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A53732 The true nature of a Gospel church and its government ... by the late pious and learned minister of the Gospel, John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1689 (1689) Wing O815; ESTC R13410 211,358 294

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Suffrage of the people 2. I have shewed instances before out of the Scripture that when a thing is done by the whole people it is usual to ascribe it unto him or them who were chief therein as elsewhere the same thing is ascribed unto the whole people THE same Authors contend that the liberty of choosing their own Officers or Elders such as it was was granted unto them or permitted by way of condescention for a Season and not made use of by virtue of any right in them thereunto But this permission is a meer imagination It was according to the mind of Christ that the Churches should choose their own Elders or it was not If it were not the Apostles would not have permitted it and if it were they ought to ordain it and practise according to it as they did Nor is such a constant Apostolical Practice proposed for the direction of the Church in all Ages to be ascribed unto such an Original as Condescension and Permission Yea it is evident that it arose from the most fundamental principles of the constitution and nature of the Gospel Churches and was only a regular pursuit and practice of them For 1. THE Calling of Bishops Pastors Elders is an Act of the power of the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven But these Keys are originally and properly given unto the whole Church unto the Elders of it only Ministerially and as unto exercise Pastors are eyes to the Church But God and Nature design in the first place sight to the whole Body to the whole Person thereunto it is granted both subjectively and finally but actually it is peculiarly seated in the eye So is it in the grant of Church-Power it is given to the whole Church though to be exercised only by its Elders THAT the grant of the Keys unto Peter was in the Person and as the representative of the whole confessing Church is the known judgment of Austin and a multitude of Divines that follow him So he fully expresseth himself Tractat. 124. in Johan Peter the Apostle bare in a general figure the person of the Church For as unto what belonged unto himself he was by Nature one Man by Grace one Christian and of special more abounding Grace one and the chief Apostle But when it was said unto him I will give unto thee the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven c. he signified the whole Church c. Again the Church which is founded in Christ received from him in the person of Peter the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven which is the power of binding and loosing UNTO whom these Keys are granted they according to their distinct interests in that grant have the Right and Power of Calling their Bishops Pastors or Elders for in the exercise of that Trust and Power it doth consist But this is made unto the whole Church And as there are in a Church already constituted several sorts of persons as some are Elders others are of the people only this Right resideth in them and is acted by them according to their respective capacities as limited by the light of nature and divine institution which is that the Election of them should belong unto the body of the people and their Authoritative Designation or Ordination unto the Elders And when in any place the supream Magistrate is a Member or Part of the Church he hath also his peculiar Right herein THAT the power of the Keys is thus granted originally and fundamentally unto the whole Church is undeniably confirmed by Two Arguments 1. THE Church it self is the Wife the Spouse the Bride the Queen of the Husband and King of the Church Christ Jesus Psal. 45.10 John 3.29 Revel 21.9 Chap. 22.17 Matth. 25.1 5 6. Other Wife Christ hath none nor hath the Church any other Husband Now to whom should the Keys of the House be committed but unto the Bride There is I confess another who claims the Keys to be his own but withal he makes himself the Head and Husband of the Church proclaiming himself not only to be an Adulterer with that Harlot which he calleth the Church but a Tyrant also in that pretending to be her Husband he will not trust her with the Keys of his House which Christ hath done with his Spouse And whereas by the Canon Law every Bishop is the Husband or Spouse of his Diocesan Church for the most part they commit an open Rape upon the people taking them without their consent at least are not chosen by them which yet is essential unto a lawful Marriage And the Bride of Christ comes no otherwise so to be but by the voluntary choice of him to be her Husband FOR the Officers or Rulers of the Church they do belong unto it as hers 1 Cor. 3.21.22 And Stewards in the House 1 Cor. 4.1 the Servants of the Church for Jesus sake 2 Cor. 4.5 IF the Lord Christ have the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven that is of his own House Heb. 3. If the Church it self be the Spouse of Christ the Mother of the Family Psal. 68.13 the Bride the Lambs Wife and if all the Officers of the Church be but Stewards and Servants in the House and unto the Family if the Lord Christ do make a grant of these Keys unto any whereon the disposal of all things in this House and Family doth depend the Question is Whether he hath originally granted them unto his holy Spouse to dispose off according unto her judgment and duty or unto any Servants in the House to dispose of her and all her concernments at their pleasure 2. THE power of the Keys as unto binding and loosing and consequently as unto all other acts thence proceeding is expresly granted unto the whole Church Matth. 