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A66445 The blovdy tenent, of persecution, for cause of conscience, discussed, in a conference betweene trvth and peace vvho, in all tender affection, present to the high court of Parliament, as the result of their discourse, these, amongst other passages, of highest consideration. Williams, Roger, 1604?-1683.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1644 (1644) Wing W2758; ESTC R2405 232,471 275

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Pergamus and Thiatira and the Angel or Officers of those Cities to suppresse not only such practices but such Doctrines also as the Roman Emperour justly punished Ovid the Poet for teaching the wanton Art of Love leading to and ushering on laciviousnesse and uncleannesse 4. Yet so far as Balaams teachers or Iesabel did seduce the members of the Church in Pergamus or Thiatira to the worship of the Idolaters in Pergamus or Thiatira which will appeare to be the case I say so far I may well and properly answer as himselfe answered before those Scriptures brought from Luc. 9. 2 Tim. 2. to prove patience and permission to men opposite viz. These Scriptures saith he are directions to Ministers of the Gospel and in the end of that passage he addes Much lesse doe they speake at all to Civill Magistrates Fifthly Either these Churches and the Angels thereof had power to suppresse these doctrines of Balaam and to suppresse Iesabel from teaching or they had not That they had not cannot be affirmed for Christs Authority is in the hands of his Ministers and Churches Matth. 16. 18. 1 Cor. 5. If they had power as must be granted then I conclude sufficient power to suppresse such persons who ever they were that maintained Balaams doctrine in the Church at Pergamus although the very Magistrates themselves of the City of Pergamus if Christians and to have suppressed Iesabel from teaching and seducing in the Church had she been Lady Queen or Empresse if there were no more but teaching without hostility And if so all power and authority of Magistrates and Governours of Pergamus and Thiatira and all submitting or appealing to them in such cases must needs fall as none of Christs appointment Lastly From this perverse wresting of what is writ to the Church and the Officers thereof as if it were written to the Civill State and Officers thereof all may see how since the Apostacie of Antichrist the Christian World so called hath swallowed up Christianity how the Church and civill State that is the Church and the World are now become one flocke of Iesus Christ Christs sheepe and the Pastors or Shepherds of them all one with the severall unconverted wilde or tame Beasts and Cattell of the World and the civill and earthly governours of them The Christian Church or Kingdome of the Saints that stone cut out of the mountaine without hands Daniel 2. now made all one with the mountaine or Civill State the Roman Empire from whence it is cut or taken Christs lilies garden and love all one with the thornes the daughers and wildernesse of the World out of which the Spouse or Church of Christ is called and amongst whom in civill things for a while here below she must necessarily be mingled and have converse unlesse she will goe out of the World before Christ Iesus her Lord and Husband send for her home into the Heavens 1 Cor. 5. 10. CHAP. LVIII Peace HAving thus by the help of Christ examined those Scriptures or writings of truth brought by the Author against Persecution and cleared them from such vailes mists wherewith Mr. Cotton hath endeavored to obscure darken their light I pray you now by the the same gracious assistance proceed to his answer to the second head of Reasons from the profession of famous Princes against persecution for conscience K. Iames Steven of Poland K. of Bohemia unto whom the Answerer returneth a treble answer First saith he We willingly acknowledge that none is to be persecuted at all no more then they may be oppressed for righteousnesse sake Againe we acknowledge that none is to be punished for his conscience though misinformed as hath been said unlesse his Error be fundamentall or seditiously and turbulently promoted and that after due conviction of his conscience that it may appeare he is not punished for his conscience but for sinning against his conscience Furthermore we acknowledge none is to be constrained to beleeve or professe the true Religion till he be convinced in judgement of the truth of it but yet restrained he may be from blaspheming the truth and from seducing any unto pernicious error Truth This first answer consists of a repetition and enumeration of such grounds or conclusions as Mr. Cotton in the entrance of this Discourse laid downe and I beleeve that through the helpe of God in such replies as I have made unto them I have made it evident what weak foundations they have in the Scriptures of truth as also that when such conclusions excepting the first as grasse and the flower of the grasse shall sade that holy Word of the Lord which the Author against such persecution produced and I have cleared shall stand for ever even when these Heavens and Earth are burnt Peace His second answer is this What Princes professe and practice is not a rule of conscience They many times tolerate that in point of State-policie which cannot justly be tolerated in point of true Christianity Againe Princes many times tolerate offendours out of very necessity when the offenders are either too many or too mighty for them to punish in which respect David tolerated Ioab and his murders but against his will CHAP. LIX VNnto those excellent and famous speeches of those Princes worthy to be written in golden letters or rows of Diamonds upon all the gates of all the Cities and Palaces in the World the Answerer without any particular reply returnes two things Truth First that Princes profession and practice is no rule of conscience unto this as all men will subscribe so may they also observe how the Answerer deales with Princes One while they are the nursing Fathers of the Church not only to feed but also to correct and therefore consequently bound to iudge what is true feeding and correcting and consequently all men are bound to submit to their feeding and correcting Another while when Princes crosse Mr. Cottons judgement and practice then it matters not what the profession and practice of Princes is for saith he their profession and practice is no Rule to Conscience I aske then unto what Magistrates or Princes will themselves or any so perswaded submit as unto keepers of both Tables as unto the Antitypes of the Kings of Israel and Iudah and nursing Fathers and Mothers of the Church First will it not evidently follow that by these Tenents they ought not to submit to any Magistrates in the world in these cases but to Magistrates just of their owne conscience and Secondly that all other Consciences in the world except their owne must be persecuted by such their Magistrates And lastly is not this to make Magistrates but steps and stirrops to ascend and mount up into their rich and honourable Seats and Sad●les I meane great and setled maintenances which neither the Lord Iesus nor any of his first Messengers the true patternes did ever know CHAP. LX. Truth IN the second place hee saith that Princes out
Church of Christ abideth and secondly the Commonweale may be in perfect peace and quiet notwithstanding the Church the Commonweale of Christ be in distractions● and spirituall oppositions both against their Religions and sometimes amongst themselves as the Church of Christ in Corinth troubled with divisions contentions c. Secondly I observe it is true the Church helpeth forward the prosperity of the Commonweale by spirituall meanes Ier. 29. 7. The prayers of Gods people procure the peace of the City where they abide yet that Christs Ordinances and administrations of Worship are appointed and given by Christ to any Civill State Towne or City as is implied by the instance of Geneva that I confidently deny The Ordinances and Discipline of Christ Iesus though wrongfully and prophanely applied to naturall and unregenerate men may cast a blush of civillity and morality upon them as in Geneva and other places for the shining brightnesse of the very shadow of Christs Ordinances casts a shame upon barbarisme and incivillity yet withall I affirme that the misapplication of Ordinances to unregenerate and unrepentant persons hardens up their soules in a dreadfull sleep and dreame of their owne blessed estate and sends millions of soules to hell in a secure expectation of a false salvation CHAP. LXXXIV The second head concerning Superiority of each Power Peace BEcause contention may arise in future times which of these Powers under Christ is the greatest as it hath been under Antichrist we conceive first That the power of the Civill Magistrates is superiour to the Church policie in place honours dignity earthly power in the World and the Church superiour to him being a member of the Church Ecclesiastically that is in a Church way ruling and ordering him by Spirituall Ordinances according to God for his soules health as any other member so that all the power the Magistrate hath over the Church is temporall not spirituall and all the power the Church hath over the Magistrate is spirituall not temporall And as the Church hath no temporall power over the Magistrate in ordine ad bonum spirituale So the Magistrate hath no Spirituall power over the Church in ordine ad bonum temporale Secondly the delinquencie of either party calleth for the exercise of the power of terrour from the other part for no Rulers ordained of God are a terrour to good works but to evill Rom. 13. 3. So that if the Church offend the offence of the Church c●lleth upon the Civill Magistrate either to seeke the healing thereof as a nursing father by his owne grave advice and the advice of other Churches or else if he cannot so prevaile to put forth and exercise the superiority of his power in redressing what is amisse according to the quality of the offence by the course of civill Justice On the other side if the Magistrate being a member of the Church shall offend the offence calleth upon the Church either to seek the healing thereof in a brotherly way by conviction of his sinne or else if they cannot prevaile then to exercise the superiority of their power in removing of the offence and recovering of the offendour by Church censures If the end of Spirituall or Church power is bonum spirituale a spirituall good and the end of Civill or State power is bonum temporale a temporall good And secondly if the Magistrate have no spirituall power to attaine to his temporall end no more then a Church hath any temporall power to attaine to her Spirituall end as is confest I demand if this be not a contradiction against their owne disputes tenents and practices touching that question of persecution for cause of conscience For if the Magistrate be supreme Iudge and so consequently give supreme judgement sentence and determination in matters of the first Table and of the Church and be custos utriusque Tabule keepers of both Tables as they speake and yet have no Spirituall power as is affirmed how can he determine what the true Church and Ordinances are and then set them up with the power of the Sword How can he give judgement of a false Church a false Ministery a false Doctrine false Ordinances and with a Civil Sword pull them down if he have no Spiritual power authority or commission from Christ Iesus for these ends and purposes Further I argue thus If the civill officers of State must determine judge and punish in Spiritual causes his power authority and commission must be either Spirituall or Civill or else he hath none at all and so acts without a commission and warrant from the Lord Iesus and so consequently stands guilty at the Bar of Christ Iesus to answer for such his practice as a transcendent Delinquent Now for civill power these worthy Authors confesse that the Government of the civill Magistrate extendeth no further then over the bodies and goods of the Subject and therefore hath no civill power over the Soule and therefore say I not in Soule-causes Secondly It is here confest in this passage that to attaine his Civill end or Bonum temporale he hath no Spirituall power and therefore of necessitie out of their own mouths must they be judged for provoking the Magistrate without either Civill or Spirituall power to judge punish and persecute in Spirituall causes and to feare and tremble lest they come neere those frogs which proceed out of the mouth of the Dragon and Beast and false Prophet who by the same Arguments which the Authours here use stirre up the Kings of the Earth to make warre against the Lambe Christ Iesus and his Followers Revel 17. CHAP. LXXXV IN the next place I observe upon the point of Delinquencie such a confusion as Heaven and Earth may stand amazed at If the Church offend say they after advice refused in conclusion the Magistrate must redresse that is punish the Church that is in Church offences and cases by a course of Civill justice On the other side if the Civill Magistrate offend after Admonition used and not prevailing in conclusion the Church proceeds to censure that is to Excommunication as is afterward more largely proved by them Now I demand if the Church be a Delinquent who shall judge It is answered the Magistrate Againe if the Magistrate be a Delinquent I aske who shall judge It is answered the Church Whence I observe which is monstrous in all cases in the World that one person to wit the Church or Magistrate shall be at one time the Delinquent at the Bar and the Iudge upon the Bench. This is cleere thus The Church must judge when the Magistrate offends and yet the Magistrate must judge when the Church offends and so consequently in this case must judge whether she contemne Civill Authority in the Second Table for thus dealing with him Or whether she have broken the rules of the first Table of which say they God hath made him Keeper and Conserver And therefore though the
and Cities out of which all false worshippers and wicked persons were to be cut Rev. 2. 3. The Divells throne was in the City of Pergamus in respect of the state and persecution of it and yet there was also the Throne of the Lord Iesus set up in His Church of worshippers in Pergamus out of which the Balaamites and Nicholaitans and every false worshipper was to be cast though not out of the City of Pergamus for then Pergamus must have beene throwne out of Pergamus and the World out of the World CHAP. CI. Peace OH that my head were a fountaine and mine eyes River● of teares to lament my children the children of peace and light thus darkning that and other lightsome Scriptures with such darke and direfull clouds of bloud Truth Sweet Peace thy teares are seasonable and precious and botled up in the Heavens but let me adde a second consideration from that Scripture If that Scripture may now literally be applied to Nations and Cities in a parallel to Canaan and Ierusalem since the Gospel and this Psal. 101. be literally to be applied to Cities Townes and Countries in Europe and America not only such as assay to joyne themselves as they here speake in a corrupt Church estate but such as know no Church estate nor God nor Christ yea every wicked person and evill doer must be hanged or stoned c. as it was in Israel and if so how many thousands and millions of men and women in the severall Kingdomes and governments of the World must be cut off from their Lands and destroyed from their Cities as this Scripture speakes Thirdly since those persons in the New English plantations accounted unfit for Church estate yet remaine all members of the Church of England from which New England dares not separate no not in their Sacraments as some of the Independents have published what riddle or mysterie or rather fallacie of Sathan is this Peace It will not be offence to charity to make conjecture First herein New England Churches secretly call their Mother whore not daring in America to joyne with their owne Mothers children though unexcommunicate no nor permit them to worship God after their consciences and as their Mother hath taught them this secretly and silently they have a minde to doe which publickly they would seem to disclaime and professe against Secondly If such members of Old England should be suffered to enjoy their consciences in New however it is pretended they would profane Ordinances for which they are unfit as true it is in that naturall persons are not fit for Spirituall worship yet this appears not to be the bottome for in Old England the New English joyne with Old in the ministrations of the Word Prayer singing contribution maintenance of the Ministrie c. if I say they should set up Churches after their conscience the greatnesse and multitudes of their owne Assemblies would decay and with all the contributions and maintenance of their Ministers unto which all or most have beene forced Truth Deare Peace These are more then conjectures thousands now espie and all that love the purity of the worship of the living God should lament such halting I shall adde this not only doe they partially neglect to cut off the wicked of the Land but such as themselves esteemed beloved and goldy have they driven forth and keep out others which would come unto them eminently godly by their owne confession because differing in conscience and worship from them and consequently not to be suffered in their holy Land of Canaan But having examined that Scripture alledged let us now weigh their Reasons First say they the not cutting off by the sword but tolerating many Religions in a State would provoke God unto which I answer first and here being no Scripture produced to these Reasons shall the sooner answer that no proofe can be made from the Institutions of the Lord Iesus that all Religions but one are to be cut off by the Civill Sword that Nationall Church in that typicall Land of Canaan being abolished and the Christian Commonweale or Church instituted Secondly I affirme that the cutting off by the Sword other Consciences and Religions is contrarily most provoking unto God expressely against his will concerning the Tares Matth. 13. as I have before proved as also the bloudy mother of all those monstrous mischiefes where such cutting off is used both to the soules and bodies of men Thirdly let conscience and experience speake how in the not cutting off their many Religions it hath pleased God not only not to be provoked but to prosper the state of the united Provinces our next neighbours and that to admiration Peace The second reason is such tolerating would leaven divide and destroy the peace of the Churches Truth This must also be denied upon so many former Scriptures Reasons produced proving the power of the Lord Iesus and the sufficiencie of his Spirituall power in his Church for the purging forth and conquering of the least evill yea and for the bringing every thought in subjection unto Christ Iesu 2 Cor. 10. I adde they have not produced one Scripture nor can to prove that the permitting to leaven of false doctrine in the World or Civill State will leaven the Churches only we finde that the permission of leaven in persons doctrines or practices in the Church that indeed will corrupt and spread 1. Cor. 5. Gal. 5. but this Reason should never have been alledged were not the particular Churches in New England but as so many implicite Parish Churches in one implicite National Church Peace Their third Reason is it will dissolve the continuity of the State especially theirs where the walls are made of the stones of the Churches Truth I answer briefly to this bare affirmation thus that the true Church is a wall spirituall and mysticall Cant. 8. 9. Then consequently a false Church or Company is a false or pretended wall and none of Christs The civill State Power and Government is a civill wall c. and Lastly the walls of Earth or stone about a City are the naturall or artificiall wall or defence of it Now in consideration of these foure wals I desire it may be proved from the Scripture of Truth how the false spirituall wall or company of false worshippers suffred in a City can be able to destroy the true Christian wall or company of beleevers Againe how this false spirituall wall or false Church permitted can destroy the civill wall the State and Government of the City and Citizens any more then it can destroy the naturall or artificiall wall of earth or stone Spirituall may destroy spirituall if a stronger and victorious but spirituall cannot reach to artificiall or civill Peace Yea but they feare the false spirituall wall may destroy their civill because it is made of the stones of Churches Truth If this have reference to that practice amongst them
THE BLOVDY TENENT of PERSECUTION for cause of CONSCIENCE discussed in A Conference betweene TRVTH and PEACE VVHO In all tender Affection present to the High Court of Parliament as the Result of their Discourse these amongst other Passages of highest consideration Printed in the Year 1644. FIrst That the blood of so many hundred thousand souls of Protestants and Papists spilt in the War● of present and former Ages for their respective Consciences is not required nor accepted by Iesus Christ the Prince of Peace Secondly Pregnant Scriptures and Arguments are throughout the Worke proposed against the Doctrine of Persecution for for cause of Conscience Thirdly Satisfactorie Answers are given to Scriptures and objections produced by Mr. Calvin Beza Mr. Cotton and the Ministers of the New English Churches and others former and later tending to prove the Doctrine of Persecution for cause of Conscience Fourthly The Doctrine of Persecution for cause of Conscience is proved guilty of all the blood of the Soules crying for vengeance under the Altar Fifthly All Civill States with their Officers of justice in their respective constitutions and administrations are proved essentially Civill and therefore not Iudges Governours or Defendours of the Spirituall or Christian state and Worship Sixtly It is the will and command of God that since the comming of his Sonne the Lord Iesus a permission of the most Paganish Iewish Turkish or Antichristian consciences and worships bee granted to all men in all Nations and Countries and they are onely to bee fought against with that Sword which is only in Soule matters able to conquer to wit the Sword of Gods Spirit the Word of God Seventhly The state of the Land of Israel the Kings and people thereof in Peace War is proved figurative and ceremoniall and no patterne nor president for any Kingdom or civill state in the world to follow Eightly God requireth not an uniformity of Religion to be inacted and inforced in any civill state which inforced uniformity sooner or later is the greatest occasion of civill Warre ravishing of conscience persecution of Christ Iesus in his servants and of the hypocrisie and destruction of millions of souls Ninthly In holding an inforced uniformity of Religion in a civill state we must necessarily disclaime our desires and hopes of the Iewes conversion to Christ. Tenthly An inforced uniformity of Religion throughout a Nation or civill state confounds the Civill and Religious denies the principles of Chr●stianity and civility and that Iesus Christ is come in the Flesh. Eleventhly The permission of other consciences and worships then a state professeth only can according to God procure a firme and lasting peace good assurance being taken according to the wisdome of the civill state for uniformity of civill obedience from all sorts Twelfthly lastly true civility and Christianity may both flourish in a State or Kingdome notwithstanding the permission of divers and contrary consciences either of Iew or Gentile TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE both Houses of the High Court of PARLIAMENT Right Honourable and Renowned Patriots NExt to the saving of your own soules in the lamentable shipwrack of Mankind your taske as Christians is to save the Soules but as Magistrates the Bodies and Goods of others Many excellent Discourses have been presented to your Fathers hands and Yours in former and present Parliaments I shall be humbly bold to say that in what concernes your duties as Magistrates towards others a more necessary and seasonable debate was never yet presented Two things your Honours here may please to view in this Controversie of Persecution for cause of Conscience beyond what 's extant First the whole Body of this Controversie form'd pitch'd in true Battalia Secondly although in respect of my selfe it be impar congressus yet in the power of that God who is Maximus in Mini●is Your Honours shall see the Controversie is discussed with men as able as most eminent for abilitie and pietie Mr. Co●ton and the New English Ministers When the Prophets in Scripture have given their Coats of Armes and Escutch●ons to Great Men Your Honours know the Babylonian Monarch hath the Lyon the Persian the Beare the Grecian the Leopard the Romane a compound of the former 3. most strange and dreadfull Dan. 7. Their oppressing plundring ravishing murthering not only of the bodies but the soules of Men are large explaining commentaries of such similitudes Your Honours have been famous to the end of the World for your unparallel'd wisdome courage justice mercie in the vindicating your Civill Lawes Liberties c. Yet let it not be grievous to your Honours thoughts to ponder a little why all the Prayers and Teares and Fastings in this Nation have not pierc'd the Heavens and quench'd these Flames which yet who knowes how far they 'll spread and when they 'll out Your Honours have broke the jawes of the Oppressour and taken the prey out of their Teeth Iob. 29. For which Act I believe it hath pleased the most High God to set a Guard not only of Trained men but of mighty Angels to secure your sitting and the Citie I feare we are not pardoned though reprieved O that there may be a lengthning of Londons tranquilitie of the Parliaments safetie by mercy to the poore Dan. 4. Right Honourable Soule yokes Soule oppressions plundrings ravishings c. are of a crimson and deepest dye and I believe the chiefe of Englands sins unstopping the Viols of Englands present sorrowes This glasse presents your Honours with Arguments from Religion Reason Experience all proving that the greatest yoakes yet lying upon English necks the peoples and Your own are of a spirituall and soule nature All former Parliaments have changed these yoakes according to their consciences Popish or Protestant 'T is now your Honours turne at helme and as your task so I hope your res●lution not to change for that is but to turne the wheele which another Parliament and the very next may turne againe but to ●ase the Subjects and Your selves from a yoake as was once spoke in a case not unlike Act 15. which neither You nor your Fathers were ever able to beare Most Noble Senatours Your Fathers whose seats You fill are mouldred and mouldring their braines their tongu●s c. to ashes in the pit of rottenesse They and You must shortly together with two worlds of men appeare at the great Barre It shall then be no griefe of heart that you have now attended to the cries of Soules thousands oppressed millions ravished by the Acts and Statutes concerning Soules not yet repealed Of Bodies impoverished imprisoned c. for their soules beliefe yea slaughtered on heapes for Religions controversies in the Warres of present and former Ages Notwithstanding the successe of later times wherein sundry opinions have been hatched about the subject of Religion a man may clearly discerne with his eye and as it were touch with his finger that according to the verity of holy Scriptures c. mens consciences ought in no sort
