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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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of Church did the Apostle Paul write most of his Epistles to the Romans to the Corinthians to the Galathians and as in the text to the Thessalonians that is to the company of believers that lived in and about those Cities and Countries called to be Saints 1. Cor. 1.2 This National Church as the case now stands with us and for the better understanding of some things hereafter to be handled must be divided into the Romish Church and Reformed First The Romish Church by this we understand all those Christians that hold the new invented Doctrine of the Church of Rome that believe as that Church believes and in all points conform thereunto either in point of practice or in point of doctrine Secondly The reformed Church by this we understand those believers whether Nationall or Provinciall that have forsaken the Church of Rome so far as she hath forsaken the truth of the Gospel and cleave to the Ancient Doctrin taught in the Catholick Church whether by the Lord or by his Apostles or by Ministers sent from them whether taught at Jerusalem Antioch Athens or at Rome it selfe disowning the Doctrine of Purgatory praying for the dead worshiping of Saints or what ever as is contrary to true Doctrine such are the reformed Churches of France Helvetia Basil Bohemia Belgie Auspurge Wittemburge Saxony Scotland or England whose Doctrine in these and such other points opposing Rome as may be seen in their publick confessions Now know that all these together are but one and the same Church diversly considered for as the great Se● which is but one sends out her Branches and Rivers which receive names according to the Countries they pass through and become as it were distinst Seas as the British Sea the Germane Sea the Atlantick Sea Even so the Church sending her Doctrine through the Kingdome and Nations of the Earth receives a denomination from the place where she is received and from them whom she washes with water in the name of the Lord and so of old were the Churches of the Corinthians or Thessalonians and so now the Churches of France or England which yet made not severall Churches for as there is but one head one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one Bridegroom one God and one way to ●eaven so there can be but one Church but severall considerations of that one Church which we believe to be holy and Catholick and is the whole society and company of Believees Elected and appointed c. And now we have seen her whom the Lord loves This is the Spouse of Christ only and besides her we know no other this is she whom Men and Devils Hereticks and Infidels for the present labour to destroy and alwayes did desire to root out but all in vain Mathew 16.18 This is she whom Iohn saw as a Bride come down from Heaven adorned for her Husband Revelations 21.2 who is jealous over her and rejoyceth over her as a Bridegroome rejoyceth over his Bride Isa 62.5 He rejoyceth over her with singing Zepha 3.17 This is the body of Christ Ephesians 1.8 which from Christ as from the Head receiveth Life and Spirit by his Spirit she is governed in all things and of whom also she receiveth increase that she growes up Ephe. 4.16 This is she that for her justification by faith in Christ and her mystical union with him is in name and nature a Queen Christs Spouse for her Nobility the new Jerusalem the Brother Sister and Mother of our Lord the first born of God for her illumination perfection defence of Evangelical truth is called the light of the world a Golden Candlestick a Pillar of truth and for her Sanctification of life a peculiar People a vessel of Honour a Garden inclosed the Temple of the holy Ghost Sancta Dei Ecclesia est mater virgo Spousa This is she who from her fruitfulnesse in bringing forth many Children unto God is called a Mother and that is by keeping her Ch●stity pure from the embracements of the world and Sathan is known and esteemed a Virgin and from those engagements that she hath given to the Lord of constant fidelity to him she is honoured as the Lambs wife This is the Vineyard of the Lord which he hath planted in this world warred with his Blood fenced it about with holy Angels builded the winepress of his passion in the midst of her and is dayly gathering out the stones that do offend her This is she whose property it is to vanquish when she is hurt to understand when she is reproved to be in safety when she is forsaken to obtain victory when she is almost over-thrown to be strongest when she is weakest to grow highest when she is most crushed to be most glorious when she is most reproached to be honourably acquitted when she is scornfully condemned to be crowned when she is dishonoured to be rich when she is impoverished to be illustrous when she is despised then she is ne●rest life when death is nearest to her He that is a member of this Church ought not to be calle● a Lutheran nor a Calvinist nor a Protestant no more then to be called a Petrir or a Paulis or a Nicean for following the doctrin of Paul or Peter or for adhearing to the positions of the Councels of Nice or Paphnutians for approving the opposition of Paphnutius in reference to the coelibat life motioned in that Councell since it is the doctrine of no private Person he believes in but of that that hath taught by the Spirit of God to the Saints in all ages therefore he is to be called a Catholick laying the ground of his Salvation on the foundation already and long agoe laid by the Prophets Apostles or Evangelists the opinion and invention of men being no part of his Religion or Articles of his Creed It is true the members of the Church of Rome subscribe themselves Catholicks but falsely many points of the Doctrin of that Church which they have made necessary to Salvation were not known by the Fathers and Teachers of the old Churches Unknown to the Apostles and to their Successors for severall ages when the fire of Purgatory first kindled We know and what Spirit or whose Breath first blew as it hath been demonstrated by Catholick Champions of this Nation and other reformed Churches Their own Histories discover that it hath neither the Spirit nor the word of God for its entry but the Bishop of Romes pollicy the peoples simplicity the Emperours inadvertency and Phochas's treachery for unto these causes may we reduce his Holinesses Supromacy and infallibility the foundation and Basis of all their other errors the Doctrin of Purgatory of Pardons of Auricular confession of Venial sin of Merit of Transubstantiation of Adoration of Saints Communicating under one kind of private Masse of the Pax of the Agnus Dei of Hostly or Ghostly processions we know to be but yesterday so that whosoever takes hold of this Doctrin deserves
dayes again observed p. 257. VI. Whether it might not be an acceptable service to have an annuall fast for the crimes lately acted in England p. 259. Of a Feast p. 260. Questions I. Whether the feasts of the Church Catholick differ from those of the Church of Rome p. 270. II. Whether the Festivals of the Church of England may lawfully be observed p. 271. III. Why are bonefiers made in England upon the feast of the fifth of November p. 174. IV. Whether the time of a martyrs death be a proper time for feasting p. 275. V. Whether the feast of Philip and Jacob be not prophaned p. 276 Of Church or Temple p. 279. Questions I. Whether those places may be consecrated p. 287. II. Whether those places may be termed holy p. 289. III. Whether such Churches as have been erected by Romanists may be used by Catholicks p. 290. IV. Whether at a Christians entry into those place he may performe his devotion p. 292. V. VVhether it be lawfull to have musick in our Churches p. 294. Of ministerial ordination p. 290. Questions I. VVhether ordination may better a Ministers gifts p. 300. II. VVhether a Minister may renounce his ordination p. 301. III. VVhether the ministerial office be to continue alway in the world p. 302. IV. VVhether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man preach p. 304 V. VVhether an ordained person may have an office in the Common-wealth p. 306 Of Catechising p. 309. Questions I. VVhether or how catechising differs from preaching p. 315. II. Whether preaching be to be preferred before it p. 316. Of preaching p. 319. Questions I. VVhether Gos●el preachers ought to have a setle● maintenance p. 325. II. VVhether an Heretical or upstart Teacher may be known from the true p. 330. III. VVhether a preacher once setled in a place may leave that place p. 332. IV. VVhether it be expedient to permit one to preach constantly or weekly in a place that hath neither orders from the Church nor charge of the people p. 339. V. VVhether he that is a Gospel Teacher may lawfully own civil titles of honour p. 336. Of a conferrence p. 329. Questions I. VVhether private or night meetings may lawfully be upheld p. 344. II. VVhether it be lawfull for Christians when they meet to make merry one with another p. 344. III. VVhether the conferences or private meetings lately used in England were agreeable to the power of Godlinesse p. 349. Of Admonition p. 351. Questions I. VVhether a heathen may not be admonished p. 359. II. VVhether admonition be alike to be given to all Ibid. Of Excommunication p. 360. Questions I. VVhether reformed Churches are legally excommunicated by the Pope p. 366. II. VVhether Kings ought to be excommunicated p. 367. III. VVhether Excommunication debars from all society of the Church p. 371. Of Singing p. 373. Questions I. VVhether it be lawfull to sing Davids Psalmes in a publick congregation p. 377. II. VVhether those Psalmes containing direfull Imprecations ought to be sung or how with a conscience they may be sung p. 379. Of the Sacraments p. 380. Questions I. Whether these five Sacraments added by the Church of Rome be Sacraments p. 381. II. VVhether the effects of the Sacraments depend upon the worthinesse of the Minister p. 384. III. Whether or how the Sacraments differ from the scriptures p. 386. IV. VVhether the Sacraments of the old differ from those of the new Testament p. 387. V. VVhether two Sacraments be sufficient under the Gospel p. 388. Of Babtisme p. 389. Questions I. VVhether Dipping be essentiall unto Baptisme p. 400. II. VVhether Infants ought not to be baptised p. 404. III. VVhether baptisme is or ought to be readministred p. 412. IV. VVhether witnesses at baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved p. 413. V. VVhether the Cross at baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved p. 415. Of Conformation p. 420. Questions I. VVhether confirmation be a standing Ordinance in the Gospel p. 426. II. VVhether the Church might not be advantaged by the restoring of confirmation p. 429. Of the Communion p. 431. Questions I. VVhether the Communion ought often to be received or how often p. 447. II. VVhether the Church of Rome hath reason to keep the Communion cup from the people p. 448 III. VVhether kneeling be a gesture lawfull to be used at the Communion p. 451. IV. VVhether it be expedient to keep prefixed times for Administration of the Communion and if offerings be lawfull p. 453. V. VVhether it be a sin to receive the Communion in a mixed congregation and if private examination be necessary p. 455. Of Prayer p. 471. Questions I. Whether men by Industry may obtain a promptnesse in prayer p. 512. II. VVhether the wicked be bound to pray p. 515. III. VVhether the set forms of Prayers used by law in the Church of England be lawfull p. 516. IV VVhether there be not vain repetitions in those formes p. 529. V. VVhether it would be convenient to alter any part of those formes p. 532. Of an Oath p. 535. Questions I. Whether swearing be an ordinance of or under the Gospel p. 538. II. Whether the oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy required by the King of England c. May lawfully betaken p. 540. Curteous Reader be pleased to take notice that these bookes following are Printed for and sold by Edward Brewster at the signe of the Crane in St. Pauls Church yard 1661. Bp. Williams Right way to the best Religion wherein at large is explained the Principle heads of the Gospel in foll Dr. Iermin Chapline to King Charles the first his phrastical Meditations by way of Commentary upon all the Proverbs foll Mr. Elton his Commentary upon 7.8.9 Romans foll Mr. Prinnes Hidden works of Darknesse brought to Light foll Mr. Ball of the Nature and life of faith 40. his large and small Catechise 80. Mr. Bentharns Christian conflict shewing the difficulties and duties armor and speciall Graces to be exercised by every Christian Souldier 40. Mr. Baxter of Crucifying the world by the Crosse of Christ. 40. A Collection of severall Sermons preached before the Parliament 40. Mr. Cawdrey of the inconstancy of the Independent way with Scripture and it self 40. Severall Sermons of Mr. Paul Bayns Mr. Calamys Sermons Compleate Mr. George Newton his Elaborat exposition on Iohn 17. foll Mr. Randoll on the Church 40. on 8. Roman 40. Mr. Stalham against Quakers 40. against Anabaptists 40. Dr. Sclator on 4. Romans Mr. Vdall on the Lamentations Mr. Ieremiah Whittakers Sermons 40. A vindication of the Presbyteriall Goverment and Ministry CHAP. 1. Of the Church 1 Thes. 1.1 Paul and Sylvanus and Timotheus unto the Church of the Thessalonians c. INtending to speak of the nature of some despised Ordinances of the Church of Christ we hold it expedient if not necessary to take our Rise from hence by unfolding the nature of that Church whose practice we
