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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A42763 CXI propositions concerning the ministerie and government of the Church Gillespie, George, 1613-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing G752; ESTC R21587 30,033 52

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touching the outward man or the outward disposing of divine things in this or that Dominion as was said not as they are Spirituall and Evangelicall Ordinances piercing into the conscience it self But the object of the power Ecclesiasticall is a thing meerly and purely spirituall and in so far as it is spirituall for even that jurisdiction Ecclesiasticall which is exercised in an outward court or judicatory and which inflicteth publike censures forbiddeth from the use of the holy Supper and excludeth from the society of the Church doth properly concerne the inward man or the repentance and salvation of the soul 56. Surely the Faithfull and Godly Ministers although they could doe it unchallenged and uncontrolled and were therein allowed by the Magistrate as in the Prelaticall times it was yet would not usurpe the power of life and death or judge and determine concerning mens honours goods inheritance division of Families or other civill businesses seeing they well know these things to bee heterogeneous to their office But as they ought not to entangle themselves with the judgeing of civill causes so if they should bee negligent and slothfull in their owne office they shall in that bee no lesse culpable 57. To the object also of Ecclesiasticall power belongeth the assembling of Synodes so far as they are spirituall Assemblies proper to the Church and assembled in the holy Ghost for being so considered the governours of Churches after the example of the Apostles and Presbyters Acts 1 5. in a manifest danger of the Church ought to use their owne right of meeting together and conveening that the Churches endangered may be relieved and supported 58. Thirdly Those powers are differenced in respect of their formes and that three wayes For first the Civill power although in respect of God it bee Ministeriall yet in respect of the Subjects it is Lordly and Magisteriall Ecclesiasticall power is indeed furnished with authority yet that authority is liker the Fatherly then the Kingly authority Yea also t is purely Ministeriall much lesse can it bee lawfull to Ministers of the Church to bear dominion over the flock 59. Emperours Kings and other Magistrates are indeed appointed fathers of the Countrey but they are withall Lords of their People and Subjects Not as if it were permitted to them to bear rule and command at their own will and as they list for they are the Ministers of God for the good and profit of the Subjects yet it belongs to their power truely and properly to exercise dominion to hold principality to proceed imperiously It is indeed the duety of Ministers and Rulers of the Church to oversee to feed as shepherds to correct and rectifie to bear the keyes to bee Stewards in the house of Christ but in no wise to bee Lords over the house or to governe as Lords or Lordlike to rule yea in brief this is the difference between the civill Magistrate and the Ecclesiasticall Ministery in respect of those which are committed to their trust that the lot of the former is to bee served or ministred unto the lot of the latter to minister or serve 60. Now we have one onely Lord which governes our souls neither is it competent to man but to God alone to have power and authori●y over consciences But the Lord hath appointed his owne Stewards over his own Family that according to his commandment they may give to every one their allowance or portion and to dispense his mysteries faithfully and to them hee hath delivered the keyes or power of letting in into his house or excluding out of his house those whom hee himself will have let in or shut out Matth. 16. 19. and 18. 18. Luk. 12. 42. 1 Cor. 4. 1. Tit. 1. 7. 61. Next the civill power is indued with authority of compelling But it belongs not to the Ministery to compell the disobedient If any compulsion bee in or about Ecclesiasticall matters t is adventitious from without to wit from the help and assistance of the Magistrate not from the nature of Ecclesiasticall power from which it is very heterogeneous and therefore if any Suspended or Excommunicate person should be found who shall be so stiffe-necked and so impudent that at once he cast off all shame and make no account at all of those censures but scorne and contemne the same or peradventure shall insolently or proudly engyre and obtrude himself upon the Sacrament or being also filled with devillish malice do more and more contradict and blaspheme the Ecclesiasticall Ministery in such cases hath nothing more to do by way of jurisdiction But the Magistrate hath in readinesse a compelling jurisdiction and externall force whereby such stubborne rebellious and undaunted pride may bee externally repressed 62. Last of all the power of the Magistrate worketh onely politically or civilly according to the nature of the Scepter or Sword maketh and guardeth civill Lawes which sometimes also he changeth or repealeth and other things of that kinde hee effecteth with a