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A07822 Salomon or A treatise declaring the state of the kingdome of Israel, as it was in the daies of Salomon Whereunto is annexed another treatise, of the Church: or more particularly, of the right constitution of a Church. Morton, Thomas, of Berwick. 1596 (1596) STC 18197.7; ESTC S112936 159,289 238

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doe cheifly teach the doctrine of the lawe yet that they doe also represent to our eyes and seale vppe to our consciences forgiuenesse of sinnes in that both of them doe take from vs the filthinesse of the fleshe Thus much of the doctrine of Baptisme the which is to be giuen so as that the body being dipped into the water the signification of it may be more euident and the force the greater in the eyes of those who see or receaue it Thus did Iohn baptist and therefore he chose our such places where there was much water Iohn 3.23 and this vse did remaine in some places in the ages following Those who are after this manner conuerted and baptised are with all diligence to be strengthned in the profession of the faith and to be edified therein as being most forcible witnesses of the trueth by whom they who remaine incredulous may be conuinced They are also in most earnest manner to be exhorted to constancie in their profession because their falling away would greatly hinder the building of the Church yea as soone as they haue attained vnto any measure of knowledge they are in like manner to be exhorted to lead a life which may be without scandall vnto those who doe not as yet beleeue and so without reproch vnto the gospell which they professe For the procuring whereof there is in the first planting of the Church great seueritie vsed both by God himselfe and also by his ministers against all such offences where by this worke may be hindered For whilest the Church is as it were in motion because at the first the truth of that profession is called into question the falling backe of one or any notorious offence doth wonderfully hinder the whole worke Therefore although many infirmities in knowledge and also in priuate conuersation were yea and ought to be gently delte withall till riper yeares yet those open offences whereby the building of the Church is hindred in respect either of those who are without or of those who are in the Church are seuerely to be punished Hither we are to referre those straunge iudgments which the Lorde executed vpon the wicked in establishing the l●gall gouernment by Moses as vppon Corath Dathan and Abiram Numbers 16.32 yea that seueritie in putting to death him that gathered sticks on the Saboath Numbers 15.36 yea also those fatherly corrections which the Lorde most seuerely layde vppon his owne seruants euen on Moses himselfe for doubting of his worde yea vppon the whole Church for murmuring and euen for the least offence So was Vzzath smitten 2. Sam. 6.7 that Dauid and the whole Church who then went about the repairing the enlarging and adorning of the worshippe of GOD might feare the Lorde So in building the temple at Ierusalem the least negligence of any of the people in furthering this worke had a fearefull curse annexed vnto it Nehem. 10.29 So were Ananias and Sapphira smitten with suddaine death Acts. 5. in so much that all both within and without the Church did feare the Lorde So Paule reiected Marke Acts. 15 38. for leauing them in that longe ●ourney which they made for the spreading of the gospell In this beginning it pleaseth GOD to giue great increase vnto his Church so that the preaching of the gospell is more effectuall in this infancy of the Church in conuerting many to the obedience of the faith then it is afterwardes Yea it is a greate signe that they who doe not yeelde obedience at the first wil be afterwards more and more hardned as the Apostle writeth 2. Cor. 4.3 If our gospell be yet hid it is hid to them that perish Yet the calling of the Lorde is not tied to any time and ther●fore we are still to vse all good meanes that those who doe not at the first beleeue may be wonne at some other time 2. Timothy 2.25 for the eff●cting whereof there may more forcible meanes be vsed nowe when as ●he trueth hath gotten some footing among them and is receaued of many the vanitie of their corrupt worshippe whatsoeuer it be is plainely to be declared and also their miserable and fearefull condition liuing in the same which at the first could not conueniently haue been done Yea further they are carefully by all meanes possible to be allured to loue the trueth by the good behauiour and honest conuersation of those who are called seeing them to be so woonderfully chaunged from ignorance to wisdome and vnderstanding from a corrupt and vicious course to a vertuous and godly life by their courteous and louing behauiour towardes them and generally by avoyding the offending them in all things as farre as may be The which meanes being diligently vsed we are not to doubt but that God will giue some good successe and blessing in the conuersion of many CHAP. V. Of ecclesiasticall gouernment so far forth as it is determined in the word of God Sect. 1. Of the lawes appointed by God for the gouerning of the church in generall SEing that we haue declared in some sorte what it is to prepare the matter for the building of a particular church we are nowe to goe on with the building of it and by ioyning these stones together in the foundation walles and other principall parts to giue vnto it the denomination and forme of a house for whenas a company of men are conuerted to the faith baptized there is the beginning or first foundation of a church but not a church vntill they ioyne together in some publike profession of the faith and the seruice of God For euen as when a great multitude of men are together in any place if they liue priuately euery one in his owne house not hauing any thing common or to doe one with another there is no common wealth because there wante magistrats lawes and orders to ioyne them together Againe as where there are many stones digged out of the grounde whereunto we resemble the conuersion of men to the faith and also hewed and wrought so that they haue lost their naturall rudenesse and now haue the forme of stones fit to be laide in a building which we may not vnfitlie cal the baptizing of those which doe beleeue if they lie asunder here and there there is no house till such time as they be laid fastened together ●n the iust compasse and forme of a house so it is in this case Men conuerted and baptized are indeede christians and members of the catholicke Church yet not of the visible Church neyther doe they make a particular Church vntill they ioyne together in some publicke seruice of God according to those lawes and orders which he hath appointed the which make these stones cleaue together Ephes. 2.11 in Christ all the building being coupled together groweth to be a holy temple in the Lord. Yea for the most part there was some space of time giuen to those who were conuerted to learne the orders and condition of a Church before
heretike Heretikes haue giuen their liues for the gospel Difference to be put betwixt the simple professours of errours and the obstinate maintainers of them What is the foundation of reliligion before and since the comming of Christ. The deuil hath knowledge but neither faith nor the profession of faith Mahometisme a mystical Ariaanisme No saluation The ca●holicke Church cannot erre in the foundatiō of religion The catholicke Church hath often beene in most grieuous errours The catholicke Church doth continually encrease in number and in knowledge The catholicke Church hath no head o● outward gouernment The catholicke Church in●isible Dispersed Christians with the Churches professing the gospel make the Catholicke Church Eremeticall separation from the Church vnawfull How the sacraments may be priuately receiued God accepteth the imperfect seruice of those who cannot be in the visible Church Dispersed christians ought to labour by all meanes to ioyne themselues to some Church By what meanes God calleth those who are with out the visible Church Three things required to the constitution of a Church A diuerse gouernment maketh a distinct Church The whole nation of the Iewes made but one particular Church A particular Church often contained in one familie Why it was needful that the whole nation of the Iewes should be one particular church Better for a Church to consist of many christians then of a fewe No kinde of men excluded from being the Church of God The most barbarous may become Christians The planting of Churches belongeth to thē who haue either extraordinarie callings or the most excellent gifes Great care to be had in planting a Church The ministerie of the word was more effectuall in the primitiue Church then it hath bene at any time since The Iewes are to be conuerted by the generall consent of the Gentiles in receauing the gospell How infidels ought to be prepared for the doctrine of the gospell How the doctrine of the gospell is to be propounded to infidels Baptisme is the badge or liueray of christians Baptisme circumcision sacraments of the lawe of death Great seueritie in punishing open offences to be vsed in the planting of Churches The establishing of ecclesiasticall lawes among beleeuers maketh a Church Ecclesiasticall lawes or ecclesiasticall gouernment is partly diuine and partly huma●● None but God can appoint the substance of Church-gouernment The gouernment of the Church alwaies changed to a better estate What was the state of the Church before the lawe What was the state of the Church vnder the lawe The state of the Church in the time of the gospel Th● Church in the time of the Gospel hath more of inward grace lesse in outward shewes and ceremonies The gouernment of the Church neuer altered but by men sent immediately from God The difference betwixt diuine and humane ecclesiastical lawes Humane ecclesiastical lawes are made of the circumstances of Gods worship How humane ecclesiastical lawes are set downe in the word of God In conueniēt lawes may lawfully be obeyed In making ecclesiastical lawes regard must be had of the knowledge or ignornance of the time Sharper laws to be made for one people then for another For what causes the multitude of ecclesiasticall lawes ought to be auoyded The difficulty of planting a Church maketh an vn●stablished state The number of Christians is to encrease daily The primitiue Church did most florish in spirituall giftes God maketh the building of the Church troublesom● and dangerous for the trial of those who build it The Church vtt●r●y ●uer throwen to mans iudgement Two ki●des of ciuil authoritie and 〈◊〉 What magistrates may be resisted in the cause of the Church The original of absolute autho●itie Vniust conquest and vsurpation may become a lawfull dominion Fli●ht i● time of persecution alwaies lawful and often good for the Church The Censures of the Church belong as well to christian rulers as to ●he people What cautions are to be obserued in excommunicating the c●uill ruler Excommunication is no curse neither toucheth the authoritie of the magistrate Public●e wants are to be priuately s●●plied How we may lawfully remaine in an imperfect Church No corruption maketh them who holde the foundation of religion to be no Church The tenne tribes in their defection were the Church of God The ten tribes in th●ir defect● on were the Church of G●d Idolat●ie the worship of the true God ioyned g●th●r The errours of the I●wes before the comming of Christ. No publicke Church sau● the people of the Iewes til the daies of Constātine The causes of a priuate C●urch Priuate men may plante priuate Churches Euery one ought to builde the Church so farre as his authoritie stretcheth Christians in priuate Churches ought not to abhorre the company of infidels Priuate Chu●ches consist of the most swee●e Chris●ians What a publick Church is Why there were no publick Ch. in the daies of the Apostles Why publick churches can not be so perfect as priua●e How publick Churches are called to the faith Publicke Churches stand no longer then they are vpheld by the ciuill magistrate The ministerie is a member of the ciuill bodie Magistrates haue charge of the soules their subiects No man ought to passe the limits of his calling in building the Church Christ is the head of the Church after another manner then men are The setting vp of a publicke Church doth not alter the forme of ciuill gouernment Ciuill states wel ordered are more fit harbours for the Ch. then disordered states In the first planting of a publicke Church the false worship is to b● abrogated by little little Obstinate infidels may be compelled to heare the word but not to be of the Church In case of necessity men of meane gifts may be admitted to the ministerie of the word The state of a priuate Church is popular but the state of a publicke Church is according to the forme of the ciuil gouernment Why the authoritie of the ciuill ruler ouer the Church is not mentioned by the Apostles in their writinges The vse of councels Why there is no me●tion made of coūcels in the writings of the Apostles For what causes others besides the ministers of the word are to be admitted to ecclesiastical cōsultations No ecclesiastical law can be made made in a publicke Ch. without the consent of the ciuill ruler The general consent of the Church confirmeth faith How the visible Church hath changed the dwelling place
zealous of the law yea Paule by the counsell of the Church at Ierusalem did goe about to make the Iewes beleeue that he also did liue according to the law of Moses Act. 21.26 and therefore we must thinke that he warneth the Galathians that if nowe in so great light of the gospell which teacheth the abrogation of the ceremoniall lawe and after so much teaching and so many admonitions they did still remaine blinde and obstinate yea and did turne backe againe to the or●ers of the lawe that then it was an euident signe that they were as yet destitute of the true knowledge and obedience of the gospell For if this had beene the first time wherein they had beene taught Christ he woulde easelie haue winked at this greate errour of ioyning the lawe and the gospell togither Likewise as concerning that detestable heresie of Arianism● we may well thinke the authours spreaders beginners furtherers and maintainers of it to haue beene men destitute of the spirit of God and that this heresie is especially in these ages a fearefull signe of eternalll reprobation Yet we are not to thinke so hardlie of those who were corrupted with it ●fter that it had ouerspred the greatest part of the worlde and so were caried away with the multitude to euill although it were in that time also a fearefull token of a reprobate minde for as in a common infection of the aire we cannot iudge of the state of mens bodies by popular diseases and deathes whenas both strong and weake men are in the same case so neyther in the common raigning of anie heresie can we perfectly discerne the state of mens mindes and soules by that token forsomuch as God doth sauesome euen by pulling them out of the fire And therefore we are charitably to hope the best of them who liue in grieuous errours not of wilfull blindnesse but of simple ignorance and not to doubt but that ignorant heretikes beeing religious and zealous seruers of God are in farre bett●r state as touching their saluation then they who professing the sincere doctrine of the gospell doe in their prophane liues denie the power thereof But that heretikes are to be accounted members of the Church we shall haue occasion to declare when we come to the corrupt state of a Church So that to conclude this pointe we doe and that as we trust and are perswaded by the worde of GOD giue the name of members of the Church and of christians to all that doe in outwarde profession holde the foundation of religion The which although in effect it be the same both before and since the time of the Gospell yet it hath some difference in respect of the diuersitie of the times For before Christ was exhibited in the flesh this was the foundation of religion I put my whole trust and confidence for my happinesse in the Messias whome God hath promised to sende for the redemption and saluation of the people of the seede of Dauid This foundation did the Church of the Iewes professe when Christ came and therefore euery one of that people was a member of the Church howsoeuer they did togither holde grosser heresies then the papistes doe at this day But since the comming of Christ this is to holde the foundation of religion I beleeue Iesus the sonne of Mary to be the sonne of God the promised Messias the Lord and Sauiour of the worlde and that in him onely saluation is to be had as it is more briefely set downe by the Apostle 1. Cor. 3.11 Another foundation can no man lay but that which is laid to wit that Iesus is Christ. To the which doctrine all opinions and assertions which are contrary are pernicious heresies and such as bring certaine damnation 2. Peter 2.1 There were many false prophe●s among the peop●e as there are fals● teachers among● you which bring in damnable heresi●s to wit these denying the Lorde Iesu● who bought them these bring vpon themselues swift damnation that is may certainly be accounted for damned As for the heresies of those who doe confesse the lord Iesus as they are more waighty and doe nearer approach to the grand heresie of those who do not confesse the Lord Iesus so they are more dangerous yet of themselues not beeing ioyned with obstinate and wilfull blindnesse not so desperate Sect. 5. Of those who dissemble their profession BVT before we leaue this point this question may me moued whether as the outward profession of faith without the trueth thereof in heart so the inwarde faith of the heart without out ward profession be sufficient to make a man a true member of the catholicke Church We answere that where true faith is there necessarely is also some outward seruice of God and some confession of the mouth by praier or some other meanes which be it neuer so little is sufficient to make a man a member of the catholicke Church But as for open and publicke profession of our faith before men true faith being weake may be destitute thereof so we read Iohn 12.40 that many of the chiefe rulers beleeued in Christ but neither did nor durst professe him before men these are members of the catholicke Church which is in visible but not of any particular Church vnlesse they doe professe their faith before others beside themselues So that outward profession of the faith although it be secrete and priuate maketh a man a member of the catholicke Church and open profession maketh vs members of the visible Church But it may be obiected against this whole doctrine that if the outward profession of the gospell be sufficient to make a true member of the Church then the diuels which confessed Iesus to be the sonne of God● are truely christians We answere that this confession was extorted from them by the power of God and sometimes came from the malice of their nature that so they might procure danger to Christ but they doe not by faith relie themselues on God in Christ for happinesse neither doe they professe themselues to be his seruantes and that they are to loue him and labour to glorifie him as all christians doe So then as many are members of the misticall bodie of Christ and of his Church which are not as yet members of his visible bodie which is the visible Church militant heere on earth they not beeing as yet called to the knowledge of the gospell so many are called to be members of the Church who are not chosen Sect. 6. Who are without the catholicke Church AND thus we see what manner of seruing God is ment in the definition the other wordes which follow haue their vse for in that we require the seruice of the true God we exclude all heathenish and pagan people from being members of the Church because as it is Rom. 1.23 they passing by the creator worship creatures as Gods And lastly we adde these wordes in Iesus Christ because there is no true seruing of God the
