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A03409 The Churches authority asserted in a sermon preached at Chelmsford, at the metropoliticall visitation of the most Reverend Father in God, VVilliam, Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury his Grace, &c. March 1. 1636. By Samuel Hoard B.D. and Parson of Morton in Essex. Hoard, Samuel, 1599-1658. 1637 (1637) STC 13533; ESTC S104116 44,865 76

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THE CHVRCHES AVTHORITY ASSERTED IN A SERMON Preached at Chelmsford at the Metropoliticall Visitation of the most Reverend Father in God VVILLIAM Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury his Grace c. March 1. 1636. BY SAMUEL HOARD B. D. and Parson of Morton in Essex HEB 13.17 Obey them that have the rule over you and submit your selves for they watch for your soules as they that must give account that they may doe it with joy and not with griefe for that is unprofitable for you LONDON Printed by M. F. for JOHN CLARK and are to be sold at his Shop under S. Peters Church in Cornhill MDCXXXVII To the Christian and courteous Reader SO Sweet a thing is Peace that God is pleased to put it into his owne title and to style himselfe the God of Peace 1 Thes 5.23 Nay Peace and Love it selfe 1 Joh. 4.16 and to pronounce him that seekes and makes peace a blessed man Blessed are the Peace-makers Mat 5.9 But much more amiable is the peace of the Church being the principall thing that our blessed Sauiour next to mans peace with God came into the world to procure Ephes 2.15 and that which makes Gods family on earth like to the State of innocency in Paradise and of glory in heaven This peace therefore should every sonne of peace pray for Pray for the peace of Jerusalem Psal 112. and pursue with all endeavour possible as men doe their game for so the word may signifie Hob. 12.16 Follow peace with all men But what peace can be expected without unity like Hypocrates twins they decay and thrive live and die together And therefore S. Paul puts them both together Ephes 4.3 Endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace and for the procuring of agreement in affections he conjures the Philippians by all the arguments enforcing concord among Christians to a consent of judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To be of one minde Phil. 2.2 to beleeve and think the same thing And therefore it should be every mans care contrary to the custome of too many turbulent dispositions who can fish best in troubled waters and gaine most profit or respect to themselves by kindling contentions among brethren not only to marke them that cause divisions and avoide them Rom. 16.17 but fix● pede with a s●eled resolution and courage to oppose them as S. Paul did S. Peter Gal. 2. when he saw that he did not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 walk with a right foot and take a right course for the uniting of the mindes and by consequent the hearts of Jews and Gentiles As therefore it hath alwayes been my desire that we who are of the same saith might be if possible in all things of the same opinion so I thought it my duty at this time having so faire an occasion by the command of my superiours to preach the Visitation Sermon put into my hands to cast in my mite toward the purchasing of this pearle and to set one small prop under the house and Church of God in our Israel too much tottering by our mutuall dissentions and for that end to justifie the authority of our Church in requiring an uniforme subjection in judgement and practise at the hands of her children to the comely and good orders therein established and to perswade a generall good opinion of and obedience to her just authority in these things Some there be so obstinate in their error and undutifulnesse that like Solomons fo●le though they be brayed in a morter and sufficiently convinced of their false and disorderly opinions and practises will not leave their folly others there be I hope of more teachable and tractable tempers and willing if better informed to frame their courses to more moderation and subjection Now sermons of this nature may be of use to both these to the first to take off their fig-leaves and present them naked as troublers of Israel to the deserved stroke of justice to the rest to make them peaceable members of the body wherein they live and obedient children to the heads by whom they are governed Whether I shall effect this last and best end of such discourses by preaching or printing this small peece I know not I doe not altogether despaire the former I doubt not I shall in some measure compasse at least liberabo animam meam I shall hereby discharge mine owne conscience and famam meam redeeme in some degree my reputation too Words being then most liable to envious mistakes and mis-reports when they are but taken in by the eares of some few partiall and prejudging hearers not exposed to the eyes and view of more indifferent and charitably minded Readers Bring an obedient and peaceable spirit with thee and then reade and censure as thou seest cause Sa Hoard REcensui concionem hane cui titulus est The Churches Authority asserted in qua nihil reperio quò minus summâ cum utilitato Imprimatur March 28. 