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A45082 Of government and obedience as they stand directed and determined by Scripture and reason four books / by John Hall of Richmond. Hall, John, of Richmond. 1654 (1654) Wing H360; ESTC R8178 623,219 532

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so we again having no other direct outward precept from God or Christ himself are through faith and by our ready obedience to him actually performed to his Church in his stead as having the word of reconciliation committed unto them acquitted in all we do but if done otherwise we forfeit thereby the whole condition and as again obliged and culpable for the breach of the whole law nothing but read mission into the Covenant of Innonency by repentance can secure us from damnation CHAP. IV. Of each particular Church and its power HAving hitherto spoken of the Reason and Foundation of the Church in general and of the necessity of our participation of her communion so now again it will be necessary to speak of each particular Church and its jurisdiction For since we cannot otherwise attain to be members of this Catholick body then as being first members of some particular Church it will therefore follow that as the necessary observation of the law of providence which we could not explicitely and perfectly do upon our owne abilities was the cause Christ became obedient to God for us that we might be made the righteousness of God in him so there lies upon each member a duty of conformity and obedience to their particular Churches that thereby being made conformable to the image of his Son they may also be restored to the image of God And therefore although the Catholick Church cannot be aggregate or represented der any single head or rule but of Christ himself yet since it is integrated and by parts made up of particular Churches and in these Christs power being to be represented by other Christs or anointeds under him it will follow that our obedience to this Church and the head thereof must have of us all that obedience which unto the other we cannot give else would that precept of obedience to the Church come to nothing as indeed for the most part is intended by such as would have the Writers of their owne mind to be held for the Catholick Church onely Therefore now being to consider the Christian Church as an assembly of Believers separate from other for Gods more immediate honour and worship we cannot well appropriate this phrase to that part of the Catholick which is past and unconversant with men nor for the present to that part of it which is yet to suceeed although both the one and the other have done or are to do their personal parts herein but must interpret that notion of Catholick Church used either when those duties are in general given which are fit for the Church to observe in obedience to Christ or when againe given for her members to observe to her to intend that part of Christs body which shall be successively militant on earth to whom alone these instructions can be necessary and useful in both kinds But then again as this general duly of praising God before men can onely be performed by the visible Church because she hath onely power and opportunity therein yet since this power here on earth is subsistant by the separate jurisdiction of those particular Churches which constitute her Catholick body and she can in no other sence be termed Catholick with reference to any other head then of Christ himself it must be therefore granted that all those precepts for general obedience to the Church must be meant of every Church in particular as having onely use of jurisdiction to this purpose And as having besides according to the several inclinations of their owne people and the known affections of those of the world amongst whom they live the best and onely ability to know and command what is fittest to be done for advancing Gods glory according to the exigence of their particulars which otherwise in the strange mixture of Christianity with other religions throughout the world were not possible to be comprised under one certain or equal rule or to be known and executed by one single persons power And that the Church and civil jurisdiction of each place signifie the same and that by obedience to the Church obedience to the particular Church is ment will appear by that of our Saviour Mat. 18. where controversies are if not decideable by umperage to be told to the Church Under which name must be comprehended the present particular authority of that place because else how shall they go to it And it must be the civil as well as ecclesiastical authority also as having them conjoined because it determines particular personal injuries where brother offends against brother and one servant takes another by the throate saying pay what thou owest as the parable denotes But the conclusion is that the supream jurisdiction whilst it is Christian is the very Church we are to submit unto And those that will not hear the Church are to be unto us as Heathens and Publicans that is such as have renounced Christ by this their renoucing the Image of his authority the Christian Church whose definition and power be the thing of never so civil nature makes the breach of it a sin as on the contrary our obedience to them acquits us of guilt For it is from Christ they have this power that Whatsoever is bound on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and whatsoever they shall loose on earth shall be loosed in Heaven So that Christ having now blotted out that hand writing of Iewish Ordinances which was against us and released them from their litteral strictness to the extent of rational and natural laws and having also answered to God for the large morallity of the whole rule of providence leaving Christians at large in all things wherein their reason or Christian precept is not transgressed and lastly having left the charge for custody and enforcing these Christian precepts to every Christian Church who are thereupon to answer to him for the faults of the people the advantage that Christians have of living in a state of innocence is unquestionable and immoveable while they contiune obedient And therefore Christs Gospel might well be called Glad tytings and we may find that our Saviour made his general encouragement to the entertainment of him and his doctrine because his yoke was easy and his burthen light Insomuch that when he came in particlar to be asked what it was he answered in one command for both Tables thou shalt love c. including under the precept of love to God and our Neighbour all the law and the Prophets that is all things of faith and charity or of faith and obedience which is charities support First for our faith and its fundamental object life eternal is to know God and Iesus whom he hath sent he is the way the truth and the life the Authour and finisher of our faith on whom whosoever believeth hath everlasting life and on him that believeth not the wrath of God abideth Which one article comes therefore to be eminently necessary
