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A85854 Hieraspistes a defence by way of apology for the ministry and ministers of the Church of England : humbly presented to the consciences of all those that excell in virtue. / By John Gauden, D. D. and minister of that Church at Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1653 (1653) Wing G357; Thomason E214_1; ESTC R7254 690,773 630

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at their supposed errors which are grown in some so rough and insolent both in words and deeds against poore Ministers that they had need to meet with something that hath good metall and usefull sharpnesse and not with that phlegmatick and sanguine softnesse which impudent men easily baffle and put both to the blush and silence yet hee meddles not save with great respect and tendernesse with any thing of Civill Power which no man may wisely dispute that is not able to resist it is foolish to shake the pen against the sword or oppose armed Legions with flocks of Geese No man may discreetly offend while as he must necessarily so he may honestly and safely be subject Prudence commands private men to leave the accounts of Ruling power to mens own consciences and to the Supream Over-ruler who best knowes as by what means they obtain it so to what ends and in what manner they use it It is enough for private persons at convenient distances to warm themselves by the light and heat of prevailing power neither scorching themselves by too neer approaches nor consuming themselves by indiscreet contestations with it Modesty also forbids such as are in subjection to dispute the actions or disparage the counsels of any that are above them who being many and so stronger are commonly by esteem supposed wiser than any one man and being successefull are usually esteemed blest and happy Although it is most certain That the many beginning from one and combined strength or counsell being but the twisting of single feeblenesse as so many hairs together the united many may be mistaken as wel as the divided unites Yea one sick man may infect many whole especially if his disease hath something catching and pleasing in it But if there happen by the Divine displeasure pestilent airs and noxious breaths in any countrey the strong the wise the great and the many are as liable to contagion and destruction as the weak the few and the foolish yea to Epidemicall and contagious diseases pestered cities and crowds of men are more subject than cels and solitudes No men are so wise but they may have errors And the sooner they see them to amendment the wiser they will be Nor is it the least part of wisdome in inferiours to shew to superiors their misapprehensions and failings rather by obliquely intimating than directly thwarting by great reflexions than rude affronts Especially in those things wherein a private man may be competently versed both by study and education yet no way trenching upon that tender point of civill power and dominion which is not a fit subject for a pen and inkhorn Therefore this Author presumes that the fair and free vindication of so publique an interest as this of the Ministry which is his proper sphear and calling can displease no men that have candor wit honesty honour good conscience or true Religion in them Nor will it anger sober men to be shewed what is amiss and how it may be mended which possibly they may be as unable as willing to doe Diseases may sometimes exceed the Art of Physitians violent Paroxysms are sometimes better left to spend themselves than provoked and encountred with medicines As for others of vain violent and foolish tempers it is better to offend than to flatter them and to suffer from them if God will have it so is more honorable than to be rewarded by them The greatest danger indeed is from those that are stolidè feroces full of those boisterous rude and brutish passions which grow as bristles upon hogs backs from ignorance pride rusticity and prejudice which make men either unable to read or impatient to bear or unwilling to understand the words of truth and sobernesse trusting more to bestiall than rationall or religious strength which most unmanly and unchristian disorders in mens soules how prevalent and epidemicall soever they may be yet they must not be here either flattered or fomented By calling their darknesse light or their evill good their presumptions inspirations their duller dreams high devotion their dissolute licentiousnesse Christian liberty their sillinesse sanctity their fiercenesse zeal their self-confidence and intrusion a divine call their disorderly activity speciall abilities their jejune novelties pretious rarities or their old errors and rotten opinions extraordinary and unheard of perfections When indeed their root is for the most part nothing but an illiterate and illiberall disposition neither learned to morality nor polished to civility neither softned nor setled by good education or true Religion being full of levity vulgarity unsatiate thirst and desire of novelties their fruit also is little else but malice cruelty avarice ambition worldly policy hypocrisie superstition loosenesse and profanenesse all conspiring as upon untrue and unjust pretentions so to evill ends namely to abase and destroy the true and ancient Ministry of the Gospell in this Nation and to bring into