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B20736 The vvay of the churches of Christ in New-England, or, The vvay of churches walking in brotherly equalitie, or co-ordination, without subjection of one church to another measured and examined bythe golden reed of the sanctuary, containing a full declaration of the church-way in all particulars / by Mr. J. Cotton ... Cotton, John, 1584-1652. 1645 (1645) Wing C6471; ESTC R209858 96,219 122

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weak beleever because the Lord hath received him Rom. 14.1 2 3. Thirdly The Lord Jesus maketh the profession of the faith of his name and such a profession as flesh and bloud hath not revealed to a man but his heavenly Father to be the rocke on which his visible Church is built for he speaketh of such a Church whereunto he committeth the keys of his kingdome and that is the visible Church Mat. 16.16 to 19. Now if such a profession be the rocke and foundation of a visible Church then wee shall build a Church without a foundation if wee receive such members into the Church as doe not hold forth such a profession but either through ignorance make no profession at all or such a verball profession as savoureth not of any blessed worke of the Father by his Spirit upon their hearts And doth not the lord expostulate with such a guest as comes into the fellowship of his Church even unto his Table not having a wedding garment Mat. 22.12 And doth not expostulation intimate a Taxation also of them by whose connivence he came in where he saith how comest thou in hither And doth not Christ in the parable impute it to the sleepinesse that is to the remisnesse and negligence of his servants that tares were sowen in his field amongst the wheate Mat. 13.25.38.39 Fourthly Such as have onely a forme of godlinesse and deny the power of it wee are forbidden to joyne with and commanded to turne from them 2 Tim. 3.5 Fiftly Can any man judge such persons fit materialls for the constituting and edifying of a Church who are more fit for the ruine and destruction of the Church such as leave their first love as all hypocrites will at length They procure the removall of the candlestick Rev. 2.4 Wee passe by the types of the old Testament which yet are not without their due weight it was touched above that rough stones were not laid in the building of Solomons Temple till they were hewen and prepared before 1 King 6.7 and behold a greater then Solomon is here and a greater Temple then that of Solomons the attendance and watchfulnesse of the porters suffering none to enter into the Temple that were uncleane in any thing 2 Chro. 23.19 doth it not evidently type forth the watchfulnesse of the Officers of the Church of Christ to suffer none uncleane uncleane in estate or course of life to enter into the fellowship of the Church which ought to be a Communion of Saints Well then if all the members of the Church ought to be Saints by calling and faithfull brethren it cannot be thought an unseasonable curiositie but rather held a due and faithfull watchfulnesse in the Officers and body of every Church of Christ to take a due triall of men by a confession of sinnes as John Baptist did Mat. 3.6 and by a profession of their faith as Philip did Act. 8.37 before they receive them into the church as members of the body of the Lord Jesus neither was it an excessive austeritie in John but an holy faithfulnesse and godly zeale not onely to repulse the Scribes and Pharisees Mat. 3.7 but the prophane people also from his Baptisme Luk. 3.7 as those who were a generation of vipers and had not yet brought forth fruit meet for repentance ver 7 8. and therefore themselves were not meete for his Baptisme which was a baptisme of repentance Luk. 2.3 Neverthelesse in this triall wee doe not exact eminent measure either of knowledge or holinesse but doe willingly stretch out our hands to receive the weake in faith such in whose spirits wee can discerne the least measure of breathing and panting after Christ in their sensible feeling of a lost estate ☞ for we had rather 99. hypocrites should perish through presumption then one humble soule belonging to Christ should sinke under discouragement or despaire and by reason of these hypocrites received into the Church it is that the Church is said to have in it good and bad wheate and tares for tares as Hierome saith are like to wheate SECT IV. COme wee now to give account of the second point why wee receive such into the Church by way of Covenant 1. Meete it is that as the whole Church was received as one body unto Christ by professing their entrance into covenant with God as hath been shewed above in the third Proposition of the fift part so every member of the Church should be received into the same fellowship by profession of their taking hold of the same Covenant Eadem estratio partium totius there is the same reason of the whole and of the parts in such things as concerne the common nature of both And as all relatives doe they mutually argue one another Hence it is that when godly strangers who had joyned themselves to the Lord to wit by faith to serve him to love his name and keep his Sabbath were to be brought into the fellowship of the Lords house they added this dutie over and above the former they took hold of the Covenant of the Lord Isa 56.3 4 5 6 7. Surely not by faith onely for their personall salvation for so they took hold of the covenant before when they joyned themselves to the Lord ver 3. but by their profession of their acceptance of the Covenant and subjection to it which the Lord maketh with his Church and people whom he causeth to passe into the bond of the Covenant Ezek. 20.37 Object It is objected first that the place in Isaiah speaketh of such strangers as were proselytes who in joyning themselves to the Lord were therein also joyned unto the Church for so joyning to the Lord implyeth joyning to the Church Jer. 50.5 Zech. 2.11 Ans 1. They that joyned to the