Selected quad for the lemma: conscience_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
conscience_n light_n natural_a sun_n 1,020 5 9.7836 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A85854 Hieraspistes a defence by way of apology for the ministry and ministers of the Church of England : humbly presented to the consciences of all those that excell in virtue. / By John Gauden, D. D. and minister of that Church at Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1653 (1653) Wing G357; Thomason E214_1; ESTC R7254 690,773 630

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

yet punctually been fulfilled chiefly in the coming of the Messias the sum center and consummation of all prophecies and promises which setting forth the nature love life and death of Jesus Christ were all most exactly accomplished in him and by him on whom were those notable signatures and characters of the divine wisdom and power John 1.14 that his glory appeared to men as the glory of the onely begotten Son of God full of grace and truth The freeness and fulness of this Evangelical grace and truth by Jesus Christ the faithful Soul further discerns in the sacred emblems and seals of the holy Sacraments by which the divine goodness is represented and conveyed to us under the notions and efficacy of those things which are most necessary to our lives either for Being or Ornament to nourish us to cleanse us and to chear us Moreover the pious Soul sees God in the exemplary patience of the holy Martyrs in the miraculous constancy of the heroick Confessors in the humility of true Penitents in the purity and amendment of real Converts in the contentedness of true Believers in the mertifulness and charity of true Christians in the mortifyings and self-denyings as to this world of all true Saints which are followers of Christ and lastly in that holy ordination and succession of the Evangelical Ministry which as Christ instituted for the Churches good so he hath through all the vicissitudes of times amidst all oppositions preserved it to these days and by it the knowledge of God and the faith of Christ in the World The devout Soul still guided and going on by the light of the Ministry discerns something of God which is yet more retired secret and ineffable in the enlightnings softnings serenities enlargements calmings and comforts which are made by a divine power and supernatural influence upon it self where it beholds the brightest glimpses of divine glory through the face of Jesus Christ and by the efficacies of his most sweet and holy Spirit who is both God and man subject to our infirmities sensible of them and victorious over them Him the Soul answerably loves as man with a love of union and complacency as God with the love of admiration and extasie as both God and man with a love of adherence and satisfaction Heb. 7.25 As one that hath undertaken and is able to save it to the uttermost reconciling it with preparing it for and uniting it to the supreme Good God All these excellencies of Christ it sees diffused and derived to it by convenient means instituted and continued in the Church which as pipes laid into the Oceans unexhaustible fulness draw from it not to what measure it can give but to what we want and can receive At length this devout Soul by this daily confluence of many heavenly Meditations holy Motions and happy Experiments flowing like lesser rivolets from all parts of the Creation from Scripture and from its own with others experiences to this stream of the knowledge of God It findes it self by degrees advanced like Ezekiels Ezek. 47. waters from vulgar and shallow conceptions and answerable affections to mighty and profound contemplations which gathering strength by their daily increasings like an imperious and irresistible torrent carry away the devout Soul in its holy propensities and impetuous fervencies toward God Impatient of any stop or hinderance till at last it comes as all Rivers into the Ocean to be wholly resigned and happily resolved into its Alpha and Omega its principle and perfection its fountain and its fulness God So then when the Soul in ways of true Religion comes to know and love and serve God it is not conversant in vagrant fancies in uncertain speculations in in-significant notions but it so far really enjoys him as it loves him and loves him as it sees him and sees him as it seriously and deliberately observes him there being nothing of true Religion in volatile spirits and transient glances which it doth most evidently though not perfectly darkly yet truly in those glasses of the Creatures in the Scriptures 1 Cor. 13.12 and in its own Conscience in all ways of Goodness Truth and Holiness in lights Natural Moral and Evangelical by all which the Soul as the Eye sees somewhat of the divine glory of that invisible Sun in the descents scatterings and aptitudes of its beams whose infinite and intire brightness it cannot without injury to it self fully and immediately behold Exod. 33.20 So that herein we see true and solid Religion both by its light and holiness its truth and practise abundantly discovers the fancifulness levity pride vanity fondness and futility of all those giddy opinions and pretensions by which some men seek to amuse the world and to abuse honest hearts And also it shews its own real worth beauty dignity fulness usefulness wisdom and power by all which it fits and fills the Souls various faculties and vast capacity And in so doing it gives the devout Soul the greatest evidences and surest demonstrations of its own immortality Malunt impii extingui quàm ad supplicia reparari Mi. Fael Souls immortality discovered in true Religion beyond what any arguments drawn from ordinary reason and philosophy can do All which the Atheistical impudence of some men easily e●ude having no experimental knowledge of God and living without God in the world they are content to imagine an utter extinction of their souls Whereas the sanctified Soul concludes and glories in its immortality which it endeavors to improve to a blessed eternity when it considers seriously and alone whence can those high and holy enlargements desires and designs arise so far above and beyond all worldly objects and enjoyments whence that unsatisfiedness which carries the soul of man with ambitious impatiencies to this height of coveting after a blessed eternity Rom. 2.7 and the supreme Good God blessed for ever Whence this magnetick tendency and divine traction of love to God and to his infinite goodness but onely from the Father of our spirits and Fountain of our souls God And why all these meditations desires and motions planted in us by so good and wise a Creator if never to be enjoyed by us in those satisfactions which onely can flow from some divine and perfective object Sure it is all one to omnipotent goodness to fill us with the perfect good desired as to endue us with the desires of that good which are but our torments and imperfections if never to be in completion Our very desires of Heaven would else be our Hell and our longings after happiness our misery Nor is it agreeable to the methods of divine wisdom and goodness to plant frustaneous and vain desires or Tantalising tendencies in mans nature which he hath done in no other Creature who attain whatever they naturally covet or have innate propensities to The same divine power having prepared the object hath also implanted the desire This unproportionableness of the Creators dealing with
