Selected quad for the lemma: head_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
head_n church_n member_n mystical_a 3,558 5 10.4248 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A32762 The divine institution of congregational churches, ministry and ordinances [as has bin professed by those of that persuasion] asserted and proved from the word of God / by Isaac Chauncy ... Chauncy, Isaac, 1632-1712. 1697 (1697) Wing C3748; ESTC R38739 70,081 155

There are 13 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the Oeconomy erected by Christ and his Apostles was sufficient to answer all Intents and Purposes of Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction without dependance upon the States and Princes of the World for the execution thereof and was fully practical under any Civil Powers who would but permit the Profession of Christianity according to Mens Consciences 2. If any Alledge That the Congregational Practice abridgeth the People of their Liberty We answer 1. If by liberty be meant liberty to sin this all Religions must profess to restrain that which doth not is not to be called Religion and this is no more than all Christian Magistrates ought to do Besides a liberty to Sin is the most Diabolical Slavery in the World 2. Our Way deprives Men of no lawful Civil Liberties 3. It doth no more deprive Men of Spiritual Liberties than a Civil Corporation-Government deprives Men of Civil Liberties For 1. Both the one and the other have the most desirable Immunities and Priviledges granted by Charter in their respective kinds 2. There are no Members made by a coercive power all voluntarily offer themselves 3. There are no Members admitted or cast out by an Arbitrary and Despotick Power but all is done by the consent of the Body Politick 4. A Church is made a Prison to none but any one may depart to another orderly and regularly when called thereto 5. As all Members are admitted so all Ministerial Officers are chosen by Consent and Agreement of the Body none are imposed 6. As all Tryals of offending Persons in a Civil Corporation are by the Neighbourhood as to matter of fact so in a Spiritual Corporation all such Judicial Proceedings are in a way of Tryal first in the Church by the Brotherhood upon whose Judgment of Guilty or not Guilty the Elder passeth Sentence of Condemnation or Absolution 3. If any object Strictness of the Terms of Admission It is Answered 1. All Vertuous Persons like those Societies best that stand upon the strictest Terms of Admission for they are likely to be purest 2. Have not all Families Companies Corporations their Terms of Admission which they will stand upon Is it not fit you should be qualified as the Society expects and submit to the Laws of the Society by express Agreement Is it fit you should enjoy the Immunities of a Family or other Society without a due qualification and obligation Without the first you are unmeet without the latter ungovernable 3. The Terms are reasonable and as easie as possible for a Spiritual Society a houshold of Faith as is made appear in the following Treatise And whatever slight Terms of Admittance you are for whilst a non-Member if you have the true Grace of God in your heart when you become a Member you will not be willing others should be so admitted lest it should make such a foul House as your self will not be able long to endure 4. Some one will say or think I am loth to come under the Observation Obligation and Charge of Church-Membership I hope I shall go to Heaven without it tho I would willingly have my Child baptized Ans 1. Take this altogether and it 's a great question whether such an one hath Grace in his heart or hath any good grounds of Hope that he shall go to Heaven For it argues loosness of heart and life and Covetousness which is Idolatry yea and plain Hypocrisie that he would have his Child baptized meerly for form and Reputation sake For I would say to such an one 1. Is not one Seal of the Covenant of as much weight to a Believer as another Wilt thou baptize thy Child as thy duty and neglect the other Seal for thy Worldly Advantage and so indulge thy self in Sin By what right dost thou claim Baptism for thy Child Is it by vertue of Abraham's Covenant And dost thou openly profess it and wilt not stipulate to the said Covenant How art thou such a Child of Abraham as the Blessing is come upon surely not the Blessing of Church-Membership Obj. But I hope my Infant hath right to Baptism tho I am no Church-Member Ans He that himself is such as that if he were un-baptized he hath no right to Baptism cannot plead right for his Child But no non-Member can plead right to any Seal the Seals of the Covenant being given to the Church and not to the World nor one Seal to the World and the other to the Church Obj. But I am a Member of the Catholick Church by my Personal Covenanting with God Ans 1. Who knows what thy private and secret actions be to verifie the Truth of what thou saist the Church calls thee to Covenant with God and them If thou wilt partake of the Priviledges of the Church and if thou hast bin serious in Covenanting privately thou wilt be as willing to Covenant openly with God and his Church for he that Covenants socially Covenants but personally and he that Covenants with Christ Covenants with him socially tho secretly for he takes him as Head of the Mystical Body So that the Notion of Personal and Social Covenanting makes not a legal distinction having no sufficient dissentaniety of parts they differing but ratione only and so are but diversa not ratione re so as to be vera opposita 2. Such personal Covenanting as you intend if it be real makes you but a Member of the Mystical Body of Christ not of any visible Church which alone is the subject of the Seals and other Ordinances 3. The Proselytes publickly embraced Abraham's Covenant and joined to the Church thereby under the Old Testament before they were circumcised and under the New Testament before they were baptized For the first see Deut. 29.11 12. where the Stranger covenanted publickly with the Lord and socially with that Church in the Land of Moab just before they passed over Jordan and were circumcised by Joshua ch 5.2 3 4. For the latter see Acts 2.39 41. Peter makes them that manifested their Repentance to stipulate publickly to Abraham's Covenant before they were baptized And as many as declared their glad receiving and embracing the Promise for themselves and Seed were baptized for they who did not explicitely declare so much were not baptized as appears by the Text. In a Word Dost thou profess to be a Christian to have received Christ by Faith for righteousness and life and to live Godly in Christ Jesus It is thy Duty then to join thy self in Church-Fellowship and thou sinnest greatly against God if thou dost not For 1. Church-Membership is one of the great parts of Abraham's Blessing And wilt thou exclude thy self from any part of so great a Gift 2. Church-Membership is a Spiritual Blessing that a Believer is blessed withal in Christ Jesus And shall not that be valued by thee 3. A Believer in Christ hath right to Church Blessings And wilt thou loose thy Possession for want of Claim 4. If thou art a true Believer Christ is precious to thee in all
b 1 Cor. 12 12. Rev. 1.20 2. It 's a Company of Men not of Angels for Angels are no where called a Church tho a Company c Heb. 12.22 but they surround the Church d Rev. 5.11 and consort in their Adorations with the Church The Angels were not Redeemed by Christ's Blood neither of the Nature of the Head and therefore not the Body of Christ as the Church is e Heb. 2.16 3. It 's a spiritual Company in contra-distinction to humane and civil Societies or Companies gathered together occasionally or statedly f Act 19.39 4. It 's separated from the World all the World is not a Church but it 's called and separated out of the World g John 17.10 15.19 2 Cor. 6.17 as Christ the Head is separate h Heb. 7.26 2 Pet. 2.20 Deut. 14.2 Titus 2.14 so must the Body be 5. They are not a company of scattered Sheep but gathered into a Fold i John 10.16 Stones not lying here and there but brought into a building k 1 Pet. 2.4.5 6. They are embodied or incorporated with the Corner-Stone and to one another and as Members are knit to the Head and one another l 2 Thes 2.1 Eph. 4.16 Ps 122 3. 1 Thes 1 1. Hence Union to Christ the Head and to one another is essentially necessary to the Church of God m John 15 to which Union is requisite cutting off from the old Stock and Implantation into the new n Rom. 11.24 connection knitting and coalition of Head and Members together Members to the Head and they to one another o Eph. 2.21 and lastly an aptitude order and fitness to each other to compleat the whole in usefulness and comeliness p 1 Cor. 12 11 12 13. Eph. 4.16 2.21 § 11. Hence it plainly appears what a Church of God is in the general Nature thereof It is a spiritual company of men separated from the world a 2 Cor. 6.17 congregated and incorporated in Christ Jesus b 1 Cor. 12.12 Congregation is a Genus to Church it 's a spiritual Congregatiion and there is no Church but is so in some sense or other the words in the Old and New Testament always signifie so Cohel and Ecclesia But Congregation seems to be a remoter Genus than Corporation for every Congregation is not incorporated neither is every incorporated Congregation a spiritual Body c Acts 19.39 and therefore a Church but every Church is a Congregation incorporated by the Union afore-mentioned and it 's for the end of him whose it is viz. his Glory in communion with him and of one Member with another CHAP. II. Of the Catholick Church A Church defined A Spiritual Corporation how distinguisht Corporation what How belonging to Christ What Persons a Church is made up of How Membership comes Communion Distribution of Church The Catholick Church Catholick Vnion Communion It s not the Subject of Ordinances No Catholick Visible Church § 1. FROM what hath bin said in the former Chapter it appears that a Church is thus defined viz. That it is a Spiritual Corporation or Body of Christ a Eph. 1.23 Col. 1.24 1 Pet. 2.9 the Head to which many select persons b Tit. 2.14 separated from the World c 2 Cor. 6.16 17. are gathered d 2 The. 2.1 and united e Eph. 5.23 30. and accordingly fitly joined one to another f ch 4.16 for holy Communion in the Lord g 1 John 1.3 § 2. Corporation or a Political Body is the next common Nature to a Church and not Congregation or Assembly for Congregation is either occasional a Act 19.39 41. or fixed and stated by incorporation and this either civil or spiritual a civil is nothing appertaining to our present concern but the spiritual is for a Civil is that which belongs to a Secular or Republican State but spiritual is that that belongs to a Spiritual or Ecclesiastick State b 1 Cor. 10 4. Gal. 6.1 Matth. 