Selected quad for the lemma: doctrine_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
doctrine_n body_n bread_n transubstantiation_n 2,166 5 10.9952 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
A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Bread grows in and rises out of the Earth so did the body of Christ he brought it not with him from Heaven for it had its Original in the womb of the blessed virgin 2. Bread undergoe● much labour sown dyes quickens reaped threshed winnowed grinded kneaded baked Christ body under-went the like things It was sown in the womb of the Virgin by Devils and wicked men was he continually threshed and winowed he was grinded in the high priests hall knead in his Cross and Passion baked in the Oven of his Sepulchre and then presented upon this table as bread for his people 3. Bread is broken before it can be food for man men cannot eat whole loaves nor whole joynts it must therefore be broken into parts even so must he be broken upon the Cross in satisfying his Fathers justice before he can be compleat or perfectly made the Captain of our salvation 1 Cor. 11.24 not that properly he was broken on the Cross for that the Scripture should be fulfilled a bone of him shall not be broken Iohn 18.36 Ex. 12.46 Breaking is renting one part of a thing from another so was Christ soul rent from his body his blood rent from his flesh he was poured out like water all his bones were out of joynt his heart was like wax melted in the midst of his bowels without question then broken his bones might have been told they looked and stared upon him Psal. 22.14.17 4 ●read is common to all that are about a table none hath a propriety in it every one cuts sufficient for himself unto whom is the merits of the Lord limited have not all Saints since the Creation been feeding upon them and all that now are and all that shall be every one saying My Lord and my God and yet no scarcity nor absolute propriety but a holy Communion this was darkly represented ●y our Saviours birth what house in a City more common then an Inn and what place of an Inn more common then a stable shewing that the fowlest sinner he is ready to embrace cleanse and entertain 5. Bread naturally strengthens mans heart Psal. 104.15 hence it is called the staff of bread Isa 3.2 the main upholder of natural strength without which man would fall unto his first nothing Nothing more strengthens a drooping soul a doubting Christian then the application of the merits of Christ unto its heart by the holy Ghost with a morsel of this bread men may walk many dayes unto the mount of God 6. Bread is necessary for life so necessary that all things conducing to mans life are subordinate to it as the Reader may know by the Lords prayer if he have not forgot it or slights ●t because common Christ in us Our hope of glory is most necessary and as we know without food or bread we cannot live a natural life we ought to know without receiving of this Ordinance we have no ground to imagine that we shall live a spiritual We dayly hear men chiefly ministers complaining of their peoples Apostacy and yet since this Sacrament in its season was not presented to their faith which might be a strong means of confirming it is not to be wondered to see their people faint stagger and all for want of bread Further between the wine the outward sign and the blood of Christ the thing signified stands this proportion 1. Wine is the juice of ●he grape pressed out by the wine press so was Christ blood pressed out by the weights of his Fathers infinite justice Isa. 63.3 2. Wine comforteth the heart of man Psal. 104.15 the blood of Christ drank in faith in large spiritual draughts out of the vessel or chalice of this Ordinance with the mouth of the affections and received into the stomach of meditation will produce holy purposes and give good spirits to the languishing Christian. 3. Wine encourageth and emboldens It raiseth the spirits that are otherwise cast down and makes the Gyant himself to shout at the flight of his enemy it makes a man to forget trouble and sorrow Prov. 31.6 Ecles 19. Christs blood applied to the soul makes it exceeding bold to fight against principalities and powers it makes them that are of a fearful heart be strong saying fea● not Isa. 35.4 and emboldens it to come to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 It makes the people to clap their hands and shout unto God with the voice of triumph Psal 47.1 4. Wine is of a healing nature Luke 10.34 the Samaritan poured in Wine with Oyle into the wounds of the bleeding traveller the bleeding wounds of an afflicted conscience know that the blood of Christ is of a Soveraign nature to preserve it from dying and yielding up the Ghost Rev. 22.2 From this Doctrine we may draw these inferences 1. When we see bread and wine and feel the comforts of the one and know the necessity of the other to think of Christ and the comforts to be had in his death and the necessity that lyeth upon believers to receive this Ordinance 2. To strive for a spiritual hunger in our approaching to the table of the Lord for otherwise there is no refreshment will be found at the receiving of this spiritual banquet 3. That the Church of Rome by her doctrine of transubstantiation takes away the beauty of this holy Ordinance robbing the people of the cup of the New Testament and by making or teaching that the Accidents of the Elements that is the whitness or roundness of the bread and the colour of the wine to be the sign of the body and blood of the Lord for which cause she is justly condemned by the reformed Churches SECT V THis Ordinance of the Supper is instituted to assure the penitent receiver of the remission of his sins yet all that receive it are not pardoned in regard that some receive it unworthily and their sins are not forgiven justly in as much as the condition upon which the Lord promiseth absolution for his part is not performed upon their part and because of that they are so far from having their soul eased that it is more burthened They being guilty of the body and blood of the Lord 1 Cor. 11.27 by reciving unworthily Now there are three wayes by which men receive unworthily First by not giving due reverence to the mystery in that Sacrament contained Secondly to the ends for which it was appoint●d Thirdly to the Author by whom it was instituted 1. The Ministery in that Sacrament contained As 1. To the crucified body of Christ this presents unto us Christ and him crucifed and the same reverence or respect that we would give to Chr●●● were he visibly present with us we must give unto him represented before us by bread and wine Not that we should give it to the bread and wine but to the Person who is represented to us by them 2. All that God ever did do or that ever he promised to do for the best and dearest of his Saints is
before the Councel of Basil that Councel sent Ambassadors to debate the matter in the City and University of Prague the Ambassadors gave the Bohemians the reasons why the Church of Rome did not give the Communion in both kinds unto the people and that the reader may see how reasonable they are we shall present them before him 1. To avoid errour that the people might not think part of Chr●st body to be in the bread and part to be in the cup. 2. To avoid irreverence for the wine might through heedlesness both of the giver and the receiver be spilled and might fall to the ground 3. To avoid inconvenience for the wine in the cup might not be sufficient to serve all the Communicants so that either there must be a new consecration or wine given not consecrated To these reasons given by these Ambassadors we may add others given by R●mish Doctors 4. The consecrated wine might sour and turn to vineger this in the Authors judgement might be prevented by drinking of it up 5. In some countries wine is hard to be got whether wine be hard or not to be got in Arabia deserta is uncertain sure it is not in France Spain and Italy 6. Lay-people should then touch the cup what great and hainous sin were ●h●s if they did 7. Some palsie hand might shake and spill the wine The Priest might give it him with the more care 8. Then the People and the Priest should be alike in dignity In this case they are both guilty of sin and stand both in need of the same redemption 9. Equ ' donati non sunt inspiciendi dentes A given horse ought not to be looked into the mouth that is it was Christs free gift to give us that Sacrament and therefore the people are not to grumble if they have not the cup By the same reason they might take from them the bread also and by the sam● the people are to have the cup. For if the Sacrament be a free gift none ought to diminish that present if a horse be given to one young sprightly and lusty and the servant present one old and decayed it may be looked in the mouth 10. Some men have long beards and the wine might stick thereon surely those men might wipe their beards dry again 11 Some sick person would be distempered if they drank wine they might drink the less 12. Because the blood of Christ is really received in the bread that is by trans●bstantion that is as soon as the Priest says hee est corpus moum this is my body to himself no body hearing and speaking true Latine for corpus mea or mins or mea would spoil all and also if the priest intend a Sacrament for otherwise it s none when all these things meet together the waf●r is turned to the very real natural flesh of Christ and is no longer a wafer which being granted the wine they hold nor necessary This doctrine of transubstantiation puts the most subtil to their shifts what to think if a Worm or a Mouse should chance to eat some of the Wafer some conceit that Christ altogether le●ves the Wafer others think he doth not but the Mouse eats the flesh of Christ Lo●●a●● that is the great Doctor of all and undertakes to reach all professeth he know●●ot what the Mouse eats Deus novit but how ever it be he must do penance forty days that suffered this to be done and if the poor Mouse can be found she must be burned and buried under the altar others more tender will have her ripped and if the Wafer can be found to be carefully preserved until it consume of it self but if the Priest will eat it it is a high piece of service specially if he be fasting One of the Kings of France which to this day receive the Communion under both kinds asking his clergy why others might not receive so as well as he had this Answer that Kings were anointed as well as Priests and therefore he might have the cup as well as they for that Text bibite ex hoc emnes Math. 26.27 was only spoken to the Apostles as Apostles not as believers and therefore priests may ha●e the cup but not the people is their doctrine When these reasons are weighed and the Commandement of Christ examined the parts of the institution well studied it may be said to the Church of Rome for all her reasons which are altogether void of reason that she hath made void the Commandements of God through her tradition For this Rome is condemned of the Reformed Churches of Helvet Art 21. of Basil. Art 6. of Bohe. Art 13. of France Art 36. of Bl●g Art 35. of Ausp Art 2. of S●● Art 14. of Wirt Art 19. of Irel. Art 97. of Scot. Art 22. of Eng. Art 30. the Articles itself is Art 30. Of the Church ofEngland THe cup of the Lord is not to be denied to the lay-people for both the parts of the Lords Sacrament by Christs Ordinance and Commandement ought to be Ministred to all Christian men alike Quest. 