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A69010 Institutions of Christian religion framed out of Gods word, and the writings of the best diuines, methodically handled by questions and answers, fit for all such as desire to know, or practise the will of God. Written in Latin by William Bucanus Professor of Diuinitie in the Vniuersitie of Lausanna. And published in English by Robert Hill, Bachelor in Diuinitie, and Fellow of Saint Iohns Colledge in Cambridge, for the benefit of our English nation, to which is added in the end the practise of papists against Protestant princes.; Institutiones theologicae. English Bucanus, Guillaume. 1606 (1606) STC 3961; ESTC S106002 729,267 922

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158.5 He spake and they were made he commanded and they were created that is God but spake the word or commaunded and the things which were not before now haue their being And that God created all things the Apostle sheweth Heb. 11.3 of things which did not appeare that is of no matter that appeared before Also this particle of nothing is thus described 1. Machab. 7.28 Behold the heauen and the earth and vnderstand that God made them of nothing where the Greeke Interpreter reades it thus that he made them of things which had no being And so Paule speaketh Rom. 4.17 He calleth those things which are not as though they were and Prou. 8.24 When the deepes were nothing I was begotten saith Wisedome 3. When as it was Moses his purpose to describe the first originall of all things And the beginning of things is the bringing of them from no being to a being it followeth that all things were created of nothing or of those things which were not What can the creation of the world be proued certainely by humane reasons The eternitie of the world may clearely be confuted because that if the world should want both beginning and ending the world should be euen God himselfe then there should be many things infinite in act all the parts of the world should be eternall and immutable For as Damascene saith Whatsoeuer is created is mutable and that onely which is vncreated is immutable A man may also know euen by the testimonie of nature it selfe that the world had a beginning But yet by faith alone we do certainely know that the world was made of nothing Heb. 11.3 or that it was so made in sixe dayes as it was as also by the same we know that one day it shall haue an end Therefore Moses doth not vse philosophicall demonstrations but simply reporteth the matter as he had receiued it by the faithfull tradition of the Fathers but especially by the instinction of the holy Ghost Now what was created 1. The heauen and the earth in which two as in a generall proposition Moses doth comprehend all things both visible and inuisible a Col. 1.16 because b Gen. 1.1 these two be the first and most principall parts of the whole world For first vnder the name of heauen he vnderstandeth all that space which is betweene the earth and the circle of the Moone which naturall Philosophers call the region of the elements As Gen. 7.17 The windowes of heauen were opened that is of the ayre and hereupon we reade the foules of heauen c Gen. 1.30 6.7 2. All those celestiall spheres together with their starres both fixed and wandring which make that firmament which the Philosophers call the skie or celestiall region being the distance from the Moone to the skie or the new sphere inuented by Astrologers 3. The place of the Blessed or Paradise or that heauen into which Christ ascended and by a Metonymie also the Angels themselues All these three heauens the Apostle comprehendeth 2. Cor. 12.2 when he saith that he was taken vp into the third heauen that is into the place of the Blessed which place is aboue all those heauens which we see In which God is said to haue prepared his throne for himselfe and in way of excellencie to haue his dwelling and which is called the seate of God Psal 103.9 And is called of Deuines * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Olympus as it were altogether shining and * Empyreū fierie in regard of the qualitie because it is altogether light and shining Which heauen it selfe God did also create of nothing as the Apostle teacheth Heb. 11.10 of which citie the maker and framer is God Now vnder the name of the earth he vnderstandeth the Earth the waters and all those things which are contained in them Whereupon Aristotle thus defineth the world by the parts of it lib. de mundo The world is a frame consisting of heauen and of earth and of the natures which are cōprehended in them And then by causes The world is called this order of the whole the frame preserued of God by God How was the creation of the world brought to passe 1. By bringing foorth of the matter or of the seminarie of the whole world made of nothing the first day which is properly called Creation 2. By giuing a forme vnto the same and all this was done by the very commandement of God in a moment of time For he did but say a Gen. 1.3.6.9 Be there or Let there be this or that and as