18.17 18. If he shall neglect to hear them tell the Church but if he neglect to hear the Church let him be unto thee as an Heathen Man and a Publican verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and whatsoever ye shall loose on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven What Church it is that is here intended we have proved before and that the Church is intrusted with the power of binding and loosing And what is the part of the Body of the people herein the Apostle declares 1 Cor. 5.4 2 Cor. 2.6 SECONDLY This Right exemplified in Apostolical Practice is comprehended in the Commands given unto the Church or Body of the People with respect unto Teachers and Rulers of all sorts for unto them it is in a multitude of places given in charge that they should discern and try false Prophets fly from them try Spirits or such as pretend Spiritual Gifts or Offices reject them who Preach false Doctrine to give testimony unto them that are to be in Office with sundry other things of the like nature which all of them do suppose or cannot be discharged without a Right in them to choose the worthy and reject the unworthy as
21.17 1 Tim. 5.17 They are some of them on other accounts called Bishops Pastors Teachers Ministers Guides but what belongs unto any of them in point of Rule or what interest they have therein it belongs unto them as Elders and not otherwise Act. 20.17 18. SO under the Old Testament where the Word doth not signifie a difference in Age but is used in a moral sence Elders are the same with Rulers or Governours whether in Offices Civil or Ecclesiastical especially the Rulers of the Church were constantly called its Elders And the use of the Word with the abuse of the Power or Office intended by it is traduced to signifie Men in Authority Signeiores Eldermani in all places 2. CHURCH-Power acted in its Rule is called the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven by an expression derived from the Keys that were a sign of Office-Power in the Families of Kings Isa. 22.22 and used by our Saviour himself to denote the communication of Church-Power unto others which was absolutely and universally vested in himself under the Name of the Key of David Revel 3.7 Mat. 16.19 3. THESE Keys are usually referred unto Two Heads namely the one of Order the other of Jurisdiction 4. BY the Key of Order the Spiritual Right Power and Authority of Bishops or Pastors to Preach the Word to Administer the Sacraments Doctrinally to bind and loose the Consciences of Men are intended 5. BY Jurisdiction the Rule Government or Discipline of the Church is designed though it was never so called or esteemed in the Scripture or the Primitive Church until the whole nature of Church-Rule or Discipline was depraved and changed Therefore neither the Word nor any thing that is signified by it or which it is applied unto ought to be admitted unto any consideration in the things that belong unto the Church or its Rule it being expressive of and directing unto that corrupt Administration of things Ecclesiastical according unto the Canon Law by which all Church-Rule and Order is destroyed I do therefore at once dismiss all disputes about it as of things Foreign to the Gospel and Christian Religion I mean as unto the Institutions of Christ in his Church The Civil Jurisdiction of Supreme Magistrates about the externals of Religion is of another consideration But that these Keys do include the two-fold distinct Powers of Teaching and Rule of Doctrine and Discipline is freely granted 6. IN the Church of England as in that of Rome there is a peculiar distribution made of these Keys Unto some that is unto one special sort or order of Men they are both granted both the Key of Order and of Jurisdiction which is unto Diocesan Bishops with some others under various Canonical restrictions and limitations as Deans and Arch-Deacons Unto some is granted the Key of Order only without the least interest in Jurisdiction or Rule by virtue of their Office which are the Parochial Ministers or meer Presbyters without any additional Title or Power as of Commissary Surrogates or the like And unto a third sort there is granted the Key of Rule or Jurisdiction almost plenipotent who have no share in the Key of Order that is were never Ordained Separated Dedicated unto any Office in the Church such as are the Chancellors c. 7. THESE Chancellors are the only Lay-Elders that I know any where in any Church that is Persons entrusted with the Rule of the Church and the Disposition of its Censures who are not Ordained unto any Church-Office but in all other things continue in the Order of the Laity or the People All Church Rulers by institution are Elders To be an Elder of the Church and a Ruler in it is all one Wherefore these Persons being Rulers in the Church and yet thus continuing in the Order of the People are Lay-Elders