contempt all holy duties and d●vine Ministrations in this Church of Christ to cry down all good learning to corrupt the mindes of men with error and ignorance to debauch their manners by licentiousnesse or superstition to bring shame upon the reformed Religion here professed to wilder the judgements to wast the comforts to shipwrack the conscience and to damn the soules of poore people Where the Apologist meets with this black guard these factors for error and sin these agitators for the Prince of darknesse these enemies to God to Christ Jesus to all good Christians and to mankind God forbid he should give place to them or not charge them home and resist them to their face His duty and design is to detect their frauds and wickednesse to countermine their deep projects to frustrate their desperate counsels to fortifie the mindes of all good Christians against their strong delusions and oppositions to pull down their high imaginations to demolish their self-conceited strong holds to maintaine the honour of this Nation the glory of this reformed Church and the worth of its godly learned and industrious Ministry against their envious cavils and ungratefull calumnies If any men apart from fanatick presumptions secular interests popular applauses rusticall clamors and ignorant confidences shall upon rationall prudent and religious grounds propound any thing in a more excellent way either for kinde or degree whereby to advance the glory of God the honour of Jesus Christ the reall propagating of the Gospell the exercise of usefull gifts and graces of Gods Spirit in this Church r the encrease of charity or comforts among Christians for the encouragement of learning vertue and godlinesse for the welfare of this Nation or the serious reforming of Religion and the Ministry of it beyond what hath been still is and ever may be had from the gifts and graces the order and office the labours and lives of those that are the chief professors preachers and pillars of learning and religion in this Nation which are the able and faithfull Ministers of a due succession and right
if judicious choise and well grounded Christians did not as they doe seriously consider these things which may establish them in that holy profession of this Church wherein they have been baptized and educated First the naturall levity and instability of mens mindes which can have no fixation like the magnetick needle but onely in one point or line where it is in conjuncture with its Loadstone the Truth of God from which while the minde is wandering and shaking it is prone to love noveltie with lies and detriment rather than wonted things of religion with truth and benefit The itching humors of mens lascivient fancies and lusts chuse to scratch themselves to bloud and sorenesse rather than enjoy a constant soundnesse which distempers among those of the reformed Churches never want vigilant and subtill fomenters whose design is to spread any infection among Protestants to the most pestilent contagions that so they being sick and ashamed of themselves under the scandals and madnesses of that profession they may at last seek to Rome for cure and entertain forain Physitians who will easily perswade such diseased Protestants that those old sores and lingring maladies with which the Romish party hath a long time laboured and with which it is justly charged however it refuse to be healed are much safer for soules than these new quick feavers pestilent Agues and desperate Apoplexies among us which threaten utterly to kill all piety to destroy all Christianity to extirpate all charity and dissolve all society both as men and as Christians while neither morals nor rituals of Christianity are observed neither the superstructure of Catholick customes nor the foundation of Scripture commands neither truth nor peace things of p ety or Christian polity are inviolable but all old things must be dissolved and passe away that some men may shew their skill to create new heavens and new earths in which not order and righteousnesse but all injuriousnesse and confusion must dwell Secondly besides this innate fondnesse of men which is alwayes finding out new evill or vain inventions as unwholesome bodies are ever breaking out there are also crafty colourings and politick affectations of piety which grow as scurfe or scabs over those prurient novelties of opinion by which unwonted formes as with severall viZards and plaisters hypocrisie seekes as to amuse the vulgar so to cover and hide its cunning and cruelty its avarice ambition revenge and sacriledge still avoiding the discoveries of its deep plots and wicked designes by specious pretensions of serving God in some more acceptable way and better manner than others have done when indeed every true factionist who is Master of his Art at last winds up the thread of that Religion he spins upon his own bottom so as may best serve his own turn nor is he ever so modest so mortified or so self-denying with his pious novelties but that he will possesse himself and his party of any places for worldly profit power or honour to which he can attain though it be by the violent and unjust ruining and outing of others which is no very great symptom of an amended or heightned Christian Lastly sober Christians doe and ought to consider those just judgements of God either as diseases or medicines usually falling