Selected quad for the lemma: church_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
church_n build_v peter_n rock_n 30,238 5 9.7701 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A37205 The power of Congregational churches asserted and vindicated in answer to a treatise of Mr. J. Paget intituled The defence of church-government exercised in classes and synods / by John Davenport. Davenport, John, 1597-1670. 1672 (1672) Wing D362; ESTC R24876 69,647 176

There are 14 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

in resect of quickning Grace whence they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Pet. 2.5 Hence they grow up in all things into him which is the Head Christ and are edifying and edified Members in the Body Eph. 4.15 16. Nor is Christ the Head only of the Catholick Church but also of every particular Church instituted by him which is therefore frequently by Christ himself called the Kingdom of God and of Heaven the King whereof is Christ his Subjects are visible Believers professing their Faith in him and their subjection to his Laws and Ordinances 2 Cor. 9.13 This Soveraign power is so properly Christs that it is not communicable to any Creature nor can any man be his Substitute or Vicar herein For neither doth Christ or his Church need such a Vicar or visible Head of the Church seeing the Church is compleat in Christ alone Col. 2.10 Nor is any Creature capable of discharging the Office of an Head unto the Church Ephes 1.20 21 22 23. 2. Consect Then it is not in the power of Earthly Kings or States or Civil Courts to make Ecclesiastical Laws or to invent and impose any Rites or Forms of Worship upon Churches according to Principles of State-Policy or Humane Prudence Though Moses was as well a great Prophet as a great Prince yet God left no part of the building of the Tabernacle to his prudence but limited him in all things to the pattern in the Mount Exod. 25.40 Nor might Solomon though the wisest of meer men act by his own wisdom in building the Temple ● Chon 28.11 12 13. but he was guided therein by the perfect pattern which David gave him from the Spirit So concerning Christian Churches Christ hath given his People a perfect pattern which he requireth the Ministers to hold forth distinctly in every point of it to his people according to that Prophesie in Ezek. 43.10 11. That they may keep the whole Form thereof and all the Ordinances thereof and do them which also Christ expresly requireth in Matth. 28.19 20. 3. Consect Then every particular visible Church must exalt Christ and his Institutions alone in their whole Church-Order and in all their Admistrations This is their visible receiving Christ Jesus the Lord and walking in him Col. 2.5 6. The Church is Christ's House and it 's equal according to Natural light and civil prudence that every man should bear Rule in his own House Esth 1.22 Much more Christ who is God and Man Artaxerxes shall rise up in judgment with all such as incroach upon Christ's Right in ordering Churches by their policies and condemn them for he fearing the jealousy and wrath of God if men should take such liberty to themselves provided against it by a strict Decree saying Whatsoever is commanded by the God of Heaven let it be diligently done for the House of the God of Heaven for why should there be wrath against the Realm c. Esth 7.23 Nor is the wrath of Christ less formidable to us or his jealousie less incensed against those that either add to or take from or alter his Institutions now than in times past but rather more Hebr. 12.25 to the end So much shall serve touching the Efficient Cause and Institutor of particular visible Churches CHAP. II. Concerning the Material Cause THe Materials whereof this Spiritual Building must consist are implyed when Christ saith Vpon this Rock will I build c. together with Peters confession in ver 16. and Christ's approbation of it ver 17. which gave occasion to this Speech of Christ Vpon this Rock c. For the Rock is Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 But how considered not simply and in an abstract sense but 1. As Preached by the Ministry of the Gospel Ephes 2.20 2. As believed on with a Faith made visible by publick confession according to Rom. 10.9 10. Christ believed on is the Foundation or Rock of the Catholick invisible Church But Christ believed on and confessed is the Rock whereupon a particular visible Church is built In this Exposition sundry of the Ancient Writers (a) Basil Tract de poenit Gre. Naz. de Comp. disserendi ratione Theod in Psal 47. Ambr. in Eph. 2.20 Aug. in lib. 1. Retract c. 21. and the Orthodox Modern generally consent The Doctrinal conclusion which these words of the Charter afford us concerning the materials of particular visible Churches is that 2. Conclusion It is the will and appointment of Christ that all and only such grown persons be admitted Members of particular Churches who make such a publick profession of their Faith as the Church may in charitable discretion conceive hath blessedness annexed to it and is such as flesh and blood hath not revealed to a man but our Heavenly Father 1. That Christ here meant a particular visible Church and not only the Catholick Church we have partly evinced already and shall more fully hereafter 2. That persons meant by Christ here are adulti grown persons appeareth by his questions to the Apostles Whom do men say and whom do ye say that I am and by Peter's answer As for Infants they are indeed Members of the Church and as such Baptized yet it is so only as they are included in their Parents by vertue of the Covenant wherein they are wrapped with their Parents Gen. 17.7 Acts 2.38 39. 1 Cor. 7.14 3. That such adulti or grown persons must make a publick confession of Faith before the Lord and his people So Christ required Peter to do here and when he had so done said Christ Vpon this Rock I will build my Church viz. in after times For no particular Christian Church was actually constituted at this time nor till after the Ascension of Christ in Act. 1. q. d. Then take this course and ever after all the World over if you will have a particular Church to be acknowledged by me to be my building 4. That their Confession of Faith must be so made as that the Church may in charitable discretion conceive it to have blessedness annexed c. For seeing it pleaseth Christ to use Men as his Instruments in building his Church Zach. 6.15 Ephes 4.11 12. He is content that they improve the judgement which they have Christs judgement concerning Peter was infallible for he knew what was in man John 2.25 But the Officers and Members of the Church are but men who judge by the outward appearance 1 Sam. 16.7 Therefore their judgment is fallible and hath been deceived as we see in the judgement of the Apostles and the Church at Jerusalem concerning Ananias and Sapphira and in that of Philip and the Church in Samaria concerning Simon Magus c. Their duty is to proceed as far as men may by Rule with due moderation and gentleness to try them who offer themselves to fellowship whether they be Believers or not refusing known Hypocrites though when they have done all they can close Hypocrites will creep in 5. That all they who hold
forth such a profession of Faith as the Church may in charitable discretion conceive to be true are to be receiv'd Though some of them have been formerly scandalous yet now holding forth repentance they are to be received 1 Cor. 6.11 and though some are at present weak in Faith yet if we may conceive that the Lord hath received them the Church must receive them Rom. 14.1 3. For Christ appro●●d this confession of Peter though he was at present but weak in Faith as the following Story in this Chapter v. 22 23. clearly sheweth 6. That none but such be admitted into Church-fellowship For this Chapter limits the Church to accept only such Vpon this Rock will I build my Church i. e. Christ believed on and publickly confessed A meer verbal confession is not that Rock For the Devils made such a confession of Christ yet were not built on him Luke 4.34 But this confession of Peter was such as held forth his Faith in him as appears by Christ's three-fold Elogy or praise of it 1. From its effect Blessed art thou c as Joh. 17.3 2. From the procreant cause of it Not flesh and blood but my Father hath revealed it as Mat. 11.25 26. 3. From the title 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Peter before promised John 1.42 and now confirmed to him signifying a Stone whereby Christ not only acknowledgeth his faith and that he was thereby a living Stone and fit to have a principal place in this Spiritual Building in which sense Peter applyeth a like title to other Believers 1 Pet. 2.4 5. who yet were inferiour in degree to himself but also giveth him this Prerogative and Honour that he should be the first Planter of the Christian Church both amongst the Jews Act. 2. and the Gentiles Act. 15.7 The Conclusion may be confirmed by two Arguments in the Text. 1. From the name whereby he calleth this holy Society 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Church i. e. a company called out Whence see Joh. 15.19 To what See 1 Cor. 1.2 How Not only by active vocation by mans ministry exhorting them to repent and believe So sundry are called who are not in the least wrought upon to answer that call but put it off as they who were invited to the great Supper Luk. 14.18 with excuse Such are called but no Church Therefore more is required to qualifie for membership of a visible Church viz. passive vocation whereby they are wrought upon to answer Gods call by submission thereunto at least in outward profession though some do it but feinedly Ps 18.44 Saints by internal and invisible calling are such as answer Gods call inwardly and spiritually Saints by external and visible calling are subdued to yeeld obedience to the Word in visible profession Thus all that were called into the Vineyard had so much efficacy of the Spirit in them that they all came into the Vineyard and laboured in it though not with like sincerity Mat. 20. According to this clause of the Chapter the Churches planted by the Apostles were constituted for the materials of them else the Apostles could not have given both the † 1 Cor. 1.2 Eph. 1.2 members and * 1 Thes 1.1 1 Cor. 12.27 2 Cor. 11.2 6.16 1 Tim. 3.15 Churches such high titles as they did Nor did they by these titles describe the invisible Church only but visible Churches For to such Paul wrote his Epistles and the like expressions are applyed in other texts manifestly to visible Churches Nor do these titles describe particular Churches only according to the better sort of members but such they did in the judgement of christian charity conceive all their members to be as Paul told the Philippians Phil. 1.6 7. which he could not have said if he had not known the care of the Church in admitting persons into membership with them to be according to the conclusion noted by us Reas 2 From Christ's appropriating such a particular Church to himself owning it for his my Church q. d. I own any Church thus built by my self to be my Church according to that in Act. 2.47 The Lord added to the Church daily such as should be saved The Lord added them How Not only by giving them saving faith and so adding them to the invisible Church but also by his inclining