whom I wonder how so many of the Church came so seriously to oppose seeing this Order of Men is owned by none but themselves The Truth is and it must be acknowledged that there is no known Church in the World I mean whose Order is known unto us and is of any publick consideration but they do dispose the Rule of the Church in part into the hands of Persons who have not the power of Authoritative Preaching of the Word and Administration of the Sacraments committed unto them For even those who place the whole external Rule of the Church in the Civil Magistrate do it as they judge him an Officer of the Church entrusted by Christ with Church-Power And those who deny any such Officers as are usually called Ruling Elders in the Reformed Churches to be of Divine Institution yet maintain that it is very necessary that there should be such Officers in the Church either appointed by the Magistrate or chosen by the people and that with cogent Arguments See Grot. de Jure Potestat Cap. 8. BUT this distribution mentioned of Church-Power is unscriptural nor is there any foot-steps of it in Antiquity It is so as unto the two latter Branches of it That any one should have the power of Order to Preach the Word to Administer the Seals to bind and loose the Conscience Doctrinally or Ministerially to bind and loose in the Court of Conscience and yet by the virtue of that Office which gives them this power not to have a Right and Power of Rule or Discipline to bind and loose in the Court of the Church is that which neither the Scripture nor any example of the Primitive Church doth give countenance unto And as by this means those are abridged and deprived of their power to whom it is granted by the Institution and Law of Christ as it is with all Elders duly called unto their Office so in the Third Branch there is a grant of Church-Power unto such as by the Law of Christ are excluded from any Interest therein The enormity of which constitution I shall not at present insist upon But Enquiry must be made what the Scripture directs unto herein And 1. THERE is a Work and Duty of Rule in the Church distinct from the Work and Duty of Pastoral Feeding by the Preaching of the Word and Administration of the Sacraments All agree herein unless it be Erastus and those that follow him who seem to oppose it But their Arguments lie not against Rule in general which were brutish but only a Rule by external Jurisdiction in the Elders of the Church So they grant the general Assertion of the necessity of Rule for who can deny it only they contend about the subject of power required thereunto A Spiritual Rule by virtue of mutual voluntary confederation for the preservation of Peace Purity and Order in the Church few of that opinion deny at least it is not that which they do oppose For to deny all Rule and Discipline in the Church with all Administration of Censures in the exercise of a Spiritual Power internally inherent in the Church is to deny the Church to be a Spiritual Political
as the best Treasure to be preserved and ensured by all that would be Happy here and hereafter By Bartholomew Ashwood late Minister of the Gospel Price bound 2s 6d Another Book of the same Authors Entituled The heavenly Trade or the best Merchandize the only way to live well in impoverishing Times A Discourse occasioned from the decay of Earthly Trades and visible waste of practical Piety in the Day we live in Offering Arguments and Counsels to all towards a speedy revival of dying Godliness and timely prevention of the dangerous issues thereof hanging over us Very necessary for all Families Price 2 s. 6 d. Some other Books Printed for and Sold by William Marshal CAryl's Exposition on the whole Book of Job In Two Volumes in Folio Pool's Synopsis Criticorum In V. Volumes Latin. 's Synopsis on the New Testament In Two large Volumes in Latin with the Index are to be sold very cheap In Quires both Volumes for 20 s and both Vol. well bound for 30 s. Pool's Annotations in English. Two Volumes Index's to the Old and New Testament to be sold alone Price 5 s. Dr. Owen on the Hebrews In Four Volumes Owen on the Spirit Clark's Martyrology Mellificium Chirurgiae or the Marrow of Chirurgery An Anatomical Treatise Institutions of Physick with Hippocrates's Aphorisms largely Commented upon The Marrow of Physick shewing the Causes Signs and Cures of most Diseases incident to humane Bodies Choice experienced Receipts for the Cure of several Distempers The Fourth Edition enlarged withm any Additions and purged from many Faults that escaped in the former Impressions Illustrated with Twelve Copper Cuts By James Cooke of Warwick Practitioner in Physick and Chirurgery There is also a very useful Book of the same Authors for those That are desirous of being their own Physicians Entituled Select Observations of English Bodies of Eminent Persons in desperate Diseases To which is now added an Hundred rich Counsels and Advices for several honourable Persons With all the several Medicines and Methods by which the several Cures were effected With Directions about Drinking the Bath Water Price bound 2 s. 6 d. Clarkson's Primitive Episcopacy Octavo Price bound 1 s. 6 d. Owen of Justification 's Brief and Impartial Account of the Nature of the Protestant Religion THE TRUE NATURE OF A Gospel Church AND ITS GOVERNMENT CHAP. I. The Subject Matter