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A94297 Of the government of churches; a discourse pointing at the primitive form. Thorndike, Herbert, 1598-1672. 1641 (1641) Wing T1055; Thomason E1102_1; ESTC R203782 63,264 216

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not disposed of their maintenance Though perhaps the advantage of fingring money was it that made them take so much upon them in his time whereof he complaineth Nay it is plain this must rest in the power of Bishop and Presbyters by the portions and divisions thereof wherein each of them had interesse as his maintenance whereof we find remembrance in S. Cyprians Epistles In the last Canon of the Councel of Antiochia is provided that the Bishop shall not alienate the Church-goods which though immovable were given for the same purpose without consent of his Presbyters And in those which are called the Canons of the Apostles which the world knoweth are not theirs but yet do expresse very ancient customes of the Church Can. iii. iv having ordered what sorts of first-fruits should be sent to the Church what home to the Bishop and Presbyters it followeth Now it is manifest that they are to be divided by them among the Deacons and Clergy to the Deacons for the maintenance of the poore to the Clergy for their own Where you see the interesse of the Presbyters in disposing of such oblations CHAP. XI Of the discipline of Penance Those that have the Keyes remit sinnes by prescribing Penance The intercession of the Church Particular persons excommunicated among the Jews Our Lord prohibiteth their course among his Disciples Two degrees of Excommunication as well in the Church as in the Synagogue The Keyes are given to Bishop and Presbyters The interesse of the people and what is required at the hands of the Common-wealth THere remaineth now two particulars of the office common to Bishop and Presbyters wherein the people also claim their interesse the one is the discipline of Penance the other the making of Ministers The due course whereof assigned by our Lord and his Apostles will best be discovered laying together first what we find of them in Scripture and then comparing of it with the proceeding of the Primitive time which we shall perceive the right to go along with The Keyes of the Kingdome of heaven are given by our Lord to the first of his Disciples in those words Matth. xvi 19. And I will give thee the keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven and whatsoever thou bindest on earth shall be bound in Heaven whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in Heaven If mens minds were not possessed with prejudice it would soon appear to be the same power that is given to all the Apostles John xx 24. Whosesoever sinnes ye remit they are remitted unto them and whosesoever sinnes ye retein they are reteined But Matt. xviii 17 18. to the same purpose though more at large And if he shall neglect to heare them tell it unto the Church But if he neglect to heare the Church let him be unto thee as a heathen man and as a publican Verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven To this must be added the proceeding of the Apostle in delivering to Satan the incestuous person at Corinth 1. Cor. v. 3 4 5. which he also did to Hymeneus and Alexander 1. Tim. i. 20. Now in the practice of the Primitive Church those that exercised this power were in part Judges Censours you may call them if you please and in part Physicians Both parts comprised in S. Cyprians words Ep. 51. Vbi lapsis nec censura deest quae increpet nec medicina quae sanet Judges they are in shutting Gods house upon offenders and binding their sins upon their consciences And the effect of this censure such supposing the proceeding of it to be due that as the disease of sin is not to be cured without the medicine of repentance no more can this knot wherewith sinnes notorious of themselves or otherwise known are tyed to mens consciences be undone without known repentance For since the worst of the souls sicknesse consisteth in not acknowledging her disease it pleased God to give his Church power and charge to constrain offenders to take their Physick which the grief of bodily diseases is able to do alone Physicians they are then in prescribing the medicine of Repentance and in that respect alone are truly said to remit sinnes God himself saith not to the Soul I absolve thee from thine offenses but upon supposition of the means his own gift of repentance that worketh the cure so farre it is from the power of his creature to pronounce forgivenesse without knowledge of the effect which the medicine of repentance hath wrought But if we say true when a Physician is said to cure a mans disease though all the world know he doth no more but prescribe the medicine or at the most see it applyed with as good right is it to be said that mens sinnes are cured by them that prescribe the course by which they are cured Onely whereas he that is cured of a bodily disease is able to tell himself when he is well he that is once sensible of the maladies of his soul is not easily satisfied when the cure is done It hath therefore pleased the goodnesse of God to provide an office and charge in his Church to assure men of forgivenesse of sinnes upon due knowledge of repentance by taking away that knot wherewith they remained tied upon their consciences Firmilianus Bishop of Caesarea Cappadociae in his Epistle to S. Cyprian the lxxvth in number of his Epistles thus writeth Lapsis quoque fratribus per poenitentiam medela quaeratur Non quasi à nobis remissionem peccatorum consequantur sed ut per nos ad intelligentiam delictorum suorum convertantur Domino pleniùs satisfacere cogantur To this purpose was the time and order and fashion of Penance regulated in the ancient Church that the diseases of the soul might receive every one their competent cure and therefore it is plain that among them it was a favour to be admitted to Penance in opposition to Novatianus Qui nemini dandam poenitentiam putavit saith Saint Ambrose De Poenit. 2. 1. exhorting men to repentance indeed but leaving them for pardon to God who had power to give it as his Disciple Socrates writeth Eccles hist iv 13. That is not imploying the power of the keyes and the benefit of it to the cure of their offenses Whereupon S. Ambrose you see calleth it dare poenitentiam as on the offenders side it was then called petere poenitentiam demanding and granting of Penance For this cause it was that this medicine of repentance was wont to be joyned with the prayers of the Congregation but in the chief place of the Bishop and Presbyters which if repentance be Physick is correspondent to that which is given to make Physick work And this is called in Tertullian Presbyteris advolvi Caris Dei adgeniculari Omnibus fratribus legationes deprecationis suae injungere and in S. Augustine Gemitus columbae the Mourning of the