their hearts to offer themselves unto the fellowship of the visible Church and to profess their faith before them and by bowing the hearts of the Apostles 〈◊〉 Brethren to receive them into visible ●munion of visible Ordinances as appeareth v. 41 42. Thus he added them daily to the Church which cleares it to be an act of the Lords ordinary dispensation and therefore presidential to the Churches in their ordinary practice They who were thus added are said to be such as should be saved That is they were such either in the judgment of the Lord which is infallible or in the judgment of the Church which is fallible The Church looked at them according to their fruits viz. their profession of faith and their Christian conversation observing so much in both that they saw reason in charity guided by rule to conceive them to be in a state of Salvation Such were the three thousand spoken of in v. 41. as appeared by their affectionate and submissive inquiring of the Apostles whom they mocked before what they should do to be saved being pricked in their hearts v. 37. and afterwards by their gladly receiving the Word both of promise for themselves and their Children with faith and of precept to repent and be baptized and to save themselves from that froward generation with obedience True it is that they could not in one day make so large accounts of Gods work upon them as are commonly held forth in our Churches nor do we effect too large narrations but wish such passages as are superfluous left out And at that time less was needful to be expressed than necessity calls for among us ordinarily For the Apostles had a more quick Spiritual discerning than ordinary Officers and Churches have And concerning the three thousand Act. 2. the manner of their offering themselves to Church-fellowship visibly at such a time when such visible confession of Christ was with manifest hazzard to their lives gave good ground to the Apostles and the Brethren of conceiving charitably that they were all of them in a state of Salvation and such as the Lord himself added to the Church In these places and times where Church-fellowship is an honour and drawes after it sundry outward and worldly advantages it will be necessary that the Church be satisfied as by sufficient testimony concerning their good conversation so by their holding forth their confession of faith both quae creditur and quâ creditur of the Doctrine of Faith and of the Gift of Faith how it was wrought and how it works in them As Mr. Rogers in his Treatise of Faith saith it may be known of
men by those tryals And this care suits the nature of Church-power which is delegate and stewardly For as the faithfulness of a Steward bindeth him to receive none into his Lords family but according to his Lords mind and appointment so the faithfulness of the Church unto Christ obligeth them to receive such into this holy fellowship as they may in charitable discretion conceive the Lord receiveth and addeth thereunto Against what hath been said two objections are made Object 1 Obj. Christ received Judas whom he knew to be a hypocrite into fellowship of the twelve Answ 1 Answ 1. Not into a particular visible Church for no such was then gathered 2. Christ had a peculiar reason for it which doth not concern Churches Joh. 13.18 Object 2 Obj. 2. Christ himself compareth visible Churches to a Field wherein are Tares to a Draw-N●t which gathers good and bad Fishes to ten Virgins of which five were foolish and the Churches planted by the Apostles had in them sundry Hypocrites and scandalous persons Answ Answ Such places shew 1. That in visible Churches sometimes Hypocrites are mixed either by the sleepiness and fault of those that should ●●●vent it Thence the Tares or by the wyliness of Hypocrites who creep in unawares Jude 4. as the bad Fish came into the net under water or they pretend saving gifts as the five foolish Virgins so false Brethren Gal. 2.4 2. The purest Churches may be blemished with scandals till they can orderly proceed against them but then they must be cast out Therfore they knew not that they were such before From this 2d conclusion thus explained and confirmed we may infer as followeth Consect 1 If this be so then more is required as the essential property of Church-members as visible than that they profess before men the Faith crave fellowship with the visible Church and desire the visible seals of the Covenant For men may have all these three properties who are notoriously scandalous in their lives Drunkards Adulterers prophane Swearers and Cursers in a word such as are described 2 Tim. 3.2 3 4. Who have a form of Godliness denying the power of it concerning whom the Apostle's charge is from such turn away v. 5. If in ordinary converse the People of God must not exercise needless familiarity with such much less may they receive them into spiritual fellowship and fraternity If such being Members must be cast out certainly being out of Church-fellowship they may not be received in whilest they continue such Consect 2 If Christ will build his Church upon this Rock then it is the bounden duty of Churches to see so far as they can according to rule that all whom they receive into Church-fellowship be visible Believers such as have been described in the Conclusion above propounded explained and proved lest otherwise they build without a foundation Particularly 1. They are to see so far as in charity they may discern that they are Beleivers in Christ Else they cannot answer the titles given them in Scripture 1 Pet. 2.4 5. nor the praises given unto Peter so confessing Christ that Christ said Vpon this Rock I will build my Church 2. They are to see that they profess their Faith and Holiness in a good conversation Phil. 1.27 Jam. 3.12 13. For they that profess they know God but in their works deny him are abominable Tit. 1.16 3. And in a publick confession of their faith before the Church as Peter did here before Christ and the Apostles c. Only because the Church cannot see the heart immediately as Christ did Peter's the confession of faith made to men must hold forth the gift of faith as well as the doctrine of faith So Calvin understood those words Sanctifie the Lord God in your hearts and be ready alwayes to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you 1 Pet. 3.15 Calvin's note upon it is this ‖ Ejus quae in vobis est spei Spes hîc per synechdochen pro fide capitur Expendi debet seduló quod dicit Significat n. eam dem● confession● probari Deo quae ex corde emanat quia nisi intus resideat fides fr●●●●à gar●●●●●gua Ergo radices in nobis agat ut deinde proferat Conf●ssionis fructum Calv. in 1 Pet. 3.15 Hope here is by a Synechdoche put for faith What he saith ought to be diligently weighed For it signifieth that God approveth only that confession which proceeds out of the heart because unless faith reside within the tongue will babble in vain Therefore faith must be rooted in us that afterward it may bring forth the fruit of confession And when all this is done the Brethren are to consent in receiving them and herein to shew forth the gentleness of Christ who will not break a bruised reed nor quench smoking flax in giving due encouragement to the weak in faith if they see cause to conceive by rightly ordered charity that the root of the matter is in them But if they see just cause to doubt of that they have warrant to suspend their acceptance till better satisfaction be given from the primitive pattern in Act. 9.26 However the Officers must propound it to the Brethren to declare whether they are so far satisfied with what they have heard that they do consent that such shall be received into their fellowship as Peter put a like question to the Brethren that went with him from Joppa concerning the Baptizing of Cornelius and those with him upon whom the Holy Ghost fell visibly Act. 10.44 45 46. c. Consect 3 3. Cons If upon this Rock Christ believed on and publickly confessed by grown persons the Church of Christ is to be built then the Children of the Church who were Baptized in their infancy when they come to be of ripe age must hold forth publickly their personal confession of Faith that they may be admitted to the Lords Table and fellowship in Voting and in Elections and Censures in their own personal right But if they be found grosly ignorant or prophane or professing a false faith or denying the true Faith or contemners of Church-fellowship and the Ordinances of Christ or do not according to this clause of the Charter publickly profess their faith and crave Church-fellowship they may not be owned for Members by their admission unto the Lord's Table and unto other priviledges of Church-communion in their own right but are to be declared non-members In Jacobs posterity when the Lord brought them to Canaan that standing Ordinance of presenting unto the Lord before the Priest their first fruits every year with such a solemn confession made by all grown Israelites as is appointed in Deut. 26.2 to 16. was a visible profession of their Faith and Obedience suited to the condition of that Church and time in performance whereof they avouched the Lord to be their God and to walk in his wayes and keep his Statutes and his Commandments and his
have an immediate right in all Church-priviledges which I do not grant nor believe but that as the Church looks upon them tanquam in lumbis parentum so also if the grown Members of the Church observe vicious qualities and practises in them they do not deal with them immediately in those steps of proceeding required in Mat. 18. to bring matters to the Church but they deal with their Parents to discharge their duty in educating their Children according to the rule in Ephes 6.4 To this sense Dr. Ames applyeth that text in 1 Cor. 7.14 Ames medulla Theolog lib. 1. cap. 32. art 12 13. Infantes tamen non adeò perfecta sunt membra Ecclesiae ut possint actus Communionis exercere aut admitti ad omnia ejus privilegia participanda nisi priùs incrementum fidei appareat ab iis vero quae pertinent ad initium fidei et ingressum in Ecclesiam non sunt excludendi 2. Nor may their Children be baptized till themselves have taken hold of the Covenant with the Church in their own right For the Children of Church-members when they come to age for not taking hold of the Covenant with the Church do become non-members and are to be so looked at by the Church if they desert Church-fellowship either departing from them in place as Esau into mount Seir or withdrawing from their communion or if the Church withdraw from them In such cases they are not so much as implicitely members Therefore their Children may not be baptized For the right that Infants have unto Baptism is in their next and immediate Parents 1. Because the Apostle in 1 Cor. 7.14 doth so limit it 2. Because the Apostacy of the next Parents takes off the federal holiness of their Seed as we see in the posterity of Ismael and Esau 3. Because if Infants should have this right in their Grand-fathers where shall we stop shall it be extended to a thousand Generations as some mis-apply that promise in Exod. 20.6 That cannot be true for then the Children of the Jews and Turks and Heathen all the world over have a right to Bapism in some of their Ancestors within that time contrary to Rom. 11.17 Coral ∣ lary 5 Then Church-covenant is no formidable matter but desirable Is it a yoke 1. It is Christs yoke which is easie Mat. 11.29 30. he will make it easie Depend upon his faithfulness as Surety of the Covenant of Grace for ability to be faithful in your discharge of your Covenant with the Church 2. It is not a yoke of bondage but of precious liberties whereby you have right in all the outward priviledges of the Gospel 3. Nor is Church-fellowship a prison but if God call they must consent to your remove from them and follow you with their prayers It is indeed a strong but sweet ingagement of all upright-hearted Christians to please Christ and to be to his honour in that state So doth the Marriage-covenant oblige those that are in that state 1 Cor. 7.34 11.7 From whence the Apostle argueth for the like care in particular Churches and the Members of them Ephes 5.24 2 Cor. 8.23 which also was a special end and use of the Covenant wherein Abraham and the Church of the Jews stood bound unto God Gen. 17.1 2. and 2 Chron. 