their measure use it by the vertue of his authority who said whose sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whose sins ye retain they are retained Whereupon we may collect that as the power of the keyes is originally in Christ the Churches universal head and was by him given to the heads of Churches onely so it can be in the whole Church or in its subordinate members no otherwise then as received from their head according to that of Saint Paul When ye are met together and my Spirit c. And therefore to make it farther evident that the heads of Churches are to be understood in the direction of tell it to the Church we are to denote that the power of the keyes in the next verse was directed to the Apostles in the word ye when it was said Whatsoever ye bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven for unto them was most of this chapter directed the which was the reason of Saint Peters interogating him presently hereupon How oft shall my brother offend c. This power comonly called the power of the keyes and by the Romanists appropriate to the chief of that Sea only is that divine obsignation of Christian authority and precept whereby those laws and edicts of him that sitteth in the seat of judgment as the head of each Church that were but civilly or morally criminal in their own nature and obnoxious to temporal wrath onely for their breach come now to be sinful and damnable as being violations against God and the heavenly thrown it self by whom they are impowred and whose authority they do represent according to that sentence to be given at the last day inasmuch as ye have or have not done it c. Upon which grounds we may know what to conceive of that article of our Creed I believe the holy Catholike Church which some would wrest and make use of to draw mens obedience which way they pleased by proposing unto us what they pleased for Catholike doctrine But we are to conceive that this primitive form of profession of Christian faith therefore called the Apostles Creed was offered to and taken by such as were to be admitted into the Christian Church to shew and state their beliefe before their admittance and not to direct their obedience afterwards For although to believe in God in Christ in the holy Ghost do together with the acknowledgement of their deity draw on obedience by just consequence yet was this form of profession of faith therefore called the Creed made but to denote their beliefe of their true existence by which means being received into the Church their obedience was thence to be learnt For strange it had been for the Church to have proposed to men the matter of obedience to any of whom as yet they had no beliefe in And therefore when I profess to believe the holy Catholike Church the word holy will make it unconceiveable how it should directly import my profession of obedience and that not onely because the Catholike Church or Christs universal body cannot as before noted be ever comprehended under one notion and conception so as to be definitive to me concerning their determinations but also because I can never rightly say of the present or past militant Church to whom I seek for direction that they are all holy nor can men that live in a particular Church be ordinarily able to know what is and what is not Catholike doctrine besides that which is proposeth Whereupon understanding our belief in or of the holy Catholike Church to import our beliefe that Christ hath a true sanctified body which being so made by means of the holy Ghost in the article foregoing comes through their union in Christ and his Spirit to be of one communion from the rest of the world and so to be the Communion of Saints as in the article following So that then although the Creed as a Creed cannot of it self oblige to obedience yet since the beliefe of the articles thereof do by consequent bring men to Christs Church and out of desire to attain that Communion of Saints doth also farther prompt me to acts of obedience to that Church to whom I made this profession it will therefore follow that that obedience which I cannot give to the Catholick Church as such must be to this end given to that part of it under which I live since that I cannot otherwise obey the Catholike then by obeying the particular All which will be cleared by one instance of Saint Pauls who as the present head of that Church gives liberty to the Corinthians in eating of things offered to Idols notwithstanding that the then Catholike representative Church at Jerusalem and he himself amongst them had decreed otherwise Clearly evincing that the power of binding and loosing was to reside in each Churches own head and that they were to perform their obedience to the same party by whom they had learned their Creed who had been their spiritual father and begotten them in Christ. And that this power of the keyes was not given to the Apostles onely as a collective body of Church heads and so to the Catholike Church onely but was also conferred upon the particular heads of the Churches appears in that it was upon occasion particularly given to Saint Peter so that whatsoever head or chief governour should like him acknowledge Christ to be the true spiritual foundation and rock he should from Christ have power also to be herein a rock to others and to bind and loose And both places must contradistinguish the persons binding from those that shall be so bound and the persons telling and complaining to the Church from those that are to hear and have power of redress And as they were in one place spoken to Saint Peter alone to declare against consistorial parity so were they elsewhere given joyntly to all the Apostles the then visible heads of Churches to abate Popish usurpation For they were not to be commanding one another out of their Churches as they might those within them which was forbidden them in the persons of Zebedees Children But in those equalities they were in love to serve one another and in this their parity obeying the precept of submit your selves one to another he that should do it most and thereupon become a Minister and Servant to his fellows will even thereby make himselfe chief among them By which means being converted and become as little Children they shall then be greatest in the kingdome of heaven or have great and kingly power in the Church from the power of Christ that hath taken them into the arms of his acknowledgement From whence it will again follow that Who so shall receive one such little Child in my name receiveth me that is in hearing and obeying him he shal hear and obey me but Who so
they being now Christians it follows that all that intermeddle without their leave are usurpers also From all which and what hath heretofore been said in the Argument we may easily conceive how to determine concerning Apostolical succession in right whereof those of the Romish Prelacy would at this day take to themselves supreme and independent power in Church affairs even because the Apostles had so in relation to their contemporary Pagan Kings and Magistrates and would on the other side leave to Christian Kings onely civil coercion and Authority because so much and no more was formerly possessed by Infidels We shall therefore say that where the Bishop is in his City or Diocess the supreme Christian Governor as to many of those Ancient Bishops and Patriarchs it happened before Kings were Christians and at this day in Rome Collen Trier c. is practised there and then are they to lay claim to direct Apostolical succession as having none on earth their superior in Ecclesiastical power But when and where that City or Diocess is but part of a greater Church united under a Christian head superior to these particular and inferior heads then and there is that chief Bishop or overseer of that Church to be held the rightful successor of Apostolical power and the other Bishops to be subordinate unto him even as Timothy and Titus were formerly to St. Paul It is not to be doubted but as this office of