7.6 1 Cor. 7.32 33. hence spiritual here is not confin'd to the sence of invisibility but is meant of that which is of a heavenly sacred and supernatural Nature c 1 Cor. 15.40 Heb. 8.5 9.23 1. Pet. 2.5 wherefore a spiritual Corporation or Body Politick is either mystical and invisible or visible professed and manifest to the World § 3. A Corporation is a Community constituted by Law or Charter granted by a Supream Power whereby it is invested with Priviledges and a Governing Power regulated by and subordinated to the Honour and Interest of the said supream Power such are Kingdoms Cities Housholds or Families or any number of persons bound together in any sociable Bond is a Society of this Nature whether implicite or explicite of these the Conjugal is the least though the first and most ancient yea the most honourable of all Civil Societies being the Root from whence they spring wherefore the Relation between Christ and his Church is represented thus to us by the Spirit of God in a most lively manner a Eph. 5.31 32. § 4. The Government Liberties and Priviledges of the Church are given as by Charter to the Lord Jesus Christ by the Father a Psa 2.6 Mat. 28.18 ch 2.6 the administration of which Power by him is either internal and immediate by his Spirit in the hearts of his People and according to the measure of Grace given to every one and of the same nature in the whole Body b Col. 3.15 Rom. 8.9 2 Cor. 3.8 17. Gal. 5.16.18.25 1 Pet. 1.2.22 of Christ c Rom. 12.3 1 John 3.24 and is universal and invisible or Christ administers more externally visibly and mediately in particular visible Bodies Politick by his Word instituted Officers and Ordinances for the sake and edifying of his Universal Church d Eph. 4.12 § 5. Every Church of Christ is made of select Persons and separated from the World a 1 Pet. 2.9 Tit. 2.14 2 Cor. 6.16.17 either by Effectual Calling and thereby become Members of the Mystical Body of Christ b Eph. 4.4 1 Cor. 12.12 or by a visible Profession and Confederation and thereby become Members of the visible particular Churches c 2 Cor. 7.13 § 6. A People may be gathered together yea to Christ so as to hear him or his Messengers a Act 13.43 Matt. 13.2 and not thereby become Members of the Body of Christ under any consideration But they must be so gathered to Christ the Head as to come into the bond of the Covenant b Eze. 20.37 Col. 2.19 1 Cor. 6.17 either by receiving Christ by Faith and thereby restipulating personally to the Covenant of Grace and so joining to the Lord. Or it is when a Person doth upon his Profession actually covenant with a particular Church by the first he becomes a Member of the Mystical Body c Col. 3.11 and by the second of a
more Glorious the Ministration of the Spirit and not of the Letter w 2 Cor. 3.6 the faithful Dispensation of the Son over his own House x Heb. 3.2 6. wherein he is more to be prized and worthy of more honour than Moses a servant could ever be capable of y Ibid. Christ's being a more excellent Ministry in that he was a better Mediator of a better Testament z Heb. 8.6 confirming and sealing it with his own Bloud a Heb. 9.16 17. and now liveth in the full execution of this last Will and Testament b Heb. 8.25 Eph. 4.11 and the glorious Witness thereof before God Angels and Men c Rev. 1.5 18. standing now our High-Priest set down at the Right Hand of the Majesty on High a Minister of the Sanctuary and true Tabernacle which God pitched and not Man d Heb. 8.1 2. § 7. The Constitution of the Church of Israel tho it was National a Exo. 19.6 Gen. 35.11 as being made up according to that part of the promise peculiar to Abraham's natural Seed yet it was Congregational b Exod. 12.6.47 Lev 4.13 1 Kings 8.5 14. 2 Chro. 6.3 according to the other part of the Promise not to be shaken or removed c Heb. 12.28 Gal. 3.8.17 29. Jer. 30.32 37. 33.26 because it was incorporated into one Church by a visible profession of and subjection to Abraham's Covenant d Exo. 34.27 for such as were Infant-Church-Members received the Seal of the Righteousness of faith and when they became adult and stood not to this Profession they forfeited their Church-Membership and thus it was with Ismael and Esau e Gen. 21.10 12. Gal. 4.30 upon which both with their Seed fell off from the Church tho the natural Seed of Abraham and Isaac f Gen. 25.31 And afterward when the Seed of Israel grew up into a National Church in all their Apostacies they were charged with the breach of Abraham's Covenant g Deut. 31 16. Ezek. 16.8 Jer. 11.10 or that made with their Fathers which was the same as therein going a whoring from God and forfeiting the Right of Church-Membership and becoming a Loammi Moreover in all their great Reformations we find their returning to the said Covenant and often their publick renewing and recognition thereof h 2 Chron. 34.31 Psal 105.4 5 c. Ezra 10.3 2. It appears in that all the House of Israel as to their stated Church-Worship worshipped under one visible Pastor in their State after Moses his Settlement one High-Priest and at one Altar in one place i Lev. 1.3 Deut. 12.14 14.23 16.2 7.11 15 16. Josh 22.18 23. and therefore the stated Church-Worship was attended in one Assembly Tabernacle or Temple Thrice every Year where the whole Congregation had Communion in one and the same Worship and acts of Worship k Deut. 16.16 3. This People were a separated People from all others in the World l Lev. 20.24 Deut. 4.7 34. cap. 7.6 14.2 Psa 135.4 4. Jeroboam's Apostacy was condemned by God as an actual Rent and Schism from the visible Church that statedly worshipped God at Jerusalem m 1 King 11.30 31. 5. The Synagogue-Worship was not the Church-Worship neither was the daily Sacrifice or others nor any holy Convocations belonging unto them any more than the meer reading of Moses and the Prophets and Exposition thereof at most sometimes n Act 13.15 6. All Church-Worship of special communion as offering Sacrifices elsewhere than at the place chosen by God for that purpose was condemned witness the frequent complaint made against their High-Places under the Reign even of their best Kings o 1 King 22.43 till Hezekiah's time that destroyed them all p 2 King 18.4 § 8. That a Congregational Church is of Divine Institution appears by these Reasons 1. Either a Congregational Church is of Divine Institution or else God hath no instituted Church for there is no other visible Church of God's Institution spoken of in Scripture 2. The Church of Israel was Congregational as hath bin proved and none will deny that to be of God's Institution 3. The express Type of a Congregational Church under the Gospel was of God's Institution therefore the Antitype or thing Typified much more a Rev. 1.20 Heb. 8.5 6 3.5 6. 4. This Church is Prophesied of by the Prophets of old b Isa 56.5.6 7. Eze. 43.11 Mal. 1.11 12. 5. Christ and his Apostles planted such Churches as appears throughout the History of the Acts. 6. These Christ and his Apostles owned to be his truly instituted Churches not only by the Epistles wrote to them by the Apostles but by those sent to them by Christ himself c Rev. 2. 3. CHAP. IV. Of a Gospel Visible or Congregational Church Restipulation to Abraham 's Covenant double A Gospel Visible Church defined A visible Church always particular not Catholick The Catholick not the Genus of a particular Church but a distinct Species of Church in general Corporation distinguisht into its Species The Political relation of a Church to Christ The immediate matter of a visible Church What is the form of it Separation inseparable from it The immediate Infant-Seed Members by Covenant Communion the end of Church-Vnion § 1. HAVING shewed what a Visible or Congregational Church is in general when the first Institution of it was and where founded viz. in Abraham's Covenant of Circumcision that for the substance of the said Covenant it was immutable both as to the Person Natures Offices Ministry Sacrifice and Exaltation of Christ the Head both Mystical and Political a Gal. 3.8 cap. 4.26 27. so as to the Body of Christ the Church in its Catholick b Eph. 3.5 6. Acts 15.7 9. or Visible relation to him c Deut. 14.2 1 Pet. 2.9 setting aside only the difference of Oeconomies and the Administration thereof called the Old and New Testaments d Heb. 8.6 9.15 it is the everlasting Covenant well ordered in all things and sure e 2. Sam. 23.5 2. Cor. 3.11 to which as to the more mysterious and hidden part under the efficacious work of the Spirit every sincere-hearted Believer doth restipulate when he becomes an actual Member of the Mystical Body f 2 Cor. 11 2 3. Heb. 12 22 and as to the more External Visible and Political part he doth visibly restipulate by confederation and embodying to Christ the Political Head g Isa 56.6 7. 44.5 and with a particular Congregation a Political Body of Christ § 2. The Ecclesiastical Blessings as belonging to the visible State Standing and Priviledges of a Congregational Church unalterable under either Dispensation are these especially First It s Foederal Constitution a Isa 61.8 9. Gen. 17.9 10. Secondly It s Divine Institution b Ibid. Thirdly The Nature of its Church-Membership c Rom. 4.11 12 16. Gal. 3.27 28 29. and the