upon Christians as here in England when they are surfeited with peace and plenty cloyed with preaching and praying wantonly weary of wonted duties and wholesome formes of sound religion though never so holy and comely Burthened with the weekly and daily importunities of Ministers doctrine and examples where the sin and misery was not that people had no true light or no true Church and no true Ministers but that having all these they rejoiced not in them they neglected them and sinned the more provokingly against them Hence it is that squeamish nauseating and glutted Christians easily turn as foul stomachs and wanton appetites all they take though never so wholesome into peccant and morbifique humors to pride and passion to self conceit and scorn of others to ambitious lusts of disputing contending and conquering in matters of Religion endeavouring to destroy all that they and their way may alone prevail and govern which is the last result of all unwarrantable and unjustifiable commotions in Church or State Nor doe men ever intend that such victories which begin with the tongue or pen and end in the hand and sword commencing with piety and religion but concluding with soveraignty and dominion shall be either inglorious or fruitlesse Seditious and schismaticall Champions for Religion will be sure as soone as they have power to carve out their own crowns and rewards the determination of scruples in conscience and differences in opinion must end not onely in imperious denying others the liberties of conscience at first craved or contended for but in the outing others of different mindes from their places callings profits and enjoyments which is very far from that taking up the crosse of Christ and following him from being crucified to the world in its lusts pride and vanity as becomes those that will be Christs Disciples in verity justice and charity To such mountains of changes and mighty oppressions doe little mole-hils in Religi●●●ually swell when the justice of God suffers piety to 〈◊〉 both poysoned with policies and Religion perverted with humane passions Little differences in Religion like Crocodiles egs bring forth prodigies which are ever growing greater till they dye adding fury to faction passion to opinion cruelty to novelty Self-interests to Conscience Divine vengeance oft punishing sin with sin extravagancies of judgements with exorbitancies of deeds suffering the greater lust or stronger faction like pikes in a pond to devoure the lesser and one error to be both executioner and heir to another Because men obeyed not the Truth in love nor practised what they knew with a pure heart in an humble meek and charitable conversation which alwayes chuseth rather to suffer with peacefull and holy antiquity than to triumph with turbulent and injurious novelty From which have risen those many Church-Tragedies as of ancient so of later times which make the bloud of Christians yea of Jesus Christ too so cheap and vile in one anothers eyes Hence those unstanched effusions those unclosed wounds those irreconcilable fewds those intractable sores those wide gaping gulphs of faction and division malice and emulation war and contention which are enlarged and deep like hell threatning to swallow up and exhaust whole kingdomes flourishing Nations and famous Churches sometimes professing Christian and reformed Religion with order peace and truth Where now countreymen and neighbors kindred and brethren Ministers and people teachers and disciples are so far from that charity sympathy and compassion becoming beleivers in Jesus Christ so as to weep with those that weep and to rejoice with those that rejoice that contrarily there is nothing almost to be heard or seen but such a face of cruelty and confusion as a shipwrack a troubled Sea or Scarefire
Ministers or others who are of different judgements Is it not their trespass that true Ministers know too much that they see too clearly that they examine things too strictly that they admit no latitudes of Civill interests or State policies Multis in culpa est ut Socrati Athenis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pictatis literatura omnigenumque virtutū eminentia cujus individua comes est invidia Melan. and sinfull necessities as dispensations of Gods Morall Law and the rules of both common honesty and true piety That they stand valiantly many of them and as becomes them in the gap against the insinuations and invasions of those infamous heresies those received errors those vile and putred novelties those perfect madnesses those apparent blasphemies confusions and dissolute Liberties which threaten this reformed Church with a more sure inundation than the Sea doth the Low-Countriss if the banks and dams be not preserved Is not this with some men the unpardonable sin of the best Ministers that they do not crouch and flatter and fawn on every plausible error on every powerfull novelty every proud fancy and high imagination Veritas nemini blanditur nem●nem palpat nullum seducit a pertè omnibus denunciat c. Bern. that they lick not the sores of any mens consciences or the pollutions of any mens hands with servile and adulterate tongues That they do not cry up or in any kind own for the gifts of the Spirit those passionate or melancholy or cunning and affected motions and extravagancies which some men strongly fancy to themselves