Ecclesiastical super-intendency is to be acknowledged as of Divine Right so may Bishops so far as their power is extensive account themselves the Apostles successors therein which as it will estate them in rightful power to govern the Presbyters and others below them so will it again subject them to their head in chief even to him that is the more direct and entire successor of Apostolical jurisdiction From whom in that regard they are to derive their personal Ordination or appointment into determinate jurisdiction and power even as Zadock the type of Evangelical Priesthood received his from Solomon the Type of Christian Kingship although the act and Ceremonies of Consecration are to be under the Gospel as formerly under the Law received from those of the Priesthood onely in acknowledgement of divine constitution of that Function But for this omission of Princes in assuming their right upon their conversion he may easily see the reason that shall consider that great splendor of the Roman Emperors and that poverty and more mean condition which the Bishops and such like Church heads did at first live in who being at that time well studyed in their Masters Precepts of Obedience and Humility had so little strugled for jurisdiction or riches that there might seem rather scorn to take then desire to assume and engross what they had And it may be more fresh sense of Piety and Devotion might make these first Christian Emperors willingly rather enlargers then detractors from men of such pious and harmless conversation The which might make them also less studious of those inconveniences which might grow from hence afterwards not only to themselves but all other Christian Kings who from their examples were often made believe that their highest expressions of devotion was to be measured by their advancemene of Christs Church meaning Clergy-men and that also by taking the Jewels out of their own Crowns and therewith embellishing their Myters Whether this omission were begun and continued through ignorance pride or blinded zeal is not so certain as is that absurdity which from thence hath arisen namely of Kings having no more power in the Church allowed them being become Christians then they had before nay and less too since some of these will now put in for so great a share But it is to be considered that as the admonition was then most proper of fear not them that can kill the body c. in respect that Pagan Kings had not Ecclesiastical coertion so was the distinction of duties and obedience into Religious and Civil then most proper also The which will upon the same reason come now to be united because of the union of that person commanding under Christ in chief in both And therefore had the Primitive Christian Princes well examined Saint Pauls distinction of his own and others Apostolical jurisdiction they would have found in them the whole rights of their Crowns comprised when he said Let a man so account of us as Ministers of Christ and Stewards of the mysteries of God Under the first expression of Ministers of Christ or his Deacons or Deputies they shall finde Magistracy and more Civil power over Christian persons and actions within their Church contained in the other all power given over the way and manner of Gods outward worship and also the chief charge and care of Preaching or Instruction Which makes St. Paul proceed in the description of his Stewards Office onely because he undertook little in the other For since it was the most natural and reasonable course to lay down Rules and Instructions for men to follow before any outward execution of Government by Rewards or Punishments in observing or neglecting them could be established we may finde good reason why our Saviour did delegate his Authority to those first Fathers and heads of the Church by vertue of that power they should from him receive to represent him herein saying to them all power is given to me in Heaven and in Earth Go ye therefore and teach all Nations c. teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you and lo I am with you always even unto the end of the world And it must be acknowledged a thing reasonable that since the actions of voluntary Agents must have issue from their understanding that therefore in order to that obedience which was expected to follow there should be appointed a powerful way of instruction to precede Which Office of instruction although it did for this cause precede yet since Christ had promised the continuance of his presence or power with it unto the end of the world as knowing it to be at all times necessary for him that is to have the charge of Government under him we cannot but resolve that this Office of Instruction or Preaching is to be held and exercised by all others but subordinately and in dependence of that present head of the Church who holds amongst other Unctions a deputation herein in chief from Christ himself who was anointed to preach In the first heads the attestation of miracles which gave them Authority to be hearkened unto in their message of Instruction gave them thereby also upon all necessary occasions Authority to be obeyed as Heads and Governors In the last heads as Conquest and the ordinary ways of Providence doth design the Governor first so doth it therewith also estate him in the right of supreme Instruction as necessary thereto And surely they that would deny the necessary conjunction of these two essential parts of
another did arise the restrictive name of a Church could not be applyed to one Nation or part of mankind more then another For although the closer observation of the first light and way given to Adam and other of the Fathers might make some of them more truly called the sons of God then others as the truer and more sincere worship of those of Judah above those of Israel might do the like yet as long as these Israelites did still make their acknowledgements to be guided by the same law and rule of Circumcision with the other it was not their Calves nor other failings could hinder them from being of the Catholique Church no more then could the corruptions of the sons of Adam the son of God hinder men from being equally his seed and members of the visible Church even after that their multiplication commerce one with another had caused pride and covetousness the two daughters of humane frailty to make the whole earth to be filled with violence and so to be equally punished by the Flood or then Noahs particular justice and closer walking with God above any other could at the same time shut out all but himself from being of the same visible Church also Mens general acknowledgement of the same way of divine guidance as proceeding from God the Creator even before the time that unto Moses he was distinguished under the expressions of the God of Abraham making all of them equally of the Catholique Church although by their deeds there after they might differently be of the Communion of Saints But although God might in mercy accept of that ready literal obedience in the Iew and also of that substantial obedience in the Gentile and albeit the law of Moses or reason were not exactly kept by either might impute Christs satisfaction unto them and so receive them into the merit of a Saviour as well as Job and other of the Patriachs yet unto us that now live after the time that this Saviour hath been by miracles proved to have been and appeared in the flesh as there can nothing save us but actual belief and profession especially where it may be had so where this profession of Christ is nothing