soone as he had spoken this or that was made What kind of matter was that which God brought foorth of nothing in the beginning 1. It was in regard of substance partly earthie partly watrie and partly slimie which is expressed by the name of Earth and Slime and Waters 2. In regard of the quantitie it was exceeding great and as it were a Chaos without a bottome For it was a rude vnformed and indigested heape in respect of the formes after following or as Moses calleth it Tohu and Bohu that is emptie and voide rawe and impolished which the seuentie Greeke Interpreters of the old Testament call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the Philosophers called Chaos 3. In regard of the qualitie it was darke and obscure that is void of all light vertue and efficacie ouer which houered not any wind or ayre which as yet were not made but the spirit of the Lord of the which the Angell speaketh to Marie Luk. 1.35 euen like vnto an henne when she sitteth vpon her egges and sustained all that whole masse and cherished it and prepared it to receiue all formes out of which the visible heauens and all the elements were produced and framed by the power of the word of God But those things which are not seene were made immediatly of nothing out of which also the light was brought the first day as the Apostle speaketh God who commaunded the light to shine out of darknesse 2. Cor. 4.6 But what was the information or framing of the world That whereby God fitted a fit and conuenient forme for that matter which was made of nothing by means of which the world did truly and indeed begin to be and to be called the world By what meanes did God giue that matter a forme By distinguishing and adorning of it By distinguishing when as God separated the light from the darknesse whereupon came the making and course of the day by the presence of that light and of the night by the absence of that light And the first naturall day was the space of foure and twentie houres or a night and a day consisting of a day artificiall and a night and tooke his beginning from the euening or the night going before Whereas the artificial day beginneth at Sunne rising vnto Sunne setting Now that light seemeth to haue
compassed me and the griefes of the graue caught mee when I found trouble and sorrow 4 According to some mens interpretation it signifieth the generall state and condition of the dead whether the good estate of the aged or the euill of the wicked 5 In others iudgement it signifieth the extreemest degree of humiliation What signifieth the word Descending 1 It properly signifieth a motion from a high place to a lower 2 By a tropicall speech it signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the descending of Christ or the last degree of his humiliation ●s Ephes 4.10 He that descended that is he that made himselfe base and of no reputation and taking vpon himselfe the forme of a seruant subiected himselfe to the miserable condition of this earthly life he is euen the same that ascended aboue all heauens What therfore is the meaning of this article He descended into hell It is diuers accordingly as the simple words are taken in diuers significations What is the first The first interpretation is of them that thinke these words are added for better explanation sake against the heresie of the Valentinians and that no other thing is heereby meant then that Christ was truly dead and laid in his graue as other men who haue beene dead and buried VVhat thinke you of this exposition That it is too sleight and trifling because it is not likely that the buriall of Christ being declared in plaine words should be deliuered in a more obscure forme of speech neither doth such a rep●tition of the same thing befit such a briefe and compendious rehearsall of the chiefe heads of our faith What is the second It is Hieromes and the Papists who thinke that Christs soule being separated from the bodie came to a certaine place which they call Limbus patrum to wit the vpper part or an vpper roome as it were of hell in which there are no punishments but onely a depriuation of a better and more perfect good In which place they say the Spirits of the faithfull fathers did remaine before Christs incarnation from whence afterwards the soule of Christ comming thither in deed did bring them with himselfe into heauen Which thing they go about to confirme out of Mathew 27.52 Many besides of the Saints rose againe either with Christ or after him and 1. Pet. 3.19 By which also he went and preached vnto the spirits which are in prison and 4.6 for vnto this purpose also was the Gospell preached vnto the dead Doe you like this opinion No 1 for such a place cannot be proued by any testimonie of Scripture 2 Because we read that not all the Saints bodies but some only rose againe with Christ to testifie the power of Christs resurrection whereby life is restored to vs. 3 The place 1. Pet. 3.16 Is manifestly to be vnderstood concerning Christs spirit which preached repētance by the mouth of Noah to the disobedient and wicked and the place in