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A53701 A guide to church-fellowship and order according to the gospel-institution wherein these following particulars are distinctly handled, I. The necessity of believers to joyn themselves in church-order, II. The subject matter of the church, III. The continuation of a church-state, and of the administration of evangelical ordinances of worship, briefly vindicated, IV. What sort of churches the disciples of Christ may and ought to joyn themselves unto as unto entire communion / by ... John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1692 (1692) Wing O760; ESTC R38177 32,962 84

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them are 1. That constant Difference be put between the Good and the Bad in all Church Administrations 2. That Persons openly or fl●gitiously wicked be not admitted into the Society of the Church or a participation of its Priviledges 3. That Holiness Love and Usefulness be openly avowed as the Design and interest of the Church But they are all so comprized in the General Head of Discipline as that I shall not in particular insist upon them From what hath been thus declared it will appear on the other hand what Church it is that a Disciple of Christ who takes due care of his own Edification and Salvation ought in duty to joyn himself unto in compleat Communion To ans●er this Enquiry is the end of all those Discourses and Controversies which have been about the Notes of the true Church I shall briefly determine concerning it according to the Principles before Evinc●d 1. IT must be such a Church as wherein all the Fundamental Truths of the Gospel are believed owned and professed without Controversie and those not born withal by whom they are denied or opposed Without this a Church is not the Ground and Pillar of Truth it doth not hold the Head it is not built on the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Neither is it sufficient that those things are generally professed or not denied A Church that is filled with wranglings and contentions about fundamental or important Truths of the Gospel is not of choice to be joyned unto For these things subvert the Souls of Men and greatly impede their Edification And although both among distinct Churches and among the Members of the same Church mutual Forbearance be to be exercised with respect unto a variety in Apprehensions in some Doctrines of lesser Moment Yet the Incursion that hath been made into sundry Protestant Churches in the last and present Age of Novel Doctrines and Opinions with Differences Divisions and endless Disputes which have ensued thereon have rendered it very difficult to determine how to engage in compleat Communion with them For I do not judge that any man is or can be obliged unto constant total Communion with any Church or to give up himself absolutely unto the conduct thereof wherein there are incurable dissensions about important Doctrines of the Gospel And if any Church shall publickly avow countenance or approve of Doctrines contrary unto those which were the Foundation of its first Communion the Members of it are at Liberty to refrain the Communion of it and to provide otherwise for their own Edification 2. IT must be such a Church as wherein the Divine Worship Instituted or approved by Christ himself is diligently observed without any Addition made thereunto In the Observation of this Worship as unto all external occasional Incidencies and Circumstances of the Acts wherein it doth consist it is left unto the Prudence of the Church it self according to the Light of Nature and general Rules of Scripture and it must be so unless we shall suppose that the Lord Jesus Christ by making men his Disciples doth unmake them from being rational Crea●ures or refuseth the Exercise of the rational Faculties of our Souls in his service But this is so remote from Truth that on the contrary he gives them an improvement for this very end that we may know how to deport our selves aright in the Observance of his Commands as unto the outward discharge of them in his Worship and the Circumstances of it And this he doth by that Gift of Spiritual Wisdom whe●eof we shall treat afterwards But if Men if Churches will make Additions in or unto the Rites of religious Worship unto what is appointed by Christ himself and require their Observance in their Communion on the force and efficacy of their being so by them appointed no Disciple of Christ is or can be obliged by vertue of any Divine Institution or Command to joyn in total absolute Communion with any such Church He may be induced on various considerations to judge that something of that Nature at some season may not be evil and sinful unto him which therefore he will bear with or comply withal yet he is not he cannot be obliged by vertue of any Divine Rule or Command to joyn himself with or continue in the Communion of such a Church If any shall suppose that hereby too much Liberty is granted unto Believers in the choice of their Communion and shall thereon make severe Declamations about the Inconveniences and Evils which will ensue I desire they would remember the Principle I proceed upon which is that Churches are not such sacred Machines as some suppose erected and acted for the outward Interest and Advantages of any sort of men but only means of the Edification of Believers which they are bound to make use of in Obedience unto the Commands of Christ and no otherwise Whereas therefore the Disciples of Christ have not only a Divine warranty justifying them in the doing of it but an express command making it their indispensible Duty to joyn in the Celeb●ation of all that Religious Worship which the Lord Christ the only Law giver of the Church and who was faithful both in and over the House of God as the Son ●ath Instituted and commanded but have no such warranty or command for any thing else it is their Duty to stand fast in the Liberty wherewith Christ hath made them free And if by the same ●reath in the same Rule Law or Canon they are commanded and obliged to observe in the Worship of God what the Lord Christ hath appointed and what he hath not appointed both on the same Grounds namely the Authority of the Church and on the s●●e Penalties of their Omission no man can be divinely obliged to embrace the Communion of any Church on such Terms 3. IT is required that the Ministry of a Church so to be joyned with is not defective in any of those things which according to the Rule of the Gospel are fundamental thereunto What these are hath been declared And because Edification which is the end of Church Communion doth so eminently depend on the Ministry of the Church there is not any thing which we ought to have a more diligent consideration of in the joyning of our selves unto any such Communion And where the Ministry of any Church be the Church of what sort or size it will is incurably Ignorant or Negligent or thro' a defect in Gifts Grace or conscientious attendance unto their Duty is insufficient unto the due Edification of the Souls of them that believe no man can account himself obliged unto the Communion of the Church but he that can be satisfied with a Shadow and the Names of things for the Substance and Reality of them If therefore it be granted as I think it is that Edification is the principal End of all Church Communion it is not intelligible how a Man should be obliged unto that Communion and that alone wherein due Edification