Lord in those Texts of Jeremie and Zachary did indeed in so doing joyne in a Church-body also for they who are there spoken of were a multitude concurring and consenting in the same Covenant to joyne to the Lord and to become his people but here in Isaiah the Eunuch and strangers are said to be joyned to the Lord who yet were not joyned to the Church but ready to complaine that the Lord had utterly deprived them of that libertie of joyning to the Church and had utterly separated them from his people ver 3. As indeed he had by expresse Law separated them that is prohibited them from entring into the Congregation of the Lord for ever Deut. 23.1 2 3. Against which Law the Lord comforteth them with this promise of the Gospel that in the new Testament neither their Eunuchicall estate nor the alienation or strangernesse of any Nation shall be an impediment unto their entrance into the Lords house which is the Church The joyning there spoken of is not their joyning to the Lord and his people as Proselytes of the Church for though they were joyned to the Lord yet they complained of their disjoyning and separating from the Lords people but the Lord
THE Way of the Churches OF CHRIST IN NEW-ENGLAND OR THE VVAY OF CHURCHES walking in Brotherly equalitie or co-ordination without Subjection of one Church to another Measured and examined by the Golden Reed of the Sanctuary Containing a full Declaration of the Church-way in all Particulars By Mr. J. COTTON Teacher of the Church at Boston in New-England 1 THES 5.22 23. Prove all things hold fast that which is good Abstaine from all appearance of evill Published according to Order LONDON Printed by Matthew Simmons in Aldersgate-streete 1645. not in our apprehension be said to hold no analogie Yet with much sweat and wiles some messengers have got through that Court of Guard to anticipate or satisfie if it might be those clamourers for a larger Narration 1. The 32. Questions or Church-government and Church-Covenant done by some Elders of N. E. they have had with seconds of frequent intimations that wee hold with the Churches of New England 2. The Apologeticall Narration they have had with our generall approbation of it 3. Mr Cotton of the Keys of the Kingdome of heaven they have had with our Brethrens Epistle to it how farre they approve it 4. The Reasons of the dissenting Brethren are in Print 5. Wee have been enformed that those our Brethren formerly have tendered themselves that in case they might be put into a Committee or like meet posture for such a work they would bring in the whole frame of their judgements in a body with their grounds and reasons 6. That now very lately they gave in seven Propositions to be discussed with promise of more But neither of them was debated Which wee alledge rather to vindicate our particular charge then to blame men whose reasons wee know not 7. With much adoe wee have presented you with a fuller declaration of all our way according to the Scriptures in this learned yet modest Treatise of THE WAY OF THE CHURCHES OF CHRIST IN NEVV-ENGLAND c. Written and sent over by Mr. Cotton And wee doe in this Epistle certifie our assent thereunto saving that wee doe not yet fully close with some expressions passim in the Book before some of which wee minded it to note a * in the Margin This we could not but say and doe pace tanti authoris or wee could not assert the Booke If all things in this Treatise as now printed doe not answer punctually word for word to the first written Copie let the reverend Authour and the candid Reader pardon us because wee had not the fairest Copie nor knew wee till the Book was neer done that there was a better to be had nor to this day yet ever saw it Therefore wee were forced to shift with this so as to keep the mind of the Authour make it constare sibi and by an interpretative leave in his absence not onely to doe as wee would be done by but also as he himselfe would have done wee are confident if he had been in our case or present here Least any should imagine that every thing in the Keyes doth not fit all the wards in this Treatise to an haire wee will here insert Mr. Cottons own words in his Letter coming from him in New-England to our hands in the very nick of time whiles this Epistle lay under the Presse viz. If you think the Draught of ChuRCH-DISCIPLINE which was sent over in your Ship varieth from that of the POVVER OF THE KEKES sent over the yeare after you may have some occasion so to conceive from some difference of expression in LOGICALL TERMES but not a jote in any DOCTRINE OF DIVINITIE or CHURCH-PRACTISE So Mr. Cotton in his Letter to Mr. R. M. Diverse Objections formerly laid against the Printing of this Book to the sadding of the Authour Some whereof are now answered by the late season of printing it Others by the necessitie of them that conscientiously and candidly cry out for information Others by the fore-printing of the Keyes to open the full minde and whole sphere of the Authours judgement in this Others by that putting forth in print of an answer to this Book before this was mid-wised by the Presse into the world All reason therefore now it can speake that it should answer for it selfe Wee hope wee have satisfied the minde of the Authour as well as our owne and of others too of the other judgement especially of those that call for fuller Declarations The Lord root out of all our hearts the spirit of contradiction that wee call not for Books with a resolution rather to confute them as wee imagine then to throw downe our selves humbly under the power of truth Wee are now fighting Modo militari for reformation let us not therefore fight against it more ecclesiastico With how much gravitie soliditie and modestie have Mr. Cotton the Apologists the Authours of 32. Questions or Church Covenant and other milde and judicious Authours written in our cause But with what a different spirit have the adverse part replyed as if personall invectives and imbittring a stile