34.31 32. and the contrary discovered the insincerity and hypocrisie of others Psal 78.37 In like manner it bindeth the Members of the Church to all the duties of their Church-relation mutually both Officers and People and quickneth them thereunto through the influence and assistance of Christ the head of the Church by his Spirit in them all Ephes 4.15 16. 1 Cor. 12. to 28. And therefore I cannot but wonder that some who do approve and plead for all other Covenants viz. National Conjugal Social Covenants should yet dislike and oppose Church-Covenants Coral ∣ lary 6 From the premises we may see when the Church-Covenant is broken and how great their sin is who do scandalously and contumaciously persist therein CHAP. IV. Concerning the quantity and compass of a Christian Church THE Church which Christ calls his Church he telleth Peter that he will build it Vpon this Rock Mat. 16.18 I will build my Church Where the verb is in the first person and in the future tense 1. He speaketh in the first Person not in the second to shew that though he will use men as his instruments in this work yet it is his presence and blessing that causeth the work to prosper in their hands Mat. 28.19 20. 1 Cor. 3.9 It is by the Spirit of the Lord that Church-work is carried on succesfully Zech. 4.6 2. See Mr. Bradf Answ to the Arch. B. of York in Mr. Fox his Act Mon. in a Conference between them and the Bishop of Chichester in the Compter in Breadstreet He speaketh in the future tense not in the praeter or present for though Christ was in all ages the builder of the Church yet he thus speaketh of the Church under the New Testament because it was to be constituted after his Death Resurrection and Ascension when the Gospel should shine forth so clearly that it should obscure the light of former ages as the Sun rising in its strength doth the light of the Stars and it should appear Tit. 2.11 bringing Salvation to all men even to the Gentiles and they should be gathered and joyned unto Christ that one Head 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 1.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 3.6 2.13 14 and become Members of his Body together with the believing Jews in Church-communion visibly the partition Wall being broken down And because all Nations could not be joyned together in one visible Church as the Nation of the Jews might be and was to have their solemn set meetings together to worship God thrice a year or once in an age the Lord Jesus instituted a Congregational-Church among Christians and invested every such Church with sufficient Church-power within it self for attainment of all the ends of Church-communion This is the Church which Christ saith he will build and appropriates it to himself My Church 1. Because it is his Institution 2. Because his Name is called and put upon it The Members of it are not Moses his disciples but Christs and therefore were of old called Christians Act. 11.26 This title of Church though it be given some times to a civil Assembly Act. 19.41 yet so it is not taken in this place For Christ no where calleth a civil Assembly his Church Therefore it must signifie an holy Society And in that sense the Scripture applieth this title sundry wayes 1. To Godly Families Rom. 16.5 Col. 4.15 Phil. 2. where the Church in such an house is distinguished from the Congregational Church For Paul writeth to the Congregational Assembly to salute Aquila and Priscilla and the Church in their house Their house it seemeth consisted all of Godly persons in Pauls judgement else he would have
performed Coroll 3 Then it is not arbitrary but a duty for every Christian to endeavour to joyn himself in Membership with a Congregational instituted Church of Christ whosoever have opportunity and neglect so to do they greatly sin against God and break the second Commandment in not worshiping him according to his institution and also against their own souls in depriving themselves of the blessing which he hath annexed unto his Institution Exod. 20.24 Mat. 28.20 and if they persist in that neglect they can hardly be accounted Believers truly seeking the Kingdom of God what profession of Religion soever they make otherwise Mat. 6.33 and they sin against their posterity also to whom God promiseth mercy upon their parents worshipping him according to his Institutions If the Lord doth good to the posterity of such it is meerly from his own good pleasure but not from their Parents Covenant Ezek. 16.61 CHAP. V. Concerning the Churches impregnable stability TO the Church built by Christ upon this Rock he hath promised and given this great priviledge that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Scripture signifieth not Hell but the state of the dead or the Grave 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are enemies vanquished by Christ for his Church 1 Cor. 15.26 55. and shal be cast into the lake of fire Rev. 20.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are the gates of Death in Job 38.17 Psal 107.18 and the gates of the Grave Isa 38.10 i. e. the power of Death and the Grave which seizeth on them as a Serjeant Psal 116.3 The sum is Let the Church be brought to the lowest that it seems to be dead as those two Witnesses Rev. 11.8 9. and buried as Christ's natural body was for a time yet neither Death nor the Grave shall prevail agaist it Yet we must not limit the sense of these words only to the power of Death and the Grave but it must be extended to all Satans plots and assaults against the Church against which if Christ did not help them Death and the Grave would prevail against them to their eternal destruction We conclude therefore that in this Text by the gates of Hell are meant all the machinations of Satan and temptations whatsoever whereby he laboureth to hinder the building of Christs Church to draw those from Christ who are built upon him The prevailing of them signifies their effectual working unto the attainment of those ends The sum is a promise that the Devil with all his policies and powers shall neither hinder the building of Christs Church nor cause the Church thus built to apostatize from Christ And that this is the true sense and meaning of the words whatsoever Socinians or Arminians say to the contrary may thus be evinced 1. Because the thing promised is the disabling of what ever opposeth the building of the Church upon this Rock or its constant adhering to Christ from prevailing to those ends but so do Satan's temptations Therefore they are meant by the gates of Hell 2. Because whatsoever goeth forth out of the gates of Hell or hath its beginning from thence is meant in this phrase but the Temptations and Machinations of Satan by himself and his instruments Hereticks and Tyrants go forth thence Therefore they are meant in this phraise 3. Because Peter to whom Christ spake these words describes unbelievers the adversaries of this building as belonging to the gates of Hell 1 Pet. 2.7 8. 4. Because the proportion which Christ implyes in these words requireth that they be so understood The proportion is between two Cities that of Heaven which hath its gates and keyes in v. 19. and the other of Hell which hath its gates whence it endeavors the ruine and overthrow of that but shall not prevail Seeing therefore City is opposed to City and Gates to Gates and one viz. the Church is considered in the state of present building it is most sutable that the other be also looked at as it opposeth that in the present whilst it is militant upon earth But from hence that Christ promiseth that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against his Church thus built some infer that Christ meaneth only the invisible Catholick Church For that only say they is bulilt on this Rock and only that shall not fail Answ 1. It is true that the Catholick invisible Church is built upon Christ by effectual and unfeigned Faith and that shall not fail For that is the general Assembly and Church of the fist-born which are enrolled in Heaven Heb. 12.23 And all the gates of Hell cannot prevail against those that are written in Heaven 2. But it is not true that these only are built on this Rock The Apostle Paul tells us that a particular visible Church rightly constituted as that at Corinth is built upon this Rock or Rocky-foundation 1 Cor. 3.10 11. and being so built is under the special protection of God in Christ in respect whereof the Lord promiseth any such Church as well among the Gentiles as the Jews Whosoever shall gather himself against thee shall fall Isa 54.15 and all the weapons that are made against thee shall not prosper vers 17. And it is clear that Christ in this place speaks of such a Church as is built upon the confession of Faith such as Peter made visibly and publickly whereupon not the invisible Catholick Church but visible particular Churches are built Therefore these only are meant here Concl. 5 The Church of Christ built by himself upon this Rock in using the means which he hath appointed for their safety is impregnable The Church of Christ is here indefinitely taken for a particular Congregational-Church instituted by Christ according to the sense of the former conclusions not for this or that definitely Therefore if any object that the gates of Hell have prevailed against the Greek-Churches those golden Candlesticks in Asia and against Rome whose Faith was spoken of throughout the whole World and against sundry other particular Churches Answ I Answer 1. Though it be true that the gates of Hell have prevailed against this or that particular Church yet not against a particular Church indefinitly considered or which is the same against the Church in general existing in its particulars In this sense the visible Church doth not fail For 1. Christ ever had and will have some or other visible Church on Earth wherein the general nature of a visible Church is preserved as the Genus is in its Species and the nature of man in this or that individual as when the Lord preserved Noah and his Family in the Ark mankind was preserved in them though multitudes of men were destroyed in the Deluge 2. Christ will shew that he makes a difference between Churches wherein are some true Believers mixed with many Hypocrites and other Societies Therefore he will not suffer such visible Churches to be totally destroyed as he doth his open enemies Hos 11.8 9. Isa 1.8 9.