can hinder the party from being a member of his body the visible Church nor the Church hereupon to admit him into her fellowship by the dore of Baptisme Which Sacrament being by the Church given to us as a seal of the performance of Gods gracious promises on our behalf is called a Covenant also and particularly the Covenant of Grace and that because salvation comes to us by free gift and not by performance of any positive outward law of God as to the Iewes it did Nor yet stand we now obliged with the Gentile to the observation of the whole law of nature for although the precepts of Love the Lord withall thine heart c. and love thy Neighbour as thy self be positively set down in holy Writ because the general insufficiency of that portion of reason which is committed unto men could not ordinarily otherwise discover so much yet they are as natural as creation and providence it self even as upholding the same For as heretofore declared in the particular of man each one in reason being obliged to do all things to the preservation and advantage of another because even thereby Gods praise and glory is preserved and encreased by the preserving and benefiting one another it followed that in whatsoever the least thing we neglected or thwarted our duty of acting herein we were so far culpable against the law of reason which was and alwayes is divine both as being part of Gods inexhaustable fountain and ayming also at the same end the continuance and furtherance of his creation and providence But because in Adam we had taken the morality of actions upon our owne score the portion of humane wisdome which would have sufficed to guide us as natural Agents in implicite obedience was not now sufficient to steer us unblamable in all things whatsoever no though we should be most intent upon it but that God and our Neighbour might have been better served therefore God to the Jew abreviates this Universal strict rule to some set precepts which being observed he makes his Covenant to accept of for performance of the whole Moral law or law of natural reason And therefore we may observe that there was something in it of providence and charity of all kinds As forbidding to eat blood the life of Creatures mercy to the poor and stranger letting the land take rest forbidding to take the young bird with the old or to seeth the kid in the mothers milk c. But exact obedience being found yet too difficult for men to attain salvation by and the very knowledge of these precepts being in the absence of the Lawmaker difficult also it pleased God to us Christians to make his Kingdom to be chiefly inward and accept of the will for the deed and the litteral exact performance being done by a Saviour in our stead we are accepted not for doing all we should but for having done what we can So that by belief and adhesion in and to him and doing what he commands we come by and through him to be accepted as having done all that he did And thereupon we that in respect of breach of Gods precepts were enemies and rebells to him and so could not be received into that Kingdome of his which was designed for innocent mankind came through faith to be made so much on with Christ who hath taken our nature upon him as to be accepted by God as actual performers of the whole law Which faith being the work of the holy Ghost doth by its reception in each person constitute him a member of that Society which we call the Catholick Church which consisting of parts or members triumphant militant and future are all yet by means of this owne Spirit received into the union of Christs mystical body or communion The communion of Saints From all which it will not be hard to conceive how God was in Christ reconciling the world unto himself not imputing their trespasses unto them and how Christ fulfilling for us both that natural large law of providence and beneficence which as Gods knowing good and evil we had undertaken as also that strict litteral abreviation thereof we come to be restored again to a state of innocence For under the condition of absolute necessity to salvation we have even as few precepts laid upon us under this second Adam as there were from God in Paradise laid on the first but that being ingrafted into Christ by faith and in all our outward deportments to our Neighbours walking according to Christian light and obedience we should be as unblameable and innocent now as then For as Adam while guided by the light of nature onely had his duty and innocence measured by obedience to that one outward law
because it is the onely foundation for other foundation then this can no man lay and this foundation every man must lay or else all the faith and obedience to be framed thereupon will come to nothing For although their be other articles as depending on this and incident to our Christian profession which ought to be believed also even as all things by God proposed as truths are yet to add them as of themselves necessary to salvation it is to Christ and Christian faith as high derogation as to add circumcision or other observations as necessary to salvation in our Christian obedience And as for our obedience outward we are freed from those many rites ceremonies and observations of the Jewes which God in particular favour of the Jewish Nation had appointed most of them being but shadows of Christ himself and of that great and plain way which by the Gospel should be revealed Nay the very judicial part though instituted by God himself for that government bindes us not as positive laws but as useful presidents upon like occasion that is to say where their and our causes were alike which is not binding as such or such laws formerly made and authorised by God but as parts of the general law of reason For as unto them God was immediate lawgiver and being given before Kings was both God and King so was the litteral observation of them in both respects necessary that is as religious and as civil duties also For both were the same to them because God at that time undertaking the managery of the Civil as well as Ecclesiastical Estate made both one then no otherwise then his remitting both to the Prince makes both of one sort now that is under the same chief relation to duty and obedience namely that of conscience But because of Gods express undertaking herein to them it was do this and live but unto us for whom those directions were not particularly made by the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified As Gods rule to them was outward and litteral so were his promises and threats for performance temporal and respecting this life onely Wherein they failed as needs they must their failing was expiated by sacrifice pointing at a Saviour to come to fulfill these things for them but Christ being now come and having fulfilled all righteousness the observation of the letter is released as to direct divine authority and we Christians standing bound but to the general precept of love and charity are referred for our particular managery and guidance therein to the higher powers whom we are to obey not onely for wrath but also for conscience sake not onely for fear of that present temporal punishment they may infflict as meer men in authority but out of conscience also of preservation of our owne innocence in preservation of our obedience to God in them All which in the Epistle to the Hebrews is plainly signified where God is brought in speaking of the difference of the Jewish and Christian Covenant and obedience according to the many Prophesies to that purpose and