were Gods way of bettering a cause or battering an opinion Here is a Booke so grave and solid that it cannot be justly despised by ingenuous learned men So full of necessary cases and truths that it cannot but be desired of those that would be knowing men And so milde and gentle that it cannot but be causlesly quarrelled if quarrelled by Cholerick men Had wee not been perswaded that it would prove a welcome Tract on all hands for the reasons afore-intimated wee could with our injoyment of the written Copie well have saved this great travell If it fall out otherwise as it hath with diverse of the like nature Golden Lavers or Vessels made Common-shores and receptacles to be filled with all filthy contempt wee shall then clearly and fully decerne mens spirits and descry their intents in challenging us for larger Narrations and shall beware for time to come how wee anger them with kindnesses But if this be candidly entertained of them then have they encouraged us in due time to impart if God permit a fuller Treatise of the same subject with amplior demonstrations by joynt consent of the Churches of Old and New-England and meane while they have abundantly recompenced the labour of love of theirs in the Lord. N.H. I.H. THE Way of the Churches of Christ in NEW-ENGLAND Measured by the Golden Reed of the SANCTUARY CHAPTER I. The Order of gathering dispersed Christians into a Church PROPOSITION I. SECTION I. THat the Church which Christ in his Gospell hath instituted and to which he hath committed the keys of his kingdom the power of binding and loosing the tables and seales of the Covenant the Officers and censures of his Church the administration of all his publick Worship and Ordinances is Coetus fidelium a Communion of Saints a Combination of faithfull godly men meeting for that end by common and joynt consent into one Congregation which is commonly called a particular visible Church For the
worship the Lord Jesus according to all the Ordinances of his house PROPOS 4. We conceive it cannot seeme unreasonable that in the same way by which particular godly persons doe enter into the fellowship of the Libertie of those holy Ordinances which Christ hath appropriated to his Church in the same way it were meet that an whole company of Christians should enter into Church estate for in entring of them into Church estate the Lord calleth as well whole companies as particular persons to enjoy the like liberty of all his holy Ordinances the enjoyment of like libertie requireth preparation thereunto by the like dutie In the times of John the Baptist such as were received into Baptisme they did first make confession of their sinnes and therewith of their repentance and of their faith also in him who was to come after him Matth. 3.6 Act. 19.4 5. And in the times of the Apostles Philip received the Eunuch unto Baptisme not untill he had made profession of his Faith in Christ Jesus Acts. 8.37 But now for as much as wee all who are borne in Christian Churches are baptized in our infancy and such as are baptized infants are not admitted to the Lords Table in well ordered Churches till they have approved and in their own persons publickly confirmed that profession of repentance and faith which their parents or others in their stead professed and promised for them at their Baptisme it cannot be thought unreasonable that such a company of godly Christians having been baptized infants should now make the like profession of their repentance before they are admitted into Church estate which others made in the Primitive times before Baptisme and all growne up to ripe yeares are wont publickly to make or at least ought to make before their admittance to the Lords Supper Besides when upon Peters confession of his faith in Christ Jesus Christ said that upon that rock or foundation he would build his Church Mat. 16.16.18 doth he not plainly hold forth that every Christian Church is founded as on Christ so on Christ in this way to wit on Christ believed on by faith and that faith publickly confessed before God and men PROPOS 5. To the erecting of a Church as the presence of Christ is necessary for the acceptance of it so the presence of neighbouring Churches and Brethren is requisite to cry Grace Grace unto it For if Davids advertisement be as it is necessary and of important weight Except the Lord build the house they labour in vaine that build it Psal 127.1 how much more important is it that the Lord who alone buildeth his own Jerusalem Psal 147.2 be sought unto with unfeigned humiliation and fervent prayer for his presence with his people and acceptance of them in such a worke and if the Apostle Paul thought it requisite to communicate with the Apostles at Jerusalem about his Apostolicall doctrine and proceedings partly to prevent suspition of dissent between him and them lest by any meanes he should run in vaine partly to hold forth mutuall communion with them in giving and taking the right hand of fellowship Gal. 2.2.9 How much more requisite will it be for such as goe about to gather together scattered Christians into a Church estate to communicate with the Elders and Brethren of other Churches craving their presence and counsell and communion in so great a work And seeing Christian Magistrates being also Brethren and members of Churches are called of God to be Nursing Fathers unto the Church Isa 49.23 it cannot but encourage them to take the more speciall notice and care of every Church and to provide and assigne convenient allotments of land for the maintenance of each of them when in times of peace they are made acquainted with the persons and proceedings of such as gather into Church-fellowship under the wing of their Government And yet seeing the kingdome of Christ is not of this world nor regulated by the wisdome of this world wee doe not doubt but that a Church may be clearly gathered and rightly ordered though they want opportunitie or omit to acquaint the Magistrates with their