And therefore they are to serue God in the time of their excommunication Sect. 2. How the dispersed members of the catholicke Church serue God THus much of the causes why some of the mēbers of the Church are dispersed abroad from the company of the Church Now we are to consider what manner of seruice they perform to God in regarde wherof they are accounted members of the Church The which title belongeth only to those who do serue God as hath beene declared The onely meanes whereby they serue God is praier or inuocation of the name of God because this seruice may be perfourmed by one alone but the ministery the word of the sacramentes and other partes of the seruice of God require acompany ioyning together for that purpose So that prayer is that part of the actuall seruice of God which onely belongeth generally to all the members of the Church which are come to yeares of discretion as well to those who are dispersed as to those who liue together in the Church Hence it is that the Apostle Paule when he speaketh of all christians without exception of any calleth them those who call vpon the name of the Lord as namely 1. Cor. 1.1 Thus did Daniell serue God in Babel Dan. 6.10 thrise a day he made his petition to God and praised him Heere order requireth that we should entreate of prayer the most generall and perpetuall part of the seruice of God yea that which is the very badge of all christians and declare the whole nature manner kindes fruite and all the pointes of doctrine belonging to this heade But we will rather passe it ouer with silence for that the matter is both large and requiring a seuerall treatise and also is sufficiently handled by diuerse godly and learned men Here also this question is to be answered whether that the dispersed members of the Church may not vse some other parte of the seruice of God as the sacrmentes for the confirmation of their faith As touching this point it seemeth that whilest any one member of the Church is wholly seuered from the societie of others that he cannot vse them neyther any other part but onely prayer as hath beene said Yet if there be any number of them although but two that then they may lawfully vse both the sacramentes of baptisme and of the Lordes supper For the further declaration whereof we may put this case A christian man and his wife being taken captiues liue amongest infidels where to their knowledge there is not any christian beside themselues There they beget children whome they woulde haue by baptisme consecrated and initiated into the profession of Christianity In this case it is lawfull yea needfull for the parentes both of them or eyther of them to administer baptisme to their children This appeareth Exod 4.25 where Moses and Zippora his wife circumcise their sonne by the commandement or rather by the threatning of God And so did all the Iewes being scattered abroade into all the partes of the worlde circumcise their male children in their owne houses Likewise for the other sacrament of the Lordes supper it is lawfull for christians in the aforesaid case to receiue it at their owne handes as this one example doth sufficiently prooue If it be obiected that the sacramentes being a part of the ministerie of the Church ought not to be administred but by a publicke person and in a publicke place we answere that where there is no Church there a priuate mans house is in steed of it and he himselfe in place of a minister Sect. 3. By what meanes the dispersed members of the Church are called THus much of that seruice wherewith the dispersed members of the Church serue God the which although it be imperfect yet it is acceptable to God where the rest cannot be had and is a sufficient meanes to worke their saluation So we reade Ezech. 11.16 the Lord saith that He will be to his people dispersed abroad in the captiuitie a little sanctuarie that is howsoeuer they were absent from the holy temple at Ierusalem in which place onely it was lawfull to offer sacrifice and to serue God in full and ample manner yet that God would accept that imperfect and maimed seruice which they should perfourme vnto him in their captiuitie by praier and circumcision For as touching the passouer it was a sacrifice and therefore could not be vsed in any place but onely at Ierusalem But although this imperfect seruice be accepted of God yet they themselues doe not so rest in it but that they doe and ought aboue all thinges in the worlde to desire to be in the societie of the Church that so they may enioy the full meanes of working their owne saluation and of glorifying God So that although they be absent in body yet in minde and affection they are ioyned with it In witnesse whereof as also to encrease this desire they did being in a straunge lande amongest the infidels pray toward the place of the Church and worship of God 1. King 8.48 Dan. 6.11 Psal. 84. Lastly it may be asked how those dispersed members of the Church which neuer were in the societie of other christians were called and became members of it whereunto we answere that in the ordinarie working of God there is no faith and true knowledge of God to be gotten but in the visible Church and in the company of beleeuers yet that God doth by extraordinarie meanes saue some who neuer were ioyned to the society of the Church The meanes which God vseth are knowen to him only yet some of them may be gathered out of the scripture As first the reliques of the true worship of God the which taketh such deep root in those places where it is planted that although the visible Church be cleane ouerthrowen yet there will some root of knowledge remain hidden in the ground euen as we see that where a garden replenished with great store of herbes hath been there wil be long after that it is defaced some sprouting vp So that the word of God as it is in the gospel cōpared to a grain of mustard seed Ma. 13.31 in respect of the speedy gret groth of it vpwards so it may be cōpared to it in that they both take so deep root that where they are once sowen there they remaine for many ages Thus there was a glimmering of the true worship of God dispersed abroade by the sonnes of Noah by the which meanes it came to passe that diuerse did in some sorte knowe God among the infidels As Melihezadec Iob with his friends Lot Baal●m of all them knowing the true God Yea in the idolatrie of Mahomet there remaineth something of christian religion hereof they holde many pointes although couered ouer with prophane fable Moreouer some liuing out of the Church are brought to the knowledge of God by the meanes and priuate teaching of some who haue beene of the Church Yea euen
by the fame of the true religiō some haue bene conuerted so was Rahab liuing in Iericho of whome it is saide Heb. 11. that she beleeued or by reading bookes containing the doctrine of religion Lastly it may please God to vse for this purpose that knowledge which remaineth in the minds of men since the fall of Adam and which is stirred vp by the contemplation of the creatures and all those meanes which naturall men haue for the attaining of knowledge These or any other meanes God may vse extraordinarily yea he may doe it without any meanes but in his ordinarie working none of these aforesaid meanes are auailable for faith is gotten ordinarely onely by hearing the worde preached and therefore we are to esteeme and iudge of them who haue not the ministerie of the worde that they wante the ordinarie meanes of attaining a true and sauing faith alwaies excepting the power and extraordinarie worke of God the which is not tyed to any meanes CHAP. III. Of a particular Church Sect. 1. Of the originall of particular Churches THus much of the dispersed mēbers of the catholicke Church the which state God doth accept where it cannot be amended but so that he wil haue al his seruantes to indeauour by al means possible to come liue together for their mutuall edification and therefore as for the more commodious maintaining of our temporall liues he hath appointed ciuill societies so for the beginning and maintaining of spirituall strength and life in vs he hath appointed holy assemblies which are particular Churches out of the which a christian may liue this spirituall life but yet in great weakenesse and danger euen as a man may preserue his naturall life in a desert place but he cannot haue perfect strength and health vnlesse he liue in some place frequented by men and replenished with thinges needfull for that purpose And therefore we are now to declare what a particular Church is Sect. 2. Of the definition of a parlicular Church A Particular Church is a company of men separated from the infidels of the world to serue God vnder al the same diuine and humane lawes or vnder the same ecclesiasticall gouernment both diuine and humane This definition doth in some sort comprehend in it the whole nature and essence of a particular Church and therefore a great part of this treatise is to be spent in the explication of it wherein that we may proceede in some distinct and plaine order we haue these three heads to obserue First the separating of those of whom the Church is to consist from the infidels of the world Secondly the diuine lawes by the which they thus brought together are to be ordered And lastly the humane lawes which are added to the lawes of God For euen as it is in the establishing of a common wealth or kingdome first men must be brought together who are to be the inhabitantes of that citie or country Secondly there must certaine generall and fundamentall lawes be made containing the very state and forme of gouernment and of subiection which must stand in force continually without any alteration and lastly there must be added some speciall positiue lawes which are often to be changed as present occasion shall require so is it in the establishing of a Church First men are called from infidelity to faith as from barbarisme to ciuility then they haue giuen vnto them the lawes which God in 〈◊〉 word hath made for the gouernment of his Church till the end of the world and lastly the changeable ecclesiasticall lawes of men Againe as we see men doe in the building of a house first they prepare stones then they ioyne them together in some fourme of a house till by little and little they set vp the whole frame of it and lastly they adde doores windowes fenses and whatsoeuer may serue for the vse of the dweller in like manner the calling of men to the knowledge of Christ is the preparing of the matter of a Church secondly the establishing of the gouernment of the Church the māner of seruing God is a setting vp of the frame of it an lastly the making of ecclesiasticall constitutions is the applying of this gouernment to the speciall vse of those men whome we woulde bring vnto the fourme of a Church that it may be a fit dwelling place for them This latter similitude we desire the reader to marke the rather for that we are to vse it throughout this whole treatise And that because it hath pleased the spiritte of GOD to teach vs so to doe who in the scripture doth for the most parte compare the Church to a house and to the buylding of it as we may see 1. Cor. 3.11.12 1. Tim. 3.15 1. Pet. 4.17 In this definition the last wordes onely the rest being of themselues plaine enough neede this explication that by humane lawes we doe not meane ciuill lawes but ecclesiasticall constitutions added to the lawes of GOD appointed in the worde by the which humane lawes being alwaies in some pointe or other differing from the lawes of other Churches particular Churches haue their difference and distincte limittes appointed to them For therefore we haue inserted this partickle all in the definition because many yea all the Churches in the worlde may agree in some ecclesiasticall constitutions but not in all So that the same gouernment maketh one and the same Church yea although they be distinguished into diuerse congregations and haue many distinct places of seruing God As if the lawes of any towne doe stretch to the suburbes and villages aboute there is but one corporation or ciuill bodie And to vse our accustomed similitude as that is one familie which hath the same gouernour ouer it the same orders in it although they be in diuerse roomes so it is in this behalfe a distincte gouernment maketh a distinct Church The gouernment is then distincte when eyther the humane Church lawes are diuerse or at the least the rulers and gouernours of the companie haue in their handes authoritie to make diuers lawes in that manner which we are afterwardes to declare So that where we see many distinct and diuerse assemblies or congregations of christians all to depend vpon one company hauing in their handes the saide authoritie and from thence to fetch all their constitutions and determinations of causes they are to be accounted not many but one onely particular Church which notwithstanding if they did no waie depend vpon any other were to be accounted so many distinct Churches So the Church of Israell although it did consist of many distinct townes and cities the which had their proper leuites and gouernours yet because for gouernment they did all depend vpon the high priest and the other priestes which did offer sacrifice in the temple at Ierusalem they all made but one Church So that those christians are to be accounted a particular Church which are ioyned together not onely in the same faith as the
whole catholicke Church is or in the same diuine gouernment as the whol visible Church is but also in the same humane gouernment to wit in the same humane ecclesiasticall lawes and the same gouernours Sect. 3. Of howe many a particular Church may consist AS touching the number whereof a particular Church doth consist the least may be giuen but not the greatest the least is the least number of one priuate familie within the compasse whereof a particular Church hath often beene contained So in the beginning there was a particular Church in the familie of Adam for they did iointly together and in common offer sacrìfice and serue God This Church consisted of foure persons at what time there was a publike seruice of God namely Adam Eua Cain and Abel Likewise in the time of the generall deluge the Church consisted of those few persons only which were within the Arke If it be obiected that in so smal a number as are three or foure persons there cannot be al the officers much lesse the bodie of a Church we confesse that they cannot make a perfect Church yet a true Church But more heereof when we come to shew what an imperfect state of a Church is The greatest number cannot be defined for a whole nation whereof there is no certaine number may be one particular Church as was the nation of the Iewes as hath beene shewed in the former section Yet the greatest number of a Church rightly established may thus generally be determined to wit that the Church consist of no moe then can without confusion or any manifest inconuenience meet together at one time and in one place to serue God so that none be by reason of the multitude excluded hindred or troubled in the seruice of God for God is not the author neyther any approuer of any kinde of confusion which as in all other actions so especially in these holy assemblies ought carefully to be auoyded If it be heere answered that this confusion which doth arise of too great a number may be auoyded by deuiding one and the same particular Church into diuerse assemblies and by appointing to each part of the Church seuerall and distinct places of meeting we confesse that this may be done vpon necessitie and for the auoyding of a greater inconueniencie but otherwise it ought not neyther can conueniently be done for besides that it is vndecent to see one body of a Church so distracted and pulled asunder into many parts it is also in many respectes inconuenient For first so great a multitude as must of necessitie be deuided into diuerse assemblies can hardly be so well ordered and so diligently looked vnto as the Church ought to be Secondly by this meanes both the labour of the teachers wil be increased and also the profit of the people much diminished who neyther can goe on in knowledge altogether nor yet be alwaies made partakers of the best and most excellent ministrie as they ought to be As for the Church of the Iewes which did consist of a farre greater number then coulde conueniently serue God together we answere first that it was necessary that this nation should be made one Church because it was needfull in diuers respectes that there shoulde be but one place of the presence of God one high priest one temple and place of offering sacrifice Secondlie that the whole nation of the Iewes might more conueniently meete together in the publicke seruice of God then the hundred part of them could doe in the time of the gospell for then the publicke seruice wherein all were bound to meete was but seldome to be perfourmed to wit thrise in the yeare at the three solemne feastes And then they did not giue themselues so much to the hearing of the worde and to publicke prayer as to the offering of the sacrifices commaunded in the lawe So that that seruice did require onely presence at Ierusalem or about the temple but our seruice requireth particular and diligent attention On the other side in the gathering of a particular Church this is carefully to be auoyded that it doe not consist of too few For we are not to thinke that any smal number of beleeuers do make a competent congregation but rather to desire that it may consist euen of so many as may conueniently come together into one place and there without confusion be made partakers of all those meanes whereby they are to be edified in the obedience of faith For the moe there be in the congregation there wil be a greater abundance of spiritual graces whereby the publicke functions of the Church yea all other wants whatsoeuer may be more easely and abundantly supplied there will also be found more pregnant examples of speciall vertues and graces in the liues of men and the ministerie of the worde will haue many diuerse strange and singular effectes in men which cannot be had in a Church consisting of a small number CHAP. IIII. Of the planting of a particular church Sect. 1. Of what people the Church may be planted THE planting of a Church consisteth in two thinges first and principally in bringing a competent number of men to beleeue imbrace the gospell euen as in the building of an house the first part of the worke is to digge stones out of the ground for that purpose secondly in giuing vnto them being thus called the sacrament of baptisme as the badge of their profession this is to hew and make them fit for our purpose In the first part we haue these pointes to consider first what kinde of men are fit to be the matter whereof the Church should consist Secondly by whom they ought to be conuerted from infidelity to christianity and lastly after what manner Of the first point the worde of God doth plainely teach vs that there is no people or nation in the world no state or condition of men whatsoeuer excluded but that the Church may consist of them Math. 28.19 Goe ye and preach the gospel to al nations baptizing them in the name of the father the sonne and of the holy ghost So that there is no people in the worlde eyther so dull and blockish but that they may be taught or so sauage fierce and barbarous but that they may be subdued to the obedience of the gospell As the prophet Esay foretolde Esay 11. that the power of the kingdome of Christ shoulde be so greate that men who of themselues were euen as Tygers Lyons Leopardes and as most sauage beastes should be made tame and gentle Yea this prophecie is ratified by the euent of thinges wherby we see that euen the most barbarous nations and generally all kindes of people haue submitted themselues to the gospell of Christ. And yet some kinde of people are more fit for this purpose then others and doe more easelie yea more vsuallie submitte themselues to the gospell Euen as we see that there is difference in stones whereof some
God and for an heartie and spirituall seruing of God doth institute a dead worship not piercing into the heart Thirdly where there are many lawes there are also necessarely many transgressions of lawes and so the necessarie breaking of some maketh the rest to be lesse obeyed and esteemed It remaineth that we should shew to whome the making of ecclesiasticall lawes doth belong but as before we did deferre to speake of the first mouer in the planting of a Church till we come to the distinct kindes of a Church so this question must be referred to the same place CHAP. VII Of the diuers states of a particular Church Sect. 1. Of an vnstablished state of a Church THus we haue declared as it hath pleased God to giue vnto vs the knowledge hereof the whole frame of a particular Church the matter whereof it consisteth being a company of christians called together by the ministery of the word the forme likewise being first and chiefly the lawes of God and secondly the positiue lawes or constitutions of the Church The which two kindes of lawes diuine and humane whenas they are ioyned together and put in practise among a beleeuing people then is the whole frame of the house of God set vp The which although it be in it selfe one and the same and according to the word of God ought to be fully and purely established in all places yet by reason of mans infirmitie not being able to perfourme the will of God in perfect manner and of the malice of Sathan labouring by all meanes to hinder this worke when it is put in practise it receaueth many alterations whereof come the diuerse states of a Church In all which this is generally to be noted that they haue many aber●ations from the forme of gouernment prescribed in the worde of God the which may lawfully be tollerated where by reason of the present state of the Church they cannot be amended yet so as that we doe alwaies aime at that which ought to be The lettes whereby this worke is hindred that it cannot come to perfection at the first are of two kindes natural violent The first kind we call naturall because they arise of no outward cause but euen of the very hardnesse of the worke it self as these for example It commeth often to passe that men although conuerted from infidelitie to faith yet cannot at the first be brought to submit themselues wholly to the gouernment of the Church yea there can hardlie be gotten at the first a sufficient number of teachers endued with sufficient giftes for this great worke Besides it is not to be hoped that the lawes whereby the Church is gouerned shoulde be soone brought to perfection For neither the lawes of God will be thoroughly knowen till they haue beene some time practised neyther the humane constitutions of the Church made fit to the people and agreeable to all circumstances till vse doe shew them to be conuenient in al or else inconuenint in some respects what is wanting in them what is superfluous By these meanes and many other of the same kinde it commeth to passe that th● Church is for some space of time although both founded an● built yet not strongly fastned together nor in any firme constant setled estate Yet this is not an imperfect state of a Church wherein some part of the gouernment is wanting but a state vnestablished Euen as we see that although the partes of the body of a childe are not as ye● so firme and compact neyther his whole bodie hath attained to that strength and firme constitution whereunto it groweth yet he is not therefore maimed or imperfect so it is in the Church the which groweth from one age state and strength to another euen as a mans bodie doth In this estate all Churches are at the first and so doe continue either a longer or a shorter time as the hindrances of the building of thē are many or few great or little Thus were the Churches in the daies of the Apostles yea many of them did continue so a long time because it was a matter of great difficulty to build thē and to bring them to any good estate for then all the orders of the Church were straunge vnto them for that they were lately ordained and had not bene practised before Hence it was that after they were planted and fully builte by the Apostles they did still require their continuall care as P●ule saith of himselfe 2. Corin. 11.28 that the care of all the Churches lay vpon himselfe For although he being pres●nt with them or by the meanes of others did set all things in due order yet they did not continue long in that estate but fell into many abuses and disorders in life doctrine and gouernment the which may be seene as in other so especially in the Church at Corinth the which whilest it was in this vnestablished state was euen ouer growen with disorders And so it is with other Churc●es being not fully setled for as a ●ouse may be easely shaken a sunder before the partes of it be firmly ioyned together and as children in their young age are subiect to many daungers and are easely hurt so the gouernment of Churches is most commonly confounded and ●roden vnder foote before it be confimed by vse and practise In the which respect they to whome the care of such Churches is commited ought to be so much more diligent and watchfull as the daunger is greater then at other times yea in regard of the infancy or weake estate of the Church they may and ought to remit somewhat of the strict forme of gouernment and especially of discipline whenas the good of the people shall so require Thus as was before noted dealt Paule with the Corinthians vnto whome he gaue milke as to infants not strong meate 1. Cor. 3.2 And likewise with the Thessalonians 1. Thess. 2.7.8 tho we might haue bene burdensome to you as the Apostles of Christ yet we were tender among you euen as a nourse cherisheth hir owne children Sect. 2. Of a pure and perfect state of a Church WHen the gouernment of the Church with those other lawes appertaining vnto it is fully established and practised then the Church hath a pure and perfect estate both which in regarde of outward gouernment may be attained vnto howsoeuer no christian mans life seuerally considered can possibly be without diuerse corruptions and imperfections in this world A pure estate is that wherein God is serued according to his owne will and ordinance onely the whole order and gouernment of the Church being free from all spottes of idolatry superstition and all traditions or deuises of men swaruing from the truth of the word of God The examples of this exact purity are very fewe beside the first Churches built by Moses among the Israelites and by the Aposteles among the christians in Ierusalem For immediatly after their daies crept in corruption the staine whereof is hardly