earnest or desirous they are to have us to do it that adjure us The Institution of Magistrates being from the Lord though the constitution of them be of man calls loud for obedience and that danger that might attend the Gospell of the Lord if believes should not obey is possibly the ground of this high charge For indeed whatever Government be set over us though possibly disaffected by us ought in such things to be yielded unto if not for his sake who is in the Throne yet for his sake who set him in But by this time I conjecture I see some in this Generation affirming that by this some passages mentioned before I take from them all liberty and the death of Christ advantageth them nothing and therefore they condemn me as Antichristian Having heard so much of that and seen it used so often by those that did not understand it as a proper shield against the Magistrates commands I shall in a word discover the severall parts of Christian liberty that consists 1. In our being delivered from the curse of the Law Galat. 3.23 2. From the Law of sin and death Rom. 8.2 3. From all Jewish Rites and Ceremonies as such Acts 15.24 4. From all humane Ordinances and Traditions whatsoever when they are imposed upon the Consciences of men to be observed under the pain of damnation Col. 2.8 This is the whole of Christian liberty from these Christ hath made us free but as touching the Observation of Laws and Ordinances such as were before spoken of Christ's death hath tyed us to them so farr are the Thrones of Princes or Church Governours seats from being shaken by Christs bowing down his head at which time our liberty began that they are much strengthned by it as appeared by his own life before he dyed and by his Apostles Doctrine when he was ascended The same reach the Reformed Churches in the Articles above mentioned Quest. 5. Whether the segregated Churches now in England be true Churches For the resolving of this Question we must consider the members of these Churches 2. ways 1. Either as holding the same fundamentall Doctrine that is by Law professed in England under the Guardship of an Ecclesiastick person by him taught in all necessary and saving truths though differing from the Church of England in other smaller points these must and ought to be accounted of our body and are indeed real and true Churches However if they would take counsell it were to be wished that they would go no further in this separating way For though I am perswaded they are not the real Fathers of that Bastard brood of Hereticks that now lies at every door yet they have given and still do give too much occasion by their wanton dalliance to be suspected for the reputed Father of them all as could be proved most clearly from the exercises of those Churches at their meetings But I forbear 2. Or we shall consider them as holding the same fundamentall Doctrine with us as the authority of the Scriptures the necessity and utility of the Sacraments and the like and these gather themselves together and Ordain a Mechanick or Lay-person to be their Teacher in Ordinary We shall take no notice of his Learning whether he have any or no or if you will suppose him to have all learning acquainted in all the Mysteries of Art wanting nothing to compleat a Scholar yet a Trades-man Mechanick or secular person either not Ordained or Ordained by the people and by vertue of that Ordination whether assumed by himself or imposed by the people dispenseth the word and Sacraments exerciseth the power of the Keys and as a Minister sent them of God to perswade them in an Authoritative way to be reconciled to God And these we must also consider 2. ways 1. In their private or civill capacity as they are Christians liveing about or among us and so both their Teacher and themselves are Members of the same Church with us viz. the Catholick Or 2. In their publick formal or supposed Ecclesiastick capacity as they have formed themselves having appointed Mechanicks for their Teachers whether certain or not whether Male or Female exercising worship among themselves by such or receiving Sacraments at the hands of such Let me now lay down and open one distinction which well considered will answer all objections that in the handling of the Question may arise in the Readers judgement that is this We must note there is a vast difference between a Church constituting and a Church constituted This holds not only in Churches but in other things when a government is going to be erected some things extraordinary may be done through necessity which necessity being removed by the thing competed those extraordinary acts cease being as at the creation in constituting the World God made trees herbs plants fishes beasts yea man in an extraordinary way being necessitated to do upon the account of his natur● that admitting no creature to be from eternity but having once made these he ceased that extraordinary act of creating and appointed the conservation of the species of the creatures to be in the successive generation of the Individuals Man is not now made out of the ground nor the woman made at an instant out of man God hath put an end to creation and constituted now generation for the means of keeping man upon the Earth So in his constituting of the Sacrament of circumcision to be a standing Ordinance to the Church of the Jews we know by Gen. 17.24 25. that Abraham was Ninety nine years old and his Son Ishmael 13 and the servants of his house some elder some younger but being in their flesh constituted it was from them to all posterity to be given at Eight days old Ishmael was thirteen years but his sons must be circumcised sooner because when the Ordinance was constituted he was not to look to that age wherein God did institute that Ordinance So in setling the Priesthood upon Aaron Levit. 8. Moses was the man that sanctified him and sprinkled the blood on the Altar seven times and other Levitical Rites which in after-ages was not lawfull save by the Priests because God having instituted Aaron he had appointed a natural Succession and by that Succession was he to be found out whom the Lord would make to offer upon his Altar So in setling the Crown of Iudah upon David he was anointed by the Prophet when he followed the Flocks but having constituted him and by that extraordinary act deputed the Son of Iesse to be the Captain of his People he will now have us to look no more after that but among David's Sons and after Solomon the First-born the ordinary way that God hath now appointed for bringing forth one to rule that People So Christ in constituting a Church for himself upon earth took from Boats and from the receipt of Custom men and immediately ordained them to preach Repentance to the People now they being
between the Summers heat and the Winters Frost All the Christian Churches in the World have been or are Synagogues of Sathan if these segregated Congregations be the Churches of Christ the Church of Ierusalem was no Church the Church of Antioch was no Church the Church of Crete was no Church the Churches of Corinth of Galatia of Philippi of Ephesus of Smyrna of Philadelphia of Sardis were no Churches if these be See the Confession of Faith of all Reformed Churches now in Christendom of Helvetiae Bohemia of France of Basil of Belgiae of Auspurge of Saxony of Wirtemberge of Swedeland of Scotland of England all of them do with one joint consent teach the contrary Doctrine of Separation of Ordination of Sacraments of the Keys unto those Congregations Cast your eye upward to the Writings Sermons Expositions Epistles Disputes of the most Ancient Worthy Learned Godly Patriarchs Martyrs Fathers that lived in any age of the Church or in all the Centuries of the purer times that immediately followed the Apostles and you shall by the whole Body of the Church see these mens practises and Doctrine as they have constituted themselves to be doomed judged sentenced as schismatical or heretical there being no such Doctrine touching those points they maintain in reference to the Ordinances above named taught by the Apostles or their immediate Successors Saint Iohn the Apostle taught no such Doctrine to Polycarpus whom he ordained Bishop of Smyrna Anno Christ● 71. about forty years after Christs death nor Peter to Linus whom he made Bishop of Rome Anno 70. Neither did he teach any such Doctrine to Evodius the Second nor to Ignatius the Third nor to Theophilus the sixth Bishop of Antioch after himself who lived Anno 170. These would have been faithfull in delivering that Doctrine if they had received any such command fr●m the Apostles But they teach the contrary and to Posterity deliver the contrary and from Generation to Generation it hath been taught until it came to the very Age wherein we live Cyprian Bishop of Carthage who lived anno 240. Athanasius Bishop of Alexandria anno 376. Hilarius Bishop of Poicttiers in France anno 355. Optatus Bishop of Millaine anno 365. Basilius the great Bishop of Caesarea anno 370. Gregory Bishop of Nazianzum anno 370. Epiphanius Bishop of Salamine in Cyprus anno 370. Ambrose Bishop of Millain anno 374. Gregory Bishop of N●ssa anno 380. What shall I do I might weary myself in copying out the worthy Champions of the Church that lived in other times as Hierom the best of Presbyters Chrysostome Augustine Cyrill who all before a Papist was heard of taught the very self-same thing that we are now proving viz. That such as separate themselves from the Catholick Church upon the account of mixture and assume to themselves the power of executing in an authoritative way the Ordinances Seals Censures of the Church upon what account soever be irregular persons unlawfull Assemblies and ought to be curbed suppressed and punished by all in authority unto which consent the Reformed Churches To Church these men and to sentence their Doctrine for truth at the same breath we must unchurch all Churches that are that have been in the Christian World and before we condemn them let us sentence these And we do by these Presents censure them as proud boasters blasphemers disobedient to Parents the Church is their Mother whom they ought not to forsake because she is old unthankfull unholy to be without natural affection to be truce-breakers false accusers incontinent fierce despisers of those that are good all the Army of the noble Worthies that have gone before us traytors heady high-minded lovers of pleasures more than lovers of God having a form of godliness but denying the power thereof 2 Tim. 3.2 3 4. And Lord have mercy upon their souls This may be thought a harsh censure yet it is no other than upon my own knowledge I am able to justifie having an unhappy curiosity a long season to be frequently at the meetings of several sorts of Hereticks where I saw more and heard more than ever I should have believed from any other 4. Should we hold them to be rightly constituted Churches we should never be sure of a right Church in the World which is expresly contrary to the ninth Article of our Creed for there we believe the holy Catholick Church that is that there is was and shall be a Ch●rch whereof we believe our selves to be Members For that with us may be accounted as the true and onely Church this day and wherein we intend to live and die and by prayers and tears seek its preservation The next offence we take at some party or other of that Church or next turn or new Religion that is turned up we are of another mind and we conclude that the Church of Christ is onely those that hold that opinion which for the time past we have spoken against and if we would walk in the mind and agreeable to the will of God we m●st be of that society that holds such an opinion and so from one Congregation to another still keeping from the Doctrine of the Catholick ●od in justice suffering few of them to come back until through pride we be puffed up That we hold it needless to be of any Congregation or create our selves one which the better to procure some new opinion is broached the novelty whereof the giddy heads of men being taken withal brings disciples in a short time to that teacher which is the very cause that scarce shall we finde one Heretick maintaining one heresie but hath with that some other mingled There being therefore such a mixture of Religions in every one that its hard from which to give him his name yet for a mark of distinction he gets a denomination from some opinion that he principally holds hence one is called a Quaker though in many points he agree with the Anabaptist and the Anabaptist with him and the Millenaries or Fifth Monarcy men with them both and each Heresie maintaining stifly that that is the Church makes him that goes from the Catholick to doubt of the very being of a Church which doubt is the immediate parent of those turnings and windings in points of Religion and opinion as the looseness and iniquity of late years hath cle●rly discovered to any understanding Christian. Of all those Congregations or Opinionists that have revolted from the Apostolick Catholick Church I should chuse to be of that society known by the name of Seekers they know that there is no Church visible in the World no Ordinance at all and therefore they spend their days in seeking one out and enquiring after one which makes them of all Opinions the most uncertain and yet there is great hopes that for the future they may be of some certainty Some of them affirm the Church to be in the Wildernesse others are seeking her in the smoak of the Temple where lest I lose my self
Church for though every one that are members of the visible are not of the body of the invisible Church yet he is not of the invisible that acknowledgeth not himself a member of the visible he that hath God for his Father hath the visible Catholick Church for his only mother and must have her if he would be saved She is like the Ark of Noah as all without that was drowned so all without this is damned In the judgement of Charity we must indeed suppose that God hath his own among the heathen and by working upon them by his Spirit in an extraordinary secret and hidden way brings them unto the knowledge of his Son by which they are ingrafted into his body and so made members of the Catholick Church for as before out of it there is no salvation the reason is out of it is to be out of Christ for that is his body and to be out of Christ is to be without God and to be without him is to be without eternal life For this is eternal life to know thee to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent Quest. 12. What are the marks of a true Church General notes and marks are set down by the Church of Rome whereby it is pretended that the true Catholick and Holy Church may be distinctly and perfectly known from all false Congregations or Churches as 1. Visibility 2. Antiquity 3. Durability 4. Prosperity 5. The name of a Catholick Church 6. Agreement with the ancient Church 7. It s union with the head viz. the Pope 8. Holiness of Doctrine 9. Efficacy of Doctrine 10. Holiness of life 11. The glory and power of miracles 12. The gift of Prophesie 13. The acknowledgement or confession of her enemies 14. The unhappy and unfortunate success of her enemies 15. A succession of Bishops With several others which in their own nature are either separable from the true Church or may agree to a false and may constitute a Synagogue of Satan as well as a Church of Christ for which with many other reasons they are rejected of the Reformed Churches as proper Characters of that body whereof Christ is the head that being able to consist pure holy and visible without some of them though in some points they agree to her also in that but not as essential or Characteristical and knowing also that many of them are forged by and in Rome that she may appear the better and stand the firmer in her Pontificalibus The proper and essential Characters of a true Church whereby she is differenced from all false also from the Church of Rome and which gives her her esse vivere sentire are these viz. 1. The pure dispensation of the Word Act. 2.4 Where the Word is taught in a pure manner according to the institution of it without detraction from or addition to it wherever that is taught what Christ commanded and the Gospel holds out so farre there is a pure Church and where that is mixed and mingled with mens Inventions as points of doctrine so far the Church is impure 2. The pure Administration of the Sacraments Matth. 28.19 30.1 Cor. 11.23 That Church that keeps to the institution of those Ordinances appointed as Seals of the Covenant by Christ putting nothing to them nor taking nothing from them as necessary for the making of them Seals so far that is a pure Church and where that is not done it is so far impure Some adde Church discipline but that holds out rather her well being then her being in times of persecution she hath wanted that and may want it and yet a true Church by the keeping pure of the Word and Sacraments which a visible Church cannot consist without hence we behold and look upon Ierusalem Galatia Thessalonica Corinth Colos. and once those famous Churchs of Asia though the gospel was taught in them in a glorious and a pure dispensatory way yet for the present wanting those two we eye them not nor number them among the Churches of Christ. The same teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 14. Behem Art 8. France Art 27. Belg. 29. Ausp Art 7. Sax. Art 11. Wirtem Art 32. Swed or the 4. Cities Art 15. S●ot Art 15. and of England Art 19. That Article it self is this Art 19. of the Church of England The visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of faithfull men in which the pure word is preached and the Sacraments be duly administred according to Christs Ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite for the same c. All which considered it follows 1. That the Church of Rome is no true Church or pure Church making the Scriptures to be imperfect for salvation without their own Tradition They will not suffer the Church to be clean through the word that Christ hath spoken The Church is only tyed to the Gospel For if an Angel from heaven teach any other Doctrine he is to be accursed by her 1 Gal. 9. With her Baptismal water she adds oyl salt and spittle as essential parts of Baptism and useth this holy Ordinance upon Bells Stocks and wood With the Sacramental wine she must mingle water of which the Lairy must not taste With her Sacramental bread she visits the sick salutes Emperors makes Procession it must be also a wafer C●ke and it must not be broken with both these Elements she maketh a Sacrifice for the dead and she teacheth that a Priest may give it to himself alone that the vertue or efficacy both of that and Baptism depends upon the intention of him that doth administer and yet the efficacy must not be questioned but believed and forasmuch as they are administered in Latine which the common sort may not understand they must act implicite faith 2. That those segregated Congregations in England are not true Churches The word preached by many that are not men in Sex nor Ministers in Office prayer being preached down and preaching only to be heard from men of their own principles teaching for Doctrine not Traditions but fancies blasphemies affirming the nullity of Apostolical Ordination c. The Sacraments are either abused as re-baptizing those that were baptized before making dipping necessary to that Ordinance and the Sacrament performed by a Laick person The Sacrament of the Lords Supper being either preached down altogether or grosly abused in nature It s vertue depends upon his goodness that gives it a sin to receive it with any that we conceit not to be holy or know him to be prophane though he be never admonished by them and if he were yet he is not to be eaten withal least I eat and drink damnation to my self through his sin the Elements not consecrated through which that only is an Ordinance and the body or blood of the Lord they are not consecrated for he that often attempts to do it hath no power so to do wanting Apostolical Authority viz. Ordination 3. That the