or better than such lazy supine superficial and empty Ministers whose duller plainness and ruder fervency is not that demonstration of the spirit 2 Cor. 2.4 Conciones sacrae nec rudes esse debent nec delicatae nec cincinnatae nec impexae Simplex quaedam gravitas subtilis soliditas adsit quae pondus ornatum deferat Zanch. Orat. Sermonis vis actionis vehementia materiei pondere aequanda Quint. Lucens●putrido Scenae in cathedram translatio which sets forth divine truths in their native Scripture-simplicity which is their greatest strength and beauty as the Sun 's when it shines freest from all mists and cloudings Nor are those mens rebust and deformed heats that judicious zeal which becomes g●ave Ministers both as sober men and holy Orators from God to the Church For expressions ought always to be proportioned in true oratory to the weight of the matter in hand Yea where the unaffected quicknings of a Ministers own spirit or the dulness of his Auditors requires more than ordinary vehemency yet still it must be carried with very comly heats and emotions either for voice or gesture but all the whole Pageantry of some mens preaching is onely a gratifying their own fancies and passions or else a miserable way of mocking God and cheating the poor peoples souls who some of them are as well content with chaff as with good corn or the bread of life and if the flail be still going they care not what grist ariseth Others thirsting for the pure and wholesom waters of life the idleness and poverty of these men gives them to drink onely of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 water which is at their doors in the shallow plashes and foul puddles of their own dull inventions where their sudden and confused thoughts are oftentimes sooner out of their mouths than in their mindes And this for want of either ability or industry Multi tadio investigandae veritatis ad proximo● divertunt errores Min. Fael to dig to the depths of those sacred springs the Scriptures which chiefly afford that living water which can refresh thirsting wash polluted and save sinful souls which are not to be wrought upon by flat or fine notions by soft expressions or by feminine insinuations but by sound demonstrations learned arguings serious convictions and masculine ways of expressions 2 Cor. 5.20 such as become the Embassie and Embassadors of God to man But as not these Ministerial defects in their peculiar Function so neither are they the private immoralities of their lifes which usually attend the negligence of their calling and bring many scandals upon both their persons and their function These are not the spots or that kinde of leprosie which could have thus made the whole body of their profession to be esteemed by many as unclean For under these personal failings and deformities wherein some and it may be too many of us have been blamable in all times yet still that abilitie soundness and diligence which was found in many other worthy Ministers both as to their learning and piety was sufficient to preserve the dignity and venerableness of the function from general obloquy and contempt nor ever was it brought to that precipice where now it seems to stand both as to disrespect and danger 8. The main cause as some conceive Until that those thick clouds and grosser vapors heretofore unknown among Protestant Ministers in England like a Scotch mist or Egyptian darkness came over the whole Firmament almost of this Church darkning and turning into Blood even many of those Stars of the second and third magnitude at least which formerly shined without blemish in the soundness of their judgement wel-guided zeals meekness of their spirits and diligence in their places to all exemplary holiness who good men probably did not know while their nails were pared and kept short by the Laws and Government above them how much they could scratch even till the blood came if once the liberty of times suffered them to grow so long that some mens secular projects might use them as the Ape did the Cats paw Then indeed it soon appeared that though Ministers might be well-gifted and well-affected men as to the Reformed Religion to the Laws and all publick Relations yet they were but men yea though they were able and useful while fixed in their Ecclesiastical orb and sphere yet when they came to be planetary and excentrick to that duty and modesty which the Laws of God and man most exactly require of them as lights and paterns to others than did their beams and influences begin to grow malign fiery and combustive Hence too many Ministers are looked upon how justly God knows and the World with their own consciences not I must judge as great incendiaries full of violence immoderation tumultuary heats and passionate transports beyond what was either comly or just for grave men of their calm and sober profession into which high distempers it was as easie for men of learned parts of zealous spirits and little experience in humane publick affairs especially that of a Civil war to fall as for constitutions of high colour and sanguine complexion to lapse into Feavers or Calentures which by degrees if not allayed bring the wisest and strongest men to ravings and fits of distraction Such did those violent fits and inordinate activities seem to be upon the second thoughts and cooler reflexions of people wherein many Ministers so much and so busily appeared in Senates and Armies in Conventicles and Tumults more like Statesmen Politicians and Soldiers or what became onely light and vain persons than like learned grave and godly men such as were called to a spiritual holy and unbloody warfare This forwardness in sanguinary motions rendred Ministers vile and contemned even to those who were content to use their uncomly activities The sound of Trumpets the clashing of Swords the thundring of Canons were not a newer and greater terror to mens ears in England than were those bold Philippicks those bitter Orations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. in Pericle those sharp Invectives those cruel Railings used by some Ministers even in their Prayers and Preachings against those to whom they formerly shewed a fair compliance and subjection Who if they had deserved evil language and railing accusations yet of all men these did not become the mouths of Ministers who should in publick appear as the Angels of God with such modesty light and beauty as sets them farthest off from any passionate darkness of minde or deformity of maners or undecency of expressions Since Christ hath commanded them most eminently to bless those that curse them to pray for those that persecute them c. After these followed other vials of wrath poured forth from those who should have been onely Pitchers with Lamps Judges 7.20 filled with holy oyl and fired onely with holy fire strange and new prodigies of opinions in doctrine government and maners sudden and violent changes