professing Right thereto to the Believing Parent covenanting and his immediate Infant-Seed in him d Isa 65.23 chap. 44.3 Gal. 4.28 Fourthly The Seal of the Righteousness of Faith given to both Parent and Seed Fifthly The Ministry of the Gospel with all other Ordinances of Christ's Institution which each is capable of for spiritual advantage in the communion of the respective Members thereof e Gal. 3.7 8. § 3. A Visible Church is a spiritual a 1 Pet. 2.5 Body b Rom. 12.4 5. of Believers c 1 Cor. 1 2 with their immediate Seed d Gal. 3.26 27 28. 4.28 separate from the World e 2 Cor. 6.17 and given up unto Christ and one another in a Publick Covenant f 2 Cor. 8.5 Isa 56.6 7. for fellowship g 1 John 1.3 7. Phil. 1.5 1 Cor. 11.20 in all instituted Worship and Ordinances h Mat. 28.20 in one place i 1 Cor. 14.23 to the Glory of God k 1 Cor 10.31 and their own Salvation l Phil. 1.9 11. § 4. A visible Church is always particular a Rev. 1.20 Col. 2.5 a Catholick being not visible as hath bin shewed for a Visible Church is not a Society gathered together and made up of all the select People in the world there is none such can be here but it s such as is limited to a People and Place and is the subject of the Ministry and Ordinances there b 1 Cor. 11.20 14.23 Act 2.41 And though it should be supposed that there is a Catholick visible Church which cannot be granted it is to be observed that the Spirit of God speaks always of Churches in their respective places as distinct Churches each one entire in it self c 1 Cor. 1 2 1 Thes 1.1 not one Epistle wrote to any under the Name of the Catholick visible Church nor to any Church or Congregation as part of it but we read of writing to a Church in such a place d Revel 3.1 c. 1 Cor. 1.1 and divers Churches in a place as Country or Province we find distinguisht by the places where they were as Town City in which they were e Gal. 1.2 Rev. 1.4 Again each particular Congregation had its proper Elders relating to it f Act. 20.17 Phil. 1.1 Act 14.23 and not to others or to a Catholick visible Lastly the Church at Jerusalem the first Primitive was indeed the biggest and largest we read of but to make it any other than a particular Congregation is as weak Divinity as it is Logick for it continued to Assemble together in one place g Act 5.12 and was called but one Church and was not the Church that was visibly Catholick for it contained not the Churches of Samaria h Act 9.31 and Antioch i ib. 15.2 3 soon after gathered § 5. Wherefore the Subject defined by us is a particular Church not because the Catholick is a Genus of it but because the Catholick and a Particular are two distinct Species of Church by proper Adjuncts e. gr A particular Church is visible here on Earth in coetu a Act 5.12 which the Catholick Church is not It assembles in one place b 1 Cor. 11.20 which the Catholick cannot here It 's the subject of external Ordinances Officers and Discipline c Phil. 1.1 1 Cor. 5.4 which the Catholick is not The Members are known by visible Profession and confederation d 2 Cor. 9.13 which the Members of the Catholick are not known by § 6. The next general Nature as we have shewed to a Church is a Body Politick or Corporation for Body is thus distributed in Scripture Acceptation it is Natural or Political Political is Civil or Spiritual the Spiritual is a Church which is a spiritual Body Politick and that is invisible and Catholick or visible and Particular Here we are on a Particular Congregation which we say is a spiritual visible Body Politick a Rom. 12.4 5. 1 Co. 12.27 That it is a Body in a Political sence is most manifest for the Scripture calling it so it must be concluded that it cannot be so in any rational sence but as it is a Body Corporate not Civil but Spiritual it being of spiritual Matter b 1 Cor. 3. 1 Gal. 6.1 spiritual Form c 1 Pet. 2.5 and for spiritual Ends d 1 Cor. 12 3.3 7.8 Eph. 5.19 1 Pet. 2.5.9 Neither is it invisibly spiritual for spiritual things are both visible and invisible e Col. 1.16 18. 2.5 1 Pet. 2.5 but its spiritual in opposition to civil Hence the Church we are speaking of is a visible spiritual Body-Politick and as such having a special and peculiar Relation to Christ the Political Head f Heb. 3.1.6 wherein the special Glory and Excellency of this Church doth ly § 7. The great Concern therefore of this Body is its true Political Relation to Christ as the head thereof a Eph. 4.15 16. that it be by its visibility at least Christ's Corporation b 1 Cor. 12.27 1. By his Purchase c Act. 20.28 2. By his Charter and Institution being founded upon his Doctrine Rules and Appointments d Mat. 28.20 3. That the Dispensation be Christ's so that all things therein transacted be in the Name and Power of the Lord Jesus Christ e Col. 3.17 and to God's Glory by him f Eph. 3.21 4. That the Matter of this Church be visibly approved as Members of Christ's Mystical Body and so in Christ Jesus by Faith visibly at least g Phil. 1.1 2 Cor. 6.15 16. 5. That their association into one Body be by explicite Covenant first to Christ the Head and to one another as visible Members of Christ supposed faithful and Loyal to him h Rom. 15.6 7. Isa 56.7 1 Pet. 5.9 6. The great ends of it are 1. A freedom in Christ i Gal. 5.1 and the Spirit k 2 Cor. 3.17 from all other Political Heads as such in this spiritual relation and all pretendedly Ecclesiastical l 2 The. 2.4 or Civil m Isa 26.13 or Pastoral compulsion and Arbitrary Government within themselves n 1 Pet. 5.3 3 John 10. 2. The great enjoyment of the Presence and Blessing of Christ o Rev. 3.1 Eph. 1.3 3. Their communion in Christ with one another p 1 Cor. 10 16. and thereby their edification in Grace q 1 Cor. 14 26. and continued growth in Christ r Eph. 4.15 in the solemn and sacred use of all his holy Institutions and Appointments All which they look upon not as Bondage but their desirable Enjoyments and Priviledges granted to them by the Charter and Seal of the New Testament ſ Eph. 1.3 Col. 2.19 Eph. 1.18 19. § 8. As it is and ought to appear a spiritual Body a 1 Pet. 2.5 and therefore visible it must be made up of such Members
his Offices in all his Relations as Head of the Body Apostle and High-Priest of thy Profession Wilt thou not be of that Body Politick to whom he is the Head of that House over which he is Lord that thou mayst offer spiritual Sacrifices 5. He hath called thee out of the World and thou art bound to come out and be separate and Covenant with God 6. However thou professest to be with Christ in this thou art against him and scatterest abroad 7. Hast thou tasted that the Lord is gracious and so art become a living Stone then thou art to come to Christ the chief Corner-Stone in Church-Fellowship to be built up a spiritual House and united therein by Joints and Bands to be a fellow-Citizen of the Saints and to help to fill up a holy Political Temple for a Habitation of God by the Spirit 8. Thou wilt never grow kindly in Grace out of a Church for that is God's Garden his Vineyard which he Plants Prunes Waters with Blessings continually on all the means of Grace there 9. What Fellowship canst thou have in the World What communion hath Christ with Belial Light with Darkness c. 10. Thou lyest open to multitude of Temptations and no wonder if God suffers them to prevail 11. Thou thinkest thou gainest as to the World by not engaging in Church-Fellowship and saist it is not time to build God's House but dost thou not carry out much and bring in little and put what thou gettest into a Bag with Holes 12. To join to a Church of Christ is the highest way of glorifying God visibly in the World 13. Thou canst never have that Communion with God out of Church-Fellowship as in 14. Whilst thou professest Christ and continuest a non-Member thou art a scandal to thy Profession and a means to harden the wicked Now lastly It may be expected that we give some Reasons of Publishing this small Treatise The Reasons are briefly these 1. For the Honour and Interest of the Lord Jesus Christ which is the main End designed and all the following reasons are in subordination thereto 2. Because it's time to build and God in his Providence plainly speaks it in that he blows upon our outward things and blasts them daily because we let the House of Godly waste 3. To vindicate our selves against our false Accusers who render us such as have little regard to the observation of whatever Christ commands 4. Because most of the Writings of the faithful Builders are out of Print or not easily obtained 5. Because many good People that have a love to Christ and desire to walk in obedience to all God's Commandments want due instruction in these Points Hence it was earnestly desired that we would Publish such a short Treatise and we dare not withhold the Truth in unrighteousness 6. Because of the great degeneration and declination of the life of Christianity and stedfast and close walking of Churches in all the parts of Gospel Order that they may repent and do their first works 7. Not to impose on the Consciences of any but to hold forth unto them what light we have received from the Word of God for the illumination of the ignorant the strengthening the weak removing stumbling-blocks from such as are offended at us and encouragement of all such as are willing and ready to build He that hath Ears to hear let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the Churches In which Glory be to God by Jesus Christ throughout all Ages World without End AMEN Errata Page 2. line 7. r. Congregation was p. 11. l. 22. r. social p. 13. l. 21. dele punctum for The r. the p. 18. l. 6. à fi for is r. are p. 20. l. 2. r. Catholicy p. 38. l. 15. for any one r. he p. 41. l. 5. r. themselves p. 46. l. 17. r. discerned p. 73. Margin r. d Num. 8.10 11. THE Divine Institution OF Congregational Churches CHAP. I. Of a Church in General Of the meaning of the Word Church A Meeting-Place no Church It 's a spiritual Building but it 's God's not Man's Building such are not God's Churches many of which there are Notes to discern true or false by Christ the Head of a true Church A Church the Body of Christ How Christ's Body is understood What a True Church is not made of And what it is not And what it is What the remote and next genus of a Church Sect. 1. THE Word Church or Kirk is most likely to be descended of the Greek words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 contracted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying the House of God a 1 Tim. 3.15 And hence the best Notation of it is by this Interpretation That a Church is domus dominica or God's House wherein he dwells by a more than usual Presence in the World Of old God chose a Material House to appear and manifest himself in to his Church of Israel b Jud. 18 31-20.26 2 Chro. 3.3 4.19 24.5 but as those Buildings were not the Church but the Congregations were c Act 7.38 So in the New Testament days more especially God's Church is not a House or Building artificially made by Man but another Building d Hebr. 9.11 i. e. a spiritual Houshold e Eph. 2.19 or Building f 1 Pet. 2.5 § 2. Tho some think a Place of meeting ordinarily for the Worship of God in Publick may by a Metonimy be called a Church in an improper sence and ignorant People from such Usage take such a Place to be so yet it doth appear plainly That there is no just grounds from Scripture to apply such a Trope to an House for a Publick Assembly 1. Nothing is more evident by Scripture than that an Artificial Building is not a Church for the Apostle Paul wrote his Epistles to Churches which could not be Dead-Walls but to a People a 1 Cor. 1.2 2 Ep. 1.1 2. God purchas'd his Church with his Bloud b Act 20.28 which is a People not Artificial Houses 3. We are commanded to give no offence to the Church of God c 1 Cor. 10.32 which cannot be meant of a Meeting-House not capable of offence 4. Paul persecuted the Church of God d 1 Cor. 15.9 Gal. 1.13 which could not be the Meeting-Place neither had the Church then any certain Meeting-Place 5. There is no House or artificial Building in Scripture called a Church § 3. By way of Similitude and Metaphorically a Church is called an House a Temple or Building or City it being such in a spiritual sense a 1 Pet. 2.5 Heb. 3.5 6 built of spiritual Materials join'd and fram'd together in due connection and order b Eph. 2.21 bearing Analogie to the Temple of old a Type of the Gospel-Church c ib. v. 22. and is called Gods House d Heb. 10.21 because it is his Propriety e Deut. 32.19 it 's of his framing and building f