Church of England is a true Church as it is now constituted her Doctrine being pure she holds nothing nor injoyns nothing upon her members in matters of salvation by way of precept neither doth she add to nor take any thing from the nature of the Sacraments that the Lord Christ hath left behinde him in the Church by way of practice she doth and may injoyn and she hath power to ordain several Ceremonies to be performed in the receiving of them which in themselves being not contrary to the Scriptures nor taught by her as necessary for salvation urged only as edifying for their meaning and decent for the service performing her Members may and they do give her all due obedience and their obedience is justifiable You need not here be put in minde of that caution formerly given viz. not to take manners for doctrine it is a high errour to conceit the vertue power efficacy of an Ordinance to consist in or depend upon the goodness of him that doth administer the same A prophane person a known Swearer may purely dispense the Sacraments for that lies not as God forbid it did in the purity of any mans conversation but in the pure adhering to our Lords Institution The pure preaching of the word hangeth not upon the purity of him that speaketh but in the purity of the word spoken of The purity of Doctrine lies in the agreement of it unto Scripture and not in the agreement of a mans life unto the word if so how many had Christ converted what multitudes of people had Paul brought to the knowledge of the truth more then he did The same Doctrine teacheth the Reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 26. To conclude this Chapter in all Instituted Ordinances it is neither Pauls goodness nor Apollo's graces nor Iudas's wickednesse that is the cause of the plants fruitfulness or barrenness from the grace of God must we look to receive the promised reward 1 Cor. 3.7 In natural as in prayer sometimes it may be otherwise Iames 5.16 CHAP. II. Of the Scriptures COL 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. HAving viewed this beautifull heavenly and holy building for it is Gods 1 Cor. 3.9 which is as Ierusalem a City compact together we shall now behold the foundation upon which it stands The Builder of it was skilfull in all kind of cunning Work and a Fabrick of this height or altitude required a foundation suitable deep strong and sure he therefore founded it upon a Rock Matth. 16.18 by which the several parts of it stand firm the carved and polished work thereof knows no shaking the least vessell therein though earthen yet being chosen for the Masters honour knoweth no falling down by tottering The foundation of this glorious Metropolis Royal Edifice or House of God is in truth and nature but one yet since Scripture speaks of it as two we shall speak in that Language and shew you that the Church hath 1. An increated essential foundation which is that holy thing whose name is Jesus Christ the Lord Matth. 16.18 begotten before the beginning of the world it is the Lamb of God the Rock of Ages it is he that is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners the only begotten Son of the Father who taking upon himself to deliver man did not abhor the Virgins womb it is he whose name is wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the Prince of Peace the everlasting Son of the Father the Man who is Gods Fellow Zach. 13.17 2. A Created Doctrinal foundation this is the Law and the Prophets Ephes. 2.20 It is the word written which is profitable for Doctrine and reproof for correction and instruction in righteousness that the man or Church of God might be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works In summ it is that word that was spoken by the Fathers by the Saints by the Prophets and Apostles who were the servants of God Phil. 1.1 Of these two we may say as Ioseph said of Phara●hs doubled dream Gen. 41.26 They are but one yet not one so but that the preheminence is given to the first under the notion of a Corner stone Isa. 28.16 that giving both strength to the building and directions to the Builder And indeed the Prophets and Apostles laid no new Foundation but added to that corner stone laid to their hands daily such firme Christians as they had fitted for this holy superstructure taking directions in their building from its pos●ture for unto it all the building fuly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord Ephes. 2. ult No foundation being laid therefore but what is united to this strengthened by this supported by this and directed by this shews that properly there is none but this Saint Paul who was a wise and excellent Master builder himself 1 Cor. 3.10 understanding there was a Church builded at Colos. a City of Phrygia the greater in the continent of Asia the lesse so called from one Phryxus a King thereof had no desire it should stand empty left the evill spirit which hath been cast out should take possession again as at this time he was like to do whether by their falling back to Paganisme and Heathnish customes again or by being taught the necessity of imbracing the doctrine or Ceremonies of Jewisme would have the Word of Christ dwell richly in them This Country of Phrygia had once in it a King named Gordius who of a Plow-man being chosen King tyed or hampered his Plow-Tacklings in such a knot that he predicted that none should untye them but he that was to be Conquerour of the World it was called Nodus Gordianus this Prophesie was fulfilled in Alexander who because he could not untye it by Art cut it asunder with his Sword and for afterward conquering the World was sirnamed the Great At this time there was among these Phrygian Colossians some that hampered their understandings by a counterfeited humility who with their dark Axiomes would have intruded upon them worshipping of Angels which knots to untye that they might be great the Apostle sends them or recommends unto them the Sword of the Spirit Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly In this Country also was the City of Midaium where Midas the son of this Gordius lived and dwelt he as the Poets fain asked of Bacchus who was his Guest that what ever he touched might become gold his great riches was the ground of the Fable his ●ute was granted by which he turned Mountains into gold but finding that he could neither eat nor drink but Goblets and Viands of Gold he recalled his wish and by washing himselfe in the River Pa●t●lus communicated that virtue to the River which afterward brought up golden sand The River that comes from the Mount Tmolus brings with it abundance of gold and
declared their perversnesse as is evident by comparing Acts 16.3 with Gal. 5.2 3. If there were no limitation in this case of giving offence there would never be an Heretick Whom we are to reject after the first and second admonition Titus 3.10 Quest. 8. Whether the Books called Apocrypha be not Scripture These Books commonly called Apocrypha are so called from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abseondo a thing hid because the authority of them is not known to the Church and in testimony of Faith those Books must not at all be produced The Church of Rome owns them as part of the Canon but the Catholick Church did ever exclude their Authority For 1. They were never used by the Jews neither in their Temples nor in their Synagogues the Jews were always Gods Library Keepers To them were committed the Oracles of God Rom. 3.2 Now these being never used nor committed to them cannot be Gods Oracles and by consequence their authority is not binding 2. They never received any countenance from the gospel they are never mentioned as a Rule or as Books wherein the will and minde of God was made known to men which Christ would never have neglected to do had they been so yea as he chid the Pharisees for putting false glosses upon the Law surely he would have upbraided them sharply for taking away so great a part of the body of the Law Our Lord Jesus mentions no other parts of the Scriptures then Moses Psalms and the Prophets Luke 24 44 4● of which the Apocrypha is no part 3. There are many things in those Books false both in History and in Doctrine much non-sense and against both sense reason and Canonical Scripture are there many passages 4. The Author of the second Book of Mac. Mac. 2.2.23 Ingenuously confesses that that Book was only an abridgment or compend of those five Books of the Wars of the Jews writ by one Iason a Cyrenean and great sweat pains and labour it cost hi● so to do This was no fit work for the Spirit of God to abridge the long books writ by Iason that men might have more pleasure in the reading of them The same Author concludes this History with a Complement and also desires to have his errours pardoned professing his best in composing that book which also shews it came not professedly from the Spirit of God The same ●each the Reformed Churches of France Art 4. of Belgiae Art 6. of Ireland Art 3. of England Art 6. Yet the Ch●rch does and hath used these books and reads them in their Congregations though not to confirm doctrine but to exhort to manners For these Reasons 1. From that Relation and aspect that it bears toward the Scripture concerning the Jews returning from the Captivity the Passeover kept by King Iosiah the Wisdom so called of Solomon though probably made by Philo the Jew who flourished An. C. 90. the sentences and sayings of the son of Sirach are so much reflecting upon Sacred Writ that they are not to be despised Iohn 10.22 We have some account of a Discourse that was held between Christ and the Jews in the Temple and withall tels us what time this discourse was viz. At the Feast of the Dedication Now of this Feast the Scripture nowhere gives us an account we read of no Laws of it no Sacrifices for it no time set apart for it yet Iesus owns it To know the original and cause of this Feast we must go to Apocrypha 1 Mac. 4. ver 52. to the end In which place we read that when the Iews had defeated the forces of Gorgias and had regained the Temple and rebuilded the Altar they offered Sacrifice thereon and dedicated it for future service and kept the days of Dedication with gladness for joy that God had given them again Liberty to worship in their Temple and ver 59. it is appointed that that feast be kept every year for eight days which in our Saviours time is kept and he graceth it with his presence too blame then are they that are offended at Ministers going down to the Apocrypha citing it for matter of fact for in this and in some other places no Minister under heaven can give his hearers any rational account of this Text without making use of the Apocrypha 2. For those excellent plain Moral Instructions that lie in many places of it so full of variety so plenteous in brevity particularly those books of Ecclisiasticus and Wisdom wherein are excellent documents suited to nay most of them taken from the word of God 3. For those godly and profitable uses beleivers may make in reading and hearing those great deliverances that God was pleased to give his own people Israel in so wonderfull a manner cloathing their enemies with shame when they were at strongest and crowning them with glory and honour when they were at weakest In a word to see how God preserved them in the midst of their enemies keeping to himself still a people when the Heathen about them had said Let them be no more a Nation as is manifest in the history of the Maccabees Yet alwayes care was taken that none of these bookes nor nothing in one of those bookes was ever made use of in matters of Faith or Doctrine but in matters of fact onely as men will make use of Poets Chronicles or moral Authors To this agree the reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 6. the Article it self is this Art 6 of the Church of England Holy Scripture containeth c. And the other books Hierom saith the Church doth read for example of life and instruction of manners but yet doth not apply it to establish any Doctrine c. Quest. 9. Why would God communicate his will to his Church in writing The meaning of this question is this Seeing God was pleased to let his will and his pleasure or his word be known and communicated to the world from the Creation unto Moses by tradition or by speaking why would he have it to be revealed from Moses untill the dissolution of the world by writing might it not have been delivered to succeeding ages by the present through the Fathers delivering it to the Children and so forward to the end as well as it was for two thousand years at the beginning of the world But God would not have it so he would have it given in writing 1 Because of the darkeness of mans nature the candle of the Lord shined darker and darker as man increased sin increased that lamp of light that he put in man at first grew dimmer and dimmer To prevent a gross darkness from falling upon the deluded sons of men he would not trust his word alwayes to remain upon the tongues or hands of men but would have it set in a candlestick and writ in tables of stone to remain a perpetual light 2 That it might be keept the●freer from corruption before man grew more stuborn and as they multiplied