performance of those duties which we ow to the One onely true God or to any Creature for his sake That is upon such grounds to such ends and after such maner as God requires them of us in the several relations wherein we stand obliged to him or them Internal Lux est religionis in conscientia lumen in conversatione Bern. 1 Cor. 2.11 1 John 1.3 3.19 Nec deest Christus ubi est fides nec ecclesia ubi Christus nec societas ubi charitas nec templum ubi cor sanctum Cypr. This Religion is discharged by us first Internally in the Receptions and Motions of an enlightned and sanctified Soul to which none can immediately be conscious but onely God and a mans own spirit Herein we conceive the very soul life and quintessence of true Religion doth consist so far as it is to be considered apart from all outward expressions visible Form Society or Church Communion onely as having spiritual inward converse and fellowship with God and Christ by the graces of the holy Spirit although Christians should be in desarts dungeons prisons solitudes and sick beds amidst all forced sordidness disorders and dissolutions of any shew and profession of Religion as to the outward man This sincerity wants nothing of extern fashion or ornament to compleat its piety but is satisfactory both to God and a mans own conscience by that integrity of a judicious holy and devout heart which hath devoted all its powers and faculties to the knowledge meditation adoration imitation love and admiration of God according as he was pleased in various times and maners to reveal himself to it Heb. 1.1 As partly yet but darkly by the light of reason in rational and moral principles seconded with fears and strokes of Conscience which is a beam and candle of the Lord in the soul of man Prov. 20.27 Lucerna Domini Scintillans in intellectu radians in voluntate ardens in affectu fumans in desiderio flammans in amore scrutans i● conscientia exhilarans in virtute torquens in facinore Bern. 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.19 Matth. 10.26 Gal. 6.1 Et solidè fundanda ad amussim Scripturâ aedificanda veritate stabilienda charitate consummanda religio August Eò pulchrior est anima quo ad summam Dei pulchritudinem propius accedit Bradward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. N. s but more clearly by supernatural manifestations in dreams and visions in audible voices prophetical revelations or angelical missions By all which religious light was onely occasional and traditional but now most evidently compleatly and constantly in that declaration of his will to mankinde which is contained in the lively oracles of his now written and perfect Word the onely infallible rule of a good Conscience and foundation of true Religion According to which onely we measure it both as to its internals which are summarily comprehended in the love of God and its externals which are compleated in that charity which for Gods sake we bear and really exercise toward all men but chiefly to the houshold of faith that is the Church or Society of those who profess to believe in Jesus Christ as the onely Saviour of sinners This well-grounded and well-guided Religion as it is then an Internal Judicious and Sincere devoting of the whole soul to God as the supreme good offered us in Jesus Christ We esteem the highest honor and beauty of the reasonable soul the divinest stamp or character on mans nature the noblest property and capacity of the immortal spirit in us demonstrating not onely its common relation to the Creator which all things have but the Creators peculiar favor and indulgence to man whom he teacheth to fear enableth to serve and encourageth to love him above all As also mans capacity to attain that knowledge of the divine wisdom and that fruition of the divine love which onely can make it truly and eternally happy For true Religion thus seated in the soul of man 2. True Religion not barely speculative but also practical is not barely a speculative knowledge of God according to what his wisdom hath revealed of himself in his works and word As that he is what he is not as to any defects what he is in all positive excellencies in himself which yet is a great and divine light shining upon mans understanding from experience and from the historick parts of the Scripture But further it also shew us what God is to us in Nature Grace Law Gospel Works Word Creation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Niss de prof Chr●stians and Christs Incarnation what we are to God in Christ for duty and dependance what all things are to us as they are in God that is in his wisdom will power providence c. either making or preserving or disposing them for our good and his glory According to which light we come to desire to love to enjoy God in all things Eph. 1.23 and all things in him that is within those bounds of honor order and those lesser ends which he hath set in reference to the great ends of our good and his glory which are as a lesser circle in a greater having both the same centres At length God becomes the joy life beauty exaltation and happiness of the believing soul by it s often contemplations of him and sincere devotions to him whence we come to have an humble sight ingenuous shame penitential sorrow and just abhorrence of our sinfulness vanity deformity vileness and nothingness compared to God and apart from him After this our wills come to be enclined to him as the most excellent good and perfecting Beauty drawn after him and duly affected with him to fear him for his power and justice to venerate him for his excellent majesty and glory to admire him for incomprehensible perfection to love him for his goodness in himself in all things and in Christ above all in whom his love grace and bounty is most clearly discovered and freely conveyed to us We come to believe him for his veracity or infallible truth in his Law and Gospel to be guided by his unerring wisdom and directions which are discerned in the mandates of his Word to us and agreeable motions of his Spirit in us which are always conform to each other Virtus Spiritus sancti in m●tibus veritas verbi in mandatis suavissi●● inseparabili nexu conjuncta sunt nec magis ab invicem distrahi possunt quàm calor solis à nativo lumine Quum à Spiritu sit veritas ut inveritate sit Spiritus necesse est August We come also to obey him in all things for his soverein Empire and Authority to trust in him at all times for his faithfulness and immutability to hope in him and to wait patiently for the consummation of his rich and pretious promises 2 Pet. 1.4 both in grace and glory All which we believe upon the divine testimony of the written
Primatum suum non objecit Petrus nec inerrabilitatem sed Paulo veritatis assertori cesset Documentum patientiae concordiae Cyp. ep 71. for deciding controversies of Religion and ending all Disputes of Faith in the Church Catholike countervail the injury of this his usurpation and oppression Considering that nothing is more by Scripture Reason and Experience not so much disputable as fully to be denied by any sober Christians than that of the Popes Infallibility which as the Church never ye enjoyed so nor doth any Church or any Christian indeed want any such thing as this infallible judge is imagined to be in order to either Christian course or comfort If indeed the Bishop of Rome and those learned men about him would without faction flattery partiality and self-interest joyn their learning counsels and endeavors in common to reform the abuses to compose the rents and differences in the Christian World by the rule of Scripture and right Reason with Christian humility prudence and charity which look sincerely to a publick and common good they would do more good for the Churches of Christ than any imaginary Infallibility will ever do yea and they would do themselves no great hurt in civil respects if they could meet and joyn not with envious and covetous but liberal and ingenuous Reformers who will not think as many the greatest deformities of any Church to be the riches and revenues of Church-men Certainly in points of true Religion to be believed or duties to be practised as from divine command every Christian is to be judge of that which is propounded to him and embraced by him according to what he is rationally and morally able to know and attain by those means which God hath given him of Reason Scripture Ministry and good examples Of all which the gifts or graces of God in him have inabled him seriously and discreetly to consider Nor is he to rest in either implicite or explicite dictates presumptions and Magisterial determinations of any frail and sinful men who may be as fallible Magnum ingenium magna tentatio De Orig. Tert. Vin. Lirin 1 Cor. 8.7 Knowledge puffeth up 2 Pet. 2.