1 Cor. 3.9 Heb. 3.4.6 9.11 it 's his chosen purchased and peculiar inheritance in the World g Deut. 14.2 Ps 132.13 Tit. 2.14 Psa 135.4 1 Pet. 2.9 God dwells and appears therein in a special and gracious manner h 2 Cor. 6.16 Eph. 2.22 Psal 87.2 it is called by his Name i 2 Chro. 7.14 it is called the Church of the living God k 1 Tim. 3.15 God is therein glorified l Eph. 2.20 21. § 4. Churches therefore are not of humane fabrick or fashion nor to suit the carnal Minds and Interests of Men or States Mens Laws cannot establish Churches they must be built after the Pattern which God hath shewed a Exo. 26.30 Heb. 8.5 it 's not Gods Church which Man builds and is after his inventions b Psa 106.29.39 Matt. 15.6 God never gave Commission to the Pope Ecclesiastick or Civil Powers to institute Churches c Isa 1.12.13 14. 42.8 48.11 and as a Church is of God so the whole form and fashion is of Gods teaching only d Eze. 43.10.11 § 5. Hence it is that the Spirit of God in his Word hath witnessed against and renounced nothing more than false Churches such especially with all their appurtenances of Ordinances Officers and Worship which have apostatized from and forsaken his own Pattern and Institution a Eze. 43.8 and fashioned themselves by their Humane Inventions b Psa 106.29 to answer their own carnal Interests c Hab. 1.26 and corrupt Ends d Isa 1.12 13. Ecclesiastical e Hos 5.1.3 or Civil f 1 King 12.27 wherefore such always are charged with spiritual Whoredoms g Hos 5.3 and treated as Harlots h Hos 2.2 most especially the Catholick Visible that Mother of Harlots with all her spurious brood of Subordinations Hierarchical and Representative two especially are laid before us as the most notorious Harlots That of Jeroboam's i 2 Kings 17.21.22 and that of the Antichristian Apostacy k 2 Thes 4.7 by the latter the World is corrupted to this day she sitting under the Name of the Catholick visible Church with her Offspring ruling over the Kingdoms of the Western World as the Mother of Harlots l Rev. 17.5.18 not only breeding but nursing up all Idolatry Superstition Will-Worship and all departure from the Pattern of Christ which hath bin and is by Papists and un-illuminated or interested Protestants m Rev. 18.2.3 Fathering all her spiritual Cheats whereby both sorts are intoxicated on the Name of Christ whence the Seven Women n Esa 4.1 Churches in the Prophetick Language are said to lay hold on one Man i. e. the Lord Jesus Christ desiring to be called by his Name to take away the reproach of spurious and adulterine Churches but yet feed on their own Institutions and are cloathed with their own righteousness § 6. Pretended Churches of Christ may be discerned to be true or false 1. By the foundation whether on the Person Nature Offices and Word of Christ a 1 Pet. 2.4 Ephe. 2.20 2. By the visible matter whether living Stones b 1 Pet. 2.4 3. By the Form Fashion and Frame according to the order of the Gospel c Heb. 8.5.6 3.3 Mat. 28.20 Ezek. 43.11 Col. 2.5 Hence a Church is no Church of God either of these being altogether wanting or is but a faulty and deficient Church so far as its defective in these as to Faith or Order Wherefore the more the Mystery of iniquity comes to be discovered and the true Woman the Lambs Wife comes out of her Wilderness-State we may expect that the Churches will come to an higher degree of Purity and Order d Isa 1.25 Rev. 19.7 8. § 7. Wherefore to a true Church Christ is all and in all a Eph. 1.22 he being the Head in all respects and hath the Preheminence b Col. 1.18 19. being before all things and above all things the Head of Principalities in Dignity and Dominion worshipped by Angels c Heb. 1.6 Psa 89.27 higher than the Kings of the Earth It hath pleased the Father that there should be a special relation and mutual Fulness between Christ and the Church Christ being so the Head of his Church as he is to none else and as Christ filleth the Church so the Church is the fulness of Christ d 1 Cor. 12 12. Eph. 1.21 22. § 8. This Headship of Christ is divers ways illustrated to us in Scripture by a Natural Man's Head and Body a Col. 1.18 by a Family or Conjugal Head b Eph. 5.23 by a Root or Vegetable Head c John 15.1 Rom. 11.24 by an Head of an artificial Building the Head Corner-Stone d 1 Pet. 2.4.5 and hence it appears That Christ is such a Head as represents the whole Body and transacts all things for it e Isa 42.6 Heb. 10.9 10. That Christ is the vital Head of his Church the Spring and Fountain from whence all Life and Motion flows f John 1.14.16 Col. 2.3 He is the Head Corner-Stone the strength and support of all the Building g Psa 118.22 He is the Conjugal Head and Saviour of the Body h Eph. 5.15 of whom all the Family is named i Eph. 3.25 And lastly Christ is set forth by these similitudes and otherwise unto to us as a graciously ruling and governing Head unto his Church set on this holy Hill k Psalm 2. the Throne of David l Luke 1.32 he is the Political Head the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession m Heb. 3.1 § 9. As Christ stands in relation to the Church as the Head so the Church is related to Christ as the Body a Col. 1.18.24 Eph. 1.23 being in that respect his fulness Christ and his Church making one Mystically b 1 Cor. 12.12 The Body of Christ in Scripture is variously taken 1. It is taken for the substance of the Mystery of Christ typified and shadowed forth by the Ceremonial Law c Col. 2.17 2. It is taken for the Humane Nature of Christ wherein he lived and suffered here d Rom. 7.4 Heb. 10.5.10 3. It 's used for the Sacramental or Symbolick Body of Christ e Luke 22.19 4. It 's taken for a Church or People embodied or incorporated in Christ Jesus and is his Political Body f Eph. 5.23 Col. 1.18 5. It 's used in a proper sense for the very Body of Christ separate and distinct from his Soul g Mat. 27.58 It is the fourth Acceptation that we are here concerned in § 10. A Church of God as to the most general consideration is the Body of Christ in a Spiritual and Political acceptation of a Body a Col. 1.24 in which respect it 's compared to a Family and City and Candlestick 1. It is a Company congregated not one or two in the Body are many Members
belong to this and not to other m Heb. 12.23 § 13. The Catholick Church is but one onely a Eph. 4.4.5 1 Cor. 12.12 and it cannot be visible as Catholick for the greatest part are not seen by us being Saints in Heaven b Eph. 1.10 3.15 Elect Infants and many not known by Profession and if Men apply Catholick to the Professors of Christianity living at the same time upon the Earth and call them the Catholick Visible Church it is a mistaken Appellation for they are neither a Visible Church nor Catholick Not a Visible Church because 1. Christ hath instituted none such 2. They are never seen in coetu or in a Congregation as a Visible Church is nor can be till the last Day c Mat. 13.41 3. Christ never gave Ordinances for such a Communion 4. All these are not under any visible bond of Confederation together which is the form of a Visible Church Profession is no Bond but a proper requisite only thereto 5. Christ never instituted such a Church Ministry but what were set in a particular Church and exercised in such The Apostles Christ's extraordinary Ministers were first set in the Church at Jerusalem d Eph. 4.11 1 Cor. 12.28 and were first Officers there and tho their Commission reached to the Planting and Governing other Churches that should succeed yet they exercised not their Ministry or Apostolick Power to any supposed Catholick Church Visible nor wrote to such but gathered particular Churches out of the World and in them settled a distinct Ministry and Ordinances peculiar to each wherein they exercised their own power as far as necessary for their Settlement and Edification Again there is no Catholick Visible Church for 1. If there be there is two Catholick Churches which is a contradiction and contrary to that Creed called the Apostles 2. All visible Professors if a Church cannot be Catholick because they are not all the Members of Christ on Earth and they that profess at large at least are not Members of Christ many if not most of them 3. It is not a Catholick Church because it 's not a Body-Corporate in any visible manner nor are capable of answering the ends of such in Government Order or Priviledges 4. If there be a Catholick visible Church it 's rational there should be a Catholick visible Pastor and from these Principles arose the Pope and the Papal Jurisdiction established throughout the professing World In the first Ages after Christ each particular Church called it self Catholick from the Profession of that Doctrine which was called the Catholick Faith because received by all the Churches Afterward the Word Catholick was applied to a supposed Universal Visible Church and became not only serviceable to the rising of the Mystery of Iniquity but a great Foundation of the Antichristian Fabrick which was afterward built thereon with all the Ecclesiastical Tyranny and Papal Superstitious Pomp imaginable The Protestants that have cast off the Universal Pastorship