A GUIDE TO Church-Fellowship and Order According to the Gospel-Institution WHEREIN These following Particulars are distinctly handled I. The Necessity of Believers to joyn themselves in Church-Order II. The Subject Matter of the Church III. The Continuation of a Church-state and of the Administration of Evangelical Ordinances of Worship briefly vindicated IV. What sort of Churches the Disciples of Christ may and ought to joyn themselves unto as unto Entire Communion By the Late Pious and Learned Minister of the Gospel John Owen D. D. John 5.39 Search the Scriptures c. London Printed for William Marshall at the Bible in Newgate-street 1692. A GUIDE TO Church-Fellowship and Order According to the Gospel-Institution CHAP. I. The Necessity of Believers to joyn themselves in Church-Order IT is the Duty of every Believer of every Disciple of Christ to joyn himself for the due and orderly observation and performance of the Comm●nds of Christ unto the Glory of God and their own Edification Ma●th 28.18 19 20. This in general is gr●nted by all sorts and Parties of men the grant of it is the ground whereon they stand in the management of their mutual fe●ds in Religion pleading that men ought to be of or joyn themselves unto this or that Church still supposing t●at it is th●ir Duty to be of one or another Yea it is granted also that Persons ought to chuse what Churches they will joyn themselves unto wherein they may have the best advan●age unto their Edification and Salvation They are to chuse to joyn themselves unto that Church which is in all things most according to the mind of God This it is supposed is the Liberty and Duty of every Man for if it be not so it is the foolishest thing in the World for any to attempt to get others from one Church unto another which is almost the whole business of Religion that some think themselves concerned to attend unto But yet notwithstanding these Concessions when things come to the ●ri●l in particular there is very little g●anted in complyance with the Assertion laid down For besides that it is not a Church of Divine Institution that is intended in these Concessions when it comes unto the issue where a Man is born and in what Church he is Baptized in his Infancy there all choice is prevented and in the Communion of that Church he is to abide on the penalties of being esteemed and dealt with as a Schismatick In what National Church any person is baptized in that National Church he is to continue or answer the contrary at his peril And in the Precincts of what Parish his Habitation falls to be in that particular Parish Church is he bound to Communicate in all Ordinances of Worship I say in the judgment of many whatever is pretended of mens j●yning themselves unto the truest and purest Churches there is no Liberty of Judgment or Practice in either of these things left unto any of the Disciples of Christ Wherefore the Liberty and Duty proposed being the Foundation of all orderly Evangelical Profession and that wherein the Consciences of Believers are greatly concerned I shall lay down one Proposition wherein 't is asserted in the sence I intend and then fully confirm it The Proposition it self is this It is the duty of every one who professeth Faith in Christ Jesus and takes due care of his own Eternal Salvation voluntarily and by his own choice to joyn himself unto some particular Congregation of Christs Institution for his own Spiritual Edification and the right discharge of his Commands 1. THIS Duty is prescribed 1. unto them only who profess Faith in Christ Jesus who own themselves to be his Disciples that call Jesus Lord. For this is the method of the Gospel that first men by the Preaching of it be made Disciples or be brought unto Faith in Christ Jesus and then be taught to do and observe whatever he commands Matth. 28.18 19 20. first to believe and then to be added unto the Church Act. 2.41 42 46 47. Men must first joyn themselves unto the Lord or give up themselves unto him before they can give up themselves unto the Church according to the mind of Christ 2 Cor. 8.5 We are not therefore concerned at present as unto them who either not at all profess Faith in Christ Jesus or else through ignorance of the Fundamental Principles of Religion and wickedness of Life do d●stroy or utterly render useless that Profession We do not say it is the duty of such persons that is their immediate duty in the state wherein they are to joyn themselves unto any Church Nay it is the duty of every Church to refuse them their Communion whilst they abide in that state There are other duties to be in the first place pressed on them whereby they may be made meet for this So in the Primitive times although in the extraordinary Conversions unto Christianity that were made among the Jews who before belonged unto Gods Covenant they were all immediately added unto the Church yet afterwards in the ordinary way of the Conversion of men the Churches did not immediately admit them into compleat Communion but kept them as Catechumeners for the e●crease of their knowledge and trial of their profession until they were judged meet to be joyned unto the Church And they are not to blame who receive not such into compleat Communion with them unto whom it is not a present duty to desire that Communion Yea the admission of such persons into Church-Societies much more the compelling of them to be Members of this or that Church almost wheth●r they will or no is contrary to the rule of the Word the example of the Primitive Church●s and a great expedient to harden men in their sins We do therefore avow that we cannot admit any into our Church Societies as to compleat Membership and actual Interest in the priviledges of the Church who do not by a profession of Faith in and obedience unto Jesus Christ no way contradicted by sins of life manifest themselves to be such as whose duty it is to joyn themselves unto any Church Neither do we injure any baptized Persons hereby or oppose any of their Right unto and Interest in the Church but only as they did universally in the Primitive Churches after the death of the Apostles we direct them into that way and method wherein they may be received unto the glory of Christ and their own edification And we do therefore affirm that we will never deny that Communion unto any person high or low rich or poor old or young male or female whose duty it is to desire it 2. IT is added in the description of the Subject That it is such an one who takes due care of his own Salvation Many there are who profess themselves to be Christians who it may be hear the word willingly and do many things gladly yet do not esteem themselves obliged unto a diligent enquiry into and a precise
observation of all the commands of Christ. But it is such whom we intend who constantly fix their minds on the enjoyment of God as their chiefest good and utmost end who thereon duely consider the means of attaining it and apply themselves thereunto And it is to be feared that the number of such persons will not be found to be very great in the world which is sufficient to take off the reproach from some particular Congregations of the smalness of their number Such they ever were and such is it foretold that they should be Number was never yet esteemed a note of the true Church by any but those whose worldly interest it is that it should so be yet at present absolutely in these Nati●ns the number of such persons is not small 3. Of these persons it is said that it is their duty so to dispose of themselves It is not that which they may do as a convenience or an advantage not that which others may do for them but which they must do for themselves in a way of duty It is an Obediential Act unto the commands of Christ whereunto is required subjection of Conscience unto his Authority Faith in his promises as also a respect unto an appeara●ce before his Judgment-Throne at the last day The way of the Church of Rome to compel men into their Communion and keep them in it by fire and fagot or any other means of external force derives more from the Alcoran than the Gospel Neither doth ir answer the mind of Christ in the Institution End and Order of Church-Societies that men should become Members of them partly by that which is no way in their own power and partly by what their wills are regulated in by the Laws of men For it is as was said commonly esteemed that men being born and baptized in such a Nation are t●ereby made members of the Church of that Nation and by living within such Parochial Precincts as the Law of the Land hath Arbitrarily established are members of this or that particular Congregation At least they are accounted so far to belong unto these Churches as to render them liable unto all outward punishments that shall be thought meet to be inflicted on them who comply not with them So far as these perswasions and actings according unto them do prevail so far are they destructive of