of the Church THE Church may be considered either as unto its Essence Constitution and Being or as unto its Power and Order when it is Organized As unto its Essence and Being its constituent parts are its Matter and Form. These we must enquire into By the Matter of the Church we understand the persons whereof the Church doth consist with their Qualifications And by its Form the reason cause and way of that kind of Relation among them which gives them the Being of a Church and therewithal an Interest in all that belongs unto a Church either privilege or power as such Our first Enquiry being concerning what sort of Persons our Lord Jesus Christ requireth and admitteth to be the visible Subjects of his Kingdom we are to be regulated in our Determination by respect unto his Honour Glory and the Holiness of his Rule To reckon such persons to be Subjects of Christ Members of his Body such as he requires and owns for others are not so who would not be tolerated at least not approved in a well Governed Kingdom or Commonwealth of the World is highly dishonourable unto him But it is so come to pass that let Men be never so notoriously and flagitiously wicked until they become pests of the earth yet are they esteemed to belong to the Church of Christ. And not only so but it is thought little less than Schism to forbid them the Communion of the Church in all its sacred Privileges Howbeit the Scripture doth in general represent the Kingdom or Church of Christ to consist of persons called Saints separated from the World with many other things of an alike nature as we shall see immediately And if the Honour of Christ were of such weight with us as it ought to be if we understood aright the nature and ends of his Kingdom and that the peculiar Glory of it above all the Kingdoms in the World consists in the Holiness of its Subjects such an Holiness as the World in its wisdom knoweth not we would duly consider whom we avow to belong thereunto Those who know ought of these things will not profess that persons openly profane vicious sensual wicked and ignorant are approved and owned of Christ as the Subjects of his Kingdom or that it is his will that we should receive them into the Communion of the Church But an old opinion of the unlawfulness of separation from a Church on the account of the mixture of wicked men in it is made a scare-crow to frighten men from attempting the Reformation of the greatest Evils and a covert for the composing Churches of such Members only Some things therefore are to be premised unto what shall be offered unto the right stating of this Enquiry As 1. That if there be no more required of any as unto Personal Qualifications in a visible uncontroulable profession to constitute them Subjects of Christs Kingdom and Members of his Church but what is required by the most righteous and severe Laws of Men to constitute a good Subject or Citizen the distinction between his visible Kingdom and the Kingdoms of the World as unto the principal causes of it is utterly lost Now all negative Qualifications as that Men are not Oppressors Drunkards Revilers Swearers Adulterers c. are required hereunto But yet it is so fallen out that generally more is required to constitute such a Citizen as shall represent the righteous Laws he liveth under than to constitute a Member of the Church of Christ. 2. That whereas Regeneration is expresly required in the Gospel to give a Right and Privilege unto an entrance into the Church or Kingdom of Christ whereby that Kingdom of his is distinguished from all other Kingdoms in and of the World unto an Interest wherein never any such thing was required it must of necessity be something better more excellent and sublime than any thing the Laws and Polities of Men pretend unto or prescribe Wherefore it cannot consist in any outward Rites easie to be observed by the worst and vilest of Men besides the Scripture gives us a description of it in opposition unto its consisting in any such Rite 1 Pet. 3.21 And many things required unto good Citizens are far better than the meer observation of such a Rite Of this Regeneration Baptism is the Symbol the Sign Expression and Representation Wherefore unto those who are in a due manner partakers of it it giveth all the external Rights and Privileges which belong unto them that are Regenerate until they come unto such Seasons wherein the personal performance of those Duties whereon the continuation of
the estate of visible Regeneration doth depend is required of them Herein if they fail they lose all privilege and benefit by their Baptism So speaks the Apostle in the case of Circumcision under the Law Rom. 2.25 For Circumcision verily profiteth if thou keep the Law but if thou be a breaker of the Law thy Circumcision is made uncircumcision It is so in the case of Baptism Verily it profiteth if a Man stand unto the Terms of the Covenant which is tendered therein between God and his Soul for it will give him Right unto all the outward Privileges of a Regenerate State but if he do not as in the sight of God his Baptism is no Baptism as unto the real communication of Grace and acceptance with him so in the sight of the Church it is no Baptism as unto a participation of the external Rights and Privileges of a Regenerate State. 