of reconcilement by imposition of hands of the Bishop and Clergy that I will say no more of it because this point of all the rest hath continued a chief imployment of Presbyters in the corrupt and pernicious opinions and customes of the Church of Rome Let not any man think now that the Apostle communicateth this power with the Congregation of the Church of Corinth when he writeth to them 1. Cor. v. 4 5. being assembled with his Spirit to deliver the incestuous person to Satan For it is plain that the sentence is given by the Apostle vers 3. where he writeth For I verily as absent in body but present in spirit have judged already as though I were present concerning him that hath so done this deed And to cause this proceeding to be the better digested he hath vouched his power in the end of the chapter afore verse 18. Now some are puffed up as though I would not come unto you but I will come unto you shortly if the Lord will and will know not the speech of them that are puffed up but the power What will you shall I come unto you with a rod or with the spirit of meeknesse Which power otherwhiles he setteth before them in case of their disobedience And therefore it must be acknowledged that he writeth to them to see his sentence published ratified and executed which the Presbyters there had either neglected to do as was touched afore or perhaps were not able to bring the people under the discipline of Christs Kingdome which must needs oblige the Apostle to interpose And therefore the Italian glosse of Diodati which maketh the Apostle in this place speak of assembling the Pastours and Guides of the Church as in Matth. xviii 17. though in effect true because for certain what is to be acted by the Congregation therein the Presbyters are to do their part by the meaning of the Apostle yet must leave us room to think that the words are to be understood of the publick assemblies of the Church there for Divine service seeing we find in Tertullian the place afore quoted that these censures were exercised at and in the assemblies of the Christian people Ibidem etiam exhortationes castigationes censur a divina saith he speaking of their Assemblies And S. Cyprian in the great case of those that fell away in persecution writeth to the Presbyters that he doth not think to do any thing in it without their counsel the consent of the people And this without doubt is the reason why the Apostle writeth in these terms 1. Cor. v. 12. For what have I to do to judge those that are without do not ye judge those that are within speaking to the Church in generall though the sentence passed as hath been said by Bishop and Presbyters because matters were censured in the Congregation and executed by the people And thus the practice of that time giveth a reason without straining why our Lord seemeth to refer these matters to the Congregation when he saith Tell it to the Church because they passed at their assemblies though under censure of Bishop and Presbyters And great reason there is why this regard should be had by the Apostle and by the Church afterwards to the people because the Church being a mere spirituall Commonwealth and not indued with temporall strength so much as to execute those sentences which the power of the keyes given by Christ obligeth it to inflict alwayes setting aside that power of working miracles which was in the Apostle upon which some think he reflecteth in some passages of those Epistles requisite it was then the Congregation should be satisfied of the course of those proceedings which must come into execution and effect by their voluntary submission to the will of God and the office of his Ministers And as the matter is now that things of this nature proceed not upon mens private consciences and judgements in particulars but upon generall rules of common right requisite it is that the Cōmon-wealth have satisfaction of those laws according to which the Church now must proceed in their censures it being acknowledged that they cannot proceed with effect but by virtue of those laws that are put in force by the secular arm But as it is now no longer time to leave matters to the Conscience of mens places which may be regulated by laws which experience maketh commendable so is it no longer time to expect at the peoples hands voluntary submission to the discipline of the Church further then it is inabled by laws of the kingdome to exercise it And therefore it is much to be wished that the laws by which the Ministers of the Church are inabled directed constrained to exercise this prime part of their office may prove so sufficient and that the power of the keyes given it by our Lord in the Gospel may be so strengthened by the secular arm and rules put in force by it that it may be able to reduce all hainous and notorious offenses under the discipline of Penance and to cut them off from the Church that refuse it Is it to be believed that our Lords intent was in settling such a power as this is that it should take hold of sinnes of incontinence or the like letting all others of as deep a stain and as well known escape uncensured Or could any man devise a more puissant means to discountenance malefactours in a Christian Common-wealth then that which our Lord hath appointed by making them know that when they have satisfied the laws of the kingdome with losse of goods or fame or have escaped with life by the gentlenesse of them the fact being proved neverthelesse they can not communicate with the people of God till the Church be satisfied of their correction and amendment Nay shall we imagine that the institution of our Lord Christ is satisfied and in force in a Christian Common-wealth so long as the case of particular offenses upon occasion whereof it is settled by him in the Gospel is scarce understood among us because it is so farre from common practice by the law of the kingdome whereas it might easily appear what an excellent and charitable course our Saviour hath chalked out to us if a good Christian heart desirous rather of his brothers amendment then of his own satisfaction and able to make an appearance of such an offense as our Lord intended by witnesses the Church inabled by rules of law established by the secular arm should call the person offending to the acknowledgement of wrong on his side cutting him off in case he refused amendment Thus much for certain if the zeal of well-affected Christians towards the state of this Church did not mistake the true mark the discipline of Penance must needs be thought one of the first points to be reformed in it And then the rest of that satisfaction which the people can demand of the Church will consist in not releasing the correction inflicted