secular power But the Ecclesiasticall power dealeth spiritually and onely in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ and by authority entrusted or received from him alone neither is it exercised without Prayer or calling on the Name of God nor lastly doth it use any other then spirituall weapons 63. The same sinne therefore in the same man may be punished one way by the civill another way by the Ecclesiasticall power by the civill power under the formality of a crime with corporall or pecuniary punishment By the Ecclesiasticall power under the notion and nature of scandall with a spirituall censure even as also the same civill question is one way deliberate upon and handled by the Magistrate in the Senate or place of Judgement another way by the Minister of the Church in the Presbytery or Synode by the Magistrate so farre as it pertaineth to the Government of the Common-wealth by the Minister so far as it respects the conscience for the Ecclesiasticall Ministery also is exercised about civill things spiritually in so far as it teacheth and admonisheth the Magistrate out of the Word of God what is best and most acceptable unto Gods or as it reproveth freely unjust judgements unjust warres and the like and out of the Scripture threatneth the wrath of God to be revealed against all unrighteousnesse of men So also is the Magistrate said to bee occupied civilly about spirituall things 64. Therefore all the actions of the civill Magistrate even when hee is imployed about Ecclesiasticall matters are of their own nature and essentially civill he punisheth externally Idolaters Blasphemers Sacrilegious persons Hereticks Prophaners of holy things and according to the nature and measure of the sinne hee condemneth to death or banishment forfeiture of goods or imprisonment he guardeth and underproppeth Ecclesiasticall Cannons with civill authority giveth a place of habitation to the Church in his territorie restraineth or expelleth the insolent and untamed disturbers of the Church 65. Hee taketh care also for maintaining the
Ministers and Schools and supplieth the temporall necessities of Gods Servants by his command assembleth Synodes when there is need of them and summoneth calleth out and drawes to triall the unwilling which without the Magistrates strength and authority cannot be done as hath been alreadie said he maketh Synodes also safe and secure and in a civill way presideth or moderateth in them if it so seem good to him either by himself or by a substitute Commissioner In all which the power of the Magistrate though occupied about spirituall things is not for all that spirituall but civill 66. Fourthly they differ in the end The immediate nearest end of civill power is that the good of the Commonwealth may bee provided for and procured whether it be in time of Peace according to the rules of Law and counsell of Judges or in time of Warre according to the rules of Militarie prudence and so the temporall safety of the Subjects may bee procured and that externall Peace and civill Liberty may bee preserved and being lost may be againe restored 67. But the chiefest and last end of civill Government is the glory of God the Creator namely that those which do evil being by a superiour Power restrained or punished those which doe good getting praise of the same the Subjects so much the more may shun impiety and injustice and that Vertue Justice and the Morall Law of God as touching those eternall dueties of both Tables unto which all the posterity of Adam are oblieged may remain in strength and flourish 68. But whereas the Christian Magistrate doth wholly devote himself to the promoting of the Gospel and Kingdom of Christ and doth direct and bend all the might and strength of his authority to that end This proceedeth not from the nature of his office or function which is common to him with an Infidell Magistrate but from the influence of his common Christian calling into his particular vocation 69. For every member of the Church and so also the faithfull and godly Magistrate ought to referre and order his particular vocation faculty ability power and honour to this end that the Kingdome of Christ may bee propagated and promoted and the true Religion bee cherished and defended So that the advancement of the Gospel and of all the Ordinances of the Gospel is indeed the end of the Godly Magistrate not of a Magistrate simply or if yee will rather t is not the end of the office it self but of him who doth execute the same piously 70. But the end of Ecclesiasticall power yea the end as well of the Ministery it self as of the Godly Minister is that the Kingdome of Christ may bee set forward that the pathes of the Lord bee made straight that his holy mysteries may bee kept pure that stumbling-blocks may bee removed out of the Church lest a little leaven leaven the whole lump or lest one sick or scabbed sheep infect the whole flock that the faithfull may so walk as it becometh the Gospel of Christ and that the wandering sheep of Christ may be converted and brought back to the sheepfold 71. And seeing this power is given of the Lord not to destruction but to edification Therefore this same scope is propounded in Excommunication which is the greatest and last of Ecclesiasticall censures namely