Synagogue of the infallibility of their Popes as Peter's successors and of the indeficiency of their Church as built upon Peter when as neither had Peter himself any such priviledge as to be infallible The next story in this 16th of Matthew evinceth the contrary v. 23. Nor by the Rock whereupon Christ builds his Church is meant the person of Peter or Peter's confession personally as it had relation to him but as it is considered really in it self and is common to all the Disciples and to all visible Believers which may be thus confirmed 1. Because Peters confession must have relation to the matter which he confessed But Peter confessed not himself but Christ saying Thou art the Christ the Son of the living God Therefore his confession had relation to Christ not to himself 2. Because Peter confessed no more than that which he knew the other Disciples believed before he speake For Christ's question being general What say ye Peter answered as the mouth of the rest but the Apostles before he speak believed Christ confessed and not Peter confessing 3. Because this Rock is that confession whereupon Christ saith he will build his Church But whosoever shall truly believe that which Peter confessed viz. Christ the Son of the living God and confess or profess it in due order is accordingly built on this Rock though he had never heard of Peter's name Therefore the confession rightly understood had relation unto Christ and not to the person of Peter 4. Because the Rock signifieth that which is immoveable and impregnable such as is Christ and his truth But Peter's confession was movable and shaken at one time thrice denying this confession of his Lord. Therefore this confession which Christ calls the Rock had not relation to Peter but only to Christ Coroll 2 Then they that would have a particular Church to be impregnable stable and firm against the prevailing of the gates of Hell must see that it be built upon this Rock and not upon humane formes 1. That Christ himself be the builder of it according to his own institutions not the policies or customs of men 2. * Ex quo patet quòd Ecclesia non consistit in hominibus ratione potestatis vel dignitatis Ecclesiasticae vel saecularis c. sed in illis personis in quibus est notitia vera confessio fidei veritatis Lyra in loc That the materials of which it consists be such as believe and profess their Faith in Christ publickly before the Lord and his People 3. That they be firmly joyned together in one Congregation by an holy Covenant of subjection and submission to the Lord Jesus Christ and to one another in him and accordingly walk together in obedience to Christ and his Rules resisting Satan in all his Temptations and Machinations through Christ strengthning them without whom they can do nothing Joh. 15.5 and that they improve carefully and faithfully the power which Christ hath given them viz. the Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven in opening and shutting binding and loosing according to Christ his appointment for the preserving of his Church safe in the purity of their Faith and Order against the gates of Hell which is the next thing to be handled The Second Part. CHAP. VI. Concerning the power given of Christ unto such a Church as the first and proper subject of it THe second branch or part of the Charter is concerning the Power given by Christ unto such Churches to have and use all the means appointed by him for their establishment against the the gates of Hell Mat. 16.19 And I will give unto thee the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven and whatsoever thou shalt bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and whatsoever thou shalt loose on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven These words contain 1. A grant of Power 2. A ratification of that Grant We shall speak to them distinctly 1. To Christ his grant of Power and therein 1. Explicate the terms by shewing what is meant 1 by the Kingdom of Heaven 2. by the Keys of it 3 What this appropriation or application of them imports To thee I will give 1. By the Kingdom of Heaven is meant both the Kingdom of Grace Glory and that the Kingdom of Glory is also meant the following words shew when he saith What you bind on Earth is bound in Heaven c. 2. By the Keys which are a sign of Power and are put by a Metonimy for the Subject the Power it self is meant Church-power which is either Supreme and Soveraign in Christ only as Lord and Head of his Church who alone hath the Key of David which openeth and no man shutteth and shutteth and no man openeth in Rev. 3.7 or subordinate and delegate such as is in Christ's Stewards This is noted by Keys in the Plural number in this place which signifie all power delegated from Christ to dispense and administer all the holy things of his House according to Christ's will and in the order prescribed by him to that end For all power wherewith the Lord Jesus betrusteth his Church aims at this which is here expressed to open and shut to bind and loose 3. To thee I will give The Application of this Grant is to Peter in the name of the Church which Christ promised to build upon himself believed on and publickly professed as Peter did before him and his fellow-Disciples in Christs School at this time And the promise is more fitly given to Peter in the name of the Church than to the Church by name because it was not the Church that made this confession but Peter in the name of the Church But here we must make a little stand to examine the sundry claims which have been made to this Right upon several pretences from this Text. 1. Some looking at Peter as representing the Catholick visible-Church conceive that a general Council which they say is the Catholick Church representatively is the Church here meant to which Christ gives the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven But that cannot be For particular visible Churches in the Apostles dayes had and exercised the Keyes compleatly within themselves yet was there no general Council till the time of Constantine which was three hundred years after Christ 2. Others look at this Grant as peculiar to Peter considered as the Prince and chief of the Apostles and to the Popes of Rome as his successors But this Papal usurpation the Councils of Constance and Basil strongly and justly opposed shewing that the Keys which are here given to Peter are in Joh. 20.21 22 23. given to all the Apostles and that Peter himself is enjoyned in Mat. 18. to tell the Church 3. Others think that the Catholick Church considered not representatively but in it self is the first subject of the Keys Yet these differ among themselves For some affirm it of the invisible others of the visible Catholick Church As for the terms we know that visible invisible
Office-Power but all Power which serves to shut and open the House or City of God not power of the Steward only but the power of the Spouse and Wife of this great King to whom the Lord Christ as her Husband being gone into a far Country even to Heaven hath given power to admit into the Family and reject as occasion shall require and for those ends to judge also because such acts require judgment and to call the Steward to his place and to put him into it and to put a Key of Office by Election into his hand and therfore though all power be not formally in her yet it cometh originally from her Reas 2. Because Christ here giveth the Keys only to those to whom he giveth Official Warrant and Authority for the actual exercise thereof in opening and shutting binding and loosing i. e. only to Teachers and Elders Answ 1. Though it is true that Official Warrant and Authority is given only to Teachers Elders only Teaching and Ruling Elders have that formally Yet 2. The power of the Keys is far larger than Office-power viz. to admit reject c. 3. They have their Office from the Church and their Office-power by the Church originally Therefore there was power in the Church before Office-power which did communicate and conveigh Office-power to its Officers 3. Reas To bind and loose are acts of the Office-power of Pastors Rulers Feeders by publick and pastoral preaching which doth not belong to Believers Answ Binding and loosing taken in the largest sense as in this Text comprehend the exercise of all the acts of the Keys or Church-power and these acts are not only by publick and pastoral preaching for then the Ruling-Elder should have no Key to bind or loose but also by Admonitions Excommunications Admissions which issue from a power of judging not proper to the Pastors only but common to the People with them 2. Though the Keys be given to the Church yet she may not exercise any act proper to Office-Power without Officers whom she doth and must call to that end and submit to them in the due exercise thereof 4. Reas If this place give not warrant and authority to Officers what warrant have they for their Office-Power Answ 1. This place gives warrant for the People to choose their Officers according to Christ's appointment and the Church doth accordingly call them to that place and invest them with Office with voluntary professed subjection to them in the right exercise of that power of Office which belongs unto them in the Lord. 2. The several acts of Office-power to be exercised by them are abundantly warranted in other places of Scripture 5. Reas They to whom the Keys are here given doe authoritatively forgive and retain sins and their Acts are valid in Heaven but the Church of Believers wanting Officers cannot by any warrant of Scripture authoritatively forgive and retain sins Answ The word Authority sometimes is taken more generally for Power sometimes more strictly and properly for Ruling and Office-Power In the first sense the Church hath power to foregive judicially in 2 Cor. 2.10 in reference to their former censure The Officers forgive authoritatively in the second sense We proceed to the last interpretation 6. Others look at the Keys as given to Peter here in the name of a particular visible Church indefinitely taken not of this or that particular definite Church that all other Churches should receive the Keys from them or be subject to the power of the Keyes in their hands For that will not stand with the parity of Churches among themselves for par in parem non habet imperium Therefore the Church here intended must be taken generally and indefinitely as comprehending in it any particular visible Church one as well as another or the general Church as existing its particulars If it be objected against this that Peter was not a Member of such a Christian Congregation when Christ spake these words unto him I answer It is true for no such Church was then constituted No more was there a Presbytery then constituted when Christ directed Peter and the rest in case of private offence obstinatly persisted in after proceeding in the first and second step to tell the Church in Mat. 18. which yet they hold but not truly to be the Presbytery as we shall evince hereafter with the assistance of Christ But in the mean time all grant that that Rule serveth to order Members how to proceed in such cases when particular Churches should be constituted And the same reason is of force in this Text also Some have thought that Christ giveth the Keys in this Text not to the Church of Believers of which he spake in the former verse but to the Elders because he altereth the form of his speech for having spoken in the former verse of the Church in the third person saying Vpon this Rock I will build my Church and the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it he saith not in this verse and I will give unto it the Keys but varying the person he turneth his speech to Peter saying and unto thee I will give the Keyes of the Kingdom of Heaven but this is a mistake Here is no changing of person nor turning of speech in Christ's giving the promise of the Keys but as Christ began so he continueth his speech to Peter upon occasion of his confession In v. 17. Christ pronounceth Peter blessed from the cause of his confession In v. 18. he giveth a promise of reward to Peters confession that upon this as upon a Rock he will build his Church and establish it as impregnable against the gates of Hell In v. 19. he giveth unto Peter upon occasion of his publick confession in the name of the Church a promise of the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven Therefore this promise is given to the Church in Peter in such sort as though the use of the Keys be various according to the variety of callings in the Church yet the power it self of the Keys is here originally and primarily cōmitted to the * Toti Ecclesiae dedit Christus claves sed ita ut in Ecclesiâ certi essent qui clavibus utantur ad salutem Ecclesiae honoremque Dei Zanc. in praec 4. quaest 3. Vid. Park de Polit. Eccles l. 3 c. 3. Church in general existing in particular Churches I might produce sundry Writers both ancient and modern of other Countries and our own if need required to confirm this Exposition yea of the Authors quoted by Mr. P. not a few consenting herein but I shall only mention Cyprian and Augustine who in sundry places speak the same with us And these two I the rather name because I find in approved Histories that sundry Martyrs being confirmed in this Truth by their Testimonies have sealed it with their blood Hieronimus Savanarola a Godly learned Preacher in Florence a man endued with a Prophetical Spirit Illyr Catal Test verit cont
