for solemne and publick humiliation. / By Alexander Henderson, minister at Edenburgh. Henderson, Alexander, 1583?-1646. 1645 (1645) Wing H1443; Thomason E286_3; ESTC R200073 26,557 39

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Christ and so is it in the cause of Christ with the Church of Christ and every beleeving soul Fourthly as there be many things that are of this world so there be other things that be not of this world A truth which all will acknowledge in respect of this world and the world to come but it holdeth also in this present world wherein there be some things that are of it and somethings that are in it but not of it The Kingdome of Christ which hath many mysteries many parts many priviledges many lawes many subjects is of this kind The naturall man seeth no more in the world then what he conceiveth to be of the world but the spirituall man judgeth all things And what the eye of the naturall man seeth not what his eare heareth not and what his reason understandeth not because it is spirituall and cannot be discerned but spiritually that the spirituall man perceiveth and receiveth with all his heart and is no lesse assured of the infallibility thereof then of what he perceiveth by sense or reason he knoweth what he beleeveth and that he is not deceived about it But passing over all these and other the like particular doctrines which cannot at this time be prosecuted I come to the necessary uses of that main and principall doctrine intended in the Text and laid open by that which hath been spoken That Christ Jesus the Sonne of God hath a Kingdome in this world and that this Kingdome is a spirituall Kingdome and not of this world The first use shall be for Information in the point of agreement and difference betwixt Civill and Ecclesiasticall power the Kingdomes of this world and the Kingdome of Christ the Magistracie and the Ministery First both the one and the other is from God In the State there be superiors and inferiors the Lord who hath appointed in nature the tall Cedar and the low Shrub growing at the root of it the Elephant and the Mole the Eagle and the Wren the great Leviathan and the smaller Fishes hath also in policie appointed Kings Princes and Nobles to rule and governe and others of lower condition to honour and obey In the Church some to teach and rule and others to be taught and ruled by them Anabaptists I speak of such as are not novices but are acquainted with the deeps of the profession and other such masters of confusion do not distinguish betwixt the common and particular vocations of Christians betwixt a Christian equality and a Civill or Ecclesiastick inaquality All Christians having alike pretious faith in respect of their common dignity and vocation as they are Christians and are in Christ are equall amongst themselves there is neither Master nor Servant bound nor Free King nor Subject Pastor nor people but all are one in Jesus Christ but this hindereth not an inequality in Civill or Ecclesiasticall respects God who hath appointed them to be equall the one way hath also appointed an inequality equality amongst them the other way Notwithstanding this agreement betwixt the Magistracie and Ministery in respect of their Author yet is there here also some difference betwixt the one and the other for Magistracy proceedeth from God the Creator and Ruler of the world and therefore doth belong unto and is to be found amongst all sorts of people in all Nations that live in any civill society But the Ministery is the Ordinance of Christ the Mediator hath not place but in the Church of Christ Again Magistracie and Civill government in the generall is from God and is ordained of him But the particular different formes of Civill government are from men and yet all of them lawfull Whence it followeth that Civill power is not absolute but limited First by the will of God whose Minister the Magistrate is And next by such lawes and limitations as are agreed upon to be the foundation of that power It is not so with the Ministery For not onely is the Ministery in the generall the ordinance of Christ but all the speciall kinds of Ministers are appointed by him An humane creature in the State is not unlawfull but to be or appoint an humane creature in the Church is unlawfull A difference which Politickes and Church-men who love preeminence above their brethren are never enough moved to acknowledge Nor have the Ministers of Jesus Christ any limitations from men all their limitation is from Jesus Christ whose Ministers they are There is also a second thing wherein the Magistracy and the Ministery doe agree It is true indeed that the Magistrate is more about things externall which concern this present life and the Minister about things spirituall which concern the soule and life eternall yet is there nothing so Ecclesiasticall but it belongeth some way to the Magistrate he being keeper of both Tables Nor is there any thing so secular but it concerneth the Ministery in so far as secular things fall under obedience or disobedience to God For the word of God is extended to all causes all persons all conditions of life all which are to be ruled by the Word And this Word is to be expounded and must be particularly applied by the Ministery But while both are about the same things causes and persons it is in a very different way the power of the one is but Ministeriall the weapons of his warfare are spiritual not carnall but the power of the other though in respect of God whose Minister he is it be Ministeriall yet in respect of his subjects and inferiors it is Magisteriall and hath authority to compell and coerce The Magistrate may not go to the Pulpit to preach or minister the Sacraments nor may he as he is a Magistrate exercise Ecclesiasticall discipline but ought by his authority to command all these necessary duties to be done And the Minister may not ascend to the Tribunall to judge civill or criminall causes yet ought he to teach and in the Name of God exhort that justice be done to all by which every one may have that which is due unto him We may say with Bernard that the Church hath two Swords the Spirituall and the Temporall but in a different sort the use of the spirituall and the benefit of the temporall We may also say that the Civill power hath two swords the Temporall and the Spirituall but in a different manner the use of the temporall and the benefit of the spirituall When these two Swords are put in good hands and wisely managed it goeth well both with Church and State with Truth and Peace with Religion and Righteousnes The Magistracy and the Ministery are not unfitly compared to the two principall faculties of the soule of man the Will and the Understanding man being as well a Republick as a little world the will of man hath two acts one which is her proper and essentiall operation it is called actus elicitus as to will to nill or to suspend the other is called actus imperatus