3. Whether kneeling be a gesture lawful to be used at the Communion Before we positively Answer this Question we shall premise 1. There is no gesture in Scripture enjoyned we find our Saviour instituting it with bread and wine we find the Saints often using it with great eagerness and Saint Paul perswading to a holy doing of it with great earnestness but in what gesture it should be taken they all remain in silence 2. That our Saviour sat nor All the Evangelists that mention our Saviours sitting do it by a word that signifies lying the common gesture of the Iews both at that time and long before It would be an odd ●ight with us to see 6 or 7. beds cast down and the Communicants lie upon them one leaning upon anothers breast as Iohn did on Jesus Iohn 13.23 which gesture was ordinary among the Iews Ezek. 23.41 and Amos 2.8 for which cause they plucked of their shoes and washed their feet before they did eat But how came our Saviour to sit or lie since in the institution of the Passeover he ought to have stood and the Iews also Exod. 12. How or when this alteration was made or whether made by Ezra or no we have no certainty yet in regard that standing is not enjoyned in the repetition of the Law the Church altered standing into lieing signifying their rest obtained which was used also by our Saviour 3. What gesture soever he used binds not without his precept and for this we have none we conclude then kneeling to be lawful For 1. It is a decent gesture where there is no particular act required in Scripture it is most lawful for us to betake our selves to general precepts In the case in hand being there is no gesture required our Saviours sitting binding us no more then his receiving in an upper chamber or after Supper doth we may betake ourselves to that
of Church did the Apostle Paul write most of his Epistles to the Romans to the Corinthians to the Galathians and as in the text to the Thessalonians that is to the company of believers that lived in and about those Cities and Countries called to be Saints 1. Cor. 1.2 This National Church as the case now stands with us and for the better understanding of some things hereafter to be handled must be divided into the Romish Church and Reformed First The Romish Church by this we understand all those Christians that hold the new invented Doctrine of the Church of Rome that believe as that Church believes and in all points conform thereunto either in point of practice or in point of doctrine Secondly The reformed Church by this we understand those believers whether Nationall or Provinciall that have forsaken the Church of Rome so far as she hath forsaken the truth of the Gospel and cleave to the Ancient Doctrin taught in the Catholick Church whether by the Lord or by his Apostles or by Ministers sent from them whether taught at Jerusalem Antioch Athens or at Rome it selfe disowning the Doctrine of Purgatory praying for the dead worshiping of Saints or what ever as is contrary to true Doctrine such are the reformed Churches of France Helvetia Basil Bohemia Belgie Auspurge Wittemburge Saxony Scotland or England whose Doctrine in these and such other points opposing Rome as may be seen in their publick confessions Now know that all these together are but one and the same Church diversly considered for as the great Se● which is but one sends out her Branches and Rivers which receive names according to the Countries they pass through and become as it were distinst Seas as the British Sea the Germane Sea the Atlantick Sea Even so the Church sending her Doctrine through the Kingdome and Nations of the Earth receives a denomination from the place where she is received and from them whom she washes with water in the name of the Lord and so of old were the Churches of the Corinthians or Thessalonians and so now the Churches of France or England which yet made not severall Churches for as there is but one head one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one Bridegroom one God and one way to ●eaven so there can be but one Church but severall considerations of that one Church which we believe to be holy and Catholick and is the whole society and company of Believees Elected and appointed c. And now we have seen her whom the Lord loves This is the Spouse of Christ only and besides her we know no other this is she whom Men and Devils Hereticks and Infidels for the present labour to destroy and alwayes did desire to root out but all in vain Mathew 16.18 This is she whom Iohn saw as a Bride come down from Heaven adorned for her Husband Revelations 21.2 who is jealous over her and rejoyceth over her as a Bridegroome rejoyceth over his Bride Isa 62.5 He rejoyceth over her with singing Zepha 3.17 This is the body of Christ Ephesians 1.8 which from Christ as from the Head receiveth Life and Spirit by his Spirit she is governed in all things and of whom also she receiveth increase that she growes up Ephe. 4.16 This is she that for her justification by faith in Christ and her mystical union with him is in name and nature a Queen Christs Spouse for her Nobility the new Jerusalem the Brother Sister and Mother of our Lord the first born of God for her illumination perfection defence of Evangelical truth is called the light of the world a Golden Candlestick a Pillar of truth and for her Sanctification of life a peculiar People a vessel of Honour a Garden inclosed the Temple of the holy Ghost Sancta Dei Ecclesia est mater virgo Spousa This is she who from her fruitfulnesse in bringing forth many Children unto God is called a Mother and that is by keeping her Ch●stity pure from the embracements of the world and Sathan is known and esteemed a Virgin and from those engagements that she hath given to the Lord of constant fidelity to him she is honoured as the Lambs wife This is the Vineyard of the Lord which he hath planted in this world warred with his Blood fenced it about with holy Angels builded the winepress of his passion in the midst of her and is dayly gathering out the stones that do offend her This is she whose property it is to vanquish when she is hurt to understand when she is reproved to be in safety when she is forsaken to obtain victory when she is almost over-thrown to be strongest when she is weakest to grow highest when she is most crushed to be most glorious when she is most reproached to be honourably acquitted when she is scornfully condemned to be crowned when she is dishonoured to be rich when she is impoverished to be illustrous when she is despised then she is ne●rest life when death is nearest to her He that is a member of this Church ought not to be calle● a Lutheran nor a Calvinist nor a Protestant no more then to be called a Petrir or a Paulis or a Nicean for following the doctrin of Paul or Peter or for adhearing to the positions of the Councels of Nice or Paphnutians for approving the opposition of Paphnutius in reference to the coelibat life motioned in that Councell since it is the doctrine of no private Person he believes in but of that that hath taught by the Spirit of God to the Saints in all ages therefore he is to be called a Catholick laying the ground of his Salvation on the foundation already and long agoe laid by the Prophets Apostles or Evangelists the opinion and invention of men being no part of his Religion or Articles of his Creed It is true the members of the Church of Rome subscribe themselves Catholicks but falsely many points of the Doctrin of that Church which they have made necessary to Salvation were not known by the Fathers and Teachers of the old Churches Unknown to the Apostles and to their Successors for severall ages when the fire of Purgatory first kindled We know and what Spirit or whose Breath first blew as it hath been demonstrated by Catholick Champions of this Nation and other reformed Churches Their own Histories discover that it hath neither the Spirit nor the word of God for its entry but the Bishop of Romes pollicy the peoples simplicity the Emperours inadvertency and Phochas's treachery for unto these causes may we reduce his Holinesses Supromacy and infallibility the foundation and Basis of all their other errors the Doctrin of Purgatory of Pardons of Auricular confession of Venial sin of Merit of Transubstantiation of Adoration of Saints Communicating under one kind of private Masse of the Pax of the Agnus Dei of Hostly or Ghostly processions we know to be but yesterday so that whosoever takes hold of this Doctrin deserves