all ages held this truth giving the same glory honour worship to all the three persons which they gave to each of them singly How often the Church of England sings glory be to the Father and to the Son c. is known It is the Catholick Doctrine taught by all Reformed Churches both of the late and the former Councell of Helv. Art 6. Art 3 of Bas. Art 1. of Bohem. Art 3 of Fr. Art 1 of Belg. Art 2 of Ausp Art 1 of Wirt Art 1 2 3 of Scot. Art 1. of England Art 1. The Article it self is this There is but one living and true God everlasting without body parts or passions of infinite power wisdome and goodness the maker and preserver of all things both visible and invisible And in Unity of this Godhead there be three Persons of one substance power and eternity The Father the Son and the holy Ghost Quest. 5. Why are Kings and Magistrates called Gods and rebellion said to be like witchcraft in Scripture 1. This Question ariseth from what hath been before spoken for if there be but one God how come the rulers of the Earth to be called Gods Ex. 7.1 Ex. 22.28 Psal. 82.1 Iohn 10.34 35. 1. Gods they are called to teach that such ought to excel others in Godliness and such only are to be chosen that for religion are like Gods among men 2. To encourage them that they ought no more to fear the faces or regard the person of men or to punish the wicked among men then God doth 3. To draw them to his honour he hath given them his own name they are Gods and therefore they ought not to serve the Devil or the world but execute true judegement as God doth 4. To teach their Subjects Obedience there ought to be no grumbling nor murmuring nor rising up against God In distress one may petition to him but further we ought not to go he hath in the hearing of their Subjects given them his own name and thefore they are to honour them accordingly beg petition of him but no further 5. Let us of these nation add one comparison not known to the ancients our British god whom the Heavenly God make in peace glorious and in warre victorious hath only as God one unpardonable sin but one sin which he will never forgive one sin which is unto death he doth not say that we shall pray for it There are some that are thought to sin against the holy Ghost yet possibly do not I am prone to think that Spira sinned not that sin though he charged it upon himself some poor souls through Sauls persecution did blaspheme Christ for whom God might have a pardon Saul might not be guilty of that sin of Regicide so high as to make it a sin unto death for them our King hath mercy Fear might make them to blaspheme majesty repentance may procure them a pardon the others like Witches though repent must die whence flowes the second part of the question Rebellon is either against God Num. 14.9 or his Word Psal. 108.28 of against a King 1 Kings 12.19 Yet when ever it is in nature it is as witchcraft 1 Sam. 15. ●3 We shall consider it in that part that is against Lawfull Kings and Governours the Similitude may stand thus viz. 1 Witchcraft is a direct opposing of the order laws and Statutes that have been enacted by him who is the God of Heaven Rebellion is of his who is a God on earth Witchraft throws off God and is not afraid of his Majesty Rebellion throws off a lawfull Prince and is not carefull of his honour 2 Wichcraft is usually entered upon by a League Compact or Covenant which according to Authors is sometimes privately and sometime visible made with the Devil So Rebellion seldome or never goes without one or both these 3 Witchcraft as we read draws the party to deny that oath that he made with God in Baptisme Rebels if not formally yet virtually renounce those obligations which they made to their King and Soveraign 4 Witchcraft arises often from Malice Envie Discontentedness if God anser nor their mindes or revenge their quarrell they will endevour to do it by Satans assistance if Royal bounty flow not upon the Subject as he would have it he growes angry and will take by Rebellion 5 Witchcraft sometime is followed by pride or curiosity to do some secret and hidden work and to receive some kind of reputation among men Some will turn Conjurers Negromancers and Witches by the same subjects will turn● Rebels and Traitors 6 Witchcraft is followed by some through poverty or covetousness to get a poor living and to help their necessity they will bargain with Sathan Subjects to better their estates purchase wealth will often break out into Rebellion 7 Witches what through Justice guilt fear as we read seldome or never repent some sorrow they may have when they are in the hand of Justice for the same reason Rebels seldom or never repent except or untill they fall in the hands of the Officer and as Witches seldom then 8 Witches first or last meet with judgement much trouble and evil may be made and done by them but at length here or hereafter they are brought to triall they that rebell first or last receive to themselves damnation Rom. 13.2 I will not judge of their eternall estate but fire on earth is usually prepared for them both In Scripture Satan is called a god 2 Cor. 4.4 because of that power given him over the wicked whom God hath not called out of the World The Belly is called a god Phil. 3.9 men spending their time strength parts for its service Idols are called gods not that they are so at all but because Jdolaters have such an opinion of them Quest. 6 What was that Image wherein God made man and why was man created naked God having made man according to his own Image and yet God not being a corporall substance as man how is man made in his Image The likeness of God wherein man was made is Internall or externall 1 Internall that is in his soul where he was like God 1 In knowledge he knew God himself the Creatures his own happiness distinctly clearly fully that is as a creature was capable of Gen. 2.20 23. 1 Rom. 19.20 2 In holiness In him was no sin as in God is no darkness In him there was an ability to have cleaved only to good and exactly to perform what by God was commanded his affections were holy and pure without disorder and without stain and subject perfectly to the rule of right reason 3 In righteousness God could behold nothing in him but what was very good Gen. 1.31 no crookedness but a totall and universall conformity to his own nature purpose and desire law and precept there needed no Mediator between God and man he being upright before him All these three to be inwardly the Image of God appears Ephes. 4.23 24. Col.
we defend that baptisme can only lawfully be Administred by the Gospel Minister thereunto appointed by Apopostolical Ordination For 1. Those only have a commission to baptize who have a visible commission to teach Matth. 28.19 Go ye and teach all nations baptizing them or as it is in the Original Disciple all nations batizing them c. teaching them That the Apostles were outwardly visibly called by Christ though extraordinarily to preach to the world the things concerning the Kingdom of God whereof baptisme is one and after their call that Christ called no other in that exordinary way is clear from Scripture whereof Paul is an eminent instance And that the Apostles might be encouraged in this great work he goeth on saying I am with you alway even unto the end of the world Now the world is not yet ended and Peter and Iames are gone with you therefore must be understood to be meant not of the whole multitude of believers but of them that are outwardly visibly called to preach all things that Christ had commanded in an authoritative way as the Apostles were And as it is said that Kings never dye that is regally and successively though personally they do so the Apostles never dye that is successively though personally they do for to the end of the world so oft as any is visibly and outwardly ordained and commissioned to teach and baptize the Apostles are not dead but alive and Christ prospering and blessing the doctrine of any so ordained in his being with his Apostles that is with them who are outwardly commissioned to teach to the end of the world To the multitude of belevers then was never the power to baptize given because not the power of teaching because not thereunto ordained as hath at large been discovered above unto which for brevity sake the Reader at present is referred 2. The nature of the Ordinance is against it baptisme is a declarative sign of the parties admission into the Church and not only so but an outward sign of the parties inward regeneration and a seal of the covenant of promise a manifestation of the forgiveness of sin Heb. 10.22 Acts 2.38 39. Tit. 3.5 And therefore to be given by none but by them unto whom the power of keeping the seals are given and in no age in no time in no place in no Text did ever God give the power of his seals to a multitude or appointed them to be used by any that ●●d indeed real gifts without an ordinary call even outwardly after the constituting of the Church Stephen Nicanor c. Acts 6.3 though full of the Holy Ghost presume not to exercise the office of Deacons without an ordinary call from the Apostles by imposition of hands the Church being constituted in their Election So Paul and Barnabas though full of worth and eminent in gifts yet must be set apart having given testimony of their abilities by ordination for teaching and baptizing by the Church Acts 13.13 2. Thus also was Timothy set apart for the same work by a Presbytery 1 Tim. 4.14 The baptisme therefore of these Lay persons or gifted brethren whence is it From Heaven or of men if from Heaven shew it from the Apostles for since them Christ ordained and set apart none and we shall believe it if of men let them Repent for the Kingdom of God is at hand or produce the Text that gives power to uncommissioned men purely upon the account of their gifts to exercise the power of the keyes and Administer the seals of the Church and that constantly and then their baptisme shall not be speak against The ability that a man hath to be a Minister is one thing and his putting into the office of the Ministry is another thing Saint Paul thanks God that he had both 1 Tim. 1.12 and we know by the Scriptures he had both by inspiration was he inwardly qualified and by ordination outwardly called he was separated unto the Gospel Rom. 1.1 by fasting prayer with laying on of hands Acts 13.2 3. 3. It is not to be found in all the New Testament implicitely or explicitely that ever any baptized upon the account of their gifts without an outward call from Church officers when those of this perswasion produce a man baptizing in the Church allowed of by the Church upon the account of his gifts then it may be a good argument for him that hath gifts to baptize without a visible commission 4. It would open a door to all irregularity and to all confusion imaginable Once make it lawful for any to baptize upon the account of his gifts we should find that Sacrament to be attempted by many that have no gifts at all what will not arrogance and pride puss men to what will nor ambition cause men to act this doctrine hath taken grace away from some and shame from many each Heretick laying a foundation for a new heresie by this man we are taught that preaching is not tyed to the Gospel Ministery and therefore not baptisme but the spirit that bloweth where it lifteth makes men sitted for that work and by it sufficiently called This being granted by another teaching is not tyed to men but common also with them to women since in Christ there is neither male nor female c. It is time for thee O Lord to work for they have made void thy Law Psal. 119.126 5. It is against the Doctrine of the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 24. Of Bohe. Art 9. Of Pran Art 23. Of Belg Art 30. Of Ausp Art 14. Of Wirtem Art 21. Of Irel. Art 71. Of Scot. Art 22. and of Eng. Art 23. The Article it self is this Article 23. Of the Church of England IT is not lawful for any man to take upon him the Office of publicke Preaching or Ministring the Sacraments in the Congregation before he be lawfully called and sent to execute the same And those we ought to judge Lawfully called and sent which be chosen and called to this work by men who have publicke Authority given unto them in the Congregation to call and send Ministers into the Lords Vineyard SECT VI. Questions Resolved Quest. 1. VVHether Dipping be essential unto Baptisme Quest. 2. Whether Infants ought to be be baptized Quest. 3. Whether Baptisme is or ought to be readministred Quest. 4. Whether witnesses at Baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved Quest. 5. Whether the Cross at Baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved Quest. 1. Whether Dipping be essential unto Baptisme That dipping is lawful is not questioned by the Church of Christ but whether it be essential that is If Baptisme be not Baptisme without it or whether none is or cannot be baptized without he be dipped is the ground of our Quere It is to be denied Dipping is not essential to that Sacrament for 1. The word baptize used in the Scripture for that Sacrament signifies not
commanded his Disciples to baptize before he commanded them to teach according to the order of the words of that Text. It is a rule given us by the Rabbies Non datur prims posterius in Scripturae that being first put in on place which is last in another and contrary Unto the case in hand we find baptizing according to the words going before preaching Mark 1.4 2. They find no express Text for it in Scripture such an Argument as this taught the Traskit to deny the Christian Sabbath but to touch these men nearer home have they any express Text for dipping for preaching upon the account of gifts or administring the Sacraments for spending the first day of the weak in holy exercises for administring the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to women or dipping in a River either naked or in linnen garments when they shew express Text for these and many other things I shall shew them one for Infant Baptisme Yea before For When our Saviour expressly commanded his Disciples to make Disciples of all Nations and baptize them who or what meaned he Whether the Earth or Ground of all Nations or the inhabitants that were upon that ground if them then whether Masters or servants husbands or wives parents or children who can say or dare say that he meaned the one and not the other he meaned all without a peradventure so that there is in this precept as express a command to baptize children as to baptize either men or women grown in years 3. They finde Faith in Scripture required of all as a necessary precedent grace unto baptisme so do we in persons that are grown in years as the Eunuch Cornelius and the Jaylor was but that faith was required of the seed of them that once believed as a grace necessary for baptisme is not yet by them demonstrated nor never shall Our Saviour having a little child before him Mat. 18.6 faith Who so shall offend one of those little ones that believe in m c. This is spoken of all that shall be believers to the end of the world and of all that were about him and of that child also that was in the midst of them so that children cannot be said to be without faith though little ones by which onely God is well pleased If children have no faith in Christ or God then why doe they teach their Children to pray or call upon God as I presume they do since without faith it is a taking the Name of God in vain a sin which they would be thought to make conscience of Briefly when men can make a rope of sand then shall we or themselves be able to make something of their own opinions in reference to this of Infant Baptisme teaching that they are without sin yet see them die that all are born holy ye● some born children of wrath 2 Eph. 3. That Infants belong to the kingdom of God yet have no interest in the Covenant that they are saved though they want faith without which it is impossible to please God to teach them to call God their Father and yet say they are not in Christ by Adoption when these things are reconciled and made to hang together we shall call them a subtile generation 14. It is against the practice of the whole Church of God in all ages and places of the world and at this day contrary to the Doctrine and practise of the Reformed Churcher of Helvet Art 21. of Bohe. Art 12. of Fr. Art 35. of Belg. Art 34. of Ausp Art 9. of Sax. Art 13. of Wirt Art 10. of Swethland Art 17. of Irel. Art 90. of Scot. Art 23. of Engl. Art 27. The Article it self is this Article 27. of the Church of England Baptisme is not onely a sign of Profession and marke of difference whereby Christian men are discerned from others that be not Christned but it is also a sign of Regeneration c. The baptisme of young Children is in any wise to be retained in the Church as most agreeable with the Institution of Christ. Quest. 