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 6.17 Ye have obeyed from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered to you Eph. 4.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Thes 2.10 Because they received not the love of the truth that they might be saved as himself For whereas they may exceed him in gifts of knowledge they may also exceed him in passions self-interests pride and policy so that he may not safely trust them on their bare word and assertion but he must seek to build his faith on the more sure Word of God which is acknowledged by all sides to be the surest director what to believe to do and to hope in the way of Religion Nor may any private Christians unletteredness that cannot read or his weaker intellect that cannot reason and dispute or his many incumberances of life that deny him leisure to read study compare meditate c. These may not discourage him as if he were a dry tree and could neither bear nor reap any fruit of Christian Religion because he hath no infallible guide or judge Since the mercy of God accepts earnest endeavors and an holy life according to the power capacy and means a man hath also he pardons unwilling errors when there is an obedience from the heart to the truths we know and a love to all truth joyned with humility and charity In order therefore to relieve the common defects of men as to the generality of them both in Cities and in Countrey Villages where there is little learning by the Book or Letter and great dulness with heavy labor the Lord of his wisdom and mercy hath appoint d that constant holy order of the Ministry to be always continued in the Church that so learned studious and able men being duly tryed approved and ordained to be Teachers and Pastors may by their light knowledge and plenty supply the darkness simplicity and penury of common people who must every man be fully perswaded in his own minde Rom. 14.5 in matters of conscience and be able to give a reason of that faith and hope which is in him beyond the credit of any meer man or the opinion of his infallibility 1 Pet. 3.15 However they may with comfort and confidence attend upon their lips whom in an holy succession of Ministry God hath given to them as the ordinary and sufficient means of Faith And however a plain-hearted and simple Christian may religiously wait upon and rest satisfied with those holy means and mysteries which are so dispenced to him by true Ministers who ought above all to be both able and faithful to know and to make known the truth as it is in Jesus Yet may he not savingly or conscientiously relie in matters of Faith nor make his last result upon the bare credit or personal veracity of the Minister but he must consider and believe every truth not because the Minister saith it but because it is grounded on the Word of God and from thence brought him by his Minister which doctrine he judgeth to be true not upon the infallibility of any Teachers but upon that certainty which he believes to be in the Scripture to which all sorts of Christians do consent And to which the Grace and Spirit of God so draweth and enclineth the heart as to close with those divine truths to believe and obey them not for the authority of the Minister but of God the Revealer whose excellent wisdom truth and love it discerns in those things which are taught it by the Ministry of man So that still the simplest Christian doth savingly believe and conscientiously live according to what himself judgeth and is perswaded in his heart to be the Will of God in his Word and not after the dictates of any man Which either written or spoken have no more authority to command or perswade belief as to Religion than they appear to the believer and not to the speaker onely grounded on the sure Word of God and to be his minde and will to mankinde And as it is not absolutely necessary to every Christian in order to Faith and Salvation to be able with his own eyes to read and so to judge of the Letter of the Scripture so it is the more necessary that the reading and preaching of the Word should be committed to able and faithful men not who are infallible 2 Tim. 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but who may be apt to teach and worthy to be believed Of whom the people may have great perswasion both as to their abilities and due authority to teach and guide them in the ways of God We read in Irenaeus Irenaeus l. 3. c. 4. that in One hundred and fifty years after Christ many Churches of Christians toward the Caspian Sea and Eastward were very sound in the Faith and setled against
which Daniel put into the Dragon break them in pieces one part rending from the other as impatient to submit to their censure and so they come to Non-Communion and to make new Colonies of lesser Churches and Bodies till they break and shiver themselves to such useless shreds such thin and small shavings as have neither the staff of beauty nor of bonds among them Every one by the light of nature concluding Par in parem non habet imperium Authority supposeth an eminency That there can be no power over others where there is parity among them nor can those have authority over each other which are in an equality Nothing would be more welcome to good Ministers and faithful people than to see that just power setled in the Church as might by the wisdom gravity and integrity of such as are truly fit to govern best repress all abuses and disorders in the Church as to matters purely religious Mean time we think it better to bea● with patience those defects which we cannot hinder or amend and to supply them what we can with private care industry and discretion than either wholly to deny our selves the comfort of this Sacrament which the Lord hath afforded us or else to usurp to our selves an absolute power and jurisdiction over others which neither the Lord hath given us nor the Church and which we see men do easily despise as a matter of arbitrary usurpation not of authoritative constitution And which is subject as to many tyrannies and abuses so to infinite private janglings and divisions which no Minister hath leisure to hear if he had abilities to compose and judge them being oft very spightful tedious and intricate yea and himself possibly a party or witness and sometimes the accused who being for the most part the ablest in a Country Congregation to judge of matters must yet himself be judged according to some mens weak Models of Church-Government and Discipline both as to his doctrine and maners by his High-shoe Neighbors which he counts his body nor may he have any appeal from them in an Independent way 21. Of the peoples judging in the Church 1 Cor. 5.12 1 Cor. 6.1 2 3 4. Do ye not know that the Saints shall judge the World and Angels How much more the things that pertain to this life To that grand Charter and Commission which some plead by which every Saint is made a Judge in all things of this life within the pale of the Church and is after to be judge of Angels I answer The wise and holy Apostle doth not give to every one in the Church any such power nor to the majority of Christians in any Congregation but rather reproves their folly that laid any judicative works on those that were least esteemed in the Church Vers 4. Whence arose that unsatisfaction as made their differences greater and drove them for remedy to go to Law before the Civil Tribunals of unbelievers V. 6. to the great scandal of Religion and shame of the Church of Corinth where being many Christians and no doubt in many distinct Congregations for conveniency of meeting the Apostle wonders they could not be so wise