the principall Contents of the Booke TRuth and Peace their rare and seldome meeting Page 15 2 Great complaints of Peace 16 Persecutors seldome plead Christ but Moses for their Authour 17 Strife Christian and unchristian ibid A threefold dolefull cry ibid. The wonderfull providence of God in the writing of the argument●s against persecution 18 A definition of persecution discussed 19 Conscience will not be restrained from its owne worship nor constrained to another 20 A chaste soule in Gods worship compared to a chaste wife ibid. Gods people have erred stom the very fundamentalls of visible worship ibid 4 Sorts of spirituall foundations in the New Testament 21 The 6 fundamentalls of the Christian Religion ibid. The comming out of Babel not Iocall but mysticall ibid. The great ignorance of Gods people concerning the nature of a true Church ibid. Common-Prayer written against by the New English Ministers 23 Gods people have worshipped God with false worships ibid. God is pleased sometimes to convey good unto his people beyond a promise ibid. A notable speech of King James to a great Nonconformist turned persecutor 24 Civill peace discussed ibid. The difference between Spirituall and civill state 25 Six cases wherein Gods people have been usually accounted arrogant and peace breakers but most unjustly 26 The true causes of breach and disturbance of civill peace 29 A preposterous way of suppressing errours 30 Persecutors must needs oppresse both erroneous and true consciences ibid. All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him ibid. What is meant by the Hereticke Tit. 3. Pag. 33 The word Heretick generally mistaken 34 Corporall killing in the Law typing out Spirituall killing in the Gospell 36 The cariage of a Soule sensible of mercy towards others in their blindness c. 38 The difference between the Church and the World wherein it is in all places 38 The Church and civill State confusedly made all one 39 The most peaceable accused for peace-breaking 40 A large Examination of what is meant by the Tares and letting of them alone ibid. Sathans subtletic about the opening of Scripture 41 Two sorts of Hypocrites 44 The Lord Iesus the great Teacher by Parables and the only Expounder of them 44 Preaching for conversion is properly out of the Church 45 The tares proved properly to signifie Antichristians ibid. Gods Kingdome on Earth the visible Church 46 The difference between the Wheat and the Tares as also betweene these Tares and all others 46 A civill Magistracie from the beginning of the world 47 The Tares are to be tolerated the longest of all sinners 48 The danger of infection by permitting of the Tares assoyled ibid. The civill Magistrate not so particularly spoken to in the New Testament as Fathers Masters c. and why 50 A two-fold state of Christianitie Persecuted under the Romane Emperours and Apostated under the Romane Popes ibid. 3 Particulars contained in that prohibition of Christ Iesus concerning the Tares Let them alone Mat. 13. 51 Accompanying with Idolaters 1 Cor. 5. discussed 52 Civill Magistrates never invested by Christ Iesus with the power and title of Defenders of the Faith 54 Gods people ever earnest with God for an Arme of Flesh. 55 The 〈◊〉 punishment of the blind Pharises in 4 respects ibid. The point of seducing infecting or Soule killing examined 57 Strange consusions in punishments 59 The blood of Soules Acts 20. lies upon such as professe the Ministrie the blood of Bodies only upon the State ibid. ●surpers and true Heires of Christ Iesus Page 60 The Civill Magistrate bound to preserve the bo●●s of their subjects and not to destroy them for conscience sake 61 The fire from heaven Rev. 13. 13. 2 Tim. 2. 25 26. examined 62 The originall of the Christian name Acts 11. 63 A Civill sword in Religion makes a Nation of hypocrites Isa. 10 64 A difference of the true and false Christ and Christians 65 The nature of the worship of unbeleeving and naturall persons ibid. Antoninus Pius his famous act concerning Religion 66 Isa. 24. Mic. 4. 3. concerning Christs visible Kingdome discussed ibid. Acts 20 29. The suppressing of Spirituall wolves discussed 67 It is in vaine to decline the name of the head of the Church and yet to practise the headship 68 Titus 1. 9. 10 discussed 69 Vnmercifull and bloody doctrine 70 The Spirituall weapons 2 Cor. 10. 4. discussed ibid. Civill weapons most improper in Spirituall causes 71 The Spirituall artillerie Eph. 6. applied 72 Rom. 13. concerning Civill Rulers power in Spirituall causes largely examined 73 Pauls appeale to Caesar examined 77 And cleared by 5 arguments ibid. 4 Sorts of swords 79 What is to be understood by evill Rom. 13. 4. 81 Though evill be alwayes evill yet the permission of it may sometimes be good 83 2 Sorts of commands both from Moses and Christ. 84 The permission of diverce in Israel Mat. 19. 17 18. ibid. Usury in the Civill state lawfully permitted 85 Seducing teachers either Pagan Iewish Turkish or Antichristian way yet be obedient subjects to the Civill Laws 86 Scandalous livers against the Civill state 87 Toleration of Jesabel and Balaam Rev. 2 14. 20. examined 88 The Christian world hath swallowed up Christianity 89 Christ Iesus the deepest polititian that ever was yet commands be a toleration of Antichristians 91 The Princes of the world seldome take part with Christ Iesus 93 Buchanans items to King James ibid. King James his sayings against persecution ibid. King Steven of Poland his sayings against persecution Page 93 Forcing of conscience a soule rape 94 Persecution for conscience hath been the launcet which hath let blood the Nations All Spirituall whores are bloody ibid. Poligamie or the many wives of the Fathers ibid. David advancing of Gods worship against order 95 Constantine and the good Emperours confest to have done more hurt to the Name and Crowne of Christ then the bloody Noroes did ibid. The language of persecuters 96 Christs Li●●ies may flourish in the Church notwithstanding the weeds in the world permitted 97 Queen Elizabeth and King James their persecuting for cause of Religion examined ibid. Queen Elizabeth confessed by Mr. Cotton to have almost fired the world in civill combustions 98 The Wars between the Papists and the Protestants ibid. The Wars and successe of the Waldensians against three Popes 99 Gods people victorious ●ver commers and with what weapons ibid. The Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted ibid. The nature of excommunication 100 The opinion of ancient Writers examined concerning the doctrine of persecution 101 Constraint upon conscience in Old and New England ibid. The Indians of New England permitted in their worshipping of devils 102 In 2 cases a false Religion will not hurt 103 The absolute sufficiencie of the Sword of the Spirit 104 A Nationall Church not instituted by Christ. ibid. Man hath no power to make Lawes to binde conscience 105 Hearing of the word in a Church estate a part of Gods worship 107 Papists plea for
toleration of conscience ibid. Protestant partiality in the cause of persecution 108 Pills to purge out the bitter humour of persecution ibid. Superstition and persecution have had many votes and suffrages from Gods owne people 109 Soul-killing discussed ibid. Phineas his act discussed 111 Eliah his slaughters examined ibid Dangerous consequences flowing from the civill Magistrates power in Spirituall cases 114 The world turned upside downe Page 114 The wonderfull answer of the Ministers of New England to the Ministers of Old ibid. Lamentable differences even amongst them that feare God 115 The doctrine of persecution ever drives the most godly out of the world 116 A Modell of Church and Civill power composed by Mr. Cotton and the Ministers of New England and sent to Salem as a further confirmation of the bloody doctrine of persecution for cause of conscience examined and answered 118 Christs power in the Church confest to be above all Magistrates in Spirituall things 119 Isa. 49. 23. lamentably wrested ibid. The civill Commonweale and the Spirituall Commonweale the Church not inconsistent though independent the one on the other 120 Christ ordinances put upon a whole city or Nation may civilize them and moralize but not Christianize before repentance first wrought 121 Mr. Cottons and the New English Ministers confession that the Magistrate hath neither Civill nor Spirituall power in Soul matters 122 The Magistrates and the Church by Mr. Cottons grounds in one and the same cause made the Iudges onthe Bench and delinquents at the Bar. 123 A demonstrative illustration that the Magistrate cannot have power over the Church in Spirituall or Church causes 124 The true way of the God of Peace in differences between the Church and the Magistrate 125. The tearms Godlinesse and Honesty explained 1 Tim. 2. x. and honesty proved not to signifie in that place the righteousnes of the second Table 127 The forcing of men to Gods worship the greatest breach of civill peace 129 The Roman Caesars of Christs time described ibid. It pleased not the Lord Iesus in the institution of the Christian Church to appoint and raise up any Civill Governours to take care of his worship 130 The true custodes utriusque Tabulae and keepers of the Ordinances and worship of Iesus Christ. ibid. The Kings of Aegypt Moah Philistia Assyria Ni●●vch were not charged with the worship of God as the Kings of Iudah were 131 Masters of families not charged under the Gospel to force all the consci●uces of their families to worship 132 Gods people have then shined brightest in Godlines when they have enjoyed least quietnesse pag. 134. Few Magistrates few Men spiritually good yet divers sorts of commendable Goodnes beside spirituall ibid. Civill power originally and fundamentally in the People Mr. Cotton and the New English give the power of Christ into the hands of th● Commonweale 137 Lawes concerning Religion of two sorts 138 The very Indians abhor to disturbe any Conscience at Worship 139 Canons and constitutions pretended Civill but indeed Ecclesiasticall ibid. A threesold guilt lying upon Civill powers commanding the Subjects Soule in Worship 143 Persons may with lesse sinne be forced to marry whom they cannot love then to worship where they cannot beleeve ibid. As the cause so the weapons of the Beast and the La●● be are infinitely different 146 A●taxerxes his Dicree examined 147 The summe of the Examples of the Gentile Kings decrees concerning Gods worship in Scripture 149 The Doctrine of putting to death Blasphemers of Christ cuts off the hopes of the Iewes partaking in his blood 18● The direfull effects of fighting for Conscience 151 Errour is confident as well as Truth 152 Spirituall prisons 153 Some Consciences not so easily healed and cured as men imagine 154 Persecuters dispute with Hereticks as a tyrann call Cat with the poore Mouse And with a true Witnes as a roaring Lyon with an innocent Lambe in his paw 155 Persecuters endure not tho name of Persecuters 156 Psal 101 concerning cutting off the wicked examined 158 No difference of Lands and Countries since Christ Iesus his comming ib. The New English seperate in America but not in Europe 159 Christ Iesus forbidding his followers to permit Leaven in the Church doth not forbid to permit Leaven in the World 160 The Wall Cant. 8. 9. discussed 161 Every Religion commands its professors to heare only its own Priests or Ministers 162 Ionah his preaching to the Ninevites discussed 162 ●●aring of the Word discussed ibid. Eglon his rising up to Ehuds message discussed ibid. A two-fold Ministrie of Christ First Apostolicall properly converting Secondly Feeding or Pastorall pag. 162 The New English forcing the people to Church and yet not to Religion as they say forcing them to be of no Religion all their dayes 163 The Civill State can no more lawfully compell the Consciences of men to Church to heare the Word then to receive the Sacraments 164 No president in the word of any people converting and baptizing themselves 166 True conversion to visible Christianitie is not only from sins against the second Table but from false Worships also ibid. The Commission Mat. 28 discussed 167 The Civill Magistrate not be trusted with that Commission ibid. Iehosaphat 2 Chron. 1● a figure of Christ Iesus in his Church not of the Civill Magistrate in the State 168 The maintenance of the Ministrie Gal. 6. 6. examined ibid. Christ Iesus never appointed a maintenance of the Ministrie from the i●penitent and unbelieving 169 They that compell men to heare compell them also to pay for their hearing and conversion ibid. Luc. 14. Compell them to come in examined ibid. Naturall men can neither truly worship nor mainteine it 170 The Nationall Church of the Iewes might well be forced to a setled maintenance but not so the Christian Church 171 The maintenance which Christ hath appointed his Ministrie in the Church 172 The Vniversities of Europe causes of universall sins and plagues yet Schooles are honourable for tongues and Arts. 173 The true Church is Christs Schoole and Believers his Scholars ibid. Mr. Ainsworth excellent in the Tongues yet no Vniversitie man 174 K. Henry the 8. set down in the Popes chaire in England 175 Apocrypha Homilies and Common Prayer precious to our forefathers ib. Reformation proved fallible 176 The president of the Kings of Israel Iudah largely examined 178 The Persian Kings example make strongly against the doctrine of Persecution 179 1. The difference of the hand of Canaan from all lands and countries in 7 particulars ibid. 2. The difference of the people of Israel from all other peoples in 7 particulars 183 Wonderfull turnings of Religion in England in twelve yeares revolution Page 185 The Pope not unlike to recover his Monarchy over Europe before his dow●fall ibid. Israel Gods only Church might well renew that Nationall Covenant and ceremoniall worship which other Nations cannot doe 187 ● The difference of the Kings and Governours of Israel from all Kings and Governours of the world
in 4 particulars 188 5 Demonstrative arguments proving the unsoundnesse of the maxime viz. The Church and Commonweale are li●e Hypocrates twins 189 Asacrilegious prostitution of the name Christian. 192 David immediately inspired by God in his ordering of Church affairs 193 Solomons deposing of Ab●a●har 1 Kings 2. 26 27. discussed 194 The liberties of Christs Churches in the choice of her officers 195 A civill influence dangerous to the State liberties ibid. Jehosaphats fast examined ibid. God will not wrong Caesar and Caesar should not wrong God 196 The famous acts of Josiah examined ibid. Magistracie in generall from God the particular formes from the people ibid. ● Israel confirmed in a Nationall Covenant by revelations signes and miracles but not so any other Land ibid. Kings and Nations often plant and often plucke up Religions 197 A Nationall Church ever subject to turne and returne ibid. A woman Papissa or head of the Church ibid. The Rapists neerer to the truth concerning the governour of the Church then most Protestants 198 The Kingly power of the Lord Iesus troubles all the Kings and Rulers of the world ibid. A twofold exaltation of Christ. ibid. A monarchicall and Ministeriall power of Christ. 199 3 Great competitours for the Ministeriall power of Christ. ibid. The Pope pretendeth to the Ministeriall power of Christ yet upon the point chalengeth the Monarchicall also ibid. 3 Great factions in England striving for the Arme of Flesh. 200 The Churches of the separation ought in humanity and subjects liberty not to be oppressed but at least permitted 201 7 Reasons proving that the Kings of Israel and Iudah can have no other but a Spirituall Antitype 202 Christianitie ●●des not to the nature of a Civill Commonweale nor doth want of Christianitie diminish it pag. 203 Most strange yet most true consequences from the Civill Magistrates being the Antitype of the Kings of Israel and Iudah ibid. If no Religion but what the Commonweale approve then no Christ no God but at the pleasure of the World 204 The true Antitype of the Kings of Israel and Iudah ibid. 4. The difference of Israels Statutes and Lawes from all others in 3 particulars ibid. 5. The difference of Israels Punishments Rewards from all others 205 Temporall prosperitie most proper to the Nationall state of the Iewe. ibid. The Excommunication in Israel 206 The corporall stoning in the Law typed out spirituall stoning in the Gospel ibid. The wars of Israel typicall and unparalleld but by the Spirituall wars of Spirituall Israel ibid. The famous typicall captivitie of the Iewes 207 Their wonderfull victories 208 The mysticall Army of white troopers 209 Whether the Civill state of Israel was presidentiall ibid. Great unfaithfulnesse in Magistrates to cast the burthen of judging and establishing Christianitie upon the Commonweale 210 Thousands of lawfull Civill Magistrates who never heare of Iesus Christ. 211 Nero and the persecuting Emperours not so injurious to Christianity as Constantine and others who assumed a power in Spirituall things ibid. They who force the conscience of others cry out of persecution when their owne are forced 212 Constantine and others wanted not so much affection as information of judgement ibid. Civill Authoritie giving and lending their Hornes to Bishops dangerous to Christs truth ibid. The Spirituall power of Christ Iesus compared in Scripture to the incomparable horne of the Rhinocerot 213 The nursing Fathers and Mothers Isa. 49. ibid. The civill Magistrate owes 3 things to the true Church of Christ. 214 The civill Magistrate owes ● things to false Worshippers 214 The rise of High Commissions 215 Pious Magistrates Ministers consciences are perswaded for that which other ●as plous Magistrates Ministers consciences condemn Page 215 An apt similitude discussed concerning the Civill Magistrate 216 A grievous charge against the Christian Church and the King of it 222 A strange Law in New England formerly against excommunicate persons ibid. A dangerous doctrine against all Civill Magistrates 223 Originall sin charged to hurt the Civill state ibid. They who give the Magistrate more then his duo are apt to disreabe him of what is his 224 A strange double picture 226 The great priviledges of the true Church of Christ. 227 2 Similitudes illustrating the true power of the Magistrate ibid. A marvelous chalenge of more power under the Christian then under the Heathen Magistrate 229 Civill Magistrates derivatives from the fountains or bodies of people 230 A beleeving Magistrate no more a Magistrate then an unbeleeving ibid. The excellencie of Christianity in all callings ibid. The Magistrate like a Pilot in the Ship of the Commonweale 231 The tearmes Heathen and Christian Magistrates ibid. The unjust and partiall liberty to some consciences and bondage unto all others 232 The commission Matth. 28. 19 20. not proper to Pastors and teachers least of all to the Civill Magistrate 233 Vnto whom now belongs the care of all the Churches c. ibid. Acts 15. commonly misapplied 234 The promise of Christs presence Mat. 18. distinct from that Mat. 28. 235 Church administrations firstly charged upon the Ministers thereof 236 Queen Elizabeths Bishops truer to their principles then many of a better spirit and profession 237. Mr. Barrowes profession concerning Queen Elizabeth ibid The inventions of men swarving from the true essentialls of civill and Spirituall Commonweales 239 A great question viz. whether only Church members that is godly persons in a particular Church estate be only eligible into the Magistracie ib. The world being divided into 30 parts 25 never heard of Christ. 240 Lawfull civill states where Churches of Christ are not ibid. Few Christians Wise and noble and qualified for affaires of State ibid. SCRIPTURES AND REASONS written long since by a Witnesse of lesus Christ close Prisoner in Newgate against Persecution in cause of Conscience and sent some while since to Mr. Cotton by a Friend who thus wrote In the multitude of Councellours there is safety It is therefore humbly desired to be instructed in this point viz. Whether Persecution for cause of Conscience be not against the Doctrine of Iesus Christ the King of Kings The Scriptures and Reasons are these BEcause Christ commandeth that the Tares and Wheat which some understand are those that walke in the Truth and those that walke in Lies should be let alone in the World and not plucked up untill the Harvest which is the end of the World Matth. 13. 30. 38. c. The same commandeth Matth. 15. 14. that they that are Blinde as some interpret led on in false Religion and are offended with him for teaching true Religion should be let alone referring their punishment unto their falling into the Ditch Againe Luke 9. 54 55. hee reproved his Disciples who would have had Fire come downe from Heaven and devoure those Samaritanes who would not receive Him in these words Ye know not of what Spirit ye are the son of Man is not come to destroy Mens lives but to save them Paul
Peace Finally let me adde this one distinction more When we are persecuted for Conscience sake It is either for Conscience rightly informed or for erronious and blind Conscience These things premised I would lay down mine Answer to the Question in certaine Conclusions First it is not lawfull to persecute any for Conscience sake Rightly informed for in persecuting such Christ himselfe is persecuted in them Acts 9. 4. Secondly for an Erronious and blind Conscience even in fundamentall and weighty Points It is not lawfull to persecute any till after Admonition once or twice ● and so the Apostle directeth 7 it 3. 10. and giveth the Reason that in fundamentall and principall points of Doctrine or Worship the Word of God in such things is so cleare that hee cannot but bee convinced in Conscience of the dangerous Errour of his way after once or twice Admonition wisely and faithfully dispensed And then if any one persist it is not out of Conscience but against his Conscience at the Apostle saith vers 11. He is subverted and sinneth being condemned of Himselfe that is of his owne Conscience So that if such a Man after such Admonition shall still persist in the Errour of his way and be therefore punished He is not persecuted for Cause of Conscience but for sinning against his Owne Conscience Thirdly In things of lesser moment whether Points of Doctrine or Worship If a man hold them forth in a Spirit of Christian Meeknesse and Love though with Zeale and Constancie he is not to be persecuted but tolerated till God may be pleased to manifest his Truth to him Phil. 3. 17. Rom. 14. 1 2 3 4. But if a Man hold forth or professe any Errour or false way with a boysterous and arrogant spirit to the disturbance of Civill peace he may justly be punished according to the qualitie and measure of the disturbance caused by him Now let us consider of your Reasons or Objections to the contrary Your first head of Objections is taken from the Scripture Object 1. Because Christ commandeth to let alone the Tares and Wheat to grow together unto the Harvest Mat. 13. 30. 38. Answ. Tares are not Briars and Thornes but partly Hypocrites like unto the Godly but indeed Carnall as the Tares are like to Wheat but are not Wheat Or partly such Corrupt Doctrines or Practices as are indeed unsound but yet such as come very neere the Truth as Tares doe to the Wheat and so neere that Good men may be taken with them and so the Persons in whom they grow cannot be rooted out but good will be rooted up with them And in such a case Christ calleth for Toleration not for penall prosecution according to the 3. Conclusion Object 2. In Math. 15. 14. Christ commandeth his Disciples to let the Blind alone till they fall into the ditch therefore he would have their punishment deferred till their ●●all destruction Answ. He there speaketh not to publi●●e officers whether in Church or Common-weale but to his private Disciples concerning the Pharises over whom they had no power And the Command he giveth to let them alone is spoken in regard of troubling themselves or regarding the offence which they tooke at the wholesome Doctrine of the Gospell As who should say Though they be offended at this Saying of mine yet doe not you feare their Feare nor bee troubled at their offence which they take at my Doctrine not out of sound Judgement but out of their Blindnesse But this maketh nothing to the Cause in hand Ob. In Luk. 9. 54. 55. Christ reproveth his Disciples who would have had fire come downe from Heaven to consume the Samaritanes who refused to receive Him Obj. And Paul teacheth Timothy not to strive but to be gentle towards All men suffering evill patiently Answ. Both these are Directions to Ministers of the Gospell how to deale not with obstinate offenders in the Church that sinne against Conscience but either with Men without as the Samaritanes were and many unconverted Christians in Crete whom Titus as an Evangelish was to seeke to convert Or at best with some Iewes or Gentiles in the Church who though carnall yet were not convinced of the errour of their Way And 't is true it became not the Spirit of the Gospell to convert Aliens to the Faith of Christ such as the Samaritanes were by Fire and Brimstone nor to deale harshly in publique Ministerie or private Conference with all such contrary minded men as either had not yet entred into Church-Fellowship or if they had yet did hitherto sinne of Ignorance not against Conscience But neither of both these Texts doe hinder the Ministers of the Gospell to proceed in a Church-way against Chruch-members when they become Scandalous offenders either in Life or Doctrine much lesse doe they speake at all to Civill Magistrates Ob. 5. From the prediction of the Prophets who foretold that Carnall Weapons should cease in the dayes of the Gospell Isa. 2. 4. 11. 9. Mic. 4. 3. 4. And the Apostie professeth The weapons of our Warfare are not carnall 2 Cor 10. 4. And Christ is so farre from persecuting those that would not be of his Religion that he chargeth them when they are persecuted themselves they should pray and when they are cursed they should blesse The reason whereof seemeth to be that they who are now Persecuters and wicked persons may become true Disciples and Converts Answ. Those predictions in the Prophets doe onely shew First with what kind of Weapons he will subdue the Nations to the Obedience of the Faith of the Gospell not by Fire and Sword and Weapons of Warre but by the Power of his Word and Spirit which no man doubteth of Secondly those predictions of the Prophets shew what the meeke and peaceable temper will be of all the true Converts to Christianity not Lions or Leopards c. not cruell oppressors nor malignant opposers or biters of one another But doth not forbid them to drive ravenous Wolves from the sheepfold and to restraine them from devouring the Sheepe of Christ. And when Paul saith The weapons of our warfare are not carnall but spirituall he denyeth not civill weapons of Iustice to the Civill Magistrate Rom. 13. but onely to Church officers And yet the weapons of such officers he acknowledgeth to be such as though they be spirituall yet are ready to take vengeance of all disobedience 2 Cor. 10. 6. which hath reference amongst other Ordinances to the censure of the Church against scandalous offenders When Christ commandeth his Disciples to blesse them that curse them and persecute them he giveth not therein a rule to publick officers whether in Church or Commonweale to suffer notorious sinners either in life or doctrine to passe away with a blessing But to private Christians to suffer persecution patiently yea and to pray for their persecutors Againe it is true Christ would have his Disciples to bee farre from persecuting for that is a sinfull oppression of Men