3. Whether baptisme is or ought to be readministred It hath been the practice of some among us to throw off their first Baptisme and as they suppose receive a new one Yea Papists who though they teach the contrary Doctrine yet sinfully have practised it upon the children of the Reformed Churches but however Baptisme if given in the name of the Trinity by applying water according to the Institution is not to be received twice For 1. It is against the nature sign end and use of that ordinance Baptisme is a visible sign representing a believer to be new born Hence it is called being born of water Iohn 3.5 Now though men eat and drink often and receive the Sacrament of the Supper often that being our food Spiritual yet we are born but once and therefore ought to receive the Ordinance of Baptisme but once that being our Spiritual birth 2. It opens a gap for one great inconvenience He can give no reason of his being twice baptized but the same reason will make him or perswade him to be baptized the third time the fourth time nec decies repetita placebit the twentieth time Whether this doctrine so brief and current among us did rise and spring from the Popish Holy water which they look upon as a dayly baptisme representing the pardon of actual sin is worth inquiring after and a Question would be seriously thought upon by our governours c. 3. Circumcision was not but once to be administred Nay when through ignorance and blinde zeale some of the circumcised would have become uncircumcised by a way not fitting to be named the Apostle commands the contrary 1 Cor. 7.18 but will have them stick to and own their former Circumcision let those that suppose they are inwardly called remember that they become not unbaptized by receiving baptisme anew 4. The sad events of rebaptizing may be a sufficient testimony of the thing now defended what errors wanderings crooked paths unheard of blasphemies of them that are so used our ears hears toe too much and our eyes have sufficient knowledge c. 5. The Reformed Churches of Christ condemn it in their practice and so many as have published their opinions to the world upon that subject have condemned it in their Confessions particularly the Church of Bohe. Art 12. of Fr. Art 35. of Belg. Art 34. of Sax. Art 13. of Hel. Art 20. The Article it self is this Article 20. of the Church of Helvetia There is but one Baptisme in the Church of God For it is sufficient to be once baptized or consecrated unto God for baptisme once received doth continue all a mans life and is a perpetual sealing of our Adoption to us c. Quest. 4. Whether witnesses at baptisme according to the Law of the Church of England be to be approved N cases of indifferency people are not to Question the reason of a Law given them by
constituted these extraordinary calls are no warrant for men in our dayes to assume that office for Christ now and afterwards more plainly appoints them to give power to others for the execution of those things having made it an Ordinance and from them and by them to continue to the end of the world And now as these people have constituted themselves a Church and have in that notion by man or woman received the Ordinances of the Church cast out and took in in the times of a Church long agoe constituted we pronounce them to be no Churches but nurseryes of Faction and prusumptuous Boasters That they are no Churches we shall endeavour to prove so clearly as we hope any indifferent or unprejudiced reader will not long halt between two opinions They appear to be no Churches For 1. They have no Bishops Preists Ministers or Teachers call them what they please deriving their authority from the Apostles of Christ. The Apostles were the masters of our Israel ordained by Christ to preach the Gospel to all Nations and where they Taught they Ordained and appointed Ministers for the Ruling and Governing of that Church and gave them power also to Ordaine others For this cause saies Paul to Titus I left the in Crete the same place now called Candy that thou shouldest set in order things that art wanting and ordain Elders in every City as I had appointed Tit. 1.5 The word Elder in the original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Presbyters or Priests he must ordain Priests he cals them Bishops v. 7. Titus was therefore left in Crete to Ordain Bishops or Priests in every City that the Gospel might be purely taught and the Sacraments administred Thus holy Polycarpus Saint Iohn's Disciple was placed by him in the Church of Smyrna Ignatius that had his name given ab igne charitatis he was also called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as being born of God was the second Bishop of Antioch next Peter For Peter ruled that Church 7. years and afterwards came to Rome An. Christ. 71. The succession of Bishops I would have none offended at the word suppose what other name they will only this is the antient Word from Peter or any other Apostle was a certain sign of a true call into Holy Orders among the Antients Let us suppose a man Ordained by the present Bishop of Canterbury and let it be inquired what power he had to do it he shews it from Abbot Whitgift and so upward for a thousand Years the Records of that Sea being known until you come to Augustin the first Bishop of Canterbury Then ask who gave him power to Ordain for that Office he names you Gregory a holy Catholick Bishop Rome not yet being Antichrist servus Serverum Dei as he called himself He again was Ordained by Pelagius he by Benedictus he by Iohn he by Pelagius the First he by Vigilius he by Sylverius he by Argapetus Anno Christi 535. and so upward for 400. years or more until you come to Alexander the great An. Chr. 121. He was Ordained by Evaristus he by Anacletus he by Clemens he by Cletus he by Linus and he by Saint Peter the Apostle of our Lord the First Bishop of Rome who after he h●d ruled the Church of Antioch 7. year in which City the Apostles and Disciples were first called Christians Acts 11.26 came An. 67 in the 14. Year of Nero the Emperours Reign to Rome by whom he was crucified with his head downwards and all the Bishops after him until Elutherius were put to death by Heathen Emperours for he was the first of 13 Bishops that dyed a naturall death It is said of him Est Primus Episcop●rum Rom●norum qui non perjit morte violenta By this Bishop Lucius who Reigned in England Anno Christi 180. had some knowledge of the faith and Doctrine of the Gospel Bring this succession down again from Peter to Linus from him to Cletus from him to Clemens and so down for 400 years to Gregory who sending Augustin into England set up his Bishops seat first at Dover then removed it as the Gospel prospered unto London whence he was removed to Canterbury where his continued succession remains unto this day In all those places he taught the Gospel and Ordained Priests or Ministers and gave them power to Ordain others Planted Teachers in Winchester York Carlisle and from these again as from fountains came the Authority of Ordination to water other dry parts of the Nation about them and so from age to age was it delivered untill it came upon the Authours head by unquestionable Authority Now let us ask one of these Mechanicks By whom were you constituted and appointed a Church-Officer to exercise the power of the Keys if you say from Christ we deny it for he Ordained none but his Disciples if from his Disciples show or produce your Warrant for Ordination was given to them and by their hands given to others that the succession might be preserved unto the end of the World So Saint Iames the Apostle sate Bishop in the Church of Ierusalem Evodius was Bishop of Antioch next Peter next to him Ignatius and to Theophilus and downward If we had the Register of the Church of Crete in which place Titus was set to Ordain Elders in every City and then ask one By whom were you appointed to dispence the Word and Sacrament and exercise the power of the Keys by such a one he by him and he by him and so you should fal on Titus himself And Timothy who was Ordained by the same Apostle the First Bishop of the Church of Ephesus had a charge in the Epistle sent unto him to commit the Doctrine to faithful men that they might be able to teach others 2. Tim. 2.2 Which Commitment is by laying on of hands that being the Ceremony for translating the power viz. the Authoritative of Teaching from one person to another as afterwards shall be discovered which Commitment Timothy must not be too rash in but weigh and examine what manner of man he is 1 Tim. 5.22 For a Bishop must be blamelesse sober apt to teach 1 Tim. 3.2 Or if it be a Deacon that Tim. so Ordain the lowest authoritative Office in the Church he must be grave 1 Tim. 3.8 Which Office of Deacon-ship if they use well they may be through their faith in God receive a higher Office called a purchasing to themselves a good degree 1 Tim 3.13 Which may truly bear this construction that good degree though a low one shall make them esteemed of God and esteemed so wel of his Church as to make him a Presbyter or a Bishop for that that Office was made a step to that of the Priest-hood is clear both in gospell and Church-History A Deaconship being only a Probationers place for it and according as the Church gave them a Benegessit for the one they received the degree of the other But what authority had Timothy to
and it is an errour so to believe and all that are of this judgement are Sons of God This is distinguished from the rest by the name Denkian he speaks out aloud that all may hear him that all the Devils and all the damned Soules shall at last be brought out of Hell and reign with God in glory This is called a Benckeld●an Polygamy he affirmes to be permitted in the Gospel of Christ it is a mighty holy thing to have many Wives You must note that it is the proper Language of every one of those severall Sects arising from the Spawn of this creature wherein also they inveigh against and are ashamed each of other but yet there is one Roman speech that is used by all these together and is the Dialect of them all in common Well we may cal it their mother tongue since we know she who suckled them taught them also to speak They hold it unlawfull to take an Oath before the civil Magistrate though lawfully called thereunto and hold it not unlawfoll to cut the throat of that Magistrate holding it a sin in any man to be a Magistrate most of them believe an earthly Monarchy after the day of Judgement and free will in spirituall things and account themselves onely the true Church They rebaptise and deny Baptisme to Infants maintain that there is no original sin with all Heresies more that have but a tendency to the overthrowing of all Kingdoms Nations Churches Common-wealths and States as hath been made manifest to the world by those that were eye-witnesses of their helish prancks murtherous deeds Blasphemous speeches Treasonable attempts unheard of cruelties unparalleld Villanies sacrilegious spoilings and Antichristian undertakings when by pretended Religion they had obtained to play the Devils in Germany and Munster An. 1520. at which time and in which place these severall Monsters appeared all of them in their proper colours for you must observe they discover not themselves further then occasion and toleration wil permit them but enough of this be●st Here is a Creature that will even make you cold to behold him though it self be very hot he is known by the name of Quaker he will prophesie at every turn hearing the Word reading the Word and preaching of the Word and receiving the Sacraments as seals of the Word is but hanging upon the Tree of knowledge So long as thou keepst him thou needst no Chaplain and when he goes away believe him and thou shalt sentence all outward worship as Antichristian In conclusion he will teach thy Wife to preach for nothing and having once learned it must be something that will make her hold her peace Now take your choice here is a Religion for every month in the year and I am prone to suppose that thy Grand-father was never so well stocked Yet to keep all fast Accept of this Hethernigonian he is a dapper fellow he will vow and maintain that the Doctrine of the Church of England is no true doctrine particularly because it teacheth that all men are sinners and for keeping but one Sabbath day in the Week or any Sabbath day at all since all days are and ought to be Sabbaths And lest thou shouldst be at any loss he wil carve you out a dainty Wainscoat box to put all thy other Religions in And indeed it is time to shut up for these foul Vermin are hurtfull to my own sight these wild beasts of prey have troubled the Church and must 1 Cor. 11.19 Were it not that I know the smell of these Foxes is good against the palsie I had not given my Reader this Present as an Antidote against the unsteadinesse of this age in which as the wild beasts in Africa meeting at the Waters engender with each other by which new Monsters are constantly begotten even so in this age by the meetings of Separatists and Hereticks there is such a mixture of Serpentine seed cast into the Matrix of itching ears keeped warm by the fair out-side of it's begetters brings forth in time monstrous Opinions and shapelesse births which after a little licking into form as it is said of the Wolf receives a name or mark of distinction yet differing in nature from those that were born before it no otherwise then a young Fiend doth from an old Devill My soul come not thou into their secrets and to their Assemblies mine honour be not thou united Each of these and all of these giving themselves out for the only true Church where should that soul once stand that enters in among them but as one groweth out of the sides of another becomes treacherous to its own body and calls upon all within hearing to hear onely that and each hollowing Come to me the poor creature must needs stand amazed and either come back into the Catholick whence he came which is seldom done or be of no Church or Religion at all which is often The Brownist he is of the spawn of the Anabaptist on one side and the Quaker comes from him upon another from the Quaker grows the Ranter who absolutely affirms that there is neither God nor Devil Hell nor Heaven and this is to go below a Heathen and deny the Faith held of Infidels It is said that Mercury could not shape a suit of clothes for the Moon in regard she was never of one bigness so neither can we so variable are they in Doctrine name them Churches each of them holding private points contradicted by another onely agreeing against the Catholick Doctrine of the Church of England like the three Brethren at the Siege of Ierusalem by Titus who agreed all against him yet had divers Battels fought in the Town between themselves It is no safe ground to bottom a mans salvation upon the Catholick Faith is the same in all Ages it is for the present what from the beginning it was and shall be at the end of the world what for the present it is it hath stood and will stand though the powers of Hell rally up against her there is but one Lord one Faith one Baptism and they remain ever the same let us therefore ever remain where they are taught not once turning aside to the ●●ocks of the companions Cant. 1.7 5. Should we Church this rabble-rout as they have formed themselves at the same instant we must have strange and blasphemous thoughts both of Christ and his Apostles Did not Christ promise ●hat he would send his Spirit and that he should guide his Church into all truth Iohn 16.13 for if these be true Churches then Gods Church even the whole body of the faithfull hath for sixteen hundred years been lead into dangerous and fundamental Errors Then the Apostles have given wrong judgement in necessary points of Faith and contrary to the will of God have made Laws in his Church Unfaithfull have they been in several deep points to the Church that would no● once inform her that no member of her body but might at his
