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A51443 The preachers tripartite in three books. The first to raise devotion in divine meditations upon Psalm XXV : the second to administer comfort by conference with the soul, in particular cases of conscience : the third to establish truth and peace, in several sermons agianst the present heresies and schisms / by R. Mossom ... Mossom, Robert, d. 1679. 1657 (1657) Wing M2866; ESTC R32966 363,207 375

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seized Zech. 12.2 how doth the Churches portion prove a cup of poison making them to vomit up not only the meat they have swallowed but their own bowels also even bring ruine upon themselves and their posterities § 2. And now Oh what shame and confusion shall be upon the soul when this guilt flies in the face and men find by sad experience Obad. 4. that though with Edom they have made their nest among the stars Ezek. 28.14 and become in the language of the Prophet speaking of Tyre tanquam Cherub extentus protegens as a Cherub spreading their wing and enlarging their power and protection over People and Nations yet having Tyres guilt they meet with Tyres doom their great glory does consume to ashes and their ruine's sealed with a non eris in perpetuum Vers 19. Thou shalt not be any more for ever Wherefore when we behold Riches heaped up by oppression and sacriledge Honor founded upon usurpation and violence worldly glory built upon the sandy foundation of a successful impiety then say we with Jacob Gen. 49 6. Psal 141.4 My soul come not thou into their secret And with David Let me not eat of their dainties lest partaking of their sin and guilt we partake with them in their shame and punishment Yea as the best guard of the soul against the suggestions of Satan and seductions of men make we Davids prayer our petition invocating God in all fervor of devotion as the Psalmist here does Let me not be ashamed for I put my trust in thee Let integrity and uprightness preserve me for I wait on thee § 3. This the second part of Davids petition Let integrity and uprightness preserve me Integrity of heart like Elisha's salt it purgeth the spring and purifieth the streams it seasons our duties and keeps the soul sound under all its infirmities and failings The least grace sincere and saving it is like seed of a growing and an increasing nature and though hid under a heap of corruptions yet does it spring up to everlasting life Joh. 4.14 Take we a view of this uprightness and integrity as to its subject its end and its object 1. The subject the inward man without which all outward performances they are Pharisaical obedience for God is a Spirit Joh 4.23 and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth And thus the Apostle I delight in the law of God after the inward man Rom. 7.22 In religious services then the integrity is that of the heart so that in what the heart does not act God does not accept Isa 29 13 14. the performance of the outward duty without the concurrence of the inward man being as a body without a soul and meet formal professors though they wear Christs livery yet do they serve themselves § 4. 2. The end the principal and ultimate is Gods glory to which there are many subordinate and subservient as the good of his Church the salvation of our souls the welfare of our Country the benefit of our families and the like But now we must observe it is too low a judgment of integrity to take its measure from the more near and immediate ends of actions we must eye therefore the principal and ultimate end the glory of God 1 Cor. 10.31 A sincere aim at which sacred end does lay the soul level and eaven in its desires which otherwise would warp and bend according to the sway of some base lusts and vile affections But notwithstanding this pure aim at Gods glory Heb. 11.26 seeing Moses hath a respect to the recompense of reward Heb. 12.2 and our Saviour himself had an eye to the joy that was set before him It will be no hypo●ritical affection but a devout encouragement to quicken our pace in the way of holiness from this Scripture-motive our own salvation and happiness I call it a Scripture-motive then which nothing is more frequently urged in sacred Scripture § 5. And indeed whether Gods glory or Mans happiness be considered as co-ordinate one with another or as subordinate one to another sure I am they are inseparable one from another no man can rightly aim at his own happiness without a respect to Gods glory nor yet aim at Gods glory without a respect to his own happiness For what is it to attain happiness but fully to enjoy God Psal 36.6 Psal 17.16 Psal 16.11 and what is it fully to enjoy God but to attain happiness So then Gods glory is mans felicity and mans felicity is Gods glory true it is some pious souls and learned pens have made it a note of integrity to love God though the●e were no heaven But besides the nicety of the Metaphysical abstraction if rightly considered it implies a contradiction 1 Joh. 4 8. for seeing God is love what is there in heaven which is not contained in the love of God And whereas hereby they think to cleer pure love from the stain of being mercenary it is but a needless attempt for that omnis amor mercedis non est mercinarius Ps 16.5 Lam. 3.24 Gen. 17.1 all love of reward is not mercenary love for that God who is our portion is our reward and if so to love our reward is to love God § 6. 