the fourth Chapter is to be vnderstood of the Gospell which was preached to them which were dead in former times that is which were indeed aliue when they were preached vnto but were dead at what time this was spoken of them Also because this opinion doth not a little detract from the power of Christs sacrifice the price whereof is infinite and extendeth it selfe vnto all times according to that which was said Apoc. 13.8 The Lambe was slaine from the beginning of the world Therefore Abraham was deliuered from hell by the merit of Christs sacrifice no lesse then Paule or any one of the godly that died after Christ was giuen for our redemption What is the third opinion The third is of them who thinke that Christ did indeed descend into the place of hell But this opinion is diuided three waies For some there are who say that the soule of Christ did go downe thither whilest his bodie lay in the graue that there it might suffer for the soules of men Which opinion is by three reasons confuted 1 Because the bloud of Christ is a most perfect expiation for all the world a Iohn 1.7 2 It is confuted by Christs saying vpon the crosse It is finished Ioh. 19.30 Therefore he had no more to suffer when as death made an end of his torments 3 Because Christ endured horrible torments in his soule whilest it was yet in his bodie as is manifest by that terrible crying My God my God c. Mat. 27.46 which shooke both heauen earth 2 Others say that the soule of Christ descended into hell not that it might suffer any thing there but that as in his bodie he had preached vpon earth the Gospell to them who were liuing so being dead he might in his spirit preach the Gospell to them in hell which opinion commeth neere to the second of those formerly repeated by vs. But to what purpose had this beene seeing after death there is no place left for preaching and repentance Moreouer he commended his spirit into the hands of his father and said vnto the theefe This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise where vndoubtedly there is no hell Luke 23.43.46 3 The fathers for the most part of them do labour to shew that in the very earthquake momët of his resurrectiō Christ did prese●t himself aliue to thē in hell shewed himselfe not so much in wordes as in deede conquerour of death and of the Prince of darknesse and that Sathan had no more power ouer the elect and that hee had a name giuen him aboue all names that at the name of Iesus euerie knee should bow both of things in heauen and things in the earth and things vnder the earth Phil. 2.10 For this cause Augustine saith thus The whole Sonne was with the Father the whole Sonne in the wombe of the virgin the whole in heauen the whole in the earth the whole on the Crosse and the whole in Hell VVhat thinke you of this iudgement of the Fathers I dare not condemne it seeing it is not against the holy Scriptures and hath in it no absurditie And the consent of Fathers when as it manifestly doth not disagree with the Scriptures is not lightly to be accounted of Yea more this opinion may seeme probable to be gathered out of the Apostles words Ephes 4.9 Now that he ascended aboue all heauens what is it else but that hee had also descended first into the lowest parts of the earth For here there is a manifest opposition betwixt aboue all heauens and the lowest part of the earth But the first is taken according to the letter therefore also the second as it seemeth must be vnderstood according to the letter but there is no part of the earth lower then hell which is the place of the damned Although others by the lowest parts vnderstand simply the whole earth which is the lowest part of the world into which Christ descended and liued in it for many yeares What is the fourth opinion Of them who saie that
nothings else is meant by these words then that Christ did descend into the state of the dead and that hee was added to the number and companie of other the deade for whom he dyed according to Dauids saying Psalm 28.5.6 I am reckoned amongst them which goe downe into the graue And Psal 88. I am as a man without strength I am counted among thē that go downe into the pit Free among the deade like the slaine lying in the graue whom thou remembrest no more and they are cut off by thine hand Whereupon hee is said to bee raised againe not from the graue but from the dead which sense and opinion doth not much differ from the first of the former What is the fift The first is of them who allegorically or metaphorically by the descention of Christ vnderstand his great ignominie and extream humiliation whilest he laie in the graue vntill the third day after his death as if he had beene foyled and vanquished by death and the diuell at which time the diuel and the Pharises did as it were insult ouer him as though he were quite gone and no more remained Doe you approue of this then I doe not dislike it for it is agreeable to the type set forth in Dauid Psal 88.7 Thou hast laied me in the lowest graue in darknesse and in the deepe and it is agreeable to that place which is Ephes 