proceedings especially when Magistrates are not acquainted with the Lawes of Christs kingdome SECT II. NOw then to apply all these Propositions to our present order and practice in the gathering of a Church thus it is when many Christians are come over into these parts they desire to joyne themselves unto some Church or other according to the second Proposition professing that it was the principall end of their comming to enjoy the presence of the Lord in the libertie and puritie of his Ordinances And if the company of such as come together be so well knowne one to another that they are loath to part company and yet so great that they cannot well joyne in any one Church already established without too much impeachment of their outward estate and livelihood the chiefest part of the lands belonging to each Church being prepossessed by others before them they then take that course which other companies took before them they consider of entring into a Church estate and fellowship amongst themselves And for that end first commending themselves to the Lord they enquire out some one or other of Eminent gifts usually such as have been Preachers of good esteeme in England who may guide and goe along with them in so great an Action and if God see good may afterwards be called to place and Office amongst them And then such whose hearts God toucheth to goe along with them in this worke they often meet together about the things of God and performe some duties of Prayer and spirituall conference together till a sufficient company of them be well satisfied in the spirituall good estate of one another and so have approved themselves to one anothers consciences in the sight of God as living stones fit to be laid in the Lords spirituall Temple which is his Church according to the first Proposition Now because through the grace of Christ our Christian Magistrates are nursing Fathers to the Church and the Churches already established are carried not onely with a pious desire to enlarge the kingdome of Christ but also with brotherly love to such as intend so good a worke those Christians therefore that desire to enter into Church-fellowship together doe acquaint the Governour and some of the neerest Magistrates and those Churches which are next adjoyning to them with their intentions to enter into Church-fellowship and crave the presence of some from amongst them at the day appointed some few weeks after to helpe them with their prayers and with their counsell if need should be in so weightie a businesse as being themselves for the most part lesse experienced in the wayes of Christs Kingdome then those who have gone before them in such a worke as also desiring to approve themselves and their course to the consciences of the Brethren of other Churches that they may more freely give them the right hand
ceased but such as had their chiefe use not for beleevers in the Church but unbeleevers out of the Church but governments are of perpetuall necessary use in the Church even as teachers and helpers unlesse wee shall say that Anarchy were fitter for a setled Church-government Object 3. But why may not these Governours be the Pastors in the church who have received an ordinary power of Government in the Church Answ The order in which the Apostle reckoneth these governments will not suffer that for here the Apostle reckoneth five severall rankes the former expresly precedent in order before the other God saith he hath set in his Church First Apostles secondly Prophets thirdly Teachers after that Miracles which is a fourth ranke then in the fift place gifts of healing and helpes governments diversities of tongues Now if by Government had been meant Pastors he would not have reckoned them in a lower order so farre after Teachers seeing they are of the same rank with them Object Why but here helpes or Deacons are set before Governments which argueth the Apostle did not regard to rank them in due order Answ It is evident by the words of order which the Apostle useth that he intendeth to reckon the foure first sorts in their due order and the fift sort of them all in a latter order after the former though in a promiscuous manner without respect of order amongst themselves for so he saith First Apostles secondarily Prophets thirdly Teachers after them Miracles then gifts of healing helpes Governments diversitie of tongues As Apostles are before Prophets so are Prophets before ordinary teachers the teachers before workers of Miracles the Miracles before them that have the gifts of healing for the gifts of healing follow after works of miracles with a note of order Then But all those last foure gifts of healing helpes Governments diversities of tongues are reckoned without respect of order amongst themselves What order is due to them is not expressed in this Scripture though it be in some other at least for some of them but cleare it is all these last foure sorts are reckoned in order after the first foure sorts Object 4. But it may be the Church in which the Apostle saith all these members are set is not meant every particular Church but the Catholick Church for every particular Church had not Apostles and Prophets Answ It is true every particular Church had not severall Apostles apart by themselves nor was it needfull they should after that Churches were once planted but every particular Church had need of his own Governours within it selfe or else wee shall make one Church subordinate to the Government of another which is incompatible to the Church of the new Testament The Lord having instituted and ordained no particular Church but the Church of a Congregation for the administration of his Ordinance unto which Congregationall Church he hath also appointed the same sort of Officers without preferment of one before another Object 5. For humane wisdome is pregnant and full of objections and exceptions against the ways and Ordinances of God may be say some these Governours are no other but Arbitrators