4. God alone is judge concerning this Regeneration as unto its internal real principle and state in the Souls of Men whereon the participation of all the spiritual advantages of the Covenant of Grace doth depend The Church is judge of its evidences and fruits in their external Demonstration as unto a participation of the outward Privileges of a Regenerate State and no farther And we shall hereon briefly declare what belongs unto the forming of a right judgment herein and who are to be esteemed fit Members of any Gospel Church-State or have a Right so to be 1. Such as from whom we are obliged to withdraw or withhold Communion can be no part of the matter constitūent of a Church or are not meet Members for the first constitution of it But such are all Habitual Sinners those who having prevalent habits and inclinations unto Sins of any kind unmortified do walk according unto them Such are profane Swearers Drunkards Fornicators Covetous Oppressors and the like who shall not inherit the Kingdom of God. 1 Cor. 6.9 10 11. Phil. 3.18 19. 2 Thess. 3.6 2 Tim. 3.5 as a Man living and dying in any known Sin that is habitually without Repentance cannot be saved so a Man known to live in Sin cannot regularly be received into any Church To compose Churches of Habitual Sinners and that either as unto Sins of Commission or Sins of Omission is not to erect Temples of Christ but Chapels unto the Devil 2. Such as being in the fellowship of the Church are to be admonished of any scandalous Sin which if they repent not of they are to be cast out of the Church are not meet Members for the Original Constitution of a Church This is the state of them who abide Obstinate in any known Sin whereby they have given offence unto others without a professed Repentance thereof although they have not lived in it habitually 3. They are to be such as visibly answer the Description given of Gospel Churches in the Scripture so as the Titles assigned therein unto the Members of such Churches may on good grounds be appropriated unto them To compose Churches of such persons as do not visibly answer the character given of what they were of old and what they were always to be by virtue of the Law of Christ or Gospel-constitution is not Church Edification but Destruction And those who look on the things spoken of all Church Members of old as that they were Saints by calling lively stones in the house of God justified and sanctified separate from the World c. as those which were in them and did indeed belong unto them but even deride the necessity of the same things in present Church Members or the Application of them unto those who are so are themselves no small part of that woful Degeneracy which Christian Religion is fallen under Let it then be considered what is spoken of the Church of the Jews in their Dedication unto God as unto their Typical Holiness with the Application of it unto Christian Churches in real Holiness 1 Pet. 2.5 9. with the Description given of them constantly in the Scripture as Faithful Holy Believing as the House of God as his Temple wherein he dwells by his Spirit as the Body of Christ united and compacted by the communication of the Spirit unto them as also what is said concerning their ways walkings and duties and it will be uncontrolably evident of what sort our Church Members ought to be nor are those of any other sort able to discharge the Duties which are incumbent on all Church Members nor to use the Privileges they are intrusted withal Wherefore I say to suppose Churches regularly to consist of such persons for the greater part of them as no way answer the Description given of Church Members in their Original Institution nor capable to discharge the Duties prescribed unto them but giving evidence of Habits and actions inconsistent therewithal is not only to disturb all Church Order but utterly to overthrow the Ends and Being of Churches Nor is there any thing more scandalous unto Christian Religion than what Bellarmine affirms to be the judgment of the Papists in opposition unto all others namely that no internal Vertue or Grace is required unto the Constitution of a Church in its Members Lib. 3. de Eccles. cap. 2. 4. They must be such as do make an open profession of the subjection of their Souls and Consciences unto the Authority of Christ in the Gospel and their readiness to yield Obedience unto all his Commands This I suppose will not be denied for not only doth the Scripture make this Profession necessary unto the participation of any benefit or privilege of the Gospel but the nature of the things themselves requires indispensably that so it should be For nothing can be more unreasonable than that Men should be taken into the privileges attending Obedience unto the Laws and Commands of Christ without avowing or professing that Obedience Wherefore our Enquiry is only what is required unto such a Profession as may render Men meet to be Members of a Church and give them a Right thereunto For to suppose such a confession of Christian Religion to be compliant with the Gospel which is made by many who openly live in Sin being disobedient and unto every good work reprobate is to renounce the Gospel it self Christ is not the High-Priest of such a Profession I shall therefore declare briefly what is necessary unto this Profession that all may know what it is which is required unto the Entrance of any into our Churches wherein our Practice hath been sufficiently traduced 1. There is required unto it a competent knowledge of the Doctrines and Mystery of the Gospel especially concerning the Person and Offices of Christ. The Confession hereof was the ground whereon he granted the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven or all Church Power unto Believers Matth. 16.17 18 19. The first Instruction which he gave unto his Apostles was That they should teach Men by the Preaching of the Gospel