the filling up of the House and eating of the Supper for it was now ready and yet the Table was not filled I dare say the Son of Ieffes place was not empty None who is like Gods own heart but will appear f●rst in ●ods House and at his Worship Probably many might excuse themselves or pretend other businesse at this invitation but the Servants could not help it onely rold their Lord that what had been concluded of him was performed by them The Master being herewith provoked charges the Servants the third time to go to the High-wayes and Hedges and compell them they had bidden and invited and exhorted and perswaded them before now they must take no excuse but Compell and by some circumstances in the text he that wanted a wedding garment appears to be of the number so forced and by this was the house filled and the Lord contented The guests were clean but not all one was found unfitted for such a table he is charged with it He had nothing to say for himself he knew that the servants told him they must do it and that by their Lords direction and therefore he urges not their compulsion as a reason of his own unpreparation they were to bring him in but he must fit himself for so noble a company and plentifull entertainment Now that the Master here is the Lord Jesus or Christ the Kings Son and that the feast are those ways and Ordinances by which Christ feeds both Jew Gentil them were first bidden and them that lay in the lanes and hedges and that the servants are the Ministers of the Church by whose Preaching and Doctrine they are called to come to the Lord Christ for Salvation is granted almost by all and how often the man without the wedding garment in chains is set at the Chancel door to perswade Communicants to a worthy receiving of the Lords Supper is knovvn to all So that there is no need to quarrel with the Word but rather fear the thing and not put the Church to compulsion which denotes the utmost of her power of which afterward to reduce her members family or children to obedience and compell them to come in to her Ordinances For we are not speaking o● her compelling those that are not or were not members of her body as the Spaniards and Iesuites are said to have done with the poor Indians driving them like droves or flocks to the Font or Baptistery and then brag of the multitude of their Converts Let us now come to the point and that the Church hath power to compell any that is of her body I mean such as never were cast out by her for all others are their own Apostacy from her takes not away her relation from them to come to her Ordinance seems to be true doctrine by these Arguments following 1. From that spiritual and powerfull efficacy and blessing that she knoweth goes along with her ordinances God will go along with his own institution and the Spirit may and often doth in the ordinance melt the heart that is otherwise cold and hard that conscience that may be pretendeded against the Ordinance may be broken or enlightned if it be real and that rancor against the Preacher may be slain with the sword of the Spirit Those that came to take Christ Iohn 7 47. and he that was sent to insnare him were both so taken with his words that they were almost if not altogether made his Disciples 2. From that danger that may incur to her whole body if she suffer one to fal off at his own pleasure for that one may open a door to another and both go several waies and each draw Proselytes after them Similitudo exemplum maxime movent and againe quod exemplo fit id etiam jure fieri putant homines She is therefore to appear with her rod in her hand as it were to correct the sawciness or stubbornness of any of her Children lest others take example and write after the copy or walke after their steps Once make it lawfull for a man to fall from the Church Ordinances without a real cause and that is to be discovered afterward and we shall quickly see others following after him out of wilfulness or malice for what Governour Government Preacher or Sermon can there be in the world that will please even all good men 3. From that power that Christ hath left to his Church in his last Will and Testament Die Ecclesiae tell it to the Church is the last refuge for an offended Brother Tell it to the Church Mat. 8.17 if that will not bring him to an acknowledgment of that real offence that he hath given for a zeal is only there supposed let him be to thee as a Heathen the Church hath here and elsewhere as in its own time shall be discovered a power to excommunicate out of the Church which is a delivery over unto Sathan 1 Tim 1.18 any of her body that gives a real and just offence to any of her members and will not make satisfaction so much as by repentance Now what greater offence can there be given to a Christian faithfull man than to see the ordnances the feals of the covenant that which is the power of God to save him that means that God hath appointed ordained instituted as standing Laws never to be repealed to the end of the World slighted rai●ed at car●ed at believe it if ever the Church did hear a cause she must hear this especially when she understands that not an Enemy hath done this but one that saies he hath affinity with Christ yea is a part of him if this tongue cannot be perswaded to say I repent the Church ought to deliver it over unto Sathan that it may learn not to blaspheme so that she may either compel him or thrust him out either make him learn or turn him out of her Schoole and that excommunication is no stingless Bee shal be discovered in its own time and place The like also teacheth the reformed Churches particularly the Church of Helvet Art 23. where speaking of publick places set a part from the worship of God declares that so many as do despise them and separate themselvee from them they are contemners of true Religion and are to be compelled by the Pastours and GodlyMagistrates In this case the Church officer may repair to the civil Magistrate if he be a Church member for redress to surcease stubbornly to separate and absent themselves from sacred assemblies by which they understand the publick temples of the Church It may be easily foreseen that the man who thus separates himself will pretend conscience for his separation The mixt congregation possibly will defile his holy heart and his conscience perswades him that the doctrin generally approved by the Church of England is not according to Godliness and he verily believes that our Churches being builded by Papists are Dens of theives And if he be made to come the sinne hee
between the Summers heat and the Winters Frost All the Christian Churches in the World have been or are Synagogues of Sathan if these segregated Congregations be the Churches of Christ the Church of Ierusalem was no Church the Church of Antioch was no Church the Church of Crete was no Church the Churches of Corinth of Galatia of Philippi of Ephesus of Smyrna of Philadelphia of Sardis were no Churches if these be See the Confession of Faith of all Reformed Churches now in Christendom of Helvetiae Bohemia of France of Basil of Belgiae of Auspurge of Saxony of Wirtemberge of Swedeland of Scotland of England all of them do with one joint consent teach the contrary Doctrine of Separation of Ordination of Sacraments of the Keys unto those Congregations Cast your eye upward to the Writings Sermons Expositions Epistles Disputes of the most Ancient Worthy Learned Godly Patriarchs Martyrs Fathers that lived in any age of the Church or in all the Centuries of the purer times that immediately followed the Apostles and you shall by the whole Body of the Church see these mens practises and Doctrine as they have constituted themselves to be doomed judged sentenced as schismatical or heretical there being no such Doctrine touching those points they maintain in reference to the Ordinances above named taught by the Apostles or their immediate Successors Saint Iohn the Apostle taught no such Doctrine to Polycarpus whom he ordained Bishop of Smyrna Anno Christ● 71. about forty years after Christs death nor Peter to Linus whom he made Bishop of Rome Anno 70. Neither did he teach any such Doctrine to Evodius the Second nor to Ignatius the Third nor to Theophilus the sixth Bishop of Antioch after himself who lived Anno 170. These would have been faithfull in delivering that Doctrine if they had received any such command fr●m the Apostles But they teach the contrary and to Posterity deliver the contrary and from Generation to Generation it hath been taught until it came to the very Age wherein we live Cyprian Bishop of Carthage who lived anno 240. Athanasius Bishop of Alexandria anno 376. Hilarius Bishop of Poicttiers in France anno 355. Optatus Bishop of Millaine anno 365. Basilius the great Bishop of Caesarea anno 370. Gregory Bishop of Nazianzum anno 370. Epiphanius Bishop of Salamine in Cyprus anno 370. Ambrose Bishop of Millain anno 374. Gregory Bishop of N●ssa anno 380. What shall I do I might weary myself in copying out the worthy Champions of the Church that lived in other times as Hierom the best of Presbyters Chrysostome Augustine Cyrill who all before a Papist was heard of taught the very self-same thing that we are now proving viz. That such as separate themselves from the Catholick Church upon the account of mixture and assume to themselves the power of executing in an authoritative way the Ordinances Seals Censures of the Church upon what account soever be irregular persons unlawfull Assemblies and ought to be curbed suppressed and punished by all in authority unto which consent the Reformed Churches To Church these men and to sentence their Doctrine for truth at the same breath we must unchurch all Churches that are that have been in the Christian World and before we condemn them let us sentence these And we do by these Presents censure them as proud boasters blasphemers disobedient to Parents the Church is their Mother whom they ought not to forsake because she is old unthankfull unholy to be without natural affection to be truce-breakers false accusers incontinent fierce despisers of those that are good all the Army of the noble Worthies that have gone before us traytors heady high-minded lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.2 3 4. And Lord have mercy upon their souls This may be thought a harsh censure yet it is no other than upon my own knowledge I am able to justifie having an unhappy curiosity a long season to be frequently at the meetings of several sorts of Hereticks where I saw more and heard more than ever I should have believed from any other 4. Should we hold them to be rightly constituted Churches we should never be sure of a right Church in the World which is expresly contrary to the ninth Article of our Creed for there we believe the holy Catholick Church that is that there is was and shall be a Ch●rch whereof we believe our selves to be Members For that with us may be accounted as the true and onely Church this day and wherein we intend to live and die and by prayers and tears seek its preservation The next offence we take at some party or other of that Church or next turn or new Religion that is turned up we are of another mind and we conclude that the Church of Christ is onely those that hold that opinion which for the time past we have spoken against and if we would walk in the mind and agreeable to the will of God we m●st be of that society that holds such an opinion and so from one Congregation to another still keeping from the Doctrine of the Catholick ●od in justice suffering few of them to come back until through pride we be puffed up That we hold it needless to be of any Congregation or create our selves one which the better to procure some new opinion is broached the novelty whereof the giddy heads of men being taken withal brings disciples in a short time to that teacher which is the very cause that scarce shall we finde one Heretick maintaining one heresie but hath with that some other mingled There being therefore such a mixture of Religions in every one that its hard from which to give him his name yet for a mark of distinction he gets a denomination from some opinion that he principally holds hence one is called a Quaker though in many points he agree with the Anabaptist and the Anabaptist with him and the Millenaries or Fifth Monarcy men with them both and each Heresie maintaining stifly that that is the Church makes him that goes from the Catholick to doubt of the very being of a Church which doubt is the immediate parent of those turnings and windings in points of Religion and opinion as the looseness and iniquity of late years hath cle●rly discovered to any understanding Christian. Of all those Congregations or Opinionists that have revolted from the Apostolick Catholick Church I should chuse to be of that society known by the name of Seekers they know that there is no Church visible in the World no Ordinance at all and therefore they spend their days in seeking one out and enquiring after one which makes them of all Opinions the most uncertain and yet there is great hopes that for the future they may be of some certainty Some of them affirm the Church to be in the Wildernesse others are seeking her in the smoak of the Temple where lest I lose my self
