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A34542 The remains of the reverend and learned Mr. John Corbet, late of Chichester printed from his own manuscripts.; Selections. 1684 Corbet, John, 1620-1680. 1684 (1684) Wing C6262; ESTC R2134 198,975 272

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teaching so that every authoritative Church-teacher is a Pastor for the Pastor rules only by the spiritual sword which is the word of God and the discipline which he exercises is no more than than the personal application of Christs word in his name to judg the impenitent and absolve the penitent And every authoritative Teacher in Christs name hath power to make such personal application of the word The Pastoral Office hath its work not only towards those that are within but towards those also that are without to bring them into the Fold As Christ the Prince of Pastors or chief Shepherd doth by virtue of that office not only feed the sheep that are gathered to him but goes out also into the wilderness to seek the lost sheep even so the Ministerial pastors or bishops are by virtue of their office under Christ to seek those that are as yet going astray and to bring them to Christ the Shepherd and Bishop of their souls Thus the name Pastor doth very congruously denote the Ministerial Authority towards the unbelieving and unconverted as well as towards believers and converts Moreover the said Officers are stiled Preachers of the Gospel 1 Cor. 9.14 Stewards of the Mysteries of God 1 Cor. 4.1 Ambassadors of Christ that have the Ministry of Reconciliation committed to them 2 Cor. 5.18 20. And these Titles infer an Office and Ministry relating as well to those that are without and to be brought into the Fold as to those that are within and to be kept there and in reference to both sorts it is for the edifying or building of the Church In short the Pastoral Office is a state of Authority and obligation to dispence the Word and Sacraments and disciplinary censures of Christ the Mediator in his name The Ministerial dispensation of the Word differs quoad formale from spiritual instruction reproof exhortation given in a common way of Christian charity or in a special way of Oeconomical or civil Authority being performed by Christs commissioned Officers and Stewards in holy things and separated or devoted thereunto And herein the Ministers as Ambassadors or Heralds according to the tenor of the Gospel do publish and offer the mercies of Christ upon his terms and denounce the threatnings of Christ to those that refuse his Mercies The Sacraments being seals annexed by Christ to the word of his grace and a visible word are also to be dispenced by them to whom the dispensation of the word is committed The disciplinary censures of Authoritative Reproof Suspension and Excommunication of persons convicted of ungodliness and impenitency being a particular and personal application of the threatnings of the Gospel and a declaring and judging of the persons unmeet for fellowship with Christ and his Church are likewise to be administred by the same Officers § 4. The nature of the Spiritual Power residing in the Pastors THE Spiritual Power of Pastors Bishops or Elders is expressed by the Author and Giver of it in these terms viz. The keys of the kingdom of heaven binding and loosing remitting and retaining sins To understand the true import of these terms is to understand the Power enquired of The keys of the kingdom of Heaven signifie the Stewardship of Christs Gospel to dispence to every one a due portion thereof according to his command Binding and loosing is a Ministerial Authority of holding impenitent sinners under the curse and absolving the penitent from it only by the word of Christ generally or personally applied and it may further signifie a Ministerial prohibiting of that which is unlawful and allowing of that which is lawful by the doctrine of Christ And the power of remitting and retaining sins as granted to Ministers is only that of meer Stewards or Dispensers of the Blessing or the Curse that hath proceeded out of the mouth of Christ their Lord and there appears no grant from Christ to his Ministers of other power than what is here expressed or what is implyed in it or by necessary consequence follows from it In reference to the ministerial power a great Scholar distinguisheth between a Vicar and a mere Minister and saith a Vicar doth produce actions of the same kind with him whose Vicar he is his words are actiones congeneres tho less perfectly but a mere minister doth not produce such actions but only such as are serviceable to the action of the principal cause Therefore the name of the same action is properly yet analogically attributed to the Vicar as to the principal as for example to pass sentence but to the minister only tropically as remitting and retaining of sins Indeed the sentence of a vicarious Judg whether just or unjust is decisive or definitive and valid as to matter of legal right till it be reversed by the principal but the action of a Minister for the remitting and retaining of sin is of no force no not for a moment if it be unjust or done as the common expression is errante clave Hereupon it follows that the ministerial power of remitting and retaining sins and of binding and loosing at least as to the conscience is merely declarative that is it hath its force and vertue as it is a true declaration of the mind of Christ in that particular otherwise it is void and of no effect The power of Pastors in the acts aforesaid is but the power of Heralds or Ambassadors and therefore only declarative God and Christ doth by the law of grace absolve or justifie the penitent constitutivè Even before the Pastor pronounceth absolution every penitent is by the covenant of grace justifyed or made righteous Therefore the Pastor doth absolve or justifie him only declarativè For when a man is justified by the law of grace and consequently so esteemed and judged of God what hath his officer or minister afterwards to do in his name but to declare what is already done in law As for the saying of Dominus expectat servum that is before God justifies the penitent believer who is ready to submit to all his terms he stays for the sentence of absolution to be pronounced by the Minister I confess I understand not its consistence with the Covenant of Grace Wherefore the pastoral sentence of absolution doth confer no new right nor doth it perfect the right already given by the law of Christ but it doth authoritatively declare that right and strengthen the assurance and comfort the conscience of the penitent The pastoral binding of the impenitent is not the adding of a further curse or obligation to divine vengeance but merely a solemn declaration of the curse already past upon the sinner by the law of Christ But as the solemn declaration of the Kings pardon to repenting rebels and the denunciation of vengeance to the obstinate by an authorized officer according to the law doth strengthen the assurance of the conditional mercy and increase the guilt of continuing in rebellion and more forcibly press to obedience so the like declarative acts