a main difference the flock under their charge is dealt with by them not by way of command or compulsion but by moving intreating and perswading them to receive the commandements of Christ They are therefore no other then fire-brands and instruments of division that would raise jealousies of this kind betwixt these two kinds of government both which are appointed of God to serve for the good of the people of God each in its own way Whatsoever hath been or can be spoken against Church-government may as wel be spoken against the Gospel and Kingdome of Christ and the contest is not properly betwixt the Magistracy and the Ministery or betwixt Civill and Ecclesiasticall authority but betwixt the Kingdomes of this world and the Kingdome of Christ which is a great unhappinesse and the cause of a world of miseries unto the Kingdomes of this world wherein the ambition of Church-men transforming the Kingdome of Christ into an earthly Kingdome and cloathing the Church with the pomp of the world beareth a great part of the guiltinesse if both were kept within the just limits and moved within their own spheares their motions and influences might be comfortable to the souls and lives of the children of men I come now to the third use which is Correction against such as say with those Citizens Luke 19.14 We will not have this man to reigne over us There be many divers sorts of enemies in the kingdom of Christ that say so some open professed enemies such as are Pagans Jews Turks some more secret dissembled enemies who under the pretence of the doctrine of Christ oppose him and his Kingdom such as have been false Christs and are this day Antichrist with all his members and followers Hereticks Schismaticks Politicks and all worldly meer naturall men And there be many sundry causes that draw them into by-parhs and make them run into errors greater or lesser but it may be coafidently a vouched that the main cause by which Satan prevaileth upon the corrupt heart of man to make him an enemy to Christ and his Kingdome is the dislike he hath of this principle and fundamentall of Christian Religion That the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world All men naturally love the world and the things of the world which are the lusts of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life and finding that the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world nor doth promise unto them the things of this world but that it is a spirituall Kingdome binding up their spirits and interdicting their hearts the love of the world it must of necessity follow unlesse the light and power of the Spirit of Christ shine in their minds and work upon their hearts that either in profession or in hear or both either more or lesse they prove enemies unto Christ especially in that which would break the bond that tieth them fast to the world If men might be pleased to examine themselves narrowly and descend into their own hearts they would find that their hearts deceive them and while they seem to others to themselves to be despisers of the world they are either by covetousnesse or vaing-lory or love of carnall liberty or some other such tie intangled and keeped fast by the world and are either directly or indirectly drawn to oppose the Kingdome of Christ He that will consider the grounds of Paganisme Judaisme and Turcisme and for what reason they doe not receive Christ when he is offered unto them shall find this to be a principall cause He that will search into the histories of particular heresies and schismes wil often meet with this and find the world in the bottome of the hearts of men I do not speak of the simple seduced people but of the wisest and learnedest of their seducers and of the great wits of the world which make the world their Idoll and bow down before it But leaving this I come to the fourth use for instruction in such duties as are required of us all at this time and after a speciall manner of those that are in high places First of all seeing the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world but is a spirituall Kingdome it is a necessary duty to study the nature and search into the mysteries and secrets of this Kingdom The kingdome of Satan and Sin have many deeps and secrets the Kingdomes of the world have their secrets of policie and government and the Kingdom of Christ hath greater secrets and more hid mysteries Great ones in the world know many things of the mystery of Iniquity and of the secrets of Kingdoms and States of the world but the truth is many of them are ignorant of the mysteries of the Kingdome of Christ The Princes of this world whether Princes for knowledge as the Philosophers were or for power and greatnes as the Nobles and great ones be do not know those mysteries for had they known them they would not have crucified the King of glory But as it is written Eye hath not seen nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things that God hath prepared for them that love him which the Apostle speaketh of the Kingdome of grace in this world 1 Cor. 2.8 9. Natural reason calleth for fit instruments for every work and the matter well prepared to work upon but the Apostles were neither noble nor learned but poor and simples and the world altogether indisposed to receive them being at that time as much as at any time before or since full of learning of power and of policie yet they went on subduing conquering and bringing all unto the obedience of the Gospel of Jesus Christ The laws of this kingdome were in stead of revenge Love your enemies in stead of lust Look not on a woman to lust after her in stead of covetousnesse Forsake all instead of ambition Deny your selves And yet the supernaturall lawes by the Spirit and power of the great Law-giver were setled and written in the tables of mens hearts The promises of reward were not worldly pleasures or ease but let every man take up his crosse and follow me All things in this kingdome were above the reach of naturall reason yet the spiritual man by a new faculty created of God knoweth the deep things of God and judgeth all things Some Divines have observed seven things in the passion of Christ altogether contrary to the judgement of the naurall man the greatest impotency and weaknesse in him who was omnipotent the greatest suffering in that was impassible the greatest foolishnes according to the judgement of men in the deepest wisdome greatest poverty in the God of all riches greatest shame in the greatest glory and majesty greatest dereliction and forsaking in the most perfect union and great severity of the Father against his Son in the greatest love of the Father to the Son in the very time of his suffering Many more might be