sedition or division to requit it will foster Heresie Hereticks do corrumpere sidem and Schisma●●cks or Separatists do disrumpere charitatem the one corrupts the Doctrine of the Church the other falls from her Communion both are fruits of the flesh and they that do such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Verse ult The sin of Separation is so infectious that in Scripture we are to separate from them that so do Rom. 16.17 There is a Rule in Divinity that wil make the sin of separation to be great it is this Those sins are the greatest which are most contrary to and do most oppose the greatest of Christian vertues or graces Now they are recorded 1 Cor. 13.13 Now abideth Faith Hope and Charity but the greatest of these three is Charity Now by the Rule distrust in Gods promises or in his power is a great sin it being a sin against hope Heresie or a stout persisting in an errour is a far greater sin for it is a sin against faith and seeks to cover conceal if not to destroy the truth Now Charity is greater then either of these that follows therefore that that sin that destroys the peace of the Church untyes the Ligatures by which the whole body is compact together is the greatest but this doth the sin of Separation a thing by this age of no account yet they wil find it of great moment in the day of their Account It is a sin generally accompanied with the other lusts of the flesh viz. Hatred Varience Emulations Strife Wrath which seldome lurks long in a Corner but in time appears in the field in the habit and acts of Murtherers Ravishers Traytors and all with the voyce of Iacob pretending Godlinesse and conscience as Histories do abundantly show But to answer the Question So long as a Church makes no separation from Christ no separation is to be made from it but to keep in it is the duty and safety honour and happinesse of him that would enjoy the Communion of Saints the forgivenesse of sins the Resurrection of the body unto life Everlasting A Church separates from Christ two ways 1. When she overthrows the foundation of that Doctrine that is laid by Christ the foundation of all truth is already laid and he that goes to overthrow that may be said to turn from it Do we see a society of men whether Nationally or Domestically whether openly or secretly going in that road that thwarteth the foundation or fundamental points of Religion there must be a separation Rev. 18.4 whether it be in the adding to these fundamentals as if they were not sufficient or taking from them as if they were redundant or superfluous This made the Reformed Churches beyond Sea and the Church of England to separate from the Church of Rome which hath both taken from and added to those fundamental Truths whereupon the Church was by the Lord and his Apostles erected and builded Having to the Scriptures added some Books as the Apocrypha makes the Scriptures to be an imperfect Rule and must have Traditions to compleat it That the sense and meaning of the Scripture depends upon the Churches authority That in all matters of Controversie not the Scriptures but the Church must be the Judge They have made five Sacraments more then Christ made They have clearly blotted out the whole body of the second Commandment out of the first Table of the Law in several Books That Infants that die without Baptism are eternally separate from God except they be as it were martyred by which martyrdom they are baptized Baptismo sanguinis with their own blood They teach that men are not justified by Faith alone before God They make Saints and holy men departed assistant in the work of reconciling us to God and therefore maintain they must be prayed unto That the Doctrine of Purgatory must be believed if we would be saved That the efficacy of the Sacraments depends upon the worthiness or intention of the giver That Baptism totally abolisheth Original sin That the real fleshly body of Christ is in the Bread at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper as soon as the Priest pronounceth the words Hoc est corpus meum this is my body if he should say Corpus mea it were no Sacrament They take the Wine or keep the Cup from the Laity in that Sacrament That the wine in that Ordinance must be mingled with water that that Sacrament is profitable not only for the living but for the dead The Priest is not to bless a second marriage They baptize Bells with the very words of Baptism and by that they teach Devils are drove from the Church O Romanists great is your Faith and give them proper names That God-Fathers and God-mothers at the Font by reason of the nearness of their Spiritual Kindred are not to nor must no● marry for the seventh generation That the Pope or Bishop of Rome is the universal Head of the Church and Christs Vicar All which ●enets as they were utterly unknown to the former Bishops of Rome nor heard of in the Church of Christ for many Ages so they are for the present opposed by all the Reformed Churches abroad who have upon that account forsaken her and England hath thrown her off and separated from her and by the Champions of the several Churches hath their separation been defended By vertue of that Catholick truth 1 Tim. 6.3 If any man teach otherwise that is then the Scriptures do and consent not to wholsom words of our Lord Iesus and to the Doctrine which is accord●ng to godliness c. from such separate turn away or withdraw thy self their separation is justifiable What Paul would have Timothy in this place to do he practiseth himself in another Acts 19.9 yet probably in one and the same City was it both done by Paul and to be done by Timothy Saint Paul being in Ephesus some there were that believed his word others not but hardened their heart speaking evil of him and of the Gospel After he had preached three moneths and perswading to the things concerning the Kingdom of God he separated the Disciples he would not have those Believers that had received the Truth to be in any Church-fellowship with those that spoke against it Luther who began to rise up and take his farewell of the Church of Rome Anno 1517. being an Augustian Frier was called an Apostate answered Consitetur se esse Apostatam sed beatum Sanctum qui sidem Diabolo datam non servavit that he had only fallen back from that Covenant and Engagement he had made with Satan Not that there is a separation to be made from all the Doctrine of Rome for she holds many great mysteries of Divinity purely and soundly wherein we must and do all agree with her as Christians but he that is a true member of the Church of Rome as it now stands he must believe that the least coal in Purgatory is very
This Errour in point of worship you may call Idolatry But beware that you take not decent or comely Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship The Apostle urging women in the Church of Corinth to be covered 1 Cor. 11.6 that which they might think was too much precisenesse in him for we may be apt to suppose he discontented them that did otherwise was decent in his eyes and commanded to be done but not making it a point of worship nor pressing it upon them as part of Gods service declares that ceremonies may be used in but ought ever to be differenced from the worship performed In brief whatever Ceremony of what nature or kind soever that is enjoined that is not contrary to the Word of God and by the Officers of the Church thought comely to be used as tending to make that worship then used to be the more Reverenced and esteemed by the performers is not to be opposed This age discovers what a dis-respect contempt undervaluinig thoughts most men have even good men in a great measure of the house of God table of God service of God and Servants of God since decent and comely ceremonies were banished from the Church of God and where such ceremonies are injoyned and thou separatest thou art guilty of renting the seamlesse coat there being no cause for making that separation justifiable For Here●●e then and Idolatry only then is there a cause of separation and what ever is more then these cometh of Satan Wherefore though our departure were a trouble to them sayth Reverend Bishop Iewel speaking of Rome yet they ought to consider how just cause we had of our departure And in another place he saith It is true we have departed from them and for so doing we give thanks to Almighty God but yet from Christ from the Apostles and from the Primitive Church we have not departed Romes Heresie and Idolatry gave a just ground for the Reformed Churches separation But In our days there is made such a separation as by no Scripture can be justified there being nothing in matter of doctrine taught nor in point of worship performed that in the least contradicts the Word written or the worship injoyned and therefore their sin is the greater tending to the destroying of that love charity concord union that ought to be in and amongst the members of the Church we must not cut off the arm for every scratch or smal hurt much lesse cut off our nose because it seems to stand awry through a false glasse neither ought we to separate from the body of the Church for every small errour in it as for every Ceremony that in our judgment is amisse and indeed those that are most separate from the Church now in the highest points of doctrine and fight against her did but at first dislike her Ceremonies so dangerous it is to yield in the least to the sin of Schisme for the hurt in that quickly turns to the Gangreen of Heresie Those that disliked her Su●plice now scorn her preaching those that disliked her prayers will not now pray at all those that disliked standing at the Creed now will fall down to no God those that disliked her Crosse in Baptism now scorn the Spiritual washing those that looked sowr upon my Lord the Bishop now casts stones at the Preacher Master G Those