4.10 in which as by ascending aboue all heauens the Apostle vnderstandeth his greatest exaltation so by his descending to the lowest parts of the earth or to hell hee vnderstandeth the greatest humiliation or debasing of Christ So Esa 14.15 Descending to hell is taken for extreame humiliation Thou saidest in thine heart I will ascend into heauen c. but thou shalt be brought downe to the graue to the sides of the pit And so may the place of Mathew 11.23 be expounded Thou O Capernaum which art lifted vp vnto heauen shalt be brought downe to hell What is the sixt It is theirs who say that by Christs descending to hel is signified those great torments of minde which Christ in his agony and vpon the crosse sustained of which we haue spoken in the Passion of Christ Is this exposition agreeable to trueth It is for it is agreeable to Scripture and proportionable to faith For Esa 53.5 saith that Christ was broken for our iniquities And Psal 18.6 The sorrowes of the graue haue compassed mee round about And Act. 2.24 Peter saith that he was entangled in the pangs of death the griefes which the curse and wrath of God procureth And Gal. 3.13 it is said He vvas made for vs a curse and that truly and without trope not in himselfe indeede but in as much as he was our suretie so that he truely felt our burden to bee laid vpon him And Heb. 5.7 the Apostle saieth that Christ was heard from his feare when he praied with teares and strong crying And that which is verie wonderfull is recorded of him that through vehemencie of his torment drops of bloud ran downe from his face and that he could not be comforted but by the sight of Angels Luk. 22.43 And in the end we see that Christ was cast downe so low that he was constrained to cry out when his anguish vrged him My God my God way hast thou forsaken me Mat. 27.46 By all which it may be gathered that hee wrestled and grapled not with a cōmon manner of death but with the forces of hell and the horror of eternall death But this seemeth to make against the exposition namelie that the torments of the minde are put after the griefes of the bodie in the creede This is done because the griefe of bodie first offereth it selfe to the senses but not so the torments of minde But it may be obiected Although they ought to be set after death and crucifying yet they should not haue beene mentioned after buriall Although the descending of Christ to hell was ended in death and in time did goe before the buriall of the body yet it is set after it in the order of the narration of the articles of our faith because it seemed good in one continued course of speach to describe whatsoeuer pertained to the debasing of his bodie and afterward to come to the suffering in soule But could God euer be angrie vvith his onlie and most beloued sonne Christ or forsake him Neuer but yet he so hid his fauour and help for a time that the humane nature of Christ did truely feele these distresses wherewith they are vrged who are cast away and forsaken of God And as Barnard saith Serm. 5. de verbis Esaiae It is a kinde of forsaking vvhen as in so great necessitie there vvas no shevving of povver no shevving of Maiestie Why vvas it needfull he should suffer these torments 1. Because when as all our sinnes were cast vpon him therefore it was fit that he should so feele the wrath of God against them as if he himselfe had committed the sinnes of all men 2. That for our sakes he might try and ouercome all manner of griefes and temptations and so the torments of death and of hell for our cause 3. That hee might aduance and carie vs vp to the ioyes of heauen being deliuered from the power of Hell VVhat profit redounded to vs by Christs descending into Hell 1. Victorie ouer the power of the diuell the horrour of death and the paines of Hell is obtained a Ose 13.14 2. Our enemies are tryumphed ouer Coloss 2.15 And he hath spoiled principalities and powers that is Sathan with his Angels b Ephes 6 12 hath made a shew of them openly and hath tryumphed ouer them in the same crosse 3. Hauing ouercome the sting of death he hath opened to all beleeuers the kingdom of heauen Therefore Hilarie saith lib. 2. de Trinitate The crosse death and hell are our life VVhat is the vse of Christs descending into hell 1. That wee should not now be afraid in death of those things which our prince hath swallowed vp 2. That looke how much more we see him humbled and abased for our cause so much the lesse wee should doubt either of the fathers loue towards vs or our redemption wrought by him and the exaltation wee shall hereafter receiue in Heauen What is opposite to this Doctrine 1. That fable of Purgatorie the paines whereof seing Christ did not vndergo nor suffer for ought we can read who notwithstanding suffered for vs all kinde of griefes a Isa 53.3 4 therefore it followeth that these are forged and counterfaite and to be feared of none who belieue For if it were as they say it should then follow that there are some griefes which Christ did not suffer for our sake 2. Of those Limbi which they haue in their owne inuentions appointed for the fathers vnder the Lawe and infants vnder the Gospell who haue beene depriued of the signe of Baptisme The sixe and twentieth common