that the soul of an offending brother may be gained to Christ and that being stricken with fear and the stubborne sinner filled with shame may by the grace of God be humbled and may as a brand plucked out of the fire bee snatched out of the snare of the devill and may repent unto salvation at least the rest may turne away from those which are branded with such a censure lest the soul infection do creep and spread further 72. Fifthly they are distinguished by the effect The effect of civill power is either proper or by way of redundance The proper effect is the safety temporall of the Common-wealth externall tranquillity the fruition of civill Liberty and of all things which are necessary to the civill Society of men The effect by way of redundance is the good of the Church to wit in so far as by execution of Justice and good Lawes some impediments that usually hinder and disturbe the course of the Gospel are avoided or taken away 73. For by how much the more faithfully the Magistrate executeth his office in punishing the wicked and cherishing and encouraging good men taking away those things which withstand the Gospel and punishing or driving away the troublers and subverters of the Church so much the more the orthodox Faith and Godlinesse are reverenced and had in estimation sinnes are hated and feared Finally all the subjects contained as much as concerneth the outward man within the lists of Gods Law whence also by consequence it happeneth by Gods blessing that the Church is defiled with fewer scandals and doth obtaine the more freedome and Peace 74. But the proper effect of the Ecclesiasticall power or keyes of the Kingdome of heaven is wholly spirituall for the act of binding and loosing of retaining and remitting sins doth reach to the soul and conscience it self which cannot be said of the act of the civill power And as unjust Excommunication is void So Ecclesiasticall censure being inflicted by the Ministers of Christ and his Stewards according to his will is ratified in heaven Matth. 18. 18. and therefore ought to be esteemed and acknowledged in like manner as inflicted by Christ himself 75. Sixthly they are also differenced in respect of the subject The politick power is committed sometimes to one sometimes to more sometime by right of election sometime by right of succession But the Ecclesiasticall power is competent to none under the New Testament by the right of succession but he who hath it must be called by God and the Church to it neither was it given by Christ to one either Pastor or Elder much lesse to a Prelate but to the Church that is to the consistory of Presbyters T is confessed indeed and who can bee ignorant of it that the power as they call it of order doth belong to particular Ministers and is by each of them apart lawfully exercised But that power which is commonly called of jurisdiction is committed not to one but to the unity that is to a consistory therefore Ecclesiasticall censure ought not to be inflicted but by many 2 Cor. 2. 6. 76. Seventhly they differ as touching the correlative God hath commanded that unto the civill power every soul or all Members of the Commonwealth of what condition and estate soever be subject for what have wee to doe with the Papists who will have them whom they call the Clergy or Ecclesiasticall persons to bee free from the yoke of the civill Magistrate The Ecclesiasticall power extends it self to none other subjects then unto those which are called Brethren or Members of the Church 77. Eighthly there remaineth another difference in respect of the distinct and
and will of Christ revealed in his Word but as it liketh them and according to their own will and prescript what other thing goe they about to doe then by horrible sacriledge to throw down Christ from his own Throne 5. For our onely Law-giver and Interpreter of his Fathers will Jesus Christ hath prescribed and foreappointed the rule according to which hee would have his Worship and the Government of his owne House to bee ordered To wrest this rule of Christ laid open in his holy Word to the Counsells Wills Manners Devices 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Men is most high impiety But contrarily the Law of Faith commandeth the counsell and purposes of men to bee framed and conformed to this rule and overtuneth all the reasonings of worldly wisdome and bringeth into captivity the thoughts of the proud swelling minde to the obedience of Christ Neither ought the voice of any to take place or bee rested upon in the Church but the voice of Christ alone 6. The same Lord and our Saviour Jesus Christ the only Head of the Church hath ordained in the New Testament not only the Preaching of the Word and Administration of Baptisme and the Lords Supper but also Ecclesiasticall Government distinct and differing from the Civill Government and it is his will that there bee such a Government distinct from the Civill in all his Churches every where as well those which live under Christian as those under infidell Magistrates even untill the end of the World Heb. 13. 7 17. 1 Tim. 5. 17 19. Rom. 12. 8. 1 Cor. 12. 28. 1 Thes. 5. 12. Acts 1. 20 28. Luke 12. 42. 1 Tim. 6. 14. Apoc. 2. 25. 