that dug down her Altars now would pull down her Churches they that saw her kneel at the Lords Supper and grumbled because she sate not are now so holy that they scorn it Which thing duly and seriously weighed might make men afraid to play about the hole of the asp or to put their hand in the Cokatrice den nay to touch it were it but with a stick least as it befals him that toucheth the Torpedo a spiritual numbnesse or Judiciall stupefaction befall them that they shall no● move one foot forward in a right way more Seldome can we see them returning to their mother Church and to that doctrine wherein they were baptized but like sheep out of the Fold as soon as out of the Church porch they wander further and further and so far they are gone that for the present I am not disposed to go after them but to such as are within hearing I give this short direction viz. to behold such as have gone before them that at first did but st●mble at straws were troubled at trifles thought to have gone no further yet whither are they now hurried look back to the Church you have left view her orders her Sacraments her points of worship study them try them by the Sciptures if you can find them contrary or repugnant to the written Word of God stand stil and save thy own soul but follow not them for they went in the way of Cain and run greedily after the errour of Balaam perished in the Gainsaying of Co●e Clouds without Water carried about of Winds raging waves of the Sea foaming out their own shame wandring stars Jude 11.12 13. By good Words and fair Speeches they deceive the hearts of the simple not for our Lord Iesus Christ but for their own belly Romans 16.18 Quest. 7. Whether more Religions then one may be Tollerated where the true Church is Established In the opening of this Question knowing the times wherein I live and the fewnesse of my years I will not shew you my opinion but you shall hear the Judgement of a Master in our Israel that was gathered with gray hairs to his Fathers and lately fell asleep One Religion is to be Tolerated and no more to be publickly taught then one 1. Because there is but one God who is the object of Religion his Essenc● being simple and indivisible his worship is also to be diversitie of Religion breeds and produceth only diversity of Opinion touching God which in time may in the conceits of men d●stroy his unity and Onenesse 2. As there is but one truth so there ought to be but one Religion for false Religions either teach to worship false Gods or else in a false way and manner to worship the true God which made God himself in constituting the Church of the Jews in a strict manner to give charge touching that and in his constituting the Church of the Christians to do the same by commanding them to stone that Prophet that taught otherwise and us to curse that Angel that should teach other Doctrine then he did then by Moses and now to us by his Son give teach command and appoint Deut. 13.1 Gal. 1.8 3. There is but one Church which is the ground and pillar of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 and one Spirit to lead that Church in the way of truth and therefore there ought to be but one Religion which is the Doctrine of that one Truth 4. There is but one way to heaven and eternal Life in which way few through ignorance and errour walk or find and ways to Hell and destruction which many through corrupted nature fall
in and run in It is dangerous to have or to suffer any to stand at the head of that way to call in Passengers from that road which leadeth unto life since men of themselves are apt and prone enough to turn from it and go in the contrary path 5. Religion is the foundation of States and Kingdoms and diversity of foundations will never keep up long a building herein we find those States in Scripture to stand surest whose Kings feared God and they that feared put down all false worship 6. Religion is the band and cord by which the unity of the State is preserved if there be heard diversities of Doctrine and the unity of Faith broken either the people are divided in their affections or among themselves and against their Princes or their Governours Hence proceed burnings emulations strifes envy malice sedition faction Rebellion Innovation treachery and disobedience and infinite more mischiefs Let me add two more 7. Let all diligence be used to keep out or subdue false Religions Satan will keep them in we know by the Proverb Where God hath his Church the Devil will whatever man do to the contrary have his Chappel A toleration seems to bring stones and timber for the enlarging of it and making it a Synagogue 8. The Angels of the Churches of Pergamos and Thyatira Rev. 2. are blamed for tolerating false Religions taking it for granted that there is but one true ziz the Catholick one of them had them tolerated possibly not by Law but by connivance and indulgence who taught the Doctrine of Balaam to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication whether natural or spiritual and the Doctrine of the Nicholaitans which God did hate then and yet in this Age it passes for true Divinity with many The other suffered Iez●bel who called her self a Prophetess first to teach and then as a proper consequence to seduce our Praedicantiffs do the same and yet plead for a toleration since Paul gave out a Law concerning womens teaching I Tim. 2.12 we finde none but this Iezabel undertaking such an Office It is observable that the Angels of the Church are reproved for bearing with or suffering them so to do and they were the Church Officers Ministers or Bishops by which it seems they had power and authority to restrain and controul them to pull them out of their pulpits and to stop their mouths Whether they were Lords or no let their power and authority speak to do this was Lord-like in my apprehension and not to do it was a ground of Gods accusation Rev. 2.19 20. This Authority was it from heaven or of men If from Heaven then Church Officers have power to controul and put down both Balaam and Iezabel and to stop their mouths and yet not to be accused for Factious If of men then Church-Officers ought to put their power in execution and resist and stop the proceedings of lawless persons command that none hear Iezabel and stop the mouths of all irregular and presumptuous Teachers and not to be accused as busie-bodies and though they be yet let rather men accuse them for performing then God should accuse them for not doing their duty Yet if the Religions be such as do not overthrow the fundamentals of Truth or such as disturb not the Government established in that State Church or Kingdom wherein they be and that the Professor of those Religions be not factious ambitious or pertinarious having no other end in holding their opinions but Gods glory and the satisfaction of their own consciences and willing to be taught and be convinced of their errors diversities of Religions may be tolerated but in private only time may produce a reno●ncing of them when violence might harden them God hath his own times of Calling men and let the humble good honest Christian have his time Wise States Kings and Princes for this cause have granted a private toleration The very Turk who is zealous in his Religion grants this it is especially to be granted in times of great infection then indeed a total suppression in private of different opinions might prove and end in a great disturbance both to Church and State but Philosophandum est sed paucis Quest. 8. Wherein consists the Individuality or singleness the Vnity or Oneness of the true Church That the Catholick Church is but one is both asserted in Scripture and believed in our Creed and though it be scattered up and down through the world in every Kingdom Nation People Province Common-wealth Countreys and Dominions that are known in the earth from La Mairs Straits to Greenland from Sancta Creek to S. Ians yet differs no more then one member of the body differs from another the question then is this what is it that like Arteries and Ligatures Sinews and Nerves holds such a vast body together that the Church of God in this place is not a distinct Church of it self from that that is in another but only a part of it differing as a bone in the neck from that in the foot of the self same body one may be preaching or hearing the word in the Country of the Great Mogul another in Iapan and another in Pauls at London and yet he in one and the self same body And as the Sea receives divers names according to the Countreys she runs through though all but one Sea so the members of the Church Triumphant above in heaven and those of the Church Militant beneath make but one body differing only as a mans upper from his lower parts this Unity consists 1. In a consenting of all of them to the truth and doctrine of the Gospel for we know no Church but the Christian what ever is written by the holy Ghost through the Ministery of the Apostles and Disciples the best expositors of the prophets Psalms and Moses whether made in it and to be done or said to be fulfilled in it and done the whole society of the Church whereever they be scattered believes it and readily consents to it as a Canon of faith and manners 2. It consists in the consenting and unity in reference to the Sacraments of the Gospel the same Sacraments for number for nature that one part holds to be profitable for the Souls of men the same doth the other it is true there are many Churches that differ from another in more externall and Ceremoniall points it is the current doctrine of all reformed Churches and of England Art 34. that it is not necessary that ceremonies be alike in all places but may be altered as the People or Officers may teach and think meet but as touching the essentiall and necessary truths as the ends the uses the Author the profit of them all Christians of the Catholick Church hold one and the same thing 3. I consists in the consenting to and unity in holding the util●●y and necessity of hearing and obeying a Gospell ministery where it is to be had it is a Catholick