the principal foundation of the external Being and Order of the Church But that mens joyning themselves in or unto any Church Society is or ought to be a voluntary act or an act of free choice in mere obedience unto the Authority and commands of Christ is so sacred a truth so evident in the Scripture so necessary from its subject matter so testifyed unto by the practice of all the first Churches as that it despiseth all opposition And I know not how any can reconcile the common practice of giving men the reputation or reality of being Members of or belonging unto this or that Church as unto total Communion who desire or chuse no such thing unto this acknowledged principle 5. THERE is a double jo●ning unto the Church 1. That which is as unto total Communion in all the duties and priviledges of the Church which is that whereof we treat 2. An adherence unto the Church as unto the means of Instruction and Edification to be attained thereby So persons may adhere unto any Church who yet are not meet or free on some present consideration to confederate with it as unto total Communion see Act. 5.13 14. And of this sort in a peculiar manner are the baptized Children of the members of the Church For although they are not capable of performing Church duties or enjoying Church-priviledges in their tender years nor can have a right unto total Communion before the testification of their own voluntary corsent thereunto and choice thereof yet are they in a peculiar manner under the care and inspection of the Church so far as the outward administration of the Covenant in all the means of it is committed thereunto and their duty it is according to their capacity to attend unto the Ministry of that Church whereunto they do belong 6. THE Proposition respects a visible professing Church And I intend such a Church in general as avoweth Authority from Christ 1. For the Min●sterial Preaching of the Word 2. Administration of the Sacraments 3. For the Exercise of Evangelical Discipline and 4. To give a publick testimony against the Devil and the World not contradicting their profession with any corrupt Principles or Practices inconsistent with it What is required in particular that any of them may be meet to be joyned unto such a Church we shall afterwards enquire 7. IT is generally said that out of the Church there is no Salvation and the truth hereof is testified unto in the Scriptures Act. 2.47 1 Pet. 3.20 21. Matth. 16.18 Ephes. 5.26 27. Joh. 10.16 8. THIS is true both positively and negatively of the Catholick Church invisible of the Elect All that are of it shall be saved and none shall be saved but those that belong unto it Ephes. 5.25 26 27. Of the Catholick visible professing Church negatively that no Adult person can be saved that doth not belong unto this Church Rom. 10.10 9. THIS Position of Truth is abused by Interest and Pride an enclosure of it being made by them who of all Christians in the World can lay the least and weakest claim unto it namely the Church of Rome For they are so far from being that Catholick Church out of which there is no Salvation and wherein none can perish like the Ark of Noah that it requires the highest charity to reckon them unto that visible professing Church whereof the greatest part may perish and do so undoubtedly 10. Our enquiry is what truth there is in this Assertion with respect unto these particular Churches or Societies for the celebration of Gospel-worship and Discipline whereof we treat And I say 1. No Church of what den●mination soever can lay a claim unto this Priviledge as belonging unto it self alone This wa● the antient Donatism They confined Salvation unto the Churc●es of their way alone And after many false charges of it on others it begins really to be renewed in our d●ys For some dispute that Salvation is confined unto that Church alone wherein there is a Succession of Diocesan Bishops which is the height of Donatism The Judgments and Determinations made concerning the Eternal Salvation or Damnation of Men by the measures of some differences among Christians about Churches their State and Order are absurd foolish and impious and for the most part used by them who sufficiently preclaim that they know neither what it is to be saved nor do use any diligence about the necessary means of it Salvation depends absolutely on no particular Church-state in the world he knows not the Gospel who can really think it doth Persons of Believers are not for the Church but the Church is
judge of its evidences and fruits in their external Demonstration as unto a participation of the outward Privileges of a Regenerate state and no farther And we shall hereon briefly declare what belongs unto the forming of a right judgment herein and who are to be esteemed fit Members of any Gospel Church State or have a right so to be 1. SUCH as from whom we are obliged to with-draw or with-hold Communion can be no part of the matter constituent of a Church or are not meer Members for the first constitution of it But such are all Habitual Sinners those who having prevalent habits and Inclinations unto Sins of any kind unmortified do walk according unto them Such are prophane Swearers Drunkards Fornicators Covetous Oppressors and the like who shall not inherit the Kingdom of God 1 Cor. 6.9 10.11 Phil. 3.18 19. 2 Thess. 3.6 2 Tim. 3.5 as a man living and dying in any known Sin that is habitually without Repentance cannot be saved so a man known to live in Sin cannot regularly be received into any Church To compose Churches of Habitual Sinners and that either as unto Sins of Commission or Sins of Omission is not to erect Temples to Christ but Chapels unto the Devil 2. SUCH as being in the fellowship of the Church are to be admonished of any scandalous Sin which if they repent not of they are to be cast out of the Church are not meer Members for the Original Constitution of a Church This is the state of them who abide Obstinate in any known Sin whereby they have given Offence unto others without a professed Repentance thereof although they have not lived in it habitually 3. THEY are to be such as visibly answer the Description given of Gospel Churches in the Scripture so as the Titles assigned therein unto the Members of such Churches may on good grounds be appropriated unto them To comp●●● Churches of such Persons as do not visibly answer the character given of what they were of old and what they were always to be by virtue of the Law of Christ o● Gospel-contitution is not Church Edification but Destruction And those who look on the things spoken of all Church Members of old as that they were Saints by calling lively stones in the house of God justified and sanctified separate from the World c. as those which were in them and did indeed belong unto them but even deride the necessity of the same things in present Church Members or the Application of them unto those who are so are themselves no small part of that woful Degeneracy which Christian Religion is fallen under Let it then be considered what is spoken of the Church of the Jews in their Dedication unto God as unto their Typical H●lines● with the Application of it unto Christian Churches in real Holiness 1 Pet. 2.5.9 with the Description given of them constantly in the Scripture as Faithful Holy Believing as the House of God as his Temple wherein he dwells by his Spirit as the Body of Christ united and comp●cted by the communication of the Spirit unto them as also what is said concerning their ways walkings and duties and it will be uncontrolably evident of what sort our Church Members ought to be nor are those of any other sort able to discharge the Duties which are incumbent on all Church-members nor to use the Privileges they are intrusted withal Wherefore I say ●o suppose Churches regularly to consist of such persons for the greater part of them as no way answer the Description given of Church-members in their Original Institution nor cap●ble to discharge the Duties prescribed unto them but giving evidence of Habits and Actions inconsistent therewithal is not only to disturb all Church Order but utterly to overthrow the Ends and Being of Churches Nor is there any thing ●ore scandalous unto Christian Religio● than what Bellarmine affirms to be the judgment of the Papists in opposition unto all others namely that no internal Vertue or Grace is required unto the Constitution of a Church in its Members Lib. 3. d● Eccles. cap 2. 