for righteousnesse sake but that hindreth not but that he would have them execute upon all disobedience the judgement and vengeance required in the Word 2 Cor. 10. 6. Rom. 13. 4. Though it be true that wicked persons now may by the grace of God become true Disciples and Converts yet we may not doe evill that good may come thereof And evill it would bee to tolerate notorious evill doers whether seducing teachers or scandalous livers Christ had something against the Angel of the Church of Pergamus for tolerating them that held the doctrine of Balaam and against the Church of Thiatira for tolerating Iesabel to teach and seduce Rev. 2. 14. 20. Your second Head of Reasons is taken from the profession and practice of famous Princes King Iames Stephen of Poland King of Bohemia Whereunto a treble answer may briefly be returned First we willingly acknowledge that none is to be persecuted at all no more then they may be oppressed for righteousnesse sake Againe we acknowledge that none is to be punished for his conscience though mis-informed as hath been said unlesse his errour be fundamentall or seditiously and turbulently promoted and that after due conviction of his conscience that it may appeare he is not punished for his conscience but for sinning against his conscience Furthermore we acknowledge none is to be constrained to beleeve or professe the true Religion till he be convinced in judgement of the truth of it but yet restrained he may from blaspheming the truth and from seducing any unto pernicious errours 2. Wee answer what Princes professe or practise is not a rule of conscience they many times tolerate that in point of State policy which cannot justly be tolerated in point of true Christianity Againe Princes many times tolerate offendours out of very necessity when the offenders are either too many or too mighty for them to punish in which respect David tolerated Ioab and his murthers but against his will 3. We answer further that for those three Princes named by you who tolerated Religion we can name you more and greater who have not tolerated Heretickes and Schismatickes notwithstanding their pretence of conscience and arrogating the Crowne of Martyrdome to their sufferings Constantine the Great at the request of the Generall Councell of Nice banished Arrius with some of his fellowes Sozom. lib. 1. Eccles. Hist. cap. 19. 20. The same Constantine made a severe Law against the Donatists And the like proceedings against them were used by Valentinian Gratian and Theodosius as Augustine reporteth in Epist. 166. Only Iulian the Apostata granted liberty to Heretickes as well as to Pagans that he might by tolerating all weeds to grow choake the vitals of Christianity which was also the practice and sin of Valens the Arrian Queene Elizabeth as famous for her government as any of the former it is well knowne what Lawes she made and executed against Papists Yea and King Iames one of your own witnesses though he was slow in proceeding against Papists as you say for conscience sake yet you are not ignorant how sharply and severely he punished those whom the malignant world calleth Puritanes men of more conscience and better faith then he tolerated I come now to your third and last argument taken from the judgement of ancient and later Writers yea even of Papists themselves who have condemned persecution for conscience sake You begin with Hilary whose testimony we might admit without any prejudice to the truth for it is true the Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted But to excommunicate an Hereticke is not to persecute that is it is not to punish an innocent but a culpable and damnable person and that not for conscience but for persisting in errour against light of conscience whereof it hath beene convinced It is true also what he saith that neither the Apostles did not may we propagate Christian Religion by the Sword but if Pagans cannot be won by the Word they are not to be compelled by the Sword Neverthelesse this hindreth not but if they or any others should blaspheme the true God and his true Religion they ought to be severely punished and no lesse doe they deserve if they seduce from the truth to damnable Heresie or Idolatry Your next Writer which is Tertullian speaketh to the same purpose in the place alledged by you His intent is onely to restraine Scapula the Romane Governour of Africa from the persecution of Christians for not offering sacrifice to their gods And for that end fetcheth an argument from the Law of Naturall Equity not to compell any to any Religion but to permit them either to beleeve willingly or not to beleeve at all Which wee acknowledge and accordingly permit the Indians to continue in their unbeleefe Neverthelesse it will not therefore be lawfull openly to tolerate the worship of devils or Idols or the seduction of any from the truth When Tertullian saith Another mans Religion neither hurteth nor profiteth any it must be understood of private worship and Religion professed in private otherwise a false Religion professed by the Members of a Church or by such as have given their Names to Christ will be the ruine and desolation of the Church as appeareth by the threats of Christ to the Churches of Asia Revel 2. Your next Authour Hierom crosseth not the truth nor advantageth not your cause for we grant what he saith that Heresie must bee cut off with the Sword of the Spirit But this hindreth not but that being so cut downe if the Hereticke still persist in his Heresie to the seduction of others he may be cut off by the civill sword to prevent the perdition of others And that to bee Hieromes meaning appeareth by his note upon that of the Apostle A little Leaven leaveneth the whole lumpe therefore saith he a sparke as soone as it appeareth is to be extinguished and the Leaven to be removed from the rest of the dough rotten peeces of flesh are to be cut off and a scabbed beast is to be driven from the 〈◊〉 le●t the whole house masse of dough body and flocke be set on fire with the sparke bee sowred with the Leaven be putrified with the rotten flesh perish by the scabbed beast Brentius whom you next quote speaketh not to your Cause We willingly grant him and you that Man hath no power to make Lawes to bind Conscience But this hindreth not but that Men may see the Lawes of God observed which doe bind Conscience The like Answer may be returned to Luther whom you next alleadge First that the Government of the Civill Magistrate extendeth no further then over the Bodies and Goods of their Subjects not over their Soules And therefore they may not undertake to give Lawes to the Soules and Consciences of Men. Secondly that the Church of Christ doth not use the Arme of Secular Power to compell men to the Faith or profession of the Truth for this is to be done by Spirituall weapons whereby
beleeve in conscience to be the truth or for practising some worke which you beleeve in conscience to be a religious dutie Truth I acknowledge that to molest any person Iew or Gentile for either professing doctrine or practising worship meerly religious or spirituall it is to persecute him and such a person what ever his doctrine or practice be true or false suffereth persecution for conscience But withall I desire it may bee well observed that this distinction is not full and complete For beside this that a man may be persecuted because he holdeth or practiseth what he beleeves in conscience to be a Truth as Daniel did for which he was cast into the Lyons den Dan. 6. and many thousands of Christians because they durst not cease to preach and practise what they beleeved was by Go● commanded as the Apostles answered Acts 4 5. I say besides this a man may also be persecuted because hee dares not be constrained to yeeld obedience to such doctrines and worships as are by men invented and appointed So the three famous Iewes were cast into the fiery furnace for refusing to fall downe in a non-conformity to the whole conforming world before the golden Image Dan. 3. 21. So thousands of Christs witnesses and of late in those bloudy Marian dayes have rather chose to yeeld their bodies to all sorts of torments then to subscribe to doctrines or practise worships unto which the States and Times as Nabuchadnezzar to his golden Image have compelled and urged them A chaste wife will not onely abhorre to be restrained from her husbands bed as adulterous and polluted but also abhor if not much more to bee constrained to the bed of a stranger And what is abominable in corporall is much more loathsome in spirituall whoredome and defilement The Spouse of Christ Iesus who could not finde her soules beloved in the wayes of his worship and Ministery Cant. 1. 3. and 5. Chapters abhorred to turne aside to other Flockes Worships c. and to imbrace the bosome of a false Christ Cant. 1. 8. CHAP. IV. Peace THe second distinction is this In points of Doctrine some are fundamentall without right beleefe whereof a man cannot be saved others are circumstantiall and lesse principall wherein a man may differ in judgement without prejudice of salvation on either part Truth To this distinction I dare not subscribe for then I should everlastingly condemne thousands and ten thousands yea the whole generation of the righteous who since the falling away from the first primitive Christian state or worship have and doe erre fundamentally concerning the true matter constitution gathering and governing of the Church and yet farre be it from any pious breast to imagine that they are not saved and that their soules are not bound up in the bundle of eternall life We reade of foure sorts of spirituall or Christian foundations in the New Testaments First the Foundation of all foundations the Corner-stone it selfe the Lord Iesus on whom all depend Persons Doctrines Practices 1. Cor. 3. 2. Ministriall foundations The Church is built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Ephel 2. 20. 3. The foundation of future rejoycing in the fruits of Obedience 1 Tim. 6. 4. The foundation of Doctrines without the knowledge of which there can be no true profession of Christ according to the first institution Heb. 6. The foundation or principles of Repentance from dead works Faith towards God the Doctrine of Baptisme Laying on of Hands the Resurrection and Eternall Iudgement In some of these to wit those concerning Baptismes Laying on of Hands Gods people will be found to be ignorant for many hundred yeares and I yet cannot see it proved that light is risen I mean the light of the first institution in practice Gods people in their persons Heart-waking Cant. 5. 2. in the life of personall grace will yet be found fast asleep in respect of publike Christian Worship Gods people in their persons are His most deare and precious yet in respect of the Christian Worship they are mingled amongst the Babylonians from whence they are called to come out not locally as some have said for that belonged to a materiall and locall Babell and literall Babell and Ierusalem have now no difference Iohn 4. 21. but spiritually and mystically to come out from her sins and Abominations If Mr. Cotton maintaine the true Church of Christ to consist of the true matter of holy persons call'd out from the World and the true forme of Vnion in a Church Covenant And that also neither Nationall Provinciall nor Diocesan Churches are of Christs institution how many Thousands of Gods people of all sorts Clergie and Laitie as they call them will they finde both in former and later times captivated in such Nationall Provinciall and Diocesan Churches yea and so far from living in yea or knowing of any such Churches for matter and forme as they conceive now only to be true that untill of late yeares how few of Gods people knew any other Church then the Parish Church of dead stones or timber It being a late marvailous light revealed by Christ Iesus the Sun of Righteousnesse that his people are a Company or Church of living stones 1 Pet. 2 9. And however his own Soule and the soules of many others precious to God are perswaded to separate from Nationall Provinciall and Diocesan Churches and to assemble into particular Churches yet since there are no Parish Churches in England but what are made up of the Parish bounds within such and such a compasse of houses and that such Churches have beene and are in constant dependance on and subordination to the Nationall Church how can the New-English particular Churches joyne with the Old English Parish Churches in so many Ordinances of Word Prayer Singing Contribution c. but they must needs confesse that as yet their Soules are farre from the knowledge of the foundation of a true Christian Church whose matter must not only be living stones but also separated from the rubbish of Antichristian confusions and desolations CHAP. V. Peace WIth lamentation I may adde How can their Soules be cleare in this foundation of the true Christian matter who persecute and oppresse their own acknowledged Brethren presenting Light unto them about this Point But I shall now present you with Mr. Cottons third distinction In point of Practice saith he some concerne the weightier duties of the Law as What God we worship and with what kind of Worship whether such as if it be Right fellowship with God is held if false fellowship with God is lost Truth It is worth the inquirie what kind of Worship he intendeth for Worship is of various signification whether in generall acceptation he meane the rightnesse or corruptnesse of the Church or the Ministry of the Church or the Ministrations of the Word Prayer Seales c. And because it pleaseth the Spirit
in His Church His spirituall judicature and executes this sentence in part at present and hereafter to all eternity Such a sentence no Civill Iudge can passe such a Death no Civill sword can in●lict I answer secondly Dead men cannot be infected the civill state the world being in a naturall state dead in sin what ever be the State-Religion unto which persons are forced it is impossible it should be infected Indeed the living the beleeving the Church and spirituall state that and that onely is capable of infection for whose helpe we shall presently see what preservatives and remedies the Lord Iesus hath appointed Moreover as we see in a common plague or infection the names are taken how many are to dye and not one more shall be strucke then the destroying Angel hath the names of So here what ever be the soule infection breathed out from they lying lips of a plague-sicke Pharisee yet the names are taken not one elect or chosen of God shall perish Gods sheep are safe in His eternall hand and counsell and he that knowes his materiall knows also his mysticall stars their numbers and calls them every one by name none fall into the Ditch on the blinde Pharises backe but such as were ordained to that condemnation both guid and followers 1 Pet. 2. 8. Iude 4. The vessells of wrath shall breake and split and only they to the praise of Gods eternall justice Rom. 9. CHAP. XXXIV Peace BUt it is said be it granted that in a common plague or infection none are smitten and dye but such as are appointed yet it is not only every mans duty but the common duty of the Magistrate to prevent infection and to preserve the common health of the place likewise though the number of the Elect be sure and God knowes who are His yet hath He appointed meanes for their preservation from perdition and from infection and therefore the Angel is blamed for suffering Balaams doctrine and Iesabel to seduce Christ Jesus His servants Rev. 2. Tit. 3. 10. Rom. 16. 17. Truth I answer Let that Scripture and that of Titus reject an Hereticke and Rom. 16. 17. avoid them that are contentious c. let them and all of like nature be examined and it will appeare that the great and good Physitian Christ Iesus the Head of the Body and King of the Church hath not been unfaithfull in providing spirituall antidotes and preservatives against the spirituall sicknesses sores weaknosses dangers of his Church and people but he never appointed the civill sword for either antidote or remedy as an addition to those spiritualls which he hath left with his wife his Church or People Hence how great is the bondage the captivity of Gods owne People to Babylonish or confused mixtures in Worship and unto worldly and earthly policies to uphold State Religions or Worships since that which is written to the Angel and Church at Pergamus shall be interpreted as sent to the Governour and City of Pergamus and that which is sent to Titus and the Church of Christ at Creet must be delivered to the civill officers and City thereof But as the Civill Magistrate hath his charge of the bodies and goods of the subject So have the spirituall Officers Governours and overseers of Christs City or Kingdome the charge of their souls and soule safety Hence that charge of Paul to Tim. 1 Tim. 5. 20. Them that sinne rebuke before all that others may learne to fear This is in the Church of Christ a spirituall meanes for the healing of a soule that hath sinned or taken infection and for the preventing of the infecting of others that others may learne to feare c. CHAP. XXXV Peace IT is said true that Titus and Timothy and so the Officers of the Church of Christ are bound to prevent soule infection But what hinders that the Magistrate should not be charged also with this duty Truth I answer many things I have answered and more shall at present I shall only say this If it be the Magistrate duty or office then is he both a Temporall and Ecclesiasticall officer contrary to which most men will affirme and yet we know the policie of our owne Land and Country hath established to the Kings and Queens thereof the supreme heads or governours of the Church of England That doctrine and distinction that a Magistrate may punish an Heretick civilly will not here availe for what is Babel if this be not confusedly to punish corporall or civill offences with spirituall or Church censures the offendour not being a member of it or to punish soule or spirituall offences with corporall or temporall weapons proper to Delinquents against the temporall or civill state Lastly woe were it with the civill Magistrate and most intolerable burthens do they lay upon their backs that teach this doctrine if together with the common care and charge of the Commonwealth the peace and safety of the Towne City State or Kingdome the bloud of every soule that perisheth should cry against him unlesse he could say with Paul Acts 20. in spirituall regards I am clear from the blould of all men that is the bloud of soules which was his charge to looke after so far as his preaching went not the bloud of bodies which belongeth to the civill Magistrate I acknowledge he ought to cherish as a foster-father the Lord Iesus in his truth in his Saints to cleave unto them himselfe and to countenance them even to the death yea also to breake the teeth of the Lions who offer Civill violence and injury unto them But to see all his Subjects Christians to keepe such Church or Christians in the purity of worship and see them doe their duty this belongs to the Head of the Body Christ Iesus and such spirituall Officers as he hath to this purpose deputed whose right it is according to the true paterne Abimelech Saul Adonijah Athalia were but usurpers David Salomon Ioash c. they were the true heires and types of Christ Iesus in His true Power and Authority in His Kingdome CHAP. XXXVI Peace THe next Scripture brought against such persecution is Luke 9. 54 55. where the Lord Jesus reproved His Disciples who would have had fire come downe from Heaven and devoure those Samaritanes● that would not receive Him in these words You know not of what spirit you are the Son of Man is not come to destroy mens lives but to save them With this Scripture Mr. Cotton joynes the fourth and answers both in one which is this 2 Tim. 2. 24. The servant of the Lord must not strive but must be gentle toward all men suffering the evill men instructing them with meeknesse that are contrary minded and oppose themselves proving if God peradventure will give them repentance that they may acknowledge the truth and that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the Divell who are taken captive by him at his will
Unto both these Scriptures it pleaseth him thus to answer Both these are directions to Ministers of the Gospel how to deale not with obstinate offendors in the Church who sin against conscience but either with men without as the Samaritanes were and many unconverted Christians in Creet whom Titus as an Evangelist was to seek to convert Ot at best with some Iewes or Gentiles in the Church who though carnall yet were not convinced of the errour of their way And it is true it became not the Spirit of the Gospel to convert Aliens to the Faith such as the Samaritanes were by fire and brimstone nor to deale harshly in publicke Ministery or private conference with all such severall minded men as either had not yet entred into Church fellowship or if they had did hitherto sin of ignorance not against Conscience But neither of both these Texts doe hinder the Minister of the Gospel to proceed in a Church way against Church members when they become scandalous offenders either in life o● doctrine much lesse doe they speake at all to the Civill Magistrate CHAP. XXXVII Truth THis perplexed and ravelled Answer wherein so many things and so doubtfull are wrapt up and intangled together I shall take in pieces First concerning that of the Lord Iesus rebuking his Disciples for their rash and ignorant bloudy zeale Luc. 9. desiring corporall destruction upon the Samaritanes for refusing the Lord Iesus c. the Answerer affirmeth that hindreth not the Ministers of the Gospell to proceed in a Church way against scandalous offenders which is not here questioned but maintained to bee the holy will of the Lord and a sufficient censure and punishment if no civill offence against the Civill State be committed Secondly saith hee Much lesse doth this speake at all to the Civill Magistrate Where I observe that he implyes that beside the censure of the Lord Iesus in the hands of his spirituall governours for any spirituall evill in life or doctrine the Civill Magistrate is also to inflict corporall punishment upon the contrary minded whereas First if the Civill Magistrate be a Christian a Disciple or follower of the meeke Lambe of God he is bound to be far from destroying the bodies of men for refusing to receive the Lord Iesus Christ for otherwise hee should not know according to this speech of the Lord Iesus what spirit he was of yea and to be ignorant of the sweet end of the comming of the Son of Man which was not to destroy the bodies of Men but to save both bodies and soules vers 55. 56. Secondly if the Civill Magistrate being a Christian gifted prophesie in the Church 1 Corinth 1. 14. although the Lord Iesus Christ whom they in their owne persons hold forth shall be refused yet they are here forbidden to call for fire from heaven that is to procure or inflict any corporall judgement upon such offenders remembring the end of the Lord Iesus his comming not to destroy mens lives but to save them Lastly this also concernes the conscience of the Civill Magistrate as he is bound to preserve the civill peace and quiet of the place and people under him he is bound to suffer no man to breake the Civill Peace by laying hands of violence upon any though as vile as the Samaritanes for not receiving of the Lord Iesus Christ. It is indeed the ignorance and blinde zeale of the second Beast the false Prophet Rev. 13. 13. to perswade the civill Powers of the earth to persecute the Saints that is to bring fiery judgements upon men in a judiciall way and to pronounce that such judgements of imprisonment banishment death proceed from Gods righteous vengeance upon such Hereticks So dealt divers Bishops in France and England too in Queene Maries dayes with the Saints of God at their putting to death declaiming against them in their Sermons to the people and proclaiming that these persecutions even unto death were Gods just judgements from heaven upon these Heretickes CHAP. XXXVIII Peace DOubtlesse such fiery spirits as the Lord Jesus said are not of God I pray speake to the second place out of Timothy 2. Epist. 25. 26. Truth I acknowledge this instruction to be meeke and patient c. is properly an instruction to the Ministers of the Gospel Yet divers Arguments from hence will truly and fairly be collected to manifest and evince how farre the civill Magistrate ought to bee from dealing with the civill sword in spirituall cases And first by the way● I desire to aske What were these unconverted Christians in Crete which the Answerer compareth with the Samaritanes whom Titus saith he as an Evangelist was to seek to convert and whether the Lord Iesus have any such Disciples and Followers who yet are visibly in an unconverted estate O that it may please the Father of mercies the Father of lights to awaken and open the eyes of all that feare before him that they may see whether this be the Language of Canaan or the Language of Ashdod What is an unconverted Christian but in truth an unconverted Convert that is in English one unturned turned unholy holy Disciples or Followers of Iesus not following of him In a word that is Christians or anointed by Christ Antichristians not anointed with the Spirit of Iesus Christ. Certaine it is such they were not unto whom the Spirit of God gives that name Act. 11. And indeed whither can this tend but to uphold the blasphemy of so many as say they are Iewes that is Christians but are not Rev. 2. But as they are not Christians from Christ but from the Beast and his Picture so their proper name from Antichrist is Antichristians How sad yet and how true an evidence is this that the soule of the Answerer I speake not of his inward soule and person but of his worship hath never yet heard the call of the Lord Iesus to come out from those unconverted Churches from that unconverted Antichristian Christian world and so from Antichrist Belial to seeke fellowship with Christ Iesus and his converted Christians Disciples after the first patterne Againe I observe the haste and light attention of the Answerer to these Scriptures as commonly the spirits of Gods children in matters of Christs Kingdome are very sleepy for these persons here spoken of were not as he speakes unconverted Christians in Crete whom Titus as an Evangelist was to convert but they were such opposites as Timothy to whom Paul writes this Letter at Ephesus should meet withall CHAP. XXXIX Peace BUt what is there in this Scripture of Timothy alledged concerning the civill Magistracy Truth I argue from this place of Timothy in particular thus First if the civill Magistrates hee Christians or members of the Church able to prophesie in the Church of Christ then I say as before they are bound by this command of Christ to suffer opposition to their doctrine with meeknesse and gentlenesse and to
