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A34668 A censure of that reverend and learned man of God, Mr. John Cotton, lately of New-England, upon the way of Mr. Henden of Bennenden in Kent, expressed in some animadversions of his upon a letter of Mr. Henden's sometimes sent to Mr. Elmeston (2) a brief and solid exercitation concerning the coercive power of the magistrate in matters of religion, by a reverend and learned minister, Mr. Geo[r]ge Petter ... (3) Mr. Henden's animadversions on Mr. Elmestons's epistle revised and chastized. Elmeston, John.; Cotton, John, 1584-1652. Censure ... upon the way of Mr. Henden.; Petter, George. Brief and solid exercitation concerning the coercive power of the magistrate in matters of religion. 1656 (1656) Wing C6415; ESTC R20949 43,719 60

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Kingdome of Heaven there is the name and whatsoever thou shalt binde on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven there is the power and efficacy of the Keyes which though the Pope and his Ministers perverted and abused yea and exercised another Key which he received from the bottomlesse pit yet it is very unsafely said That the power of the keyes was wholly resolved in the Pope and that there was no other face of Officials but amongst the Papists in Luthers time and that the visible Church the foundation of these failed and onely an elect s●aled number remain●d F●● it is evident and in Story yea and in the Revelation also 1. That the s●aled number was a visible Church represented to John under the resemblance of two Candlesticks Rev. 11. 4. discerned and seen not onely by John representing the faithful Rev. 14. ● but also by the Dragon and by his Vicegerent the Beast who persecuted the Woman and her seed that is the Church and her Members R●v. 12. 13. to 17. and cap. 13. 6 7. The Church visible to malignant persecutors was doubtlesse v●sible in it self and in its Members one to another 2. It is evident that in Luthers time and many ages before the Waldenses lived and when Luther came wrote to Luther and to Calvin also who not onely kept Church-assemblies amongst themselves but exercised the power of the keyes among themselves How then can the Author of the Epistle say That there was not any face of Officials but among the Papists in Luthers time What could be spoken more eff●ctually to gratifie the Papists and to confirms their boasting that either the Church of Rome was the onely visible Church upon the face of the earth or else Christ had no visible Church upon eath for above a thousand yeares together It is a very slender and lean evasion to excuse the rooting out of Ordinances for having any being upon earth to hold they have a beeing in the Scriptures of truth and in the mindes and desires of the faithfull For we might as well say Babylon hath no being upon earth but is burnt down with fire and the New Jerusalem is come downe from Heaven because so it is in the Scriptures of truth and in the mindes and desires of the faithfull If we doe as he saith in this our returne from Babylon carry as the Israelites did of old the vessels of the Lord along with us why should we be afraid to officiate in them We dare not saith he officiate in them because we are as yet within the territories of Babylon and so shall be till we have passed by the sixth Viall over the River Euphrates Rev. 16. 12. Answ. There might be some colour for this if the Churches of Europe and of the Western America were in Scripture-phrase the Kings of the East For they that are said to passe over the Riv●r Euphrates in that sixth Viall are expr●sly styled the Kings of the East But sooner shall a man draw East and West together than prove Christian Churches to be the Kings of the East or that we are still in the territories of Babylon till we have passed by the sixth Viall over the River Euphrates yea suppose we were still in the territories of Babylon yet neverthelesse though the Jewes of old did not perform Temple-worship within the territories of Babylon because that worship was confined to the Temple yet we in the dayes of the New Testament where the worship of God is not limited to any place the true worshippers may worship the Father even in the midst of Rome And so did the Waldenses and other of our godly fore-fathers within the Roman territories The mention of the sixth Viall putteth me in minde of an wholsome warning delivered in it by Christ and that to the Saints of this age in a speciall manner Behold I come a● a thief not to the last Judgement which is no yet but to rob men of their garments of their former profession Blessed is he that watcheth and keepeth his garments lest he walk naked and men see his sh●m● Rev. 16. 15. AMEN Mr. Cottons Letter to Mr. Elmeston upon his writing back to thank him for this labour of love in imparting unto me his judgment upon Mr. Hendens Letter and my signifying the slight account that Mr. Henden made thereof Deare SIR I Thank you for your last Letter of March 5. 1651. whereunto I woul● have returned you a large Answer but that God having lately afflicted me with an Asthma I finde stooping to write somewhat painfull to me which distemper though I thank the Lord it doth not yet silence me from publick Ministry yet it keepeth me within the town that I cannot go to neighbour towns to hear else I had gone abroad to have joyned this day with the Indians at Natick about 20 miles from us in a day of Humiliation wherein they intend to give themselves to the Lord and to the worship of Christ in a Church-way It is a wise dispensation of the Lord that when many Christians with you and with us too fall off from Christs Institution and Ordinances that now God should stir up poor Pagans to seek after the same But so it was in the dayes of old Acts 13. 46 47 48. and 28. 28. As for your Neighbour I do not expect the Word should convince him till the Spirit convert him more from himself and perswade him I do not easily believe his saying that he had met before with all the things presented to him but self is self-full I should spend time in vaine to run over the particulars of his notions unlesse all his grounds were laid open in them To cut off some sprigs when other lye hid The best help for such is the prayer of faith to him that toucheth hearts as well as judgements If God returne him not I feare he will fall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and greater ex●●bitances till he be filled with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 way and hav● enough of himself But the Lord Jesus rede●●● him I comm●nd my affectionate love to you and you to the 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 grace in who● I rest desirous of your pra●●rs and yours in 〈◊〉 ●●rly love John Cotton Re●●●● this 12. of the 8. 1652. FINIS Pag 94. * Erasm. Chil. 2. Cent 2. Cited by Mr. Burg. vindic. leg. in the Preface Orat. post Mich. 1573. Chiliads 1. ●ent 5. Plaut. Mil. glor. Act. 10. Scen. 1. Virg. Aen. 5. Ramus dialect lib. 1. cap. 21. Zabarel de mente bumanâ cap. 8. In his Preface to his my●●ery of Iniquity not fa● from the end Buchol in Cbron. Chiliad 2. Cent. 3. Isa. 49. 23. Zech. 4. 6. Revel 6 2. Dan. 2. 34. Psal. 110. 3. and 47. 9. 2 Cor. 5. 14. K●kerman System log l. 10. sect. 2. cap. 5. 1. Chro. 29. 9. Deut. 6. 5. 2. Cor. 8. 12. Gen. 18. 19. 2 Chron. 14. 4. Eph. 6. 6 7. Col. 3. 23. Nè saevi magne Sacerdos Matt. 1● 7. H●b. 9. 27. Eccles. 3. 16. Chil. 7. cent 1. Proprio laxesordet in ore Dolo●e agit qui versatur in generalibus 1 Cor. 9. 14. Gal. 4. 14 15 16. 1 Kings 22. 28 Error ● Answ Error 2. Answ Error 3 Answ