4. THEY must be such as do make an open profession of the subjection of their Souls and Consciences unto the Authority of Christ in the Gospel and their readiness to yield Obedience unto all his Commands This I suppose will not be denied for not only doth the Scripture make this Profession necessary unto the participation of any benefit or privilege of the Gospel but the nature of the things themselves requires indispensably that so it should be For nothing can be more unreasonable than that men should be taken into the privileges attending Obedience unto the Laws and Commands of Christ without avowing or professing that Obedience Wherefore our Enquiry is only what is required unto such a Profession as may render men meet to be Members of a Church and give them a Right thereunto For to suppose such a confession of Christian Religion to be compliant with the Gospel which is made by many who openly live in Sin being disobedient and unto every good work reprobate is to renounce the Gospel it self Christ is not the High Priest of such a Profession I shall therefore declare briefly what is necessary unto this Profession that all may know what it is which is required unto the entrance of any into our Churches wherein our Practice hath been sufficiently traduced 1. THERE is required unto it a competent knowledge of Doctrines and Mystery of the Gospel especially concerning the Person and Offices of Christ. The Confession hereof was the ground whereon he granted the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven or all Church Power unto Believers Matth 16.17 18 19. The first Instruction which he gave unto his Apostles was That they should teach men by the preaching of the Gospel in the knowledge of the Truth revealed by him The knowledge required in the Members of the Judaical Church that they might be translated into the Christian was principally if not solely that of his Person and the acknowledgment of him to be the true Messiah the Son of God For as on their unbelief thereof their Eternal ruine did depend as he told them if you believe not that I am he you shall die in your sins so the confession of him was sufficient on their part unto their Admission into the Gospel Church State And the Reasons of it are apparent With others an Instruction in all the Mysteries of Religion especially in those that are fundamental is necessary unto the Profession we enquire after So Justin Martyr tells us what pains they took in those Primitive Times to instruct those in the Mysteries of Religion who upon a general Conviction of its Truth were willing to adhere unto the Profession of it And what was their Judgment herein is sufficiently known from the keeping a multitude in the state of Catecumens before they would admit them into the Fellowship of the Church They are not therefore
the Church but what is raised and created by Ways and Rules of mens appointment or if there be a Temporary disposal of Persons into a discharge of that Office without a solemn Call Choice Ordination and Separation unto the Office it self and its work the Law of Christ is violated and the Order of the Church disturbed in its Foundation 2. That those who are called unto the Office of the Ministry be duly qualified by their Endowment with Spiritual Gifts for the discharge of their Duty is Fundamental unto the Ministry that the Lord Jesus Christ doth still continue his Dispensation of Spiritual Gifts unto Men to fit and enable them unto the Office and work of the Ministry that if he doth not do so or should at any time cease so to do the whole Office of the Ministry must cease and the Being of the Church with it that it is altogether useless for any Churches or Persons to erect an Image of the Gospel Ministry by outward Rites and Ceremonies without the enlivening form of these Spiritual Gifts I have proved sufficiently in my Discourse of Spiritual Gifts and their c●ntinuance in the Church Wherefore a Communication of Spiritual Gifts peculiarly enabling Men unto the Work of the Ministry antecedent unto their solemn Separation unto the Office in some good Measure is absolutely necessary unto the due continuance of the Office and its Work See Ephes. 4.7 11 12 13 14 15. To suppose that the Lord Christ doth call and appoint Men unto a certain Office and Work in his Church secluding all others from any Interest in the one or other and yet not endow them with peculiar Gifts and Abilities for the discharge of that Office a●d Work is to ascribe that unto him which is every way unbecoming his Wisdom and Grace with his Love unto the Church But when Men look on all Church Order as a lifeless Machine to be acted moved and disposed by External Rules Laws Canons and Orders without respect unto the Actings of the Spirit of Christ going before in the Rule of his Word to enliven every part of it the true Disciples of Christ will receive no advantage thereby 3. It is of the same Importance that Persons so called do take heed unto their Ministry that they fulfil it that they give themselves unto the VVord and Prayer that they labour continually in the VVord and Doctrine and all those other Duties which in the Scripture are prescribed unto them and this not only as unto the Matter of them but as unto the Manner of their performance with Zeal Love Compassion and Diligence Where there is a great Defect in any of these things on what Pretence soever it be where Men esteem themselves exempted from this Work or not obliged unto it when they suppose that they may discharge their Office at a cheaper rate and with less trouble as unto their present Interest by such ways as I shall not here express No Man is no Man can be obliged to confine his Church Communion unto such a Ministry 4. It is required that they be Examples unto the Flock in the Expression of the Nature and Power of the Doctrine which they Preach in their Conversation especially in Zeal Humility Self-denial and readiness for the Cross. Where these things are not there is such a defect in the Fundamentals of Church Practice us unto the Ministry of it that no Man who takes care of his own Edification can joyn himself unto a Church labouring under it For Ministers and Churches are nothing but instituted means of the Conversion of Sinners and the Edification of Believers And when any of them through their own default cease so to be there is no obligation unto any man to joyn or continue in their Communion nor do they contract any Guilt in a peaceable departure from them but discharge their Duty That this be done peaceably without strife or contention without judging of others as unto their Interest in Christ and Eternal Salvation the Law of Moral Obedience doth require That it be done with Love and Compassion and Prayer towards and for them who are left is the peculiar Direction of that moral Duty by the Gospel Such a Practice at present would fall under severe charges and accusations as also brutish Penalties in some places But when all Church Craft shall be defeated and the uses that are made of its imaginary Authority be discarded there will be little occasion of this Practise and none at all of Offence Again There are Things Fundamental unto Church Practise and Order in the Church it self which where they are neglected no man ought of choice to joyn himself unto that Church seeing he cannot do it without the Prejudice of his Edification the furtherance whereof he ought to design in that Duty And these are 1. That the Discipline of Christ be duly exercised in it according unto his mind and by the Rules of his Prescription There never was any Sect Order or Society of men in the world designed for the Preservation and Promotion of Vertue and things Praise-worthy but they had Rules of Discipline proper unto the Ends of their Design to be observed in and by all that belong unto them VVhere the Erection of such Societies is continued in the VVorld as it is much in the Papacy both their Constitution and their Conversation