be so farre from striving to subdue their opposites with the civill sword that they are bound with patience and meeknesse to wait if God peradventure will please to grant repentance unto their opposites So also it pleaseth the Answerer to acknowledge in these words It becomes not the Spirit of the Gospel to convert Aliens to the Faith such as the Samaritanes and the unconverted Christians in Crete with Fire and Brimstone Secondly be they oppositions within and Church members as the Answerer speakes become scandalous in doctrine I speake not of scandals against the civill State which the civill Magistrate ought to punish it is the Lord onely as this Scripture to Timothy implyes who is able to give them repentance and recover them out of Sathans snare to which end also he hath appointed those holy and dreadfull censures in his Church or Kingdome True it is the Sword may make as once the Lord complained Isa. 10. a whole Nation of Hypocrites But to recover a Soule from Sathan by repentance and to bring them from Antichristian doctrine or worship to the doctrine or worship Christian in the least true internall or externall submission that only works the All-powerfull God by the sword of his Spirit in the hand of his Spirituall officers What a most wofull proofe hereof have the Nations of the Earth given in all Ages And to seeke no further then our native Soyle within a few scores of yeeres how many wonderfull changes in Religion hath the whole Kingdome made according to the change of the Governours thereof in the severall Religious which they themselves imbraced Henry the 7. finds and leaves the kingdome absolutely Popish Henry the 8. casts it into a mould half Popish halfe Protestant Edward the 6. brings forth an Edition all Protestant Queene Mary within few yeares defaceth Edwards worke and renders the Kingdome after her Grandfather Hen. 7. his pattern all Popish Maries short life and Religion ends together and Elizabeth reviveth her Brother Edwards Modell all Protestant And some eminent Witnesses of Gods Truth against Antichrist have enclined to believe that before the downfall of that Beast England must once againe how down her faire Neck to his proud usurping yoake and foot Peace It hath been Englands sinfull shame to fashion change their Garments and Religions with wondrous ease and lightnesse as a higher Power a stronger Sword hath prevailed after the ancient patterne of Nebuchaanezzars bowing the whole world in one most solemne uniformitie of worship to his Golden Image Dan. 3. CHAP. XL. BUt it hath been thought or said Shall oppositions against the Truth escape unpunished will they not prove mischievous c. Truth I answer as before concerning the blinde Guides in case there be no Civill offence committed the Magistrates all men that by the mercy of God to themselves discerne the miserie of such Opposites have cause to lament and bewaile that fearfull condition wherein such are entangled to wit in the snares chains of Satan with which they are so invincibly caught and held that no power in Heaven or Earth but the Right hand of the Lord in the meeke and gentle dispensing of the Word of Truth can release and quit them Those many false Christs of whom the Lord Jesus forewarnes Mat. 24. have sutably their false bodies faith spirit Baptisme as the Lord Jesus hath his true body faith spirit c. Ephes. 4. correspondent also are their weapons and the successe issue or operation of them A carnall weapon or sword of steele may produce a carnall repentance a shew an outside an uniformitie through a State or Kingdome But it hath pleased the Father to exalt the Lord Iesus only to be a Prince armed with power and meanes sufficient to give repentance to Israel Acts 5. 31. Accordingly an unbelieving Soule being dead in sinne although he be changed from one worship to another like a dead man shifted into severall changes of apparell cannot please God Heb. 11. and consequently whatever such an unbelieving unregenerate person acts in Worship or Religion it is but sinne Rom. 14. Preaching sinne praying though without beads or booke sinne breaking of bread or Lords supper sinne yea as odious as the oblation of Swines blood a Dogs neck or killing of a Man Isa. 66. But Faith it is that gift which proceeds alone from the Father of Lights Phil. 1. 29. and till he please to make his light arise and open the eyes of blind sinners their soules shall lie fast asleep and the faster in that a sword of steele compells them to a worship in hypocrisie in the dungeons of spirituall darknesse and Sathans slavery Peace I adde that a civill sword as wofull experience in all ages hath proved is so far from bringing or helping forward an opposite in Religion to repentance that Magistrates sinne grievously against the worke of God and blood of Soules by such proceedings Because as commonly the suffrings of false and Antichristian Teachers harden their followers who being blind by this meanes are occasioned to tumble into the ditch of Hell after their blind leaders with more inflamed zeale of lying confidence So secondly violence and a sword of steele begets such an impression in the sufferers that certainly they conclude as indeed that Religion cannot be true which needs such instruments of violence to uphold it so that Persecutors are far from soft and gentle commiseration of the blindnesse of others To this purpose it pleased the Father of Spirits of old to constraine the Emperour of Rome Antoninus Pius to write to all the Governours of his Provinces to forbeare to persecute the Christians because such dealing must needs be so far from converting the Christians from their way that it rather begat in their mindes an opinion of their crueltie c. CHAP. XLI Peace THe next Scripture against such persecution is that of the Prophet Isa. 24. together with Mic. 4. 3. they shall break their swords into plough-shares and their speares into pruning-hookes Isa. 11. 9. There shall none hurt or destroy in all the mountaine of my Holinesse Unto which it pleased Mr. Cotton to say That these predictions doe onely shew first with what kinde of weapons he should subdue the Nations to the obedience of the faith of the Gospell not by fire and sword and weapons of War but by the power of the Word and Spirit of God which faith he no man doubts of Secondly those predictions of the Prophets shew what the meeke and peaceable temper will be of all true converts to Christianity not Lyons or Leopards not cruell oppressors nor malignant opposers or biters one of another but doth not forbid them to drive ravenous wolves from the sheep-fold and to restraine them from devouring the sheep of Christ. Truth In this first excellent and truly Christian Answer me thinks the Answerer may heare a voyce from Heaven Out of thine owne
hast thou helped him that is without power How savest thou the arme that hath no strength How hast thou counselled him that hath no wisedome how hast thou plentifully declared the thing as it is 5. Lastly I ask whether as men deale with Wolves these wolves as Ephesus were intended by Paul to be killed their braines dasht out with stones staves halberts guns c. in the hands of the Elders of Ephesus c Truth Doubtlesse comparing spirituall things with spirituall all such mysticall wolves must spiritually and mystically so be slain And the Witnesses of Truth Revel 11. speake fire and kill all that hurt them by that sierie Word of God and that two-edged sword in their hand Psal. 149. But oh what streames of the blood of Saints have been and must be shed untill the Lambe have obtained the Victorie Revel 17. by this unmercifull and in the state of the New Testament when the Church is spread all the World over most bloody doctrine viz. The wolves Hereticks are to be driven away their braines knock● out and killed the poore sheepe to be preserved for whom Christ died c. Is not this to take Christ Iesus and make him a temporall King by force Iohn 6. 15. Is not this to make his Kingdome of this world to set up a civill and temporall Israel to bound out new Earthly holy Lands of Canaan yea and to set up a Spanish Inquisition in all parts of the World to the speedy destruction of thousands yea of millions of Soules and the frustrating of the sweet end of the comming of the Lord Iesus to wit to save mens soules and to that end not to destroy their bodies by his own blood CHAP. XLIV Peace THe next Scripture produced against such Persecution is 2 Cor. 10. 4. The weapons of our warfare are not carnall but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds casting down imaginations and every high thing that exalteth it selfe against the knowledge of God and bringing into captivity every thought to the obedience of Christ and having in a readinesse to avenge all disobedience c. Unto which it is answered When Paul saith The weapons of our warfare are not carnall but spirituall he denieth not civill weapons of Iustice to the civill Magistrate Rom. 13. but only to Church-officers and yet the weapons of Church officers he acknowledgeth to be such as though they be spirituall yet are ready to take vengeance on all disobedience 2 Cor. 10. 6. which hath reference amongst other Ordinances to the censures of the Church against scandalous offenders Truth I acknowledge that herein the Spirit of God denieth not civill weapons of justice to the Civill Magistrate which the Scripture he quotes Rom. 13. abundantly testifie Yet withall I must aske why he here affirmeth the Apostle denies not civill weapons of Justice to the civill Magistrate of which there is no question unlesse that according to his scope of proving persecution for conscience he intends withall that the Apostle denies not civill weapons of justice to the Civill Magistrate in Spirituall and Religious causes The contrary whereunto the Lord assisting I shall evince both from this very Scripture and his owne observation and lastly by that 13 of the Romanes by himsefe quoted First then from this Scripture and his owne Observation The weapons of Church officers saith he are such which though they be spirituall are ready to take vengeance on all disobedience which hath reference saith he amongst other Ordinances to the Censures of the Church against scandalous offenders I hence observe that there being in this Scripture held forth a two-fold state a Civill state and a Spirituall Civill officers and spirituall civill weapons and spirituall weapons civill vengeance and punishment and a spirituall vengeance and punishment although the Spirit speakes not here expresly of Civill Magistrates and their civill weapons yet these States being of different Natures and Considerations as far differing as Spirit from Flesh I first observe that Civill weapons are most improper and unfitting in matters of the Spirituall state and kingdome though in the Civill state most proper and sutable CHAP. XLV FOr to keepe to the similitude which the Spirit useth for instance To batter downe a strong hold high wall fort tower or castle men bring not a first and second Admonition and after obstinacie Excommunication which are spirituall weapons concerning them that be in the Church nor exhortations to Repent and be baptized to beleeve in the Lord Jesus c. which are proper weapons to them that be without c. But to take a strong hold men bring Canons Culverins Saker Bullets Powder Musquets Swords Pikes c. and these to this end are weapons effectuall and proportionable On the other side to batter downe Idolatry false worship heresie schisme blindnesse hardnesse out of the soule and spirit it is vaine improper and unsutable to bring those weapons which are used by persecutors stocks whips prisons swords gibbets stakes c. where these seem to prevaile with some Cities or Kingdomes a stronger force sets up againe what a weaker pull'd downe but against these spirituall strong holds in the soules of men Spirituall Artillery and weapons are proper which are mighty through God to subdue and bring under the very thought to obedience or else to binde fast the soule with chaines of darknesse and locke it up in the prison of unbeleefe and hardnesse to eternity 2. I observe that as civill weapons are improper in this businesse and never able to effect ought in the soule So although they were proper yet they are unnecessary for if as the Spirit here saith and the Answerer grants spirituall weapons in the hand of Church officers are able and ready to take vengeance on all disobedience that is able and mighty sufficient and ready for the Lords worke either to save the soule or to kill the soule of whomsoever be the party or parties opposite in which respect I may againe remember that speech of Iob How hast thou helped him that hath no power Iob 26. Peace Offer this as Malachie once spake to the Governours the Kings of the Earth when they besiege beleagure and assault great Cities Castles Forts c. should any subject pretending his service bring store of pins sticks strawes bulrushes to beat and batter downe stone walls mighty Bulwarkes what might his expectation and reward be but at least the censure of a man distract beside himself c. Truth What shall we then conceive of His displeasure who is the chiefe or Prince of the Kings of the earth and rides upon the Word of Truth and meeknesse which is that white Horse Rev. 6. and Rev. 19. with His holy witnesses the white Troopers upon white horses when to His helpe and aid men bring and adde such unnecessary improper and weake munition Will the Lord Iesus did He ever in His owne Person practice or did he appoint
that terme Evill viz that the Magistrate is to punish Evill urge it strictly eo nomine because Heresie Blasphemie false Church false Ministerie is evill as well as Disorder in a Civill State Secondly I observe how they take away from the Magistrate that which is proper to his cognisance as the complaints of servants children wives against their parents masters husbands c. Families as families being as stones which make up the common building and are properly the object of the Magistrates care in respect of Civill Government Civill order and obedience CHAP. LIV. Peace I Pray now lastly proceed to the Authours Reason why Christs Disciples should be so far from persecuting that they ought to blesse them that curse them and pray for them that persecute them because of the freenesse of Gods grace and the deepenesse of his Councels calling them that are Enemies Persecutors No people to become meeke Lambes the sheep and people of God according to 1 Pet. 2. 20. You which were not a people are now a people c. and Matth. 20. 6. Some come at the Last houre which if they were cut off because they came not sooner would be prevented and so should never come Unto this Reason the Answerer is pleased thus to reply First in generall We must not doe Evill that Good may come thereof Secondly in particular he affirmeth that it is evill to tolerate seditious evill doers seducing Teachers scandalous livers and for proof of this he quotes Christs reproofe to the Angel of the Church at Pergam●s for tolerating them that hold the doctrine of Balaam and against the Church of Thiatyra for tolerating Iesabel to teach and seduce Revel 2. 14. 20. Truth I answer first by assenting to the generall Proposition that it is most true like unto Christ Jesus himselfe a sure foundation 1 Cor. 3. Yet what is built upon it I hope by Gods assistance to make it appeare is but hay and stubble dead and withered not suiting that golden foundation nor pleasing to the Father of mercies nor comfortable to the Soules of men It is evill saith he to tolerate notorious evill doers seducing Teachers scandalous livers In which speech I observe 2 evills First that this Proposition is too large and generall because the Rule admits of exception and that according to the will of God 1. It is true that Evill cannot alter its nature but it is alway Evill as darknesse is alway darknesse yet 2. It must be remembred that it is one thing to command to conceale to councell to approve Evill and another thing to permit and suffer Evill with protestation against it or dislike of it at least without approbation of it Lastly this sufferance or permission of Evill is not for its ownsake but for the sake of Good which puts a respect of Goodnesse upon such permission Hence it is that for Gods owne Glorie sake which is the highest Good he endures that is permits or suffers the Vessels of Wrath Rom. 9. And therefore although he be of pure eyes and can behold no iniquitie yet his pure eyes patiently and quietly beholds and permits all the idolatries and prophanations all the thefts and rapines all the whoredomes and abominations all the murthers and poysonings and yet I say for his glory sake he is patient and long permits Hence for his peoples sake which is the next Good in his Son he is oftentimes pleased to permit and suffer the wicked to enjoy a longer reprive Therefore he gave Paul all the lives that were in the ship Acts 27. Therefore he would not so soone have destroyed Sodome but granted a longer permission had there been but 10 righteous Gen. 19. Therefore Ierem. 5. had he found some to have stood in the gap he would have spared others Therefore gave he Iesabel a time or space Revel 2. Therefore for his Glory sake hath he permitted longer great sinners who afterward have perished in their season as we see in the case of Ahab the Ninevites and Amorites c. Hence it pleased the Lord not onely to permit the many evills against his owne honourable ordinance of Mariage in the world but was pleased after a wonderfull manner to suffer that sin of many wives in Abraham Iacob David Salomon yea with some expression which seeme to give approbation as 2 Sam. 12. Peace It may be said this is no patterne for us because God is above Law and an absolute Soveraigne Truth I answer although wee finde him sometime dispensing with his Law yet we never finde him deny himselfe or utter a falshood And therefore when it crosseth not an absolute Rule to permit and tolerate as in the case of the permission of the soules and consciences of all men in the world I have shewne and shall shew further it doth not it will not hinder our being holy as hee is holy in all manner of conversation CHAP. LIV. Peace IT will yet bee said it pleaseth God to permit Adulteries Murthers Poisons God suffers men like fishes to devoure each other Habac. 1. the wicked to flourish Ier. 12. yea sends the Tyrants of the world to destroy the Nations and plunder them of their riches Isa. 10. Should men doe so the world would be a Wildernesse and beside we have command for zealous execution of Justice impartially speedily Truth I answer we finde two sorts of commands both from Moses and from Christ the two great Prophets and Messengers from the living God the one the type or figure of the later Moses gave positive Rules both spirituall and civill yet also hee gave some not positive but permissive for the common good So the Lord Iesus expoundeth it For whereas the Pharises urged it that Moses commanded to give a Bill of Divorcement and to put away the Lord Iesus expoundeth it Moses for the hardnesse of your heart suffered or permitted Math. 19. 17 18. This was a permissive command universall to all Israel for a generall good in preventing the continuall fires of Dissentions Combustions in families yea it may be Murthers Poysons Adulteries which that people as the wisedome of God foresaw was apt out of the hardnesse of their heart to breake out into were it not for this preventing permission Hence it was that for a further publike good sake and the publike safety David permitted Ioab a notorious malefactor and Shimei and Adonijah c. And civill States and Governours in like cases have and doe permit and suffer what neither David nor any civill Governour ought to doe or have done were it not to prevent the hazard of the whole in the shedding of much innocent blood together with the n●cent in civill combustions Peace It may be said Ioab Shimei Adonijah c. were only as it were reprived for a time and proves only that a season ought to be attended for their punishment Truth Answ. I answer I produce not these instances to prove a permission of Tares Antichristians Heretikes
which other Scriptures abundantly prove but to make it cleare against the Answerers allegation that even in the civill State permission of notorious evill doers even against the civill State is not disapproved by God himselfe and the wisest of his servants in its season CHAP. LV. Truth I Proceed Hence it is that some Generals of Armies and Governours of Cities Townes c. doe and as those former instances prove lawfully permit some evill persons and practices As for instance in the civill State Vsury for the preventing of a greater evill in the civill Body as stealing robbing murthering perishing of the poore and the hindrance or stop of commerce and dealing in the Commonwealth Just like Physicians wisely permitting noysome humours and sometimes diseases when the cure or purging would prove more dangerous to the destruction of the whole a weake or crazy body and specially at such a time Thus in many other instances it pleased the Father of lights the God of Israel to permit that people especially in the matter of their demand of a King wherein he pleaded that himselfe as well as Samuel was rejected This ground to wit for a common good of the whole is the same with that of the Lord Iesus commanding the Tares to be permitted in the World because otherwise the good wheat should be indangered to be rooted up out of the Field or World also as well as the ares and therefore for the good sake the Tares which are indeed evill were to be permitted Yea and for the generall good of the whole world the field it selfe which for want of this obedience to that command of Christ hath beene and is laid waste and desolate with the fury and rage of civill War professedly raised and maintained as all States professe for the maintenance of one true Religion after the patterne of that typicall land of Canaan and to suppresse and pluck up these Tares of false Prophets and false Professors Antichristians Heretickes c. out of the world Hence illae lachrymae hence Germanies Irelands and now Englands teares and dreadfull desolations which ought to have beene and may bee for the future by obedience to the command of the Lord Iesus concerning the permission of Tares to live in the world though not in the Church I say ought to have beene and may bee mercifully prevented CHAP. LVI Peace I Pray descend now to the second evill which you observe in the Answerers position viz. that it would bee evill to tolerate notorious evill doers seducing teachers c. Truth I say the evill is that he most improperly and confusedly joynes and couples seducing teachers with scandalous livers Peace But is it not true that the world is full of seducing teachers and is it not true that seducing teachers are notorious evill doers Truth I answer far be it from me to deny either and yet in two things I shall discover the great evill of this joyning and coupling seducing teachers and scandalous livers as one adaequate or proper object of the Magistrates care and worke to suppresse and punish First it is not an Homogeneall as we speake but an Heterogeneall commixture or joyning together of things most different in kindes and natures as if they were both of one consideration For who knowes not but that many seducing teachers either of the Paganish Iewish Turkish or Antichristian Religion may be clear and free from scandalous offences in their life as also from disobedience to the Civill Lawes of a State Yea the Answerer himselfe hath elsewhere granted that if the Lawes of a Civill State be not broken the Peace is not broken Againe who knowes not that a seducing teacher properly sinnes against a Church or Spirituall estate and Lawes of it and therefore ought most properly and onely to bee dealt withall in such a way and by such weapons as the Lord Iesus himselfe hath appointed gainsayers opposites and disobedients either within his Church or without to be convinced repelled resisted and slaine withall Whereas scandalous offendours against Parents against Magistrates in the 5 Command and so against the life chastity goods or good name in the rest is properly transgression against the Civill State and Commonweale or the worldly state of Men And therefore consequently if the World or Civill State ought to be preserved by Civill Government or Governours such scandalous effendours ought not to be tolerated but supprest according to the wisdome and prudence of the said Government Secondly as there is a fallacious conjoying and confounding together persons of severall kindes and natures differing as much as Spirit and Flesh Heaven and Earth each from other So is there a silent and implicite justification to all the unrighteous and cruell proceedings of Iews and Gentiles against all the Prophets of God the Lord Iesus Himselfe and all His Messengers and Witnesses whom their Accusers have ever so coupled and mixed with notorious evill doers and scandalous livers Elijah was a troubler of the State Ieremy weakned the hand of the people yea Moses made the people neglect their worke the Iewes built the Rebellious and bad City the three Worthies regarded not the command of the King Christ Iesus deceived the people was a conjurer and a traytor against Caesar in being King of the ●ewes indeed He was so spiritually over the true Jew the Christian therefore He was numbred with notorious evill doers and nailed to the Gallowes between two Malefactours Hence Paul and all true Messengers of Iesus Christ are esteemed seducing and seditious teachers and turners of the World upside downe Yea and to my knowledge I speake with honourable respect to the Answerer so far as he hath laboured for many Truths of Christ the Answerer himselfe hath drunke of this cup to be esteemed a seducing Teacher CHAP. LVII Peace YEa but he produceth Scriptures against such toleration and for persecuting men for the cause of conscience Christ saith he had something against the Angel of the Church of Pergamus for tolerating them that held the doctrine of Balaam and against the Church of Thiatira for tolerating Iesabel to teach and seduce Rev. 2. 14. 20. Truth I may answer with some admiration and astonishment how it pleased the Father of lights and most jealous God to darken and vaile the eye of so pretious a man as not to seek out and propose some Scriptures in the proofe of so weighty an assertion as at least might have some colour for an influence of the Civill Magistrate in such cases for First he saith not that Christ had ought against the City Pergamus where Sathan had his throne Rev. 2. but against the Church at Pergamus in which was set up the Throne of Christ. Secondly Christs Charge is not against the Civill Magistrate of Pergamus but the Messenger or Ministry of the Church in Pergamus Thirdly I confesse so far as Balaams or Iesabels doctrine maintained a liberty of corporall fornication it concerned the City of