which the Apostle biddeth the Corinthians set up in the Church for the deciding of differences amongst brethren 1. Cor. 6.4 But now since God hath set up Christian Magistrates there is no more need of such Arbiters to be chosen by each Church to compound their difference Answ These Arbiters in the Church had not place or office of Government but of Counsell onely to direct brethren in the judgement of right and wrong equitie and inequitie nor was such a power of such Arbitration any speciall gift for the Apostle thinketh every member of the Church even the least capable enough of it and sufficient for it Nor is it well said since God hath set up Christian Magistrates there need no Arbiter to be set up in the Church nor Church Governours For it is plaine the Apostle maketh it a fault or defect in the Church of Corinth that any of their members went to law at all for such suites as the least member of the Church if he were called to heare the case might arbitrate and determine and he maketh it a further fault that they goe to law under Infidels Now therefore saith he there is utterly a fault among you that brother goeth to law with brother and that under Infidels ver 6 7. The former is a defect of brotherly love the latter is a neglect of the honour of Christ and of his Church and before Infidels If brother goes to law with brother before Christian Magistrates the latter of these faults is avoyded but not the former Neither may it be thought as some have done that the benefit of Christian Magistracy taketh off the necessitie of Church-Government For the government of the Church is as the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world but spirituall and heavenly The power of the keys is far distant from the power of the sword and though one of them may need the helpe of the other when they goe astray yet when they are rightly ordered and administred the one of them doth not intercept but establish the execution of the other A third witnesse to the office of ruling Elders in the Church is that well knowne and much agitated Text in Timothy 1 Tim. 5.17 The Elders who rule well are worthy of double honour especially they who labour in Word and Doctrine This text though it have been much vext and rackt to looke and speake another way yet when all is done it still giveth a cleare and stedfast evidence to this office The most learned Adversaries of this Ordinance would fasten foure other interpretations of the place and each of them as they pretend more pertinent to the scope and sense of the Apostles words then this of ruling Elders 1. Say they by ruling Elders may be meant Deacons for the Apostle giving Timothy to understand what manner of persons they be with whose maintenance the Church is to be charged having before informed him of widowes now telleth him the Deacons also are to be maintained yea and with a double portion above them and either the Deacons are not to be maintained at all at the Churches charge or else the Apostle provideth for their maintenance in this place or no where Answ 1. There is no man to be maintained at the Churches charges but either in respect of his present poverty and necessity or in respect of his office which calleth him off from the attendance to the maintenance of his private family unto the publike service of the Church In the former case if it fall out that the Deacons be in necessity they may be supplied with some maintenance from the Church as well as any other of the poore brethren and so though this Text sayth nothing concerning them yet other Scriptures take care for them for the Deacons by the very institution of their office were to
some publick offence which they lie under as hath been already opened Surely though this third reason reach not Infants yet the two former doe and prevent as their Parents of just claime of the Lords Supper so them of due right of Baptisme with us For neither have wee power over them neither have they communion with any particular Church being dismissed from the Church where they were baptized and recommended to none Against this sundry things are objected and such as seeme of much weight as 1. That the Sacrament of Baptisme hath been administred to some who were no members of any visible Church and therefore why not to the Children of non-members as Philip baptized the Eunuch Acts 8.37 38. and Peter baptized Cornelius and his houshold Acts 10.47 48. Paul baptized Lydia and her houshold the Gaoler and his houshold Acts 16.15.33 To which wee answer three things * First The Apostles had an unlimited power and might baptize beleevers professing the faith and their seed wheresoever they came but the power of Pastors and Teachers is limited to their own particular visible Church which hath called them to minister unto them * Secondly It cannot be proved that the Apostles or Evangelists baptized any but such as either were members of some visible Church before they preached to them or else they gathered them into a visible Church estate before they baptized them * The Eunuch in Acts 8. was a Proselyte to the Church of Jerusalem for the Text saith he came up to Hierusalem for to worship Acts 8.27 Neither let any man object that his membership at Hierusalem would not intitle him to Baptisme seeing Baptisme is a Sacrament of the Christian Church not of the Jewish * for whatsoever member of the Jewish Church as beleeved in Christ as the Messiah and professed that faith he was capable of Baptisme for such they were whom John baptized Mat. 3.6 and Christs Disciples Joh. 4.2 yea all the Israelites were baptized in the cloud and in the Sea in the dayes of Moses 1 Cor. 10.2 * As for Lydia and the Gaoler and both their families they lived together in the same Citie of Philippi Act. 16.12 where was a company also of other brethren ver 4. and from the beginning of the Gospel which doubtlesse was when he preached to them Acts 16. he speaketh of them as a Church Know yee Philippians saith he that in the