depend on the especial Rules of Discipline which they have framed unto themselves And this is done by them in great Variety for being ignorant of the Discipline of the Gospel and so esteeming it insufficient unto their Design they have made no end of Coyning Rules unto themselves To suppose that our Lord Jesus Christ who in this Church-state according unto his infinite VVisdom hath erected the most perfect Society for the most perfect Ends of Religion of Obedience towards God of Love and Usefulness among our selves hath not appointed a Discipline and given Rules concerning its Administration for the Preservation of that Society and the attaining of those Ends is highly injurous unto his Honour and Glory VVhere therefore there is a Church or any Society that pretends so to be wherein there is an utter Neglect of this Discipline of Christ or the establishment of another not administred by the Laws and Rules that he prescribed no Disciple of Christ can be obliged to joyn unto or to continue in the Total sole Communion of such a Church And whereas there are two Parts of this Discipline of Christ That which is Private among the Members of the Church for the Exercise and Preservation of Love and that which is Publick in and by the Authority of the Rulers of the Church for the Preservation of Purity and Order a Neglect in either of them doth much impeach the Fundamental Constitution of a Church as unto its Practise 2. There are sundry other things which belong unto this Discipline in General which are of great consideration in the Discharge of the Duty we enquire into Among
cannot be obtained Wherefore a Ministry e●abled by Spiritual Gifts and ingaged by sense of Duty to labour constantly in the use of all means appointed by Christ for the Edification of the Church or increase of his Mystical Body is required in such a Church as a Believer may conscientiously joyn himself unto And where it is otherwise let Men cry out Schism and Faction whilst they please Jesus Christ will acquit his Disciples in the Exercise of their Liberty and accept them in the Discharge of their Duty If it be said that if all Men be thus allowed to judge of what is best for their own Edification and to act according unto the Judgment which they make they will be continually pa●ting from on Church unto another untill all things are filled with disturbance and Confusion I say 1. That the contrary Assertion namely that Men are not allowed to judge what is meer and best for their own Edification or not to act according to the Judgment they make herein may possible keep ●p some Churches but is the ready way to destroy all Religion 2. That many of those by whom this Liberty is denyed unto professing C●ristians yet do indeed take it for grant●d that they have such a Liberty and that it is their Duty to make use of it For what are all the Contests between the Church of Rome and the Church of England so far as Christians that are not Church-men are concerned in them Is it ●ot in whether of these Churches Edification may be best obtained If this be not the Ball between us I know not what is Now herein do all the Writers and Preachers of both Parties give their Reasons and Arguments unto the People w●y Edification is better to be had in the one Church than in the other And do they not require of them to form a Judgment upon those Reasons and Arguments and to act accordingly if they do not they do but make a Fourish and act a Part like Players on a stage without any determinate design 3. All Christians actually do so they do judge for themselves unless they are brutish they do Act according unto that Judgment unless they are hardened in Sin and therefore who do not so are not to be esteemed Disciples of Christ. To suppose that in all things of Spiritua● and Eternal Concernment that men are not determined and acted every one by his own Judgment is an Imagination of men who think but little of what they are or do or say or write Even those who shut their Eyes against the Light and follow in the H●rd resolving not to enquire into any of these things do it because they judge it is best for them so to do 4. It is commonly acknowledged by Protestants that private Christians have a Judgment of Discretion in things of Religion The Term was invented to grant them some Liberty of Judgment in Opposition unto the blind Obedience required by the Church of Rome but withal to put a restraint upon it and a distinction of some Superiour Judgment it may be in the Church or o●hers But if by Discretion they mean the best of Mens Vnderstanding Knowledge Wisdom and Prudence in and about the things wherein it is exercised I should be glad to be informed what other Judgment than this of Discretion in and ●bout the things of Religion this or that or any Church in the World can have or exercise But to allow Men a Judgment of Discretion and not to grant it their Duty to act acconding unto that Judgment is to oblige them to be Fools and to act not discreetly at least not according unto their own Discretion 5. The same is to be spoken of Gospel Discipline without which neither can the Duties of Church Societies be observed nor the ends of them attained The neglect the loss the abuse hereof is that which hath ruined the Glory of Christian Religion in the World and brought the whole Profession of it into Confusion Hereon have the servency and sincerity of true Evangelical mutual Love been abated yea utterly lost For that Love which Jesus Christ requireth among his Disciples is such as never was in the World before amongst men nor can be in the World but on the Principles of the Gospel and Faith therein Therefore it is called his New Commandement The Continuation of it amongst the Generality of Christians is but vainly pretended little or nothing of the Reality of it in its due Exercise is found And this hath ensued on the Neglect of Evangelical Discipline in Churches or the turning of it into a Worldly Domination For one principal End of it is the Preservation Guidance and acting of this Love That mutual Watch over one another that ought to be in all the Members of the Church the Principal Evidence and Fruit of Love without Dissimulation is also lost hereby Most Men are rather ready to say in the Spirit and Words of Cain Am I my Brothers Keeper than to attend unto the Command of the Apostles Exhort one another daily least any be hardened through the Deceitfulness of Sin or comply with the Command of our Saviour if thy Brother offend thee tell him of it between him and thee By this means likewise is the Purity of Communion lost and those received principal Members of Churches who by all the Rules of Primitive Discipline ought to be cast out of them Wherefore this also is to be considered in the Choice we are to make of what Churches we will joyn our selves unto as unto constant compleat Communion and in whose Communion we will abide For these things are matters of Choice and consist in Voluntary free Acts of Obedience With those unto whom they are not so who would on the one hand have them to be things that Men may be compelled unto and ought so to be or on the other that follow no other Guidance in them but outward Circumstances fr●m the Times and Places where they are born and inhabit I will have no Contest It follows from hence also That Where there are many Churches wherein these things are found whereon we may lawfully and ought in Duty to joyn with some of them in particular every one is obliged to joyn himself unto such a Church as whose Principles and Practises are most suited unto his Edification ADVERTISEMENT FOR your further carrying on of this Work there is another Book Doctor Owen liv'd to finish and left it as his last Legacy to the Church Intituled The true Nature of a Gospel Church and its Government wherein these following particulars are distinctly handled I. The Subject Matter of the Church II. Formal Cause of a particular Church III. Of the Polity Rule or Discipline of the Church in General IV. The Officers of the Church V. The Duty of Pastors of Churches VI. The Office of Teachers in the Church VII Of the Rule of the Church or of Ruling Elders VIII The Nature of the Polity or Rule with the Duty