for their own credit and quiet as to finde out some wise and able men who might be fit to judge and end their controversies as having both real abilities internal and outward reputation in the Church also a publick consent and orderly appointment to the work a●l which makes a compleat and valid Authority to judge others which can never be promiscuous in whole bodies or rabbles of simple and mean men without both contempt and confusion which imprudent way among the Corinthians the Apostle counts both a fault and a shame Of Communicants to be admitted 1 Cor. 5.7 2 Cor. 6.15 16. What places are further urged for purging out the old leaven for not eating with such an one for the non-communion between Christ and Belial light and darkness c. They are all fulfilled by every private Christian when both in conscience and conversation he keeps himself from concurring or complying with any wicked and scandalous persons in their sins reproving and repressing them as much as morally lies in his place and power But the bare view or knowledge of anothers sin Vnumquemque alienis peccatis maculari omnes impiae seditionis autores solam causam separationis sibi assumunt Contra disputat Cypr. de unit eccl August ep 48. must not hinder him from doing his duty or enjoying his privilege and comfort by the Sacrament which depends not on what is in anothers life or heart of sin but on what he findes of grace and preparedness in his own As to the publick honor and purity or unleavenedness of the Church the special duty and care executive lies on those not who are private Christians in common but who have publick authority in special to do it by censuring restraining or casting out scandalous offenders whereto every Christian is not called because not enabled either by God or man by gift or power to discern or judge and determine cases which is a matter of polity power and order in the Church and not of private piety or charity Nor is it indeed of absolute necessity so as to deprive good Christians of any holy ordinance in case such power is obstructed or hindered or not established in the Church Neither Minister nor People then ought to refrain from doing their duty in the holy celebration of this Sacrament upon any such defects of external polity and power for well-ordering of the Church but rather with the more exactness and diligence exhort one another and prepare by inward graces for those holy Mysteries whose institution hath no such restriction either by Christ or the blessed Apostle Paul who enjoyns Ministers and Believers to do this 1 Cor. 11. holily and worthily in point of personal preparation but no word of either usurping a power to re●ect others as they list which belongs not to them or else to abstain wholly from the duty for want of having their will as too many do both People and Ministers to the great grief of many good Christians and to the exceeding slighting and disuse of that holy Ordinance in this Church 1 Cor. 11.25 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As oft as ye drink it which was wont to be much frequented which the words of Christ import or enjoyn to be done oftentimes in the Church For that new coyned form image and superscription of a Church 22. Of Church-Covenant that Congregational Church-Covenant which no Synod or Council but onely some private men have lately invented and in formal words magisterially dictated when yet they cry down all other prescribed forms of administrations prayer or devotion in the Church By which some men fancy they onely can be rightly made up into one lump or Church-fellowship This they accuse us in England for the want and
Over whose Walls the crafty malice of Jesuitick Foxes and any other enemies will easily go and break them down Neh. 4.3 when ever they pass which makes many men suspect that these Lay Preachers are but the left hand of Babels builders fit instruments to divide Muros dum erigunt mores negligunt Bern. confound and destroy the Reformed Religion in these British Churches and all those who study to preserve it Which they only can with any shew of reason effectually do by Gods blessing who are workmen that for their Authority and approved skill as well as their good will and readiness to build need not to be ashamed 2 Tim. 2.15 Of whose reall sufficiencies these new bunglers are most impatient hearers and perfect haters because from those Ministers exactness these mens bungling receives the severest reproaches and justest oppositions A man may as well hope that hogs by their rootings and moles by their castings will Plow and till his ground as that such Arbitrary Casuall and contingent forwardness or such inordinate activities of poor but proudly gifted men will any way help on the great work of Christian Religion the propagating of the Gospell or the Reformation of hearts or Churches which require indeed the greatest competency and compleatness both for gifts learning and due Authority that can be had both for the Majesty of Religion and for the defence of the truth as also for the binding to diligence and exactness the conscience of the Ministers no less than for the satisfaction of other mens consciences in point of the validity of Sacraments and other holy Ministrations which have not any Physicall or naturall vertue but a mysticall and Religious only which depends upon the relation they have to the word and Spirit of the holy Institutor and Commander Jesus Christ So that it is indeed a very strange bewitchedness and depravedness in many mens appetites that they should so cry up those mush-room Prophets and Teachers who need more sauce to make them safe or savory than their bodies are worth who are self-planted soon started up in one night as if they were beyond all those former Goodly plants for beauty sweetness and wholesomness which much study care learning pains and prayers have planted in the Church Or that Christians should so far flatter themselves that the soyl here in England since it was watered with civill bloud is so well natured and fruitfull that there needs no such care and culture as was antiently used in the Garden of God either in setting watering preparing or transplanting those trees of the Ministry which should be full of life Rev. 22.2 Supers●minationes satanae whose leaves should be for the healing as well as their fruits for the nourishing of mens souls So confident the devill seems to be of the giddiness folly negligence and simplicity of these times that he stirs up the very thistles the most useless and most offensive burthens of the earth which the foot of every vile beast is ready to crush and trample upon to chalenge and contemn the Cedars of Lebanon 2 Kings 14.9 And he would fain perswade reformed Christians to cut down and stub up those goodly trees of the Lord which are tall strait and full of sap as cumbring the ground that those sharp and sorry shrubs those dry and sapless kexes may have the more room and thrive the better pretending that they will at easier rates and with less pains supply all the Churches occasions when the Lord knows and all excellent Christians see by sad experience that they are so far from that length strength and straitness required in the beams and pillars of the Temple that their crooked and knotty shortness will scarce afford a pin on which to hang the least vessell of the Sanctuary Excellent Christians I protest before the Lord that I write not thus out of any desire to grieve quench or exasperate any mans Spirit 17. No design in the Author to grieve any good mans Spirit or discourage his gifts 1 Joh. 4.1 in whom the wise and sanctifying graces or usefull gifts of Gods Spirit do dwell in the least measure with truth and humility