beginning of the Gospel no Church communicated with mee as concerning giving and receiving but yee onely Phil. 4.15 Which evidently holdeth them forth as a Church at that time and that Paul did first gather the brethren there into a Church when he baptized Lydia and the Gaoler and others there And indeed the Commission which Christ gave his Apostles holdeth it forth that they were by preaching to make Disciples before they baptized them and their children Mat. 28.19 Now a Disciple as the meaning of the word implyeth is a Scholler in Christs schoole and therefore when the Apostles were directed to make Disciples before they did baptize them they were not onely to convert them to the faith but also to gather them as Disciples or Schollers into a Schoole of Christ and the Schoole of Christ is every particular visible Christian Church wherein some are teachers some are Disciples or Schollers and his Discipline is exercised amongst them Neither is it credible that the Apostles would baptize any that is apply to them the seale of the Covenant given unto the Church before they had taught them the Covenant it selfe and entred them into it in which regard wee cannot easily thinke that when Peter baptized Cornelius and his family he did onely perceive they had received the holy Ghost and evidently professed the same in new tongues Acts 10.45 46 47. but that he did also gather them into one body directing them to the spirituall use of the newly received gifts in the Communion of Saints and baptized them into the fellowship of the Lord Jesus and of one another in his Name Thirdly Wee answer as the Apostles were transcendent Officers of the Church so they received transcendent power to administer their worke As the Father sent Christ so Christ sent them Job 20.21 to wit Cum amplitudine plenitudine potestatis with all fulnesse of power so that any one Apostle received both the gifts and power of all the Officers of the Church Any Apostle might doe the worke not onely of an Apostle but of a Prophet of an Evangelist of a Pastor of a Teacher of a Deacon Rev. 1.1 They doe foretell as Prophets things to come Acts 27.22 They travelled up and downe not onely to plant Churches but to water Churches as Evangelists Acts 15.41 They as Pastors feed the flock of Christ with wholsome words of exhortation 1 Tim. 2.7 Joh. 21.25 They as Teachers of the Gentiles as Paul speaketh of himselfe taught them in the mysteries of the kingdome of God They as Elders ruled the Church not as Lords but as examples to the flocke and as Deacons they received the oblations of the Church and distributed the same according to the necessitie of the Saints Yea Acts 4.35 though when the Apostles came where Churches were planted they did put forth no act of transcendent authoritie but did all with the consent of the Church yet in the absence of the Churches they might doe any act which any Church and all the Officers thereof might doe together As for ought wee know they might in such a case impose hands alone so Paul might set apart Timothy to some speciall office 2 Tim. 1.6 they might alone deliver unto Satan 1 Tim. 1.20 they alone might baptize in as much as the presence and the power and fellowship of any one of them did comprehend as much as the presence and power and fellowship of the whole Church together * their acts therefore in such transcendent cases are not patterns nor presidents for us but according to the measure of the gift of Christ wee are to move in our owne line and to act onely as the Ministers of Christ and his Church in the presence and fellowship of the Church 2. It is objected againe that children of excommunicated persons such as being cast out are not holden as members of the Church have yet right unto Baptisme and therefore it is not well done of us to deny the Baptisme of the children of such as are not Members That children of Excommunicated persons have right to Baptisme they prove by sundry Arguments 1. From the consideration of the divers sorts of Members some are members not actually but in the eternall Counsell of God as Paul before his conversion 2. Some are member onely in shew and appearance as hypocrites which are as woodden legs fastned to the body 3. Some are lively members knit to Christ by faith to the brethren by the spirit of love 4. Some are decayed members which though they belong to Gods Election
is ready to send and commend such of their members as their selves may spare and are fit for office but not called to office amongst themselves to supply the necessities of their Brethren SECT VI. A Sixth way of communion amongst our Churches is by way of admonition as it one Church should be credibly given to understand of some scandall arising in another Church whether by corruption in doctrine or in manners and upon diligent search and inquiry the report is found true the Church hearing thereof sendeth Letters or Messengers or both unto the Elders of that Church where such offence is found and exhorteth them to take a speedy and diligent course for the redresse thereof but if the Elders of that Church should be remisse therein or be faulty themselves they then certifie the whole Church thereof to call upon their officers as Paul sent to the Church of Coloss to call upon Archippus to take diligent heed to the fullfilling of that work of the Ministery which hee had received of the Lord Col. 4.17 If the Church heare them the scandall is removed if it heare them not the Church offended herewith taketh in the help of two or three Churches more to joyne with them in their exhortation or admonition It still the Church where the offence lieth persisteth in the neglect of their duty and of the counsell of their Brethren either the matter would be referred to a Congregation of many or all the Churches together if need should require or else if the offence be evident and weighty and of ill though not generall consequence the Churches offended with them would as justly they might withdraw