1637. SA BAKER THE CHVRCHES AVTHORITIE 1 COR. 14.40 Let all things be done decently and in order OF the Devils practises against the Church The Cohaerence of the Text. which our Saviour gives notice of Mat. 13.25 while men slept the enemy came and sowed tares among the wheat and went his way the Corinthians were too true an example For no sooner had S. Paul after much paines taken to sowe the good seed of saving truth among them and to make them one of Christs cornfields departed from them to plow up other grounds to plant other Churches but the enemy of Christ and his deare Church began to sow the tares of ungodlinesse among them which as ill weeds for the most part doe sprang up apace For they became 1. Sectaries dividing themselves among Christ Apollos Paul and Cephas 1 Cor. 1.11 12. and making men the Lords of their faith and consciences which they should have captivated to Christ alone 2 They were Heretiques denying a fundamentall Article the Resurrection 3 Polluters also of Gods sacred worship and ordinances First by their base indecencies Their women sate before God with their heads uncovered and the men with their hats on 1 Cor. 11.4 5 they mingled intemperate and carousing bankets with the spirituall feast of the blessed Eucharist ver 21 their women beyond the modesty that becomes that sexe presumed to chat and talke their shares in the congregation c. 14.34 Secondly By their disorders likewise for they received not the holy Communion together but by snatches one before another came cap 11.33 they interposed unseasonable questions while their Ministers were preaching and rudely interrupted them in their discourse cap 14.29 Thirdly By their empty and unprofitable assemblies for their trumpets made an uncertaine sound they prayed in their Churches in a tongue they understood not All these were great scandalls 1 Cor. 1.11 The Apostle therefore being informed by some of Cloes family of their declined condition like a loving pastor labours to remove these tares and reduce
this Church to its primitive purity For the procuring of which hee takes a mixt course that they might neither detest his severity nor yet despise his lenity One while he sharply reprooveth another while he gently allureth in one place hee punisheth in another he prescribeth In this Chapter hee meeteth with two faults disorder and unprofitablenesse and because contraria contrariis curantur distempers are usually cured by remedies of a contrary nature for the healing of their unprofitablenesse in the use of their religious exercises he command that all things bee done to edification ver 26 and for the removall of their indecencies and disorders he requires that all things be done decently and in order And so I am come to my Text. In which by the judgement of expositors St. Paul investeth the Corinthians The scope and parts of the Text and the point insisted on and in them all Christian Churches with authority to ordaine Rites and Ceremonies appertaining to order and decency in the service of God (a) Hinc apparet liberum esse Ecclesus titus ordinare servientes ordini decoro Heming in hunc locum Hinc aparet saith Hemingius hence it appeareth that it is in the liberty of Churches to ordaine rites serving to order and comelinesse (b) Facit Ecclesiae p●testatem de decoro et ordine ecclesiastico liberò disponendi et leges ferendi Par in hunc loc Facit Ecclesiae potestatem c. He gives the Church saith Pareus power freely to dispose of things belonging to Ecclesiasticall order and decency (c) Non potest haberi quod Paulus hic exigit ut decenter omnia et ordine fiant nisi additis constitutionibus tanquam vinculis quibusdā ordo ipse et decorum servetur Cal. Instit l. 4. c. 10. Non potest haberi c. That which St. Paul requires saith Calvin cannot be had unlesse there bee Canons made by which as by certaine bands men and things may bee kept together in a comely order (d) Davenant de Iudic. Cont● fidei c. 16. p. 84. And the Reverend Bishop of Salisbury having delivered a position that the Prelates of the Church have power to appoint rites and ceremonies respecting the externall policy of the Church prooveth it by my text Let all things be done decently c. These words therefore in the opinion of these men and almost all writers on these words or point containe the Churches Investiture and may be cast into these two parts 1. The Churches liberty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let all things be done 2. The Churches limits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 decently and in order Or else into these two 1. Her Authority to make laws Let c. 2. The object about which her Authority is to move matters of order and decency decently c. From both these ariseth the point on which I purpose to build my present discourse and which I will deliver in the words of our twentieth Article That the Church hath power to decree Rites and Ceremonies In the handling of this conclusion 1. I will explaine the termes 2. Prove the point 3. Touch upon such consectartes as the point doth naturally derive it selfe into