3 The object whatsoever God commands which is to be done ut mandavit quia mandavit according to his will and because of his soveraignty To do what but not as God commands is disobedience 1 Sam. 15.19 as with Saul in the case of Amalek Again to do as God commands but not because he commands is hypocrisie as with Jehu in the case of Baal Jehu 2 King 10.30 31. he is zealous in reforming yet not to advance Gods glory but his own greatness But further of those things which God hath commanded Integrity respects the credenda as well as the agenda the doctrines of faith as well as the duties of obedience For it is easie to observe how the Apostles in their several Epistles are as zealous in their reproofs and as hot in their zeal against evil doctrines as against evil lives against false Teachers as against lewd Livers yea and accordingly in their exhortations and instructions they join the necessity of a true faith with that of a good conscience § 7. To practise holiness and profess heresie and to profess truth but practise prophaneness are both opposite to Davids integrity and uprightness for sincere faith can no more dispense with any doctrines revealed then holy life with any precepts declared in Gods word Yea Gal. 5.19.20 2 Pet. 2 1. ask the Apostles and they will tell us Heresies as well as Prophanenesses they are works of the flesh they are damnable yea bring swift damnation False teachers as well as lewd livers they deny the Lord that bought them Jud. 4. and are prepared of old to destruction Wherefore a holding fast the true
either to confirm your faith or give some reasons why you desert it yea you will have the advantage happily of gaining him who seeks to pervert you 5. An itching curiosity and affectation of novelties This is that which hath made so many Seekers that they are become a Sect. Seek and ye shall finde saith our Saviour Seek is the precept Matth 7.7 ye shall finde is the promise But no wonder if men finde what is not intended in the promise when they seek what is not commanded in the precept let Humility seek and it findes Truth but let Curiosity seek and it finds Heresie let Prayer seek in a devotion of Piety and it finds Grace and Peace but let Passion seek in an affectation of Novelty and it findes wrath and a curse To be setled in mind is a right means to be established in truth and to be wise unto Sobriety Rom. 12.3 is a temper for all those who will be sincere in the Faith But he who still is affected with novelties no wonder if he be soon infected with Heresies they that have the itch of curious disputings no wonder if they get the Scab of Heretical opinions 6. Covetous desires and ambitious designs All Heresie and Schism we finde still cherished with the warm zeal of a full purse Had not the Church of Rome those strong attractives of Cardinal Dignities Papal Indulgences Ecclesiastical Immunities and Spiritual Benefices I believe she would finde few Patrons of her cause and gain few Proselytes to her profession The Foxes would not trouble the Vineyard were it not for the Grapes neither would Heresie and Schism so much rend and tear the Church were it not for her Revenues That poorer Fry and meaner Sect of Quakers would not as they do 2 Tim. 3 6. Creep into houses and boast themselves in so poor a Triumph as a leading captive silly women were it not as some mens ruined estates can tell them That there-out they suck no small advantage And I refer it to the Consciences of most Ministers whether the sequestred Living was not the strongest Argument to convince their Judgments to a deserting as well as a dissenting from what they had subscribed yea I refer it to the Conscience of every Sacrilegious Invader of the Churches possessions whether this be not the great weight which keeps down his wishes of the Churches restoring even the thoughts of vomiting up the morsels he hath so greedily swallowed giving up the possessions he hath so covetously seized When covetous and ambitious mindes see profit and preferment soonest obtained by Faction what Schism what Heresie yea what Perjury will they not allow embrace and follow Primianus and Maximianus heads of two Donatist factions St. Augustine tells them That were it not for Faction Primianus would