administratiō of the Sacraments But yet the spirits are to be tried that is by a Metonymy those which say they are indued with the spirit of god whether they be of God 1. Ioh. 4.1 which cannot be done more certainly by any thing then by the scripture to which the Lord commandeth the triall of spirits to be conformed a Deut. 13.1 2.3 4 neither must we harken to the words of the false Prophets b Ier. 23 19 By what name were they wont to cal the definitions of Synods Canons which then especially haue authority are as lawes whosoeuer contemns violates them must vndergo the politicke punishmēt inflicted by the magistrate so soon as they are ratified cōfirmed by the chief magistrat but before they are not auailable by reason of politicall punishment although they be by reason of censure Do such constitutions bind the conscience before God No truly by themselues for that they are humane and mutable yet notwitstanding being once set downe to violate or contemne them with safe conscience no man can both in respect of scandalizing others as also by reason of contumacy but euerie one is tied faithfully to obserue them and that with a free conscience e 1 Cor. 10.28 29 but so as it may be done without scandall that is so that the weaker brethren be not offended and when vpon iust causes we be hindered sometimes it is lawfull to omit them our consciences being not offended VVhat is the ende of this power In generall the glorie of God and the edification of the Church to vs saith Paule 2. Cor. 10.8 13.10 is power giuen to edification not to destruction but the end of Synods is the assertion of the pure doctrine of God comprehended in his word against the heretickes and the constitution of Ecclesiastical gouernment in respect of the diuerse circumstances of time place and persons VVhat effect or vse haue they Order and Decencie d 1. Co. 4.40 Order whereby the presidents and publishers of the gospell haue a certaine rule in their actions and doe accustome their auditors to obedience and in a well gouerned estate of the Church peace and concord is kept Comelines whereby we may be incited by those helpes to pietie and that grauitie may appeare in the handling of pietie VVhat things are repugnant to this Doctrine 1 The errour both of those which ascribe to much and also of those which do attribute too little to the Church 2 The errour of the Nouatians or Catharists who deny pardon to those which are fallen by their confession or to those which are defiled with great offences 3 The Monarchie of the Papacie and tyranny which they haue arrogated to themselues in translating the kingdomes of the world 2 That tyrannicall voyce that the Pope of Rome ought to be iudged of no mortall man and that hee is aboue the councill 3 That vsurping and abusing the keyes and the power of remitting or retaining sinnes at his pleasure 4 That maioritie and supreme power which hee hath taken to himselfe by vertue of succession and of the Church when soeuer hee please in consigning the Canon of Scripture In interpreting the word of GOD and giuing the true sense of the Scripture in forging new Articles of our faith in making lawes and proposing traditions and establishing wicked decrees because as they say that the Bishoppe hath all lawes in the closet of his heart 5. All Ceremonies Popish rites and will-worship repugnant to the word of God 6 That errour that the Church is the rule of all things which are to bee beleeued when as on the contrarie the Scripture alone is the rule of faith 7. A wicked and superstitious opinion of necessity merit and worshippe in the obseruation of humane ceremonies 8. A foolish zeale of Moses law 9. That Sacriledge wherby they driue the laity from the reading of the word of God and doe prohibite Bibles to bee Printed in the vulgar tongue 10. Furthermore that Councils should be assembled and gouerned by the authoritie of the Pope and that such Councils cannot erre 11. That the Church ought to supply the defect of the word written by written traditions which is to attribute more authority and power to the Church then is meete 12 That the Church is eminent in generall Councils and that the trueth remaineth no where but amongst their Pastors 13. That the power of interpreting the Scriptures is in the Councils and that no man may appeale from them 14. That the approbation of the Scripture to be either Canonicall or Apocryphall dependeth on the iudgement of the Church 15. The contempt of constitutions simply for order and decency appointed in the Church 16. The errour of those who in Ecclesiasticall controuersies resting on their owne priuate iudgements opinions do disclaime Synods and all definitions deliuered by Synods The foure and fortieth common place Of the Gouernment and Iurisdiction of the Church where also of fasting What is the third part of Ecclesiasticall power IVdiciarie or Iurisdiction Ecclesiastical altogither to be