I heartily subscribe and know the God the Spirit the Prince the Angels and all the true awaked Sons of Peace will call thee blessed Truth How sweet and precious are these contemplations but oh how sweet the actions and fruitions Peace Thy lips drop as the Honey-combe Honey and Milke are under thy Tongue oh that these drops these streames might flow without a stop or interruption Truth The glorious white Troopers Rev. 19. shall in time be mounted and he that is the most High Prince of Princes and Lord Generall of Generalls mounted upon the Word of Truth and Meeknesse Psal 45. shall triumph gloriously and renew our meetings But harke what noise is this Peace These are the dolefull drums and shrill sounding trumpets the roaring murthering Canons the shouts of Conquerours the grones of wounded dying slaughtered righteous with the wicked Deare Truth how long how long these dreadfull sounds and direfull sights how long before my glad returne and restitution Truth Sweet Peace who will beleeve my true report yet true it is if I were once beleev'd blest Truth and Peace should not so soone be parted Peace Deare Truth what welcome hast thou found of late beyond thy former times or present expectations Truth Alas my welcome changes as the times and strongest swords and armes prevaile were I beleeved in this that Christ is not delighted with the blood of men but shed his owne for his bloodiest enemies that by the word of Christ no man for gainsaying Christ or joyning with his enemy Antichrist should bee molested with the civill sword Were this foundation laid as the Magna Charta of highest liberties and good security given on all hands for the preservation of it how soone should every brow and house be stucke with Olive Branches Peace This heavenly invitation makes mee bold once more to crave thy patient eare and holy tongue Errour●s impatient and soon tyred but thou art Light and like the Father of Lights unwearied in thy shinings Loe here what once againe I present to thy impartiall censure A MODEL of CHURCH and CIVIL Power Composed by Mr. COTTON and the MINISTERS of NEW-ENGLAND And sent to the CHURCH at SALEM as a further Confirmation of the bloody Doctrine of PERSECUTION for cause of CONSCIENCE Examined and Answered CHAP. LXXXII Truth VVHat hast thou there Peace Here is a combination of thine owne Children against thy very life and mine H●re is a Modell framed by many able learned and godly hands of such a Church and Common-weale as wakens Moses from his unknown Grave and denies Iesus yet to have seene the Earth Truth Begin sweet Peace read and propound My hand shall not be tyred with holding the ballances of the Sanctuarie doe thou put in and I shall weigh as in the presence of Him whose pure eyes cannot behold iniquitie Peace Thus then speakes the Preface or Entrance Seeing God hath given a distinct power to Church and Common-weale the one Spirituall called the Power of the Keyes the other Civill called the Power of the Sword and hath made the members of both Societies subject to both Authorities so that every soule in the Church is subject to the higher powers in the Commonweale and every member of the Commonweale being a member of the Church is subject to the Lawes of Christs Kingdome and in him to the censures of the Church the Question is how the Civill State and the Church may dispence their severall Governments without infringement and impeachment of the power and honour of the One or of the Other and what bounds and limits the Lord hath set betweene both the Administrations Truth From that conclusion deare Peace that every mem● of the Commonweale being a member of the Church is subject to the Lawes of Christs Kingdome and in Him to the censure of the Church I observe that they grant the Church of Christ in Spirituall causes to be superiour and over the highest Magistrates in the World if members of the Church Hence therefore I infer may she refuse to receive and may also cast forth any yea even the highest if obstinate in Sin cut of her Spirituall society Hence in this Spirituall society that soule who hath most of Christ most of His Spirit is most spiritually honourable according to the Scriptures quoted Acts 15. 20. Isa. 49. 23. Gal. 3. 28. And if so how can this stand with their common tenent that the Civill Magistrate must keep the first Table set up reforme the Church and be Iudge and Governour in all Ecclesiasticall as well as Civill causes Secondly I observe the lamentable wresting of this one Scripture Sometimes this Scripture must prove the Power of the Civill Magistrates Kings and Governours over the Church in Spirituall causes c. Yet here this Scripture is produced to prove Kings and Magistrates in Spirituall causes to be censured and corrected by the same Church ●Tis true in severall respects he that is a Governour may be a subject but in one and the same spirituall respect to judge and to be judged to sit on the Bench and stand at the Bar of Christ Iesus is as impossible as to reconcile the East and West together CHAP. LXXXII The first head That both Iurisdictions may stand together Peace VVHereas divers affecting transcending power to themselves over the Church have perswaded the Princes of the World that the Kingdome of Christ in His Church cannot rise or stand without the falls of those Common-weales wherein it is set up we do beleeve and professe the contrary to this suggestion the government of the one being of this World the other not the Church helping forward the prosperity of the Commonweale by meanes only Ecclesiasticall and Spirituall the Commonweale helping forward her owne and the Churches felicity by meanes politicall or temporall the falls of Commonweales being knowne to arise from their scattering and diminishing the power of the Church and the flourishing of Commonweales with the well ordering of the people even in morall and civill virtues being observed to arise from the vigilant administration of the holy Discipline of the Church as Bodin a man not partiall to Church Discipline plainely testifieth The vices in the free estate of Geneva quae legibus nusquam vindicantur by meanes of Church Discipline sine vi tumultu coercentur the Christian liberty not freeing us from subjection to Authority but from inthrallment and bondage unto sinne Truth Ans. From this confession that the Church or Kingdome of Christ may be set up without prejudice of the Commonweale according to Iohn 18. 36. My Kingdome is not of this World c. I observe that although the Kingdome of Christ the Church and the Civill Kingdome or Government be not inconsistent but that both may stand together yet that they are independent according to that Scripture and that therefore there may be as formerly I have proved flourishing Commonweales and Societies of men● where no
Church make him a Delinquent at the Bar yet by their confession God hath made him a Iudge on the Bench. What blood what tumults hath been and must be spilt upon these grounds Peace Deare Truth No question but the Church may punish the Magistrate spiritually in spirituall cases and the Magistrate may punish the Church civilly in civill cases But that for one and the same cause the Church must punish the Magistrate and the Magistrate the Church this seemes monstrous and needs explication Truth Sweet Peace I illustrate with this Instance A true Church of Christ of which according to the Authors supposition the Magistrate is a member chooseth and calls one of her members to office The Magistrate opposeth The Church perswaded that the Magistrates exceptions are insufficient according to her priviledge which these Authours maintaine against the Magistrates prohibition proceeds to Ordaine her officer The Magistrate chargeth the Church to have made an unfit and unworthy choice and therefore according to his place and power and according to his conscience and judgement he suppresseth such an officer and makes void the Churches choice Upon this the Church complaines against the Magistrates violation of her priviledges● given her by Christ Iesus and cries out that the Magistrate is turned Persecuter● and not prevailing with admonition she proceeds to Excommunication against him The Magistrate according to his conscience endures not such profanation of Ordinances as he conceives and therefore if no advice and admonition prevaile he proceeds against such obstinate abusers of Christs holy Ordinances as the Authors grant he may in Civill Court of justice yea and I adde according to the patterne of Israel cuts them off by the sword as obstinate usurpers and prophaners of the holy things of Christ. I demand what helpe hath any poore Church of Christ in this case by maintaining this power of the Magistrate to punish the Church of Christ I meane in spirituall and Soule-cases for otherwise I question not but he may put all the members of the Church to death justly if they commit crimes worthy thereof as Paul spake Acts 23. Shall the Church here slie to the Popes Sanctuarie against Emperours and Princes excommunicate to wit give away their crowns kingdomes or dominions and invite forraigne Princes to make War upon them and their Territories The Authors surely will disclaime this and yet I shall prove their Tenents tend directly unto such a practise Or secondly shall she say the Magistrate is not a true Magistrate ' because not able to judge and determine in such cases This their confession will not give them leave to say because they cannot deny unbelievers to be lawfull Magistrates and yet it shall appeare not withstanding their con●ession to the contrary their Tenents imply that none but a Magistrate after their own conscience is a lawfull Magistrate Therefore thirdly they must ingenuously and honestly confesse that if it be the duty of the Magistrate to punish the Church in spirituall cases he must then judge according to his conscience and perswasion whatever his conscience be and then let all men judge into what a wofull state they bring both the civill Magistrate and Church of Christ by such a Church-destroying and State-destroying Doctrine Peace Some will here say in such a case either the Magistrate on the Church must judge either the Spirituall or Civill State must be supreme I answer if the Magistrate be of another Religion First What hath the Church to judge him being without 1 Cor. 5. Secondly If he be a member of the Church● doubtles the Church hath power to judge in spirituall and Soule-cases with spirituall and Church censures all that are within 1● Cor. 5. Thirdly If the Church offend against the civill peace of the State by wronging the bodies or goods of any the Magistrate bears not the sword in vaine Rom. 13. to correct any or all the members of the Church And this I conceive to be the onely way of the God of Peace CHAP. LXXXVI The third head concerns the End of both these Powers FIrst the common and last end of both is Gods glory and Mans eternall felicitie Secondly the proper ends First of Commonwealth is the procuring preserving increasing of externall and temporall peace and felicitie of the State in all Godlines and Honestie 1 Tim. 2. 1 2. Secondly of the Church a begetting preserving increasing of internall and spirituall peace and felicity of the Church in all godlinesse and honesty Esay 2. 3 4. and 9. 7. So that Magistrates have power given them from Christ in matters of Religion because they are bound to see that ou●ward peace be preserved not in all ungodlinesse and dishonesty For such peace is Satanicall but in all godlinesse and honesty for such peace God aymes at And hence the Magistrate is custos of both the Tables of godlinesse in the first of Honesty in the second for Peace sake Hee must see that honesty be preserved within his jurisdiction or else the subject will not be bonus Cives Hee must see that godlinesse as well as honesty be preserved else the subject will not be bonus vir who is the best bonus cives Hee must see that godlinesse and honesty be preserved or else himselfe will not bee bonus Magistratus Truth In this passage here are divers particulars affirmed marvellous destructive both to godlinesse and honesty though under a faire ma●ke and colour of both First it will appeare that in spirituall things they make the Garden and the Wildernesse as often I have intimated I say the Garden and the Wildernesse the Church and the World are all one for thus If the Powers of the World or Civill State are bound to propose externall Peace in all godlinesse for their end and the end of the Church be to preserve internall Peace in all godlinesse I demand if their end godlinesse● bee the same is not their power and state the same also unlesse they make the Church subordinate to the Common-wealths and or the Commonweale subordinate to the Churches end which being the governour and setter up of it and so consequently the Iudges of it it cannot be Now i● godlinesse bee the worshipping and walking with God in Christ is not the Magistrate and Commonweale charged more by this tenent with the worship and Ordinances of God then the Church for the Magistrate they charge with the externall peace in godlinesse and the Church but with the internall I aske further what is this internall peace in all godlinesse whether intend they internall within the Soule which onely the eye of God can see opposed to externall or visible which man also can discerne or else whether they meane internall that is spirituall soule matters ma●ters of Gods Worship and then I say that peace to wit of godlinesse or Gods worship they had before granted to the civill State Peace The Truth is as I now perceive the best and most godly of
from them according to their office as it pleased God alwayes to send to the Kings of Israel and Judah in the like case Peace Some will here object Pauls appealing to Caesar. Truth And I must refer them to what I formerly answered to that Objection Paul never appealed to Caesar as a Judge appointed by Christ Jesus to give definitive sentence in any spirituall or Church controversie but against that civill violence and murther which the Iewes intended against him Paul justly appealed For otherwise if in a spirituall cause he should have appealed he should have overthrowne his owne Apostleship and Power given him by Christ Iesus in spirituall things above the highest Kings or Emperors of the world beside CHAP. XC Peace BLessed Truth I shall now remember you of the fourth Quaerie upon this place of Timothy to wit whether a Church of Christ Iesus may not live in Gods worship and comelinesse notwithstanding that the civill Magistrate professe not the same but a contrary Religion and Worship in his owne person and the Country with him Truth I answer the Churches of Christ under the Roman Emperours did live in all godlinesse and christian gravity as appeares by all their holy and glorious practices which the Scripture abundantly testifies Secondly this ●lowes from an institution or appointment of such a power and authority left by the Lord Iesus to his Apostles and Churches that no ungodlinesse or dishonesty in the first appearance of it was to be suffered but supprest and cast out from the Churches of Christ even the little Leaven of doctrine or practice 1 Corinth 5. Gal. 5. Lastly I adde that although sometimes it pleaseth the Lord to vouchsafe his servants peace and quietnesse and to command them here in Timothy to pray for it for those good ends and purposes for which God hath appointed civill Magistracy in the world to keepe the world in peace and quietnesse Yet Gods people have used most to abound with godlinesse and honesty when they have enjoyed least peace and quietnesse Then like those spices Cant. 4. Myrrhe Frankincense Saffron Calamus c. they have yeelded the sweetest favour to God and man when they were pounded and burnt in cruell persecution of the Romane Censors then are they as Gods Venison most sweet when most hunted Gods Stars shining brightest in the darkest night more heavenly in conversation more mortified more abounding in love each to other more longing to be with God when the inhospitable and salvage World hath used them like strangers and forced them to hasten home to another Country which they professe to seeke CHAP. XCI Peace DEare Truth it seemes not to be unseasonable to close up this passage with a short descant upon that Assertion viz. A subject without godlinesse will not be bonus vir a good man nor a Magistrate except he see godlinesse preserved will not be bonus Magistratus Truth I confesse that without godlinesse or a true w●rshipping of God with an upright heart according to Gods Ordinances neither Subjects nor Magistrates can please God in Christ Iesus and so be spiritually or christianly good which few Magistrates and few men either come to or are ordained unto God having chosen a little ●lock out of the world and those generally poore and meane 1 Cor. 1. Iam. 2. Yet this I must remember you of that when the most High God created all things of nothing he saw and acknowledged divers sorts of goodnesse which must still be acknowledged in their distinct kindes a good Ayre a good Ground a good Tree a good Sheepe c. I say the same in Artificialls a good Garment a good House a good Sword a good Ship I also adde a good City a good Company or Corporation a good Husband Father Master Hence also we say a good Physitian a good Lawyer a good Sea-man a good Merchant a good Pilot for such or such ● shoare or Harbour that is Morally Civilly good in their severall Civill respects and imployments Hence Psal. 133. the Church or Citie of God is compared to a Citie compact within it selfe which compactnes may be found in many Townes and Cities of the World where yet hath not shined any spirituall or supernaturall goodnesse Hence the Lord Iesus Matth. 12. describes an ill state of an house or kingdome viz. to be divided against it selfe which cannot stand These I observe to prove that a Subject a Magistrate may be a good Subject a good Magistrate in respect of civill or morall goodnes which thousands want and where it is it is commendable and beautifull though Godlines which is infinitely more beautifull be wanting and which is onely proper to the Christian state the Commonweale of Israel the true Church the holy Nation Ephes. 2. 1 Pet. 2. Lastly however the Authors deny that there can be Bonus Magistratus a good Magistrate except the see all Godlines preserved yet themselves confesse that civill honesty is sufficient to make a good Subject in these words viz. He must see that Honestie be preserved within his jurisdiction else the Subject will not be Bonus civ●s a good citizen and doubtlesse if the Law of Relations hold true that civill honestie which makes a good citizen must also together with qualifications sit for a Commander make also a good Magistrate CHAP. XCII Peace THe 4. head is The proper meanes of both these Powers to attaine their ends First the proper meanes whereby the Civill Power may and should attaine its end are onely Politicall and principally these Five First the erecting and establishing what forme of Civill Government may seeme in wisedome most meet according to generall rules of the Word and state of the people Secondly the making publishing and establishing of wholesome Civill Lawes not only such as concerne Civill Justice but also the free passage of true Religion for outward Civill Peace ariseth and is maintained from them both from the latter as well as from the former Civill peace cannot stand intire where Religion is corrupted 2 Chron. 15. 3. 5. 6. Iudg. 8. And yet such Lawes though conversant about Religion may still be counted Civill Lawes as on the contrary an Oath doth still remaine Religious though conversant about Civill matters Thirdly Election and appointment of Civill officers to see execution of those Lawes Fourthly Civill Punishments and Rewards of Transgressors and Observers of these Lawes Fifthly taking up Armes against the Enemies of Civill Peace Secondly the meanes whereby the Church may and should attaine her ends are only ecclesiasticall which are chiefly five First setting up that forme of Church Government only of which Christ hath given them a pattern in his Word Secondly acknowledging and admitting of no Lawgiver in the Church but Christ and the publishing of his Lawes Thirdly Electing and ordaining of such officers onely as Christ hath appointed in his Word Fourthly to receive into their fellowship them that are approved and in●licting Spirituall censures against them that offend
viz. that none but members of Churches enjoy civill freedome amongst them ordinarily in imitation of that Nationall Church and State of the Iewes then I answer they that follow Moses Church constitution which the New English by such a practice implicitely doe must cease to pretend to the Lord Iesus Christ and his institutions Secondly we shall finde lawfull civill State both before and since Christ Iesus in which we finde not any tidings of the true God our Christ. Lastly their civill New English State framed out of their Churches may yet stand subsist and flourish although they did as by the word of the Lord they ought permit either Iewes or Turkes or Antichristians to live amongst them subject unto their Civill Government CHAP. CII Peace ONe branch more viz. the third remaines of this Head and it concerns the hearing of the Word unto which say they all men are to be compelled because hearing of the word is a duty which even Nature leadeth Heathens to for this they quote the practice of the Ninevites hea●ing Ionah and Eglo● King of Moab his rising up to Ehuds pretended message from God Iudg 3. Truth I must deny that position for light of Nature leadeth men to heare that onely which Nature conceiveth to be good for it and therefore not to heare a Messenger Minister or Preacher whom conscience perswades is a false messenger or deceiver and comes to deceive my soule as Millions of men and women in their severall respective religions and consciences are so perswaded conceiving their owne to be true Secondly as concerning the instances Ionah did not compell the Ninevites to heare that message which he brought unto them Besides the matter of compulsion to a constant worship of the world in Church estate which is the Question comes not neare Ionahs case Nor did Christ Iesus or any of his Embassadours so practice but if persons refused to heare the command of the Lord Iesus to his Messengers was onely to depart from them shaking off the dust of their feet with a denunciation of Gods wrath against them Math. 10. Act. 14. Concerning Eglon his rising up First Eh●d compelled not that King either to heare or reverence and all that can bee imitable in Eglon is a voluntary and willing reverence which persons ought to expresse to what they are perswaded comes from God But how doe both these instances mightily convince and condemne themselves who not onely professe to turne away from but also persecute or hunt all such as shall dare to professe a Ministry or Church estate differing from their owne though for personall godlinesse and excellency of gifts reverenced by themselves Thirdly to the point of compulsion It hath pleased the Lord Iesus to appoint a two fold Ministry of his Word First for unbeleevers and their conversion according to Math. 28. 19. Marc. 16 15 16. and the constant practice of the Apostles in the first preaching of the Gospel Secondly a Ministry of feeding and nourishing up such as are converted and brought into Church estate according to Ephes. 4. c. Now to neither of these doe we finde any compulsion appointed by the Lord Iesus or practised by any of his The compulsion preached and practised in New England is not to the hearing of that Ministry sent forth to convert unbeleevers and to constitute Churches for such a Ministry they practise not but to the hearing of the word of edification exhortation consolation dispenced onely in the Churches of worshippers I apply When Paul came first to Corinth to preach Christ Iesus by their Rule the Magistrates of Corinth ought by the Sword to have compelled all the people of Corinth to heare Paul Secondly after a Church of Christ was gathered by their rule the Magistrates of Corinth ought to have compelled the people still even those who had refused his Doctrine for the few onely of the Church embraced it to have heard the Word still and to have kept one day in seven to the Christians God and to have come to the Christians Church all their dayes And what is this but a setled formality of Religion and Worship unto which a people are brought by the power of the sword And however they affirme that persons are not to be compelled to be members of Churches nor the Church compelled to receive any Yet if persons be compelled to forsake their Religion which their hearts cleave to and to come to Church to the worship of the Word Prayers Psalmes and Contributions and this all their dayes I aske whether this be not this peoples Religion unto which submitting they shall be quiet all their dayes without the inforcing them to the practice of any other Religion And if this bee not so then I aske Will it not inevitably follow that they not onely permit but enforce people to bee of no Religion at all all their dayes This toleration of Religion or rather irreligious compulsion is above all tolerations monstrous to wit to compell men to bee of no Religion all their dayes I desire all men and these worthy Authors of this Modell to lay their hands upon their heart and to consider whether this compulsion of men to heare the Word as they say whether it carries men to wit to be of no Religion all their dayes worse then the very Indians who dare not live without Religion according as they are perswaded Lastly I adde from the Ordinance of the Lord Iesus and practice of the Apostles Acts 2. 42. where the Word and Prayer is joyned with the exercise of their fellowship and breaking of Bread in which Exercises the Church continued constantly that it is apparent that a Civill State may as lawfully compell men by the civill sword to the breaking of bread or Lords Supper as to the Word or Prayer or Fellowship For first they are all of the same nature Ordinances in the Church I speake of the feeding Ministrie in the Church unto which persons are compell'd and Church Worship Secondly every conscience in the World is fearfull at least shie of the Priests and Ministers of other Gods and Worships and of holding Spirituall fellowship in any of their Services Which is the case of many a Soule viz. to question the Ministers themselves as well as the Supper it selfe CHAP. CIII Peace DEare Truth This pressing of men to the Spirituall Battels of Christ Jesus is the cause why as it is commonly with prest Souldiers that so many thousands flie in the day of Battell But I present you with the 9. Question viz. What power the Magistrate hath in providing of Church-Officers First say they the Election of Church officers being the proper Act of the Church therefore the Magistrate hath no power either as Prince or Patron to assume such power unto himselfe When Christ sends to preach by his supreme power the Magistrate may send forth by his power subordinate to gather Churches and may force people to heare