be Postremianus and Maximianus Minimianus The like we may say of the greatest Patriarchs of Heresies and Schisms That were it not for Faction kept up by covetousness and ambition they would soon become as low in esteem as in merit as mean in degree as in desert To close then from the Premisses we may infer That Heresie is the cursed Issue of most cursed Parents The father that begets it is the Devil and the mother that conceives it is the Flesh And as Domitius used to say Nil nasci potuit nisi detestabile infausium Suet. That of him and Agrippina nothing could be begotten but what was ominous and odious hateful and monstrous and such was Nero. The like may be said as to this cursed Brood That of the Devil and the Flesh nothing can be begotten but what is horrid and hainous Carnal and Diabolical and such is Heresie Joh. 8 44. Satan he is the Father of lies and therefore as Ignatius saith Ignat. ep 1. ad Trall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heretical opinions they must needs be Satans off-spring the Devils inventions And as Heresies are from Satan as the Father of lies so begot of the Flesh as the mother of corruption Gal. 5.20 and therefore the works of the flesh are manifest saith the Apostle amongst which are reckoned up with adultery and murders Seditions and Heresies Some carnal affection either of pride and pertinacy of spirit or of impurity and prophaneness of life or of envy and malice or of slothfulness and indifferency or of affectation and curiosity or of covetousness and ambition some one or more of these carnal affections it is that gives birth to Heresie and is as the Womb to bear so the Paps to nurse this ugly and deformed Brat the perfect likeness of its father the Devil And thus we have done with our proposed task To shew you by what means Satan draw's men to the sin and involves them in the guilt of Heresies Now give me leave to close with a few words of Application Applic. Be we sincere in our obedience as a cheif means of being sound in the Faith and be we sound in the Faith otherwise it will be in vain to plead the sincerity of our obedience For this is our Calling to walk worthy of the Lord 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all well pleasing Col. 1.10 Of which general notion the Greek Scholiast gives us this equal distribution 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in words in works and in opinions 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Hom. 5. in 1 Tim. or Doctrines of Faith And therefore with St. Chrysostome True Faith is compared unto a sound Ship without which we cannot pass the Sea of this troublesome World to the safe Harbor of Heavens rest For suppose we a man Chaste Temperate Hospitable Just in his Dealings Zealous in his Devotions for such was Pelagius such was Donatus yea such were many of the Arrians of the Macedonians even to an high repute amongst the Orthodox themselves as St. Basil and Nazianzen both will witness Suppose we then I say a man to be Chaste Temperate Hospitable Just in his Dealings Zealous in his Devotions but withal that he is an Heretick and then hear what St. Augustine will tell us August tom 7. de Bapt. l. 4. c. 18. Nulli utique dubium est propter hoc solum quod Haereticus est regnum Dei non possessurum There is no doubt at all but for this alone That he is an Heretick he shall not inherit the Kingdom of God And this of St. Augustine does well accord with that of St. Paul 2 Thes 2.13 14. Where he gives us to understand That if we hope to obtain Salvation and glory by Jesus Christ it must be through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the Truth And O thou blessed Spirit of Grace so sanctifie us through the Truth that we be not led away into the errors of the wicked but amidst the many Heresie which are amongst us let it be manifest that we are approved Amen THE SECOND SERMON UPON 1 COR. 11.19 There must be also Heresies among you that they which are
be innocent and his tongue guilty If he that speaks lends his tongue doest not thou that hears lend thine ear unto the Devil But thou wilt say Thou canst not think them Heretical in their Opinions who are holy in their lives and therefore won by their example thou attendst unto their Doctrine Yet be not dece●ved for Hypocrisie still leads in Heresie by the hand Macedonius Donatus Pelagius and others though Arch-hereticks yet as strict for life as reprobate concerning the faith It is no new thing 2 Tim. 3 8. for the Devil to appear in Samuels shape and mantle 1 Sam 28 14 for Heresie to rise up in the shew and dress of truth Let not then the Preaching some truth and the pretending much holiness be baits to draw thee i●to Heresies For that our Apostle here forewarns his Corinthians eminent in gifts and graces he forewarns them with much emphasis of Premonition