of one and will not endure a Catholick single Pastor do most of them retain the Notion of an Universal Visible Church as also of divers Catholick Pastors dividing that Catholocy which they will not allow the Pope among themselves each one exercising the Office and Power of a Catholick visible Pastor where-ever he comes having bin ordained by a Presbytery of a Catholick Constitution to a Catholick Pastorship to the Catholick Church To conclude Our best Protestants in opposition to the Papists have still denied the being of a Catholick Visible Church amongst whom was Famous Dr. Whitaker whose Arguments upon this Question against Duraeus are Quoted by Mr. Hooker in his Survey ch 15. p. 265. Our Savoy Confession allows the Name but denies the Nature Ch. 26. § 2. Institution of Churches § 6. for it saith it s not entrusted with the Administration of any Ordinances nor hath any Officers to Rule and Govern as such and what a kind of Visible Church is that that is neither the subject of Ordinances or Officers Mr. Hooker saith Church is the Genus of all particular Churches but a Visible Church in the generical consideration can no more be found existing out of individual particular Churches than a Man can be found existing under the generical consideration of Man out of individual Men. But that a totum aggregatum of all Churches in this World can be made and be a visible Church he denies upon Learned and convincing Reasons which will stand their Ground against all contradiction To whom for brevity sake we refer the Reader where also he evinceth that there 's no Catholick Visible Church considered as a totum Representativum i. e. as a Representative Church in all the Pastors that there cannot be a Catholick Visible Representative Church and that there is no such thing as a Representative Church of any kind of greater or lesser extent § 14. What the Scripture speaks of a Church is either of a Church in general and indefinitely belongs to any or of a Church in Specie either Catholick and invisible or particular and visible but saith nothing of a Catholick Visible CHAP. III. Of a Congregational Church in General Of Christ's Dispensation as Head A visible Church defined Revealed Worship exercis'd first in Families then in Instituted Churches The Foundation of visible Churches laid in Abraham's Covenant Two parts thereof The Church of Israel First Essential then Organized The difference between the Mosaical and Gospel Oeconomy The Church of Israel Congregational § 1. THE Lord Jesus Christ exerts his Headship not only by the more immediate Administration of his Spirit a 1 Cor. 2.11 12. 12.4 7.13 Eph. 4.3 7. internally in the hearts of his People whereby he constitutes his Mystical and Catholick Body but also as the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession b Heb. 3.1.2 6. by external Means of Grace Constituting and Ordaining particular visible Churches and in them Ministry and Ordinances suited to the State and respective Ages of the World c Heb. 9.1.8.10 Deut. 29.1 for the filling up and edification of his Mystical Body d Eph. 4.12 13. and blesseth such accordingly to his great Glory and good of his Chosen e Eph. 3.21 Ps 106.45 Exo. 20.24 Deut. 4.8 § 2. A Visible Church is a Particular Assembly of Professing Believers a 1 Cor. 1.2 visibly embodied in Christ b 1 Cor. 12.27 for a stated and holy Communion c Act 9.31 in one place d 1 Cor. 11 20. with God and one another in all instituted Ordinances e Act 2.42 appertaining to themselves and their immediate seed f Act. 2.39 Isa 61.9 65.23 Eph. 6.4 for God's Glory in Christ g Eph. 3.21 and their mutual Edification h 1 Cor. 14 5.12.26 § 3. God's External Worship by Revealed Religion was first celebrated in Adam's Family a Gen. 4.3 4. and continued in the Families of the Faithful till the time of Abraham
b Heb. 11.5.7 8. which by many are esteemed to have bin so many distinct Churches and accordingly distinguish particular Churches into Oeconomick or Family and Congregational But others think that tho God appointed to those Patriarchs a solemn Family-Worship yet that a Church was not instituted till Abraham's time when the first Foundation of an Instituted Church was laid in the Covenant that God made with and Sealed to Abraham and his Seed c Gen. 12.2 17.1 2 for before this Covenant tho God was Worshipped in Families there seems not to have bin any Churches made up of divers Families and therefore not Congregational nor any Church-Covenant or Seals thereof Hence he is said to have received the Sign of Circumcision the Seal of the Righteousness of Faith which he had being uncircumcised that he might be the Father of all that believe both circumcised and uncircumcised d Ro. 4.11 i. e. of Believers whose Church-Covenant was Sealed by an Instituted Seal appropriated thereto or else how was Abraham said to be a Father to all that should afterward believe any more than Noah was or Sem and moreover because in this Covenant Christ the Head of the Church was explicitely contained e Ro. 4.13 Gal. 3.18 19. who indeed was promised as Heir of the World through the Righteousness of Faith therefore the Apostle tells us that the Promise of Christ and all Church-Priviledges and Ordinances of his Institution are sure not only to Abraham's natural Seed but to all who are of the Faith of Abraham who is the Father of all Professing Believers and Covenanting with God for themselves and Seed by vertue of his receiving the Seal of the Righteousness of Faith which he had in his uncircumcision f Ro. 4.16 so that the stress of Abraham's Father-hood to the Faithful is not laid upon his Eminent Faith alone but upon his receiving an Instituted Seal of the Righteousness of Faith to himself and his infant-Seed g Rom. 4.11.16 and in this respect as he is called the Father so each Believer is his Seed in Christ h Gal. 3.26 27 28. receiving a Seal of the Righteousness of Faith to himself and Seed as Isaac did i Gal. 4.28 § 4. In Abraham's Covenant was contained the Promise and Blessing of Christ to his Church in all Ages both in respect of its Mystical and Visible relation to him as its Head a Gal. 3.8 9 14. Ephes 1.3 and therefore the establishment of Church-Membership was made in Abraham to the professing covenanting-Believer un-alterably as a substantial part of the Blessing which was to come on the Gentiles and not to be removed b Gal. 3.14 15 16 17 18. Heb. 12.27 There were two things manifestly in Abraham's Covenant 1. The substantial and abiding part of that Covenant both to Jews and Gentiles both internal and Mystical yea and external as to a Church visible state Membership and Priviledges all which came upon the Gentiles c Gen. 17.13 19. Eph. 3.6 c. 1.3 2. There was the peculiar and moveable part of Abraham's Covenant which was the increase of his Seed into a National Church d Gen. 12.2 18.18 the growth and progress it should make through Bondage and Pilgrimage to an external and Typical Rest e Gen. 15.13 14 16 18. with all worldly Plenty and Prosperity f Josh 5.6 7. 22.4 21.43 and most especially the form and manner of that Church-Worship according as was after established by God's Ordination and Institution g Deut. 4.7 8.31 32. to 37. Exo. 25.40 for the time then being till the coming of Christ h Heb. 9.9 10. Circumcision it self being a part of that moveable Fabrick begun in Abraham and perfected in Moses i Act 7.8.32.37 38. Heb. 3.2 3 8.5 Gal. 5.3 4. it was taken away with the other observances k Heb. 8.5.8.13 9.9 Col. 2.11 17. but a Seal of the Righteousness of Faith whereby Abraham became the Father of all Believers Jews and Gentiles was not taken away l Rom. 4.11 15.8 but was a great part of the Blessing that came on the believing Gentiles m Gal. 3.9 14. viz. that the Professing Covenanting-Believer should both he and his Infant-Seed receive a Seal of the Righteousness of Faith as the great Priviledge of Church-Membership belonging to both as to Abraham and his they being his Seed by Faith as Isaac was n Ro. 4.12 16. Gal. 3.26 27. 4.28 Col. 2.10 11 12. Acts 2.39 Ro. 15.8 9. Isa 61.9 ch 65.9 § 5. The Church of Israel before Moses was Congregational and in a visible Covenant with God and truly an essential Church a Ex. 12.3 Num. 20.4 Ex. 12.40 41. 16.22 Act. 7.38 but not organized with a Ministry and Ordinances of God's Institution for a due and orderly Worship of God till Moses b Act 7.38.44 45. which state and standing of that Church from Abraham to Moses and partly in its Wilderness condition was a great Type of the Gospel-Church in its persecuted bewildred and unsettled state under its great Adversaries wherein it hath been mostly fed by God and preserved by him in its Mystical State and standing as was before hinted c Rev. 12.6.13 § 6. The Administration of the external Constitution by Christ in the Ministry and Ordinances of the Church of Israel a Acts 7.38 was of a distinct form and manner from the Church Administration according to the Gospel Oeconomy Ordinances and Order b Heb. 9.1.9 10 11. For the Administration of the Ecclesiastical State and standing of that Church was faulty in respect of the Ordinance of Circumcision it self c Acts 7.8 Gal. 5.3 4. 2 Cor. 3.14 and Mosaick Vail drawn over Gospel Mysteries d Heb. 8.6 the encouragement to Gods Service by temporal Promises the Typical and Legal Nature of the Sanctuary Ministry e Heb. 8.9 2 Cor. 3.9 Heb. 8.5 and Ordinances called carnal f Heb. 9.10 7.16 and worldly g Heb. 9.1 imperfect not reaching the Conscience h ch 9.11 10.1 2. 7.19 Moses the Mediator i Gal. 3.20 thereof and Aaronick Priesthood k Heb. 7.11 23. both typical of the true Mediator l 8.4 5. 3.1 and High-Priest of our Profession It was a faulty Covenant m Heb. 8.7 and called by the Apostle the Old Testament n 2 Cor. 3.14 and is all done away as a shadow in the coming of Christ o Ibid. and his bringing in to us a better because clearer ground of Faith and Hope p Heb. 7.19 by spiritual Promises q Eph. 1.3 and a more Heavenly Gospel Ministry and Ordinances r Heb. 8.5 9.23 and is therefore called a New Covenant ſ Heb. 8.8 the blessings whereof are Abraham's now come on the Gentiles t Gal. 3.14 heavenly and spiritual in high places v Eph. 2.6 much