end It is true the whole Nation in their civil relation and subordination according to Law is the Kingdom of England But the representation of the Kingly power and rule in it is in the Courts of all sorts wherein the Kingly power is acted openly and visibly And he that lives in the Nation yet denies his h●mage unto these Courts is not to be esteemed a Subject So doth the whole visible professing Church in one or more Nations or lesser precincts of people and places constitute the visible Kingdom of Christ yet is no particular person to be esteemed a legal true Subject of Christ that doth not appear in these his Courts with a Solemn expression of his Homage unto him 8. THE whole Administration of the Rule and Discipline appointed by Christ is confined unto these Churches nor can they be approved by whom that rule is despised I shall not argue farther in a case whose truth is of so uncontroulable evidence In all the writings of the New Testament recording things after the Ascension of Christ there is no mention of any of his Disciples with approbation unless they were extraordinary Officers but such as were entire Members of these Assemblies CHAP. II. The Subject Matter of the Church THE Church may be considered eith●r as unto his Essence Constitution and Being or as unto its Power and Order when it is Organized As unto its Essence and Being its constituent parts are its Matter and Form These we must enquire into By the Matter of the Church we understand the persons whereof the Church doth consist with their Qualifications And by its Form the reason cause and way of that kind of Relation among them which gives them the Being of a Church and the●ewithal an Interest in all that belongs unto a Church either privilege or pow●r as such Our first Enquiry being concerning what sort of Persons our Lord Jesus Christ requireth and admitteth to be the visible Subjects of his Kingdom we are to be regulated in our Determination by respect unto his Honour Glory and the Holiness of his Rule To reckon such persons to be Subject● of Christ Members of his Body such as he requires and owns for others are not so who would not be tolerated at least not approved in a well governed Kingdom or Commonwealth of the World is highly dishonourable unto him But it is so come to pass that let Men be never so notoriously and fl●gitiously wicked until they become p●sts of the earth yet are they esteemed to belong to the Church of Christ. And not only so but it is thought little less than Schism to forbid them the Communion of the Church in all its sacred Privileges Howbeit the Scripture doth in general represent the Kingdom or Church of Christ to consist of persons called Saints separated from the World with man● other things of alike nature as we shall see immediately And if the Honour of Christ were of such weight with us as it ought to be if we understood aright the nature and e●ds of his Kingdom and that the peculiar Glory of it above all the Kingdoms in the World consists in the Holiness of its Subject● such an Holiness as the world in its wisdom knoweth not we would duly consider whom we avow to belong thereunto Those who know ought of these things will not profess that persons openly prophane vicious sensual wicked and ignorant are approved and owned of Christ as the Subjects of his Kingdom or that it is his will that we should receive them into the Communion of the Church But an old opinion of the unlawfulness of separation from a Church on the account of the mixture of wicked men in it is made a scare-crow to frighten men from attempting the Reformation of the greatest Evils and a covert for the composing Churches of such members only Some things therefore are to be premised unto what shall be offered unto the right stating of this Enquiry As 1. THAT if there be no more required of any as unto Personal Qualifications in a visible uncontroulable profession to constitute them Subjects of Christs Kingdom and Members of his Church but what is required by the most righteous and severe Laws of men to constitute a good Subject or Citizen the distinction between his visible Kingdom and the Kingdoms of the World as unto the principal causes of it is utterly lost No● all negative Qualifications as that Men are not Oppressors Drunkards Revilers Swearers Adulterers c. are required hereunto But yet it is so fallen out that generally more is required to constitute such a Citizen as shall represent the righteous Laws he liveth under than to constitute a Member of the Church of Christ. 2. THAT whereas Regeneration is expresly required in the Gospel to give a Right and Privilege unto an entrance into the Church or Kingdom of Christ whereby that Kingdom of his is distinguished from all other Kingdoms in and of the World unto an Inte●est wherein never any such thing was required it must of necessity be something better more excellent and sublime than any thing the Laws and Polities of men pretend unto or prescribe Wherefore it cannot consist in any outward Rites easie to be observed by the worst and vilest of men besides the Scripture gives us a description of it in opposition unto its consisting in any such Rite 1 Pet. 3.21 And many things required unto good Citizens are far better than the meer observation of such a Rite Of this Regeneration baptism is the Symbol the Sign Expression and Representation Wherefore unto those who are in a due manner partakers of it it giveth all the external Rights and Privileges which belong unto them that are Regenerate until they come unto such Seasons wherein the personal performance of those Duties whereon the continuation of the estate of visible Regeneration doth depend is required of them Herein if they fail they lose all privilege and benefit by their Baptism So speaks the Apostle in the case of Circumcision under the Law Rom. 2.25 For Circumcision verily profiteth if thou keep the Law but if thou be a breaker of the Law thy Circumcision is made uncircumcision It is so in the case of baptism Verily it profiteth if a man stand unto the Terms of the Covenant which is tendered therein between God and his Soul for it will give him Right unto all the outward Privileges of a Regenerate State but if he do not as in the sight of God his baptism is no baptism as unto the real Communication of Grace and acceptance with him so in the sight of the Church it is no baptism as unto a participation of the external Rights and Privileges of a Regenerate state 4. GOD alone is judge concerning this Regeneration as unto its internal real principle and state in the Souls of men whereon the participation of all the spiritual advantages of the Covenant of Grace doth depend The Church is
Office of Teachers in the Church VII Of the Rule of the Church or of Ruling Elders VIII The Nature of the Polity or Rule with the Duty of Elders IX Of Deacons X. Excommunication XI Of the Communion of Churches Sold at the Bible in Newgate-street by William Marshal CHAP. III. The Continuation of a Church-state and of the Administration of Evangelical Ordinances of Worship briefly Vindicated THE Controversie about the Continuation of a Church-state and the Administration of Gospel Ordinances of Worship is not new in this Age though some pride the●selves as though the Invention of the Error whereby they are denied were their own In former Ages both in the Papacy and among some of them that forsook it there were divers who on a pretence of a peculiar Spiritually and imaginary Attainments in Religion wherein these things are unnecessary rejected their Observation I s●pp●se it necessary briefly to confirm the Tru●h and Vindicate it from this exception because though it be sufficiently w●ak in it self yet what it is lies against the Foundation of all that we are pleading about But to reduce things into the lesser compass I shall first confirm the Truth by those Arguments or Considerations which will defeat all the Pleas and Pretences of them by whom it is opposed and then confirm it by positive Testimonies and Arguments with all Brevity possible First therefore I shall argue from the removal of all causes whereon such a Cess●tion of Churches and Ordinances is pretended For it is granted on all hands that they had