There must be also Heresies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you 4. The propinquity of its danger 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 among you Explic. Hierom●● Jer 22. there must be also Heresies among you Omnis Haereticus Nascitur in Ecclesia Every Heretick is begotten and brought forth in the Church as a Viperous Brood eating thorow the Womb that bare it He who never profest the Faith of Christ is an Infidel whether Jew Turk or Pagan He who renounceth Christ and the Faith he hath prof●st is an Apostate such was Judas Simon Magus and Julian He who professing the true Faith in some parts corrupts or overthrows the Faith in other particulars he is an Heretick such was Sabellius Apollinaris Arrius Nestorius Macedonius Pelagius and others Now these three the Apostate Heretick and Infidel have this d●fference of degrees in their greatness and guilt of sin The Apostate he is guilty of greatest transgression as violating the most of Obligation The Heretick he is next in guilt of sin as being next in breach of Faith and both are so much worse then the Infidel by how much defection and a traiterous breach of Loyalty is worse then non-subm●ssion or refusal of Allegeance The Jew Turk and Pagan have the more sin as to the extension of their Infidelity because guilty of more error but the Heretick sins mo●e as to the intension of the guilt because more opposite to the Law of Faith And of those that fall away they sin so much the more ha●nously by how much they have been instructed the more fully Heresies then which are ad languorem interitum fidei productae Tert. de Prae. script c. 2. brought forth to the decay and destruction of the Faith they are Tares which grow up in Christ's field Evils which arise in the body yea in the bosom of the Church yea even of that Church which Paul had planted Apollo watered and God given the increase 1 Cor. 3.6 No Purity of faith then may priviledge any Church from the poyson of Heresies since that of Corinth is infested Corinth so famous for the gifts of Tongues of Prophecy of Knowledge of Eloquence yea so eminent for the graces of Faith of Charity of Patience of Hope and in all for Zeal How comes the Wolf then into this fold so strongly guarded How comes this Church of Corinth to be infected and infested with Heresies Why especially because Heresies still appear in the shape of truth and the shew of holiness The Wolf covers himself up so close in the Sheeps clothing Optat. cont Parmen l. 2. Ut prius ovis mordentem sentiat quam praesentiat venientem that the innocent Sheep feels him biting before it perceives him coming And thus many poor souls are unawares seized by Heresie before they discover the false Prophet to be an Heretick Manes himself so prophanely blasphemous yet hides his blasphemy under this vail An Apostle of Jesus Christ and intitles his Heretical Paradoxes with an Haec sunt salubria verba de perenni ac vivo fonte These are the wholsome and saving words from the eternal and living Fountain of Truth so St. Augustine If Simon Magus attract the eye and ear yea the judgment and affection too of the vulgar it is with this cover upon his Divellish Sorceries Acts 8.10 The great power of God If Montanus seduce with his Fanatick dreams it is by the plausible insinuation of being the Comforter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Athan. Orat. 2. cont A ian Quest Answ Matth. 7.16 promised by Christ and sent from Heaven Yea Arrius the Arch-heretick as full of cruelty and blood as of Heresie and Blasphemy yet in his Thaleia he asserts the doctrine he delivers to be according to the Faith of Gods Elect and of those holy Men who have received the Holy Ghost and were taught of God But if such be the close subtilty and fair shew if such the plausible pretences and yet desperate deceit of Hereticks how are they discovered how are they known Answer Our Saviour himself resolves us By their fruits ye shall know them Not onely meant of their fruits of manners but chiefly of their fruits of Doctrine the evil consequences of what they teach as well as the evil actions which they practise Haeresis docta est mentiri non linguâ tantum sed vitâ Bern. Serm. 65. in Cant. For that oftentimes Heresie is taught not onely to lie in words but also in works not onely with the tongue but also in the life As many teach well which live ill so many teach ill which live well teach ill as to doctrine and opinion which yet live well as to manners and conversation that is well as to the eye of the world but impossible so as to the eye of God For every Heretick as formally such not onely violates the Faith but also makes breach of Charity and where there is not Faith working by Love let the shew of Piety be more then Angelical yet is it Hypocritical and how ever gracious in the eye of men yet is it odious in the sight of God Socrat. l. 2. c. 