saying Not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt that is not like as it was whilst I gave them particular precepts for all their outward duties and did lead them in all their affairs my self as if I should have taken them by the hand But this course God now changeth because they continued not in my Covenant and I regarded them not saith the Lord that is because I found humane frailty so great that these litterall commands could not be kept therefore now I will put my laws into their minde and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people And they shall not teach every man his Neighbour and every man his brother saying know the Lord for all shall know me even from the least to the greatest that is by the love of God shed abroad in our hearts all shall be taught of God and by his Spirit led into all fundamental and saving truth so that by being all taught of God to love one another which is the life and soul of the moral law they shal by keeping that one precept of love keep the whole law But for our direction outward therein we are not come unto a mount that might not be touched and that burned with fire nor unto blackness and darkness and tempests that is to hear them from such a mountain which was made inaccessible through these terrible apparitions that accompanied Gods presence thereon and the sound of a Trumpet and the voice of words which voice they that heard entreated that the word should not be spoken to them any more for they could not endure that which was commanded That is neither are we now to be terrified as by hearing God speaking with his owne voice to our outward ears but we for our outward direction are come unto mount Sion and unto the City of the living God the Heavenly Jurusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels that is to the present Church militant and to such as do therein instruct us as Gods Messengers by their Angelical doctrine And to the general assembly and Church of the first born which are written in Heaven and to God the judge of all and to the spirits of just men made perfect that is unto the Catholick doctrine of the Church assisted by God the judge of all and attested by those many Martyrs which like their Captain are made perfe●t by suffering And then that both these may be made beneficial to us and to our salvation we are come to Jesus the Mediator of the New Covenant and to the blood of sprinkling that speaketh better things then the blood of Abel And these Gospel duties of love and obedience we shall find to be the verry errand also of him that was to conclude the Law and the Prophets and to be Christs forerunner as it is most fully though mystically expressed by the Prophet Malachy and also by Saint Luke in their descriptions of Iohn the Baptist his office and message The first of these duties is couched in these words He shall turn the hearts of the Father to the Children that is he shall prepare them to entertain the loving of one another in as high degree as the Father doth his Child And then secondly for performance of the duty of obedience whereby to make this love to be advantagious it is added by Malachy and the heart of the children to their Fathers the which Saint Luke expounding to mean the disobedient to the wisdome of the just doth plainly shew that the preparation of the Gospel of peace and the way to make ready a people prepared for the Lord was by bringing them into such a state of
so continually nor Vniversally resident as to be able to determine all differences nay they may be conceived included in the injunction too because they exercised their present power in a patriarchal right and way as shall be hereafter noted So that in regard of this injunction to obedience under the notion of Father c. the Christian Church had resemblance with the Jewish also for their laws and commandments being given by God before they were at that heigt as to be fitted to enjoy that statute officer who should as a constant publick Father command amongst them they had likewise their precept for obedience and respect couched under the notion of Father too in the fifth Commandment within the generality thereof including as well such temporary publick officers as should immediately command as that future setled officer of King prophetically designed to be over them in both Churches Now as these Fathers and Masters had and have entire jurisdiction in their families and Kingdomes because these could have but one head in chief so must it be granted that since there can be but one Church that is to say Catholick because Christ can have but one body and that body again but one head that therefore proportionably as any other authority and head shall come between Christ and this body so much will the separation and disunion of him with his body be encreased For to represent Christ in the whole Catholick Church is not so much to represent him as head as to be head in his room And in abatement of this ambitious humour is our Saviours reply to be construed which he made to the Children of Zebedee who would have transcended their Apostolical rank of parity and have been alone sitting above their fellow heads of Churches at the right and left hand of Christ. For if their suit had been but for equality they needed not to ask it nor do I see why any of the rest should have been so angry at it But to answer these it was that our Saviour sayes that those that had highest abilities in close and holy following of him might expect a reward or Crown in heaven for it but they were not after the manner of the Gentiles to exercise domini-over one another here The like are we to conceive of that example of washing his Disciples feet and many other places where he purposely gives directions and precepts against this ayme of Vniversal Government of most of which we shall have occasion to speak in discourses following As for the other Government by an independent consistory of the Clergy it must to all unbiassed judgements appear unreasonable for since as Subjects they are included in the general jurisdiction and authority of each kingdome so for order and peace sake they should by the same authority be subject to their diocessans as they again are to be to the Prince the head of that particular Church Where by the word Church is meant that assembly of Christian Believers which is divided from others by an entire jurisdiction of their owne and do thereupon come to be called this or that Church No● Clergy men onely as if these were the sole members of Christs body and so as being more immediately imployed by authority about Church matters they as more strictly called Church men and spiritual guides might be judged as some do do have the sole and absolute power of the Church and to be the onely watch-men and guide of souls No their mission and power as immediately received from Christ is onely inward unto us that is over Gods kingdome ther● they are perswade men to turn to the Lord with purpose of heart that is so settle in our hearts the foundations of faith and love which being wroucht in us by the holy Spirit they become thereupon so far as they are Gods Ministers to be Ministers of the Spirit not of the Letter being for directing men in their outward duties to have their power from that Church and Christian authority unto which themselves are subject But because that error grew from an in considerate necessity of our imitation of the primitive Church according to its first manner of Government it will be necessary to speak something thereof As God hath