of the people yet they were suited to promote them as well as to countenance them which they did effectually Hence it came to pass that the Reformation of the Church as unto the matter of it or the Purity and Holiness of its Members was not in the least attempted until Calvin set up his Discipline at Geneva which hath filled the World with clamours against him from that day to this In most other places Churches in the matter of them continued the same as they were in the Papacy and in many places as bad in their Lives as when they were Papists But this Method was designed in the Holy Wise Providence of God for the good and advantage of the Church in a progressive Reformation as it had made a gradual Progress into its decay For had the Reformers in the first place set themselves to remove out of the Church such as were unmeet for its Communion or to have gathered out of them such as were meet Members of the Church according to its Original Institution it would through the paucity of the number of those who could have complied with the Design have greatly obstructed if not utterly defeated their endeavour for the Reformation of Doctrine and Worship This was that in the Preaching of the Gospel and the Profession of it which God hath since made effectual in these Nations especially and in other places to turn Multitudes from Darkness to Light and from the Power of Satan unto Himself translating them into the Kingdom of His dear Son. Hereby way is made for a necessary addition unto the work of Reformation if not to the closing of it which could not at first be attained unto nor well attempted namely the Reduction of Churches as unto their matter or the Members of them unto their Primitive Institution The sum of what is designed in this Discourse is this only We desire no more to constitute Church Members and we can desire no less than what in judgment of Charity may comply with the Vnion that is between Christ the Head and the Church 1 Cor. 12.27 Eph. 2.22 1 Cor. 3.16 17. 2 Cor. 11.1 18. 1 Thess. 1.1 2 c. that may in the same judgment answer the way of the beginning and increase of the Church according unto the Will of God who adds unto the Church such as shall be saved Act. 2.47 the Rule of our receiving of them being because he hath received them Rom. 14.1 2. that may answer that Profession of Faith which was the Foundation of the Church which was not what flesh and blood but what God himself revealed Matth. 16.16 and not such as have a form of Godliness but deny the Power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 We acknowledge that many Church Members are not what they ought to be but that many Hypocrites may be among them that the judgment which is passed on the Confession and Profession of them that are to be Admitted into Churches is charitative proceeding on evidence of moral Probability not determining the reality of the things themselves that there are sundry measures of Light Knowledge Experience and Abilities and Readiness of Mind in those that are to be Admitted all whose Circumstances are duly to be considered with indulgence unto their weaknesses And if the Scripture will allow us any further Latitude we are ready to embrace it Our present Enquiry yet remaining on these considerations is What is our Duty in point of Communion with such Churches as are made up or composed of Members visibly unholy or such as comply not with the Qualifications that are by the Rules of the Gospel indispensably required to give unto any a Regular entrance into the Church with a participation of its Privileges For it is in vain to expect that such Churches will Reform themselves by any Act Duty or Power of their own seeing the generality of them are justly supposed averse from and enemies unto any such Work. I answer therefore 1. It must be remembred that Communion with particular Churches is to be regulated absolutely by Edification No Man is or can be obliged to abide in or confine himself unto the Communion of any particular Church any longer than it is for his Edification And this liberty is allowed unto all persons by the Church of England For allow a Man to be born in such a Parish to be baptized in it and there educated yet if at any time he judge that the Ministry of the Parish is not useful unto his Edification he may withdraw from all Communion in that Parish by the removal of his Habitation it may be to the next door Wherefore 2. If the corruption of a Church as to the matter of it be such as that 1. It is inconsistent with and overthroweth all that Communion that ought to be among the Members of the same Church in love without dissimulation whereof we shall treat afterwards 2. If the scandals and offences which must of necessity abound in such Churches be really obstructive of Edification 3. If the ways and walking of the generality of their Members be dishonourable