Either 1. Strictly for those Precepts Sayings Sermons Exhortations that he gave made left behind in the World when he was visibly dwelling among men in the shape and form of a Servant and whosoever lets these words dwell in them they shall be like men dwelling upon a Rock the water may come about them but it shal never hurt them they may come about their feet but never swell up to the head the wind may blow but not a hair of his head fall to the Earth Mat. 7.27 2. Largely for all the Words Sayings Prophesies Sermons that were spoken by all whom he commissioned to preach after for the whole Doctrine of the Old and new Testament rejecting nothing nor turning out of doors of the great and capacious building of our souls no Word no Scripture since we can see the Image of Christ upon them all we know that Orally and Vocally or Verbally Christ made no Psalm yet here they are put down as the Words of Christ for they were truly Prophetically and spiritually made by him they are a part of that holy Book called the Word of Christ not excluding the other persons but including for it hath various titles according to the purpose and pleasure of the holy Ghost It is the VVord of God Ephes. 6.17 It is the VVord of the Lord 2. Thes. 2.3.1 It is the VVord of Life Phil. 2.16 and here it is the VVord of Christ. In those other places the Son is not excluded quod necessario subintelligitur non deest and here the Father with the Spirit are concluded That the whole body of the Doctrine of the Scriptures and what ever is contained therein may be called the word of Christ though Christ might not be yet come in the flesh may be thus demonstrated 1. They were all uttered and spoken by his spirit or they were written by that spirit that came from him Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy ghost 2. Pet. 1. ult Now the Holy ghost is sent by the Father in his Sons name Ioh. 14.26 and the Son sends the Holy ghost again from the Father Ioh. 15.26 It was this Spirit that put words in the mouth and mind of Noah Abraham Isaac Iacob David Solomon Iehosophat Iob Daniel Ieremiah VVhat shall I say the time would fail to speak of Gideon Barack Sampson Peter Paul and Iames the Lords Brother all which were acted by one and the same spirit which proceedeth from the Father and the Son prompting them and dictating to them the things Councels prophesies that are recorded in the Oracles of God 2. They did all of them hold him out to the VVorld or to the Sons of men speak of him Abraham saw his day Iohn 8.56 Moses wrote of him Ioh. 5.46 Isaiah saw him born of a Virgin Isa. 7.14 and told the VVorld of it Isa. 9.6 Ieremiah saw the children of Bethlem slain for him Ier. 31.15 He was seen from the top Tower of divine speculation giving eyes to the blind and ears to the deaf Isa. 35.5 He was sold for thirty pieces of silver Zacch 11.13 he was seen scourged mocked and crucified Isai. 53.4 5. he was seen to rise from the dead the third day Hos. 13. 14. Psal. 16.10 Ion. 1.17 he was seen to intercede at the right hand of God Dan. 9.17 he was seen coming in the clouds to judge his people Iude 14. his Birth his Reign his Nature his Suffering the cause of his Suffering the profits of his sufferings the height of his Power the extension of his Kingdom was made known to the world to Simeon before he embraced him else he would not nay could not have beheld him as the Lords Salvation Luk. 2.30 that is he through whom God appointed salvation to come by Christ himself commanded the Jews to search the Scriptures Ioh. 5.39 as if he had said If you do not find by the Scriptures the properties acts signs tokens of the true Messias spoken of by the Prophets to agree with and in me then believe me not They speak so fully and so largely of him of his Kingdome strength and power that almost it is nothing else but the word of Christ as if he himself were speaking of himself the things concerning himself Every Prophet in his turn prophesied and spake of him untill Iohn and he pointed him with his finger saying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 behold the Lamb of God they held him out unto the World in Prophesies and Types the Baptist held him forth to the World in flesh and bones yet fleshand blood revealed it not to him neither but the spirit which he sent before to restifie of those things that should come to pass and that they might be brought by those sayings to believe on the Son of man he brought indeed glad tidings vere magnum id est majus quom humana capit intelligentiam that said To you is born this day a Saviour which is Christ the Lord. Gloria in excelsis he plainer that said Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the World 3. They were all of them ratified and fulfilled of him confirmed and established by him Not a Iota or Title that was foretold of him but was to the height accomplished of him ut impleretur that it might fulfilled which was spoken in the Scriptures is a usual phrase with the Evangelists As Ionas was three days and three nights in the Whales belly so was the Son of man in the bowels of the earth As the Serpent was lifted up that the Israelites beholding it might be cured of those wounds the fiery Serpents had given them so must the Son of man be lifted up on the Cross that whoso beholds him might be saved from the stings of that old Serpent called the Devill and Sathan Revel 12.9 He is the true Melchizedec who meets the faithfull returning from the slaughter of their sins and comforts them with bread and wine and blesseth them yea and they shal be blessed There was one Text and it seems but a mean one yet he wil not dye nay rather he cannot dye until it be fulfilled for at the last gasp he cryes out Ioh. 19.28 I thirst Quodnam Genus Sermonis he that could endure mockings scourges buffettings nay nailing to the Cross cast out of the land of the living and near to be made free among the dead cannot he endure a little thirst This thirst it seems is more then naturall that death it self cannot quench he is a thirst and Heaven and earth shall perish before he drink not those hands feet that in this his condition we would think should rather smite him spurn at him must be imployed to fetch reach him drink Ut impleretur all this was done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken in that Scripture Psal. 69.21 In my thirst they gave mee Vinegar to drink which when he had done then Consummatum est all was finished if it had not been the truth
declared their perversnesse as is evident by comparing Acts 16.3 with Gal. 5.2 3. If there were no limitation in this case of giving offence there would never be an Heretick Whom we are to reject after the first and second admonition Titus 3.10 Quest. 8. Whether the Books called Apocrypha be not Scripture These Books commonly called Apocrypha are so called from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abseondo a thing hid because the authority of them is not known to the Church and in testimony of Faith those Books must not at all be produced The Church of Rome owns them as part of the Canon but the Catholick Church did ever exclude their Authority For 1. They were never used by the Jews neither in their Temples nor in their Synagogues the Jews were always Gods Library Keepers To them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 Now these being never used nor committed to them cannot be Gods Oracles and by consequence their authority is not binding 2. They never received any countenance from the gospel they are never mentioned as a Rule or as Books wherein the will and minde of God was made known to men which Christ would never have neglected to do had they been so yea as he chid the Pharisees for putting false glosses upon the Law surely he would have upbraided them sharply for taking away so great a part of the body of the Law Our Lord Jesus mentions no other parts of the Scriptures then Moses Psalms and the Prophets Luke 24 44 4● of which the Apocrypha is no part 3. There are many things in those Books false both in History and in Doctrine much non-sense and against both sense reason and Canonical Scripture are there many passages 4. The Author of the second Book of Mac. Mac. 2.2.23 Ingenuously confesses that that Book was only an abridgment or compend of those five Books of the Wars of the Jews writ by one Iason a Cyrenean and great sweat pains and labour it cost hi● so to do This was no fit work for the Spirit of God to abridge the long books writ by Iason that men might have more pleasure in the reading of them The same Author concludes this History with a Complement and also desires to have his errours pardoned professing his best in composing that book which also shews it came not professedly from the Spirit of God The same ●each the Reformed Churches of France Art 4. of Belgiae Art 6. of Ireland Art 3. of England Art 6. Yet the Ch●rch does and hath used these books and reads them in their Congregations though not to confirm doctrine but to exhort to manners For these Reasons 1. From that Relation and aspect that it bears toward the Scripture concerning the Jews returning from the Captivity the Passeover kept by King Iosiah the Wisdom so called of Solomon though probably made by Philo the Jew who flourished An. C. 90. the sentences and sayings of the son of Sirach are so much reflecting upon Sacred Writ that they are not to be despised Iohn 10.22 We have some account of a Discourse that was held between Christ and the Jews in the Temple and withall tels us what time this discourse was viz. At the Feast of the Dedication Now of this Feast the Scripture nowhere gives us an account we read of no Laws of it no Sacrifices for it no time set apart for it yet Iesus owns it To know the original and cause of this Feast we must go to Apocrypha 1 Mac. 4. ver 52. to the end In which place we read that when the Iews had defeated the forces of Gorgias and had regained the Temple and rebuilded the Altar they offered Sacrifice thereon and dedicated it for future service and kept the days of Dedication with gladness for joy that God had given them again Liberty to worship in their Temple and ver 59. it is appointed that that feast be kept every year for eight days which in our Saviours time is kept and he graceth it with his presence too blame then are they that are offended at Ministers going down to the Apocrypha citing it for matter of fact for in this and in some other places no Minister under heaven can give his hearers any rational account of this Text without making use of the Apocrypha 2. For those excellent plain Moral Instructions that lie in many places of it so full of variety so plenteous in brevity particularly those books of Ecclisiasticus and Wisdom wherein are excellent documents suited to nay most of them taken from the word of God 3. For those godly and profitable uses beleivers may make in reading and hearing those great deliverances that God was pleased to give his own people Israel in so wonderfull a manner cloathing their enemies with shame when they were at strongest and crowning them with glory and honour when they were at weakest In a word to see how God preserved them in the midst of their enemies keeping to himself still a people when the Heathen about them had said Let them be no more a Nation as is manifest in the history of the Maccabees Yet alwayes care was taken that none of these bookes nor nothing in one of those bookes was ever made use of in matters of Faith or Doctrine but in matters of fact onely as men will make use of Poets Chronicles or moral Authors To this agree the reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 6. the Article it self is this Art 6 of the Church of England Holy Scripture containeth c. And the other books Hierom saith the Church doth read for example of life and instruction of manners but yet doth not apply it to establish any Doctrine c. Quest. 9. Why would God communicate his will to his Church in writing The meaning of this question is this Seeing God was pleased to let his will and his pleasure or his word be known and communicated to the world from the Creation unto Moses by tradition or by speaking why would he have it to be revealed from Moses untill the dissolution of the world by writing might it not have been delivered to succeeding ages by the present through the Fathers delivering it to the Children and so forward to the end as well as it was for two thousand years at the beginning of the world But God would not have it so he would have it given in writing 1 Because of the darkeness of mans nature the candle of the Lord shined darker and darker as man increased sin increased that lamp of light that he put in man at first grew dimmer and dimmer To prevent a gross darkness from falling upon the deluded sons of men he would not trust his word alwayes to remain upon the tongues or hands of men but would have it set in a candlestick and writ in tables of stone to remain a perpetual light 2 That it might be keept the●freer from corruption before man grew more stuborn and as they multiplied