but only in the way of trying the gifts and Spirits whether they be of God or no if they be found by the word of God to be proud foolish evill unclean unruly refusing to be bound with any bonds of good order and government such as seems to have possessed some in this Church who seek to bewitch others and to trouble all God forbid we should not all of us strive by fasting prayer preaching writing and all just rebukes of them to cast them out Luke 9.42 notwithstanding their cryings tearings and foamings It is far I hope from my Soul by any envy or undervaluing of any good Christians to damp the Spirit of Christ in them I would have every one study to improove the talents he hath and to be employed according to his reall improovement of which no man being naturally proud and self flatterers is fit to be judge himself but ought to be subject to the tryall and judgement of others both as to that light and heat knowledge and zeal gifts and graces which any may pretend to and wherein they may be really usefull to the publike or any community of Christians whose edifying in faith and love we have all cause both in conscience and prudence dayly to nourish and increase in Gods way which is an orderly peaceable and blessed way wherein only either private Christians or Church societies can hope to thrive and flourish Num. 11.29 I wish with Moses all the Lords people were Prophets Both able to give an account of their knowledge in the mysteries of Christ and also to help on in an orderly way as every wheel or pin doth in the motions of a watch the great and weighty work of saving souls which is the main end of the Ministers calling and pains Better we Ministers be despised than the Spirit of Christ in any gracious heart be justly grieved or any good work of God in the Church hindred But we are well assured by good experience that none would be less despisers or more encouragers lovers and zealous preservers of the true Evangelicall Ministry and its divine Authority than such men who have graces with their gifts and are both able and humble none are more slow to speak to others in the name of Christ James 1.19 than they who cannot hear others Preaching with due abilities and authority without fear and trembling as reverencing God and the Lord Jesus Christ in their Ministers There is no danger of able parts where there are humble and honest hearts no more than we need fear the strength of any part in the body will hurt or offend the whole body or disorder and violate any other Member which is above it in place in honour and in operation or function Reason teacheth us that the ability or
unworthily or unduly Ordeined are like sleight and ill built ships which endanger the loss of themselves and all those that are embarqued in them and put to Sea with them Miscarriages in the matter of ordination of Ministers are to the unspeakable detriment and dishonour of Religion as unskilfull cowardly or perfidious Officers are to Armies I shall never hope to see the Church flourish or truly reformed untill this Point of right Ordination of Ministers be seriously considered of and duly restored to its Pristine honour and excellency when to Ordein Ministers for the service of the Church O●ortet Ecclesiae Epis ministrum Christi esse formam justitiae sanctimoniae speculum pietalis exemplar veritatis doctorem fidei defensorem Christianorum ducem sponsi amicum cui ille irascitur Deum sibi iratum non hominem sentiat Bern. ad Eng. l. 4. was not to prefer men to a Benefice so much as to recruit Christs regiments to strengthen his forces to fortifie the Church and true Religion with most vigilant Watchmen and valiant Champions whose care was on every side to defend the Flocks of Christ against all enemies which were to be as the Cloud or Pillar of fire both lights and guards to Christians upon all occasions who made conscience to live with to suffer with yea and to dy for the sheep as good Shepheards Such men only are fit to be Ordeined Ministers such Ministers ought to be prayed for highly prised and perserved in the Church by all that desire to transmit any thing of true Religion to Posterity nor was the Church of England or yet is destitute of such Ministers both duly and worthily ordeined to the service of Christ and this Church To abolish this order or to usurp to undue hands or to contemn this Sacred and right Ordination which sends forth able Ministers in Christs way can be no other but a most cruell and detestable sacrilege far worse than that of robbing the Church of its maintenance for such Ministers Cyprian reproves Novatus a factious Presbyter Quod Felicissimum satellitem suum diaconum suum constituit ne● sciente nec permittente me sola sua factione ambitione Acts 8.18 All undue Ordination is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. profanum detestandumque ludibrium B●s both as preaching and ruling well wich yet is a sin of so deep a dy that no Niter can cleanse it being seldome ever pardoned because seldome repented of so as to make a ●ust restitution without which repentance is never true Yea for any Laymen in a brutish violence and meerly by Ppular insolency to arrogate this power where it is not or to abrogate it where truly it is is a sin of a more heynous nature than that of Simon Magus was who had so much of civility justice and good manners as to offer money for a part of the miraculous and Ministeriall power It is indeed no other than a Cyclopick fury and unwonted barbarity ill becomming any sober or civilized Christians thus to wrest the keys of Gods house out of the hands of those Stewards with whom the great Master Christ hath specially intrusted them for the right Oeconomy and dispensing of all holy Mysteries and Institutions And when such rude and unruly fellows have thus insolenced these Officers of the Church and bound their hands how comly will it be to see the keyes of the kingdome of heaven Ischyras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Self-ordeined or only by Rol●thus a Persbyter Hence Athanasius Apol 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Pro. 20.23 managed or committed as it were to Boyes to Pages and Laquies to weak mean mechanick ignorant dissolute and riotous wretches who not conscious to any true Ministeriall power or just authority in the Church can never make conscience of doing any holy Ministerial duty to which they are most unfit never caring how prodigall they are of the truth and honour of Religion of their own or other mens souls It being a sport to such proud and spitefull fools to do wickedly to speak prophanely and to live disorderly in the Church And not content to commit a rape upon true Religion and the holy orders of Christs Church as Absalom did on the house-top before the Sun and all Israel they will further in time justifie the flagitiousness of their villanies as if the zeal they had for true Religion provoked to such outrages these pestilent pandars for errors and all licentiousness with their followers who must presently all turn preachers though never duly Ordeined nor fit ever so to be yea their arrogancy makes them ordeiners too of whom they please to set up to minister to their extravagant lusts and follies which makes them many times much fitter for the flocks or cages than for the pulpits These will surely come at last as much short of the happy effects of true Ministers as they are far from that holy power of right Ordination which I have proved to be from Christ and the Blessed Apostles rightly derived to us by the constant Custome of this and all Churches and this not as a cypher or meer formality but as of sacred Institution so of reall and excellent efficacy and divine vertue in the