whose riches were from pill●ging of the goods burning the houses and murthering the persons of those that were not of an Anabaptistical spirit This Kings Title was The King of Iustice the King of the new Ierusalem he erected a Throne of great cost and coyned Money with this Motto Verbum car● factum quod habitat in nobis By this Kings Regall Authority Divorces were frequently made as men grew weary of their Wives all books burned but the Bible all Churches rifled demolished and as from God performed blood sighs tears was only to be seen and heard in this Kings Reign At a feast he gave the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to the Number of 4000. but accusing one of Treason you must note he was a King between them cut off his head himself and with bloody hands consecrated the Elements administring the bread one of his Queens following him delivered the cup. I long to make an end of this Monarch he came in a few days to be tyed to a stake by two Executioners with two hot pincers was his flesh torn from his bones in Munster where his most Sacrilegious Majesty had acted and enacted unhe●rd of Villany This Sacrilegious King was not without Rebellious Subjects which the German Princes by burning drowning killing not for their consciences but for their ●reaso●●●tte● and hell●sh acts put an end to them At which time 〈…〉 of them into England for shelter A. 1535. 〈…〉 were burned and o●hers made to recant yet some 〈…〉 ●slily carrying them-themselves did live and became the 〈◊〉 Father of the Brownist Mr. Robert Brown of Northamptonshire venting their Doctrine in a Saw-pit first near Islington obtained Proselytes three years afterward he Recanted his errour and took Orders becoming a faithfull Teacher of the Doctrine of the Church of England though his Disciples remained as thorns in her sides they did somwhat refine the Doctrine of the German Anabaptists and continuing a separation did bring forth that Creature whom we call an Anabapist who must own the Quaker for his first born and all those by-opinions and fancies taught by the whole Rabble of Phanaticks must be acknowledge to grow out of his Roots and are sprigs of the Tame branch all of them being quickned with the same Sap or Spirit of their German Father who by a pretended humility and s●ow of Godlinesse got into the affections of the Vulgar which ceased not untill they had put them in the throne which deservedly brought them to the stake I have heard of a Welch-man that being condemned to be hanged by the neck called aloud O good my Lord hang her not by the neck her Father was hanged by the neck and her dyed Let our English Anabaptist remember that Her Father was burned at a stake and hanged by the neck for Treason Her Prince Prophet Her King and all Except I say this King they had never a Nursing Father So far hath it been from all Nations coming in unto it that if these be true Churches they have never had a village to boast of If these be true Churches there are more Churches then one and so the unity of the Church must be denied and consequently there must be more Christs then one Christ is the head of the Church Ep. 1.22 and the Church is his body Why because all the members move according to that life that is communicated unto them from the head Now this rabble hath not one Spirit nor one life neither do they preach all one kind of faith therefore there must be diversity of heads to give life to these several bodies consequently if they be Churches there must be divers Christs to quicken those severall Churches which destroy the unity of the Godhead in Trinity the consent Harmony and agreement of Prophets and Apostles and the unity of the Catholick Church on earth and before that be done let us condemn those segregated meetings for those that separate themselves sensual having not the spirit Iud. 19. Whence the Catholick faith came we know how old it is we know it hath Seniority over and above all other Doctrine as truth hath over error i● is of the same standing with the Creation And though heresie hath and must closely follow it yet it was before them the Wheat is first sowed and then the Tares Such is Sathans hast that he begun to lye at the beginning yet from the beginning lyes were not but truth Not to speak of those Heresies that were in the Church before the Time of our Saviour in his time there were those that denied the Resurrection and the being of Angels and Spirits Matth. 22.23 Acts 23.8 Most of those grand Heresies that troubled the Church by false Doctrine the time they came in the Authors that broached them are known by name and the occasion of their so doing is also known not so the Catholick faith We must know that all new lights that now shine are but the stinking snuffs of those old Heresies that were extinguished by the powerful breath of the Catholick Doctrine blown in again by the envious breath of him that fights against the Church and her seed and may be reduced to the same causes that before they of old were kindled by and may be reduced to these heads 1 Envy and discontentednesse when men could not get into those places that either their merit did not deserve or their ambition thought they were worthy of then to revenge themselves like Corah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.1 they rose up against the Governours of the Church and rebelled against Catholick truth It was this that made Arius rise and swel like a great Sea to overthrow the faith of Christ. An. 310. for not being chosen Bishop of Alexandria of which he was a Deacon when Achillas the Bishop thereof dyed and Alexander a man he thought not so deserving as himself chosen in the place presently he set himself to oppose Episcopal dignity and such Doctrine as plagued the Church for almost three hundred years together purely because he could not be a Bishop whose Doctrine though condemned by 318 Bishops A. 325. gathered together at Nice at the command of the good Emperour Constantin the great is revived again in our Socinians Anabaptists c. for want of discipline in our Church And truly that hideous damp that came upon the Church of England in these last years had it's rise from the same ground viz. from the mouths of those men that were extended in a large measure for the receiving of a Mitre which not coming they vented their ill-favoured breath in the very faces of them that through desert wore it envying the glory that others had because they themselves had but Ordinary respect This made M. M. a principall Pres. break out into extravagancy he Petitioning the King for a Deanry and afterward for a Bishoprick getting neither strove as the King told to undo and overthrow all So D. T. an earnest Suitor for the Deanry of Salisbury or
near as hot as hell he must believe the least point of Reliques with as strong a faith as the greatest mysteries of the God-head and if he deny any of the former he is no lesse an Heretick then if he had denied the latter and he that believes not the Churches tradition to be as necessary to be believed as the Epistles of Paul he cannot be saved Indeed there is not an Article of the Church of Rome that is Catholick wherein reformed Churches differ from her but in those Articles that are but of Yesterday such as those above mentioned they stand at a distance praying for her but loth to touch her she being not sick of a small Ague but hath running sores Ulcers Infections Pestilential humours within her which makes them write over her as if she were visited Lord have mercy upon her but dare not make themselves one body with her H. The Apologist of the Church of England declares That we have Renounced that Church wherein we could not have the Word of God sincerely taught being mixed with tradition nor the Sacraments rightly administred the one half of the Lords Supper being but given to the people and Baptisme being given to Bells c. Nor the Name of God duly called upon praying to the Saints and Angels and in a Latin tongue which the people understand not To conclude we have forsaken the Church viz. of Rome as it is now not as it was in old time past c. and come to that Church viz. of England wherein all things be governed purely and Reverendly This overthrowing of the foundation thou maist call Heresie in d●ctrine Yet by caution take not the manners of the people for doctrine let the people be what they will the man what he pleaseth it is neither the good lives of men nor the bad lives of men that makes or unmakes Churches but false and corrupted doctrine Much loosenesse was in the Church of Corinth and Prophanenesse partic●larly about the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet the Apostle gives no ground at all for separation only exhorts to a more orderly peaceable walking and a more holy and prepared celebration Neither must we take things indifferent for doctrine nor every blemish for fundamentall Heresie It is an errour in our age to take Circumstances and outward Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship There was much corruption in the Church of the Jews in our Saviours time and much false glosses put upon the Law yet in regard the fundamentals were not razed he commanded his disciples to hear even the Pharisees who yet were thieves and robbers being none of those appointed to expound the Law which justified not their manner of teaching but the truth of the doctrine taught who sate in Moses chair Matth. 23.1 2 3. but gives them a Caveat to beware of the practices and leven of the Pharisees that is hearken and obey to those truths and fundamental precepts that they give out teach to be in my Fathers Law first taught by Moses as cirumcision the way and manner of the Sacrifices which in the Jewish Church were necessary points but refuse those things they lay down as from tradition as Corban washing of cups for not these but the other are commanded you to do Moreover you must be sure not to separate your selves from those who possibly are ignorant of the depths of Sathan in that particular doctrine delivered for Christ pities such and speaks comfortably to them Revel 2.4 nor from others whom you can perceive in the least to disown that corrupted doctrine though privately being troubled at the razeing out of necessary principles How many poor souls are led away from the truth by those that creep into houses in our days that are ignorant possibly of the designes of their prime Teachers following them as much as the people followed Absolon viz. in the simplicity of their heart these giving great encouragement to those that so teach makes them bolder to go on against the unity of the faith showing the Number of their Disciples loving to hear those Doctrines that either add to or take from the infallible and unalterable rule of the Word in both which the Church of Rome is erroneous and therefore the separation from her justifiable 2. We may lawfully separate our selves from a Church when she enjoyns those acts of worship as necessary not enjoyned by Christ when a Church preacheth corrupted doctrine as from God we may separate from her so may we nay so ought we to do when she injoyns false worship to be performed to God whether it be in worshipping him after a false manner or giving another besides him true worship Deut. 10.20 This is another cause of the reformed Churches separation from Rome their Beads their Ave Maries their Fastings a great part of worship with them their praying to Saints as those that have the plague must pray to St. Rochus those that have the tooth-ache to Apollonia those that are poysoned to Saint Iohn those that are in Captivity to Saint Leonard those that have the Fistul● to Saint Quintin Women that are in labour must pray to Saint Margaret but especially to the Virgin Mary besides those common prayers that you must make in common to all the Saints and to the Angels also must prayer be made There is a little Book published by the Authority of Pope Pius the V. in which almost at the beginning that all might prosper the better you have this Prayer Precibus meriti● beatae Mariae semper Virginis omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad Regna Coelorum The Summe of which Prayer is this that God would be pleased to lead bring the Petitioner unto Heaven by the intercession praers and merits of the blessed Virgin and of all the Saints I do wonder that Christ should be left out by whose merits and intercession alone we are saved but I marvail most whether all these shall be a distinct Company by themselves for of the whole company of the Virgins they cannot be the foolish Virgins had no Oyle the wise had but enough to save themselves where is there any of their merits then left for me yet this is better then Tu per Thomae sanguinom c. These with many more of the like nature as praying for the Dead offering or burning up of incense praying in an unknown Tongue that common people know not what they pray their Ordination of the Hoast their holy water their penance their Pilgrimages their oyl or Chrisme sal● and spittle used in Baptism was the cause of that separation made from her by the reformed Churches these points and this kind of worship being not Catholick for as before they separate not from Rome in any point of worship that she holds in Common with the Ch●rch of Christ but these being brats of her own begetting they deny them entertainment or Countenance and separate themselves from her and their separation is justifiable