as to the adult part are Professors of their Mystical Relation to Christ b Eph. 5.30 for the truest Believer cannot be known but by such Profession that must come into visibility before any one can have any approved Church-Membership or any fair or plausible pretence to a right thereto c Jam. 2.18 Act 11.23 2. Tho Professing Believers with their immediate Infant-Seed are the true and fit Matter for a Visible Church d Act 2.39 yet is not their Profession the Visible Form of a Church Stones may be good and well squared for a Building but do not give Form to any House e 1 King 6 7. till they be visibly conjoyned and knit together to a Corner-Stone f 1 Pet. 2.5 Eph. 2.21 therefore the Band must be visible in this Building of Christ all the sitted parts as living Stones freely coming to Christ the Corner-Stone and by common consent uniting themselves to Christ and one another to make a spiritual House a Habitation of God by his Spirit g Eph. 2.21 22. every one of which being supposedly at least united to Christ the Mystical Head h Eph. 4.15 and so becoming living Stones do now come to Christ by a second explicite visible Union in a Political Body of his i Rom. 12.1 4 5. which can be no other than Confederation whereby each one with his immediate Infant-Seed is given up unto Christ and associated to the said Members in one Corporation or Body Politick § 9. That explicite confederation gives form to a visible Church appears beyond all doubt 1. From the nature of its being a Body Politick or Corporation a Ro. 12.4 5. 1 Cor. 12 12 13 14 27. for all Civil Corporations are in this manner made a Body 2. Men may be very honest and good Subjects under the King's Government but not incorporated in any distinct Body Corporate under the King 3. They that are incorporated are bound by a promise of Fidelity to the King the Political Head and by a promise obliging to Membership with and fidelity to that particular Body 4. There is no Person governable by any such Body Politick that is not thus bound to it by such confederations for what hath it to do with such as are without b 1 Cor. 5.12 5. It is not fit that any should partake of the granted Liberties and Priviledges of any particular Society without becoming a fast Member thereof and how can any one that is at his choice whether he will or will not be made a fast Member thereof without a declared mutual obligation between him and such Society As all these Reasons hold good as well in a spiritual Body Politick as a Civil and bear a great Analogy with the Natural Body of a Man therein So likewise it appears in the second place from the Word of God speaking of a Church as such a Body 1. The first constitution of a Congregational-Church in Abraham and his Seed was by Covenant c Gen. 17.2 10. and so the great Reformations thereof afterwards were by renewing Abraham's Covenant 2. All the descriptions of a Visible Church by allusion to a Natural Body d Ro. 12.4 5. to a House e Eph. 2.21 22. 1 Pet. 2.5 or Temple hold forth such an explicite Band of parts together as well as the whole to the Head as parts of a Body or House are knit together which nothing can do in a Body Politick but a voluntary Confederation 3. The expressions of joining to the Lord and adding to the Church f Act. 2.47 5.13 14. 4. Church-Covenanting under the Gospel is foretold g Isa 56.6 62.5 5. The Apostle is express about it when he treats purposely and directly of the true matter of a Church and foederal form of it h 2 Cor. 6.15 16 c. Act. 11.23 6. Professed Subjection to the Gospel is explicite covenanting i 2 Cor. 9.13 as also in that place speaking of giving up ones self to the Lord and one another k 2 Cor. 8.5 § 10. Hence as it is a Covenanting Body so a Body separate from the World Heathenish and Antichristian a 1 Cor. 10 19.20 Rev. 18.3 2 Cor. 6.16 17. A Church cannot be a peculiar and select People without separating from communion in Church Ordinances with visible unbelievers and from false Worship of all kinds whatever b 2 Cor. 6.15 16. 1 Pet. 2.9 § 11. The immediate Infant-Seed of the Confederate-Believer becomes given up unto God and receives Church-Membership in and by the Parents Covenant a 1 Cor. 7.14 Gal. 4.28 Rom. 9.8 for such was the Constitution of the first Congregational-Church which remains un-altered for the righteousness of faith and the Seal of the righteousness of Faith remaining to Believers b Ro. 4.11 12. as the Gospel preached c Gal. 3.8 to Abraham was the Blessing that came on the Gentiles d ibid. 14. it belongs to them to whom he was the Father even in that respect e Rom. 4.11.16 and they are Heirs according to the Promise f Gal. 3.29 being the Children of God by Faith in Christ g ib. v. 26. ib. v. 9. are blessed with faithful Abraham h ib. v. 27 yea as many as have bin baptised into Christ have put on Christ as Abraham did both in respect of the righteousness of Faith and the Seal thereof i Ro. 4.11 12. the Priviledge he hath for himself and Seed in Covenant and both Jew and Greek Male and Female are all one as to this respect in Christ Jesus k Gal. 3.28 And being Abraham's Seed l Ro. 4.16 yea his Children as Isaac was they inherit the Blessing in the righteousness of Faith and the Seal thereof to themselves and Seed But this Blessing as it comes upon the Gentiles as fellow-heirs of the same Promise made to Abraham m Eph. 3.6 which neither the makeing or abrogation of Moses his Constitution did or could disannul n Gal. 3.17 comes not on this or that Nation or Race of any Family specified as it was upon Abraham's but it comes only in the right of a confederating Believer o Rom. 9.6 7 8. and therefore on him and his immediate Seed only for the Child of a Believer when he comes to be adult by his non-profession of Abraham's Faith and non-covenanting accordingly his Membership ceaseth and his Seeds and therefore the Grandfather's Faith cannot give the Grand-Child any right to the seal of the righteousness of Faith but the Infants Membership and Right to any Church-Priviledge as it must ly in the immediate Parent so the unbelief of the immediate Seed cuts off from any right to that Seal § 12. The ends of Visible Church-Union are very great viz. The constant and frequent waiting and attending upon God in his Worship and that by a People assembling together for this end and purpose with one Heart and Mind
a Acts 2.4.2 5.12 in one Place b 1 Cor. 11 20. and therefore in communion with Christ the Head c 10.16 17. and all the Members of the Body together d 1 Joh. 1.3 whereby each Member is nourished and edified and grows up into Christ the Head in all things e Eph. 4.15 the Ordidinances of communion the immediate ends of Visible Church-Union The stedfast abode therein f Act 2.42 the offering up spiritual Sacrifices unto God acceptable through Christ g 1 Pet. 2.5 and shewing forth the Vertues of him that hath called them out of Darkness into his marvellous Light h Ibid. v. 9 CHAP. V. Of Gathering a Gospel Visible Church Christ first in Gathering a Church The Means of Grace by Conversion and Good Men exciting Instruments How a People thus moved come into a Body How Incorporated orderly without confusion What ordinary Christian Prudence is to be used and Questions put An Essential Church a true Church as to being but not as to well-being A Person excepted against to defer for that time § 1. AVisible gospel-Gospel-Church is made by gathering divers select Persons unto Jesus Christ in a spiritual Body and relation to him as their Political Head a Eze. 34.11 12. 2 Thes 2.1 and it is Christ himself the great Shepherd that first gathers them seeketh his Sheep and brings them to his Fold and Pasture b John 10.9.14 16. perfecting them in every good Work to do his Will through the Blood of the Everlasting Covenant c Heb. 13.20 21. § 2. Christ as he is our Peace a Eph. 2.14 so he cometh and preacheth Peace by the Ministry of the Everlasting Gospel b ib. v. 17. and accompanying it with his Spirit blesseth it to the turning Men from Darkness to Light c Act 26.18 working Faith and Love in Sinners Hearts d 1 Tim. 1.14 whereby they come to embrace the Blessings of Abraham's Covenant and profess the same e Act 15.11 § 3. When God hath called some thus through his Grace a Gal. 1.15 Acts 2.40 in any place and they have tasted that the Lord is gracious b 1 Pet. 2.3 they begin to see and behold how richly Christ's Glory and all the Mysteries thereof are displayed in the Churches c Eph. 3.9 10. his Golden Candlesticks d Rev. 1.20 1 Pet. 2.5 and therefore seek after all ways and means provided by Christ for their coming as lively Stones to Christ the Corner-Stone e Eph. 2.21 22. and of becoming a spiritual House or Habitation of God by his Spirit that they may offer unto God spiritual acceptable Sacrifices in and through Jesus Christ call upon and encourage one another saying come let us go up to the House of the Lord f Isa 2.3 and he will teach us his ways and some that are eminent in Faith and Holiness excite and stir up others to their Duty and claim of their Priviledges in Christ as Barnabas did at Antioch g Acts 11.23 when he saw the Grace of God in the new Converts made through the Ministry of the Disciples scattered by the Persecution from the Church at Jerusalem he exhorts them to cleave to the Lord with full purpose of heart h Ibid. i.e. by an explicite Church-Covenant for he saw as to the inward heart-work it was already done Which they did accordingly and became a Church by a visible Constitution and professed Subjection to the Gospel of Christ in all its holy Appointments in which Church Paul and Barnabas Preached a whole Year i Acts 11.26 and to which Elders were Ordained k ib. 14.23 § 4. Hence such a People thus moved by the Grace of God and having by mutual converse one with another in their Neighbourhood and Society in some holy Duties speaking often solemnly and seriously among themselves of the things of God and their Souls a Mal. 3.16 discerning the Grace of God b Act. 11.23 and love to the Lord Jesus Christ his House and Members in each other and finding good and sufficient matter to build with c 1 Pet. 2.5 counting the cost of their professed undertaking d Luke 14.28 in the fear of God e Acts 9.31 strength of Christ and assistance of the Spirit f Eph. 3.16 having frequently and solemnly waited upon God on this account together and apart g Col. 3.17 Phil. 4.6 as also advised with the neighbouring Churches of Christ and Elders thereof h Prov. 11 14. 