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil ep 82. We read of Arrius that as he was himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 subtle in disputes so were his followers grave in their sanctity yea for the reverence had to their feigned sobriety temperance and holiness offices of dignity and trust were committed to their charge Yea as for the Macedonians blasphemous in their Heresie yet Nazianzen gives this testimony of them N●zian ● 2● 44 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Though we admire their lives yet we approve not their doctrine Here you see the blasphemous Macedonians and the no less blasphemous Arrians advanced to offices of dignity for the esteem of their Piety and though horrid Hereticks yet they live as to Formal Religion to the wonder and admiration of the Orthodox Yea Beloved I have my self wondered to see many of the Heretical so Formally
the Holy Ghost and so though three immersions yet but one Baptism for that B●nav l 4. disp 3. as Bonaventure well observes Non est completum Sacramentum quousque terminatum sit verbum The Sacrament in its administration is not perfected till the word of Institution be ended And now where Baptism is thus rightly administred as to the application of the Word and Water there it is certainly valid and good though administred by an Heretick Even an Heretical Church like a diseased Mother may bring forth sound Children though indeed their health and life too be presently hazarded by the infection of her Milk the corruption of her Doctrine Which rightly considered proves that we are discipled unto Christ not so properly by doctrine as by baptism But how are we assured Object that the Apostles baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost Act. 2 38. 8.16 19.5 seeing the Scripture so often speaks of their baptizing in the name of the Lord Jesus Answ I answer To baptize in the name is to baptize according to the institution with the invocation and in the confession of the Lord Jesus And so that the Apostles notwithstanding they are said to baptize in the name of Jesus did baptize expressly in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost besides the precept of Christs institution which they could not violate and besides the witness of universal Tradition which we may not reject hear one Scripture-proof which none can evince which proof is taken from that passage in the Acts Act. 19.2.3 c. concerning the Ephesian Disciples of John who tell S. Paul that they had not so much as heard whether there were any Holy Ghost Which seeming strange to the Apostle he asks with wonder Unto what then were ye baptized intimating that Christian baptism did certainly admit them into the faith of the Holy Ghost being administred in his name and he supposing they had been baptized with the Baptism of Christ did not question their believing but their receiving the Holy Ghost And therefore having rightly instructed them in John's Baptism as differently administred from that of Christ's he gives them Confirmation after Baptism and by his imposition of hands they then receive what they were taught to believe and in Baptism to profess even the Holy Ghost This that genuine and clear interpretation of that Text consenting with the Judgment of the Antient Fathers which will bear up against all that forced and wrested sense which is urged by Modern Opponents And so hereby we make good Scripture-practice as well as sacred precept confirming the right manner and form of Baptisms administration to be in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost 2. Having done with the Administration of Baptism in what is necessary as to the essence of the Sacrament we proceed to the second particular What is requisite as to the Solemnity of the Church viz. Especially that the Infant baptiz'd make its abrenunciation of sin and Satan and its profession of the faith of Christ by the mouth of its Sureties According to that of S. Augustine speaking of Infants Baptism Accommodat illis mater Ecclesia aliorum pedes ut veniant aliorum cor ut credant aliorum linguam ut fateantur The Church as an indulgent Mother accommodates them with anothers feet that they may come with anothers heart that they may believe with anothers tongue that they may confess And this the Church does upon a sure perswasion that it is agreeable to the grace and goodness of the Almighty ut qui aliena culpa cecidit aliena fide resurgat that he who fell by anothers fault should rise again by anothers faith Et ad verba aliena sanetur Aug. serm 14. de verb. Apost c. 11. qui ad factum alienum vulnaretur and he might be healed by anothers profession who was wounded by anothers sin so S. Augustine intending the sin of Adam As for the original of Sureties in Baptism the