distinguished from ciuill and is commonly called power and it is another part or kinde of the power of the keyes distinguished from the former for that the first whereof Mat. 16.19 and Ioh. 20.23 which is the office of teaching or of preaching the Gospell committed to the Pastors doth properly appertaine vnto them but this doth belong to the moral discipline of the Church and repressing of offencs commended to the Church which the Graecians cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is discipline correction institution wherof Christ speaketh Mat. 18.17.18 If a brother do not heare the Church let him be as a Heathen or Publican vnto thee verily I say vnto you whatsoeuer you shall binde on earth shall be bound in heauen and whatsoeuer you shall loose shall be loosed for the Church doth bind whom she doth excommunicate and she doth loose when she againe receiues men into her society VVhat is Ecclesiasticall gouer●ment It is an Ecclesiasticall Paedagogie instituted by the authority of the word of God whereby men being receiued into the familie of Christ they are guided to godlinesse and compelled not to commit any thing vnworthy the Christian profession but those which do offend and are inordinate are reproued chidden and corrected that they may returne into the right way and that euery one may do their dutie according to the direction of the Gospell How manifold is Ecclesiasticall gouernment Twofold Common vnto which all citizens of the Church ought equally to be subiect and proper which is peculier to the Clergie and doth solely appertain to the ministers of the Church to reteine them in their dutie and the common againe is twofold ordinary extraordinary now that is ordinary which alwaies hath the word of God and Apostolicall tradition for his rule and from which it doth neuer decline and is alwaies obserued in the Church How many parts bee there of ordinary
the Liturgy of Basill Chrysostom c. Againe each professor of Christ hath the name of Deacon or minister giuen vnto him Ioh. 12.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If any man wil be my Minister let him follow me But more specially this word Diaconia doth signifie prouision for the poore and that collection it selfe is so called k 2. Cor. 9. Diaconissa and properly 1 Ro. 12.7 men Deacons were such as were ouerseers for the poore and women Deacons in the Ecclesiasticall Historie who looked to the poore being sick or who were as the publick hostes to entertaine Christian strangers a Rom. 16.1 1 Tim. 5.9 10. But Christ he is called the minister of Circumcision Rom. 15.8 Not of circumcision it selfe or of the Lawe which he by his comming did abrogate or rather fulfill but of the Circumcised Iewes amongst whome he onely liued so long as he vpon earth liued b mat 15 24. Hee is called the Apostle of our profession that is of the Gospell c Heb. 3. ● as he who immediatly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was himselfe sent frō the Father Now in this place wee take the word Ministerie as it generally signifieth for an Ecclesiasticall function VVhy doe you call this Function a Ministery Because it is not a chiefdome Dominion Magistracie or imperious office but rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 care and Diaconia seruice yea a painfull seruice and ministerie Neyther are the Ministers of the Church as Ministers such rulers or Lords as may chalenge to themselues dominion ouer eyther the Cleargy or mans conscience or the members of the Church or vnto ought to haue power to make lawes and translate kingdomes but they are the seruants and ministers of that one Prince and Lord of Lords Christ Iesus For after this sorte to domineere Christ expressly forbiddeth his Disciples both by word and example Rom 1.1 Phil. 1.1 Iac. 1.1 2. Pet. 1.1 Iude. 1. by word Luke 22.25.26 The kings of the Gentiles rule ouer them it shall not be so with you and by example verse 27 and Iohn 13.4 and. 13. yea and Peter himselfe exhorteth all Pastors to be not as Lords c. but as ensamples to the flock of Christ This made Bernard writing to Eugenius the Pope to say Dominion was plainely forbidden the Apostles be not thou therfore bold to Challenge to thy selfe either ruling Apostleship or being Apostolicke rule Thou art quite forbidden both If thou wilt needs haue both together in the end thou shalt loose both What is Ministerie It is an Ecclesiasticall function vpon earth assigned to preach the worde to administer the Sacraments to practise Christian Discipline and things which are called Ecclesiasticall What is a Minister of the Church He is a person lawfully called to teach Gods word administer the Sacraments Church gouernment and things ecclesiasticall according as they are prescribed in the word of God How many sorts of Church Ministers are there in the scriptures Two some of the olde Testament others of the new and againe the Ministers of the Church of the Old Testament were some perpetuall and as it were ordinary as Patriarchs Leuites Priests Scribes others Temporarie and as I may say extraordinary