Alexandrum Omnia probate quod bonum est tenete estote probati nummularij ut si quis nummus adulter est figuram Caesaris non habet nec signatus est moneta publica reprobetur qui autem Christi faciem claro praefert Iumine in cordis nostri marsupium recondatur The Churches Charter Containing Two Parts 1. The Constitution of particular visible Churches 2. The Priviledges and Power given to such Churches BEfore I proceed to examine Mr. Pagets arguing for the Ecclesistical Juridical Power of Classes I shall positively declare what power is given by Christ to particular Churches after I have described their constitution according to Christ his appointment In every of which particulars I shall principally insist in the metaphor of a Corporation or body politick such as that of the chiefest and most perfect Cities is because I find that it pleaseth the Holy Ghost in Scripture frequently to express this matter under this similitude * Ps 48 1● 2. 87.3 Isa 26.1 60.14 Ezek. 40.2 4● 35 Rev. 3. ●● ●0 ● 21. 〈…〉 22. 〈…〉 Luc. 1●●● But I shall not venture to apply it any further than the light of Truth in Scripture will direct and warrant There we finde the grand Charter it self and the ancient Presidents of the first Christian Churches planted by the Apostles According to these Records I shall endeavour to declare the mind of Christ whom God the Father commands us to hear * Mat. 3.17 17.5 in all things whatsoever he saith unto us and that under a dreadful penalty † Acts 3.22 23. Cypr. ad Coecil lib. 2. ep 3. Si solus Christus audiendus est non debemus attendere quid aliquis ante nos faciendum putaverit sed quid qui ante omnis est Christus prior fecerit faciendum statuerit Neque enim hominis consuetudinem sequi oportet sed Dei veritatem cùm per Isaiam Prophetam Deus loquatur dicat c. Whence Cyprian doth wel infer If only Christ is to be heard we ought not to attend what any before us thought should be done but what Christ who is before all hath done and appointed to be done For we ought not to follow the custom of men but the truth of God seeing the Lord saith by the Prophet Isaiah In vain they worship me teaching for doctrines the commandements of men The Charter according to which particular Churches are to be constituted and their power in re propriâ is to be stated we find in Mat. 16.18 19. In the opening and explaining whereof I purpose with Christ's assistance to proceed in this method 1st handling the constitution of a particular visible Church 2ly clearing the power of it The words in Mat. 16.18 hold forth a perfect Rule for the constituting of a visible Church of its causes of which we shall speak severally and distinctly and the more largely that the strength of such objections as occurr in each particular may be duly weighed and in handling them I shall observe this order 1. I shall propound what I conceive to be the truth in certain doctrinal Conclusions 2. Explicate and confirm them 3. Deduce thence such Consectaries or Inferences as freely flow from them CHAP. I. 1. THe principal efficient cause is noted in this clause I will build my Church I who is that even he whom Peter had confessed in these words Thou art the Christ the Son of the living God That is Jesus our Mediator 1. He speaks in the first Person not in the second For though he useth men as his instruments yet himself by his Spirit buildeth his Church Zach. 4.6 Therefore it is called his Building 1 Cor. 3.9 2. He speaks not in the preter or present tense but in the future I will build For though Christ was yesterday is to day and shall be ever the builder of his Church yet he thus speaketh in a particular respect to the Christian Churches under the New-Testament which should be built after his Ascension of Jews and Gentiles joyned into one body upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Jesus Christ being the Corner-Stone c. Ephes 2.20 21 22. The Conclusion hence is Concl. 1 That Jesus Christ our Mediatour is the only immediate Authour and Institutor of particular visible Churches That he speaketh here of a particular visible Church and not of the Catholick Church appeareth by his giving to it the Keyes Which we shall prove hereafter are given only to particular Churches 2. That Christ himself is the only immediate Institutor of such Churches may be evinced 1. Generally from Heb. 3.3 4 5. 2. Particularly by Induction thus 1. He is the Door by whom they that are orderly admitted must enter Joh. 10.9 2. He sets the Members every one of them in that place and rank which they have in the Body 1 Cor. 12.18 and gifteth them accordingly Ephes 4.7 3. He compacteth the whole Body Ephes 4.16 and firmly knits the materials together in this Spiritual building 1 Pet. 2.5 4. He gives the several Offices and Officers Pastors Teachers Ruling-Elders and Deacons 1 Cor. 12.28 Ephes 4.8 11. 5. He appointeth the visible Seals Baptism Col. 2.10 11 12. and the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11 23 c. 6. He is the Law-giver to his Church Jam. 4.12 7. He is the Lord of all Church Admininistrations 1 Cor. 12.3 8. The Censures have their power and efficacy from him Rev. 3.7 1 Cor. 5.4 5. 9. The blessing of all the Ordinances is from his Institution of them and effectual presence with his Church and Ministers dispensing them Matth. 28.19 20. Reas Thus he is by a three-fold right 1. From the Decree and Donation of the Father Psal 2.7 8. John 3.35 and 5.22 23. 2. From the Redemption of his Church Act. 20.28 Phil. 2.9 10 11. Matth. 28.18 19 20. 3. From his conquest over the powers of darkness from whence he hath delivered them and translated them into his Kingdom Col. 1.13 In all these respects and many more Jesus Christ our Mediatour hath right to institute particular Christian Churches and to cast them into what mould he pleaseth From this Conclusion thus proved I infer as followeth 1. Consect Then Jesus Christ is the only Lord and Head of such Churches as himself hath instituted Thus from Christ's building his House followeth his being over the House Hebrews 3.3 6. And he is over it as the Lord of it Acts 2.36 And as the only Political Head of it in three respects 1. Of Preheminence as having the Spirit in a greater measure than all his Members Col. 1.18 John 3.34 2. In respect of Government Ephes 5.22 23 24. 3. In respect of Influence Joh. 15.5 and that not only in respect of common Gifts whereof Hypocrites partake which if they be joyned to Christ's visible Body the Church are but dead Members whom as dead Branches in the Vine God will take away and cast forth Joh. 15.2 6. but also
6.13 2. Though it be true that the Churches of Asia and Rome have been prevailed against by the gates of Hell yet not as they were built by Christ or planted by the Apolstes but their degenerate Posterity and Successours who were not built on this Rock but on an outward Form and neglected the means appointed by Christ for their safety The Apostle Paul forewarned the Romans to beware of Apostacy by the example of the Jews Rom. 11.12 They nevertheless in succeeding generations did degenerate from the Faith and Profession of their Predecessors and so fell into the gulf of Antichristian Apostacy But as when God took his visible Kingdom from the Jews for their obstinacy in unbelief he did not destroy his visible Kingdom totally from the face of the Earth but gave it to a Nation bringing forth the fruits thereof Mat. 21.43 So though in his righteous judgement against Apostates he may destroy this or that particular Congregational Church yet the gates of Hell shall not prevail wholly against the Church-state but it shall be preserved He doth but translate the Candlestick not break it all to pieces he doth but remove it out of one place into another Rev. 2.5 and still preserveth it in some particular Congregation or other 3. Though the gates of Hell have sometime and in some degree prevailed against this or that particular visible Church holding fast the profession of their Faith without wavering yet they have not prevailed according to the meaning of these words They have prevailed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only in some respect as 1. in Temporals to impoverish them Heb. 10.34 to bring them under bondage as Pharaoh did the Israelites to establish a decree for their destruction as Haman did against the Jews to put multitudes of them to death as the ten persecuting Emperors did the Christians and as the high Priest and the Jews dealt with Christ 2. In Spirituals 1. to scatter the Members of the Church so far the gates of Hell prevailed against them upon occasion of Stephen Act. 8.1 and to cause the Woman to flye into the Wilderness Rev. 12. 2. To assault them with temptations as Christ told Peter that Satan had desired to winnow him like Wheat But they could not prevail against the Church absolutely and totally 1. Not against all of them in Smyrna by outward calamities Rev. 2.10 Nor against all in Sardis by temptation Rev. 3.4 2. Nor totally against the whole Church For God did raise up unexpected helps for the Woman fled into the Wilderness Rev. 12.6 14 16. to that part of them which remains on earth and for the other part of them God will receive his people when outward subsistence fails into everlasting habitations Luke 16.9 And when the gates of Hell prevail to the dispersion of a particular Church built on this Rock yet that is not to their destruction but tendeth to the multiplication and inlargement of particular Churches The dispersion of the Church at Jerusalem was like the dispersion of Seed into the Field which bringeth forth a more plentiful Harvest so their dispersion prevailed against the gates of Hell to the propagating of sundry Churches Act. 11.19 21. Thus the Lord turned the Policies of the gates of Hell against themselves according to that promise Zach. 12.3 Thus we see the impregnable stability of Christ his Church built upon this Rock We shall now prove by Reason that it must be so Reas 1 From Christ who is the Head of the visible Church as well as of the invisible 1 Cor. 12.27 And he will not suffer the sound Members of his Body to be plucked and torn from it by the gates of Hell He is the builder of his Chuch Heb. 3.3 4. and therefore will establish it When the Ark was built by Noah as Gods Instrument according to God's appointment it stood against all the power of the Deluge He is the Foundation as he is belived and publickly confessed whereupon he buildeth his Church Against an House so built the Winds and Waves cannot prevail Matth. 