themselves from the right hand of fellowship and so forbeare all such exercises of mutuall brotherly communion with them which all the Churches of Christ are wont to walke in one towards another We have never yet been put to the utmost extent of this duty towards any of our Churches The Lord hitherto so farre preventing with his grace that no Church hath stood out so long in maintaining any offence found amongst them But if it should so fall out which God forbid wee look at it as our dutie to be faithfull one Church to another in like sort as the Brethren of the same Church are called to be faithfull one towards another Doe not Churches injoy brotherly Communion one with another as well as brethren of the same Church The Church in the Canticles tooke care not onely for her own members but for her little sister which had no breasts Cant. 8.8 And would shee have taken no care of having her breasts healed if her breasts had been distempered and given corrupt milke The Apostles had a publick care by vertue of their office of all the Churches 2 Cor. 11.28 And is the publick spirit of grace and love dead with them ought not all the Churches of Christ to have a care and watchfull eye over the publick good of one another Though not virtute officii yet intuitu charitatis SECT VII THe seventh and last way of the Communion of our Churches is by way of propagation or multiplication of Churches Though this was a peculiar eminency of the Apostolike calling for them in their life-times to travell into all Nations to preach the Gospel to beget Disciples to gather them into Church-estate and so to plant Churches wheresoever they came yet that which they did by vertue of their office is reserved unto the Churches of Christ to prosecute and carry along according to their measure throughout all generations and in all Nations for the inlargement of the kingdome of Christ unto the end of the world The power of the keys which was immediately given by Christ unto his Apostles is also given by Christ unto all the Churches in that fulnesse of measure which the establishment and enlargement of Christs kingdome doth require If then any particular Church of Christ shall come in processe of time to be so farre multiplyed as that like Bees when the hive is too full they are necessarily occasioned to swarme forth as it is indeed the case when the voice of their Ministers cannot reach to all in such or in the like case the Church surcharged with multitude may send forth sundry of their members fit for the purpose to enter into a Church-estate amongst themselves or if a number of godly Christians shall come over into a Countrey where they finde the Churches so full that they cannot with conveniency joyne with them the Church may comfortably encourage them to enter into holy Covenant amongst themselves They may also commend both unto the one Company and unto the other such able gifted men whom they may fitly choose to be Ministers and Officers to them and both then when they enter into Covenant and gather into Church-estate as hath been shewed in the beginning as also when they goe about to choose and ordaine Church-Officers amongst themselves the Churches already established ought to be ready to helpe them with their presence counsell and assistance so farre as shall be found requisite for the propagation and enlargement of the kingdome of Christ in the multiplication of Churches according to the order of the Gospel Thus have wee given unto all our holy Brethren throughout the Churches of our Lord Jesus a just and true account of all our proceedings in Church-affaires so farre as concerneth our way and order amongst our selves If wee fall short of the Rule in some thing or other goe astray it is our humble and earnest request unto all our godly learned Brethren that they will be pleased Erranti comiter monstrare viam but if the way wee walke in be found upon serious and mature consideration to be agreeable to the rules of the Gospell as wee verily beleeve it is let all the upright in heart be intreated in the name of the Lord Jesus not to judge or speake evill of the wayes of Christ before his people But rather seeke how to addresse themselves and to call on others to walke in the straight steps of the Lord Jesus in the kingdome of his grace till wee shall all come to meete him in the kingdome of his glory CHAP. VII Of the way of reformation in the Congregations in England SECT I. WEE take not upon us as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to prescribe unto our Brethren in England men of their Churches and eminent lights in the world what course to take in pursuing and perfecting the great worke of Reformation in England Nay wee know our own Tenuity the store of busines enough which wee have to attend unto neere home Neverthelesse as wee cannot cease to pray for and seek their good as our own so wee cannot but rejoyce with them to behold that open doore which God hath set before them and with that all their hearts were so far enlarged towards the Lord and to his waves as wee heare his hand is enlarged towards them Onely being absent in body but present in