Necodemus a maister in Israell Iho. 3.10 Neither did they looke so much for forgiuenes of sinnes and eternall life by the Messias thinking to be iustified by keeping the law as for temporall commodities And lastly they denied the doctrine of the death of Christ for they held that the Messias should not dy Iohn 12.34 That these and other such errours were popular and common in the Church of the Iewes we may both gather out of their saying recorded by the euangelists as also by their continuall silence in these matters the which we doe not reade that any of them doe mention vppon any occasion And lastly by the open confession of the Iewes in all ages since the comming of Christ. For it is plaine that they holde euen to this day those opinions which they receaued from their auncestours and were commonlie helde of that nation Notwithstanding all which errours we thinke as it is generally thought that the people of the Iewes professing generally faith in the Messias to come were then the true Church and the people of God but this confession will not serue now in the time of the Gospell to make them a Church because they doe reiect Christ himselfe in his very person As for the hereticall Churches since the time of the gospell as the Church of Arians papists or any other maintaining grieuous errours contrarie to the worde of God it seemeth that they are to be accounted the Churches of God because they doe all hold the foundation of the Gospell which is faith in Iesus Christ the sonne of God and the sauiour of the world CHAP. VIII Of a Priuate Church Sect. 1. What a priuate Church is HItherto we haue entreated in generall of a particular church now we are to speake of the kindes of it which are two in number to wit priuate publick A priuate Church is a company of Christians seruing God together in the midst of infidels or there where the whole multitude or the whol body of the people generally publickly considered abideth in infidelity Of this kind of churches we haue many examples First from the beginning vntill the daies of Moses in all which time the Churches were priuate Secondly after the nation of the Iewes did cease from b●ing a Church for from their comming out of Egipt vntill the time wherein they reiected christ and the gospel they were a publick church til the dayes of Constantine the great all the chu●ches of the christans were priuate For we doe not read of any one citie or countrie within al that time being about .300 yeares did publickly embrace the gospell but a fewe in respect of the infidels in this and that citie as in Ierusalem Antioch Corinth Rome and the rest So that al the churches planted by the Apostles Euangelists or any other in the first ages of the gospel were priuate Thirdly of this kinde are those churches at this day if there be any such which are amongst the Turkes or any other kind of infidels Out of the which examples we may gather that the cause of this priuat estate of the church was in the first ages of the world the smal nūber of the tru worshippers of God is in these latter ages the infidelitie of magistrates who being themselues infidels do not go about to bring their subiects to the faith but are perhaps content to tolerate the same within their dominions and that for some ciuill respect as namely to make their cities and countries more resorted vnto for encrease of the tribute due vnto them for the preseruation of peace or for some other such consideration Lastly the cheife cause of these priuate Churches is to be taken from the very nature of the Gospell the which being contrary to mans reason is hardly beleeued and therefore it is vsually receaued only of a fewe As it is written Rom. 10.16 who hath beleeued our report that is very fewe in respect of the infidels do beleeue the doctrine of the Gospell For howsoeuer the force of ciuill authoritie and other outward respects make the gospell to be generally receaued in many places yet this generall profession is contrary to the nature of the gospell the which hardly and seldome is truly receaued as hath bene said But here it may easely be obiected that no Church can be called priuate seing that we haue here before defined a church in generall by the publick seruice of God We answere confessing that euerie church is publick in respect of the seuerall members of it yea although it be in a priuate house or family or in the most secrete corner that can be And yet a church contained within a priuate place and consisting of a small company may truly and fitly be called priuate in respect of that Church which consisting of the whole body of the people doth not lurke in a corner but is openly established amongst all and in euerie place Yet the ministerie of the word and al other actions of such a church are to be counted publick and not priuate So that this kinde of Churches is called priuate from the subiect because they are in priuate places but the subiect of the other kindes is a publick citie or countrie Sect. 2. Of the the specials in planting a publicke Church NOW that we see what a priuate Church is we are in the next place to come to the specials in the planting of it And first we are to declare by whom this kinde of Church ought to be founded as for the secondarie workers to wit the ministers of the worde we haue spoken of them in the generall treatise of planting a Church So that here we are to search out ●he first workers in this action who are the chiefe in that they begin the worke and procure the ministrie of the worde The answere is that euery man may be the chiefe and first builder of a Church so farre foorth as his calling power and authority doth stretch So that in this case priuate men may be lawfully and are vsually the first and chiefe builders Yea it is not onely lawfull but that wherunto the duetie which we owe both to God to seeke his glory and to men to seeke their saluation doth necessarelie binde vs that if God giue vs occasion the Church standing in neede of our helpe we be not wanting in this behalfe For so we are to vnderstande that this is to be done whenas the C●urch is destitu●e of christian magistrates and likewise of other gou●rnours and teachers As it is in those places where eyther there is no C●●rch a● all or else so decayed that there rem●in●th nothing but the professi●n of religion amongest some fewe In the which case it is lawfull for any christian whom God hath endued with the zeale of his glorie and the saluation of his brethren and also wit● some measure of knowledg● how this thing ought to be done to labour both in bringing t●ose who are infidels to the
of the same ciuill power THus much of the voluntarie coniunction of particular Churches vnder the gouernment of councels now followeth the necessarie coniunction of them so called because it is not in their power to shake off that common authoritie whereunto they are subiect This necessarie coniunction hath place then whenas diuerse particular Churches are tyed together in obedience to the same ciuill authoritie by the which they are ruled as hath beene declared in the former chapter Yea it may be seene almost in all publick Churches the which vsually consist of so great a number of professours as cannot possiblie be contained within the compasse of one C●urch for if any one populous citie doe generally professe the gospell it must of necessitie be deuided into diuers particular Churches much more a christian country nation or kingdome cannot but containe in it many particular Churches All which although they haue their proper rulers or teachers and orders as free Churches haue yet they haue also a common gouernment and lawes proceeding from the ciuill power to the obedience whereof they are all bound For in publicke Churches the ciuill power hath the greatest sway in gouerning by the which being one the whole Church and euery particular assembly is brought to a conformitie both in doctrine as also in gouernment yea it is requisite needfull that it should be so for otherwise if euery particular Church did differ from the rest in gouernment the whole Church could not be ordered without great trouble and confusion But yet this common gouernment of the magis●●ate doth not take away the grouernment of particular Churches no more then the councels whereof we haue spoken do from free Churches This is to be done by the authoritie of the ciuill ruler yet by the aduise of others In the choise of whom as it is lawfull for the prince to call or passe ouer whom he thinketh meete or vnmeete so it will be conuenient for the good of the Church the which it is not lawfull for him eyther wholly to neglect or lightly to regard to call of all sortes of men those who are endued with best giftes yet so that some be had out of euery particular Church as if they were free Churches And especially the ministers of the word are to be called for the reasons declared in the former section when they by his authoritie are gathered together he is to take vnto himselfe the ruling of the whole action vnlesse it be needful that he delegate his authoritie to some other and by praying for the blessing of God vpon their consultations declaring the cause of their meeting to begin it Then he is to propound in the first place those wants faults and corruptions of the Ch. which he himselfe hath obserued would haue supplied and taken away to shewe the manner how he thinketh it most meet to be done which being done he is to giue liberty to euery one present to speake their mindes freely of those things which he hath propounded as also of any other thing which they thinke good for the Church that which is agreed vpon doth appeare to al or to the most of them right meete to be decreed he is to establish giuing vnto it the vertue of an ecclesiastical law the which the whole Ch. ought to obey That which cannot be agreed vpon is to be deferred to another time of meeting which ought to be somuch the sooner as the matters controuersed are of greater importance for more mature deliberation with themselues and others will make that cleare and euident which before was doubtfull If there be any thing which neyther can be agreed vpon by the consent of the greater part neither yet deferred without great hurt to the Church the chiefe ruler may with the consent of some of the councell decree and enact that which they thinke needfull to be done Yet he is not to vse this authority in this manner but vpon vrgent necessitie for many inconueniences do follow the enacting of ecclesiasticall lawe● without the full consent of the councell yea the suspitiō of tyrannizing ouer the Ch. of God is by al meanes to be auoyded In regard wherof many christian Emperors rulers did resigne their authoritie which they had in gouerning the ch to these councels insomuch that they had the ful power not only of aduising lawes but also of enacting or the giuing vnto them the force of laws But as hath bene shewed this m●y easely turne to the hurt of the Ch. and therefore it ought not wholly to b● followed yet it sheweth how great regard ciuil rulers ought to haue of the iudgement aduise of those who are godly wise and learned in the ordering of the Churches subiect vnto them And therefore that which the councell thinketh good to be done or the greater part of them ought to be greatly regarded Yet if the chiefe ruler cannot be brought to giue his assent vnto it it cannot haue the force of an ecclesiastical lawe or be imposed vpon the whole Ch. in that name As touching the number wherof any national councel doth consist there cānot any be defined but it must be left to the appointmēt of the chief ruler to whom the deposing authorizing of this whole action doth belong Yet it ought to be proportionable to the quantity of the Ch. to the number of the particular Churches so that if some be had out of euery one of thē it wil make the lawes enacted to be much more willingly receaued obeyed whenas it shal be knowen that some of thē selues did in the name of the rest consent vnto them And especially this is requisite in respect of the chiefe end and vse of these councels both in free and publicke churches whereof we will briefly speake The which is to bring the whole Church to a conformitie of doctrine this is needfull and good to be done and that for these causes first for the repressing of heresies which doe continually arise in the Church For the which purpose the generall consent of the Church is very forcible for eyther the consent and iudgement of the whole Church will be of great waight to take the said heresies out of the mindes of those who doe maintaine them or else the authoritie by which the trueth oppugned is publickly established will be able to remooue the maintainers of them out of the Church Secondly this forme of doctrine agreed vpon by many will be effectuall to strengthen and confirme those who are weake in the faith and not fully grounded in some pointes of christian religion Yea it may be a meanes to helpe forward those who haue not as yet taken vpon them the profession of the gospel Not that we ought to build our faith vpon the authority of men but for that we ought to take from the Church a confirmation of our faith seeing we may be greatly helped and strengthned by this meanes And lastly this forme of
although in respect of the simple handling of the matter it be vnworthy to be accepted and red by the meanest yet no man can doubt or will deny but that the fitnesse of the argument is a probable excuse for this presumptuous dedication Lastly we desire thee good reader to vse christian moderation in suspending thy iudgement of vs till happely time make that manifest which now is doubtfull in regard of two opinions contained in these treatises the which will seeme somewhat strange to some and perhaps to thy selfe among the rest The one is that we enfraunchize the papist Arian al other heretickes professing the gospel of Christ into the catholicke Church by the which we meane nothing else but the whole Church militant here on earth from the which many doe vtterly reiect them as mere infidels and straungers from the couenant and commonwealth of Israel The other opinion is in that we giue to the christian magistrate especially in great and absolute Monarchies greater authoritie both in ciuill and ecclesiasticall causes then seemeth to stand with the good of the Church or the trueth of Gods word For the former we neede not trouble our selues with the defence of it any further then it is declared in the treatise it being held and professed by many sound diuines who are in euerie respect far more able to maintaine it Likewise for the other we haue nothing to say in this place saue onely that we are to desire thee not to attribute it to flattery rather then to a constant and setled perswasion the suspition whereof it is hard for him to auoyde who doth any thing whereby the power and authoritie of mightie men is maintained and enlarged and so their fauour as vsually it commeth to passe procured We doe indeed intend in publishing this treatise the good and peaceable estate of this kingdome and the maintaining of that powerfull and maiesticall authoritie whereunto it hath pleased God to make vs subiect Yea we doe earnestly desire of him that these treatises may haue that effect in al their hearts into whose handes they shal come that they if there be any such who doe nourish in their breastes any sinister affections or opinions in this behalf may be by meanes of them wonne to heartie loue to so gratious a prince loyall subiection to so lawfull and excellent a kinde of gouernment Yea that they who haue alreadie receaued these graces from God may encrease in them and perfourme all dueties which are needfull in regard eyther of the safetie or the maiestie of their prince more willi●gly and chearefully then before as being perhaps resolued of some pointes ●hereof before they doubted And lastly that as touching the religion and worship of God professed in this land they who accounte vs no Church by whome we affirming their opinion to be such as might easely be shewed out of the word of God to be erroneous haue beene vehemently charged in the name of God to publish somewhat of the true nature and constitution of a Church for the manifesting of the trueth in that behalfe may be moued to thinke and acknowledge that God i● truely serued his word preached his sacramentes administred and his name called vpon in all the publicke assemblies throughout this land especially by considering the doctrine nature and state of a publicke Church the which kinde of Churches not being in vse in the daies of the Apostles and therfore not mentioned in their writi●gs seemeth strange to many This we confesse that we intend in this action and are perswaded that we may lawfully yea in some respectes ought necessarely to doe but we trust that God will neuer so giue vs vp to a senselesse minde as to doe any thing for the procuring of the fauour of men contrarie to the trueth of Gods word and the good of his Church He maketh an euill bargaine that throweth himselfe into the bottomlesse sea or rather into the burning furnace of Gods wrath in aduenture of mans fauour which is vncertaine and momentani● sooner lost then gott●n in respect of true happinesse altogether vnprofitable But we trust good reader that this apologie might haue beene spared and that thou wilt take these simple treatises in good part as thou hast done the like heretofore Thus I commend thee as I earnestly desire to be commended by thee to the word and spirit of God to be led into all trueth and preserued without blame till the day of Christ. T. M. The Arguments of these treatises THE former treatise declareth the state of the kingdome of Israell the which we haue endeuoured to learne and set downe in plaine manner out of the scripture wherein there is nothing but truth especially out of the bookes of Samuell the Kings Chronicles wherein the first originall continuance and end yea the whole n●ture and condition of this gouernment is at large declared Where by the kingdome of Israell we doe not meane that apostaticall rebellious and idolatrous kingdome of the ten tribes vsually called the kingdome of Israell or the kingdome of Samaria but the kingdome of Iuda the which we call by the first ancient and right name of Israell because our purpose is to entreate of the state of it as it was at the first instituted by Samuell and as it continued vnder Saule Dauid and Salomon in whose time it was called the kingdome of Israell But in the beginning of the raigne of R●boam it lost ten of the tribes and together the right name which vsually followeth the greater part For the which cause in the time following it was called the kingdome of Iuda for that the tribe of Iuda did not onely make the greatest part of it but also had the prerogatiue of the kingdome annexed vnto it The causes by the which we are moued to thinke the state of this kingdome most worthy to be carefully sought out and truely knowen are these because of all the kingdomes in the world this onely was instituted by God himselfe or at the least approued by him and also registred and fully described in the bookes of the scripture yea and first practised in the Church of God In the which respectes we cannot doubt but that the true and perfect knowledge of it doth greately belong to the Church and to all the members of it And yet we doe not speake of it as of the onely lawfull forme of gouernement and that which ought to be vsed of the Church in all places For there is no kinde of gouernment which may not lawfully bee established among Christians and as lawfully vsed amongest them as this Neyther as if all kingdomes shoulde be squared according to this rule from the which they may farre differ without any blame for the iudiciall lawes of the commonwealth or of the kingdome of Israel doe not belong to the Church Neyther yet doe we affirme this kingdome to be the most excellent and conuenient state and that which christians according to the example of