Learned deduce it from Apostolical tradition sure we are very near the Apostles times we read plainly this custom setled in the Church and the same piety and prudence which first instituted this ceremony does still perswade its continuance For as formerly to preserve from Heathenism so now to preserve from Heresie it is the pious and prudent care of the Church to engage the promise of Sureties with the duty of Parents to secure their Childrens instruction and education in the Faith Enquir ng into the original of Suretiship in the behalf of Infants we find it commonly known and used of old among the Jews The Rulers of the Consistory taking the care and charge of the young Proselytes and the House of Judgment that is the Congregation entring promise to instruct them in the knowledge of what they had undertaken And passing from the Jewish Synagogue to the Christian Church we find Higinius the eighth Bishop of Rome whose seat was in the time of Antoninus Pius Eus●b hist eccles so Eusebius about an hundred and forty years after Christ long before Popery was entred that Sea This Higinius I say we find to have first enacted this pious and prud ntial order of Godfathers and Godmothers But however this Bishop may be said to have regulated yet sure methinks he cannot be said to have first introduced this custom which whether it be of Apostolical tradition or Ecclesiastical constitution we may well esteem it as Peter Martyr stiles it utile institutum a profitable ordination Pet. Mart. loc com and as profitable so just and reasonable too For the abrenunciation of Satan and the reciting of the Creed made in the Infants name by the Sureties is no egregious prevarication as the Adversaries call it but a Christian reception as the Church intends it like the interest of Minors and Pupils undertaken by their Guardians So that the Questions Doest thou forsake and Doest thou believe are Interrogatories pro more fori according to the manner of Civil Courts known and allowed by the prudent derided and despised only by the ignorant And know we do not catechise the Infants when we interrogate the Sureties Lomb. l. 4. dist 6 c. 1. but require a profession of repentance and faith in their names ut obligentur non ut instruantur so the Schools for their obligation not their instruction to bind them to act and perform in their persons what their Sureties do promise and vow in their names Which Promise and Vow made in their names Children catechised take upon themselves when confirm'd by the Bishop Which Confirmation if stript of the rags of Romish superstition and vindicated from the disrepute of Vulgar misapprehension is certainly of excellent use for the furthering the benefit of religious education for the restraining the enormities of licentious youth and for the preserving the unity of our holy faith That Confirmation
discendum quod de Deo intelligendum as Hilary speaks we must learn from God what we may understand of God even as we discover the Body of the Sun by the light of its own beams yea God it is who prepares the eye of the practical judgment and proportions the palate of the rectified will to discern the evidence and rellish the sweetness of supernatural Truths and he does it in this order The Church by a Ministerial Manuduction and Ecclesiastical dispensation to those matriculated by Baptism born in her Lap and bred in her Bosom tutored to a reverend esteem of her Maternal Authority to them she transmits this indubitate principle of Christian Verity That the sacred Scriptures are the Word of God But to them who are without the Infidel and Heathen the Church hath her arma praelusoria her preparatory Arguments of Right Reason to fit the minde for a candid reception and diligent examination of the Scriptures And upon this the Spirit of Truth comes in with Conviction to the Conscience perswading the Soul to this assent of Faith that they are the Word of God Wherefore besides the Ministry and Manuduction of the Church there must be an illuminating power of the Spirit yea a power rectifying and raising the minde to a capacity of supernatural light otherwise the Mysteries of Grace to the Natural man will be as the varieties of colours to the blinde the colours are not discerned till the faculty be restored nor are those Mysteries understood till the minde be healed And when thus by the Spirit of God the minde is fitted to the Word and the Word revealed unto the minde then does the Soul discern an excellency in the sacred Scriptures above what is in Humane Writings with as sure a distinction though not so clear an evidence as the eye does discern a beam of the Sun from the blaze of a Candle Quest 3 Thirdly In doubtful cases how may we best interpret the sacred Scriptures Answ I answer That Interpretation of Scripture is best which holds conformity to the Analogy