yet converted but to places wherein the Gospel is by law established and the ordinances by law defended In such places constantly to preach without authority from the Church or charge of the soules he preaches to seemes not at all convenient for 1 Preaching is not only necessary for the Churches good the Administration of Sacraments is also to be observed and many things may occurre by providence necessary to be done for the Churches edification which such a one is not able to performe 2 It may breed an occasion of difference between the setled Minister and his people he that hath both authority from the Church and Charge of the peoples soules may by this person secretly be brought out the affections of the people there may be diversity of gifts one of them in speech may be bold the other in doctrin more found one eminent in prayer the other more powerfull in preaching this may open a door of division and be a fire-ball of contention between them 3 It gives too much liberty to passion no face so fair but there may be found some blemish no heart so holy but may have some lust no man so upright but sometimes may halt no preacher so sound but may preach errours Now to suffer one constantly to exercise his faculty of preaching among a people if he have erroneous tenets he may freely utter them having no engagement against them though he by the law of the Church should be made to recant or leave off preaching yet those whom he corupted might never be reduced to order Mr. Brown of Northhamptonshire who was the Father of the Brownists though he renounced his errour and took orders from the Church of England yet those whom he had subverted would never reform It is good therefore to prevent the worst that men oblige themselves to that form of doctrin by law established which will make them rather study to defend it then for the pleasure of any to pick a quarrel with it 4. It is none of those ways that God hath ordained for the building up of his Church such a constant Preacher can never be designed for the work of the Ministry for they are Apostles Prophets Evangelists which had extraordinary calls for that purpose and are now gone or Pastors or Teachers which have ordinary calls and to this day remain Ephes. 4.11 These men therefore having no call that is ordinary and the extraordinary themselves confess they want we may conclude to be none of those that God hath appointed for the carrying on of the work of the Gospel in a publick way 5. By the experience and relation of the aged such tolleration made faction and gave shelter to untained spirits when men would not through wilfulness and peevishness conform themselvs to the Laws of the Church by good and found advice established they were then protected under the notion of Lecturers who to please unsetled heads and some fond persons could inveigh at liberty against the Government ecclesiastical and when Law did lay hold upon them then call out persecution persecution In a word we say he that hath an unchast wife is to keep fast his back-door so those that would have the house of the Church freed from the doctrine of Incendiaries had best keep a bolt upon this Postern gate and suffer none to reach without either of the two things before mentioned Quest. 5. Whether he that is a Gospel-Teacher may lawfully own civil Titles of Honour There are spirits and they would be thought holy that are offended if a Preacher be called Lord and there are others they are near of kin that are angry if he be called Master however both may lawfully be done and owned by a Church-Officer 1. From the dignity of their office they are Masters in Israel and Doctors of the Law they are in high places and to them is committed such great power that Whom they bind on earth are bound in heaven an● whom they loose on earth are loosed in heaven Mat. 18.18 Unto whom God hath committed such great power they may have honourable titles given them conformable to that power 2. From the acceptance of it by former Prophets and practise of it under the Gospel Elijah was a Prophet yet he could hear Obadiah say unto him Art thou that my Lord Elijah 1 Kings 18.7 and not be angry Obadiah feared the Lord greatly verse 3. and his religion taught him to give honourable titles to Gods Messengers and the Messenger takes them without a check yea that these or such were the common Titles of Teachers by those that feared God may appear by these instances The Sunamite coming and falling down at the feet of Elisha Did I desire a son of my Lord and yet she is not reproved 2 Kings 4.28 neither is Elisha to be thought proud in receiving it Nichodemus came to our Saviour with the title of Rabbi and our Saviour owned him for a Master of Israel Iohn the Baptist is called Rabbi Iohn 3.2 10.26 and his Disciples call Christ by the name of Rabbi which is to say Master 1 Iohn 38. These titles being mutually given and taken by such makes it not unlawfull to receive the same titles of respect and honour now 3. From the Laws of the land if the King who is the fountain of honour put such a peece of Honour whether by Patent or otherwise upon any Church-officer there is there is nothing in the Scripture that contradicts the lawfulness of its receiving Ministers will sometimes own upon the same account the title of an Esquire why may not another own the title of Lord 4. Them that are against that sinless practise they are such as would be very well pleased if there were no Church-officer to be called a Lord that they might lord it over their lands and tenements yea would never be angry at the title if they could obtain it themselves and they who would not have them to be called Masters are such as would have them trod under foot and be Masters of their Pulpits considering this denial of theirs or anger of theirs against these titles is the less with wise men to be regarded Touching that place of Scripture against exercising Lordship Mark 10.42 As it takes not away authority out of the King of the Gentiles hands so neither doth it make it unlawfull for a Church-Officer to be called Lord so he lords it not in a tyrannical and oppressive way that Text purely teaching humility and love and yet we know of late dayes none was more tyrannical none more exercised unlawfull authority nor lorded it over the Clergy then those meek Lambs yet wild foxes that refused to be called Lords As for that place urged against a Ministers being called Master Mat. 23.8 9 10. where our Saviour condemns the Scribes and Pharisees for using of it who were not worthy of it in regard it blew them up with pride when they understand those words going before Call no man Father they
Christians duty at fit times and opportunities to instruct and teach the ignorant in matters of faith and doctrine yet it is not unlawful but oftentimes expedient even for believers to meet and in their meetings to make merry each with other Seeing 1 Samson that man of God at his marriage feast proposeing Riddles a usual peece of mirth for his companions to answer in which sport he begun yet the spirit of the Lord was withhim Iudg. 14.12.19 2 God threa●nes the remove all of natural or carnal mirth from a nation Ier. 7.34 now God threatening it as a judgment shews that to enjoy it is a gift of God and a mercy from him and therefore may be used 3 The want of ●irth is greatly lamented by the prophets Isa. 24.11 many judgments were lamented and that the mirth of the land was gone is not forgotten as a sore one 4 Our Saviour graced mirth by honouring a wedding with his presence Iohn 2.2 and both scriptrue and experience restifie that marriages are attended with mirth whether Saint Iohn was the● bridgegroome as some suppose I know not but both he and his fellow disciples were at the feast which might Justify mirth even in the best for we always find gladnesse annexed to that ordinance of mariage Ier. 7.34 16 9. 25.10 Isa. 62.5 5 Our Saviour graced mirth by makeing it the ground and bottome of severall parables Luk. 15.6 9 25 29 32. In which places he sets out that joy that is in Angels for the conversion of sinners from death or from their errors by that mirth that it was meet parents should make or men and women did make for the recovery of their goods or children 6 The refreshment that it yeelds to the body whereby the soul is more quickned and enlivened even for the service of God seemes to approve its lawfullnesse we must remember that the body is the Instrument by which it runs speaks and acts and if it be not looked after the soul may have a good will and a good arme yet it will never do much without a good and chearfull body which like a sharp axe shall make a quicker and a better dispatch of any businesse she undertakes Mirth is oftentimes like physick taking away those corrupt melancholy humours which otherwise might infest the whole body and that would produce no good effect unto the mind As men cannot always be in the mount with God so neither can they ever be in the valley of Baca which made God give his people those solemn times of Feasting of which we have spoken before wherein they did eat heir meet with gladnesse and made great mirth Nehe. 8.12 That place Ephe. 5.4 against fea●ting makes nothing against this truth For ● if we joyn it to the words going before we may understand foolish ●esting which in the scripture ●ence is wicked jeasting and this is not at all pleaded for Or 2 The word translated jea●●ing is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scu●●ilily that is bi●ing jeasts such as a have teeth such as tend to a main disgrace shame or dishonour which who so doth is rather a scoffer then a jeaster To conclude this Question recreation● mirth sports in themselves are not sinfull but according as they are used and being done according to these following qualifications may irreproverbly be used 1 If they be such as are not against the Law of God It is not fit out of mirth to put a woman in the attire of a man or a man in that of a woman D. ●t 22.5 or either of these in the shape of a beast 2 If they be not against the Law or customes of the place we live in 3 If we spend not too much time in them recreation like a whetstone may put an edge to the soul but like the same if we continue long in it it may make it the more blunt In this case a whet and away 4 If they be such as answer to the end of recreation which is a refreshing of the mind Whether it be by presenting some pleasant object before it to behold as wit and harmlesse jeasts historical passages or artificiall musick or by giving it some slight yet serious imployment as that harmlesse sport of riddles c. which makes that by many dice are condemned there being nothing in that but purely a shaking of the elbow 5 If mens hearts be not too much upon them to be pondering over night what recreation men may goe to the morrow if frequent may call in question the lawfullnesse of that act to spend dayes and nights in it is not good to spend the morning in it is not safe he hath no right to recreation nor title to refreshment that was never weary and we ought to know that sleep it self is a refreshment recreation often like Wine is not convenient in a morning 6 If mens ends be good in following of them this indeed makes some generally condemn all sorts of plays in as much as for l●cre sake they give themselves to these divertisments which is their fault not rhine at cheffe therefore or tables to mind more out own refreshment then our Brothers money cannot make the playing unlawfull or if it be determined that the gaines be spent in a civill orderly neighbourly way for the upholding of Charity it is not blame worthy for a man in those games to ●be● as deligent and watchfull● as possibly for the freeing of himselfe yet ever honest without hurting his Brother Quest. 3 Whether the conferences or private meetings lately used in England were agreeble to the power of godlinesse This question reacheth not the doctrine handled in these private meetings but to the practise of them whether such things as were done in them or came from them were to be endured In doing of which I shall not present the Reader with the half of what I know but yet give him two or three reasons for the denying of the question 1 They seemed to be and indeed were great occasions of pride and puffing up When Doctors and learned Preachers must as it were study a week to give every fond boy and ratling woman an answer to her fond and foolish Question gave great occasion for them to conceit highly of their own parts and in time they grew up to that degree of knowledge that they were even above that ordinance of conference and many of those that tarryed with them● thought themselves being of such a ones Church the only Saints and all others highly prophane as is as well known as we knew the men that were of those congregations 2 They very much conduced to sow division and discord in the Church of Christ. They made themselves and looked upon themselves as Churches distinct from others making people shake off that minister who by Law was set over them and own only him for their pastour whose meeting they came to the others were but as wolves and not to be regarded and that pastour again
part of the substance of that Sacrament for when the Minister dipping the infant in water or laying of water upon the face of it hath pronounced these words I baptize thee in the name of the Father c. the infant is fully and perfectly baptized so as the sign of the Cross being afterwards used doth neither adde any thing to the vertue or perfection of baptisme nor being omitted doth detract any thing from the effect and substance of it 2. It is apparent in the Common Prayer book that the infant babtized is by vertue of baptisme before it be signed with the sign of the Cross received into the Congregation of Christs stock as a perfect member thereof and not by any power ascribed unto the sign of the Cross. So that for the very remembrance of the Cross which is very precious to all them that rightly believe in Jesus Christ and in the other respects mentioned the Church of England hath retained still the sign of it in baptisme following herein the primitive and Apostolical Churches and accounting it a lawful outward Ceremony and honourable badge whereby the infant is dedicated to the service of him who dyed upon the Cross as by words used in the book of Common Prayer it may appear Lastly The use of the sign of the Cross in baptisme being thus purged from all Popish superstition and errour and reduced in the Church of England to the primary institution of it upon those true rules of doctrine concerning things indifferent which are consonant to the word of God and the judgements of all the Ancient Fathers we hold it the part of every private man both Minister and others reverently to retain the true use of it prescribed by publick authority considering that things of themselves indifferent do in some sort alter their nature when they are either commanded or forbidden by a lawfull Magistrate and may not be omitted at every mans pleasure contrary to the Law when they be commanded nor used when they are prohibited The usual Objection against this harmless Ceremony is this Viz. what need is there of it but if Magistrates should not establish Lawes until every one of their Subjects were rationally convinced of their necessity when should there be Lawes made and many that makes this a sufficient Argument against the Crosse in Baptisme may remember that when they had power and fate at the Helm there were many things commanded of which we might have said What need they To conclude what ever is established by lawful Magistrates we are not to inquire the Reason of it Reason and Religion commanding us to obey without all Dispute for the Lords sake There being many things in the Church of Christ of themselves low and poor yet in regard of others so necessarie that she may say of them as our Saviour said of the Asse The Lord hath need of them Courteous Reader THis following Chapter was not so fully Preached as here handled in regard that the Iniquitie of the Times wherein these things were taught would from this chiefly have concluded the Preachers Malignancy whereby he should have been Crucified by an Ordinance By vertue of that Rule estote prudentes Matthew 10.16 it was passed over in a few words and they so clouded that it might have appeared the Preacher was not willing to be throughly understood CHAP. III. Of Confirmation THis is not here handled as a Sacrament but is placed as the space between the Font and the Table it being a most solemn Ordinance that the Baptized as in the ancient Churches was to be partaker of before he might be admitted to the Sacracrament of the Lords Supper Before we go any further it is necessary to speak something touching the rise of this word Confirmation in the Church which was briefly this In the Primitive Church when there were any persons wiling to imbrace the Christian Faith whether Iewes or Infidels they were not by and by admitted into the Priviledges of the Church but by certain ●teps or degrees set their foot therein 1. By hearing they were admitted to the hearing of the Word taught Catechized or Expounded which was common to them with men of all kinds whether Christians or not yet these were more particularly regarded by the Church and were called Audientes 2. By Catechizing having heard in common with others some grounds of the true faith and liked it they were after admitted in ● peculiar way and performing some Ceremony were admitted both to hear and see more in the Church then the Audientes were had the Principles of Religion taught them by eminent men purposely thereunto appointed who were called Catechista and their Disciples Catechum●ni Hence it is said that Theophilus is said to be instructed or as the word Originally is Catechized in the things of Christ 1 Luke 4. 