euils was in their owne wickednesse and idolatrie in that they did forsake the true worship of God and therefore God did forsake them and tooke from them their iudges in whose daies they liued in religious order and peaceable estate And so the people according to that which is written Iudg. 9.13.14.15 forsooke the vine the figtree and the oliue tree euen God the fountaine of all blessinges and saide to the brier come and raigne ouer vs and we will trust in thy shadowe For to haue a king and to trust in his power doe vsually goe together Rom. 15.12 He shal raigne ouer them and they shall trust in him Thirdly the people in the pride of their heartes did despise the gouernment of the iudges as base and contemptible for that howsoeuer it was mightie in the power of the spiritte of GOD yet it had not that outwarde shew of glorie and maiestie which the stately Monarchies of other nations did carie with them The last sinne which they committed in this action we call by the generall name of disobedience for that contrarie to the expresse commaundement of God they had a crooked and peruerse desire to be transformed into all the fashions of the prophane nations amongest whome they dwelt as in all other respectes so also in their gouernment and therefore they ●id affect a kingdome which was the most vsuall kinde of gouernment Thus we see why God was offended with this alteration of the state as for the gouernment it selfe he did neuer mislike it for although he suffered it to be brought in by this cooked meanes yet he did alwaies purpose that it shoulde be established as may plainlie appeare by these reasons First for that he promised Abraham Gen. 17.6 That of his seede should come kings and nations the which is to be vnderstood chiefly of this faithfull nation of the Iewes although beside them others came of Abraham Secondly Moses did foretell this Deut. 17. That assoone as the people were quietly possessed of the lande of Chanaan they would haue a king to raigne ouer them But this doth most euidently apppeare by the prophesie of Iacob who saith Genesis 49. That the rodde shall not departe from Iuda nor a Lawe-giuer cease to be of his ofspringe till Silo come and vnto him shall be the obedience of the people Nowe this cannot be vnderstoode of the iudges for of them all onely Othoniell was of the tribe of Iuda Yea GOD did alwaies purpose that Christe shoulde succeede the kinges of Israell in the kingdome for the wordes are plaine and the euente hath shewed it to be true that of the tribe of Iuda should come the Lion and the Lions whelpe that is the stately kingdome of Israell and the continual discent thereof yea the great lion the little lion that is the Messias the great eterna●l king of glory and the temporall and earthly kings of Israel For this cause the most plaine and euident promises which God made of the messias were deferred vntil the time of the kings were made to Dauid who in this respect is to be counted the first king and therefore is called Math. 16. Dauid the King that is the first king of the forefathers of Christ as hath beene alreadie touched And lastly this gouernment may seeme in some sort to be the more acceptable to God because it doth most liuelely represent the power and maiesty of God for although all magistrates doe beare the image of God yet they chiefely doe it whose authoritie being absolute and their glorie great come nearest to the infinite power and glorie of God As touching the lawfulnes of this kinde of gouernement although it be inferred of the former point for whatsoeuer is acceptable to God ought to be accounted lawful for vs yet it may briefly be considered by these reasons for that this gouernment was set vp by the appointment of God and that by Samuel a faithful prophet and so accounted of al Israel yea for that it was practised by Dauid a man according to Gods owne hearte by Salomon the glorie of the worlde by Asa Iehosophat and other religious kinges by good Ezechias and by zealous Iosias who would neuer haue born this office if the kinde of gouernment had beene in any respect vnlawfull the exception which is vsually taken against this kinde of Monarchie is as touching the greatnesse of the power maiesty of it in this manner that howsoeuer the prophane nations of the world doe suffer tyrantes to spoyle them of their liberty and whatsoeuer they haue yea and doe foolishly in the pride of their heartes desire such a loftie gouernment yet that in the Church of God it is a thing both intollerable altogether vnlawfull that one should so haue all the power in his owne hands that he may at his pleasure ouerthrowe all or that a great part of the substance of the land should be imployed to maintaine him in his iolitie vpon sumptuous buildings costly attyre dainty fare great rewardes and other thinges of the same kinde which would serue for many necessarie vses both of the Church and of the commonwealth For answere heereof we are farre from going about to perswade any people which liue vnder a moderate gouernment by this wicked example of this people to affect or desire this estate yea we leaue it to others to determine whether it be the most conuenient kinde of gouernment in respect of the Church of God and the safe constance and good estate of it yet we doe not doubt to affirme that it was a lawful kinde of gouernment among the Iewes and may lawfully be practised amongest Christians at this day For howsoeuer some kindes of gouernment and magistracy are conuenient or inconuenient safe or dangerous yet this and all other kindes are to be accounted lawfull For there is no power but from God and all the powers which are haue beene instituted by God Rom. 13.2 and especially of this gouernment now in question we may see Daniel 5.18.19 that God doth professe himselfe to be the author and giuer of it for there it is saide O King God gaue Nabuchadnezzer thy father a kingdome then followeth a description of the nature of a kingdom euen maiesty honour and glorie he slewe w●ome he woulde and smote whome he would he aduanced and debased whom he pleased Now that we see that this kinde of gouernment was acceptable vnto God we are in the second place to consider how farre it was subiect vnto him For the which point it shal be sufficient that we know that as al other powers authorities principalities and dominions whatsoeuer they be whether in heauen or in earth so also this kingdome was wholy absolutely subiect to God and to his power and bound to obey his will and commaundementes and to set forth his glory in all things as it is written in the 17. of Deutronomie that the king whensoeuer he were made shoulde take an excript of the
be despersed ouer the whole worlde yet not all nor many in comparison of the infidels but a verie fewe belong vnto it And therefore we are in the next place to see who are the members of it and of whom it doth consist The answere to this point we haue in the definition which saith that all who serue God in any part of the worlde are of the catholicke Church For as a king may deuide the whole worlde into his owne subiectes who liue within his dominions knowe obey and honour him and into forrenners who are without the compasse of his iurisdiction doe him no seruice make no account of him and in briefe haue no kinde of dealing with him so all men liuing in the worlde are eyther Gods subiectes and seruantes liuing within the compasse of the catholicke Church and as it is written Ephes. 2.12.19 Citizens with the faintes and of the houshold of God or else they are aliantes from the common wealth of Israell without the promise couenant or hope of saluation yea without God in the worlde But forsomuch as God is serued many waies in deede or in shewe onely sincerely or hypocritically purely or corruptly fully or after an imperfect manner in knowledge or in ignorance and after many other differences therefore we are to search out what manner of seruing God doth make a man to be a member of the catholicke Church wherunto we answere that the outward profession of the true seruice of God although ioy●ed with impotencie of performing any actual seruice yea with hypocrisie corruption imperfection errour and heresie will serue for this purpose and doth make a man a true member of the catholicke Church For the first difference some serue God actually by praying to God or praising him by hearing his word and obeying it or which is all in all by trusting fearing and louing God in heart namelie so many of the Church as haue comne to yeares of discretion but there are some who cannot serue God by any of these meanes or any other of the same kinde to witte infantes who by reason of the infirmitie of their age cannot heare or vnderstande and therefore can neither knowe nor beleeue God or serue him in any actuall manner Yet they may and doe by the helpe of others take vpon them and beare the true profession of the seruice of God by receiuing the sacrament of initiation or first entrance into the Church by the which meanes they become true members of the catholicke Church as well as men of ripe age The trueth heereof appeareth 1. Corin. 7.14 where the Apostle saith that the children of the Christians are holy meaning euen the yongest infantes as they are borne of faithfull parentes not that the faith of the parentes or the sacrament of the Church doth adde any inward and reall holinesse vnto them but onely giueth vnto them a holy profession or an outward profession of holinesse and of faith and also imputed righteousnesse and supposed holinesse if they belong to Gods election In like manner vnder the lawe all the young children of the Iewes especially after they had receiued the sacrament of circumcision were counted members of the Church and in the number of the holy people of God And therefore God complaineth of the Iewes offering their young ones in sacrifice to idols that they gaue his children to Moloch Ezec. 16.21 Thus much of those who become members of the Church by meere profession nowe we come to the actuall seruing of God the which where it is in sinceritie of hart and life perfourmed it maketh one a member of Christ●s mysticall bodie much more the● of his Church here on earth But all the controuersie is of them in whome this actuall seruice is imperfect as it is first in hypocrites who want the inward seruice of the heart as also heretikes doe some part of the sinceritie of doctrine and dissolute men the seruice of outwarde life and ignorant idiotes the seruice of the minde and lastly as the dispersed members of the Church wante the publike worshippe of God The answere in generall is this that howsoeuer the imperfect seruice of hypocrites wicked men heretikes and idiotes be not acceptable in the sight of God yet it is sufficient to make them true members of the militant Church but we will come to the seuerall consideration of them And first of hypocrites by the which name we call those men in whome the outwarde seruice is perfect in that they both hold and professe the whole trueth of christian religion and also expresse the same in their liues both in worde and deede and yet doe not serue GOD in spiritte and trueth but are destitute of true faith and of all the rest of the effectuall graces of the sanctifying spiritte springing thereof This manner of seruing GOD is not pleasing but rather odious and abhominable to him Esay 1.14 and therefore it is not auailable for the saluation of any but rather maketh mens damnation the more iust yet it giueth vnto them the name of the members of the Church For it is confessed of all that hypocrites may be true ministers in a particular Church as Iudas was a true Apostle whereof it doth necessarelie followe that they are true members of the Church for the teachers and rulers of a Church are the chiefe members of it So that as in a common-wealth or kingdome they who haue freedome and interest in such bodies eyther by nature or fauour are counted true subiectes as long as they liue in outwarde obedience to lawes yea though they be knowen to beare in their heartes an vnnaturall and disloyall affection to their country or prince so it is in the Church with hypocrites destitute of the true faith and loue of God But howe can hypocrites be made true members of the Church which is the bodie of Christ seeing that they haue no coniunction with Christ who is the heade of the Church For the resoluing of this doubt we must consider both Christ the heade and the Church his bodie two diuerse waies for Christ as he is a sauiour is a heade to the mysticall bodie of the elect onely vnto whome he giueth by his spirite effectuall grace spirituall motion and eternall life In this respect hypocrites haue no more to doe with Christ or his Church then darknesse hath with light but heere we doe not meddle with the mysticall body of the Church Secondlie Christ is the kinge Lorde and ruler of his Church militant heere on earth in the which respect hee is a heade not onely to the faithfull but also to hypocrites to whom hee giueth spirituall graces ministeriall giftes and ecclesiasticall functions euen as he maketh the sunne to shine vppon the iust and the vniust first he communicateth to them the giftes of knowledge wisedome doctrine and exhortation of tongues of miracles and prophesie Ephesians 4.8 Where he like a victorious king triumphing ouer his enemies ascended into heauen and gaue
giftes to men some to be Apostles some Euangelistes c. Secondlie he imparteth to them graces tending to their owne saluation as a kinde of faith of repentance of spirituall ioy loue and in generall whatsoeuer grace is in the true beleeuers the like may be found in an hypocrite and that not onely in shew and appearance but also in trueth Marke 4.16 hypocrites receiue the word with ioy Yet there is this difference in the faithfull these graces are sincere euident effectuall constant and perpetuall but in hypocrites they are obscure in small measure vnprofitable and temporarie yea mixed with much hypocrisie So that both faithfull and hypocritical men are ioyned to Christ and to the Church by the bond of the spirite for where there is one spirite there is also one body but the one to Christ as to their sauiour the other to him as to their Lord the one to the Church in heauen the other to the Church on earth the one by a mightie worke of the spirite the other after a light manner the one for a time the other for euer Sect. 4. That heretikes are members of the catholicke Church BVT although it were granted that hypocrites are members of the Church so many of them as both holding the whole trueth of Christian religion and also leading a life in outward appearance correspondent thereunto doe fully professe the seruice of God yet it might be doubted what we shoulde thinke of them in whome this profession is in a great part wanting as it is in all those who either leade a life or maintaine some heresie contrarie to their owne profession and to the word of God The answere for both kindes seemeth to be this That they who professe Iesus Christ to be the sauiour of the worlde and themselues to be his seruantes readie to obey his will and worde although they doe indirectly by wickednesse of life or heresie in doctrine deny their owne profession yet are to be accounted Christians and true members of the Church heere on earth It is true indeed that no man can be saued who is not iustified by faith nor yet haue faith who is not sanctified from a wicked life yet men of dissolute liues yea tho they be by excommunication cut off from the body of the visible Church that is from all particular Churches yet they remaine members of the catholicke Church from the which no censure can separate saue onely death Likewise as touching ignorant men who liue in the Church and yet knowe scarce any one point of the doctrine of Christ although they be in an euill estate in regarde of their saluation yet they are to be accounted Christians because of their profession But there is greater question made of heretikes who doe maintaine some grieuous heresie and that about the foundation of religion as they who thinke erroniously of the ●rinitie of the person or natures of Christ of the māner of our iustification of the nature of the sacramente● or of ●ny other such waighty point of doctrine whether these are to be accounted christians and members of the Church We answere that such are as it seemeth to be accounted christians although their heresies be both many and grieuous yea such as if they were throughly vrged would by necessarie consequence of argument ouerthrow faith and all religion And to make instance in the grossest and most blasphemous heresie that euer was inuented to wit the heresie of Arius who denied by diuinity of Christ this doth almost directly ouerthrow christianity for if Christ be not God he is not a sufficie●● mediator then our faith is in vaine This would follow plainely of that heresie and yet such was their blindnesse that maintained it that they did togither maintaine and professe zealously the whole doctrine of the gospel beside and did beleeue obey and honour Christ as the onely sauiour of the world The which dot● appeare by that confession of faith which Ariu● the chiefe maintaine● of that heresie did exhibite to Constantine Wherein although he doth dissemble his heresie yet it sheweth what he and his followers held in the test of the doctrin● of the gospell 〈◊〉 4. pag. 13.42 yea this heresie was co●mon in the Church of the I●wes before the comming of Christ for it is euident tha● verie ●ewe of them did thinke that the Messias shoulde be God For what was thought of Christ euen of many of his disciples we may gather by the wordes of Cleophas L●ke 24. Hast thou not heard of Iesus of Nazareth who was a prophet c. Yea it might be plainly shewed that many of the Church both before the comming of Christ and also after did not thinke that the Messias should be God And not to ouerpasse in ●●lence popery the most common heresie of our times wherewith the Church both is now most annoied and hath in times past bene lamētably oppressed and almost cleane ourthrowen it doth consist of so many grieuous errours that most men do thinke it not to be an heresie but a false religion and the maintainers professours of it to be alienates from ●he common-wealth of Israel which is the Church of God as namely of those great heresies of idolatry transsubstan●iation the sacrifice of the Masse ment iustification by workes freewill and inuocation of saints yea of many other great errours insomuch that we may say of them the wordes of the prophet from the top of the 〈◊〉 to the sole of the foot there is no whole part but all full of loath some and dangerous ●ore● And therfore it is no maruaile that they seem● to many to haue in them no life of christian faith but to be dead rotten stoc●s yea to haue no outward profession of christianity But yet if due consideration be had how far ●he nature and name of a Church and of christians doth stretch it selfe it wil appeare that we may truely account the● christians and so consequently members of the Church and that because they doe still professe hold and maintaine the chiefe fundamental pointes of religion of God of Christ of hi● d●ath and passion of the resurrection and all the rest contained in that summe of religion called the Apostles Creede so that although by 〈…〉 they doe wound and in a manner kill themselues yet in regarde of the trueth which they keepe there rema●neth 〈◊〉 them some life of Christianity and so are fitly compared to a man who although he both lacke many partes of his body and also haue the rest corrupted with pestilent diseases y●t draweth breath and therefore is not a dead 〈◊〉 but a liuing man The reason by the which we are perswaded to thinke that papistes and other heretikes doe stil retaine the name of christians is this for that faith and especially a generall and historicall faith the profession whereof is sufficient to make a man be accounted a christian may be lodged in a mans minde together with such errours as