of Faith and consent with the judgment of the Church two sure rules of Scripture interpretation approved and observed by the ablest Expositors of Gods Word 1. Which holds conformity to the Analogy of Faith Rom 12 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Which Analogy of Faith is none other thing then that summary and fit proportion which is in the general principles of Christianity and cheif mysteries of Grace plainly set down in the sacred Scriptures A sum whereof we have in our publick Confessions of Faith the Decalogue the Lords Prayer and the Doctrine of the Sacraments seeing then it is the Scripture phrase to be built up in our holy Faith As that stone Jud. 20. which holds not proportion with the rest of the building is either fitted or rejected by the Architect so that interpretation of Scripture which holds not Analogy with the received Doctrines of Faith it must be either amended or cast away by the Religious And in doing this the Faithful of Christs Church they shall according to St. Pauls precept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phil. 3 16. walk orderly by one and the same rule and so preserve the unity and peace of the Church in being of one and the same minde 2. Consent with the Judgment of the Church For that no Scripture is of private interpretation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Pet. 1.20 to be interpreted by a mans own wit fancy or reason but by the enlightning power of the Spirit of Truth for as the Scriptures came not by the proper will Vers 21. so nor are they to be interpreted by the private judgment of men but the same Spirit who is the Author must also be the Interpreter And where may we with more confidence rest assured that this holy Spirit is then where Christ did expresly promise he should ever be with his Church Matth. 28.20 John 16.13 And especially with the Pastors of his Church to whom our Lord gives the promise that His Spirit should lead them into all truth But here it may be demanded what I call the Judgment of the Church I answer The antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine received at all times in all places and of all the faithful But especially do we fix upon that judgment of the Church in the antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine collected out of the most consonant Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the sacred Decrees of the first Councils For that without controversie even by confession of all parties in that time were the most Eminent Saints for holiness of life excellency of learning purity of doctrine and constancy of martyrdom And he that will think to go to Heaven in any other path then what these blessed Saints have trod before him I say to him as Constantine to Acesius Erige scalam ascende solus Raise thy self O man a Ladder and climb up alone Now this antient perpetual and universal consent of holy Doctrine collected out of the most consonant Writings of the Primitive Fathers and the sacred Decrees of the first Councils This is that we may call in the language of St. Ambrose Liber Sacerdotalis Ambr. de fid ad Grat. l. 3. c. 7. That Sacerdotal Book signatus a confessoribus multorum Martyrio consecratus signed by the confessions of the most eminent Saints and consecrated by the blood of the holiest Martyrs As then the Authority of the sacred Scriptures gives us the sure rule of Faith so the judgment of the Universal Church gives us the right line of interpretation according to which two it is well worthy our observation the Church of England did exactly draw the platform of her Reformation And this is evident in her Doctrine and Practice 1 In her Doctrine Art 20. amongst many other instances see it in her Book of Articles expresly acknowledging the Church to be the witness and keeper of the sacred Oracles and in her Book of Canons as expresly denying any doctrine necessary to be religiously held and believed which the Catholick Fathers and old Bishops of the Primitive Church have not collected out of the Scriptures And 2 that her practice is suitable to her Doctrine appears by her owning the four General Councils the Apostles Nicen and Athanasian Creeds And in all her disputes against the now silent adversary otherwise too busily employed the Jesuite justifying her reformed estate as conformed to the Primitive Church within the first five Centuries of years And here give me leave to observe unto you how the Presbytery laid the way to their own and our Churches ruine even by setting up private interpretation of Scripture in opposition to the received judgment of the Universal Church For do not the Brownists the Anabaptists under the name and notion of Independents presently beat them with their own weapon The Presbyterian abolisheth the Publick Liturgy and takes away Regular Ordination