Whether it be a sin to receive the Communion in a mixed congregation and if private examination be necessary By a mixed congregation the age makes us to understand 1. A congregation wherein any Communicant is not of the same judgement principle or opinion though in things circumstantial 2. A congregation wherein there are some Communicans that have sin in their mortal bodyes though it be repented 3. A congregation wherein there be drunkards or sweaters though adhearing professedly to the doctrine of the Gospel Unto which we will add this also though he was never reproved nor admonished by us The Question is then whether a man that hath prepared himself by sound hearty real and holy examination for that Ordinance may altogether forbear it and omit it upon the account of his knowing or foreseeing that such a drunkard will be at that holy banquet It is answered in the negative he ought not to forbeat upon any such pretence For 1. That Ordinance is not arbitrary It is not left to our own will and discretion that we may or may not as we will we ought to do our duty and prepare our selves to be worthy receivers if another neglect his and yet receive let him look to it the Lord is at hand 2. We might neglect other Ordinances as well as that we might refuse to read the Scriptures to pray to hear upon the same reason and indeed this doctrine as it hath kept some from the Chancel that is from receiving it hath kept others from the Church that is from hearing and this again hath kept some from the Scripture resolving to keep company with none but such as are altogether without sin and therefore the light within is their rule 3. God requires no such condition he craves faith repeatance and new obedience on my part but not that my companion should have the same or then I to be refused and my offering not to be accepted one Christian shall never be bound hand and foot and cast into utter darkness because another of the company wants the wedding garment 4. It is plainly against that Text 1 Cor. 11.29 he that ea●eth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh damnation or judgement to HIMSELF therefore not at all to another he that prepares himself aright need not fear what the unworthiness of others can do against him 5. It would clearly take away this Sacrament out of the Church who would prepare himself to come if he should be cursed by ano●hers unworthiness or approach that table though full of faith with boldness except he knew that every heart at the table were as holy as his own and others that were as full of faith as he might hang down the head least his unworthiness procure unto them a judgement and so the devotion even of the devout should receive a bar ●nd be shut from all comfortable actings and holy duties This is not spoken to countenance prophaness but to inform the weak and tender conscience there being Laws in the Church to d●b●rth scandalous from that table and also th● ignorant which may and ought to be put in execution by the Church Officer after his admonishing the one and instructing the other for to exclude either of these without tryal save in case of necessity is arrogant and rash and without Authority but upon certain knowledge to deba● such is both religiously and lawfully done No Minister shall in any wise admit to the receiveing of the Holy Communion any of his cure or flock which be openly known to live in sin notorious without repen●ance nor any who have maliciously and openly contended with their neighbours until they shall be reconciled c. The scandalous are found out by the ear and secluded by Law the ignorant cannot be found but by discourse conference or examination which leads in the second part of the Question Whether private examination be necessary There is a twofold examination in reference to the Sacrament of the Supper 1. In respect of God 1 Cor. 11.28 men are bound and it is necessary for them to examine themselves 2. In respect of the Church that the ignorant and unlearned make not that Ordinance undervalued the Question is of this latter and amounts to this Whether the Church Officer may lawfully debar a sober pious Christian or one of whom he neither sees nor hears evil purely upon the account he will not submit to his examination a practice of late too commonly known nay several thousands have been excluded except they came under the tryal not of the Church Officers only but of his lay-Elders an office not heard of in the Church until these late years and are parts of the Church no more then those Anticks whose mouths supplie the places of spouts unto the temples but to let them pass it is denied private examination in this sence is not necessary For 1. The Scripture would have given some Item of it when the nature of the Sacrament is stated and examination required 1 Cor. 11. No word that tended in the least to this is written but every man enjoyned to examine himself 2. It cannot be shewed that ever the priests examined the fitness even legal of those that aproached the Paschal and yet the danger of unworthy receiving the one seems as great as the other 2 Chro. 30.20 1 Cor. 11.30 3. That Parable Matth. 22.9 is against this practice wherein the servants are appointed to bring in all that they could find without Order to try if they had the wedding garment the want of which condemned the party but not the servant Yet by the Law of the Church particularly of the Church of England none are to be admitted to that Ordinance until they have given sufficient testimony of their knowledge in the principles of the Christian religion Which Law though not expressed in Scripture in direct terms yet consequently it is approved In regard that the Church Officers are called Watchmen Stewards Shepherds c. which titles denote what a care they ought to have of their people or flock This even this being not taught unto the people was a firebrand of division between the Pastor and his people in these last days examination being by them required and that rigidly not declaring it as necessary in respect of the Church which would have satisfied the minds of all sober Christians but as from Scripture when the people knew that no such thing was required and they themselves not being able ●o produce the Text wherein in it was enjoyned It was pretty sport to hear men publickly and privately affirming that those who submitted not themselves to examination ought to be secluded for breach of that Order or discipline they themselves erected and yet not conforming themselves to those Orders that by Law had been established By which two things to all of understanding occurred First their arrogance to make Laws and compel the people without authority to submit under the pain of le●ser excommunication
Church for though every one that are members of the visible are not of the body of the invisible Church yet he is not of the invisible that acknowledgeth not himself a member of the visible he that hath God for his Father hath the visible Catholick Church for his only mother and must have her if he would be saved She is like the Ark of Noah as all without that was drowned so all without this is damned In the judgement of Charity we must indeed suppose that God hath his own among the heathen and by working upon them by his Spirit in an extraordinary secret and hidden way brings them unto the knowledge of his Son by which they are ingrafted into his body and so made members of the Catholick Church for as before out of it there is no salvation the reason is out of it is to be out of Christ for that is his body and to be out of Christ is to be without God and to be without him is to be without eternal life For this is eternal life to know thee to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent Quest. 12. What are the marks of a true Church General notes and marks are set down by the Church of Rome whereby it is pretended that the true Catholick and Holy Church may be distinctly and perfectly known from all false Congregations or Churches as 1. Visibility 2. Antiquity 3. Durability 4. Prosperity 5. The name of a Catholick Church 6. Agreement with the ancient Church 7. It s union with the head viz. the Pope 8. Holiness of Doctrine 9. Efficacy of Doctrine 10. Holiness of life 11. The glory and power of miracles 12. The gift of Prophesie 13. The acknowledgement or confession of her enemies 14. The unhappy and unfortunate success of her enemies 15. A succession of Bishops With several others which in their own nature are either separable from the true Church or may agree to a false and may constitute a Synagogue of Satan as well as a Church of Christ for which with many other reasons they are rejected of the Reformed Churches as proper Characters of that body whereof Christ is the head that being able to consist pure holy and visible without some of them though in some points they agree to her also in that but not as essential or Characteristical and knowing also that many of them are forged by and in Rome that she may appear the better and stand the firmer in her Pontificalibus The proper and essential Characters of a true Church whereby she is differenced from all false also from the Church of Rome and which gives her her esse vivere sentire are these viz. 1. The pure dispensation of the Word Act. 2.4 Where the Word is taught in a pure manner according to the institution of it without detraction from or addition to it wherever that is taught what Christ commanded and the Gospel holds out so farre there is a pure Church and where that is mixed and mingled with mens Inventions as points of doctrine so far the Church is impure 2. The pure Administration of the Sacraments Matth. 