others so to doe Sixtly the catholicke Church is neuer pure here on earth no more then the goldlying in the bowels of the earth but hath hypocrites mixed with true beleeuers Yea the number of hypocrites is farre greater then of the other for many are called but fewe are chosen Sect. 8. Of the distribution of the Catholicke Church THus we see in generall the nature and condition of the catholicke Church Now we are to discend into a more particular consideration of it in the members the which are eyther scattered abroade of the which we are to entreate in the first place because they are in nature most simple or else being ioyned together make a particular Church The coniunction of all particular Churches doth make the visible Church the which with the dispersed members maketh the catholicke Church The which we deuide in the first place into dispersed members and particular Churches euen as the people of any kingdome or country may be brought to these two heades the one of those who doe wander hither and thither not belonging to any societie companie or corporation the other of those who dwell together in some towne or citie vnder lawes gouernment and in due order CHAP. II. Of the dispersed members of the catholicke Church Sect. 1. For what cause men are separated from the Church ALthough the members of the Church doe ordinarely and for the most part liue together by the institution and commaundement of God for their mutuall edification yet it commeth often to passe that some are seuered from the company of the Church and that vpon diuerse occasions Of all which in general this is to be held that they are eyther necessarie constraining men against their wils or else vnlawfull and condemned by the word of God for as touching that voluntarie or rather wilfull separation of the Eremites in times past who forsaking the company of men did choose to liue in desert places it is in no case to be imitated for that it is contrary to the worde of God who in great wisedome hath appointed as ciuil societies for the greater comodity of our temporall liues so also the spirituall and holy assemblies of his seruantes that by this meanes they might be helped each by other in matters pertaining to their eternall saluation For in the Church we haue the ministery of the word of the sacraments of the censures of the Church we haue priuate exhortation and admonition of one to another yea the examples of a godly life in our brethren and finally all the meanes of edification whereof these Eremites made themselues destitute And therefore in so doing as they did sinne against their owne bodies in that leauing those places where all the creatures of God needfull for the maintenance of this pesent life might conueniently be had did by suffering hunger thirst colde and nakednesse make themselues altogether vnfit for the perfourming of any christian duetie so they did much more sinne against their owne soules which they suffered to pine away through want of the word of God and which they did lay open to the manifold temptations and delusions of sathan Yea they did inflict vpon themselues and that not vnworthely in regard of their pride and wilfull contempt of the ordinance of God that most feareful punishment which the scripture 1. Cor. 3. calleth giuing vp to sathan in that they did depriue themselues of the inestimable benefit and comfort of the Church of God If they obiect for their owne defence the example of the prophet Ieremy 9.2 who wisheth that he had a cottage in the wildernesse that so he might not see the wickednesse of the people we answere first that the prophet did speake diuerse things in the zeale of the spirit in a hyperbolicall manner of speach yea sometime also in humane impatience which he did neuer put in practise as it doth not appeare that he did this desire Secondly that they did it in no such minde but in a vaine presumption pretending the contempt of the world and their owne sufficiencie to worke their saluation without the helpe of others and of those meanes which God hath appointed We confesse indeede that so many of them as liued in those times wherein poperie did corrupt the worshippe of God had iust cause of separation and that they might more commodiously and lawfully serue God in the vastest desert then in the most populous Church being in that case But most of these Eremites were more foolishly superstitious then they were whom they left and fewe or none of them had that knowledge and grace vouchsafed to them of God to see and abhorre those palpable corruptions As for those who although they liued in desert places yet they had the company of others who ioyned with them in that kind of life their doing was more probable because they seemed by this meanes to liue in the forme of a Church yet not iustifiable by the worde of God if this their separation were made from a Church seruing God aright in any measure But it commeth often to passe that some are constrained by vrgent and necessary causes to liue out of the assembly of the Church as in the time of persecution whenas the seruantes of God cannot without euident danger meete together So we read Act. 8.1 that the whole Church which was at Ierusalem was dispersed abroad saue the Apostles Likewise whenas any of them are taken captiues and by violence caried into those countries where there is no Church and there detained as if a christian were constrained to abide among the Turkes Iewes or any other infidels Yea many haue in all times serued God who neuer were of any particular Church but being called to the knowledge of God by extraordinarie meanes haue continually liued amongest infidels These although they ought to make repaire to those places where they vnderstand the Church to be and to make their abode there yet often they abide in their natiue countries vpon diuerse occasions as namely for that they being endued with a small measure of knowledge and of faith cannot easely ouercome the frailty of the flesh which counselleth them that in no case they forsake their country kindred friends houses and landes and cast themselues into infinite dangers troubles and miseries which for the most part doe accompany them who liue in strange places Yea it may be that they know not eyther what or where the Church is and so cannot endeauour to come to it And lastly euen men liuing in the Church may haue necessarie causes constraining them to liue from the societie of the same as contagious diseases as the leprosie was amongest the Israelites for the which we reade that king Ozias was separated a long time from the Church Yea men which are excommunicated and doe so continue are still to be accounted members of the catholicke Church so long as they continue in the profession of the faith howsoeuer they be not members of any particular Church
and of the iudgementes of God that by this meanes they may be driuen to Christ and euen compelled to imbrace the doctrine of the gospell For as the iron must first be made hote in the fire before it will receaue any newe fo●me so must the hard heart be mollified in the furnace of the wrath of God before it will receaue the doctrine of faith and therefore it is needfull that there should by this meanes a way be made for the doctrine of the gospell for men must first be made to see their sinnes and the punishment of eternall death due vnto them before they can learne the vse and necessitie of Christ and of his righteousnesse For the phisition commeth not to whole men neyther doth the surgeon lay his plaisters but vpon wounded and brused members Thus did Iohn goe before Christ in the spirit of Elias to prepare the people for the Lord Luk. 1.17 and thus Christ prepared the young man Math. 19.21 and Peter the Iewes Actes 2.37 who when they were pricked in their heartes by hearing their sinnes they came to the Apostles saying men and brethren what shall we doe And Paul the men of Athens Act. 17.31 and lastly thus did God himselfe by a feareful earthquake prepare the iaylor Actes 16.30 and according to these exmples all other vnbeleeuers are to be conuerted by bringing them to a sight of their sinnes and a sense of the anger of GOD and that especially by mentioning and vrging those sinnes which are most hainous in their owne eyes and by the confession of all men which they can least excuse and whereof they are most ashamed Yea the doctrine of the lawe ought to goe before because it will more easelie be receaued and beleeued forsomuch as it is naturall to men being ingrafted in euerie mans minde since the first creation of man For although it were by the fall of Adam greatlie diminished obscured and peruerted yet there remaineth a confused and darke knowledge of good and euill of right and wrong and also of the rewarde belonging to obedience and the punishment of death due to sinne Rom. 1.32 the Gentiles knowe the lawe of God that they who committe sinne are worthy of death Yea of this knowledge commeth a conscience in infidels sometimes excusing them altho●gh falsely but for the most parte accusing them for their sinne before God So that this their knowledge of the lawe and conscience of sinne may easely be inlightned and stirred vppe by the preaching of the lawe whereas the doctrine of faith is contrarie to naturall reason and therefore harde to be perswaded Thus we see the first parte of the ministerie of the worde to wit that whereby infidels are to be prepared for the gospell This being done then the doctrine of christian religion is briefely and summarelie to be propunded euen as the Apostles did vse to preach Christ. The summe of whose sermons was this that saluation is to be had by faith in Iesus Christ the sonne of God and the redeemer of the world The trueth of this doctrine is to be proued by such testimonies as are of most force as the lawe and prophetes are with the Iewes out of the which we see that Christ and his Apostles doe continually proue that which they speake Likewise as touching the gentiles although the maine points of the gospell be contrarie to humane reason and therefore not to be grounded thereon yet we are not destitute of many helpes and euident argumentes drawen out of their owne poets philosophers prophetisses and oracles whereby the probabilitie trueth and necessitie of the gospell may be declared euen to the heathen The which who so desireth to know may see them in those bookes which are written for the demonstration of the trueth of christian religion both in the first ages of the Church as also in these latter times Especially the vanitie of that false and idolatrous worship is to be laid open vnto them that so they being as it were driuen from that may be constrained to seeke the true religion as hath beene declared Sect. 4. How men conuerted to the faith ought to be ordered SO many of them as can be wonne by this means to beleeue the trueth of the doctrine deliuered are vpon confession of their faith to haue baptisme administred vnto them to be a seale of their faith to themselues and a badge of their profession to others and so to be separated from the rest as those of whom the Church is to consist Yea although they doe not at the first expresse the power of religion in true repentance and a christian life yet if they doe beleeue that to be the true religion of GOD and be content to professe the same then are they to be accounted members of the Church So we reade Actes 8.16 that many of the Samaritanes were baptised and so receaued into the Church whenas none of them had receaued the holy ghost but onely beleeued in the name of Iesus as they were taught So the Eunuch was baptised Actes 8. vpon this confession I beleeue that Iesus Christ is the sonne of God For euen as they who labour in digging mettals out of the earth doe at the first ●ake for golde whatsoeuer doth glister and afterward purge the pure golde from the corrupt drosse and from all base mettall and as fishers take for fishe whatsoeuer commeth to the net but afterwarde separate the good from the bad Math. 13.47.48 so at the first the ministerie receaueth all that seeme to beleeue but in processe of time it separateth the hypocrite from the beleeuer and the wicked from the godly although not perfitly But before the administration of baptisme the summarie doctrine of it must be taught that so it may be receaued with greater fruite to wit that this sacrament was appointed by God himselfe as Iohn the first minister of it doth testifie Iohn 2.33 to be in his church a badge and common liueray of all his seruants whereby they are to professe his name and to be knowen from vnbeleeuers and also for their owne edification that by baptisme they may be confirmed in beleeuing the doctrine both of the law and of the gospell and further that it belongeth cheifly to the doctrine of the law in that by drowning vs in water it putteth vs in remembraunce of that eternall death whereunto we were subiect before as the Apostle teacheth Rom. 6.4 and that it is of the same nature and vse with circumcision the which did vnder the law both distinguishe the Iewes as gods people from all other nations as prophane and also set before the eies of the receauers eternall death as the other ordinarie sacrament of the passouer did eternall life for the one sacrament was of a bloudy signification wounding the body and so threatning death but the other graue the comfortable nourishment of life and so doe baptisme the Lords supper differ Lastly that both baptisme and circumcision although they
rites then she listeth her selfe so that these ecclesiasticall lawes made by the authority of the Church doe not stretch themselues vnto the substance of the gouernment of the Church as to the institution of any office beside those which are ●xpresly mentioned in the worde If it be obiected that Dauid did adde vnto the ceremoniall lawe the office of singers 1. Chro. 6.31 The answere is that he did this by himselfe and others as by prophets not by any ordinarie authoritie In the second place we are to see after what manner and by what rule these lawes are to be made We answere according to the word of God the square of all christian and spirituall actions not only in the ordering of the Church but also throughout the whole course of a christian mans life But seeing that they are not expresly mentioned in the worde howe doth it appeare that they ought to be framed according to this rule The answere is that the worde doth shewe what ought to be done in these thinges First by giuing general rules to guide vs as these That there ought to be nothing in these lawes vnlawfull or contrarie to the morall lawe of God nothing inconuenient offensiue or hurtfull to the Church nothing needlesse and superfluous yea that they ought to be so made as they may most tende to the glorie of God and the edification of the Church But these rules doe belong as wel to the particular actions of priuate men as to the publicke consultations of the Church so that they cannot be any certaine direction in this behalfe And therefore we must come to the second helpe which the scripture doth afforde vs for the making of these lawes to wit particular examples of the like cases which giue a greate lighte in these actions and are a sufficient warrant for vs to imitate the difference betwixt those cases and those which we haue in hande being wiselie obserued But neyther this second meanes is sufficient forsomuch as particular cases are so infinite and diuerse that there cannot alwaies be found like examples yea the differences of the exāples being found do easely breede great controuersie doubt and erroure And therefore we must haue recourse to the third and last meanes which is that those humane lawes be made agreeable to the lawes of God and the ceremonies to the substance of Church-gouernment so as they may most fitly expresse and resemble the nature of the action But neither this third way doth alwaies serue for the finding out of the truth because it is hard to see the true nature o● the action where vnto the ceremonie is to be made conformable especially since the time wherein the gouernment of the Church hath been peruerted altered and almost wholly corrupted as also because that it is not alwaies easie to iudge a right of the generall rules and of the examples of the scripture and of those other pointes which we are nowe ●o consider Yet these are the meanes which God hath appointed for this purpose and which being diligently vsed will by the blessing of God lead vs to the truth Thus we see that the deuising of these lawes ought to be according to the worde of God and yet so that they are left arbitrarie to the Church not ●s if it were lawfull for them to doe what they lift in the least action of their priuate liues much lesse in the publick ordering of the Church For the word of God must be our rule according to the which all actions and lawes are to be squared and tried For euen those things which are in theire own nature indifferent left to our own choise to doe or not to doe being generally considered yet whenas they come to be practised weighed with special circumstances so that the trueth doth appeare vnto vs then they are no more indifferent as before but either good or euill to be done or not to be done As in the foresaide instance at what time the worde of God shoulde be publickly preached is a thing indifferent whereof there is no commandement in the worde and therefore it is left to the Church to determine Yet if they appoint those times at which the people cannot conueniently come together then they do euen in this indifferent thing offend against the worde of God which commandeth that in all our actions both priuate and much more publick we do that which may make most for the glory of God and the edi●●cation of our brethren and yet these lawes which are so made that they are onely inconuenient to the Church not simply vnlawfull although they cannot lawfully be made yet they may lawfully be obeyde For although it be not lawfull for any man to bring griefe or inconuenience to his brother yet it is lawfull to take and beare that inconuenience whenas it cannot conueniently be auoided Sect. 4. According to what rules ecclesiasticall humane lawe● ought to be made THus we see that the scripture is the chiefe rule of these lawes in aduising whereof there must consideration be had of all circumstances whatsoeuer that as farre as may be they may agree withall and fight with none and especially of these First of the age or condition of the time wherein the Church is Secondly of the nature disposition and fashions of the people Thirdly of the state of that Church for which the lawes are to be made Fourthly of the condition of the ciuil estate of the kingdome or common-wealth wherein the Church is built And lastly of the lawes of other Churches We say that in making Church lawes besides the direction of the worde diuers other rules are necessarely to be obserued First the state of the time wherein we liue whether it be a time of knowledge wherein men do commonly knowe the will of GOD or a time of ignorance and blindnesse wherein the worde of GOD is rare as it was in the daies of Eli. 1. Samuell 3.1 Hereof due regarde is to be had that neither lesse nor more be exacted of the people by the lawes then the time present can afforde for priuate ignoraunces may be suddainly taken away but publick blindnesse cannot be fully amended but in progresse of time For some times the truth of GOD shineth clearely euen as the sunne at noone day which at other times is ouercast with cloudes and mistes of blindnesse and shineth more darkely euen as the sunne in the beginning of the day This hath been the state of the Church nowe these many ages wherein blindnesse and palpable darknesse brought in by antichrist hath ouershadowed the face of the whole earth but nowe by the mercy of GOD the trueth hath these many yeares and doth daily more and more appeare vnto vs insomuch that if we doe compare this present time with those dayes wherein it pleased God not many yeares past to reueale his will vnto vs we shall find a great difference of knowledge in the Church yea so great ●s that the
knowledge which men had at the beginning may seeme to haue been great ignoraunce and darknesse in respect of the light which nowe doth appeare So that according to the differences of times we must also make a diuersitie of ecclesia●tcall lawes and that in respect not onely of the people but euen of them also who doe in the name of the whole Church aduise and appoint th●se lawes who although they doe excell all others in knowledge yet they are partakers of the ignoraunces and errors of the tyme wherein they liue from the which no man can be wholly freed as might be declared at large if it were needfull to be stoode vppon by the which meanes it commeth to passe that they doe see much more in processe of time then they did at the first insomuch that they will acknowledge many imperfections in those lawes wherein before there seemed nothing to be wanting Thus we see that the liberty or rather the necessitie of preaching the Gospell to the gentils was in time reuealed vnto the Church whereof at the first they neuer dreamed Acts. 11.18 Secondly if this be graunted that they to whome the aduising of lawes for the Church is commmited do see the whole trueth of those matters whereof they doe consult yet there must be regard had of the state of the Church and of the people for whom these lawes are to be made as the Apostle witnesseth that he could not speake to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 3.1 as vnto spirituall but as vnto carnall men and that in consideration of this their estate he gaue them milke and not strong meate And in like manner he writeth to the Romanes that their saluation was nowe much nearer then when they did first beleeue Rom. 13. where he sheweth that the night of ignoraunce and atheisme wherein they had liued had gone on and passed away by little little and in like manner the day had approched For the Apostle did see that the gentils which had imbraced the gospel could not at the first let goe their whole course of life whereunto they had been continually accustomed and did in that respect no doubt tollerate many things amongst them by reason of the time which afterwarde were not to be suffered In regard of the diuerse naturs of the people we may consider that some need more sharpe and straight lawes to keepe them in order then others doe The which consideration the Apostle did commend to Titus Tit. 1.13 That forasmuch as the Gratians were allwaies lyars euill beastes and slowe bellies therefore he should reproue them sharply And specially we are here to note the sinnes whereunto the people are generally and after a sort naturally giuen that they may be repressed by many lawes and sharpe censures and punishments appointed for them who doe offend and by cutting off the vsuall occasions of those sinne● Yea the manners and behauiours of men commonly receaued are often times to be marked in appointing the outwarde orders and ceremonies of the Church For many things are decent and orderly in one countrie which would be straunge and vnseemely in another Thirdly for the present state of that Church which we do goe about to put in good order by these lawes we are to haue a speciall regarde vnto it the which as it is diuerse and subiect to many alterations so ought the lawes to be changed so as they may best fitte the present state For as the Church is either in planting or else in growing to a ripe age eyther in great motion or else fully established and setled pure or corrupt perfect or imperfect so all the lawes of the Church are to be altered and framed accordingly of all which estates we are hereafter to intreate Fourthly the lawes of the Church are so to be made as that they doe not crosse the lawes of the commonwealth wherein the Church is by hindering the Church from perfourming any ciuill duetie which is lawfull to be done and to omit many other respectes which herein are to be had this is diligently to be regarded that we doe labour to conforme our lawes to the lawes of those Churches which are most pure and syncere in the gouernment of the Church that as we haue the same faith and substance of gouernment so also we may haue the same ceremonies and ecclesiasticall orders although not all for that cannot be yet in the greater part for besides that this full agreement of Churches in all matters both of lesser and greater importance without any iarring is as a sweet harmonie in the eares of God and most decent in the eies of all men euen of those who are strangers from the faith it doth also bring great estimation authoritie and obedience to the lawes of seuerall Churches For that hardly any Christian will be founde so peruerse and wilfull as to contemne or reiect those orders which are approued and pr●ctised by many Churches This argument the Apostle doth often vse to establish and keepe in force the good orders of the Churches as we may see 1. Cor. 11.16 and 14.36 and 1. Th●ss 2.14 Sect. 5 Of the number of ecclesiasticall lawes THE number of these lawes ought to be defined by the necessitie of the Church that they be so many as are needfull for the preseruation of the good estate and order thereof so that if any were taken away there would a manifest inconuenience follow Neyther ought the number to exceede the necessitie of the Church and that for these causes First because the multitude of lawes is contrarie to christian libertie in that it doth both restraine men from doing thinges which otherwise were verie commodious for them to doe and also impose dueties the performance whereof being otherwise needlesse is a burthen and trouble to the Church This reason ought to be of great force for this purpose especially in this time of the gospell wherein it hath pleased God in great mercy and wisedome to take from his Church that heauie yoke of ceremoniall lawes wherewith she was grieuously clogged before and to endue her being nowe more nearely ioyned to Christ her husband with this notable priuiledge and benefit of Christian libertie the which being giuen by God man cannot without great iniurie both to God and man take away And here by the way we may see what an impious and intollerable tyranny the Church of Rome hath exercised in and ouer the Church of God imposing such an infinite number of vaine and ridiculous ceremonies as doth farre exceede the number both of iudiciall also of heathenish ceremonies And therfore herin we are to follow the example of the Apostles Act. 15.28 It seemeth good to the spirit of God and to vs not to lay any burthen of obseruations vppon the Church more then is needfull Secondly the multitude of ecclesiasticall lawes doth bring with it a multitude of ceremonies which in no case is to be admitted for that it doth derogate from the simplicity of the worship of