is not properly a punishment to the Infant but meerly a non-deliverance or a being left in the state of sin and wrath wherein he is by nature I still query Whether the aforecited assertion That it is certain by Gods word that Children which are baptized dying before they commit actual sin are undoubtedly saved be not contained under the Declaration It being the matter of a directing Rubrick and for use as I suppose Moreover this Rubrick seems evidently included in the injoyned Subscription and to be justified thereby as not contrary to the word of God Now the same things that are objected about the saving Regeration of all baptized Children may be objected in reference to this also Besides to affirm the certainty of this position by the word of God is much harder than to admit it as a probable truth only Whereas it is said that this position may be acknowledged as certainly true of children indefinitely without denying it to be true universally I answer That to understand it but of children indefinitely is to make it an insignificant and useless Assertion unworthy to be matter of a Rubrick as shewing no more but that it is certainly true that all baptized children are not damaned but some saved This is not rationally apprehended to be the meaning thereof According to the order prescribed in the Liturgy Children are devoted to God and brought into the Covenant of Grace and the Baptismal Vow by Godfathe s and Godmothers who have no propriety in them nor right of dedicating them to God or bringing them into his Covenant and the Parents who have right and by whom the Infants have title to this priviledg are excluded It is not mans Law that can authorize any to bring children into the bond of the Covenant with God And there is no Law of God that authorizeth any besides Parents Proparents or Proprietors so to do Tho the taking in of Sureties in conjunction with the Parents for a greater assurance of the Infants Christian Education may be commendable and useful if those Sureties did indeed concern themselves therein and not make it a matter of meer formality as generally it is made yet there can be no reason for such a rigid insisting upon Sureties the use of whom at the most is but expedient for greater caution about the Childs future education and in the mean time to overlook yea to exclude the Parents open and solemn dedication of the infant which is necessary That form of speaking to the Infant by the Sureties Dost thou renounce c. dost thou believe c. wilt thou be baptized c. wilt thou obediently keep c. and the taking of several answers as from him by the Sureties is not a form of words expressing ones being devoted or brought into Gods Covenant by another but of ones own professed present actual believing desiring and vowing If it be said This is spoken to the Sureties in the Childs name and 't is a declaring of what the child undertakes by his baptism I answer The child is not capable of doing any thing in the case and the child doth not and cannot undertake any thing by another as in his name To say the Infant doth these things passively and that he doth passively accept the Covenant is that which I do not understand I grant that baptized infants are under a vow of dedication to God but not a vow made by themselves but by those whom God hath authorized to dedicate them and by which they are bound as much as by a vow actually made by themselves when they are capable Of the CATECHISM EVery baptized person is taught thus to answer in my baptism wherein I was made a member of Christ the child of God and an inheritor of the Kingdom of Heaven By the very receiving of baptism neither infants nor the adult are first put into a state of grace but those who by their own faith or by the faith of their Parents were before in the Covenant of Grace are by Baptism solemnly invested in that Grace Ones being in the Covenant of Grace is a prerequisite condition to the saving use of this Sacrament which is the sole●n dedication to God of one so qualified and his solemn investiture in the Grace of the Covenant But whether the said words be understood of the first consering of those benefits or of the solemn investiture therein nevertheless be it considered Whether it be fit to teach every Catechised person to believe That by his baptism he was made a pertaker of or solemnly invested in those high priviledges which only the children of true believers do receive by their Infant-baptism Be it also considered whether it tends not to cause many who are yet in the state of sin to believe that they are in the state of grace Of the Order of Confirmation ANY such baptized persons as are come to a competent age and can say in their Mother-tongue the Creed the Lords Prayer and the Ten Commandments and also can answer to other questions of the Catechism and to the Bishops interrogatory touching the renewing of the Vow made in their name at their Baptism and their consenting thee unto shall answer I do are according to the Rule of this Book sufficiently qualified for confirmation Be it considered Whether all this may not be said by a person in whom appears no credibility of a sincere yea or of an intelligent profession If it be said it is left to the Bishops discretion by these words of the Rubrick and if the bishop approve of them he shall confirm them nevertheless the Rule here set down doth express and require no more The Query is Whether I may consent to the use of a Rule insufficient for its end Confirmation is reserved to the Bishop alone yet it is ordinarily impossible for him to take due notice of all persons to be confirmed within his Diocess and consequently it cannot be duly administred to a multitude of persons that are to be brought to it Whereas it is alledged That this reservation was the usage of the ancient Church let it be considered that the primitive or more ancient bishops were bishops but of one particular Church and were capable of taking the oversight of every particular person of their flock and did personally perform the same But the present bishops being bishops of many hundred Churches have commonly more souls in their several Diocesses than an hundred bishops can personally watch over In the prayer immediately before the act of Confirmation it is said of all persons admitted to it That God hath vouchsafed to regenerate them by water and the Holy Ghost and hath given them the forgiveness of all their sins I enquire Whether this be warrantable and according to truth considering what is the corruption of human nature and what the inclinations and behaviour of most young ones are and what regeneration by the Holy Ghost doth import and how such as are far from any credible