28.19 30.1 Cor. 11.23 That Church that keeps to the institution of those Ordinances appointed as Seals of the Covenant by Christ putting nothing to them nor taking nothing from them as necessary for the making of them Seals so far that is a pure Church and where that is not done it is so far impure Some adde Church discipline but that holds out rather her well being then her being in times of persecution she hath wanted that and may want it and yet a true Church by the keeping pure of the Word and Sacraments which a visible Church cannot consist without hence we behold and look upon Ierusalem Galatia Thessalonica Corinth Colos. and once those famous Churchs of Asia though the gospel was taught in them in a glorious and a pure dispensatory way yet for the present wanting those two we eye them not nor number them among the Churches of Christ. The same teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 14. Behem Art 8. France Art 27. Belg. 29. Ausp Art 7. Sax. Art 11. Wirtem Art 32. Swed or the 4. Cities Art 15. S●ot Art 15. and of England Art 19. That Article it self is this Art 19. of the Church of England The visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of faithfull men in which the pure word is preached and the Sacraments be duly administred according to Christs Ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite for the same c. All which considered it follows 1. That the Church of Rome is no true Church or pure Church making the Scriptures to be imperfect for salvation without their own Tradition They will not suffer the Church to be clean through the word that Christ hath spoken The Church is only tyed to the Gospel For if an Angel from heaven teach any other Doctrine he is to be accursed by her 1 Gal. 9. With her Baptismal water she adds oyl salt and spittle as essential parts of Baptism and useth this holy Ordinance upon Bells Stocks and wood With the Sacramental wine she must mingle water of which the Lairy must not taste With her Sacramental bread she visits the sick salutes Emperors makes Procession it must be also a wafer C●ke and it must not be broken with both these Elements she maketh a Sacrifice for the dead and she teacheth that a Priest may give it to himself alone that the vertue or efficacy both of that and Baptism depends upon the intention of him that doth administer and yet the efficacy must not be questioned but believed and forasmuch as they are administered in Latine which the common sort may not understand they must act implicite faith 2. That those segregated Congregations in England are not true Churches The word preached by many that are not men in Sex nor Ministers in Office prayer being preached down and preaching only to be heard from men of their own principles teaching for Doctrine not Traditions but fancies blasphemies affirming the nullity of Apostolical Ordination c. The Sacraments are either abused as re-baptizing those that were baptized before making dipping necessary to that Ordinance and the Sacrament performed by a Laick person The Sacrament of the Lords Supper being either preached down altogether or grosly abused in nature It s vertue depends upon his goodness that gives it a sin to receive it with any that we conceit not to be holy or know him to be prophane though he be never admonished by them and if he were yet he is not to be eaten withal least I eat and drink damnation to my self through his sin the Elements not consecrated through which that only is an Ordinance and the body or blood of the Lord they are not consecrated for he that often attempts to do it hath no power so to do wanting Apostolical Authority viz. Ordination 3. That the
Church of England is a true Church as it is now constituted her Doctrine being pure she holds nothing nor injoyns nothing upon her members in matters of salvation by way of precept neither doth she add to nor take any thing from the nature of the Sacraments that the Lord Christ hath left behinde him in the Church by way of practice she doth and may injoyn and she hath power to ordain several Ceremonies to be performed in the receiving of them which in themselves being not contrary to the Scriptures nor taught by her as necessary for salvation urged only as edifying for their meaning and decent for the service performing her Members may and they do give her all due obedience and their obedience is justifiable You need not here be put in minde of that caution formerly given viz. not to take manners for doctrine it is a high errour to conceit the vertue power efficacy of an Ordinance to consist in or depend upon the goodness of him that doth administer the same A prophane person a known Swearer may purely dispense the Sacraments for that lies not as God forbid it did in the purity of any mans conversation but in the pure adhering to our Lords Institution The pure preaching of the word hangeth not upon the purity of him that speaketh but in the purity of the word spoken of The purity of Doctrine lies in the agreement of it unto Scripture and not in the agreement of a mans life unto the word if so how many had Christ converted what multitudes of people had Paul brought to the knowledge of the truth more then he did The same Doctrine teacheth the Reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 26. To conclude this Chapter in all Instituted Ordinances it is neither Pauls goodness nor Apollo's graces nor Iudas's wickednesse that is the cause of the plants fruitfulness or barrenness from the grace of God must we look to receive the promised reward 1 Cor. 3.7 In natural as in prayer sometimes it may be otherwise Iames 5.16 CHAP. II. Of the Scriptures COL 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. HAving viewed this beautifull heavenly and holy building for it is Gods 1 Cor. 3.9 which is as Ierusalem a City compact together we shall now behold the foundation upon which it stands The Builder of it was skilfull in all kind of cunning Work and a Fabrick of this height or altitude required a foundation suitable deep strong and sure he therefore founded it upon a Rock Matth. 16.18 by which the several parts of it stand firm the carved and polished work thereof knows no shaking the least vessell therein though earthen yet being chosen for the Masters honour knoweth no falling down by tottering The foundation of this glorious Metropolis Royal Edifice or House of God is in truth and nature but one yet since Scripture speaks of it as two we shall speak in that Language and shew you that the Church hath 1. An increated essential foundation which is that holy thing whose name is Jesus Christ the Lord Matth. 16.18 begotten before the beginning of the world it is the Lamb of God the Rock of Ages it is he that is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners the only begotten Son of the Father who taking upon himself to deliver man did not abhor the Virgins womb it is he whose name is wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the Prince of Peace the everlasting Son of the Father the Man who is Gods Fellow Zach. 13.17 2. A Created Doctrinal foundation this is the Law and the Prophets Ephes. 2.20 It is the word written which is profitable for Doctrine and reproof for correction and instruction in righteousness that the man or Church of God might be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works In summ it is that word that was spoken by the Fathers by the Saints by the Prophets and Apostles who were the servants of God Phil. 1.1 Of these two we may say as Ioseph said of Phara●hs doubled dream Gen. 41.26 They are but one yet not one so but that the preheminence is given to the first under the notion of a Corner stone Isa. 28.16 that giving both strength to the building and directions to the Builder And indeed the Prophets and Apostles laid no new Foundation but added to that corner stone laid to their hands daily such firme Christians as they had fitted for this holy superstructure taking directions in their building from its pos●ture for unto it all the building fuly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord Ephes. 2. ult No foundation being laid therefore but what is united to this strengthened by this supported by this and directed by this shews that properly there is none but this Saint Paul who was a wise and excellent Master builder himself 1 Cor. 3.10 understanding there was a Church builded at Colos. a City of Phrygia the greater in the continent of Asia the lesse so called from one Phryxus a King thereof had no desire it should stand empty left the evill spirit which hath been cast out should take possession again as at this time he was like to do whether by their falling back to Paganisme and Heathnish customes again or by being taught the necessity of imbracing the doctrine or Ceremonies of Jewisme would have the Word of Christ dwell richly in them This Country of Phrygia had once in it a King named Gordius who of a Plow-man being chosen King tyed or hampered his Plow-Tacklings in such a knot that he predicted that none should untye them but he that was to be Conquerour of the World it was called Nodus Gordianus this Prophesie was fulfilled in Alexander who because he could not untye it by Art cut it asunder with his Sword and for afterward conquering the World was sirnamed the Great At this time there was among these Phrygian Colossians some that hampered their understandings by a counterfeited humility who with their dark Axiomes would have intruded upon them worshipping of Angels which knots to untye that they might be great the Apostle sends them or recommends unto them the Sword of the Spirit Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly In this Country also was the City of Midaium where Midas the son of this Gordius lived and dwelt he as the Poets fain asked of Bacchus who was his Guest that what ever he touched might become gold his great riches was the ground of the Fable his ●ute was granted by which he turned Mountains into gold but finding that he could neither eat nor drink but Goblets and Viands of Gold he recalled his wish and by washing himselfe in the River Pa●t●lus communicated that virtue to the River which afterward brought up golden sand The River that comes from the Mount Tmolus brings with it abundance of gold and