remoued Yet the Church had this puritie in some measure in the dayes of the religious kings of Israell who did cast out of the Church all reliques monumentes and shadowes of corruption And likewise in diuers places since the time of the Gospell especially in these last daies wherein it hath pleased God to bring his Church out of that sinke of Antichristianisme and to reueale the right way and manner of his seruice Yea churches as they haue a small beginning from the which they rise and a state vnestablished wherein they continue for some space of time so also they may at lengh attaine to a perfect state whereunto they doe daily growe and whereat they ought continually to aime It is then attained vnto whenas all those ordinances which Christ hath appointed for the gouerning of his Church are fully established all the ecclesiasticall functions and all those meanes whereby the Church is to be edified in the obedience of the faith being vsed so farre forth as humane infirmitie doth permit For although we both prophecie gouerne teach exhortobey and practise onely in part in this life 1. Cor. 13. yet the wants that are in the particular actions of men do not make an imperfection in the church So that when there is no office of the Church wanting none negligently executed but that he that exhorteth laboureth in exhortation the teacher in doctrine he that distributeth in simplicitie and he that ruleth in diligence he that sheweth mercy in chearfulnesse and whenas the people do by these meanes lead a godly and a christian life agreeable to their profession then is there a perfite state of a Church The which although as hath bene heretofore noted it can hardly be attained especially of Churches consisting of great multitudes of professours yet we are to doe our endeauour committing the successe of our labours to the blessing of God to whom nothing is hard or impossible yea who doth so blesse and prosper them that labour in the building of his church farre aboue their owne expectation that they shall see such fruite of their laboures which would seeme impossible to be brought to passe by the meanes of any man Sect. 3. Of the flourishing estate of a Church THe Lorde in mercy is yet more gratious to his Church and graunteth that in many places it should haue not onely a perfect but also a flourishing estate the which is to be considered in these things First when as the Church doth consist not of a smal company of beleeuers but of great multitudes professing the name of Christ praising him calling vpon him and seruing him the which no doubt is a happie thing and most earnestly to be wished In this respect the Churches in these daies do flourish as it is to be hoped that they will doe more and more For this is the time wherein the Lorde hath appointed that the fulnesse of the gentiles shall come in and not onely a fewe here and there but euen whole countries kingdomes and nations submit themselues to the obedience of the gospell Of the great number of beleeuers it cometh that there are in the Church many notable examples of godlinesse and of all spirituall graces yea greater varietie of them then is to be found in small congregations although vsually it commeth to passe by the malice of Sathan and the corruption of men that multitude maketh confusion in the Church and can hardly be brought to the due order of a Church as we are to consider hereafter Secondly the florishing estate of a Church consisteth in the ab●nd●●ce of the graces of Gods spirite whenas knowledge wisdome the giftes of teaching and all other which make for the building of the Church are plentifully poured vpon it when as that commeth to passe which the prophets foretolde of the times of the Gospell that the spirite of God should be poured vpon all flesh the which as it was accomplished in the primitiue Church on the which the Lorde did immediatly and extraordinarely pourefoorth all the graces of his spirite in such plentiful manner as was neuer in the Church before not shal be till the Church be perfected at the appearing of Christ So now the hand of the Lord is not shortened but he doth still continue this mercie to his Church although after a diuerse manner for now we are not to looke for the extraordinarie giftes of prophecie speaking in strange tongues working miracles and such like by the which the primitiue Chu●ch was most glorious and did florish in most wonderfull manner for these serued onely for the first planting of the Church neither are we to looke either for the like measure of giftes ●r for 〈◊〉 graces of knowledge wisdome the giftes of interpretation teaching exhorting or any other immediatly from God as they had For this also was proper to those times in the which because it was not meete that the building of the Churc● shoulde not goe forward till men had attained these giftes by ordinary meanes therefore it pleased God immediatly to supply their wantes But now these are not attained but by ordinarie meanes and yet the Lorde doth oftentimes graunt them to his Church in such abundance and in so great measure as that they doe make a flourishing estate of a Church A speciall note whereof in this behalfe is when there are many endued with those excellent giftes of knowledge and wisedome whereby the whole Church may be furnished with wise and learned teachers This is to be looked for in those places and countries which God hath blessed with a long and continuall peace So it is Act. 9.31 The Churches had peace throughout Galatia Iurie and Samaria and were edified and did goe on in the consolation of the holy spirit For euen as for the building of that glorious temple the Lord did giue a long time of peace in the daies of Salomon so doth he also when it pleaseth him to haue a flourishing Church in any place Yea for a flourishing estate in the giftes of his spirit there is in these daies required abundance of learning and of men endued with singular giftes both of nature and ind●stry For God doth sanctifie these for the edifying and beautifying of his Church Hereof it was that the Churches of Corinth Alexandria changed their subtile and learned P●ilosophers into most excellent diuines But especially they of Corinth did flourish notably in a wonderful abundance of all graces aboue al other Churches whereof we reade that they had the giftes of prophecie tongues interpretations yea and all other as the Apostle witnesseth 1. Cor. 1.6 and that in greate measure In regarde whereof the Apostle sait● 1. Cor. 4.8 That they were enriched and did raigne as kinges without him Neyther are these graces bestowed onely vpon the teachers and rulers in the Church but in this flourishing estate they are euen as that pretious oyntment which being poured vpon Arons head did runne downe to the skirtes of his garmentes So that
affection and indeauour doe helpe it forwarde as they who doe builde out of order or not in due time a●d season But there is another k●●d of hin●erers who a●e t●uly and properly so called and these doe of set purpose ●●nder the building of it The which no doubte is not onely a strange thing although it be most vsuall in the world that any man should be giuen vp to such a reprobate and senslesse minde as to labour by all meanes to ouerthrow and deface that wherein his cheife felicitie doth consist but also a most fearefull case for as the Apostle witnesseth 1. Cor. 3.17 Who so destroyeth the temple of God which is holy him shall GOD destroy And Philip 1.28 to be an aduersarie to the Church is a signe of perdition howsoeuer the Lorde may chaunge the hart of the most fierce enimie which his Church hath and make him become a fauourer of it as we see in the example of Paule Sect. 5. Howe the Church is to be built against professed hinderers THey who doe of set purpose hinder the building of the Church are of two sortes to wit professed or hypocritical Of both these kindes the Apostle fore-warneth the elders of the Church which was at Ephesus Act. 20.29 saying I knowe that after my departure fierce wolues shall come in vppon you not sparing the flocke The other kinde followeth And of your selues there shall arise men speaking peruerse things to drawe disciples after them And so doth Christ his disciples Math. 24.9.10 open persecutors shall kill you and yee shal be hated of all men yea many that beleeue shall be offended and one shall betray an other and many false prophets shall arise and deceaue many These hinderers as they are diuers so they are diuersly to be dealt withall yet this belongeth vnto them all that whenas they are obstinately and desperatly malitious in hindering the building of the Church they are subiect to the imprecations of the said Church Neh. 6.14 and 2. Timo. 4.14 professed hinderers are such as are not members of the Church for no man can professe himselfe to be both a seruant to Christ and a hinderer and defacer of his glory which shineth only in the Church and is obscured by hindering the building of it more then by any other meanes but they who hating Christian religion doe by all meanes labour to hinder the propagation of it and that most commonly by open violence These may lawfully be resisted by violence as they doe oppugne the truth as we read that the people of the Iewes did who did build with the one hand and hold their weapons with the other Neh. 4.17 therefore these are called the Lordes battails And hereof we need not doubte but that the force of open enimies labouring to ouerthrow the Church may and ought to be resisted by force There is no cause of warre so iust as is the defence of the Church neither any wherein we may be more bolde to looke euen for the extraordinary helpe and blessing of God in fighting for vs for the good and safety whereof al the creatures in heauen and in earth doe serue Thus Ioah incourageth his brother 2. Sam. 10.12 quite thee like a man and let vs be valiant for our people and for the cities of our God Sect. 6. How the Church is to be built whenas the ciuill magistrate is a professed enimie to the Gospell IT commeth often to passe that the building of the Church is hindered by the ciuill rulers who ought to be the cheife furtherers of it being placed by God in authoritie for this end that by their meanes the people might liue a quiet life in all godlines and honestie 1. Timo. 2.2 But the people by their sinnes doe often pull vpon themselues as diuerse other iudgments so also prophane and Godlesse rulers so much abhorring frō the true worship of God that they do not onely not imbrace it themselues but also hinder their subiects from vsing it The which is a lamētable case euen a horrible cōfusiō of all things whenas the sword of the magistrate is stretched out against the Church the members and builders of it which was appointed cheifly for the maintaining of it yet we haue many examples hereof in all ages of kings princes Emperours all kindes of rulers who haue opposed their whole power and authority to the building of the church This was the state of the church for the space of diuerse hundred yeares in the first time of the Gospell the which did miserably labour vnder the crosse of persecuting Emperours the like may be seene in euerie age And therefore it belongeth to all Christians to knowe howe farre they may go in building the Church in this state of things and whether that it be lawfull as before to build the Church and to maintaine the same being built by force against the violence of the ciuil power The answere to this question is diuerse according to the diuersitie of rule and of subiection for some magistrates doe so rule a● that they themselues are in some sort to be ouerruled by others yea they are subiect to lawes as other men are so as if they doe transgresse either in their priuate life or in publick administration they are to be called to account and to be brought into order by the people or by the ch●ife and noblest of them in the name of the rest These may lawfully by the aforesaid power of ●he people but not by any priuate man or companie of men be compelled to suffer the building of the Church to goe forward But this is no answere to the question for here subiects doe not resist a higher power but the ciuill power being deuided betwixt the people and the rulers one part of it resisteth the other in the which combat the lower power ought to giue place to the higher and therefore the magistrates to the whole body of the people by the which they were put in office to rule them seuerally and ioyntly in the name and by the authoritie of all For this kinde of magistrates is to be accounpted as deputies or substitutes to the people and may lawfully be deposed by them when the common good doth so require Yea if any people haue submitted themselues to any authoritie with condition of hauing the true worshippe of God and the free vse of it they are not bound to obey if the said condition be broken But there is another kind of gouernment wherin the ruler for vsually he is but one hath greater authoritie and a more sure standing in his place in that he is not chosen or appointed by the people to rule neither doth take his authoritie at their handes as their giftes but hath it from God from his predecessors and from himselfe These rulers are for the most part great kinges and Monarches who doe obtaine kingdomes by hereditarie succession from their auncestours hauing either by force conquered the dominion of
those places or by the fauour and consent of the people obtained that great authotitie for themselues and their posteritie Yea often a temperate and meane power being graunted doth incre●se to this immoderate and absolute authoritie whereof we speake The which although it were at the first conquered by violence and vniust dealing yet if afterwardes it be by the generall and continuall consent of the people admitted acknowledged and obeyed it is to be accounted a lawfull authority Now in many of those kingdomes the rulers are not tied to any couenants or conditions by the which they shoulde rule but onely so farre forth as they doe voluntarilie submit themselues for the more quiet obtaining enioying of their kingdoms Yea they haue the full and absolute authority of the land in their owne handes and inherēt in their own persons insomuch that al others within their dominions ioyntly and seuerally considered are in respect of them priuate men Of this kinde was the kingdome of Israell as hath beene shewed in the former treatise and many other in the which that we may apply this to our purpose it was not lawfull for any of the people to resist the ciuill authority by open force no not in the cause of setting vp or maintaining the Church as appeareth by the historie and examples of the saide kinges Yea this is agreeable to the word of God which teacheth that we ought not to doe that which is good but by good lawful and ordinarie meanes but to resist the ciuill power is euill and greatly displeasing in the eyes of God Yet we ought to vse all lawfull meanes for the setting forward of this worke when it is hindered by these magistrates as first to solicite the cause of the Church at their hands yea euen with our owne danger as did Hester Est. 4.14.16 Nehemias Neh. ● 4 and to labour to bring them to the knowledge of the truth Yea further if it be so needfull to redeeme the freedome of religion with our goods by paying to our rulers great tributes that the Church may be established Also by shewing our faithfull obedience loyal submission and duetifull seruice euen to the vnbeleeuing rulers as did Daniel Nehemias and many other godly men By the which meanes and such like the Lord working together in whose handes the heartes of kinges are to turne at his pleasure it may happely come to passe that they will become louers and furtherers yea members of the Church or at the least not haters and hinderers of it but if they doe continue obstinate and as it vsually commeth to passe become persecutours of the Church Then in the first kinde of gouernment the people may vse eyther that secret authoritie which as yet remaineth in their owne handes or else the libertie and benefit of conditionall obedience and so notwithstanding the ciuil ruler build the Church as they ought to doe But in the other kind of gouermēt we may not build with the one hand hold our weapons with the other against that g●eat absolute and maiesticall authoritie for here God giueth no other weapons where withall to fight saue onely patience to suffer their vngodly dealing and if they become malitious and bloudy persecutours of the Church winges to flie For that in time of persecution moued eyther by our owne magistrates or by any other power we may fly for our safetie we are taught euen by the light of nature which moueth euery one to preserue his life by all good meanes But nature is an euill counseller in cases of religion and therefore we haue a more sure ground whereon to rest in this behalfe euen the worde of God whereunto we are to hearken giuing vs this libertie yea this counsell that when we are persecuted in one place we should fly to another as the primitiue Church was dispersed except the Apostles Act. 8.1 yea this is good not onely for our selues but also for the Church for by this meanes we preserue the Church which otherwise would be destroyed in vs. Besides those who are weake and doubt of their constancy ought not to tempt God by vndergoing extreame daunger Yea the Lord vseth thi● meanes for the inlarging of his Church Act. 8.4 yet sometimes God doth not graunt vnto vs this libertie of flying but giueth the persecutour power ouer vs that by this meanes he may try our soundnesse and constancy in the profession of his trueth Yea sometimes it is also expedient for the Church that we doe not vse this liberty though we may as if our suffering be like to bring many to the profession of the trueth or to confirme the weake or to auoyd the slaunder of the enemy obiecting to vs fearefulnesse hypocrisie want of faith and of the hope of eternall life Sect. 7. Of the building of the Church hindered by the ciuill ruler being a christian THus much of professed hinderers being open enemies to the Church Nowe we come to those who although they professe themselues members of the Church and such as do by all meanes labour to build it yet in trueth they doe hinder the same yea often more then the opē enemy doth And to let others passe the greatest hurt is done by those who are publicke in the Church vnto whome the building and furthering of this worke doth belong as namely the ciuill ruler being a member of the Church and the ecclesiasticall gouernour or the minister of the worde For as when the light of the body is darkenesse how greate is that darkenesse so when the builders of the Church are the hinderers of it how great is that hurt For the first the ciuill ruler for so we speake as of one because that kinde of gouerment is most vsuall may greatly hinder the building of the Church although he doe in part further the same as namely if together with the profession of the true worship of God he doe retaine some part of some false worship or the reliques and memorials of it whereby many are offended and hindered Secondly if he hinder the establishing of any part of the gouernment of the Church commaunded in the worde or else the function of any office and finally if he doe by any meanes hinder the course of the gospell and the building of Gods Church in that place Heere we haue other meanes to vse the ciuill ruler being a member of the Church For first we may be more bolde in mouing him to regard the building of the Church the which doth as much concerne his owne good and saluation as the good of any other We may also haue greate hope that he will be moued by the aduise of them who are godlie wise and learned in his realme Yea those that are the ministers of the worde of GOD by whose meanes the Church is built may deale more plainely with him and exhort yea charge him in the name of God who will one day take an accounte of him howe he hath discharged his duetie to