them but not invest them with office amongst them Secondly the Maintenance of Church-officers being to arise from all those who are ordinarily taught thereby Gal. 6. 6. hence it is the dutie of the Civill Magistrate to contend with the people as Nehemiah did chap. 13. ver 10. 11. who doe neglect and forsake the due maintenance of the Church of God and to command them to give such portions for the maintenance of Church officers as the Gospell commandeth to be offered to them freely and bountifully 2. Cor. 9. 5 6 7. According as Hezekiah commanded the people to give to the Priests and Levites the portions appointed by the Law that they might be incouraged in the Law of the Lord 2 Chron. 31. 4. Thirdly the furnishing the Church with set officers depending much upon erecting and maintenance of Schooles and good education of youth and it lying chiefly in the hand of the Magistrate to provide for the furthering thereof they may therefore and should so farre provide for the Churches as to erect Schooles take care for fit Governours and Tutours and commend it to all the Churches if they see it meet that in all the Churches within the Jurisdiction once in a yeare and if it may be the Sabbath before the Generall Court of Election there be a Free-will offering of all people for the maintenance of such Schooles And the monies of every Towne so given to be brought on the day of Election to the Treasurie of the Colledge and the monies to be disposed by such who are so chosen for the disposing thereof Truth In the choice of officers it is very obscure what they mean by this supreme power of Christ Jesus sending to preach We know the Commission of the Lord Jesus to his first Messengers to goe into all Nations to preach and gather Churches and they were immediately sent forth by him but Mr. Cotton elswhere boldeth that there is now extant no immediate Ministry from Christ but mediate that is from the Church Let us first see how they agree with themselves and secondly how they agree with the Magistrate in this busines First if they hold a sending forth to preach by Christs supreme power according to Math. 28. Mark 16. Rom. 10. they must necessarily grant a time when the Church is not but is to be constituted out of the Nations and Peoples now converted by this preaching whence according to the course of Scripture the nature of the Worke and their own Grant in this place it is apparent that there is a Ministery before the Church gathering and espousing the Church to Christ and therefore their other Tenent must needs be too light viz. that there is no Ministry but that which is mediate from the Church Peace Blessed Truth this doctrine of a Ministry before the Church is harsh and deep yet most true most sweet Yet you know their Ground that two or three Godly persons may joyne themselves together become a Church make officers send them forth to preach to convert baptize and gather New Churches Truth I answer first we find not in the first institution and pasterne that ever any such two or three or more did gather and constitute themselves a Church of Christ without a Ministrie sent from God to invite and call them by the Word and to receive them unto fellowship with God upon the receiving of that Word and Message And therefore it may very well be quaeried how without such a Ministry two or three become a Church and how the power of Christ is conveyed unto them Who espoused this people unto Iesus Christ as the Church at Corinth was espoused by Paul 2 Cor. 11. If it be said themselves or if it be said the Scriptures let one instance be produced in the first patternes and practices of such a Practice It hath been generally confest that there is no comming to the Mariage feast without a Messenger inviting sent from God to the Soules of men Matth. 22. Luc. 14. Rom. 10. We finde when the Thessalonians turned to God from their Idolls to serve the living and true God 1 Thessal 1. 9. it pleased God to bring a Word of Power unto them by the mouth of Paul in the same place Peace You know deare Truth it is a common plea that Gods people now are converted already and therefore may congregate themselves c. Truth Two things must here be cleered First doth their conversion amount to externall turning from Idolls I Thess. 1. 9. beside their internall Repentance Faith Love c. Secondly who wrought this conversion who begot these Children for though the Corinthians might have ten thousand Teachers yet Paul had begotten them by the Word 'T is true as Mr. Cotton himselfe elsewhere acknowledgeth God sendeth many Preachers in the way of his providence even in Babel mysticall though not according to his Ordinance and Institution So even in the wildernesse Rev. 12. God provideth for the sustentation of the woman Rev. 12. by which provision even in the most Popish times and places yea and by most false and Popish callings now in this lightsome Age confest so to be God hath done great things to the personall conversion consolation and salvation of his people But as there seems yet to be desired such constitution of the Christian Church as the first institution and patterne calls for So also such a calling and converting of Gods people from Antichristian Idols to the Christian Worship And therefore such a Ministry according to the first patterne sent from Christ Iesus to renew and restore the Worship and Ordinances of God in Christ. Lastly if it should be granted that without a Ministry sent from Christ to gather Churches that Gods people in this Country may be called converted from Antichristian Idolls to the true worship of God in the true Church estate and Ordinances will it not follow that in all other Countries of the World Gods Elect must or may be so converted from their severall respective false worships and Idolatries and brought into the true Christian Church estate without such a Ministry sent unto them Or are there two wayes appointed by the Lord Iesus one for this Country and another for the rest of the World Or lastly if two or three more without a Ministry shall arise up become a Church make Ministers c. I ask whether those two or three or more must not be accounted immediately and extraordinarily stirred up by God and whether this be that supreme power of Christ Iesus which they speake of sending forth two or three private persons to make a Church and Ministers without a true Ministry of Christ Iesus first sent unto themselves Is this that commission which all Ministers pretend unto Mat. 28. 19. c. first in the hands of two or three private persons becomming a Church without a mediat call from which Church say they there can be no true Ministry and yet also confesse that Christ sendeth
and purgings Are not all the Nations of the Earth alike cleane unto God or rather alike uncleane untill it pleaseth the Father of mercies to call some out to the Knowledge and Grace of his Sonne making them to see their filthinesse and strangenesse from the Commonweale of Israel and to wash in the bloud of the Lambe of God This taking away the difference between Nation and Nation Country and Country is most fully and admirably declared in that great vision of all sorts of living creatures presented unto Peter Acts 10. whereby it pleased the Lord to informe Peter of the abolishing of the difference between Iew and Gentile in any holy or unholy cleane or uncleane respect Fifthly not only to speake of all but to select one or two more This people of Israel in that Nationall State were a type of all the Children of God in all ages under the profession of the Gospel who are therefore called the Children of Abraham and the Israel of God Gal. 3. Gal. 6. A Kingly Priesthood and holy Nation 1 Pet. 2. 9 in a cleare and manifest Antitype to the former Israel Exod. 19. 6. Hence Christians now are figuratively in this respect called Iewes Rev. 3. where lies a cleare distinction of the true and false Christian under the consideration of the true and false Iew Behold I will make them of the Synagogue of Sathan that say they are Jewes and are not but doe lie Rev. 3. But such a typicall respect we finde not now upon any People Nation or Country of the whole World But out of all Nations Tongues and Languages is God pleased to call some and redeem them to Himselfe Rev. 5. 9. And hath made no difference betweene the Iewes and Gentiles Greekes and Scithians Gal. 3. who by Regeneration or second birth become the Israel of God Gal. 6. the Temple of God 1 Cor. 3. and the true Ierusalem Heb. 12. Lastly all this whole Nation or people as they were of one typicall seed of Abraham sealed with a shamefull painfull Ordinance of cutting off the fore-skin which differenced them from all the World beside So also were they bound to such and such solemnities of figurative worships Amongst many others I shall end this passage concerning the people with a famous observation out of Numb 9. 1 3. viz. All that whole Nation was bound to celebrate and keepe the Feast of the Passeover in his season or else they were to be Put to death But doth God require a whole Nation Country or Kingdome now thus to celebrate the spirituall Passeover the Supper and Feast of the Lambe Christ Iesus at such a time once a yeare and that whosoever shall not so doe shall bee put to death What horrible prophanations what grosse hypocrisies yea what wonderfull desolations sooner or later must needs follow upon such a course T is true the people of Israel brought into covenant with God in Abraham and so successively borne in Covenant with God might in that state of a Nationall Church solemnly covenant and sweare that whosoever would not seeke Iehovah the God of Israel should be put to death 2 Chron. 15. whether small or great whether man or woman But may whole Nations or Kingdomes now according to any one title exprest by Christ Iesus to that purpose follow that patterne of Israel and put to death all both men and women great and small that according to the rules of the Gospel are not borne againe penitent humble heavenly patient c. What a world of hypocrisie from hence is practised by thousands that for feare will stoope to give that God their bodies in a forme whom yet in truth their hearts affect not Yea also what a world of prophanation of the holy Name and holy Ordinances of the Lord in prostituting the holy things of God like the Vessels of the Sanctuary Dan. 5. to prophane impenitent and unregenerate persons Lastly what slaughters both of men and women must this necessarily bring into the world by the Insurrections and Civill Warres about Religion and Conscience Yea what slaughters of the innocent and faithfull witnesses of Christ Jesus who choose to bee slaine all the day long for Christ his sake and to fight for their Lord and Master Christ onely with spirituall and Christian weapons CHAP. CXIV Peace IT seemes deare Truth a mighty Gulfe betweene that people and Nation and the Nations of the world then extant and ever since Truth As sure as the blessed substance to all those shadowes Christ Iesus is come so unmatchable and never to bee paralleld by any Nationall State was that Israel in the Figure or Shadow And yet the Israel of God now the Regenerate or Newborne the circumcised in Heart by Repentance and Mortification who willingly submit unto the Lord Iesus as their onely King and Head may fitly parallell and answer that Israel in the type without such danger of hypocrisie of such horrible prophanations and of firing the Civill State in such bloody combustions as all Ages have brought forth upon this compelling a whole Nation or Kingdome to be the antitype of Israel Peace Were this Light entertained some hopes would shine forth for my returne and restauration Truth I have yet to adde a third consideration concerning the Kings and Governours of that Land and people They were to be unlesse in their captivities of their Brethren members of the true Church of God as appeares in the History of Moses the Elders of Israel and the Iudges and Kings of Israel afterward But first who can deny but that there may be now many lawfull Governours Magistrates and Kings in the Nations of the World where is no true Church of Iesus Christ Secondly we know the many excellent gifts wherewith it hath pleased God to furnish many inabling them for publike service to their Countries both in Peace and War as all Ages and Experience testifies on whose soules hee hath not yet pleased to shine in the face of Iesus Christ which Gifts and Talents must all lye buried in the Earth unlesse such persons may lawfully be called and chosen to and improved in publike service notwithstanding their different or contrary Conscience and Worship Thirdly if none but true Christians members of Christ Iesus might be Civill Magistrates and publikely intrusted with civill affaires then none but members of Churches Christians should be Husbands of Wives Fathers of Children Masters of Servants But against this doctrine the whole creation the whole World may justly rise up in armes as not onely contrary to true Piety but common Humanity it selfe For if a Commonweale bee lawfull amongst men that have not heard of God nor Christ certainly their Officers Ministers and Governours must be lawfull also Fourthly it is notoriously knowne to be the dangerous doctrine profest by some Papists that Princes degenerating from their Religion and turning Heretickes are to be deposed and their Subjects actually discharged from their
God the Spirituall Iewes Christs true followers in all parts and quarters of the World Beside all these without Israel is betraied within her owne bowells bloudy Sauls Absaloms She●aes Adonljahs Ieroboams Athal●ahs raising insurrections conspiracies tumults in the Antitype and Parallell the Spirituall state of the Christian Church Secondly consider we the famous and wonderfull battells victories captivities deliverances which it pleased the God of Israel to dispence to that people and Nation and let us search if they can be paralleld by any State or people but mystically and Spiritually the true Christian Israel of God Gal. 6. How famous was the bondage and slavery of that people and Nation 430 yeares in the Land of Aegypt and as famous glorious and miraculous was their returne through the Red Sea a figure of Baptisme 1 Corinth 10. and Aegypt a figure of an Aegypt now Rev. 11. 8 How famous was the 70 yeares captivity of the Iewes in Babel transported from that Land of Canaan and at the full period returned againe to Ierusalem a type of the captivity of Gods people now Spiritually captivated in mysticall Babel Rev. 18. 4 Time would faile me to speake of Ioshua's conquest of literall Canaan the slaughter of 31 Kings of the miraculous taking of Iericho and other Cities Gideon his miraculous battell against the Midianites Ionathan and his Armour bearer against the Philistims David by his 5 smooth stones against Goliah Asa Iehosaphat Hezechia their mighty and miraculous victories against so many hundred thousand Enemies and that sometimes without a blow given What State what Kingdome what warres and combats victories and deliverances can parallel this people but the Spirituall and mysticall Israel of God in every Nation and Country of the World typed out by that small typicall handfull in that little spot of ground the land of Canaan The Israel of God now men and women fight under the Great Lord Generall the Lord Iesus Christ Their Weapons Armour and Artillery is like themselves Spirituall set forth from top to toe Ephes. 6. So mighty and so potent that they breake downe the strongest holds and Castles yea in the very soules of men and carry into captivity the very thoughts of men subjecting them to Christ● Iesus They are Spirituall conquerours as in all the 7 Churches of Asia He that overcommeth He that overcommeth Rev. 2. 3. Their victories and conquests in this are contrary to those of this World for when they are slaine and slaughtered yet then they conquer So overcame they the Divell in the Roman Emperours Rev. 12. By the bloud of the Lambe 2. By the word of their Testimony 3. The cheerfull spilling of their owne bloud for Christ for they loved not their lives unto the death And in all this they are more then Conquerors through him that loved them Rom. 8. This glorious Armie of white Troopers horses and harnesse Christ Iesus and his true Israel Rev. 19. gloriously conquer and overcome the Beast the false Prophet and the Kings of the Earth up in Armes against them Rev. 19. and lastly raigning with Christ a thousand yeares they conquer the Divell himselfe and the numberlesse Armies like the sand on the Sea shoare of Gog and Magog and yet not a tittle of mention of any sword helmet breastplate shield or horse but what is Spirituall and of a heavenly nature All which Warres of Israel have been may be and shall be fulfilled mystically and Spiritually I could further insist on other particulars of Israels unparalled state and might display those excellent passages which it pleaseth God to mention N●hem 9. CHAP. CXXIII Peace YOu have deare Truth as in a glasse presented the face of Old and New Israel and as in water face answereth to face so doth the face of typicall Israel to the face of the Antitype between whom and not between Canaan and the Civill Nations and Countries of the World now there is an admirable consent and harmony But I have heard some say was not the civill state and Judicialls of that people presidentiall Truth I have in part and might further discover that from the King upon his Throne to the very Beasts yea the excrements of their bodies as we see in their going to War Deut 23. 12● their civills moralls and naturalls were carried on in types and however I acknowledge that what was simply morall civill and naturall in Israels state in their constitutions Lawes punishments may be imitated and followed by the States Countries Cities and Kingdomes of the World Yet who can question the lawfulnesse of other formes of Government Lawes and punishments which differ since civill constitutions are mens Ordinances or creation 2. Pet. 2. 13. unto which Gods people are commanded even for the Lords sake to submit themselves which if they were unlawfull they ought not to do Peace Having thus far proceeded in examining whether God hath charged the Civill State with the establishing of the Spirituall and Religious what conceive you of that next assertion viz It is well knowne that the remissenes of Princes in Christendome in matters of Religion and Worship divolving the care thereof only to the Clergie and so setting the● Ho●●es upon the Churches head hath been the cause of 〈◊〉 invention usurpation and corruption in the Worship and Temple of God Truth It is lamentably come to passe by Gods just permission Sathans policie the peoples sinne and the malice of the wicked against Christ and the corruption of Princes and Magistrates that so many inventions 〈◊〉 and corruptions are 〈◊〉 in the Worship and Temple of God throughout that part of the World which is called Christian and may most properly be called the Popes Christendome in opposition to Christ Iesus his true Christian Common-weale or Church the true Christendome But that this hath arisen from Princes remissenesse in not keeping their watch to establish the Purity of Religion Doctrine and Worship and to punish according to Israels patterne all false Ministers by rooting them and their worships out of the World that I say can never bee evinced and the many thousands of glorious Soules under the Altar whose blood hath beene spilt by this position and the many hundred thousand soules driven out of their bodies by Civill Warres and the many millions of soules forced to hypocrisie and ruine eternall by inforced Vniformities in Worship will to all Eternity proclaime the contrary Indeed it shewes a most injurious idlenes and unfaithfulnes in such as professe to be Messengers of Christ Iesus to cast the heaviest weight of their care upon the Kings and Rulers of the Earth yea upon the very Common-weales Bodies of People that is the World it selfe who have fundamentally in themselves the Root of Power to set up what Government and Governours they shall agree upon Secondly it shewes abundance of carnall diffidence and distrust of the glorious power and gracious presence of the Lord Iesus who hath given his promise and
the power of Christ to censure sufficiently an offendour on whom yet they have executed the deepest censure in the world to wit cutting off from Christ shutting out of Heaven casting to the Divell which offendours crime reacheth not to hurt the good of the civill state but that she is forced to make complaint to the civill state and the Officers thereof for their helpe O let not this be tole in Gath nor heard in Ashkalon and O! how dimme must needs that eye be which is blood shot with that blo●dy and cruell Tenent of Persecution for cause of Conscience Peace But what should be meant by this passage viz. That they cannot give liberty to the Magistrate to punish without exception all excommunicate persons within so many months Truth It may be this hath reference to a Law made formerly in New England that if an excommunicate person repented not within as I have heard three months after sentence of excommunication then the Civill Magistrate might proceed with him These worthy men see cause to question this Law upon good reasons rendred though it appears not by their words that they wholly condemne it only they desire a longer time implying that after some longer time the Magistrate may proceed and indeed I see not but according to such principles if the Magistrate himselfe should be cast out he ought to be proceeded against by the Civill state and consequently deposed and punished as the Pope teacheth yea though happily he had not offended against either bodies or goods of any subject Thirdly from this true confession that the Magistrate ought not to punish for many sinnes above mentioned I observe how they crosse the plea which commonly they bring for the Magistrates punishing of false Doctrines Heretiques c. viz. Rom. 13. The Magistrate is to punish them that doe evill and when it is answered True evill against the Second Table which is there onely spoken of and against the Bodies and Goods of the Subject which are the proper object of the Civill Magistrate as they confesse It is replied why is not Idolatry sinne Heresie sinne Schisme and false Worship sinne Yet heere in this passage many evils many sins even of Parents against their Children Masters against their Servants Husbands against their Wives the Magistrate ought not to meddle with Fourthly I dare not assent to that assertion That even originall sinne remotely hurts the civill State T is true some doe as inclinations to murther theft whoredome slander disobedience to Parents and Magistrates but blindnes of minds hardnes of heart inclination to choose or worship this or that God this or that Christ beside the true these hurt not remotely the civill state as not concerning it but the spirituall Peace Let me in the last place remind you of their charge against the Magistrate and which will necessarily turne to my wrong and prejudice They say the Magistrate in hearing and prosecuting the complaints of children against their parents of servants against their masters of wives against their husbands without acquainting the Church first transgresseth the rule of Christ. Truth Sweet Peace they that pretend to be thy dearest friends will prove thy bitter enemies First I ask for one rule out of the Testament of the Lord Iesus to prove this deepe charge and accusation against the Civill Magistrate Secondly This is built upon a supposition of what rarely falls out in the World to wit that there must necessarily be a true Church of Christ in every lawfull State unto whom these complaints must goe whereas how many thousand Common-weales have been and are where the name of Christ hath not or not truly been founded Thirdly The Magistrates office according to their own grant properly respecting the bodies and goods of their Subjects and the whole body of the Common-weale being made up of Families as the members constituting that body I see not how according to the rule of Christ Rom. 13 the Magistrate may refuse to heare and helpe the just complaints of any such petitioners Children Wives and Servants against oppression c. Peace I have long observed that such as have been ready to ascribe to the Civill Magistrate and his Sword more then God hath ascribed have also been most ready to cut off the skirts and in case of his inclining to another conscience then their owne to spoile him of the robe of that due Authoritie with which it hath pleased God and the People to invest and cloath him But I shall now present you with the 13. Head whose Title is CHAP. CXXIX What power Magistrates have in publike Assemblies of Churches FIrst say they the Churches have power to assemble and continue such Assemblies for the performance of all Gods Ordinances without or against the consent of the Magistrate renuente Magistratu because Christians are commanded so to doe Matth. 28. 18. 19. 20. Also because an Angel from God commanded the Apostles so to doe Acts 5. 20 Likewise from the practice of the Apostles who were not rebellious or seditious yet they did so Act. 4. 18. 19. 20. Act. 5. 27 28. Further from the practice of the Primitive Church at Jerusalem who did meet preach pray minister Sacraments censures Act. 4. 23. renuente Magistratu Moreover from the exhortation to the Hebrewes 10. 25. not to forsake their Assemblies though it were in dangerous times and if they might doe this under professed Enemies then we may much more under Christian Magistrates else we were worse under Christian Magistrates then Heathen therefore Magistrates may not hinder them herein as Pharaoh did the people from sacrificing for Wrath will be upon the Realme and the King and his Sons Ez●● 7. 23. Secondly it hath been a usurpation of forraigne Countries and Magistrates to take upon them to determine times and places of Worship rather let the Churches be left herein to their inoffensive Libertie Thirdly concerning their power of Synod Assemblies First in corrupt times the Magistrate desirous to make Reformation of Religion may and should call those who are most fit in severall Churches to assemble together in a Synod to discusse and declare from the Word of God matters of Doctrine and Worship and to helpe forward the Reformation of the Churches God Thus did Iosiah Secondly in the reformed times he ought to give Libertie to the Elders of severall Churches to assemble themselves by their owne mutuall and voluntary agreement at convenient times as the meanes appointed by God whereby he may mediately reform matters amisse in Churches which immediately he cannot nor ought not to doe Thirdly Those meetings for this end we conceive may be of two sorts 1. Monthly of some of the Elders and Messengers of the Churches 2. Annuall of all the Messengers and Elders of the Churches First monthly of some First those members of Churches which are neerest together and so may most conveniently assemble together may by mutuall agreement once in a