Of all these with what brevity I can The termes explained what is meant by Ceremonies and Rites The termes are two the Ceremonies and Church Ceremonies are externall acts and adjuncts annexed to sacred Services For in Religion there are two things considerable Substantialls and Circumstantialls Substantialls are of two sorts 1. Matters of faith and manners to be beleeved and done of necessity to salvation conteined in the Creed and ten Commandements 2. Sacraments ordained for the bringing of men and women into the Church and their conduct therein to everlasting happinesse About these the power which the Church hath is to preserve them as the Ark did the tables of the Law to give an honorable testimony to them to consecrate to dispense them to her children and to transmit them to posterity in which respects she is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Pillar and ground of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 Power to make adde alter or diminish these she never had Never durst any Prelates in the Church but the Pope take liberty to stamp new Articles of faith or to joyne Traditions to the writtē word of God for supply of its imperfection which are of the same authority Sess 4. decre● 1 and to be received pari pietatis affectu with the like religious respect as the Trent Councill hath determined never did any presume but he to curt all the Lords Supper by taking away the cup from the people or to transforme the Sacrament into a Sacrifice propitiatory for quick and dead to the great injury of that alsufficient Sacrifice once offered upon the Crosse by our Lord himselfe In all these manum de tabula hands off for they are all above the Churches power But Secondly there are besides these some ceremonialls and circumstantialls necessary for the right ordering and cariage of Gods service the trayning up of people in piety and the preservation of religion for without ceremonies saith Zanchy (a) Sine Ceremon●s nec sideles in unum convenne co●lescere possunt nec Deo publice se●vire Zanch de Re● l 1. p 420. neither could the faithfull grow up together into one body nor give God any publique worship That God is to be worshipped by his owne rule and with his owne prescribed acts and dutyes of religion is Substance but that this may bee well done some circumstances of time and place persons gestures habites c. must bee determined What therefore shall be the times wherein Gods people must come together to worship him and how farre they are to be sanctified what are to be the places wherein wee are to meet and how to be adorned in what order divine Service shall be celebrated with what habit the Priest when he commeth to minister before the Lord should be clothed what gestures of body both Priest and people shall use in their publique devotions and the times when this or that particular gesture of kneeling standing sitting or bowing may be used with most comelinesse and profit what kinde of places are fittest for Service and Sermon what tables what chalices what other ornaments doe best beseem that sacred mystery of the Lords Supper c These and such like circumstances are the things permitted to the Churches liberty to determine What we are to understād by Church By Church which is my second terme I meane not private and inferior members of the Church whose place is obedience not government for we should have a mad Church and a miserable divine service if every private spirit might have authority to order these things as hee thinkes good It would be I feare me like that mis-shapen Picture which the Painter Polycletes made by the peoples direction a very deformed one a Church and Service that could not be knowne or
have been used by the Romane Church when yet it is most certain that not only Papists but Pagans too by the light of reason may be competent judges of decency and order in externall Rites 3 Others will allow this surname to none that have been abused to superstition and Idolatry but would have them all abolished as most uncomely for the service of God but without reason may not Churches be accounted fit places for publike worship because they have formerly been polluted with Idolatry may not that body which hath made it selfe a member of an harlot become a glorious member of Iesus Christ and a holy Temple for Gods Spirit to dwell in Wise men have alwayes thought that the separation of the use of a thing from its abuse is very possible and that the use of some things stript out of their abuses is very commendable To take away the use of a Ceremony because formerly abused Curatio quidem est sed curatio carnisicis non medici saith (b) Cassand Commonstr viae Circ med Cassander rightly is a cure of the abuse indeed but the cure of a hangman who takes away diseases disasters and life and all at a clap not of a physician who so expells the disease as he saves the life These are all false Cards to saile by By the best writers ceremonies are then judged to be conformable to these directions 1. When they are not elevated above their nature neither used as true and proper acts of worship as vowed chastity poverty and regular obedience among the Papists