7. This Ecclesiasticall Government distinct from the Civill is from God committed not to the whole body of the Church or Congregation of the faithfull or to bee Exercised both by Officers and People but to the Ministers of Gods Word together with the Elders which are joyned with them for the care and Government of the Church 1 Tim. 5. 17. To these therefore who are over the Church in the Lord belongeth the Authority and Power and it lyeth upon them by their office according to the rule of Gods Word to discerne and judge betwixt the Holy and Prophane to give diligence for amendment of Delinquents and to purge the Church as much as is in them from scandalls and that not only by enquiring inspection warning reproving and more sharply expostulating but also by acting in the further and more severe parts of Ecclesiasticall Discipline or exercising Ecclesiastick jurisdiction 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the greatest and weightiest censures where need is 8. None that is within the Church ought to bee without the reach of Church-law and exempt from Ecclesiastick Censures but Discipline is to be exercised on all the Members of the Church without respect or consideration of those adhering qualities which use to commend a man to other men Such as Power Nobility illustrious Descent and the like for the judgement cannot bee right where men are led and moved with these considerations Wherefore let respect of Persons be farre from all Judges chiefly the Ecclesiasticall And if any in the Church doe so swell in pride that he refuse to be under this Discipline and would have himself to be free and exempt from all tryall and Ecclesiastick judgement this mans disposition is more like the haughtinesse of the Romane Pope then the meeknesse and submissivenesse of Christs Sheep 9. Ecclesiasticall censure moreover is either proper to bee inflicted upon the Ministers and Office-bearers onely or with them common to other Members of the Church The former consisteth in suspension or deposition of Ministers from their Office which in the ancient Canons is called {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} The latter consisteth in the greater and lesser Excommunication as they speak Whatsoever in another Brother deserveth Excommunication The same much more in a Mininister deserveth Excommunication But justly sometimes a Minister is to bee put from his Office and deprived of that Power which by Ordination was given him against whom neverthelesse to draw the sword of Excommunication no reason doth compell 10. Sometime also it happeneth that a Minister having fallen into Heresie or Apostasie or other grievous crimes if hee shew tokens of true repentance may bee justly received into the communion of the Church Whom notwithstanding it is no way expedient to restore into his former place or charge yea perhaps it will not bee found fit to restore such a one to the Ministery in another Congregation as soone as hee is received into the bosome of the Church Which surely is most agreeable as well as to the Word of God 2 King 23. 9. Ezech. 44. 10 11 12 13 14. as to that Ecclesiasticall Discipline which in some ages after the times of the Apostles was in use So true is it that the Ministers of the Church are lyable as well to peculiar as to common censures Or that a Minister of the Church is censured one way and one of the people another way 11. Ecclesiasticall censure which is not proper to Ministers but common to them with other Members of the Church is either suspension from the Lords Supper which by others is called the Publicanes Excommunication or the cutting off of a Member which is commonly called Excommunication The distinction of this twofold censure commonly though not so properly passing under the name of the lesser and greater Excommunication is not onely much approved by the Church of Scotland and the Synode now assembled at Westminster but also by the Reformed Churches of France the Low-countreys and of Pole-land as is to be seen in the book of the Ecclesiastick Discipline of the Reformed Churches in France Chap. 5. Art 9. In the harmonie of the Belgicks Synodes Chap. 14. Art 8. 9. In the Canons of the generall Synode of Torne held in the yeare 1597. 12. That the distinction of that twofold Church censure was allowed also by antiquity it may be sufficiently clear to him who will consult the sixtie one Canon of the sixth generall Synode with the Annotations of Zonaras and Balsamon Also the thirteenth Canon of the eighth Synode which is termed the first and second with the Notes of Zonaras Yea besides even the penitennts also themselves of the fourth degree or {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} {non-Roman} that is which were in the consistency were suspended from the Lords Supper though as to other things of the same condition with the faithfull For to the communion also of Prayers and so to all priviledges of Ecclesiasticall society the Eucharist alone excepted they were thought to have right So sacred a thing was the Eucharist esteemed See also beside others Cyprian 1. Book Epist. 11. That Dyanisius the Author of the Ecclesiastick Hierarchie Chap. 3. Part. 3. Basil. Epist. to Amphilochius Can. 4 Ambros. lib. 2. De officiis Chap. 27. Augustine in his book against the Donatists after the conference Cap. 4. Chrysostom Homil. 83. in Matth.