memorie and other common giftes Then followeth a corrupt worship consisting in outward rites and ceremonies in vaine babling in suffering hunger or in other bodily exercises Further if in steede of true doctrine errours be publickely taught and generally receaued or if in steede of a christian life sinne doe abounde by these meanes and many other which it is not needefull to rehearse commeth a corrupt state of a Church But heere we are briefely to touch a question which hath beene in part handled alone Chap. 1. Sect. 4. to wit howe farre a Church may be corrupt before it cease to be a true Church that is a Church truely and indeede For answere whereof it seemeth that wheresoeuer a company of men doe ioyntlie and publickely by worshipping the true God in Christ professe the substance of Christian religion which is faith in Iesus Christ the sonne of God and Sauiour of the world that there is a true Church notwithstanding any corruption whatsoeuer yea although it be of that nature that it might be made by consequent of argument to fight with the very foundation of christian religion and so hainous as that in respect thereof the people stained with this corruption are worthy to be abhorred of all men and vnworthy to be called the Church of God We will take an instance of a people which together with the profession of the faith doe m●intaine and vse idolatrie not worshipping a false God for then they were without all question to be counted infidels but the true God after a false and deuised manner These seeme to be a Church although they doe prophane the worship of God after a most horrible grieuous m●nner thus as it may seem some christans did in the first time of the gospel who did both beleeue in some sort yet could not of a sudden shake off that idolatrie wherein they had liued so many yeares For so Paul writeth 1. Cor. 5.11 If any that is called a brother that is a christian be a fornicatour or couetous or a worshipper of Images This kind of w●rship is in vse in the Church of Rome the which seemeth to be a Church althogh in the lowest degree that can be imagined vnlesse as it semeth that we may do we wil admit into the church the people of the ten tribs who were idolaters yet by circumcisiō some otherwaies did professe the name of Iehoua as we may note out of many testimonies of scripture And first out of those places where they are called the people of god as we read Ro. 10.25.26 wher the people of God the beloued of God and the children of the liuing God doe all signifie a true Church In the 1. King 16.2 they are twise so called wher God saith that he made Bahasa the captaine of his people Israell Secondly God is called the God of the ten tribes and said to be among them 1. King 20.28 because the Syrians speaking of the God of the ten tribes of whome they were ouercome said that Iehoua was God of the hils onely and 1. King 18.35 thou art the God of Israel Thirdly for that they alwaies had the true prophets of God and by them did aske and receiue counsell of God in their waightie affaires Thus 1. King 22.5.6.7.11 Achab asked counsel of God 2. King 2.16 Ahazia is reproued by God for that He sent to aske counsell at Baalsebub as though there were not a GOD in Is●ael whose worde he might haue sought after Likewise 1. King 5.8 Eliseus saith this is a most certaine thing that Israell is not at any time without a prophet The trueth hereof may be gathered also 1. King 18.21 where Elias saith that the people did halt betwixt God and Baal that is did serue them both together And lastly by that which is often said that the kinges of Israel did euil in the eyes of God that is in that place wherupon God did as yet looke with the eyes of his mercy as vpon his Church So that although they did wante almost the whole publicke worship and therefore are said 2. Chro. 15.3 to be without God without priestes and the law yet because the name of God was generally by circumcision professed of them they seeme to retaine the name of a Church and o● the people of God Euen as the Church of Rome serueth God and Christ by baptisme and by professing his name otherwaies although they haue no part of the worship of God vncorrupt●d And so the ten tribes some christians in the primitiue church the papists and as we may thinke king Salomon with many others ioyned idolatry the worship of the true God together as it is said of the Samaritanes that they feared the Lord and worshipped idols 2. Kinges 17.41 yet these Samaritanes were not a Church for they did only in their mindes slauishly feare God but all their outward worship was done vnto idols Sect. 11. Of a Church corrupt in doctrine NOwe we are to enquire howe farre a people may be corrupt in doctrine and yet remain a Church Whereunto we answere as before that all they who hold the foundation of religion are to be counted a Church although together they be infected with many grieuous errours By the foundation of religion we doe not meane any one particular point no not the waightiest points or those which come nearest to the foundation it selfe but the generall and maine doctrine of Christianitie the which was before the comming of Ch●ist this I beleeue in the Messias who is to come of the seed of Dauid and since his comming it is this I beleeue that Iesus is Christ as the foundation of religion is defined by the Apostle 1. Cor. 3.11 The truth hereof may euidently appeare by considering the state of the visible Church before the comming of Christ especially as it was at the time of his comming in the which although God did reueale his will more clearely to some of his prophets people yet the church generally was altogether ignorant of the waightiest points of the Gospell as of Christ the trinitie two distinct natures the vnion of them of his offices death and resurrection Now although simple ignoraunce be not so grieuous a sinne as wilfull heresie neither an heresie before the comming of Christ as one since his comming yet in this respect they are all one for a man doth erre in that point which he doth not knowe holding the errour contrary to the said trueth Euen as the Iewes not knowing the heades of doctrine before named did alwaies in all ages and doe to this day so many as continue in vnb●leife deny the doctrine of the trinitie for they make but one person to wit God the father and the doctrine of the deitie of Christ thinking that the Messias should be a mere man they deny his offices thinking that he should be a temporall king onely and therefore they knewe not the doctrine of regeneration as we see in
profession of the faith and also to b● a meanes to continue them together in the same so it is recorded Act. 8.4 That the Church which was at Ierusalem being dispe●sed they did preach the worde euerie man labouring as he had occasion offered So we reade that Prisci●la and Aquila had a Church in their owne house which we may wel thinke to haue beene gathered and constituted by them for that they are saide to haue preached the gospell diligently and to haue conuerted many Rom. 16.4 1. Cor. 16.19 So Colossians 4.15 the Apostle saluteth Nympha and the Church which was in his house and although it be not mentioned that these men were the founders of these Churches within their owne houses yet this doctrine may be proued by that generall rule of the worde the which layeth this charge vppon euery man that he build the Church and establish the true worship of God so far as his authoritie doth stretch By this rule as euery man is to make himselfe the temple of the holy ghost so masters of families and rulers of cities and countries are bounde to be the first founders of the Church in those places where they haue to doe yea they may lawfully preach the word to any other when occasion is offered Yet whenas they haue wonne any to the profession of Christ who are not of their owne families or gathered them together beeing dispersed abroad to serue God together then they are to commit the further building of it to those who shall be appointed and chosen to teach and order the said congregation And if they themselues be thought meetest for that purpose then are they no more priuate men but ecclesiasticall rulers Also this is to be considered that whenas it pleaseth God to put into any mans heart this desire and purpose to goe about the building of any such priuate Church he or they if they be more then one are to communicate their purpose to those who doe alreadie beleeue and professe the faith neere to that place that their consent and approbation of their doings may be vnto them a kind of calling and also confirme and encourage them in the saide work And in this manner it is not vnlawful for priuate men to be the first builders founders of a priuate Church consisting not onely of their own families but also of any other whose hearts it shall please God to moue to beleeue the gospell and to ioyne with them in the profession of it But in conuerting others there is great wisedome to be vsed forasmuch as ciuill rulers who are not themselues of the Church although they doe giue a toleration for a priuate Church within their dominions yet they wil hardly suffer their subiectes to be turned to any newe religion so that they who doe take in hande this worke are to consider that they haue not such libertie as were to be wished and therefore they ought with peace and quietnesse to vse that libertie which God hath graunted vnto them rather then by passing the limits of their calling to venture the losse of that which they haue So that they are to builde chiefely by gathering together those who doe alreadie professe the faith and that by priuate teaching as occasion is offered and as for others to vse all lawfull meanes to allure them to the liking of their profession as is an honest and vnblameable life whereby they may get the fauour of all men as the Church had Act. 2.47 Then to be readie to receaue all that come vnto them and louingly and mildly to conferre with them of those pointes wherof they doubt Thus did the apostle Paule at Rome for the space of two yeares remayning in an hired house priuatly receaue all that came vnto him did preach the G●spell with all bold●esse without any hindrance the which he could neuer haue done in that place if he had gone about openly publickly to chaunge the state of religion to bring the people of Rom● to the profe●sion of the Gospel Sect. 3. Of the state of it being planted AS great care is to be vsed in the gathering of a priuate Church so likewise continuing it this alwaies is to be obserued that they liue in obedience to all ciuil lawes and constitutions so that they be no cause of disturb●nce to the publick state of the place where they liue For to this ende are all those exhortations which are made concerning obeying magistrates rulers whether high or lo● R●m 13.1 Peter 2.17 in many other places for the Churches were then in those places where heathen magistrates ruled Yea christians liuing in this estate although they ought to desire the company of their brethren professing the faith rather then of infidels which are strangers from God and also as much as they can to haue their continuall conuersation with them yet they ought not to abhorre or fly the company of those who are not of the Church whenas by iust occasion it is offered For so we see the Apostle writeth to the Co●inthians 1.7.12 that the beleeuing husband should not put away the vnbeleeuing wife being content to remaine with him So also we may obserue that the christians were often inuited by infidels to their banquets 1. Cor. 10.27 And as for the sinnes and corruptions which we shall see in them we may and ought to vse greater patience towardes them then towardes those that doe professe the gospell So Paule writeth 1. Cor. 5.12 what haue I to doe to iudge them that are without doe not ye iudge those who are within and therefore we may lawfully leaue their faultes and sinnes vnreproued Yet in all our dealinges with them we must aime at their conuersion and then it will be for the glorie of God and our owne comfort which if it be onely for our temporal commodity cannot be without the offence of our brethren whereunto a speciall regarde is to be had and also to our owne hinderance in regarde of comfort and edification in the knowledge and obedience of Christ. Furthe● in these priuate Churches this is to be obserued that they most vsually consist of the most syncere and faithfull christians For in them none are compelled to professe the faith but all are such as do willingly of their owne accord embrace the gospell Act. 2.41 So many as willingly receaued the worde were baptized Yea this also may be an argument of their sounden●sse in the profession of the trueth for that liuing amongest infidels they cannot but incurre the hatred of many yea oft●ntimes euen of the ciuill rulers themselues by taking vpon them the profession of the gospell and so sustaine many iniu●ies and hurtes in regarde of thinges belonging to this temporall life and manifolde molestations scoffes yea reproches in regarde of the se●uice of God Againe this is to be noted that these priuate Churches are for the most part more pure perfect orderly and free then publi●ke Churches are For
with the multitude there commeth in confusion and corruption And the ciuill power being in the person of the magistrate ioyned to the church doth often too much abridge the vse of christian liberty taking to it selfe as it may lawfully do full power in making those ecclesiasticall lawes which belong generally to all the churches within the compasse of it But in these churches the whole authoritie of establishing lawes orders and the appointing of rites and ceremonies is in the Church it selfe Lastly it is vsually obiected against these priuate Churches that they are the causes of tumults and ciuil dissensiō and so consequently do bre●d the ruine of those common-wealthes and kingdoms wher●in they a●e toll●rated therefore that it is the part of wise rulers who tender the good and peaceable estate of the people not to suff●r them within their dominions to this we answere confessing that through the peruersnesse of our corrupt natures the which are 〈◊〉 inflamed with bitter enmitie against God and all goo●nesse it commeth often to passe that ●●uersitie of religion doth stirre vp great debate in kingdomes cities and families for this cause the Church desired to be separated in place from the idolatours least th●y should exasperate their mindes against them Gen. 46.34 Exod. 8.26 yea Christ doth professe that this would follow the Gospell that the father should be at deadly variaunce with the sonne and the mother with the daughter and that a mans nearest friend shoulde for this cause become his cruell enimie Yea the bloudie and tragica●l tumults which haue of late times risen and continued vpon this occasion in diuerse places do testifie the truth here of But yet we ought not therefore to banish the Church out of our dominions For it is better to haue the true worshippe of god with warre trouble and dissention then idolatrie with quietnesse So that we ought to say with Christ that seeing the Gospell is euen as a fierbrand in the world what shoulde be our desire but that it be preached for although for a time it breed trouble yet in the end it will be found the onely meanes of true quietnesse CHAP. VIIII Of a publick Church Sect. 1. Of the obiections which are made against publick churches THus much of a priuate Church Besides the which there is another kinde of a church namely when any whole citie countrie or nation doth generally professe the faith and so becommeth a Church consisting not of any smale or meane number but of great multitudes of people euen of whole nations As we see at this day that diue●s great kingdomes and common-wealthes haue receaued the gospell of Christ so that in them the church doth not lurke in any family or priuate corner or is in some few places but is openly publickly and generally set vp in all places by the authority of the ciuill rulers and the common consent of all men This we call a publick C●urch such as we see at this day most of al the cities commonwealthes countries and kingdomes in Eu●ope to be Of the which one is distinguished from another by hauing a proper gouernment of the owne being ruled by the same humane lawes both ciuill and also ecclesiasticall But it may be here thought that these countries are no true churches but that there are churches in them and that not all the people generally but only some fewe of them separated from the rest are to be accounted the true churches of God and that for these reasons first because there was no such churches established by the apostles or recorded to haue bene in the first ages of the gospell Secondly for that although it be not impossible to God to conuert the harts of all men to embrace the gospell yet it is not agreable to his vsuall dealing so to blesse any nation as that all of them without exception should beleeue and become faithfull men Thirdly because of the great confusion and many fould corruptions which are vsually found in such Churches the which seldom or neuer can be brought to the right order of the Church of Christ. Lastly because they are not called to the profession of the faith by the ministerie of the word of God but are in a manner forced thereunto by the lawes edictes of princes and other rulers Wh●reunto we answere that these things doe not hinder these whole cities or nations from being the true churches of God As touching the first we do confesse that there we●e no such publick and generall churches in the daies of the apostles neither in the ages following the cause whereof we may plainly see to be this That then was the ●ime of the infancie of the gospell in respect of the number of beleeuers it hauing been but lately published to the world but this is the time wherein the lord hath appointed that the fulnes of the gentiles should come in which is the conuersion of whole nations and many countries Yea the apostle witnesseth that the fulnes of the Iewes shal be then whenas that whole nation shal generally embrace christ as the sauiour of the world Rom. 11.26 To the second doubt we answere that all the people of any countrie may haue a general faith whereby they do knowe and professe that Iesus Christ is the sauiour of the world that their prof●ssion hereof although it be not effectual to their saluation yea although it be meerly hypocritical they thinking no such thing yet it is sufficient to make them members of the visible chu●ch As touching the corruptiōs which are in such churches we doe confesse that it is greater then either it is to be wished it were or then is in priuat churches where the nūber of beleeuers is lesse and that they cannot so easely be brought to and kept in that holy order which christ hath appointed for his church and further that these publick churches so seldome attaine to any pure or perfect estate because in them the church and the common-wealth are so ioyned linked together the whole affai●es and state of the Church depending on the ciuil estate that the manifold alterations wherūto al kingdoms cōmon-wealthes are subiect do make many chaunges in the church Yet this doth not take from them either the being or the name of the church For it is no straunge thing that there should be greater confusion and moe corruptions in great multitudes of people then in small congregations For so we see euen in the first congregation of C●ristians which the Apostles themselues did gouerne that when the number of disciples did encrease then there was murmuring among them and so euen this priuate Church did tend to some confusion Act. 6.1 yea this thing hath long ago been obserued to haue been con●inually the state of the Church the which as long as it was in persecution did florish not in the number so much as in the time of peace but yet it was farre better ordered godlines loue and vertue did
more florish the Lorde was more feruently and hartely serued and called vpon all faultes and corruptions in life or doctrine were seuerely censured yea rather sharply punished but whenas it pleased God to giue peace and prosperitie to his Church by the meanes of Christian Emperours and kings then did the number of beleeuers mightely increase and the Church did in that respect florish but together with the nūber loosenes in life in the seruice of God scismes heresies and all manner of corruptions did come in increase more and more So that these multitudes of professours are not in regard of these inconueniences to be reiected but rather we are to reioyce at this as the apostle did Philip 1.18 For that Christ was preached although for vaine glorie to praise God for that according as he promised by his prophets Esa 54.2 The Church hath enlarged her tentes so that all the nations of the earth doe come into her bosome Yea euen this that the name of C●rist is not blasphemed as amonge infidels but honored worshipped and called vpon although it be in great confusion yet it maketh for the glorie of God and therefore all good Christians ought to reioyce herein although they doe wholly mist●ke all corruptions and the confusion which is vsually in these publick Churches Lastly concerning their calling we are not to thinke that it is so strange a thing that they are called to the profession of the faith who were borne Christans and doe euen as it were sucke the profession of christianitie from their mothers breastes of whom the Apostle saith that they are holy 1. Cor. 7. or yet they who being professours of the gospell and holding the foundation of christian religion as it seemeth that papistes and such other heretickes doe as we haue declared more at large heretofore are brought by the authoritie of the magistrate from a corrupt manner of seruing God or from grieuous heresies to a more syncere worship and profession as it was in the primatiue Church whenas men were conuerted from heathenisme to christianity And therefore all those who haue beene by baptisme ingraffed into the profession of Christ in their young yeares and haue afterwarde beene continually brought vp in the same profession of the faith declaring vnto all men in the whole course of their liues that they doe like loue and imbrace that profession which they tooke vpon them and doe serue and worship God in the name of Iesus Christ are to be counted members of the Church although they haue no effectuall calling to the vnfained and true obedience of the gospell To conclude this point the example of the Church of the Iewes wil euidently declare the true nature and whole estate of this kinde of Churches and also resolue all doubtes which can be moued For in it all that receiued circumcision were counted members of the Church Yea the Apostle witnesseth that at the time which the Lord hath appointed that whole nations shal againe become the Church of God So that in what place soeuer whether towne citie commonwealth prouince or kingdome the people doe generally professe the faith or thus wheresoeuer the lawes ecclesiasticall doe stretch themselues as wide and doe belong to as many as the ciuill or common lawes made for the administration of the commonwealth there is a true publicke Church set vp Sect. 2. Of the coniunction of the Church and commonwealth BY setting vp a publick Church in any place it cōmeth to passe that the Church commonwealth are ioined together the which in a priuat state of a Church haue nothing to deale the one with the other For there the Ch. either lurketh in secret if she haue not he fauour of the ciuil ruler or at the least dwelleth as in a priuate house if she haue a toleration But now whenas any people gen●rally together with their magistrats do professe the faith the church may be cōpared to Esther who was taken from her priuat state wherin she liued being brought forth into open and publick place was maried to the king so is the coniunction of the Church the common-wealth Wherin we haue these points consider first what is the bond of this coniunction secondly the manner of it thirdly whether state is the superiour fourthly how they meddle with each other lastly the cōmodities discommodities which either the Church or the cōmonwealth reapeth by this meanes or the changes alterations which happen to either of them For the first the bond of this coniunction is the ciuil power which is the ve●y fountain head from the which both these estates do flow and by the which it is brought to passe that there is a publicke Church in any place for howsoeuer great multitude of people may be conuerted only by the ministerie of the word yet we do not see that al generally do professe the faith but only wher the power of the magistrate ioined to the word doth make the gospel to be publickly receaued in that it maketh al that are mēbers of the ciuil body to be members of the Church also Hence it is that as soone as the ciuill power ceaseth to maintaine religion these publicke Churches fall to the ground the bond being broken wherby they were tied to the cōmonwealth So we read Iud. 2.7.19 That the people of Israel serued God as long as Iosua the elders or their iudges liued but as soone as they died they fel away to idolatry Likewise in the first time of the gospel there were no publicke Churches for diuers hundred yeares and al for want of this bond of christian rulers but as soone as the Roman Emperours did embrace the gospel then were publicke Churches set vp in many places Sect. 3. That a publicke Church with the ciuill estate maketh one bodie vnder one head IN the second place we are to see what manner of coniunction this is to wit whether that the Church commonwealth thus ioined together make one body or state ruled by one the same head or else are still two diuerse bodies absolute and perfect each in it selfe without the other and ordered by the owne proper head in all matters belonging vnto it For answere hereof it hath bene thought that in this coniunction there are two bodies not onely diuerse but euen cleane opposite and contrary the one to the other euery respect that they are ordered by two diuerse supreame heades and that all the functions of these bodies are of so contrary natures that they cannot lawfully meete together in the same subiect This opinion which seemeth not to be agreeable to the trueth hath risen of a reuerend religious yea as it proued at length a superstitious opinion of the ecclesiasticall estate with too base and vile an opinion of the ciuill state the which hath seemed so prophane and vnholy as that it coulde not in any respect be ioyned with the other without defiling and prophaning it But the word of