Church where duly used and applyed Which was that I had to prove against the scurrillous objections of those that seek to despise and destroy the whole Function Ordination and divine authority of the Ministry of this Church Reader the Reason why the Folios of this Book do not follow is because the Copy for Expedition was divided to two Printers Of speciall Gifts of the Spirit pretended beyond Ordinary Ministers ANother great Calumny 3. Calumny or cavill That the Ministers of England have not the Spirit to which their Adversaries pretend highly urged by their Adversaries against the true Ministers of the Church of England whose due and right Ordination I have vindicated to be as Divine so both Necessary and Efficacious is as a forked arrow sharpned with Presumption and Prejudice On the one side an high esteem and confidence which they have of themselves and a very low despicienty of all Ordained Ministers on the other side even in that which is the highest honour of Man or Minister while these Anti-ministeriall Adversaries pretend That the Ordained Ministers have not the Spirit of Christ nor can or ever doe Pray Preach and administer holy things by the Spirit which these new Modellers challenge in such a plenary measure and power to themselves that they justifie their want of ordinary abilities and endowments by their needing none Excusing their not studying or preparing for what they utter by their being specially Inspired Colouring over their well known idlenesse ignorance illiteratenesse and emptinesse by the shews of speciall Illumination sudden Inspirations and spirituall Enablements Which they say they have far beyond any Ordained Ministers And this by the Spirit of Christ which is extraordinarily given to them which suddenly leads them into
learning soften the spirits and manners of men how they supple in them that roughnesse and asperity which remains in others how of okes it makes them become willowes and in stead of hard wax which onely fire can tame makes them gentle as soft wax so good natured that they are not at all pertinacious of any former signatures and stamps either as civill or sacred made upon them but readily and explicitely yeeld to any formes and impressions though never so new and different which the hand of power is pleased to make And this not only as to a passive sequaciousnesse in the externall fashion of their civill conversation and profession but as to those internall characters and perswasions which their judgments have made upon their consciences Nothing is more tractable and malleable nothing more easily runs into any State mould and receives any politick figure and mark than many Ministers doe whose judgements or policy or fears or necessities have taught them how they may * Rom. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza interp Domino servientes ut Chryso Basil c. Erasmus Tempori servientes i. e. Temporum incommodis sese accommodantes patientia charitate serve the Lord and the times too how to become all things to all men in regard of things civill and extern they have many wholesome and prudent latitudes of evasions absolutions cautions and distinctions by which they unravell the cords of any Oathes and untwist the bonds of any Covenants or Protestations They have in things meerly politick as many distinctions as would furnish any good Casuist for the absolution of entangled or the satisfaction of grumbling consciences Thus furnished no wonder if in civill changes which are fatall and by them unavoidable they can never be brought to Baalams straits Numb 22. where an Angell should meet them with a drawn sword and the Asse either fall under them Utriusque fortunae documento didicerunt ne contumaciam cum pernicie mallent quam securitatem cum obsequio Tacit. hist l. 4. or crush them against the wall on either side These Ministers acting according to their consciences cannot justly be blamed for any refractarinesse many of whom are so much every where in any civill conformities that you can hardly lose them in any State alterations or labyrinths nor doe they doubt but the Lord will be mercifull to them in this thing which not private choice inconstancy but publique force and necessitie puts upon them Charity commands to judge and hope that these doe all things according to that light and latitude which is in their consciences as to things secular Wherein they conceive that the Providence of God Mic. 6.9 which is as his voice teaching us by the event of all humane affaires what is his will is a sufficient absolution as to all preceeding ties civill or sacred which they look upon as obligatory onely in relation to power Magistratick publique and effectuall in what men and in what manner soever they see it placed and exercised Thus some learned men and Ministers plead it as a matter of not onely necessity and prudence but also of justice and gratitude that what ever power Christians are by providence cast under and by that doe in any order of justice enjoy civil protection there they should pay a civill and peaceable subjection according to Conscience and equity while they have the benefit of Lawes and government they ought to yeeld obedience according to Law and this not so much to the persons of men governing who may be unworthy but to the Ordinance of God civill government which is managed at present by them 2. 2. Others more pragmaticall and fierce There are indeed other Ministers who are not only of harder metall but of hotter tempers of more cholerick constitutions and feaverish complexions who love to be moving in the troubled waters of secular affaires who seem most impatient of any order or publique rule in which they have not some stroke and influence ready to undoe what ever is done without them Their breast is as full of turbulent and seditious spirits as the Cave of Aeolus is of windes forgetting what spirit becomes the Ministers of the Gospell in all times who though they may denounce hell fire against all impenitent sinners yet they may not kindle civill flames of sedition Luk. 9.54 or imprecate revengefull fire from heaven upon any men to destroy them To the misguided activity of such Ministers some think the publique may owe much of its troubles for whom the best Apology is their repentance for any transports and excesses whereto they have been weakly or wilfully carryed beyond those bounds of duty and gravity which as Ministers and subjects they ought to observe both toward God and man All that can be pleaded in any veniality for their folly and fury is the * Excuti●●●omnem ingeniis mediceribus constantiam fatales regnorum rerumpub motus Ju. de pictur l. 2. c. 13. Plarimum refoert●n quae eujusque virtus tempora inciderit Plin. l. nat common genius and generall distemper of times which slackening by civill dissensions the cords of humane lawes and loosning the ties of wonted modesty and observance to Superiours gave so great temptations that many Ministers of more forward spirits knew not how to resist them Alas who hath not sufficiently seen in our dayes by sad experiences that even among Ministers there are not onely poor weak and credulous but also heady turbulent and factious men prone to affect any miserable way of popularity and to debase their function and profession to most pragmatick impertinencies as in Ecclesiasticall so also in Secular affaires though their gifts be other wayes above the ordinary size very usefull and commendable yet they retain much of the vulgar masse and leaven and are subject to the same passions and common infirmities yea no men are more prone to rash indeavourings and bold activities by how much they have many specious fancies and pretty speculations suggested to them by those bookes they read which to some men is a kinde of Necromancy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a conversing with the dead and conjecturing by their counsels So that some of them like Alchymists by their reading of chymicall lights grow so possest of their Elixars or Philosophers stones as if it were within a stones cast of them counting it a sinfull and shamefull lazinesse for them to sit still when they are tempted to such goodly prizes as their notions and conceptions hold forth in some way of reforming or wholly changing the State of Religion and government of any Church and in order to that they shake even the civill frame of things to which they doe not think themselves longer bound in subjection then they want a party strong enough for opposition nor will they easily be perswaded that is the sin of Rebellion which carries the face of Reformation easily dispensing with obedience to man where they