moneth consult of such things as make for the good of the Churches Secondly the time of this meeting may be sometimes at one place sometimes at another upon the Lecture day of every Church where Lectures are and let the Lecture that day be ended by eleven of the clock Thirdly let the end of this Assembly be to doe nothing by way of Authoritie but by way of Councell as the need of Churches shall require Secondly Annuall of all the Elders within our jurisdiction or others whereto the Churches may send once in the yeare to consult together for the publike welfare of all the Churches First let the place be sometimes at one Church sometimes at another as Reasons for the present may require Secondly let all the Churches send their waighty questions and cases six weeks or a month before the set time to the Church where the Assembly is to be held and the Officers thereof disperse them speedily to all the Churches that so they may have time to come prepared to the discussing of them Thirdly let this Assembly doe nothing by Authoritie but only by Councell in all cases which fall out leaving the determination of all things to particular Churches within themselves who are to judge and so to receive all doctrines and directions agreeing only with the Word of God The grounds of these Assemblies First need of each others helpe in regard of dayly emergent troubles doubts and controversies Secondly love of each others fellowship Thirdly of Gods glory out of a publike spirit to seeke the welfare of the Churches as well as their owne 1 Cor. 10 33. 2 Cor. 11. 23. Fourthly The great blessing and speciall presence of God upon such Assemblies hitherto Fifthly the good Report the Elders and Brethren of Churches shall have hereby by whose communion of Love others shall know they are the Disciples of Christ. CHAP. CXXX Truth I May well compare this passage to a double picture on the first part or side of it a most faire and beautifull countenance of the pure and holy Word of God on the later side or part a most sowre and uncomely deformed looke of a meere humane invention Concerning the former they prove the true and unquestionable power and priviledge of the Churches of Christ to assemble and practise all the holy Ordinances of God without or against the consent of the Magistrate Their Arguments from Christs and the Angels voyce from the Apostles and Churches practice I desire may take 〈◊〉 impression written by the point of a diamond the finger of Gods spirit in all hearts whom it may concerne This Libertie of the Churches of Christ he inlargeth and amplifieth so far that he calls it an usurpation of some Magistrates to determine the time and place of Worship and say that rather the Churches should be left to their inoffensive libertie Upon which Grant I must renew my former Quaerie Whether this be not to walke in c●ntradictions to hold with light yet walke in darknes for How can they say the Magistrate is appointed by God and Christ the Guardian of the Christian Church and Worship bound to set up the true Church Ministrie and Ordinances to see the Church doe her duty that is to force her to it by the Civill sword bound to suppresse the false Church Ministrie and Ordinances and therefore consequently to judge and determine which is the true Church which is the false and what is the duty of the Church officers and members of it and what not and yet say they the Churches must assemble and practice all Ordinances without his consent yea against it Yea and he hath not so much power as to judge what is a convenient time and place for the Churches to assemble in which if he should doe he should be an usurper and should abridge the Church of her inoffensive libertie As if the Master or Governour of a Ship had power to judge who were true and fit officers mariners c. for the managing of the Ship and were bound to see them each performe his duty and to force them thereunto and yet he should be an usurper if hee should abridge them of meeting and managing the vessel at their pleasure when they please and how they please without and against his consent Certainly if a Physician have power to judge the d●sease of his patient and what course of Physicke he must use can he bee counted an usurper unlesse the patient might take what physicke himselfe pleased day or night summer or winter at home in his chamber or abroad in the aire Secondly by their grant in this passage that Gods people may thus assemble and practice ordinances without and against the consent of the Magistrate I●infer then also may they become a Church constitute and gather without or against the consent of the Magistrate Therefore may the Messengers of Christ preach and baptise that is make disciples and wash them into the true profession of Christianity according to the commission though the Magistrate determine and publikly declare such Ministers such baptismes such Churches to be hereticall Thirdly it may here be questioned what power is now given to the Civill Magistrate in Church matters and Spirituall affairs If it be answered that although Gods people may doe thus against the Magistrates consent yet others may not I answer as before who sees not herein partiality to themselves Gods people must enjoy their Liberty of Conscience and not be forced but all the Subjects in a Kingdome or Monarchie or the whole world beside must be compelled by the power of the Civill Sword to assemble thus and thus Secondly I demand who shall judge whether they are Gods people or no for they say whether the Magistrate consent or consent not that is judge so or not they ought to goe on in the Ordinances renuente Magistratu How agrees this with their former and generall assertion that the Civill Magistrate must set up the Christian Church and Worship therefore by their owne grant he must judge the godly themselves he must discerne who are fit matter for the House of God living stones and what unfit matter trash and rubbish Those worthy men the Authours of these positions and others of their judgement have cause to examine their soules with feare and trembling in the presence of God upon this intergatory viz. whether or no this be not the bottome and root of the matter If they could have the same supply of maintenance without the helpe of the Civill Sword or were perswaded to live upon the voluntary contribution of poore Saints or their owne labour as the Lord Iesus and his first Messengers did I say if this lay not in the bottom whether or no they could not be willingly shut of the Civill power and left only to their inoffensive liberties I could also put a sad Quaerie to the consciences of some viz. what should be the reason why in
the Church constituted and gathered but to such Ministers or Messengers of Christ Iesus whom he is pleased to imploy to gather and constitute the Church by converting and baptizing unto which Messengers if Christ Jesus will be pleased to send such forth that passage Acts 15. will be presidentiall Peace The 14. generall head is this viz. What power particular Churches have particularly over Magistrates First say they they may censure any Member though a Magistrate if by sinne he deserve it First because Magistrates must be subject to Christ but Christ censures all offenders 1 Cor. 5. 45. Secondly Every Brother must be subject to Christs censure Mat. 18. 15 16 17. But Magistrates are brethren Deut 17. 15. Thirdly They may censure all within the Church I Cor. 5. 12. But the Magistrates are within the Church for they are either without or within or above the Church not the first nor the last for so Christ is only above it Fourthly The Church hath a charge of all the Soules of the members and must give account thereof Heb. 13. 17. Fifthly Christs censures are for the good of Soules I Cor. 5. 6. but Magistrates must not be denied any priviledge for their Soules for then they must lose a priviledge of Christ by being Magistrates Sixthly In Church priviledges Christians are all one Gal. 2. 28. Col. 3. 11. 2. Magistrates may be censured for apparent and manifest sinne against any Morall Law of God in their judiciall proceedings or in the execution of their office Courts are not Sanctuaries for sin and if for no sin then not for such especially First because sinnes of Magistrates in Court are as hatefull to God 2. And as much spoken against Isa. 10. 1. Mic. 3. 1. Thirdly God hath no where granted such immunity to them Fourthly what a brother may doe privately in case of private offence that the Church may doe publikely in case of publike scandall But a private brother may admonish and reprove privately in case of any private offence Mat. 18. 15. Luc. 19. 17. Psal. 141. 5. Lastly Civill Magistracy doth not exempt any Church from faithfull watchfulnesse over any member nor deprive a Church of her due power not a Church member of his due priviledge which is to partake of every Ordinance of God needfull and requisite to their winning and salvation Erg● CHAP. CXXXV Truth THese Arguments to prove the Magistrate subject even for sinne committed in judiciall proceeding I judge like Mount Zion immoveable and every true Christian that is a Magistrate will judge so with mee Yet a Quaerie or two will not be unseasonable First where they name the Church in this whole passage whether they meane the Church without the Ministry or Governours of it or with the Elders and Governours joyntly and if the latter why name they not the Governours at all since that in all administrations of the Church the duty lies not upon the body of the Church but firstly and properly upon the Elders It is true in case of the Elders obstinacy in apparent sinne the Church hath power over him having as much power to take down as to set up Col. 4. Say to Archippus c. Yet in the ordinary dispensations and administrations of the Ordinances the Ministers or Elders thereof are first charged with duty c. Hence first for the Apostles who converted gathered espoused the Churches to Christ I question whether their power to edification was not a power over the Churches as many Scriptures seem to imply Secondly for the ordinary Officers ordained for the ordinary and constant guiding feeding and governing the Church they were Rulers Shepheards Bishops or Overseers and to them was every letter and charge commendation or reproofe directed Revel 2. 3. Acts 20. And that place by them quoted for the submission of the Magistrates to the Church it mentions only submission to the Rulers therof Heb. 13. 17. Those excellent men concealed not this out of ignorance and therefore most certainly in a silent way confesse that their doctrine concerning the Magistrates power in Church causes would too g●osse if they should not have named the whole Church and but silently implyed the Governours of it And is it not wonderfull in any sober eye how the same persons Magistrates can be exalted over the Ministers and Members as being bound to establish reforme suppresse by the civill sword in punishing the body or goods and yet for the same actions if the Church and Governours thereof so conceive be liable to a punishment ten thousand times more transcendent to wit excommunication a punishment reaching to their soules and consciences and eternall estate and this not only for common sins but for those actions which immediately concerne the execution of their civill office in judiciall proceeding Peace The Prelates in Q. Elizabeths dayes kept with more plainnesse to their principles for acknowledging the Queen to be Supreme in all Church causes according to the Title and Power of Henry the 8. her Father taken from the Pope and given to him by the Parliament they professed that the Queen was not a sheepe but under Christ the chiefe Shepheard and that the Church had not power to excommunicate the Queen Truth Therefore sweet Peace it was esteemed capitall in that faithfull witnesse of so much truth as he saw even unto death Mr. Barrow to maintaine before the Lords of the Councell that the Queen herselfe was subject to the power of Christ Iesus in the Church which Truth overthrew that other Tenent that the Queene should be Head and Supreme in all Church causes Peace Those Bishops according to their principles though bad and false dealt plainly though cruelly with Mr. Barrow but these Authors whose principles are the same with the Bishops concerning the power of the Magistrate in Church affaires though they wave the Title and will not call them Heads or Governors which now in lighter times seems too grosse yet give they as much spirituall power and authoritie to the civill Magistrates to the full as ever the Bishops gave unto them although they yet also with the same breath lay all their honour in the dust and make them to lick the dust of the feet of the Churches as it is prophesied the Kings and Queens of the Earth shall doe when Christ makes them nursing fathers and nursing mothers Isa 49. The truth is Christ Jesus is honoured when the civill Magistrate a member of the Church punisheth any member or Elder of the Church with the civill sword even to the death for any crime against the civill State so deserving it for he beares not the sword in vain And Christ Iesus is againe most highly honoured when for apparent sinne in the Magistrate being a member of the Church for otherwise they have not to meddle with him the Elders with the Church admonish him and recover his Soule or if obstinate in sin cast him forth of their Spirituall and
l. 22. his perilous soule p. 43. l. 20. r. or l. ult Answeres p. 44. l. 2● b● closer p. 49. l. 1. last p 57. l. 22. cut l. 24. l ●●rme that Justice p. 58. l. 5. the lying p 98. l. 6. road or doe these p. 114. l. 29. r the 31 question p. 119 l. 10. remembers p. 139. l. 9. immunitie p. 161. l. 28. or Christ. p. 214. l. 36. delt shall p. 225. l. 19. the Churches of God 225. l. 25. not might not The famous saying of a late King of Bohemia Essay of Religion It is rarely seen that ever persons were pers●●●ed for their 〈…〉 3. Reas. Truth and Peace rarely and seldom meet a great complaints of Peace Persecutors seldom plead Christ but Moses for their Author Strife distinguished 1. Ungodly strife 2. Godly strife A threefold dolefull cry Christs worship is his bed Cant. 1. 16. False worship therefore is a false bed The cry of the soules under the Altar A cry of the whole earth The wonderfull providēce of God in the writing of the Arguments against persecution in Milke The Answer writ in Bloud The first distinctiō discussed Desinition of persecution discussed Conscience will not be restrained from its own worship nor constrained to another A chaste soule in Gods worship like a chast wife The second distinction discussed● Gods people may erre from the very fundamentals of visible worship 4 sorts of spirituall Foundations 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The sixe Foundations of the Christian Religion or Worship Comming out of Babell not locall but mysticall The great Ignorance of Gods people concerning the Nature of the true Church Mr. Cotton all the Halfe Seperates halting between true fals Churches and consequently not yet clear in the fundamentall matter of a Christiā Church The true Ministrie a Fundamentall The New English Ministers examined Common Prayer cast off written against by the New-English Gods people have worshipped God with false worships It pleaseth God sometimes beyond his promise to convey blessings comfort to His in false worships Fundamentals of Christian worship not so easie and cleare A notable speech of K. Iames to a great non-conformist turned persecuter The 4. distinctiō discussed What civill peace is Gods people must be Nonconformitants to Evill The difference between Spirituall and Civill Peace The difference between the Spirituall and Civill State The Civil State the Spirituall estate and the Church of Christ distinct in Ephesus The Answerer too obscure in generalls Gods meekest servants use to be counted arrogant and impetuous 6 cases wherein Gods people have been bold zealous yet not arrogant Christ Jesus and his Disciples teach publikely a new Doctrine fundamentally different from the Religion professed Gods servants zealous and bold to the faces of the Highest Gods people constantly immoveable to death Gods people ever maintained Christ Jesus the only Lord and King to the conscience That Christ is King alone over conscience is the sum of all true preaching Gods people have see men the disturbers of Civill State Gods word and people the occasion of tumults The instances proposed carry a great shew of impe●●ousnesse yet all are pure and peaceable The true cause of tumults at the preaching of the Word A preposterous way of suppressing errours Light only can expell fogs and darknesse Persecutors oppresse both true and erroneous consciences All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him All persecutors of Christ professe not to persecute him What is meant by Hereticke in Titus The word Hereticke generally mistaken Checks of conscience What is the first second admonition What the rejecting of the Heretick was Corporall killing in the Law typing out Spirituall killing by Excommunication in the Gospell The third Conclusiō discussed Sathans policie The Answerer granteth a Toleration Patience to be used toward the opposite The cariage of a Soule sensible of mercy toward other sinners in their blindnesse and opposition The Answerer cōfounds the Churches in Philippi and Rome with the Cities Philippi and Rome Difference between 〈◊〉 the Church and the World The Church and Civill Scare confusedly made all one Persecutors have forgotten the blessednesse promised to the mercifull Math. 5. What persons are guilty of breach of civil peace The most peaceable wrongfully accused of peace-breaking The examination of what is meant by the Tares and the command of the L. Jesus to let them alone The Answerers fallacious exposition that Tares signifie either Persons Doctrines or Practices The Answerer ba●ely affirming a most strange interpretation Sathans subtlet●e about the opening of Scripture Toleration in Rom. 14. considered Toleratiō of Jew●sh ceremonies for a time upon some grounds in the Jew●sh Church proves not toleration of Popish and Anti christian Ceremonies in the Christian Church although in the State Tares proved not to signifie hypocrites Hence were the witnesses of Christ 〈◊〉 and others in H. 4. his reigne called Lo●lards as some say from 〈◊〉 weeds known well enough hen●e taken for signe of barrenesse Ius●lix 〈◊〉 sterll●● do●●●an●u● a v●●a others conceive they were so called from one Lolla●d c. but all Papis●s accounted them as Tares because of their profession * The false and counterfeit Christians appeare as soon as the true and faithfull Hypocriticall Christians The Tares cannot signifie Hypocrites Two sorts of Hypoc●ites 1. In the Church as Iudas St. ●o● M●g●● and these must be to le●ated untill discovered and no longer 2. Hypocrites in the world which a●e false Christians ●a●●e Churches these the Lord Iesus wi● have let alone unto Harvest The Field by most generally but falsely interpreted the Church The Lord Iesus the great teacher by Parables and the only expounder of them The scope of the Parable Fou●e sorts of ground or hearers of the word in the world and but one properly in the Church the rest seldome come or acciden●ally to hear the word in the Church which word ought to be ●itted for the feed●ng of the Church or flocke preaching for conversion is properly out of the Church The scope of the Parable of the Tares The Lord Iesus in this ●arable of the Ta●es gives direction and consolation to His servants The Tares proved properly to signifie Antichristians Math. 8. 12 Mat. 21. 43 Gods kingdome on Earth the visible Church The difference between the Wheat the Tares as also between these Tares and all other Civill Magistracie from the beginning of the World Offenders against the Civill lawes not to be perpetually tolerated Nor offenders in the Church of Christ Jesus to be su●●red The great Reapers are the Angels The Tares to be tolerated the longest of any sinners The danger of infection by these tares assoyled Lamentable experience hath proved this true of late in Europe and lamentably true in the sl●ughter of some hundred thousands of the English The great dreadfull Harvest The charge of Christ Jesus Let alone the Tares was not spoken to Magistrates Ministers of the civill state but to