them and nothing more shameful and ignominious by the generall consent of all men then for any people to be blockish in diuine matters and not able to discerne which is the right worshippe of the true God Nowe let vs see what the Church gaineth by this bargaine and couenant made with the ciuill state First by this meanes she becommeth safe from outward daungers and from the violence of malitious persecutours by whom priuate Churches are continually troubled and often quite ouerthrowen being neither willing to resist by force of armes their owne magistrates labouring to deface the true worshippe of God neith●r for the most part able to with-stand forrain inuasion And therefore they may fitly be compared to a vinyard which wanteth a hedge or fence so that all the wilde beastes of the forrest do enter in and root it vp but a publick Church is garded by the ciuill power against all daungers not onely outward but also inward arising of the stubburn wilfulnesse of those who will not submit themselues to the orders of the Chur●h Hence it is that those ciuill states which are well ordered are farre more fit harbours for the Church then confused common-wealthes are For whenas men are not taught to yeeld obedience to ciuill gouernment which forbidding only hainous offences is more gentle and remisse howe shall they beare the yoke of ecclesiasticall gouernment which looketh more narrowly into the liues of men and is farre more streite and seuere So that a people subdued to ciuill obedience are as horses broken and wilde beastes tamed and may more easely be brought into the form● of a Church We do confesse that the power of the word of God preached is of sufficient force and power to make the most lawlesse and barbarous men good Christians and as tame as lambes and that without the helpe of this ciuill power as we see in priuate Churches yet for the preseruation of the outward order of these publick Churches this meanes is of great force Lastly the encrease of number which commeth by this meanes is to be counted no small commoditie being simply considered howsoeuer vsually it bringeth with it confusion and imperfect state and sundrie such discommodities Sect. 6. Of the first mouer in the planting of a publick Church NOwe we are to come to the specials which are in planting of a publick Church and first to the beginner or first mouer in this worke For the declaring of the trueth hereof we are to consider the verie originall and first planting of churches the which were founded by the Apostles and Euangelists in many places yea they also committed the care of continuing those Churches vnto faithfull men that they might prouide for the time to come But neither the Apostles could bring to passe that all the world should be brought to the profession of the faith neither the care of those ordinary ministers to whom the preseruation of the said Churches was committed could so preuaile but that euen in those places where the Apostles planted Churches religion afterwards was by the malice of Sathan not onely defaced but euen so rooted out as in most of those places there remaneth not any shadow of a church The Apostles and other extraordinary ministers being dead their offices and calling which were to plant Churches in all places did cease after whom there remained in the Church ordinary ministers to accomplish that worke which they had begun namely to build out those Churches which they had planted Yet they had no calling to build churches in all countries but in some one place where vnto they were appointed for if ordinary ministers which are nowe in those places where the Church is had this calling to preach in diuerse countries and to diuers nations then they should haue gifts needfull for this worke as the gifts of discerning spirits the gifts of tongues without the which none can preach to a straunge people But these gifts are ceased as also these callings neither hath any ordinary minister by his calling any charge of any other people and countries to bring them to be a Church And as for extraordinary men although God may raise vp such when he will yet we are not to looke for any such in these daies As for the bishope of Rome who challengeth vnto himselfe the care of the whole world as being christs vicar general we know that his authority in the Ch. is but vsurped and his allegations friuolous he hath destroyed the Church therefore we are not to looke that he should be the cheife doer in the building and planting of Churches whom then shall we make to be the first mouer in the planting or repairing of a publick Church in a citie common-wealth or kingdome euen the cheife rulers and magistrates of those places as hath been declared in the second section of this chapter So then the first thing in the planting of a publick Church in any countrie is this that we suppose the ciuill ruler willing and desirous to take this work in hand and that by the meanes of some of his subiects making humble supplication to him in this behalfe or by some neighboure Churches stirring him vp by their example to erect the church within his dominions and commending this worke vnto him as the most excellent and happie thing as it is indeed Sect. 7. Of the speciall manner of planting a publick Church THe next thing to be considered is how the ciuil ruler being willing to plant the Ch· should knowe the manner of this worke and the right frame of it whereof at the first we must suppose both him and his people to be ignorant The meanes which God hath appointed for this end is this Although at the first he did not send his apostles to all countries to plant Churches neither doth since that time send any other as Apostles yet in that he did by them at the first preach the gospel and plant Churches in most partes of the world and doth continually preserue the fame in one place or other he giueth sufficient meanes of hauing the knowleege of his true worshippe to those that wil imbrace it and leaueth the rest inexcusable The first building of Churches in so many places was so conspicuous euen as a citie set on the top of an hill that it might easely be seene of all men So that euen as the gentiles which dwelt farre off from hierusalem hearing of the fame of it were moued many of them to repaire thither to learne the knowledge of the true God so all they nowe euen the Iewes also when God shall turne their hartes and open their eyes to see some glimmering of the Gospell ought to resort to those places where the Church is there to get the word of God the manner of his true worshippe and all other meanes which may further their purpose And this is to be done by procuring men of knowledge and wisdome to come and instruct both rulers and people how
each other and their generall affaires are so lincked together as that neither can be well ordered without respect had to the other as that we rather take it agreeable to the worde of GOD that the cheife stroke in this action be giuen vnto him For the further declaration hereof the making of lawes hath two partes the first is the counselling or aduising of them the second is the establishing or enacting of them both which as it seemeth belong to the ciuill ruler the first in parte the second wholly The enacting of the lawes is the making of them and therefore in the first place we will endeauour to shewe that those thinges which are aduised for the ordering of a publick Church haue both the name and the force of lawes from the ciuill power for first this must of necessititie be graunted to it in the first founding of the C●urch wherein we are to suppose that there are neither ministers nor any beleeuing people only the magistrate hauing the knowledge of the true God goeth aboute to bring the people thereunto The which thing he cannot do without making and establishing lawes for that purpose So that as we see it to be in other matters in that the ciuill ruler is the first and sole founder of these publick Churches he hath the power of enacting those lawes whereby the whole worke is both begun continued and preserued thus the Apostles being the first founders of the Churches did make lawes and constitutions for the ordering of them as we may see 1. Cor. 4.17 Where Paule witnesseth of himselfe that he did make the same cōstitutions in al Churches In like manner the cheife rulers although they haue not Apostolicall callings offices and giftes yet for that in planting publick Churches they do supplie thier places we are to grant vnto them authority in this behalfe And as this po●er cannot be denyed to the magistrate in the first founding of a Church so whenas the Church is built his authoritie is not diminished or abated or giuen to any other but remaineth still in his owne handes The trueth whereof may be declared in this manner to make a lawgiuer there must these things concur First a publick calling whereby he hath care and c●arge of the people to procure their good as by all other meanes so especially by giuing them good and righteous lawes by the which they may be ordered Secondly authoritie to command and also power to compell those who are rebellious to yeeld obedience vnto the said lawes The which thinges for so much as they are wanting in all others saue in the cheife ruler hereof it commeth to passe that the giuing of lawes cannot belong to any saue to him onely For the greater euidence of this point we are to consider to whom this making of ecclesiasticall lawes is giuen being denied to the ciuill ruler namely to the whole ministerie of the Church established who as they haue the ordering and ruling of the Church and the greatest measu●e of knowledge in these affaires so it may seeme most meete that the making of lawes be permitted vnto them For the answering whereof this is to be marked that we do not here enquire who a●e most meet to aduise ecclesiasticall lawes and to be admitted into consultation of them for we cannot doubt but that the ministers of the word are vsually most fit for this purpose but who hath this calling office and authority to make these lawes All which seeme to be wanting in the minister● whose calling and office is to be in particular Churches the ministers of the word of prayer of the sacraments of discipline but not to be lawgiuers in the Church For so they should rule ouer it as Lordes which is forbidden 1. Pet. 5.3 yea they haue no power to make and authorize lawes no not in a priuate Church which is free from the ciuill power For although they beare the chiefest sway in this and in all other actions yet the lawes take their authoritie not from the ministers but from the whole bodie of the Church consisting of ministers and people But in a publicke Church this authoritie goeth from the people to the ciuill ruler by whose authoritie it is planted built and preferred the worde lawfully preached in great assemblies of the people the which otherwise were tumultes yea the positiue lawes of the Church authorized put in force So that in a priuate Church the state i● popular but in a publicke Church it is according to the ciuill state as namely monarchicall in the rule of one If any doe here obiect that definition of the office and duetie of a ruler which the people of Israel make 1. Sam. 8.20 saying We wil haue a king who shall iudge vs and fight our battailes for vs and thereof gather that he being otherwise busied cannot vse the meanes of attayning a sufficient measure of knowledge in ordering of the Church we answere that this people had no care but of worldly matters And further that there is no ruler in his owne person so continually imployed in ciuil or warlike affaires but that he may and ought to giue himselfe to the studie of the worde of GOD and to the vse of all men whereby he may be made able for the discharging of this duety to the Church The trueth of this pointe appeareth in the example of Iosua who had a more waightie and troublesome charge laide vpon him namely to bring the people of Israel into the land of Chanaan and to giue them quiet possession of it then any ruler hath in the ordinarie gouernment of his realme and yet the Lorde gaue him this commaundement in the first place Ios. 1.8 That the booke of the lawe should neuer depart from him but that he should meditate on it day and night If it be further asked why the Apostles neuer make mention of any such authority that princes should ha●e in the church the answere is plaine to wit that there were no publicke Churches in their daies And therefore the ciuill ruler had no further to deale with them then to tolerate them within their dominions and to see that they liued in ciuill peace and order As touching the aduising of lawes although the ciuill ruler haue the authoritie of enacting them yet he ought to be very sparing and moderate in vsing it The which thing as it is necessarelie to be obserued in the ciuill gouernment of all rulers who desire to haue a quiet and peaceable estate so it is much more requisite in ordering the Churrch which ought to be ruled after a most gentle and milde manner euen as the prophet Esay doth teach vs saying that in the time of the gospell Kings Queenes shal be nourse-fathers and nourse-mothers to the Church that is they shall rule and order it not tyrannically by force and violence but in a louing and tender sort euen as we see nourses deale with young children The which affection a christian ruler
doctrine ought to be esteemed the publicke confession of the whole Church whereby they doe make knowen not only to other Churches but also to the whole world that they do professe maintaine the trueth of christian religion and of euery part therof do detest abhor al the false worship of the Iewes Turkes and all other infidels whatsoeuer and also that they are free from all false erroneous opinions all grosse blasphemous heresies of men professing the faith wherewith the Church hath bene at al times and is troubled at this day This publicke profession of the faith being with great care diligence made and approued by the generall consent of the whole councel is by the authority of the chiefe ruler to be enioined to the whole Ch. so as it be not lawfull for any man to deny or refute any point of it Yet it ought not to containe in it the determination of al controuersies but only a declaration of the chiefe points of religion in the profession wherof the life as it were the very essence or being of the Church doth consist For as touching matters of lesse moment in the which men may erre without any danger to their owne saluation or hurt to the Church it is impossible that all men should be brought to think and professe the same thing but there will be continually diuersity of opinions in these points in euerie Church Yet it doth belong to this publick councel to consider to determin euen of other doubts cōtrouersies which do troble the Church that by this meanes contention may be taken away and as the Apostle writeth 1. Cor. 1.10 all may say the same things and be knit together in one minde and in one iudgment Yet the determination of the councell of these lighter points ought not to be imposed vpon any man to thinke or to professe but euerie man left to thinke as it shall please God to giue him to vnderstand the worde of God in that behalfe either keeping his opinion dissenting fr●m the Church to himselfe or else imparting it to others in that moderate wise and christian manner as that no man be iustly offended by him or the publick peace of the Churche disquieted but rather all in some measure edified Sect. 4. of the gouerning of the seuerall prouinces of a national Church THus much of a publick or nationall councell gathered ordered and established by the authority of the cheife ruler for this end to bring the whole Church to a conformity both in outward rites and orders and also in the truth of doctrine Wherein this is especially to be cōsidered and therefore not vnfit to be repeated that there be regard had vnto the liberty of inferiour Synodes For as it is impossible to make all men thinke the same thing in all pointes so also it is vnmeet yea impossible that the generall councell should so define of al things which are incident into the gouerning of churches as that nothing be left to the discretion and disposition of inferiour assemblies And therefore the decrees and lawes made by the generall councell ought to be as rules to direct them in their actions although all particular cases and circumstances yea matters of lesse importance be neither determined nor yet mentioned in them Nowe we are to come to prouinciall councels for so much as there do daily many doubts and controuersies arise yea great and waightie affaires do offer themselues amongest the Churches which neither for the greatnesse can sufficiently be determined and ordered by a fewe ministers neither yet conueniently be deferred to a generall meeting which cannot be had without great trouble to the Church Therefore prouinciall sinodes haue a necessarie vse They are of the same nature with general councels saue only that they belong not to the whole Ch. but onely to some parte of it as it is distinguished They are to be called ordered and established by the authoritie of the ciuil ruler and do deale in the same matters and in the manner aforesaid for the care and ordering not only of a whole nationall Ch. generall but also of the seuerall prouinces of it doth belong to the ciuill ruler so that although it doth not belong to his office to enter into particular congregations and there to performe the dutie of an ordinary gouernour or teacher yet he ought to see and procure that they be in good order that the ministers of the word do their duties diligently and sincerly that the people liue in obedience to the gospell of Christ. But in great nations and kingdoms it is not often seene that the cheife ruler can keepe in his owne handes and discharge in his owne person this dutie of ouerseeing the seuerall prouinces of the Ch. and therefore it is as alwaies lawfull so often needfull that he delegate and commit this parte of his dutie to some other euen to whomsoeuer he thinketh meetest for this purpose Neither are we to exclude those who are ministers of the word from this calling as if they only were vnmeete whenas they are in some respects fitter then others hauing been many yeares exercised in the affaires of some particular Church And therefore if it please the ciuill ruler to call any who doth performe some ordinarie ministerie in some particular Church to this office of ouerseeing many Churches he doth nothing but that which is agreable to reason and warrantable by the word of GOD. For men hauing taken vpon them any ministerie are not so tyed vnto it but that they may leaue it when as they shal be called by the cheife ruler to performe any other more waighty and publick dutie yea although it be in some ciuill office and much more to haue the care of many churches Yet it is not meet that any man hauing this office should withall haue any function in a particular Church as doth necessarely require his presence For besides other inconueniences it will be to him an occasion of negligence in the performance of his dutie and an euill example to others Which as it is a grieuous thing in any man to do the worke of God negligently so it is much more offensiue in him whose office and calling it is to see that the Church be well ordered Thus much of the common gouernment of diuers Churches whether they be free or subiect to the same ciuill power From this common gouernment whole nations and kingdoms consisting of many Churches are often called one particular church because they al haue the same humane lawes although if we speake properly they are diuers Churches because they haue not all the same lawes but only some publick common and generall lawes pertaining to all CHAP. XI THus much of a partìcular Church both seuerally and also ioyntly considered In the next and last place we are to come to the visible Church which is nothing else but a collection of all the particular Churches in the world into one body or summe which