a Divine Original and Institution and were observed by all the Disciples of Christ as thing● by him commanded If now therefore they cease as unto their force efficacy and use it must be on some of these Reasons 1. Because a limited Time and Season was fixed upon them which is now expired So was it with the Church-state and Ordinances of old they were appointed ●nto the time of Reformation Heb. 9.10 They had a certain time prefixed unto their duration according to the Degrees of whose approach they waxed old and at length utterly disappeared chap. 8.13 until that time they were all punctually to be observed Mal. 4.4 But there were many antecedent Indications of the Will of God concerning their Cessation and Abolition whereof the Apostle disputes at large in his Epistle unto the Hebrews And from a pretended supposition that such was the state of Evangelical Ordinances namely that they had a time prefixed unto their Duration did the first opposition against them arise For Montanus with his Followers imagined that the appointments of Christ and his Apostles in the Gospel were to continue in force only unto the coming of the Paraclete or the Comforter promised by him And adding a new Phrensie hereunto that that Paraclete was then first come in Montanus they rejected the Institutions of the Gospel and made new Laws Rules for themselves And this continues to be the principal pretence of them by whome the use of Gospel-Ordinances is at present rejected as that which is of no force or efficacy Either they have received or do speedily look for such a Dispensation of the Spirit or his Gifts as wherein they are to cease and disappear But nothing can be more vain than this pretence 1. It is so as unto the limitation of any Time as unto their Duration and Continuance For 1. There is no Intimation given of any such thing either in the Divine-Word Promise Declaration about them or the Nature of the Institutions themselves But whereas those of the Old Testament were in Time to be removed that the Church might not be offended thereby seeing Originally they were all of immediate Divine Institution God did by all manner of ways as by Promises express Declarations and by the Nature of the Institutio●s themselves fore-signifie their removal as the Apostle proves at large in his Epistle to the Hebrews But nothing of this Nature can be pretended concerning the Gospel Church state or Worship 2. There is no Prediction or Intimation of any other way of VVorship or serving God in this VVorld that should be introduced in the room of that established at first so that upon a Cessa●ion thereof the Church must be left unto all uncertainties and utter ruin 3. The principal Reason why a Church-state was erected of old and Ordinances of VVorship appointed therein that were all to be removed and taken away was that the Son the Lord over his own House might have the Preheminence in all things His Glory it was to put an end unto the Law as given by the Disposition of Angels and the Ministry of Moses by the Institution of a Church-state and Ordinances of his own appointment And if his Revelation of the Will of God therein be not compleat perfect ultimate unalterable if it be to expire it must be that Honour may be given above him unto one greater than he 2. It is so as unth their Decay or the loss of their primitive Force and Efficacy For their Efficacy unto their proper Ends depends on 1. The I●●●i●ution of Christ This is the Foundation of all Spiritual Efficacy unto Edification in the Church or whatever belongs thereunto And therefore whatever Church-state may be framed or Duties ways or means of Worship appointed by Men that have not his Institution how specious soever they may appear to be have no Spiritual Force or Efficacy as unto the Edification of the Church But whilst this Institution of Christ continues irrevocable and is not Abrogated by a greater Power than what it was enacted by whatever defect there may be as unto Faith and Obedience in Men rendring them useless and ineffectual unto themselves however they may be corrupted by additions unto them or detractions from them changing their Nature and Use in themselves they continue to be of the same Vse and Efficacy as they were at the beginning 3. On the Promise of Christ that he will be present with his Disciples in the Observation of his Commands unto the Consumation of all things Matt. 28.20 To deny the continued accomplishment of this Promise and that on any pretence whatever is the Venom of Infidelity If therefore they have an irrevocable Divine Institution if Christ be present in their Administrations as he was of old Revel 2.1 there can be no abatement of their Efficacy unto their proper ends in the Nature of Instrumental Causes 3. On the Covenant of God which gives an infal●i●le i●seperable Conjunction between the Word or the Church and its Institution by the Word and the Spirit Isa. 59.21 God's Covenant with his People is the Foundation of every Church-state of all Offices Powers Priviledges and Duties there unto belonging They have no other end they are of no other use but to Communicate express declare and exemplifie on the one hand the Grace of God in his Covenant unto his People and on the other the Duties of his People according unto the Tenor of the same
render them visible which it becomes their indispensible Duty to do when outward Impediments are not absolutely insuperable But of these things thus far 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 CHAP. IV. What sort of Churches the Disciples of Christ may and ought to joyn themselves unto as unto Entire Communion WE have proved before that it is the Duty of all individual Christians to give themselves up unto the Conduct Fellowstip and Communion of some particular Church or Congregation Our present Enquiry he●eon is that whereas there is a great Diversity among professing Societies in the World concerning each whereof it is said L● here is Christ and Lo there is Christ what Church of what Constitution and Order any one that takes care of his own Edification and Salvation ought to joyn himself unto This I shall speak unto first in General and then in the Examination of one particular Case or Instance wherein many at this day are concerned And ●ome things must be premised unto the right stating of the Subject of our Enquiry 1. The Diversities an● Divisions among Churches which respect is to be had unto in the choice of any which we will or ought to joyn unto are of two sorts 1. Such as are ●ccasi●ned by the remaining Weaknesses Infirmities and Ignorance of the best of Men whereby they know but in par● and Prophesie only in part wherein our Edification is concerned but our Salvation not endangered 2. Such as are in and about things Fundamental in Faith Worship and Obedience We shall speak to both of them 2. All Christians were Originally of one Mind in all things needful unto Joynt-Communion so as that there might be among them all Love without Dissimulation Howbeit there was great Variety not only in the Measure of their apprehensions of the Doctrines of Truth but in some Doctrines themselves as about the continuance of the observations of the Law or at least of some of them as also Oppositions from without unto the Truth by Hereticks and Apostates neither of which hindred the Church Communion of true Believers But the Diversity Difference and Divisions that are now among Churches in the World is the effect of the great A●ostasie which befel them all in the latter Ages as unto the Spirit Rule and Practice of those which were planted by the Apostles and will not be healed until that Apostasie be Abolished 3. S●tan having possessed himself of the Advantage of these Divisions where●f he was the Author he mak●s use of them to act his Malice and R●ge in stirring up and i●stigating one Party to Persecute Oppress and Devour anoth●r until the Life Power and Glory of Christian Religion is almost lost in the World It require● therefore great Wisdom to depart our selves aright among these Divisions so as to con●ribute nothing unto the Ends of Malice designed by Satan i● them 4. In this sta●e of things until it may be cured which it ●ill never be by any of the ways yet proposed and insisted on the Enquiry is concerning the Duty of any one who takes care of his own Soul as unto a Conjunction with some Church or other And on the Negative Part I say 1. Such an one is boun● not to joyn with any Church or Society where any Fundamental Article of Faith is rejected or corrupted There may be a Fundamental Error in a true Church for a season when the Church erreth not Fundamentally 1 Cor. 15. 