and weakly demonstrate to others as to any thing like to sound reason or Scripture religion Suidas in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Herodes primus ex alienigenis ex Judaorum ex ima plebe artus Ignobilitatis suae conscius Genealogias Judaicas exussit quantas poiuit ut sic facilius nobilitatem suam ementiatur Euseb hist Eccl. l. 1. c. 7. That they oppose these Bells and Dragons of fanatick Divinity which the Authors of them will never be able to advance to any publike veneration or reception as spirituall heavenly and divine among sober Christians in England while such wise Daniels live who have neither leisure nor boldness so to mock God and to play with religion nor untill as Ptolomy did to magnifie the Image of Diana to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faln from heaven so they deal with able Ministers when the best Statuaries had formed an Image of Diana to rare perfection the King at one supper destroyed them all by the ruine of the house where they were and after produced the Statue as faln from heaven Or as Herod the Idumaean or mungrill Jew did with the antient Records and Genealogies of the stems of the Kings and succession of the Priests among the Jews that so he might by abolishing them the better bring on his own tide So must these Antiministeriall adversaries first destroy and cancell both common reason in mens souls and the whole Canon of the Scriptures which are the durable oracles of God Arti●ci●sa sibi parant Lumina Histriones quâ melius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ous suas obtegere simulari possint Lenocinantibus lucernis meridianum solem quasi de nimio splendore exprobrantes Sydo Veritas loquendigrande praesagium mali Lact. Psal 18.24 for the Churches directions and all learned interpreters of them Torches of private Spirits are ridiculous too be lighted up while the Sun shines unless it be for those who having some mask or play to act reproach the Noon-day Sun of to much splendor and make to themselves and others an artificiall Night which will better serve their turns When all light of true reason and Scriptures are extinguished in this Church and Nation or much Eclipsed then and not before will honest-hearted Christians believe that they have no need of true Ministers or that those they have hitherto had have not been worthy the name of reformed or have pertinaciously reteined any such Popish opinions or superstitions as are inconsistent with true piety And in this thing let the Lord deal with us according to the clearness of our hands and the uprightness of our hearts in his sight either to deliver us into or redeem us out of the hands of violent and unreasonable men whose very mercies have proved cruell to poor Ministers whose pious constancy is the greatest thorn in some mens sides But if our wayes please God he can make our very enemies at peace with us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is Pel. Prov. 16.7 Wholy to remove the antient Ministry as some men aym under pretence of bringing up a new nursery of gifted brethren and Prophets which like under-woods are not so likely to thrive while Ministers like goodly Timber trees grow so high above them and over drop them will be a work fully compleating those sad effects which disorderly unordeined unsent and unabled Teachers and false Prophets have already begun to bring forth in this Church And how can it ever be thought or hoped that they will bring forth better fruits either for the truth honour or power of the Reformed Religion either for the Peace of Church or State unless there be a speciall committee appointed for the regulating of Prophets and tryall of their gifts in which none may be fitter for learning piety and moderation to be Chayr-man than that Author and zealous assert●r of the peoples Liberty and Privilege Pag. 3. who says he is not so much a friend to these new Prophets as to be an utter enemy to the function of the old Ministers though he would have Prophets planted yet not Ministers pulled up root and branch but only pruned from that which he calls superstition wherein his Charity to Ministers may perhaps make his censorious severity veniall He that so much studies the Reformation of Ministers we hope will not bring in such Esopick and deformed Prophets as most of those who have yet appeared rather to scare men from than to instruct good Christians in true holyness and Religion It is evident enough 15. The vanity and mischief of false and foolish Prophets and too much to all true reformed Christians what wide gaps that generation of pretended Prophets and gifted Brethren have already made for the easy inrodes of what is truly Popery superstition or meer formality All sorts also of corrupt opinions and Heresies together with Idleness barrenness barbarity Illiteratness Ignorance Atheism and contempt of all true Reformed Religion both in the power and extern form order and profession of it Many men being prone have learned easily to make little conscience of hearing reverencing or obeying the word of God Even from any true Ministers never so able and worthy since they have learned to scorn make sport of and laugh at these novell and pittifull pretenders to Preaching and prophecying of whose insufficiency and non-authority to Preach and administer any holy mysteries in Christs name common people being