as the Prophets were As for the Pharisees and Saduces they were rather names of Sectes then publicke functions as appeareth Act. 23.9 What were the Patriarckes The heades of Families or heads of Fathers in their kinreds a Exo. 6.13 2. Chro. 8.10 Act 7.9 or they were men of the Olde Testament before and after the Deluge till Moses vnto whom God reuealed himselfe by Angels Visions in the night apparition by day and by dreames b Gen. 8 16 6.13.14 12.7.20.13.28 12.46 2 Num 12.6 And that by a voyce perceptible to man and framed to the speach vsuall amongst men And by these onely in liuely tradition hee taught their families religion they being in the families as Prophets and Priests Thus Adam whilest hee exp●unded to his wife and children the promise of that seed of the woman taught them a twofold seruice of God and offered Sacrifices vnto God c Gen. 4.4 And Henoch the seauenth from Adam is thus said to haue prophecied d Gen. 5.22 Gen 14 ● And so Noah is called a Preacher of Repentance e 1 Pet. 3.19 4.6 2. Pet. 2.5 Righteousnes the Gospell and of Christ because all those hundred and twentie yeeres before the floud be ceased not by words and works to admonish that wicked world how great a measure of Gods wrath did hang ouer their head After this the chiefe in each family are said to haue been teachers and Priests So in the land of Canaan at Salem which was after called Ierusalem Melchisedeck who as some thinke was Sem a Priest of the most high God and who was also King of Salem f Gen. 14.18 Heb. 7.1 so Abraham performed the office of a Doctor and a Priest g Gen. 13.18 17.23.20.17 22.10 13 and by faith is said to haue offered sacrifice h Heb. 11.7 Gen. ●3 20 35.7 49.2 After Abraham Isaacke after Isaacke Iacob who himselfe as a prophet instructed his people at diuers places erected diuers Altars and offered sacrifices i At the length when it was now time not to teach onely priuate families but many people in the true knowledge of God Moses being stirred vp by God a Exod. 3.2 did establish a seruice and Church among the people and to this purpose he ordained Priests and Leuites to whom from God he prescribed certain Lawes according to which God would haue the people of Israel gouerned not onely by liuely voyce as before but by writing and at Gods commaundement he deliuered the word of God For before Moses we read not of any Scripture giuen by inspiration from God What were priests They were men immediatly called out of Aarons posteritie for they onely were Priests and were called the sonnes of Aaron and annointed with oyle and consecrated in the sight of the people b Exod. 41 29. Leuit. 8 2 that they might teach others the doctrine mediatly receiued from GOD offer sacrifices blesse the people and might make intercession for themselues and the people c Leuit. 9 7 16.6 Num. 17.6.24 2. Chron. 1.4 Mat. 2.4 and these were superiours who ministred to the people in the Tabernacle among whom some were called High Priests d 1. Chron. 1. these were the heads of their families For the which cause they were called Princes of the sanctuarie and deuided into twentie foure ordes or classes e Hebr. 5.6 all which were figures of Christ but yet was there euer some one aboue the rest he was the eldest of Aarons sonnes and posteritie who was called the high Priest and was especially in his function a figure of Christ the head of his Church f Heb. 6 5 he alone might goe into the Sanctuarie g Hebr. 9.11 Leuit. 16.2 and he alone might appeare
erre as Aaron did but true prophets to witt inspired by god as they were prophets did not erre How many kinds or sortes of ministery are there of the new Testament Paule Rom. 12.6 7 maketh two to wit Prophecy and ministery vnder the name of prophesie comprehending their office who labour in teaching and exhorting whether it be in speech as pastors or instruction as Doctors b 1 Timo. 5 17 But vnder the name of ministerie he vnderstandeth their office who had another seruice as distribution of almes censure of manners prouision for the poore or other ecclesiasticall offices from which the Apostles exempted them selues c Act. 6.2.3 4. The like distribution he hath Philip. 1.1 Tim. 3.2.8 calling them Bishops whome Rom. 12 6.7 He calleth prophets namely to whome is committed the ministerie of teaching vnderstanding the rest by the name of deacons So Peter 1 pet 4.11 saith if any man speake let him speake as the words of God if any man minister c. So then of them that beare Ecclesiasticall office some are teachers others are ministers How many orders of teachers are there The same Paul Ephes 4.11 Numbreth fiue Apostles Prophets Euangelists Pastors and Doctors Of whome Apostles Prophets and Euangelists had a temporarie and extraordinary calling and therefore are now ceassed but pastors and doctors which are ordinary callings are to continue for euer to the comming of Christ for prophecie and knowledge that is the giftes of teaching prophecying being instituted of God for the collecting of a church and nourishing it in this life are therefore said to be abolished and of no