power and will have glory alone so it is necessary in the constitution of those things in which he will have his glory more eminently to abide that he have his power making and stateing them to be more remarkably and particularly manifest Thus in the Creation that was the foundation of all things else he acts alone and so much alone that his very word was the deed In that particular designation of a Church for his glory to be more eminent amongst men that the honour of doing might be more his owne he did first make use of the weakest means in humane reason for the foundation and establishment thereof In the first Church amongst the Jews and whilst they were in their weak and wandering condition as their need was greater so his personal protection and guidance of them was more express and apparent And therefore whilst they were in this Theocraty their government was not to be managed by any setled Vniversal authority besides himself or any one who took not in all weighty things immediate direction from him least the eminence of his owne glory should be hereby abated but they were to continue in their wonted obedience to the natural fathers of their families and tribes until such time as being throughly setled in peace and security from their enemies he might make his recess and according to his former promises permit and appoint them a King of their owne Nation Who as standing in his stead and authority now and being entrusted with the future preservation and guidance of that which God had so carefully brought to perfection there was the same reason why he should have remarkable eminence and authority then as why he should not at all have it before The same course we may see taken in the founding of the Christian Church also for they during the time of their owne persecution were as their weakness required in a Theocraty too that is to say guided by the express direction of our Saviour himself given to his Apostles during the time he was on earth and particularly as being conversant with them for the space of fourty dayes and speaking of the things pertaining to the Kingdome of God And in those things wherein his direction was wanting they were to wait for the promise of the Father even the promise of the holy Ghost who should lead them into all truth Thereby came those spiritual Guides and Priests of the primitive Church to be sometime called Ministers and Pastors but commonly Presbyter from which the Dutch word Priester and our English word Priest are derived being a notion in the sence of antiquity importing Seniority jurisdiction and power whereby they coming to be enabled notwithstanding the
to be void also However before the time that the Magistrate was Christian the claim of immediate succession or possession were a good plea in it self and fit to be observed by others to avoide the danger of Schism as it was also then reasonable enough that in consideration the Bishop in each place was also supream head of the same under Christ that thereupon the designation or ordination of persons into offices of power might be at his dispose too yet since even then this his own ordination or choice and appointment into office was done by the people and in the same form whereby they constituted other Magistrates it will thereupon appear but reasonable that as this power to govern was by them then executed not as Evangelists barely but as the present supream Christian heads so should it be afterwards resigned to him that did succeed as supream in causes Ecclesiastical as well as Civil And as their ordination that is personal succession and appointment into these functions of power not their consecrations doth or should depend on his choice or negative voice as it did formerly on the people and Emperours it cannot be now thought reasonable they should claime any outward independent jurisdiction over the liberties or estates of others By due consideration whereof we may know how to distinguish between those several ordintions of power and Office which Saint Paul admonisheth Timothy to make use of For by that which in his first Epistle to him is set down as a gift given by Prophesie with the laying on of the hands of the Presbytery we may understand that more civil election and ordination whereby those Presbyters or Elders the representative authority of that Church had it may be at Saint Pauls recommendation chosen him as their chief guide or instructor even because of that eminent guift of Prophesie or instruction they found in him into which Office we may suppose him afterwards confirmed and also consecrared by Saint Paul which he calls the gift of God which is in thee by the putting on of my hands For those places and cities being but partly Christians as yet whereby Saint Paul and other primitive Christian heads could not have entire jurisdiction it was reasonable even for the better obedience sake of those that did believe to submit the election of their Church guide to that very form they used in the choice of their other Magistrates And as in these last alledged Texts we finde both election and consecration set down in that phrase proper to Priestly administration onely namely laying on of hands so shall we elsewhere finde them both at once comprised under the expression proper to election of other Magistrates signifying holding up of hands called there ordaining The which Presbyterial way of choice continued still in the Church after the time that Emperors and Kings were Christian but not as at first for then these Presbyters did it as Rulers and Representatives of those places some of them being Preachers and some not whereas afterwads when whole Cities became Christians those of the chief of the Clergy of each diocess or jurisdiction took upon them to make these elections as the Chapiter of that place but it was still done or supposed to be according to recommendation or licence of that Prince or Emperour that had supream power over them all And however at first before the people of any place or City were wholly converted so as the jurisdiction could be entire under one Church head they might well be distinguished under the notions of Church and state as each might be under a separate authority yet when and where these power shall be united then and there all election and jurisdiction in the one sort as well as the other must be held dependant on this one supream Church head If we suppose those of the Clergy to be successors to Apostolical power by vertue of ordination received from the hands of one another as by a kinde of confederacy then since the efficacy of ordination is the same to all of them there must be now amongst us as many men in Apostolical power as there are men in orders because ordination having its efficacy as primarily inherent in the Apostles it must follow that all those derived ordinations must be equal one to another even as that f●rst act of ordination from the Apostles received was the same or equal to it self But of those that would set up an Vniversal Pope and of those that would set up a Pope by this means in every Parish I would ask how far they would have their jurisdiction to extend If they say they have right to all the Apostles had then have they right to command and be obeyed in all things for such right had the Apostles as shall be shewed anon If they say they have right to no more them was by then practised and so claime to succeed in the power of excommunication and Church censure so far as to extend it to corporal punishment then they will have much ado to make this all