Ministers of the Gospel The civill Magistrate not so particularly spoken to as Fathers and Masters in the New Testamēt and why Eph. 5. 6. Col. 3. 4. c. A twofold state of Christianity the persecuted under the Roman Emperors and the Apostate ever since Christs Messengers receive a threefold charge in that prohibition of Christ Let them alone Gods people not to pray for ●h● present ruine and destruction of idolaters although their persecutors but for their peace and salvations The word of God ●●ghtly de●ounced plucks up k●ng●●ms Gods Ministers are 〈◊〉 to provoke 〈…〉 1 ●et 2. 9. 1 Cor. 5. Companying with 〈…〉 1 Cor. 5 discussed Lawfull converse with idolaters in civill but not in spirituall things Dangerous and ung●ounded zeale M●●th 15. 14. the se●●●● Scripture controv●rted in this cause Christ Jesus never directed his Disciples to the civill Magistrate for help in his cause Pauls appealing to Caesar. Civill Magistrates never appointed by God Dfenders of the Faith of Jesus Every o●● is bound to put forth him selfe to his utmost power in Gods businesse wh●re it stops the guilt will lie Christ could have easily been furnished with godly Magistrates if he had so appointed Gods Israel earnest with God for in Arme of Flesh which God gives in his anger and takes away in his wrath The punishment of blind Pharises though let alone yet is greater then any corporall punishment in the world in 4 respects The eye of the 〈◊〉 struck out is worse then for both right and left eye of the body to be 〈◊〉 out tenne thousand times Some soules incurable whom not only corporall b●● spirituall phys●●ke can nothing availe The bottom 〈…〉 blind ●all Soul killing the ch●efest murder No Magistrate can execute true justice in killing soule for soule but christ Jesus who by typicall death in the Law typed out spirituall in the Gospel A great mistake in most to conceive that dead men that is soules dead in sin may be infected by false doctrine All naturall men being dead in sin yet none die everlastingly but such as are thereunto ordained The Lord Jesus hath not lest his Church without spirituall antidotes and remedies against infection The miserable bondage Gods people live in The Kings and Queens of England Governours of the Church Strange confusion in punishments Woe were it with the civill Magistrate if he bloud of soules beside the ordinary care of the bo●ies ●●d goods ●f 〈…〉 sh●uld ●●ry 〈◊〉 him The Magistrates duties toward the Church the Sp●●se of Christ. Usurpers and true heires of the spirituall Crowne of Jesus Luke 9. 54. 55 discussed An excellent saying of persecutors themselves● The Answerer when he should speake to toleration in the State ●unnes to punishments in the Church which none can deny If the Civill Magistrate be a Christian he is bound to be like Christ in saving not destroying mens bodies The civill Magistrate bound not to inflict nor to suffer any other to inflict violence stripes or any corporall punishment for evill against Christ. Revel 13. 13. Fire from heaven What the fire from heaven is which the fals Prophet bringeth downe 2 Tim. 3. 25. 26. examined A quaere what the Answerer meanes by his unconverted Christian in Crete The originall of Christians The Answerer yet in the unconverted Churches and worships Gods people sleepy in the matters of Christs Kingdome Cant. 5. 2. 1 Cor. 14. Patience and ●eeknesse required in all that open Christs mysteries The civill Sword may make a Nation of Hypocrites Antichristians but not one Christian Wonderfull changes of Religion in England Englands changes in point of Religion The miserie of opposites against the Truth A difference between the true and false Christ and Christians The worship of unbelieving unregenerate persons The danger mischiefe of a civill sword in Soule matters which makes the civill Magistrate deeply guilty of all those evils which he aims to suppresse That cannot be a true Religion which needs carnall weapons to uphold it Persecutors beget a perswasion of their crueltie in the hearts of the persecuted Antoninus Pius his golden act Isa. 2. 4. Mic. 4. 3. Isa. 11. 9. concerning Christs peace able Kingdom discussed Mr. Cottons excellent interpretation of those Prophecies His doctrine and practice condemned by that interpretation Spirituall and mysticall Wolves Act. 20. 29. opened What those Wolves were Act. 20. 29. Charges directed to Ministers of the spiritual kingdome fasly applyed to the Magistrates of the civill No word of Christ to the civill Magistrate to feed his flock but to his Ministers who if true have spirituall power sufficient against spirituall Wolves Magistrates decline the name of Head of the Church and yet practise the headship or government The Elect shall not be devoured Christ Jesus furnisheth his Shepherds with power sufficient to drive away Wolves Tit. 1. 9. 10. opened Job 26. 1 2. Unmercifull and bloody doctrine John 6. 15. 2. Cor. 10. 4. discussed The difference of the civill spirituall estate Civill weapons most improper in spirituall causes fitly exemplified by that similitude 2 Cor. 10. 4. Spirituall weapons only effectuall in spirituall soule causes Civill weapons not only improper but unnecessary in spirituall causes No earthly Kings or Governours will be so served as we pretend to serve the King of Kings Psal. 45. The white Troopers Spirituall Ammunition Eph. 6. applied Materiall and Spirituall ●●htly joyned together An alarme to civill or earthly Rulers Concerning the civill Rulers power in spirituall causes discust Rom. 13. speakes not at all of spirituall but civill affaires The scope of Rom 13. Love to man the duty of the whole second Table How love fulfilleth the Law Rom. 13 so interpreted even by them that held persecution for conscience Calvins judgement of Rom. 13. Gods people loath to be found yet proved persecutors Caelvin confesseth that the first Table concerning Gods worship is not here in Rom. 13. touched Beza upon Rom. 13. Paul writes not to the Romane Governors to defend the truth and to punish hereticks Pauls appeale to Caesar discussed If Paul had appealed to Caesar in spirituall things he had committed 5. evils Imperours than them selves if Christians subject to the Apostles and Churches in spirituall things Lawfull appeales in civill things to Civill Magistrates Foure sorts of swords mentioned in the New Testament The Civill Sword Tribute Custome c. meerly civill recompences for civil work Magistrates called by God Gods Ministers The spirituall Ministery The civill Ministery or service What is to b● understood b● Evill Rom. 13 4. Some give to the Magistrate what is not his and take from him that which is proper to him Toleration discussed Upon this point hath Mr. John Goodwin excellently of late discoursed Evill is always Evill yet permission of it may in case be good Deut. 24. Two sorts of commands both by Moses and Christ. Math 16. 17. 18. The permission of divorce in Israel Usurie in a Common-weale or Civill State lawfully permitted
Permission of the Tares in the field of the world for a twofold good 1 Of the good Whe●e 2 Of the whole world ●he field it selfe Seducing teachers either Pagan Jewish or Antichristian may yet be obedient subjects to the Civill lawes Scandalous livers against the Civill state who they are Toleration Rev. 2. 14. 20. examined Christ Ministers Churches have power sufficient from Christ to suppresse Balaam and Iesabel seducing to false worship The Christian world hath swallowed up Christianity The second head of Reasons against such persecution viz. the profession of famous Princes K. James Steven of Poland and K. of Bohemia Isa. 40 6. 2 Pet. 2. Mr. Cottons unequall dealing with Princes The Answerer a knowledgeth a necessi●y of some tol●ration Christ Jesus the deepest politician that ever was and yet he commands a toleration of Antichristians The Princes of the world seldome take put with Christ. Princes not persecuting are very rare Buchanans Item to King Iames. King Iames his sayings against persecution King Steven of Poland his speech against Persecution Forcing of Conscience is a Soule rape Persecution for conscience the Launcet that letteth blood Kings Kingdomes All spirituall Whores are bloody The Godly somotimes evill actors and the Ungodly good actors Poligamie or the many wives of the Fathers Davids advancing of Gods Worship against Gods Order Constantine and the good Emperours are confest to have done more hurt to the name and crown of the Lord Jesus then the persecuting Neroes c. The Garden of the Church and Field of the World made all one by Antichrististianisme The language of Persecuters the wolves and hunters of the World Christs Lilies may flourish in his Church notwithstanding the abundance of weeds in the world permitted The persecution of Queen Elizabeth and King Iames compared together In his opening of the 7. Viols in print Mr. Cotton confesseth that Queen Elizabeth her persecuting the Papists had almost ruined the English Nation The Wars betweene the Papists and the Protestants Eventus omnis 〈…〉 The wars and successe of the Walden●●an witnesses against three Popes and their popish Armies Gods people victorious overcommers and with what weapons The third head of Arguments from ancient and later writers The Christian Church doth not persecute but is persecuted Persecuting 〈◊〉 cannot be Christs Churches The nature of excommunication What persecution or hunting is Christs Spouse no●ser ●tcher or fighter Who cannot be won by the Word must not be compelled by the Sword Constraine upon Consciences in Old and New England Tertullian his speech discussed The Indians of New England permitted by the English not only to continue ●n their unbele●f which they can●●●●ure but also in their f●lse worsh●p which they might by the civil sworrestraine In a cases a false Religion will not hurt the true Church or the State The seducing or infecting of others discussed The Answerer trus●eth not to the sword of the Spirit only in Spirituall causes The absolute sufficiencie of the sword of the Spirit The Church of Christ to be kept pure A Nationall Church not inst●●●t●d by Christ Jesus The nationall Church of the Jewes 1 Sam. 13. Man hath no power to m●ke lawes to binde conscience Desperate consequences unavoidable Luthers testimony in this case discussed Mr. Cottons positions evidently proved contradictory to themselves Hearing of the Word of God in a Church estate a part of Gods worship Papists plea for toleration of conscience The Protestants partiall in the case of persecution A false balance in Gods matters abominable to God Sheep cannot h●nt no not the wolves Pills to purge out the spi●it of persecution Superstition persecution have had many votes from Gods owne people Austins saying for persecution examined Soul-killing Punishments provided by Christ Jesus against Soule-killers and Soule-wounders Men dead in Sin cannot be Soule kill'd A Nationall enforced Religion or a Civill War for Religion the two great preventers of soule conversion and life Soule killers prove by the grace of Christ Soule savers Optatus examined Persecuters leave Christ flie to Moses for their practice Phineas his act discussed Elia●s slaughters examined Eliahs consuming the 2 Capta●nes and their companies by ●i●e discussed Dangerous consequences flowing from the Civill Magistrates judging in Spirituall causes The World turned upside down The wonderfull answer of the Ministers of the Church of New England to the Ministers of the Church of Old England L●mentable differences even amongst them that ●ear God Betweene the Presbyterians and Independants Covenanters and Noncovenanters of both which many are truly godly in their persons The doctrine of persecution nec●ss●r●ly and most commonly falls 〈◊〉 vi●st upon he ●●ost godly persons The doctrine of persecution drives the most godly persons out of the world The bloody Tenent Warres for Conscience The blessed Magna Charta A strange Modell of a Church and Common-weale after the M●s●call and Jewish pattern Mat. 16. 19. with ●oh 20. 23. Rom. 13. 1. Mat. 10. 18. T it 3. 1. Acts 15. 20. Isa. 49. 2● Gal. 3. ●8 Christs power in his Church confest to be above all Magistrates in 〈◊〉 all things Isa. 49. 23. lamentably wrested The first head examined John 18. 36. J●r 29. 7. Ezta 7. 23. Rom. 1. 2. 3. Tim. 2. 2. The Civill Commonweal and the Spirituall Commonweale the Church not inconsistent though independent the one on the other Christs Ordinances put upon a whole City or Nation may more civilize and moralize but ●ever Christianize them The second head concerning superiority of each power Rom. 13. 1. 5. 6 Isa. 49. 23. Isa. 49. 23. Luc. 12. 14. Joh. 8. 11. And that judicium of the church in law suits 1 Cor. 62 is only arbitrarium not coasti●●m Ans. Truth A contradiction to make the Magistrate supreme judge in spirituall causes and yet to have no spirituall power The Civill Magistrate confest to have no Civill power over the soules of men Nor spirituall The Magistrate and the Church by the Authors grounds at one and the same time in one and the same cause made the Judges on the B●●●h and D●●●quents ●●●th B●●re An illustration demonstrat●ng th●● the C●vill Mag●st●at● c●nnot h●ve power over the Church 〈◊〉 spiritu●ll or Church causes The punishments Civill which the Magistrate insticts upon the Church for Civill crimes lawfull and necessary The true way of the God of Peace in differen●es between the Church the Magistrate Ch●mer de Ec. l●s p. 376. Park part polit lib. 1. cap. 1 The G●rden of the Church and the Wildernesse of the World ma●e all one The Commonweale more charged by these Authors with the W●●sh●p and Ordinances then the Church The authors of these Position● never yet s●w a true d●fference betweene ●he Church of Ch●●●t ●nd the world in po●●t of worsh●p 1 Tim 2. 1. discuss●d The word honesty in this place of Timothy cannot signifie here the honesty or righteousnesse of the second Table The scope of Gods Spirit in this place of
type out a Civill but a Spirituall Sword of the Christian Church No man should be bound to worship nor maintaine a Worship against his own consent Christs labourers worthy of their hire but from them that hire them What maintenance Christ hath appointed his Ministers in the Gospell Universities of Europe a cause of universall sins plagues yet Schooles honourable for Tongues and Arts. Christs church his Schoole and all Believers Scholars Who knowes but God may againe powre forth the gifts of Tongues Tongues attainable out of Oxford or Cambridge Mr. Ainsworth King Henry the 8. set down●● the Popes chaire in England If the Mgistrate must punish in Spirituall 〈◊〉 he must 〈◊〉 be judge 〈◊〉 Spirituall causes also Apocripha Common-Prayer and Homilies pretious to our forefa●hers A case Reformations are fallible Bloudy conclusions 11 Head The argument from the Babylonian and Persian kings re-minded The president of the Kings and Governo●●s of Israel and Iudah examined The state of Israel relating to spirituall matters proved typicall The Persian Kings make evidently against such as produce them for maintenance of the doctrine of persecution The Land of Canaan chosen by God to be the seat of the Church but under the New Testament all Nations alike The inhabitants of Canaans Land every soule to be put to death that the Israelites might enjoy their possessions not so now The very 〈◊〉 silver of Cara●aes● Images 〈◊〉 to be abhorred The Land of Canaan ceremonially holy Greater holynesse in the Antitype under the Gospel then in the types under the Law The Land of Canaan Jehorahs Land Emanuels Land so no Land or country more then another The Blasphe m●us titles of the Christned and Christian World The materiall Land of Ca●a●n was to keep her Sabboths so no materiall land or Country now God feedeth his sometimes immediately The J●bilee of Canaan a type of restitution and redemption in the Gospell Canaans land a type of 〈◊〉 Kingdome of God on Earth and in Heaven Why Naboth refused to part with a Garden plot to his King upon hazard of his life The difference of the people of Israel and all other Peoples The people of Israel the seed of one man Only made good in the Spirituall seed the regene●ate or new-borne The people of Israel separate from all Nations in Sp●●● all and in some Civill things No Nation so s●parated to God in the Gospel but only the new borne Israel that feare God in every Nation The whole people of Israel 〈…〉 of Egypt Not so any whole Nation now Pope●y not so easily turned from as i● conceived Wonderfull turnings in Religion in 12 yeares conpasse in England The Pope not unlike to recover his Monarchie over Europe before his downfall Who are now the true Seed of Abraham The people of Israel all holy in a typicall 〈◊〉 All Nations now alike since the comming of the Lord Jesus The children of Israel a figure of the Israel or people of God only u●der the Gospel The people of Israel 〈◊〉 rent from all the world in their figurative and ceremoniall worships Israel Gods only Church might well renew that Nationall Covenant and ceremoniall worship which other Nations cannot imitate The hypocrisies prophanations and slaughters which such imitation now in the Gospell produce The difference of the Kings and Governours of Israel from al Kings Governors of the world First they were all members of the Church Excellent Talents vouchsafed by God to unregenerate persons A doctrine contrary to all true Piety and Humanity it selfe The Papists doctrine of deposing Magistrates confessed in effect to be true by the P●●cestants No civill Magistrate Christian in Christs time Five demonstrative arguments proving the unsoundnesse of that Maxime The Church and Common-wealth are like Hypocrates twins Many flourishing States without a true Church Many of Gods people 〈…〉 from a true Church state Yet ●it for civill services Gods people permitted and favoured by Idolaters Christs church gathered and governed with out the helpe of an arme of flesh Christs true ●pouse 〈◊〉 and faithfull to Christ J●sus in the 〈…〉 or 〈◊〉 from the World The 10 horns Revel 13. 17. The great mysterie of Persecution unfolded Christian Naboths slaughtered 2. Difference The mysterie of the anointing the Kings of Israel and Judah The Name Christian or Anointed A Sacrilegious Monopolie of the Name Christian. The Crown of Christs Kingly power 3. The Kings of Israel and Judah invested with a● Spirituall power David immeately inspired by the Spirit of God in his ordering of Church ma●ters Salomons deposing Abiathar ● Kings 2. 26. 27● discussed Salomon his putting Abiathar from the Priesthood examined A case put upon occasion of Abiathars case Another ●ase The liberties of Christs Churches in the choice of their officers A civill influence dangerous to the Saints liberties Jehosaphats ●ast examined If civill powers may inj●y●e the time o● the Churches w●rship the may also forbid her times God will not wrong Caesar and Caesar should not wrong God The famous acts of 〈◊〉 examined M●gistracy in generall from God the particular formes from the people Israel confirmed in a Nationall Covenant by revelations signes and miracles but so not England Henry 8. the first head and governour of the Church of England The wonderfull formings and reformings of Religion by Englands Kings Kings and States often plant and often pluck up Religions A Nationall Church ever subject to turne and returne c. A woman Papissa or head of the Church The Papists neerer to the Truth concerning the government of the Church then most Protestants The Kingly power of the Lord Jesus troubles all the Kings and Rulers of the Wo●ld A twofold exaltation of Christ. The world ●●o●meth at both A fourth difference Kings of Israel ●ypes They wore a double Crown The Saviours of the Jewes ●igures of the Saviour of the World The Monarchicall and Ministeriall power of Christ. 3 Great Competitours for the Ministeriall power of Christ. The Popes great pretenders fo● the Ministeriall power of Christ. They also upon the point chalenge the Monarchicall also The second great pretender the Civill Magistrate 3 Great factions chalenging an Arme of Flesh. 1. The Pre●aci● 2. The Presbyterie The Pope and Presbyte●i● make use of the Civill Magistrate but as of an Executio●er 3. Independents The Independents who come neerest to the Bishops The third competition of those that seperate Their neerer conformitie to Christ. The Churches of the Seperation ought in Humanitie and Subjects Libertie not to be oppressed but at least permitted ● Reasons proving that the Kings of Israel and Judah cannot have any other but a Spirituall Antitype Civill Types and figures must needs be answered by Spirituall Antitypes Civill compulsion was proper in the Nationall Church of the Jewes but most improper in the Christian which is not Nationall Neither Christ Jesus nor his Messengers have made the Civill Magistrate Israels Antitype but the contrary Civill Magistracie essentially civill and the same in
all parts of the World Christianitie adds not to the nature of a Civill Commonweale nor doth want of Christianitie diminish it Rom. 13. evidently prove● the Civill work and wages of the Civill Magistrate Most strange yet most true consequences from the Civill Magistrates now being the Antitype of the Kings of Israel and Judah If no Religion but that which the Common-weal approves thē no Christ no God but at the pleasure of 〈◊〉 world ● Ep. Jo 9. The true antitype of the ●●ngs of Israel and Judah A fourth difference of Lawes and Statutes from all others Moses a type of Christ. The Lawes of Israel unparallel'd Gods owne finger penn'd Lawes for Israel Fift difference Temporall prosperity most proper to the temporall Nationall State of the Jewes The spirituall prosperity of Gods people now the antitype What Israels excommunication was The corporall stoning in the Law typed out spirituall s●oning in the Gospell The rewards or punishments of the Lawes of Israel not to be parallel'd The wars of Israel typicall Israels Enemi●s round about The Enemies of mysticall Israel Enemies against Israel in her owne bowells The famous typically captivities of the Jews Their wonderfull victories The mysticall battells of Gods Israel now The mysticall Army of white troopers R. 19. Whether the Civill state of Israel was presidentiall The true Christendome Great unfaithfulnesse in Ministers to c●st the ●hiefest burden of judging and establ●sh●ng true Christi●nity upon the Commonweal or worl● it selfe To governe judge in civill aff●●●es load enough on the Civill Magistrate Magistrates can have no more power then the common consent of the people shall betrust them with Thousands of lawfull Magistrates who never heare of the true church of God The Spirituall and Civill Sword cannot be managed by one and the same person The Lord Jesus refused so manage both Nero and the persecuting Emperours not so injurious to Christianity as Constantine and others who assumed a power in Spirituall things Under Constantine Christianity fell into corruption and Christians fell asleep Who force the consciences of others yet are not willing to be forced themselves Constantine and others wanted not so much affection as information of conscience Sad consequences of charging the Civill powers with the care of Spiritualls Civill Rulers giving and lending their Horns or Authority to Bishops both dangerous to the truth of Christ. The Spirituall power of the Lord Jesus compared in Scripture to the incomparable horne of the Rhinocerot A time when Gods people are wholly at a losse for Gods worship Nursing fathers and mothers The Civill horne or power being of a humane constitution cannot but be of a humane operation The Civill power owes 3 things to the true Church of Christ. 1. Approbation 2. Submission 3. Protection The Civill Magistrate owes to false worshippers 1. Permission 2. Protection The Civill Magistrates conscience torne and distracted between the divers and contrary affirmations even of the most godly Reformers The Authors of these positions deal with the Civill Magistrate as the souldiers dealt with the Lord Jesus The rise of high Commissions c. Pious Magistrates and Ministers consciences are perswaded for that which other Magistrates consciences condemne To professe the Magistrate must force the Church to her duty and yet must not judge what that is what is it but to play in Spirituall things An apt similitude discussed concerning the Civill Magistrate First quaerie what if the 〈◊〉 command the Mr. or Pilot to steere such a course which they know will never bring them to the harbour 2. Quaerie If the Mr. of the Ship command the 〈◊〉 thus the Prince command the contrary who is to be obeyed If the Prince have as much skill as the Mr. or Pilo c. 4. Quaerie 5. Quaerie Whether the meanest saylor in respect of his skill and service be not to be preferred before the Prince himself 6. Quaerie Whether if the Mr. of the ship gratifie the Prince to the casting away of the ship and Prince c. he be not guilty and 〈◊〉 to answer The application in generall of the ship to the Church c. The meanest Christian according to his knowledg and grace to bee preferred before the highest who have received none or lesse grace of Christ. A true Minister of Christ ought to walk by another rule then the command of Civill Authority in Spirituall causes Former positions compared with this similitude and found to contradict each other The similitude of the Magistrate prescribing to the Physician in civill things but the Physician to the Magistrate concerning his body The 12 Head examined To give the government of the Church to the Civill Magistrate as before and yet to abridge his conscience what is it but to sport with holy things c. An evident contradiction An excellent confession of the proper end of Civill Government When Civill Lawes are not broken it is confest that Civill Peace is not hurt A grievous charge against the Christian Church and the King of it A strange law in New England formerly against Excommunicate persons A dangerous doctrine against all civill Magistrates Many sins prohibited to be punished by the Magistrate and yet they also charge him to punish all sin Rom. 13. Originall sin charged to hurt remotely but falsely the civill state Magistrates strangely forbidden to hear civill complaints Thousands of Common-weales where no true church of Christ. The complaints of families properly fall into the cognizance of the civill Mastrate They who give to Magistrates more then is due are most apt to dis●o to be them of what is theirs 13. Head A strange double picture The great priviledges of the true Spouse or Church of Christ. To hold with I●ght and walk in darknesse The Magistrate lift up to be the chief 〈◊〉 of the Church and yet cast downe not to have power to appoint the place or time of meeting 2 Similitudes illustr●ting the Magistrate 〈◊〉 be ●oth governor of the Church and yet usurp●r in commanding If a Church may assemble without and against the Magistrates consent as is assi●●ed then much more constitute and become a Church c. Grosse partiality If the Civill Magistrate be to build the Spirituall or Christian house he must judge of the matter A close and faithfull intergatory to the consciences of the authors of these positions A sad quaerie to some concerning their practice A marvallou● challenge of more Libertie to Christians under a Christian Magistrate then under the Heathen If Magistrates● were appointed by Christ Jesus Governours of his Kingdome it were not reasonable that Christians should more freely breake the commands of the Christian then of the Heathen Magistrate The necessry of Civill government in generall of God but the speciall kindes of men 1 Pet. 2. 13. Civill Magistrates are derivatives from the fountaines or bodies of people A beleeving Magistrate no more a Magistrate th●n an unbeleeving The excellen●●● 〈◊〉 Christs 〈…〉 The Magistrate like a Pilot in the Ship of the Common-weale Christianitie ste●●es a Christian Pilots course The Christian Pilot hath no more power over the soules of his Mariners or passengers then the unchristian or Pagan Pilot. The tearmes Heathen and Christian Magistrate All out of Christ are heathens that is of the Nations or Gentiles Josiah a type of Christ Jesus the King of the Church An unjust and partiall desire of liberty to some co●sciences bondage unto all others The Commission Mat. 28. of preaching and baptizing not properly directed to the Churches or fixed Teachers of it least of al to the Commonweale A quaerie who have now the care of all the Churches A Ministrie before the Church Acts 15. commonly misapplied Christs promise and presence only makes an Assembly blessed The promise of Christs presence Mat. ● 8. distinct from that Mat. 28. 14. Position examined Church administrations are charged firstly upon the Misters thereof The Ministers or Governors of Christs Church to be acknowledged in their dispensations A paradox Magistrates made the Judges of the Churches and Governours of them yet censurable by them Queene Eliz. Bish p●truer to their principles then many of a better spirit and profession Mr. Borowes profession concerning Queen Elizabeth Is not this too like the Popes profession of servu● servorum Dei yet holding out his slipper to the lips of Princes Kings and Emperours 15. Head examined The inventions of men in swarving from the true essentialls of Civill and Spirituall Common-weales 16. and last Head examined A great Quegion viz. Whether only Church members that is as is intended Godly persons in a particular Church estate be only eligible or to be chosen for Magistrates Lawfull Civil States where Churches of Christ are not The world being divided into 30 parts 25 never heard of Christ. Lawfull heires of Crownes Civill Government although not Christian and godly Few Christians wise and noble and qualified for affaires of State Some Papists and some Protestants agree in deposing of Magistrates Those Scriptures Exod. 18 Deut. 17. 18. c. parallel'd in the true spirituall Israel by 1 Tim. 3. Tit. 1. The Ninevites Fast examined Object Answ. Object Answ. How England and London may yet be spared Luc. 22 the felling of the Coat to buy a Sword discussed A threefold taking of the Sword Revel 17. 16. the Kings having of the Whore discussed