3. By requesting that is having been Catechized and making good progress in the Christian principles and desireing to be owned as professors of the same they desired and required the Sacrament of baptisme which they did by giving in their names to the officers of the Church forty dayes before Easter that and Whitsunday being the publick dayes appointed by the Church for baptizing the Catechumeni and in regard of their number these two dayes being insufficient they set the two days following each of the former for that service apart from this giveing in their names they were called competentes quia nomina dederunt ad baptismum eum simul petebant 4. By baptizing after this upon the aforesaid dayes they were brought to the font or Baptistery and publickly and severally asked Credis in D●um Patrem Believest thou in God the Father c. the party said Credo c. So was baptized and called hence baptizati and looked upon as Members of the body of Christ yet incompleate and imperfect that is weak Christians being newly born 5. By confirming that is having been baptized and so owned as visible Members of the Church they were brought before the Bishop or chief Officer of the place and before him openly making a declaration of his faith and resolution to walk in the same was confirmed by a solemn calling upon God in prayer unto which was annexed the outward sign of imposition of hands by the Bishop that God would strengthen and confirm the baptized in that faith wherein he was baptized and whereof he had made profession after which prayer and imposition of hands he was declared a perfect Church Member that is fitted for the receiving of all Church priviledges particularly the Sacrament of the supper unto which the Church in this had a peculiar respect which is a great confirmer of the faith of the Saints Hence they were called Fideles and were of full age men in Christ Iesus and received Imposition of hands signifying that the Lord blessed them ut pleni Christiani inveniantur This is confirmation and laid down by the Apostle as a Christian Principle
at Westminister November 4.1548 and being by them perused after thanks returned to the King for his care and pains he is petitioned to let it passe unto an act and by Authority it was enacted that in all Churches and Chappels Sacraments and all other ordinances within the compasse of that bock should be performed solely and wholy by it appointing penaltys to the not users or defamers of the same It might very well be Inquired considering the premisses and our practises whether a set for me may not be as necessary in our days as it was in those considering how various men are in their form manner place or gesture in the administration of ordinances not that I would have mens gifts hindered but their spleen rancour and rage stopped unto which well composed for me would be a proper remedy which truly as it is to be suspected is the cause why a forme is by many called down knowing that it would cut be their extravagant notions their abilitye and parts being neither so high nor so great but a liturgy might be used by them but to let them passe The compilers of the Book of Common-prayer were Doct. Cranmer Arch Bishop of Cant. Doct. Goodrick Bishop of Ely Doct. Skip Bishop of Hereford Doct. Thirlby Bishop of Westminster Doct. Day Bishop of Chichester Doct. Holbeck Bishop of Lincolne Doct. Ridley Bishop of Rochester Doct. May Deane of Pauls Doct. Taylour Deane of Lincolne Doct. Heynes Dean of Exeter Doct. Redman Dean of Westminster Doct. Cox King E●wards Almoner Doct. Mr. Robinson Arch-Deacon of Leinest All these being then owned for sound professors of the faith afterward great sufferers by death exile or banishment for their not yeelding to the errors of the Church of Rome Shall their work be thought to be unlawfull which after much deliberation they composed for the edification of the Church were they difstracted or mad or Hypocrites that they should thus put down and erect Popery For all the zeal of the Guisel before Latimer shall be accused as a Papist let him be indicted for an Atheist he that so says fearing neither God nor regarding man had that holy soul no religion when he gave his body to be burned I do now imagine I smell Cranm●ns flesh burning through the Cruelty of the Papists and let my right hand forget her cunning if I should not rather kisse the straw he lay upon and bow to th● chain he was fastened to the stake by then kick the ashes he was burned to or condemn him for a cheat a dissembler for a Papist which consequentially must be affirmed when that book of Common prayer is reviled and ●corned and as Popish asserred 2. This book of Common-prayer appears to be lawfull from that autho●ity by which it hath been established It is strange that that young Iosiah of England viz King Edward studying to root out Popery should so farre befoole himself and his counsel as to be glad at that bookes compiling if it had strength●ned the Papal power was there nor a wise man in all the Parliaments of his time was there no religion in Q● Elizabeth was she such a notorious dissembler as under a pretence of throwing the doctrine of Rome aside would hug the Pope the closser in her armes or if she had been such was there never a holy man nor a religious Parliament in her time to rectifie that abuse ● was King Iames and his Parliaments all out of the way and King Charles of glorious memory and his Parliaments all Papists or Ignoramuses that they knew not what they did when they established this book Certainly those glorious Princes and wise Parliaments in establishing successively that book did find in it nothing that was unlawfull or that was contrary to true Godlinesse 3. From its conformity to sacred Scripture Let the Common-prayer be abserved and the matter of it be marked and bring it to the Bible Old or new Testament to Moses the Proph●ts or the Psalms and if there be a word sentence petition or prayer that is not agreeable to either of these all of these or a part of these the Author of these lines at this present engages himself to recant publickly what either here or elsewhere he hath written in defence of that book and become a proselyte to the profession of the Guisels In the book of Common prayer there are two things considerable 1. The matter of it 2. The Ceremonies in it 1. The matter or subject of the book of which it is composed to passe over scripture is either 1. Holy songs 2. Pious prayers 3. Godly exhortations 4. Christian confession 5. Scriptural Comminations Which may be again subdevided into 1. The Priests Versicles 2. The Peoples Responses In all which there is nothing but what is agreeable to holy writ and the will of God revealed in his Scriptures The Ceremonies in it which are those particular gestures or acts to be performed in the administration of such and such particular services and they are cheifly these 1. The crosse in Baptisme 2. Kneeling at the Supper 3. The Preists standing at the north side of the table at the communion 4. Marrying with a ring 5. Standing at the Creed In giveing obedience unto which ceremonys there is no more scripture to prove it a sin then there is to maintaine it unjust to be thrice asked in a Church before marriage as the Guisels in their directory enjoyn or to be married by a minister which there by them is also thought to be expedient 4. From the sutablenesse of it to the Common Christians capacity The service of the Church of Rome were it not repugnant in other points to the word of God yet in this it is sinfull that it is performed in a strange tongue which the common sort of Christians understand not In the Church of England there is no ordinance no service but the exhortations thanksgiveings and confessions therein are all of them so plain so easy that the bluntest understanding may reach them and the shallowest capacity may upon a certain knowledge say Amen So be it unto them all 5. From the agreements of it to the set formes of other Churches to those of Geneva Sweden France yea to the Church of Rome so farre as they are agreeable to scripture and to those formes that were of old used and at this present are in the Easterne Church doth the sevice of the Church of England agree and correspond an argument of it self were there no other of its excellency and dignity the wise composers of it having drained the errours from all other formes and thrown away what ever was a misse in other liturgys retaining what was pure and holy agreeable to found doctrine and religion which being methodicall digested and composed was presented to the King and ratified by Parliament as a standing rule to be used in the house of God which is the Church 7. F●om the excellent order and uniformity that is in the
be taken Quest. 1. Whether swearing be an ordinance of or under the Gospel There are them that live about us and among us who denies that swearing is any part of Gospel worship and therefore though called thereunto refuse least they should sin but erroneously For 1. Swearing was no part of the Ceremonial law but used long before Moses and the ends of it are morall and therefore it is not abolished by the death of Christ. 2. It is prophesyed that the Church of the Gentils shall swear by the Lord and by the God of truth Isa. 65.16 Ier. 4.16 Implying that whereas they did swear by Baal and other false gods they should by knowledge be brought from that Idolatry and give that point of worship to the God of Heaven who alone is the true God 3. By a holy Apostle it is frequently done even by him who was an eminent preacher of the Gospel viz. St. Paul an oath is nothing but a calling of God to witnesse of the truth of that which is done or spoken that it may be received with the greater belief now how often doth that eminent servant of the Lord Jesus deliver himself in the very substance of an oath as God is my witn●sse Rom. 1.9 God is my record P●il 1.8 God is my witnesse 1 Thes. 2.5 10. God knoweth 2 Cor. 11 11 31. Before ●od I lie not Gal. 1.20 I say the truth in Ch●isti●n Christ I lie not Rom. 9.1 As the truth of Christ is in me 2 Cor. 11.10 I speak the truth in Christ and lye not 1 Tim. 2.7 All which are as substantial oaths as any we read of in the o●d ●●●pensation 4. Even in the close of the Gospel we find a holy Angell to swear Rev. 10.6 we pray that the will of God may be done by u● as it is done by the ho●y Angels and hear we have an An●ell for greater certainty sealing his threatning by an oath From these reasons we may without errour conclude that the o●dinance of swearing is in full force and power under the Gospell to all intents and purposes any thing that our adversaries can b●ing to the Contrary notwithstanding Those texts Math. 5.34 and Iames 5.12 speaks of swearing in our common communication and of such oathes as are sworn by the creatures as may appear by the contexts not of Judicial swearin● o● any other kind of oathes when necessity and authority draws men to it for clearing of the truth and ending of controversie against which the Gospel speakes not one word but confirms it by severall passages yea St. Paul writing to the Hebrews says Heb. 6.16 That an oath for confirmation is to men an end of all strife not that it was but it is q.d. while I am writing and preaching now when the found of the Gospell is gone over all the world is an oath the end of strife and that not to some only but to men i.e. to all sorts of men whether Jew or Gentile now had it been a sin to have used an oath under the Gospell for that end we should have heard of it in this most proper place or in some other And if any will be contentious let them consider that Pauls before God I lye not 1 Gal. 20. and the Angells by him that lives for ever is more then yea yea and yet who dare reprove either of them of sin To this doctrine consents the reformed Churches of Helva Art 30. of Ausp Art 16. of England Art 39. the Art itself is this Art 39. of the Church of England As we confesse that vain and rash swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Iesus Christ and James his Apostle so we judge that Christian religion doth not prohibit but that a man may swear when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of faith and Charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in Iustice Iudgement and truth Quest. 2 Whether the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy required by the Kings of England c. of their Subjects may lawfully be taken That Covenants or oaths in cases of necessity or suspition may be made by the subjects of a land to their lawful Prince appears by that Act of Iehoiadah at the Coronation of King Iehoash 2 King 11.17 where we have the footsteps of a Coronation and allegiance oath but to come to the matter in hand either of these oaths may lawfully be taken For 1 Swearing is a Gospell Ordinance and therefore under the Gospell may be performed being ratified taken and used by a holy Apostle and blessed Angell 2 There is nothing in them oaths that is contrary to the word of God God who made the heavens is only called to testifie the reallity of the intentions 3 The taking of them gives assurance to his Majesty of his Subjects faithfulnesse and loyalty and indeed as the case now stands he may be suspected of disloyalty that will not satisfie the law in that particular 4. It is but equall that subjects swear to defend his Majesties honours and prerogatives since he hath sworn to maintain his subjects rights and properties Next swear not at all the grand objection is his Majesties supremacy But 1 It is under Christ none acknowledgeth him as absolute head of the Church that being his sole prerogative who is King of Kings and it would be considered whether God hath not made as good and as many Laws touching the government of the State as he hath for that of the Church yet who will thence conclude that the Magistrate is not supreame in civill affairs that is next immediately under God For no otherwise is he head that is governour of the Church 2 It is only to exclude the Popes Authority His holinesse at Rome looks upon all Kings and Emperours as his Vassals and servants and did he not exalt him above all that are called Gods he would want one mark of the Antichrist 1 Thes. 2.4 by the way they being called Gods we are to know that none on earth no no Presbytery their superior nor contain the Pope therfore pretending a power over the Church making himself or giving out himself as head of all civil Ecclesiastical officers and withall making the Church to be so absolute a distinst body from the state that no state officer whether the King though he only be supream ought in the least to meddle with it or if he do to be excommunicated or deposed for his presumption this power is by this Oath taken from the Pope and given to him that is the true as the Pope makes the Church to be so absolute a distinct body from the state as that the state hath nothing to do with it or in it there are them in our dayes to be quit with the Pope that would have no Church officer in the least to meddle with the state supposing such an absolutnesse in the one that it hath no coherence with or dependance upon the other in this absolute sence the