7.24 25. Reas 2 From the Promises given to such a Church which are of two sorts 1. For protection Isa 4.5 6. where be prophesieth concerning the Church of Christ under the New Testament and describes Gods protection over them by a twofold allusion 1. By the Pillar of Cloud and Fire that protected the people of Israel at the Red Sea from Pharaoh and his Host 2. By the covering of the Tabernacle and the holy things in it from all injuries of weather Exod. 26.14 Rev. 7.16 And his power is ingaged to perform his promise Joh. 10.28 29. And his Providence will order all issues and events thereunto Isa 54.16 17. Mat. 28.18 20. 2ly For victory Rom. 16.20 If the Lord will tread Satan under their feet he will see to it that Satan shall not tread them under his feet Reas 3 From the titles given to particular visible Churches They are frequently in the New Testament called the Kingdom of Heaven and Hell cannot prevail against Heaven They are called the Kingdom of Christ and God the Father hath established his Kingdom by an oath Psal 89.35 36. To confirm our Faith herein he calls the Sun and Moon to be witnesses vers 37. The Sun may be clouded sometimes and Moon is sometimes in the Full sometimes in the Wane but still it is in the Heaven So it is with the Church on Earth Dr. Whitt ad Rat. Camp Resp p. 56. Semper fuisse in terris futuram deinceps Ecclesiam non dubitamus quanquam ejus aspectum aliquando illustrem ut conspici ab omnibus possit aliquando tantâ caligine ut vix agnoscas obscuratam esse fateamur And it belongs to Christ to break the Serpent's Head who can proceed no further than to bruise his h●el Gen. 3.15 He is that little stone that brake the Image to pieces which represented the Monarchies and Powers whereby the gates of Hell sought to prevail against Christ and his Church Dan. 2.45 Christs Church is called an House of prayer to all Nations Isa 56.7 The Israel of God Gal. 6.16 in allusion to the change of Jacobs name who by prayer obtained victory and protection against Esau Gen. 32.28 Hos 12.2 3. So shall the Church of Christ by prayer obtain deliverance from the gates of Hell that they shall not prevail against them Reas 4 From the state of the Devils themselves and all their instruments 1. They are cursed Gen. 12.3 I will curse them that curse thee therefore they shall not prosper in their interprizes against the Church of Christ 2. They were conquered and captivated and triumphed over by Christ before he did build his Church Ephes 4.8 12. Therefore shall not hinder the building of it nor destroy it being built 3. They are enemies unto Christs Kingdom Therefore shall not prevail Ps 2.2 3 4. and 110.1 2. Let us briefly note some Corollaries hence Then in vain boasteth that Roman
Church The Church may by communion of Churches upon orderly recommendation receive the members of other Churches unto fellowship of such Ordinances as are for the comfort and strengthning of the Saints as the Seals are and the Officers may administer them to such being accepted by the body for we have a warrant for so much from the Rule Rom. 16.1 3 Joh. 9. but not to act in judgement For the Church hath this priviledge proper to be judged by and to judg only those that are within 1 Cor. 5.12 whereas I alledged this Text against Mr. Paget to prove that Church-Ordinances belong only to the Members of some particular Church Mr. Rutterf meeting with that expression saith Mr. D. will have Pastors so far strangers to all Congregations save their own that he saith other Churches are without and have nothing to do to judge them and alledgeth for this 1 Cor. 5.12 But by those that are without Paul meaneth not those that were not of the Congregation but he meaneth Infidels and Heathen as in other Scriptures For Paul judged and excommunicated Hymeneus and Alexander 1 Tim. 1.20 who were without the Church at Corinth Had Mr. Rutt been pleased to cast his eye upon my own defence of that passage In my Apolog Reply pag. 312 313. printed sundry years before he put pen to paper in these disputes about Church affairs he might have found that written by me touching the sense and my application of that Text which might have prevented his exagitating that matter Nor doth he with any congruity argue from Pauls Excommunicating Hymeneus and Alexander who he saith were without the Church at Corinth to prove that Pastors have any thing to do to judge judicially or excommunicate the members of other Congregations For Paul was an Apostle an extraordinary Officer had an illimited commission and a fulness of delegated power both in every Church and to administer Church-Ordinances without the fellowship of a particular Church when it could not be had and to execute all Offices in any Church where Officers were wanting But Pastors are ordinary Officers have a limited commission to do only the acts of the Pastoral Office and those only to that particular Church by which they are called unto Office Act. 20.28 1 Pet. 5.2 Therefore though Paul might excommunicate one that was not of that particular Church at Corinth yet the Pastor to the Church at Corinth might not Yet Paul could not excommunicate one that was no member of any Church but without as Infidels and Heathen are For that implies a contradiction To conclude The Apostle doth so appropriate Church-judgment to those that are within that particular Church 1 Cor. 5.12 Ye judge them that are within that he exempts from it in a due proportion all that are not members of that Congregation though there are degrees of being without some being totally without all Church-communion as Infidels and Heathen others though in Church-communion else-where yet not in communion of membership of that Church to whom he wrote to put away from them not one that was a member of another Church but him that was a member of that Church And in this sense Mr. Rutt saith Hymeneus and Alexander were without the Church at Corinth though members of some other Church for which cause the Church at Corinth could not excommunicate them yet Paul might and did by his Apostolical Power Thus by his own confession some are without a particular Church who yet are not Heathen or Infidels To conclude one may be said to be without this or that particular Church two ways 1. Simply and absolutely so Infidels and Heathen that are of no Church 2. Comparatively so the Members of other Churches compared with those that are of this Body 4. Corollary Then Churches gathered and Officers ordained in these days without Apostles are true Churches and true Church-Officers according to Christ and Churches thus Organized according to the Rules of the Word are true and intire Churches and the first subject of all Church-power as well as those Primitive Churches planted by the Apostles For the concurrence of the Apostles is not put into this Charter whereof we speak as a conditional Clause which might not have been omitted if Christ had intended that it should be always necessary He doth not say upon this Rock my Apostles shall build my Church and to my Church built by them I will give the Keys of the Kingdom but upon this Rock I will build my Church viz. by such Instruments as Christ will raise and use and bless in that work in every Age and to this Church thus built he gives the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven Object But Christ gave the Commission of gathering Churches to his Apostles in Matth. 28.18 19. And when he ascended up on high he gave some Apostles and some Prophets and some Evangelists and some Pastors and Teachers for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry and for the edifying of the Body of Christ Ephes 4.8 11 12. Answ Those and the like Texts of Scripture do indeed shew that God used Apostles principally in this work but not only For as to Teach and Baptize is common to other Teaching-Officers as well as Apostles so the gathering of Churches by making men Disciples of Christ was done by others besides Apostles even in the Apostles days Act. 11.20 21. The dispersed Disciples planted the Church at Antioch the Members whereof were first called Christians a Church whose planting Barnabas approved ver 23. 2. They shew that God would use Apostles herein for a time but not alwayes which I prove 1. From the proper work committed to them which was to make the first Models and Patterns of planting and gathering Churches which ordinary Instrumentts are bound to attend in the gathering and constituting of Churches 1 Cor. 3.6 10. and in that sense their work continues to the end of the World though their manner of working viz. from an immediate Call Inspiration and Infallible assistance proper to Apostles in making those Patterns was extraordinary and ended with their Office in the first Age since when there never have been Apostles in the World For though Matthias succeeded in the place of Judas by Gods Election Act. 1.26 yet after James was beheaded no Apostle was chosen to succeed him though the Apostles lived long after 2. The Apostle John who lived longest of the Apostles describeth by Revelation from Christ all the Officers that should be by Gods Ordinance in Christian Churches after that Age under four sorts of living Creatures which note the four sorts of ordinary Officers to continue in the Church after that Age viz. Pastors Teachers Ruling-Elders and Deacons Revel 4.1 6 7. Vers 19. And whatsoever thou shalt bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven Whatsoever thou shalt loose on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven THese words hold forth the Ratification of Christ's grant of the Keys unto a Congregational-Church with the chiefty