not beaten away the graces of Gods Spirit and fighting against Christians have not taught them to fight against God and the checks of conscience If the shedding of mans bloud have not taken away the sense and virtue of Christs bloud If the noise of warre and the cry of the slain have not deafned mens ears against the voice of God and the cals of his Spirit If the dreadfull and lamentable aspect of poore Christians supplicating in vain for life and dying with horrour and anguish at the feet and before the eyes of their brethren have not taken away the fight of charity and deprived men of the light of Gods countenance in love and mercy If there be any tendernesse of conscience any sense of sin any fear of God any terrours from above from beneath or from within if any belief of the judgment to come and accounts to be given if any thoughts of and ambitions for a better Kingdome than the earth can afford Nemo potest veracitere esse amicus hominis nisi qui fuerit primitus veritatis Aust Ep. 52. Charitas pie saevire humiliter indignari patienter irasci novit Ber. Ep. 2. No men will be more acceptable even to the greatest than those Ministers who know at once how to speak the truth and yet to keep within the bounds both of Charity and civility Nor doth it follow as the sophistry of some Sycophants would urge against true Ministers that those will be most active to destroy or disturb the powers of this world who are most faithfull to keep potentates soules from damning in the world to come In these Christian bounds then of peaceable subjection humility and holinesse if the Ministers of England which are able discreet and faithfull might but obtain so much declared favour and publique countenance which all other fraternities and professions have as to be sure to enjoy their callings liberties and properties which seem to be many times in great uncertainties under the obedience and protection of the laws as it would much incourage them in their holy labours which alwayes finde carnall opposition enough in mens hearts and discouragement from their manners so it would redeem them from those menaces insolencies and oppressions of unreasonable men who look upon them as publique enemies and perdue because they thinke they have little of publique favour and incouragement Ministers are so much men that kind and Christian usage will no doubt much win upon them The Sun-shine of favour is likelyer to make the morosest of them lay off that coat of rigour and austerity which some perhaps affects to wear than that rough storm and winde wherewith they are dayly threatned and by which many of them have been and are still distressed which makes them wrap themselves up as Elias in his hairy mantle when they think their lives and liberties and livelihoods are sought after and no such protection like to continue over them as they thought in a Christian State and Church they might have both obtained and deserved by their quiet and usefull conversation As just protection invites inferiors to due subjection so no men pay it more willingly than they who besides the iron chains of fear have the softer cords of lov● and favour upon them By how much after many violent stormes and hard impressions they are more tenderly used the more is respect gained and peaceable inclinations raised in men toward such as will needs govern them The very best of whom are seldome so mortified or heightned by Religion as to forget they are men or to be without their passions discontents and murmurings joined with desires and endeavours to ease and relieve themselves At least to change their condition if they finde it Tyrannique and Egyptian that is unreasonable arbitrary injurious and oppressive quite contrary to what is pretended of honest and just liberties both Christian and humane civill and conscientious which are for every one to enjoy as his private judgement of things so what ever is his priviledge and property by Law while he keeps within the practique obedience and compasse of the Law whereto Governours as well as governed are bound not onely in piety but also in policy Both tyranny and rebellion are their owne greatest Traitors Magistrates seldome losing or hazarding their power nor subjects their peace but when they wander out of the plain highway of Laws Non diu stare potest potentia quae multorum malo exercetu● Sen. de Ira. which are the conservatories both of Governours and governed It is the least degree of justice and short enough of any high favour to permit and protect worthy Ministers with all other honest and peaceable men as in doing their duties so in receiving their dues Yet this is as great a measure as in these times they dare either ask or hope for Immunities from any burthens that lye heavy on them Additions of honour or augmentations of estate I think all wise Ministers despair of Peace with a little as to this world would be a great meanes both to compose their studies and to strengthen their hands in the work of God Also to quench that fire with which many mens tongues are inflamed against Ministers their calling persons and their maintenance thinking they may both safely and acceptably despise those whom power delights not to honour For whose ruine the malice of some Antiministerian spirits wisheth as many gallowses and gibbets set up as there are Pulpits Dan. 3.18 But the Lord is able to deliver us if not yet be it known to these violent and unreasonable men Hoc posteris dicite Hominem Christo deditum posse mori non posse supera●i Ieron Psal 68.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dictum juvenis inter tormenta cum totum vulnus erat fornam hominis at non fidei amiserat Euseb hist l. 5. c. 1. that no learned judicious and consciencious Ministers will bow down to worship that papall or popular Image of Anarchy and confusion which they seek to set up as to the shame and ruine of this and all Reformed Churches so infinitely to the detriment and dishonour of this Nation as to its common welfare in peace plenty or power in good learning or true Religion And however we are forced for some time to lye among the pots yet shall we be as the wings of a dove nor shall we want an Ark whither to fly at last where a gracious hand will receive us to eternall rest when we shall retire to heaven wearied with the troubles on earth and finding no rest for our souls amidst those overflowing scourges which the just and offended God will certainly bring upon all such evill and unthankfull men who love their power or profit more than their soules and glory in despising those who professe to be Noahs the Preachers onely of righteousnesse and of repentance but no way the pragmatick plotters of troubles or seditious movers of civill perturbations I Have now O you