vse 1. Cor. 13.8 because god by himselfe thorough an inward power shall effect that in the life to come which he hath begunne in vs in some sorte by his ministers in this life What were Apostles Peculiarly and by way of excellencie those that were called the first Apostles as also those eleuen elected called out of the world not by men or from men but immediately by Christ liuing yet vpon earth before his manyfestation that as hearalds they might stir vp onely their owne nation and being sent prepare them to harken to Christ a Math. 10.6.7 And in the end after his resurrection being confirmed by him to the same apostleship they might publish the doctrine committed to them through the whole world b Mat 28 19.20 Mark 16.15 Iohn 20.21 But because he commaunded them to stay at Ierusalem till they were indued with vertue from aboue c Act. 1.24 after his ascention in the same place and at the same time to wit on the day of Pentecost they were by the visible gift of the holy Ghost as it were by a solemne inauguration Mathias being ioyned with thē before the whole people of Israell confirmed in their appostleship and declared to be the apostles of Christ in which respect they are said then to be giuen of Christ from heauen d Act. 2.1 c. Ephes 4.11 By this it appeareth that this solemne sending of the holy Ghost did appertaine to none other but to those twelue destined by so peculiar aboundance of Gods spirit to plant churches through the whole world euen as to them properly and peculiarly the promise was made e Luk. 24.49 Mat. 28 19 20. and as the Apostleship was proper to them f Act. 2.22 To these adde we those two called by Christ after his ascention Matthias by lot g Act. 1.16 and Paul from heauen h Act. 9.3 Gal. 2 1. Al which as builders and founders of the future edifices of the church as it were patriarkes were sent not to teach onely in certaine places but to plant churches through the whole world when also they were called apostles as it were the lords legates who also being inspired by God did deliuer the doctrine of the gospell both by word and in writing so as their doctrine is the canon and rule of all christian religion which must be shewed to the end of the worlde and being indued by Christ with vertue of doeing miracles they confirmed their doctrine by miracles and sealed it by the administration of the sacraments i Math. 28.19 which was principall in them they alone in the infancie of the church by a visible signe of Imposition of hands gaue the holy Ghost and who all and ech of them were all of equall power and dignity ecclesiasticall amongst them selues in a primary principall but yet a spirituall power but not in regarde of the giftes of the spirit for although the same talent was giuen to all yet it was doubled vpon some and tripled vpon others so as one excelled an other in labour and eminencie of grace a 1 Cor. 15 20 This office after they had well discharged together with thē that apostolicall function ceased not in regard of their doctrine to which the church is perpetually obliged nor in regard of their ministery to preach the gospell and administer the sacraments But in regarde of apostolicall excellency plenary authority for it selfe to be belieued so as he that should resist their doctrine did not resist man but God and that it was not circumscribed within any confines of the world but to be diuulged through the whole earth as also to found and plant churches to conferre the giftes of the holy ghost by Imposition of hands to constitute perpetual functions in the church and in a word to prescribe rules for church gouernment for thus their office was temporarie for that of Christ at this departure Iohn 20.21 as my father sent me so I send you is to be restrained to their apostleship onely they were as we may say successers of the prophets but the prophets were Sovvers the Apostles reapers b Iohn 4.35 c ●ct 11.28 2● 10 they preached Christ to come these Christ already come Who were called prophets Specially they who about the beginning of the gospel preached and excelled in a singuler gift of reuelation and wisedome by the instinct of Gods spirit and were sometimes able to foretell matters of great moment concerning the Church or such as should be tide some of the faith full whome GOD adioyned to the Apostles though they also were indued with the spirit of prophecie c that by this supernaturall grace of the spirit he might also confirme the Apostles preaching by which grace it pleased him to adorne confirme that then breeding church such a prophet was Agabus and the foure daughters of Philip theuangelist d 1. Cor. 14 29.31 hence to prophecie is to interpret prophecies 1. Cor. 11.4.5 And the spirit of prophets 1 Cor. 14.32 Is for the doctrine which prophets indued with gods spirit do bring notwithstanding in general they were called prophets who had a singuler gift in interpreting scriptures such are now adaies the learned interpreters of scriptures Who are Euangelists 1 Companions fellowe laborers and fellow ministers of the Apostles not chosen by Christ