Judgments and to hearken unto his Voice and the Lord avouched them to be his peculiar People c. v. 16 17 18. And the like if not greater care was had of the profession and conversation of the Sons of strangers the Children of such Proselytes as were admitted into the Church of Israel Isa 56.6 7. John Baptist also required of all whom he admitted unto his Baptisme a repenting-confession of their sins and that they should believe on him which should come after him that is on Christ Jesus Act. 19.4 warning them not to rest in this that Abraham was their Father Mat. 3.9 Answerably the Primitive Churches required of all grown persons 1. Visible Repentance in case of open scandals Act. 19.18 2. to joyn therewith a publick profession of their Faith in Christ Act. 2.39 3. A profession of their subjection to the Gospel of Christ 2 Cor. 9.13 And after the Apostles dayes the ancient Churches they had their Poenitentes such as held forth their Repentance publickly and their Catechumeni who were of two sorts 1. Such as had been Pagans and were instructed by being catechized in the Christian Faith that they might crave Baptisme when they should be found fit and then were called Competentes In the interim they were called Audientes or Auditores * Tertull. l. de poenit c. 6. praescr advers Haeret c. 4. Cypr. l. 3. ep 17. 2. Such as having been Baptized in their Infancy when they did nonnihil adolescere were Catechized and being found to be Believers were confirmed by imposition of Hands and admitted unto the Lords Table and unto the full fruition of all Church-priviledges These Clemens calleth Incipientes Novitios and so do others from 1 Tim. 3.6 As the Mystery of Iniquity wrought higher and more effectually to adva●ce Papal usurpation by the spoils of Churches this custom in the right use of it ceased and Popery retained only the name of Confirmation but corrupted the thing and turned it into a Sacrament limiting the Administration of it to Diocesan Praelats This corrupt custom was continued in England after they renounced the Pope But as Luther in Germany sought to introduce the right use of it into the Churches there So did Cranmer under that Godly King Edward the 6th endeavour in England and committed the perusal and censure of the Common-Prayer-Book to that godly learned and moderate Theologue Bucer who examining the Book found among sundry other things That those which were to be confirmed Censura M. Buceri super lib. Ordinat Eccles cap. 17. must say the Apostles Creed the Lord's Prayer and the ten Commandments and answer the Questions of the short Catechism Bucer's censure upon it is thus This requires diligent ponderation If they think it sufficient that the words of this Confession be recited God abhorreth such as confess him in words and their heart is far from him Nor is Catechizing instituted to this end that they should answer in words only That they believe in God and will keep his Commandments The Lord saith Teach them to observe and do and not only to speak and he requireth such Worshippers as worship him in spirit and in truth But if a true Confession of Faith and profession of Obedience such as should be required of adulti grown persons unto Baptism be meant such a Confession of Faith must be required as may be judged not to be born in the mouth or gotten only by humane teaching but also it must have those signes in the life and manners that it ought to be received of the Churches as coming from an heart truly believing the Gospel and the Doctrine of the holy Spirit For though the Church cannot look into the hearts of men yet they ought to judge of trees by their fruits which fruits afterwards he declares at large But I hasten to the next point having been the larger in this because it is a subject of no less importance than dispute in reference to the question under so much agitation CHAP. III. Concerning the formal Cause THe formall cause or that which gives essential being to this Church is here held forth in a Metaphor taken from houses For 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly signifies to build an house of materials fitly joyned and compacted together but Christ doth not here speak of the structure of a material house but of the constituting of that holy Society which he calleth his Church under the metaphor of building an house which every way suits the matter he speaks of For as a material house suppose of stones is built by orderly placing and strongly cementing them together which before were either scattered stones or a confused and loose heape but not an house till they were thus framed and compacted together so this holy Society the Church of Christ ariseth from the coadunition or knitting together of many Saints into one by an holy Covenant whereby they as lively Stones are built up a spiritual House 1 Pet. 2.4 5. And as the natural body of a man is built by an orderly joyning and firmly knitting the parts together So is the Church of Christ built by the mutual Covenanting of the Saints the Members of the Church which is called the Body of Christ where the Members of it are thus orderly and firmly knit to the Head and one to another Eph. 4.15 16. The same holds in Cities and Families which are thus built also and therefore the Apostle speaketh of this matter under the same matephor in Ephes 2.19 20 21. The conclusion from hence is that Concl. 3 It is the will and appointment of Jesus Christ our Lord that his Churches under the New Testament be constituted in respect of their essential form by the publick mutual covenanting of the Saints with the Lord and one with another Though all men seem to grant that every Church of Christ hath its being from a Covenant for which cause they that want an explicite Covenant do yet plead their implicite Covenant to maintain the truth of their Church-state yet such disputes are raised against the Church Covenant that I am compelled to handle this point also the more largely that the truth concerning it may be the better cleared and setled I shall therefore with the help of Christ shew 1. To what end it serveth 2. what it imports 3. prove it to be the Ordinance of Christ 4. draw some consectaries from the Conclusion 1. The next end of their confederating is to engage themselves to submit one to another in the Lord to cleave to Christ and his Rules and to one another in him mutually and to walk together accordingly in the use of all means sanctified and appointed by him for attaining the ends of Church-communion 2. The Covenant it self imports two things 1. On the Lords part it implyeth 1. the Lords giving them his Covenant for themselves and their seed Gen. 17.7 2. His giving them hearts to take hold of his Covenant accordingly Isa 56.4 5
6 7. where you see the Eunuch's and the son of the stranger's taking hold of the Covenant is fore-told as that which should be previous to the Lord 's giving them a place in his house and bringing them into his holy Mountain that is joyning them to his visible Churches under the New Testament when the Church shall be called an house of prayer to all Nations v. 7. 2. On the Saints part their covenanting for themselves and for their seed to be the Lord's People and to walk in his waies Deut. 29.10 11 12. and to cleave firmly one to another viz. to their Officers and Brethren Deut. 12.19 Neh. 10.29 with mutual watchfulness one over another Lev. 19.17 Deut. 29.18 with Heb. 12.15 16. and with mutual submission to Christ and to one another in him 2 Cor. 9.13 3. Such Covenanting is Christ's Ordinance unto the Churches under the New Testament this is proved Reas 1 From the parity of reason between the Churches before the coming of Christ and since in all essentials of a Church For in the essential state and form of a Church there is par ratio omnium Ecclesiarum Before the coming of Christ the People of God were joined together into Church-fellowship by confederation Psal 50.5 Gather my Saints together unto me those that have made a Covenant with me by sacrifice So did Adam and all the holy Patriarchs unto Abraham and so did the posterity of Jacob at Mount Sinai Exod. 19.5 6. and 24.8 and from thence were called the Church in the Wilderness with which Moses was joyned Act. 7.38 And so the Lord there tells them it should be in point of the Covenant though not of Sacrifices with the Church under the New Testament v. 14 15 16. In Abrahams family God built his Church by a Covenant without sacrifice but first the Lord changed his name and called him Abraham to shew that he now treated with him not as a single person but as a Father of many nations and as a multitude vertually Gen. 17.5 Then he gave him his Covenant to be a God to him and his seed Gen. 17.7 and to shew that it was a Church-Covenant he gave him Circumcision for the visible signe and seal of it Gen. 17 10-15 Thus far went the Covenant on God's part 2. On Abraham's part he first accepted both the Covenant and the confirmation of it with Faith and holy reverence declared by his rejoycing John 8.56 and humble prostration of himself before the Lord v. 17. and by real performance of it after both in his own person being circumcised when he was ninty nine years old v. 24. and as a Prophet and Ruler instructing his family concerning the Covenant and Circumcision and their duty to accept the one and submit to the other which they did accordingly v. 23 27. and thereby professed their subjection to the Lord and to his Ordinances Hence the posterity of Abraham by Isaac and Jacob became the Lord's People Exod. 3.7 yea his first born Exod. 4.22 23. and had Circumcision as a seal of this Covenant whereby they were distinguished from all other People Deut. 7.6 7 8. But they like men transgressed and broke the Covenant both in Egpyt and in the Wilderness yet the Lord being faithful in his Covenant unto their forefathers did not cast them off but called them to repentance and renewed his Covenant in a more Evangelical manner in the plains of Moab that he might establish them to be his People and their little ones and the strangers Deut. 29 10-14 which Covenant they took hold of for themselves and their seed and for them that were not there with them that day v. 15. that they would admit none unto Church-fellowship with them but such as should separate themselves from the polutions of the Heathen and enter into the common engagement with them to cleave to the Lord and to one another with member-like love watchfulness and submission mutually Hence it was that the sin of one Achan became the sin and punishment of all Israel Josh 7.11 12. Reas 2 From the Apostles manner of planting Christian Churches after the Death Resurrection and Ascension of Christ Their custom it was when they had converted many to Christ to joyn them together into one Congregation by covenanting with the Lord and his People for themselves and their Children Object Against this assertion some object that in the planting of the Church at Samaria in Cornelius his house at Phillippi Corinth Ephesus Thessalonica c. they find no mention of such a Covenant as the Doctrine intendeth only that they believed professed and were Baptised but no mention of an express vocal Covenant Answ 1 1. Though it be not mentioned in those Texts yet it may be in others 2. We need not be solicitous about the words if the thing be found there 3. And that the thing is to be found there it may be evinced three wayes 1. From their being baptised 2. From the phrases 3. From the similitudes which import their covenanting together 1. From their being baptized which presupposeth that they were first made Disciples because their Commission required that Mat. 28.19 where to make Disciples is as much as to gather and plant Churches by visible bringing men into Christs school with engagement by those of years for themselves and their seed to submit unto Christs teaching and government therein This school of Christ is the Church of God whence the members of Christian Churches are called Disciples in Act. 15.10 So then they were in Church-fellowship before they were baptised 2. From the Phrases which imply covenanting to be that whereby they became visible members of the Church I shall instance in two The first is used in Act. 2.41 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were added and v. 47. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord added and chap. 5.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 were the more added The word imports such an adding as did visibly and firmly knit them together Calvin in Act 2.41 adjuncti Christi discipulis vel in idem corpus insiti Calvin saith they were joyned to Christs Disciples or ingrafted into the same body That which thus visibly ingrafted them was not Gods working Faith in their hearts or their visible profession of it for it is said Believers were added v. 14. which is of the same import with those that gladly received the Word in Act. 2.41 Therefore this adding was by something else and what could that be but their visible taking hold of the Covenant with that particular Christian Congregation whereunto they now joyned themselves notwithstanding their former state in the National Church of the Jewes And that they were thus added to the Church Luke confirmeth two wayes 1. by the effect of this ingagement in Act. 2.42 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they were strongly and constantly knit together viz. by vertue of their former mutual ingagement in the Apostles Doctrine Hearing Believing Professing Obeying it constantly and in fellowship i. e.