1 Thes 1.6 2.14 and finding their way made clear before them by the footsteps of other Flocks of that Nature i Cant. 1.8 they proceed with their Faces Zion-ward k Jer. 50.5 to the most solemn attending this great matter in framing a Gospel-Temple with Fasting and Prayer and manage it in such a manner as becomes so sacred and weighty a business without any thing of confusion l 1 Cor. 14 33 40. § 5. And therefore that it may be so performed something of ordinary Christian-Prudence is necessary a Prov. 13.16 under Christ's General Rules that all things should be done in and about Churches and God's Service without confusion b 1 Cor. 14 33. and to edification c ib. v. 26 For which reason on a solemn Day set apart for this end they ought in Faith and dependance on him d Heb. 12.28 James 1.6 to depute one of their number for that time at least to go before the rest in the concerns of that Day and preside in matters of Order e 1 Cor. 14.40 which being done all of them and each person he or she by her self if bashfulness hinder not if it doth by delivering in Writing what should be spoken are to give an account of what God hath done for each and of the hope they have with meekness and reverence f 1 Pet. 3.15 which when all have done Two Questions are to be put by the said presiding person 1. Whether they be all and every one fully satisfied with each others declared and professed grounds of Hope g Phil. 2.2 3 4 5. so far as to be willing cordially to receive one another in the Lord g Ro. 15.7 16.2 Which being answered in the Affirmative by Suffrage or word of Mouth which is best in this Case The next Question ought to be 2. Whether they all and every one do freely solemnly and unanimously give up themselves and their Seed to the Lord h Ro. 12.1 Matt. 19.14 15. Acts 2.39 and join themselves to one another in Church-Fellowship i ib. 41 42 promising subjection to Christ their Political Head in the Faith and Order of the Gospel k 2 Cor. 9.13 and to walk accordingly in discharge of their Duties to God and one another as becometh Church-Members l Col. 2.5 6 Phil. 1.27 through the Grace of God helping and assisting
Deacons by laying on of Hands as for the laying on of Hands on ordinary Pastors and more there being a seeming President for the first but none for the second § 8. It 's alledged The Presbytery laid their Hands on Timothy a 1 Tim. 4.14 and they say The Presbytery was a Classis or at least a Consistory of ordinary Elders Ans 1. That Inference wants proof for that they were not all so is beyond Question for the Apostle Paul was among them for one or else Timothy had Hands laid on him twice b 2 Tim. 1.6 2. The Apostles were Presbyters and call themselves so c 1 Pet. 5.1 and why might it not be a Presbytery of Apostles and Evangelists seeing such are mentioned by Name and it belonged to them and not to ordinary Pastors to bestow the Gifts of the Holy Ghost by laying on of Hands And 3. It appears that Timothy received such a Gift by the laying on of Hands d 1 Tim. 1.18 4. He was not made an ordinary Pastor but an Evangelist the Ordination of whom we find was by the Apostles As Paul's Ordination was a separation to his Apostleship to the Gentiles e Acts 13. § 9. It 's alledged That Timothy is charged to lay Hands suddenly on no Man which seems to be meant of Ordination of ordinary Pastors Ans If it be so meant yet it proves not laying on of Hands by ordinary Pastors for Timothy was not such It is not to be doubted but the Gift that Timothy received was such an extraordinary Gift as was bestowed then frequently by laying on of Hands and which Simon Magus would have purchas'd of Peter for Money That on whomsoever he should lay his Hands they should receive the Holy Ghost a Acts 8.18 19. This Gift or the Rite of Conveyance the Apostles were wary of prostituting to Men of corrupt Minds And therefore the Apostle warns Timothy not to apply it rashly to any for it 's apparent the Apostles laid not their Hands on Simon Magus finding he had no truth of heart but rejected him and laid not Hands upon him though he had bin baptized § 10. Heb. 6.2 is pleaded That Baptism and laying on of Hands were appointed as standing Ordinances in Churches Ans This Text hath bin much mistaken and abused But briefly it 's not to be understood as if Baptism it self or laying on of Hands were to be understood to be the Principles there meant for indeed he speaks but of one Foundation a 1 Cor. 3.11 the Doctrine of Christ which is laid in Repentance and Faith held forth in Baptism and confirmed by the Apostolick Signs following Christ's Ascention b Heb. 2.3.4 Mark 16.16 in those extraordinary Gifts conveyed by laying on of the Hands of the Apostles and Apostolick Men Hence Beza saith he found in one Copy That Baptism and Laying on of Hands were enclosed by a Parenthesis But if it be not so it matters not much for it is the Doctrine of Baptism and laying on of Hands which are here spoken of viz. The Foundation-Doctrine of Christ symbolically exhibited by the one and miraculously beyond all doubt confirmed by the other in Apostolick times § 11. We conclude concerning this high applauded Ceremony which the Papists make Sacramental and say it leaves an indelible Character and some Protestants adore little less That we find upon the best Enquiry and strictest Scrutiny That it is no continued Ordinance or Institution of Christ in his Churches And That its an obsolete and ceased Ceremony for these Heads of Reasons only for brevity sake following 1. Because the End and Significancy of this Rite is ceased therefore the Rite it self for a Rite that signifies nothing is an empty Sign and vain and we ought not to do any thing in the Worship of God that is empty insignificant vain a Col. 2.8 Matt. 15.9 Col. 3.20 and the doing whereof is Will-Worship 2. That Ceremony that none can by a due Authority apply cannot be performed but none such are now or can pretend thereto there being no Apostles or Apostolick Men or such as can pretend to extraordinary Gifts of the Holy Ghost much less to a Power or Commission to bestow them on others by any Solemn Duty whatever much less by a Ceremony Therefore such a Practice as is a Pretence before Men to that which we dare not profess plainly to in Words before God is but a mocking of God and Man b Gal. 6.7 2 Cor. 11.13 3. We have shewed that the Ceremony was never appropriate to the Ordaining of any Ministers for it was a common Ceremony used in other Cases and to other Persons To the sick c Mar. 16.18 to new Converts d Act 8.17 to those that were Members and had Grace but it was none of those Gifts that were for Propagation and Confirmation of the Doctrine of Christ e ib. 13.3 Many yea most of the Apostles were Ordained without it f Mat. 10.7 8. 28.19 No Ordinary Pastor Ordained with it as we read of g Acts 24.23 Where it was used the Appliers of it were such as were inspired or had immediate Command from God for doing it and there were many that never had imposition of Hands themselves h Acts 8.14 17. 4. Ordination is no where called Laying on of Hands nor Laying on of Hands Ordination in the Old or New Testament 5. There is the same Reason for the Ordaining Ruling Elders and Deacons by Imposition of Hands greater for the latter i Acts 6.6 and will the Assertors of this Rite allow it to them No they appropriate it to Teaching Elders only 6. Our Translators do honestly own that the Churches Solemn and Publick Election of Elders by Suffrage is Ordination k ib. 14.23 7. There is no more ground for continuance of this Rite nor so much as for that of washing feet l Joh. 13.5 or laying on of hands or anointing the sick m James 5.14 but since the cessation of Miraculous Gifts the anointing of the sick and Imposition of Hands in all Cases as a Rite is ceased That of washing feet was only teaching to Christ's Disciples the duty of Humility and Self-Denial which they were after to follow him in as Ministers not in the use of the Ceremony it self n John 13.13 14 15 16. and there are but two Instituted Rites perpetuated to the Churches to the end of the World Baptism o Mat. 28.19 and the Lord's Supper p 1 Cor. 11 26. 8. If it be used only to denote the Blessing of the Party Ordained then Imposition of Hands is a great Usurpation and makes the Elders of one Church superiour to them of another for the lesser is blessed of the greater which Superiority Christ never allowed q Heb. 7.7 Mat. 23.11 Mar. 9.34 Luke 22.24 26. If it be said It 's used to point out the Person ordained it 's childish and frivolous
as if a Man could not be seen or known that comes upon so weighty and Publick an Undertaking but they must point at him and tell the People who he is as if the Churches Election and his publick Acceptance were not enough to shew the Man 9. This Ceremony hath bin abominably abused by Papists to Superstition and Idolatry and greatly idoliz'd by Protestants r 2 Kings 18.4 and always a Bone of Contention even in the more Reformed Churches ſ 1 Tim. 1.6 Titus 3.9 a great offence and Stumbling-Block to many Therefore it is of great Concern to the Churches for the promoting Peace and Truth to throw it out altogether having no Ground or Warrant for the continuance of it § 12. It will be then enquired In what manner a Church should Ordain its own Ministers The Way is plain and easie if Men make it not hard knowing That Ordination of any one to an Office is no more than the Publick and Solemn Recognition of the Call with his like Declaration of his Acceptance whereby he is enstated in and enters upon his Function and Charge Therefore this Solemnization ought to be before competent Witnesses i. e. Churches by themselves or Pastors and Messengers and ought thus to be performed decently to the Honour of Christ a 1 Cor. 14 40. on a Day of Solemn Prayer set a-part for this End by the Church b Acts 14.23 the neighbouring Churches acquainted therewith and their Presence desired beforehand on the said appointed Day Either a Ruling Elder or other if there be any or a Delegated Brother after first Application unto God by Prayer c Phil. 4.6 Eph. 6.18 puts this Question unto the Church Whether they do freely choose A. B. to be their Pastor Teacher Ruling Elder as the Relation is to be the Ordination of all being alike to be such an one to them And whether they submit to him in the Lord To which Answer being made in the Affirmative the Brethren only holding up their Hands d Ibid. 1 Tim. 2.12 The Elected Elder declares his Acceptance in all Gravity and Humility e 1 Pet. 5.2.3 c. So is the Day filled up with suitable Exhortations and Supplications by the assistance of