are nor as instruments to produce supernaturall effects as holy water is sprinkled in the Church of Rome to wash away veniall sinnes and the signe of the Crosse is used to drive away devils 2. When for their multitude they be neither burdensome to the Church making Iews of Christians and Law of Gospell nor occasions of diverting their affections and thoughts from such religious acts and services as are substantiall And therefore such Rites as are not opposite to these rules we are to hold for decent and orderly Determination of decency belongs to Superiours 3. The determination of this decency belongs not to private persons it is not for them to nominate and governours to chuse or for them to bring the writing and superiours to give the seale this would be to make authority but a meere cypher and the Bishops of the Church like those images in the Psalme Which have eyes and see not hands and handle not c. this were an utter vverturning of the body a placing of the feete where the head should be But our Rulers must be judges in these matters the Kings majesty the supreme and the Prelates of the Church the subordinate for 1. this is the honour belonging to their places as it is the honour of the head to judge what is fit and comely and conducible to the wel-fare of the body 2. they are best fitted for this work of determining both in respect of their learning and experience and because of that divine assistance which by their masters owne promise Loe I am with you to the end of the world Mat. 28.20 is usually afforded them though not so far as to secure them from all possibility of mistaking in their decisions To their sentence in these things must inferiours submit if not their judgements for perhaps they are not bound to beleeve at all times that they doe all things well yet their practises both for the honour that is due to their places and the peace of Gods Church which every good member will pursue In Deut. 17.8 9 10 11 12. God enjoyneth the people under the paine of death in all their doubts and controversies to stand to the sentence of the Priest and to square their practises thereby he thought it not fit then for the people to be judges of doubtfull cases and doth he think it convenient now I will therefore conclude with the speech of Nazianzene Greg. Naz in Orat. quâ se purgat Presume not ye that are sheep to make your selves guides of them that should guide you neither seek to skip over the fold which they have pitcht about you it sufficeth for your part if you give your selves to be ordered Take not upon you to judge nor make them subject to your laws who should be a law to you for God is not a God of confusion but of order and peace in all the Churches of the Saints 1 Cor. 14.33 And so leaving Rites and Ceremonies for their determination to the heads of the Church as peeces of coine which beare their image and superscription I passe from the point to the Consectaries resulting from it 1. From hence we may see that Laws or Canons concerning orders in the Church are alterable and binde to their use no longer than they that made them are pleased to urge them Matters of faith and morality will endure no addition diminution or change because their authority is divine but matters of order and decency doe because their authority is humane Every particular or nationall Church hath power to ordaine change and abolish ceremonies and Rites ordained only by mans authority so as all things be done to edification (a) Art 14. It is the subscribed doctrine of our owne Church and a proofe of the Consectary Upon this ground S. Ambrose in his owne Church abrogated an old custome of feasting at the Tombs of m●rtyrs (b) ●ud ●es in Aug de Civ Dei l. 8 c 27. S●d ●c Ambrosi●s ●●●r● ve●u●t ne u●●●oc●sio l●●o●sis se ing●rg● andi q●ua illa qu●si parent l●a superst●m gen●li●m ●s●t si●n 〈◊〉 lest occasiō of quaffing should be given thereby to drunkards and because those parentalia funerall feasts were very like to heathenish superstition And how many Apostolique and ancient Rites have long since bidden the world good-night by the Churches pleasure only on the same ground (c) Cassand l de ossic P● pag. 855. Cassander reckons up two sorts of old ceremonies which because they were different have been differently dealt with 1. Some there were which are of perpetuall use to preserve the memory of Christs benefits and to traine up Christian people in piety Such were those famous festivals of Easter Ascension and Whitsontide for by their anniversary solemnizations and by the publique reading and explaining the histories sutable to those holy-dayes people are put in minde of those Acts which Christ did for their redemption and excited to shew their thankfulnesse to him by their love and obedience to his laws Of this sort also have singing of Psalms and sacred hymnes in the Church reading of sutable prayers and Scriptures at the holy communion silence of women in the congregation and the fast of Lent been accounted All these therefore have been religiously preserved without the least alteration 2. Others of them were of an inferiour nature and may be divided into three ranks 1. Rites of no great