one with a spiritual jurisdiction and censure The truth is that we must look on the Apostles in their sentence of excommunication as punishing men in the highest measure they then could in regard of the engrosment of all coercive and vindicative power by the then Pagan Magistrates they lived under and not as thinking their refraining to keep a Blasphemer or an incestuous person company were a punishment adequate to such offences as by their hainousness and nature did argue already no regard to their society And again this act of excommunication was not then to banish him from them but themselves from him For as they could not force any to be of their society or come to their meetings so as the case stood then could not they force them from coming to any their publike meetings as well as others even when they were to celebrate the communion although they might forbear to eat whilst he was in the company So that now if the Church-men claime but the same measure of power the Apostles did or might then exercise and againe allow the person now excommunicate the like power with the other they will then finde the force and terrour of their excommunication as from themselves alone proceeding and without leave and assistance from the Magistrate to amount to just nothing If they claime all the jurisdiction and power that the Apostles as heads of Churches then had right unto they will have right to all power whatever that is power outward and civil as well as inward and spiritual For of that nature we shall finde many things that were taken into cognisance by those primitive heads and so lyable also to the censure and punishment of the Magistrates and civil laws of the Countrey as was that Incestuous act and would no doubt upon notice have been by them that had present power punished in a more remarkable and sensible degree then could
proceed to Scripture proofs in these things and in farther confirmation of the precedent chapter beginning with some out of the New Testament Saint Paul having declared somewhat to the Ephesians of his knowledge in the mystery of Christ doth it that thereby all men may see what was the fellowship of the mistery that is both the fellowship of Christian precepts amongst themselves and our fellowship or communion with Christ through obedience Which mistery from the beginning of the world hath bin hid in God who created all things by Jesus Christ that is heretofore hid under the legal observations but is now as the unsearchable riches of Christ preached amongst the Gentiles To the intent that now unto the principalities and powers in heavenly places that is unto the higher powers seated and deputed by Christ might be known by the Church that is by the vertue of illumination and authority given to them through Christs headship of the Church the manifold wisdome of God And therefore Saint Pauls prayer was that Christ might dwell in their hearts by faith so that they being rooted and grounded in love they may be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height that is this mistery of the love of Christ which passeth all knowledge Namely that they may know how it should be effected and kept up by those that walk worthy of the vocation wherewith they are called who must do it with all lowliness and meekness with long suffering forbearing one another in love endeavouring to keep the unity of the spirit in the bond of peace that is in obedience to our owne Christian head which is the only bond of peace For by means of the building and foundation laid by these Christian heads Apostles and Prophets as then they were called given for the perfecting of the Saints and for the work of the ministry we come to be united as Citizens of the houshold of God or Catholick Church of which Christ himself is the chief corner stone The body of Christ being in this sort to be framed and built together in this life till we come to be past fear of being tossed to and fro of every winde of doctrine even by being come to the unity of faith through the knowledge of the Son of God or to have attained that measure and stature of fulness which is to be from Christ himself expected Of which Christian submission and obedience having set downe positive precepts in the names of Husbands Parents and Masters he finally exhorts them to be still furnished with the whole armour of God that is faith love and obedience that they may be able to stand against the wils of the Devil That is these his most crafty wiles and insinuations whereby we come to be tempted by him as an Angel of light under religious pretences to acts of obedience even by the Prince of the power of the aire the spirit that worketh in the children of disobedience For saith he we wrestle not against flesh and blood meaning against fleshly rules or Masters for against the works of the flesh we must wrestle but against principalities and powers agaist the rules of the darkness of the world that is against spiritual wickedness in in high or heavenly places Or against the wills of the Devil working in such as under the colour of legal or moral precepts called usually darkness by their owne high power in the Church would countenance disobedience and so overthrow the mystery of Christ by the mysterie of iniquity For these are to know as Saint Paul saith to Tymothy that the end of the commandment is Charity or peaceable submission and obedience for charity sake out of a pure heart and a good conscience and faith unfeigned From which saith he some having swearved are turned aside unto vain jangling that is unprofitable questionings of legalty desiring to be Teachers of the law when they should hearers understanding neither what they say nor whereof they affirm But we know that the law is good if a man use it lawfully that is an obeyer of legal authority whereby to retain innocence and not as judge to become guilty Knowing this that the law is not made for the rsghteous or just man that is to condemn a just or obedient man but for the lawless and disobedient for ungodly and sinners c. Where all wickedness being reckoned after as subsequent and attendant on disobedience and by opposing the disobedient and lawless against the righteous man we must understand obedience and righteousness to be contivertible For as the fruit of the Spirit is love so the fruit thereof again is joy peace long suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance against such there is no law that is law of condemnation And this mistical way of accomplishing our innocence is farther repeated to the Collossians that their hearts might be comforted being knit together in love and unto all riches of the full assurance of understanding to the acknowledgement of the mistery of God and of the father and of Christ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge In which words we may plainly see that our greatest comfort ariseth from love in our hearts and from hence have we the full assuranc of understanding of right obedience to Gods law to the acknowledgement of the mistery of God even the mistical way of justification whereby being inwardly made ready and pliable to perform all acts of benificence we by our conformity and obedience to this one precept should contrary to the doctrine of the darkness of this world be estated truely innocent In which words the general name of God is first attributed to the holy Ghost for that he is the more proper efficient in the understanding of this mistery as also of the acknowledgement of the Father and of Christ. so that in participation of the Godhead by this mistery we are made comprehensive of all the reall treasures of wisdome and knowledge in being thereby guided through Gods light and not our own Which as the Apostle spake least any should beguile them with entising words that is Religious pretence which is most enticing of any so he joyes in beholding the fruit of this inward love their order and stedfastness of their faith in Christ that is their peace and agreement in the faith And thereupon proceeds to admonish them least any man spoil them through Philolosophy and vain deceit meaning through the Greekish popular Philosophy of their Country teaching righteousness to be attained by their many precepts of morall justice or vain legall deceit of the Iews amongst them after the Tradition of men after the Rudiments of the world or worldly wisdome and not after Christ in the simplicity of this Gospell precept of obedience For we cannot offend God whilst we are obedient to him