said Salute them of such an house who are in the Lord and it was an exemplary Family and a seminary of the Church yet not such a Church as was capable of all Church Officers and power as this meant in the text hath by the gift of Christ 2. Sometimes it signifieth the Catholick visible Church Heb 12.23 but that hath been from the beginning and doth not nor can meet in one place on earth to worship God Therefore it is not meant here 3. Most commonly it signifieth a Congregational Church or an holy Society joyned together by an holy Covenant in one Congregation to walk together according to all the Ordinances and Lawes given by Christ to his Church And so sometimes it signifieth a definite particular Congregation meeting together in one place for the publick worship of God and their mutual edification as that at Corinth 1 Cor. 11.18 20. and 14.23 And in that acceptation it notes sometimes the Brethren as distinguished from the Elders Act. 15.22 Sometimes the Elders and Brethren assembled together as in 1 Cor. 11.20 but never the Elders meeting apart from the Brethren But in this place it doth not signifie a particular definite Church For there is no particular Christian Church built by Christ more or rather than other It remaineth that Christ speaks of a particular Congregational Church here in an indefinite sense And so the word Church is applyed in the New Testament when Paul saith he persecuted the Church Phil. 3.6 Not that at Jerusalem only or Damascus but all the Churches in Judea Gal. 1.22 23. In this sense Christ calls every Christian Congregational Church thus built his Church From the words thus opened this doctrinal conclusion is to be collect●d viz. That it is the will and appointment of Jesus Christ that the Christian Church under the New Testament be in respect of its quantity and compass Congregational Concl. 4 This we shall endeavour to prove both by Scripture and Reason 1. The Scripture in the writings of the Apostles clearly sheweth that they so understood this branch of the Church-Charter and therefore they speak of Christian-Churches as several and distinct from one another 1 Cor. 11.16 and 14.33 Yea in one and the same Country as Galatia Gal 1.2 Judea v. 22. Macedonia 2 Cor. 8.1 Yea in Corinth where God had much people Act. 18.10 yet the Church there was but one Congregation 1 Cor. 14. and though Cenchrea was a Port near unto Corinth yet it had a Church distinct from Corinth Rom. 16.1 The Church also in Jerusalem though a greater number of Believers was declared to be there than we read of in other Cities yet it was but one Congregation Act. 2.41 44 47. and 6.2 15. The same holdeth concerning other great Cities the Church in every one of them was Congregational and if the number of Believers grew too great for one Congregation doubtless more Churches were gathered in such a place and case if several parts of the Church met in times of Persecution now and then here and there as they might yet they continued one Congregation having the same Officers in common for any thing appears in Scripture to the contrary Now let us see why the Christian Church must be Congregational Reas 1 The first Reason is from the end of Church-fellowship which is mutual edification in the use of the means instituted by Christ thereunto Let all things be done unto edification 1. Cor. 14.26 but how can this be attained unless they so meet together that all may learn and all may be comforted v. 13 Hence all the Members of the Church are exhorted not to forsake their assembling together Heb. 10.25 which was the praise of the primitive Church in Jerusalem Act. 2.42 44. Therefore a particular visible Church is compared to a flock which are fed together Act. 20.28 and to an House or Family the members whereof injoy the same Family-priviledges in common under the same family-order 1 Tim. 3.15 Reas 2 The second Reason is from their duty to take up offences among Brethren which cannot be ended privately Mat. 18.17 18. which implyeth two things 1. That the Church must consist of more than two or three for though two or three may watch over one another admonish one another and in case of obstinancy withdraw from a convicted delinquent and though two or three praying together may expect the presence and blessing of Christ as v. 19 20. upon their admonition yet two or three cannot issue the matter compleatly in way of Church-censure but must tell the Church Therefore the Church must necessarily consist of a greater number Again how can two or three choose the four sorts of Officers amongst themselves which are described by four living creatures in Rev. 4.6 7. viz. Pastor Teacher Ruling Elder and Deacon 2. That they must not exceed the quantity and compass of one Congregation For the Church must meet ordinarily together with their Officers for these purposes Therefore the Scripture sheweth that the whole Church did meet together to chuse and ordain Officers as Deacons Act. 6.2 3 5. Elders Act. 14.23 to receive and admit Members Act. 9.26 for Prophesying 1 Cor. 14.23 for the Seals 1 Cor. 11.20 and for Censures 1 Cor. 5.4 and to release from censures 2 Cor. 2.6 7. So much for proof of the point The Con●●ctaries are these Coroll 1 Then the Congregational frame of a Christian Church is no humane invention or constitution True it is that the Parish frame as it was wont to joyn all the inhabitants within such a praecinct into one Church injoyning them all to communicate at the Lords Table at least at Easter is meerly humane not being measured by the Golden Reed which is the Church-measure but by the Court-measure Rev. 11.1 2. But that Members so qualified as Christ requireth and so confederating should ordinarily meet togather in one Congregation for the solemn worship of God and their mutual edification is the Ordinance of Christ and according to the measure of the golden Reed whereby the City and Gates and the dimensions of the New-Jerusalem are measured Rev. 21.15 that they shall not be so few as to cut off Church-jurisdiction within themselves nor so many but that all may hear and be edified and be governed by the Power which Christ hath given to the Church to preserve the purity of his Worship and of their fellowship within themselves Coroll 2 Then when a People grow to be so numerous in any Church that they cannot ordinarily meet together to Church-ends it is the mind of Christ that they should be distributed into sundry Congregational Churches For though many thousands of Israel met together in the court of the Temple at Jerusalem to offer Sacrifice because they might stand in so large a place together and see the Sacrifices burnt yet that will not prove that such multitudes should be Members of a Christian Church where more communion is required then in seeing some one Ordinance
may by the eyes which are given to it for that end 2. The Confirmation or proof that such a Church is the first and proper subject of this power shall be double 1. By Scripture 2. By Reasons 1. By Scripture it may be proved from sundry Texts 1. This in hand clearly confirmeth it if that good ancient rule of expounding Scripture be received Dictorum intelligentia ex causis dictorum sumenda est For Christ's question to the Disciples which was the cause of Peter's confession here was only concerning the Faith common to the Church Whom say ye that I am Hereupon Peter in the name of the Disciples made this confession of Faith Quia Christus Petra Petrus populus Christianus August in Matth. de verbis Domini Ser. 13. Christ testified his approbation of it by calling him Peter not so much in respect of his Office as of his Faith thus publickly professed whence also visible Believers are called lively stones 1 Pet. 2.4 5. and Christ added to this praise of Peter a twofold promise 1. Of edifying and stablishing the Church upon this Rock 2. Of affording it sufficient means for the attainment of those ends viz. the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven c. Where the Kingdom of Heaven or visible Church of Christ on earth is compared to a City or House the Door or Gate whereof is Christ the Keys are all instituted means whereby an entrance into Christ and his Kingdom visibly is opened and shut the subordinate power whereof is here given to the Church immediately The second Text is in Mat. 18.17 18. Tell the Church if he hear not the Church let him be as an Heathen and a Publican For what you shall bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven c. This cannot be meant of Elders assembling together and acting apart from the Brethren For no such assembly is called the Church in the New Testament much less is this power given to them for in case of scandal given by them they are under the power of the whole Church as well as other Members to be censured by them though when they keep the Rule they are as Elders Rulers in the Church It must therefore be meant of a Congregational-Church The third Text is in 1 Cor. 5. where Paul exhorted the Church at Corinth to exercise this their power which he calls the power of the Lord Jesus v. 4. whereby they were to deliver unto Satan that incestuous person v. 5. and were to purge out the old leaven v. 7. and were to judge those that are within v. 12. and to put away that wicked person from among them v. 13. and this Paul calls a punishment inflicted by many 2 Cor. 2.6 Thus he establisheth their power to bind and teacheth them how to use it and in like manner he exhorteth them upon the mans repentance to turn the Key and to open the Door of Christian liberties to him and to loose him from the former censure by forgiving him in a legal or judicial sense 2 Cor. 2.7 10. And that this Church at Corinth was a meer Congregational-Church it may be evinced from hence that the whole Church was no larger then was wont to meet together in one place 1 Cor. 14.23 for the ordinary worship of God 2. By Reasons 1. Because in such a Congregational-Church are all the causes of this power 1. Efficient the Institution and Ordinance of Christ who delegateth this subordinate power to whom it pleaseth him by his own appointment 2. The material cause visible Believers 3. The formal cause Covenanting together to walk in all the Ordinances of Christ and to submit mutually one to another in the Lord to be reclaimed if they err from the rules or to be censured by the power of the whole if they be found obstinate 2. Because there is no former subject of this power from whence a Congregational-Church might derive it but it is communicated by means of the Church to all that partake of it and it remaineth in the Church when others are removed They choose their own Elders therefore they had this power virtually in them before they had Elders and so could not derive it from them 2. All particular Churches are of equal power within themselves not one of them subordinate to another Therefore they derive it not from other particular Churches 3. Synods both lesser and larger are made up of the Elders and Messengers sent from particular Churches and have their being from them nor do they send them to them to borrow any Church-power but only light from them as the Church at Antioch did from the Church at Jerusalem Acts 15. Therefore they derive no Church-power from them Again when the Elders of particular Churches are dead or censured or rejected by the power of the whole for obstinacy in scandalous evils the Church still retaineth its power to choose others as a Corporation hath its full power still though the Magistrates be dead or cast out The same holds in Churches in Islands by their own confession when they cannot have the help of Synods Thus we prove Fire to be the first subject of heat because if it be in other things as in Water or Wood it is there by the means of Fire and when they are removed yet still it remains in Fire The like reason holds in this as you see to prove such a Church as this of which we speak to be the first subject of Church-Power or of the Keys 3. Because all the acts done immediatly by the Church in opening and shutting in binding and loosing flow from this power of the Keys given them by Christ and hold it forth 1. Their admitting Members is an act of this Power and holds it forth for till the Brethren be satisfied and approve ones fitness he cannot be received into their fellowship Act. 9.26 and 10.47 2. Their choosing Officers is an act of this Power which the Apostles would not violate in adding Deacons Act. 6.3 5. and Ruling-Elders to the Church Act. 14.23 and the same holds much more concerning Pastors and Teachers This power Cyprian acknowledged to be in the * Plebs obsequens praeceptis Dominicis Deum metuens ipsa maximè habet potestatem vel eligendi dignos sacerdotes vel indignos recusandi Quod ipsum videmus de Divinâ authoritate descendere Cypr. l. 1. ep 4. People principally to accept or refuse Ministers as they judged them worthy or unworthy 3. Their Ordination of Officers by deputing some chosen out of their own Body thereunto in the want of Officers is an act of this Power of the Keys residing in them For though the Offices of Elders in general and the Authority of their Office as they are Rulers is from Christ immediately yet the investing of this or that elect person with this Office Authority in relation to this or that Church by application of it to him in particular rather than to another this is by the