the whole body of them could not doe but by deputing some eminent persons amongst them to the performance thereof But after they be furnished with Elders a Presbytery of their owne let Imposition of hands be given by them according to 1 Tim. 4.14 to such as for the future shall be ordained 6. For the making up of a Presbytery in stead of Parson and Vicar wherewith some Congregations are endowed let them choose Pastors and Teachers and Ruling Elders in stead of those who crept into their roome viz. the Church-wardens and Sidesmen But let them choose and ordaine them in a day of humiliation according to Acts 14.23 and not for a yeare onely but during life and let the Presbyteries of all neighbour Churches take all opportunities to make use one of another for brotherly consultation but not for Jurisdiction and Authoritie one over another And in stead of Collectors or Overseers for the poore who crept into the roome of Deacons let Deacons be chosen as hath been shewed above but not as members of the Presbytery 7. For set forms of prayer or prescript Liturgies let them not be enjoyned unto the Ministers of the Churches but let the Ministers as well give up themselves wholly unto prayer as to the Ministery of the Word Act. 6.4 8. Baptisme may orderly be administred to the children of such parents as have professed their faith and repentance before the Church as above Or where either of the parents have made such profession or it may be considered also whether the children may not be baptized where either the grand-father or grand-mother have made such profession and are still living to undertake for the Christian education of the childe for it may be conceived where there is a stipulation of the Covenant on Gods part and a restistipulation on mans part there may be an obligation of the Covenant on both parts Gen. 17.7 Or if these faile what hindereth but that if the parents will resigne their infant to be educated in the house of any godly member of the Church the childe may be lawfully baptized in the right of its houshold Governour according to the proportion of the law Gen. 17.12 13. 9. Let the Lords Supper be administred onely to such as have so professed their faith and repentance publickly and are received approved members of the Church endued with sufficient knowledge to examine themselves and to discerne the Lords body free from scandall and of good conversation 10. Let Officers in the Church be redressed and removed not by presentments to Officers of other Churches but according to the order of the Gospel described above Chap. 5. sect 1 2 3. 11. Where the Ministers of the Congregation are ignorant or scandalous meet it is that they were removed and better chosen in their roome by the people according to the counsell direction of the godly Ministers and brethren of neighbour Churches Hos 4.6 12. Where the people in a Congregation are generally ignorant and profane it were necessary godly Preachers were sent forth with countenance from the King and State to preach unto them till they were brought on to knowledge and to some measure of gracious reformation Thus Jehosaphat sent forth Priests and Levites to teach in the Cities of Judah and certaine Princes and Nobles with them to countenance the good worke in their hands 2 Chron. 17.7 8 9. 13. Till the people be in some sort duly prepared and growne up to some measure of knowledge and grace it were neither meet to receive them to a renewing of their Covenant formerly made at their Baptisme or to the seales of it But after they have been wrought upon by the Ministery of the Word to lament after the Lord as the Israelites did when the Arke had been long absent from them 1 Sam. 7.29 then let them proceed as other godly Christians were directed to doe Propos 2 3 c. for renewing of their Covenant for choice of their Ministers and Officers and for Communication in all the liberties of the Church of God 14. For the helpe of the Universities of the whole Kingdome and of all the Churches in it it were necessary that some experienced godly learned Nobles and Ministers were deputed to visite and reforme the Universities That subscriptions to Ceremonies and prescript Liturgies were removed That degrees in Divinitie were not abused unto qualifications for pluralities and non-residency nor allowed in the Ministers of Churches to put a difference between brethren of the same calling whence Christ hath removed it Mat. 23.8 9 10. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there mentioned is not to be translated Master for it is a Title common to all Ministers but Doctors and the Academicall title of Doctors is fitter for Masters of Colledges Readers in the Schooles then for Church-officers Here also speciall care would be taken for setting up of such Preachers in both the Universities as whose spirit and gift and Ministery might be examplary patterns to young Students 15. For the effectuall and orderly expedition and transaction of all these things it were requisite that as King Jehosaphat did so the King and State should depute some choice persons to doe the same to wit to goe throughout all the Kingdome to see the people returned and all the Churches restored to a true state and course of Reformation 2 Chron. 19.4 All which things are humbly presented by us not as if we would undertake to give Counsell to them that are wiser then our selves much lesse Injunctions But as Subjects who desire to approve our faithfull service to the Lord and our King and Countrey hold them forth as true Consectaries from the Rules of the Gospel which should rule us all FINIS An Alphabeticall Table containing the principall things handled in this Treatise A OF Addition of members to the Church page 52. chap. 3. Sect. 1. Sect. 2. Of communion of Churches by way of Admonition pag. 108. Sect. 6. The Antiquity of the Church way intimated in the Bishops Common-prayer book p. 12 Of disclaiming Advocations by Patrons to livings p. 113. Sect. 2. B Whether all Baptized are fit for Church-fellowship p. 9 Why by the same reason that beleevers children circumcised were admitted to the Passeover now they are baptized may not be admitted to the Lords Supper p. 9 All Baptized by vertue thereof are not members of a particular visible Church p. 9. No place in Scripture for succession of Diocesan Bishops after the Apostles p. 46. Sect. 8. p. 49. Sect. 9. Whether unbeleevers giving up their infant to be educated in the house of a godly member of a Church it may not according to Gen. 17.12 13. be Baptized in the right of that houshold p. 115 C. The part of all true Christians to joyne themselves into some particular visible Church p. 2. Joyning into a particular visible Church cannot be but by Covenant p. 2. 3. 4 c. Particular visible Churches to be gathered must have the concurrence of