because in him that is in Christ dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Where the word bodily is added to express our reall participation of his corporeall fulness that are to be rooted and built up in him according as in the following words is expressed And yee are compleat in him which is the head of all Principality and Power That is in obeying him as King of Kings by our submission to the Prince his Deputy we are compleat in him as therby obeying his Kingship and Christship And so also being grounded in love in him we are circumcised with the Circumcision made without hands in putting of the body of the sins of the flesh or the observation of the Law that causeth sin by the circumcision of Christ buried with him in baptism That is following him by our patience in those afflictions which love to our neighbours and obedience to our Superiours must produce we shall then like as the Captain of our salvation was made perfect by suffering and was thereupon exalted so we proving our selves able to endure our shares of that baptism which he was baptized with shall rise with him through the faith of the operation of God who hath raised him from the dead For we being dead in sins and the uncircumcision of the flesh That is kept under the bondage of sin through the weakness of our flesh hath he quickned together with him having forgiven us all trespasses blotting out the hand writing of Ordinances that was against us which was contrary to us that is to us Christians and took it out of the way nailing it to his Cross That is made legall righteousness to be perfected only by taking up our Cross and following him by patience and humility in obedience For having by his Cross spoyled principalities and powers that is the principality and power of death and the Law that caused it he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in it Whereupon the admonition follows Let no Man therefore judge you in Meat or in drink or in respect of a holy day or of the new Moon or of the Sabbath dayes That is be not subject to Ordinances now as of immediate Divine precept although men should go about to prove them as expresly Divine as these for these were shadows of things to come but the body is of Christ that is they in their particular tendencies to moral perfection and obedience did foreshew that the body and drift of them was to be abreviated and compleated by us in Christ by putting on of charity which is the bond of perfectness He therfore proceeds let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worship of Angels that is let no private man bereave you of heaven the reward of obedience to Christ by making you believe that your own voluntary humility to any such Minister or Messenger that like Angels would appear most divinely authorised can excuse you of default in not giving your rightfull obedience to him that holds his power by direct office from Christ Intruding into those things which he hath not seen that is proceeding by his presumptuous and self-willed refusall of Christs authority in the flesh under colour of spiritually serving him being vainly puft up by his fleshly minde and not holding of the head or right chief from which all the body or the Church by joints and bands that is by just degrees of subordination having nourishment ministred and knit together or being nourished by her own Angels and Ministers in the bond of obedience united increaseth with the increase of God that is receives Gods blessing following Divine order and subordination under Christ. Wherefore if we be dead with Christ from the Rudiments of the world that is if we confess the sting of death and the Law nailed to his Cross and worldly wisdome to be abolished in our Christian perfection Why as though living in the world are we subject to Ordinances meaning to such as hold not of the head of that Church whereof we are Members For to humane Ordinances that doe hold of the King as supreme under Christ we must for the Lords sake be subject when as those things which by any else should be put upon us as under a Religious tye and precept of touch not taste not handle not are all to perish with the using after the commandments and doctrines of men That is the Precepts in these things are not otherwise of Divine authority then as commanded by that supreme Officer and Head in each particular Church substituted by Christ the Churches univers●ll Head Having indeed a shew of Wil-worship and humility and neglecting of the body not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh That is they have but a shew of spirituall sanctity or form of godliness as though they did not intend the honouring of the flesh and their own selves in this their seeming obedience and worship of Christ after their own wils and devisings when yet it was their only aim For this worshipping or obeying Christ or Christian Authority according to the wayes and forms of our own wisdomes only is not truly worshipping or obeying him or them but our selves whom we Idolize in his and his Ministers stead For whilst we take the interpretation of the Morall Law on our own scores and will as by and from our selves presume to hear God himself only therein as once generally heard from Mount Sinai We sacrifice to our own nets and snares and do forfeit that glorious liberty of the Gospel whose mysterie is to fulfill the Law in this one word Thou shalt love thy Neighbour as thy self and are again entred into bondage For so St Paul interprets our literall observation of the morall Law as given by Moses from Mount Sinai even as answering to that Jerusalem which is in bondage with her children and not to that freedome which is to be restored unto us by the head of that Ierusalem which is above whom we are now to hear in all things in Moses stead as hath been noted from that prophesie set down by Moses himself concerning it The Lord God shall raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee of thy Brethren like unto me unto him shall ye hearken according to all that thou desirest of the Lord thy God in Horeb saying Let me not hear again the voice of the Lord my God neither let me see this great fire any more least I die By which words we may plainly understand that all Command and Precepts are to be by us obeyed as Gospel-precepts under the Kingship of Christ and not as formerly delivered by Moses from God the Father and that without exception of the Decalogue it self The which fault St Paul complains of in his giddy and disobedient Corinthians being jealous over them with a godly jealousie least by listening to others they