2 Tim. 2.18 But I suppose the Error in or against the Foundation is part of the Profession of the Church or Society to be joyned unto For thereby the Nature of the Church is destroyed it doth not hold the Head nor abide on the Foundation nor is the Ground and Pillar of Truth Wherefore alth●ugh the So●i●i●●s under a Pretence of Love Forbearance and Mutual Toleration do offer us the Communion of their Churches wherein there is somewhat of Order and Discipline commendible yet it is unlawful to joyn in Church Fellowship or Communion with them For their Errors about the Trinity the Incarnation of Christ and his Sati●faction are destructive of the Foundation of the Prophets and Apostles and Idolotry in the Divine Worship of a meer Creature is introduced by them 2. Where there is any Church taught or allowed a Mixture of Doctrines or Opinions that are preju●icial unto Gospel Holiness or Obedience no man that takes due care of his Salvation can joyn himself unto i● For the Original Rule and Measure of all Church Communion is agreement in the Doctrine of Truth Where therefore there is either not a stable Profession of the s●me Doctrine in all substantial Truths of the Gospel but an uncertain s●u●d is given some s●ying one thing some anoth●r or that Opposition is made unto any Truths of the Importance before mentioned None can be bound or obliged to hold Communion with it nor can incur any blame by refraining from it For it is the Duty of a Christian in all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And to joyn with such a Church would 1. Stain their Profession 2. Hinder their Edification 3. Establish a new Rule of Communion unknown to the Scriptures namely besides Truth as might easily be manifested 3. Where the Fundamentals of Religious Worship are corrupted or overthrown it is absolutely unlawful to joyn unto or abide in any Church So is it with the Church of Rome The various ways whereby the Foundations of Divine Religious Worship are overthrown in that Church by Superstition and Idolatry have been sufficiently declared These render the Communion of that Church pernitious 4. Nor can any Man be obliged to joyn himself with any Church nor can it be his Duty so to do where the Eternally fixed Rule and Measure of Religious Worship namely that it be of Divine Institution is varied or change by any Additions unto it or Substractions from it For whereas one principal end of all ●hurches is the joynt celebration of Divine VVorship if there be not a certain stable Rule thereof in any Church of Divine Prescription no Man can be obliged unto Communion therewith 5. Where the Fundamentals of Church Order Practice and Discipline are destroyed it is not lawful for any man to joyn in Church Communion These Fundam●ntals are of two sorts 1. Such as concern the Ministry of the Church 2. Such as concern the Church it self There are four things that are necessary Fundamentals unto the Order of the Church on the part of the Ministry 1. That all the Ministers or Officers of it be duly chosen by the Church it self and solemnly set apart in the Church unto their Office according unto the Rule and Law of Christ. This is Fundamental unto Church Order the Root of it from whence all other parts of it do Spring And it is that which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or expresly provided for in the Scripture as we shall see If there be a neglect herein and no other Relation required between Ministers Elders Rulers Bishops and
of Elders IX Of Deacons X. Excommunication XI Of the Communion of Churches In large Quarto price bound 3 s. Other Books lately Published of Dr. Owens Left behind him fitted for the Press 1. A Treatise of the Dominion of Sin and Grace Price Bound 1 s. 2. A Brief and Impartial Account of the Nature of the Protestant Religion its State and Fate in the World its Strength and Weakness with the Ways and Indications of the Ruin or Continuance of its publick National Profession Price 6 d 3. A Brief Instruction in the Worship of God and Discipline of the Church of the New Testament by way of Questions and Answers with an Explication and Confirmation of those Answers Price Bound 1 s. 4 Meditations and Discourses concerning the Glory of Christ Applied unto unconverted Sinner● and Saints under Spiritual Decays from Joh. 17.24 Bound 1 s. These with the rest of Dr. Owen's Works that are in Print are sold by William Marshall at the Bible in Newgate-street where you may be supplied of other Authors Books following An Exposition of the whole Book of the Revelation wherein the Visions and Prophesies of Christ are opened and Expounded By that Late Reverend Divine Hansel Knowlls Price Bound 2 s. 6 d. Dr. Crisp● Works in large Quarto four parts Bound 7 s. A Plain and Familiar Conferrence Concerning Gospel Churches and Order for the information and benefit of those who shall seek the Lord their God and ask the way to Sion with their Faces thitherwards Price Bound 1 s. Ashwood's Heavenly Trade or the best Merchandize Price Bound 2 s. 6 d. Ashwood's best Treasure or the unsearchable Riches of Christ. Bound 2 s. 6 d. Mr. Mead's Effigies lately Engraven and Printed on large Paper Price 6 d. Mr. Caryls Effigies large Paper 6 d. Dr. Owen's Effigies in large Paper 6 d. Mr. Bunyan's Effigies large Paper 6 d. Dr. Crisp's Effigies in Paper 6 d. There is Newly Printed a Stitch'd Book containing six Sheets entituled The Sufficiency of the Spirits Teaching By Sammuel How Price 6 d. Those that send for six Books shall have a seventh Gratis Likewise there is in the Press and will be Published if the Lord will February next 1692. To Subscribers and others Bound 12 s. The Labours of John Bunyan Author of the Pilgrims Progress late Minister of the Gospel and Pastor of the Congregation at Bedford Collected and Printed in Folio by Procurement of his Church and Friends and by his own Approbation before his Death that these his Christian Ministerial Labours may be preserved in the World He was an Eminent Convert and Experienc'd Christian. He was an Excellent Eminent and Famous Gospel Minister He hath Suffered Twelve Years Imprisonment for Gospel Preaching His Books have sold admirably well And he behaved himself Wisely Plainly ●ouragiously as a Follower of the Great Apostle Paul as he was a Follower of Christ. And theref●re all Christian People may reckon themselv●● obliged to ●reserve these his Labours This Folio will contain Ten of his Excellent Manuscripts prepared for the Press before his Death and Ten of his Choice Books already Printed but long ago and not now to be had Their Titles are as followeth viz. MANUSCRIPTS An Exposition on the Ten first Chapters of Genesis Justification by Imputed Righteousness Paul's Departure and Crown Israel's Hope Incouraged Desires of the Righteous granted The Saints Priviledge and Profit Christ a compleat Saviour Saints knowlegde of Christ's Love The House of the Forest of Labenon A Discription of Antichrist BOOKS formerly Printed Saved by Grace Christian Behaviour A Discourse of Prayer The Strait Gate Gospel Truths opened Light for them in Darkness Instructions for the Ignorant A Map of Salvation c. The New Jerusalem The Resurrection FINIS Psal. 15.1 2 3 4 5. Psal. 24.3 4. Psal. 93.5 2 Cor. 8.23 Ephes. 5.27 2 Tim. 3.1 2 3 4 5. Ezek. 22.26 Joh. 3.3 Tit. 3.3 4 5. Joh. 3.5 Act. 2.38 1 Pet. 3.21 Phil. 3.18 19. Tit. 1.15 16. Act. 15. ●8 Rev. 2.23 Act. 8.13 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Phil. 3.18 19. 2 Thes. 3 6. 2 Tim. 3.5 Rom. 9 6 7. Tit. 1.16 Mat. 18.16 17 18. 1 Cor. 5.11 Rom. 10.10 2 Cor. 8.5 Chap. 9.13 Matth. 10.32 33. Luke 9.16 2 Tim. 2.12 Rom. 15.9 Joh. 12.42 1 Joh. 4.2 3 15. Matth. 10.37 38 39. Mar. 8.34.38 Luk. 9.23 Phil. 3.18 Act. 4.10 11 20. Act. 24.14 Matth. 28.19 20. 1 Cor. 10.32 Phil. 1.10