neighbouring Pastors and the Ordination is finished and the Pastor Ordained enters on his Office in the Conclusion of the Solemn Work of that Day § 13. In the same manner a Deacon is ordained differing only in some respects of Publick Solemnity and that the words of the Question import him not to be a Governing Minister § 14. A Church ought to have a due regard to the Person whom they Call and Ordain a Pastor or Teaching-Elder that he be a Man sound in the Faith a 2 Tim. 1.13 of good Report b 1 Tim. 3.7 Tit. 1.6 no Novice c 1 Tim. 3.6 of Exemplary Grace and Piety d ib. 4.12 1 Pet. 5.3 and approved Abilities to Teach e 1 Tim 3.2 rightly divide the Word of God f 2 Tim. 2.15 and defend the Truth g Tit. 1.9 § 15. The Conceit that Ordination may not be repeated is a Popish and vulgar Error For as Churches are no more Prisons to Ministers than People and there may be sufficient reason for the Pastor Elder or Deacon to remove from one Church to another in such a Case a Man is to be Ordained again and so if he change to another Church afterward for one Churches Ordination of a Man cannot make him Pastor to another § 16. He that Preacheth to a People for Conversion needs no other Ordination than the due Approbation and Mission of a Church of which he is a Member accompanied with their Solemn Prayers for a Blessing on his Ministry CHAP. X. Of Ordinances of General Communion Of the reason of the Word Ordinance Christ's Offices shine forth in Ordinances The Church obliged to wait on Christ in them Ordinances General or Special Which General Publick Preaching what Publick Prayers what Praises of the Church and singing Psalms Contribution Observation of the Lord's Day Of Church Fasts § 1. HAVING shewed what Christ's Ordination of Persons is we come to shew what Christ's Ordination of things is and it is His Enacting divers Ordinances a 1 Cor. 11.2 and Appointments for the Order and Government of his own House b Heb. 3.6 Hence his positive Laws of this kind are called Ordinances because Ordained by him or made by his Ordination c Acts 16.4 § 2. The Lord Jesus Christ exerts his Headship of our Profession by his Institution and Ordination of such Ordinances wherein his Offices may eminently shine forth in some appearing as the Apostle of our Profession a Heb. 3.1 in others as High-Priest i. e. Melchisedech a Kingly High-Priest b Ibid. ch 7.16 17. In the Word Preached c Eph. 2.17 as our Apostolick Prophet d Acts 3.22 In the Seals of the Covenant his Priestly Vertues and Excellencies are held forth e 1 Cor. 11 25 26. Acts 2.38 In the Keyes of Rule and Government his Kingly Office shines forth f Rev. 3.7 Zac. 6.13 And thus he is symbolically described in the midst of the Golden Candlesticks the Churches g Rev. 1.13 14 c. § 3. A Gospel Ordinance of Christ is some visible Means of Grace a Acts 20.32 Eph. 4.7 8 Heb. 12.28 Ordained by Christ as Head of our Profession b He. 3.1.2 wherein a Church of Christ and all the Members thereof are obliged to wait on him Socially or in Communion c Acts 2.42 1 Cor. 10.16 Heb. 10.23 25. for his Presence and Blessing d 2 Cor. 6.16 Rev. 1.13 Ps 132.15 in one place e 1 Cor. 11 20. 14.23 § 4. Christ hath appointed some Church Ordinances to be dispensed in a Publick and General way promiscuously and some to be attended upon in a more peculiar way of Communion being appropriated to the Churches only The Ordinances that appertain to the General Publick Communion of the Church as well as to the separate and retired are Preaching the Word a Acts 11.26 Prayers b Eph. 6.18 Praises c Heb. 13.15 and Contributions d Gal. 6.6 1 Tim. 6.18 Heb. 13.16 § 5. The Publick Preaching of the Word of God is the Reading a Neh. 8.8 Luke 4.16 Expounding b Neh. 8.8 Acts 17.3 28.3 rightly dividing the Word of God c 2 Tim. 2.15 to all spiritual Ends and Uses d ib. 3.15 in order to the Edification of Believers e Acts 20.32 and Conversion of Unbelievers f Acts 26.18 Which Preaching ordinarily belongs to the Teaching Elders g 1 Tim. 5.17 tho occasionally others may Exercise Gifts among them as the Elders of other Churches h 1 Pet. 4.11 1 Cor. 2.4 or Brethren when Called thereto who are able to speak to Edification Exhortation and Comfort with submission to the Judgment of the
particular Congregation d Act. 2.41 § 7. The end of Church-Union is Communion which is with Christ the Head and one another a 1 Joh. 1.3 This is in the Spirit b Phil. 2.1 and belongs to the whole Catholick Body or it is expressed by a visible communion in the Ordinances administred in particular Bodies and is the Communion of particular Churches c Act. 2.43 1 Cor. 10.16 § 8 According therefore to the Dispensation of the Fulness of Christs Headship a Joh. 1.16 Eph. 1.19 3.7 Col. 1.19 20. internally and mystically by his Spirit b John 14.26 16.13 14 15. or externally and ministerially as the Apostle and High-Priest of our Profession c Heb. 3.1 8.6 10.1 12.23 Eph. 4.12 The Church and Body of Christ hath its standing mystical and invisible or instituted and visible § 9. The Catholick Church is the Mystical Body of Christ made up of all saved ones Militant and Triumphant a Heb. 12.23 24. Eph. 3.15 united together in one Spirit b 1 Cor. 6.17 for communion therein accordingly c Phil. 2.1 Or It is all the Company of saved ones Militant and Triumphant embodied in Christ Jesus d Ro. 12.5 1 Cor. 12.12 It is called the Mystical Body from that hidden standing which it hath in Christ e Col. 3.3 1 Pet. 3.4 Psal 83.3 every Member being undiscernably as to Men united to Christ and one another f 1 Cor. 12 13. Eph. 4.3 and have communion in the Mystery of God of the Father and of Christ they all eat and drink the same spiritual Meat and Drink g 1 Cor. 10 3 4. whence the matter and form of this Body being not infallibly known to any on Earth h 2 Tim. 2.19 either the particular Members Militant or Triumphant or their bond of Union or their Heavenly communion in the Spirit this Church is fitly called the Mystical Body of Christ to distinguish it from all other considerations of a Church and hence it hath these distinguishing Properties 1. Invisibility as to Men a Heb. 12.22 23. 2. Universality as containing all saved ones on Earth and in Heaven b Eph. 1.10 3.15 3. Perpetuity as to particular Members union and communion their Names being all written in Heaven c Heb. 12.22 23. Luk. 10.20 § 10. The Catholick Union is that whereby a person being cut off from his corrupt standing in the old Adam a Ro. 11.24 he is created b Eph. 2.10 and implanted in Christ Jesus c Ro. 11.24 for righteousness and life d 1 Cor. 1.30 Eph. 4.24 personally restipulating by Faith to the Covenant of Grace made in Christ Jesus e Gal. 3.22 26.29 such an one becomes vitally f Gal. 2.20 conjugally and federally united to Christ the Head g Eph. 4.23 5.23 Jer. 31.33 32.40 Rom. 12.5 and therefore consequentially and really is a Member of the whole Body of Christ and of every part being so united to the Head h Eph. 1.23 § 11. Catholick Communion of Saints is that which is also invisible a Phil. 2.1 and is not only of the Saints Militant one with another but of the Militant and Triumphant in one body b Heb. 12.22 23. and consists in a coparticipation of the fulness of the Grace of God in Christ c Joh. 1.16 being all Elected Redeemed and Sanctified in him d Eph. 1.4 5 6. gradually here e Phi. 3.13 and perfectly conformed to him hereafter f Heb. 12.23 all partakers of the same Spirit in the measure of each one g 1 Cor. 12 4.11 blessed with the same spiritual Blessings for kind h Eph. 1.3 growing up under the same means of Grace for substance i Eph. 4.15 As likewise it consists in the exercise of the same Faith towards the Lord Jesus Christ and Love towards one another k Eph. 6.23 2 Cor. 4.13 1 Joh. 4.7 11 12 2 Tim. 1 13 Coloss 2.2 with all the fruits of both as the matter may require whereby there is always a mutual Heart-Communion at least between all the Saints on Earth l Col. 1.4 and they are come to an actual Communion as well as Union with the glorified Spirits of Just Men made Perfect m Heb. 12.22 c. according to their respective degrees of attainment n Ro. 12.3 more or less whereby they arrive at last in due season to such a determined degree of Sanctity which is their prepared fitness and stature in Christ for the inheritance of the Saints in Light o Col. 1.12 Eph. 4.13 being changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory by the Spirit of the Lord p 2 Cor. 3.18 § 12. The Catholick Church as such is not the subject of Officers or Ordinances nor it being not visible can be Christ never instituted any Officers whose Power was of an universal extent except the Apostles and them only in visible Churches nor any Ordinances for a Catholick visible Communion in which all the Saints living in the same Age were to assemble and meet together a 1 Cor. 11 20. for the visibility of a Church is always in some Assembly But the Catholick Church tho it be not as hath been said hath many things peculiar to it wherein it hath its preheminence above all visible Churches In that therein the Administration of Grace and Dispensation of the Rule and Government of Christ is immediately by his Spirit b 2 Cor. 3.3.8 Gal. 5.25 Eph. 3.16 Gal. 6.18 2 Tim. 4.22 1 Pet. 1.2.22 1 Joh. 3.24 2. In that there are many saved ones in this Church that were never Members of any visible Church c 1 Pet. 1.1 3. That all the saved ones of any visible Church belong to this Church d Rev. 13.8 Heb. 12.27 4. That the Institution of visible Churches and Ordinances is for the sake of this Church e Eph. 4.11 12. 5. All adult Persons that are admitted to Membership in a particular visible Church ought to be such as are supposed by their Profession to be Members of this Mystical Body f 1 Thes 1.1 2 ep 2.1 Col. 1.2 6. That of all Churches this shall never be dissolved or one person lost out of it g Mat. 16.18 Psalm 125.1 John 10.28 29. 7. That as this Church is sometimes preserved and fed without instituted Ministry and Ordinances as the Jewish Church in Babylon and the Gospel-Church in the spiritual Babylonish Wilderness h Rev. 12.6 so it shall be most Glorious without them when it hath arrived at its perfect fulness i Rev. 19.8 9. 8. There is no false or superfluous Member in this Church tho many in others some it may be in the best k Eph. 5.27 Col. 1.21 22. Rev. 14.4 9. Death separates from other Churches but not from this l Rom. 8.35 38. 10. The Glorified Saints