unto the Gospel and the Profession of it giving no Representation of the holiness of Christ or his Doctrine 4. If such Churches do not can not will not Reform themselves Then It is the Duty of every Man who takes care of his own present Edification and the future salvation of his Soul peaceably to withdraw from the Communion of such Churches and to join in such others where all the ends of Church Societies may in some measure be obtained Men may not only do so because all obligation unto the use of means for the attaining of such an end doth cease when the means are not suited thereunto but obstructive of its attainment but also the giving of a Testimony hereby against the Declension from the Rule of Christ in the Institution of Churches and the dishonour that by this means is reflected on the Gospel is necessary unto all that desire to acquit themselves as Loyal Subjects unto their Lord and King. And it cannot be questioned by any who understand the nature use and end of Evangelical Churches but that a relinquishment of the Rule of the Gospel in any of them as unto the practice of Holiness is as just a cause of withdrawing Communion from them as their forsaking the same Rule in Doctrine and Worship It may be some will judge that sundry inconveniences will ensue on this Assertion when any have a mind to practise according unto it But when the matter of Fact supposed is such as is capable of an uncontrollable evidence no inconvenience can ensue on the practice directed unto any way to be compared unto the mischief of obliging Believers to abide always in such Societies to the ruine of their Souls Two things may be yet enquired into that relate unto this part of the state of Evangelical Churches As 1. Whether a Church may not ought not to take under its Conduct Inspection and Rule
of the Truth which they have so learned and comprehended Unless we look on Truth as a Pearl as that which is valued at any rate bought with any price as that which is better than all the World we shall not endeavour its preservation with that diligence which is required Some are ready to part with Truth at an easie rate or to grow indifferent about it whereof we have multitudes of examples in the days wherein we live It were easie to give instances of sundry important Evangelical Truths which our fore-fathers in the Faith contended for with all earnestness and were ready to seal with their Blood which are now utterly disregarded and opposed by some who pretend to succeed them in their Profession If Ministers have not a sense of that Power of Truth in their own Souls and a taste of its Goodness the discharge of this Duty is not to be expected from them 3. A consciencious care and fear of giving countenance or encouragement unto novel Opinions especially such as oppose any Truth of whose Power and Efficacy Experience hath been had among them that believe Vain curiosity boldness in conjectures and readiness to vent their own conceits have caused no small trouble and damage unto the Church 4. Learning and ability of Mind to discern and disprove the oppositions of the Adversaries of the Truth and thereby to stop their Mouths and convince gain-sayers 5. The solid confirmation of the most important Truths of the Gospel and whereunto all others are resolved in their Teaching and Ministry Men may and do oft-times prejudice yea betray the Truth by the weakness of their Pleas for it 6. A diligent watch over their own Flocks against the crafts of Seducers from without or the springing up of any bitter root of error among themselves 7. A concurrent Assistance with the Elders and Messengers of other Churches with whom they are in Communion in the declaration of the Faith which they all profess whereof we must treat afterwards more at large IT is evident what Learning Labour Study Pains Ability and Exercise of the rational Faculties are ordinarily required unto the right discharge of these Duties And where Men may be useful to the Church in other things but are defective in these it becomes them to walk and act both circumspectly and humbly frequently desiring and adhering unto the Advice of them whom God hath entrusted with more Talents and greater Abilities 5. IT belongs unto their Charge and Office diligently to labour for the Conversion of Souls unto God. The ordinary means of Conversion is left unto the Church and its Duty it is to attend unto it Yea one of the principal ends of the Institution and Preservation of Churches is the Conversion of Souls and where there are no more to be Converted there shall be no more Church on the Earth To enlarge the Kingdom of Christ to diffuse the Light and Savour of the Gospel to be subservient unto the Calling of the Elect or gathering all the Sheep of Christ into his Fold are things that God designs by his Churches in this World. Now the principal instrumental cause of all these is the Preaching of the Word and this is committed unto the Pastors of the Churches It is true Men may be and often are Converted unto God by their occasional dispensation of the Word who are not called unto Office for it is the Gospel it self that is the Power of God unto Salvation by whomsoever it is Administred and it hath been effectual unto that end even in the necessary occasional teaching of Women But it is so frequently in the exercise of Spiritual Gifts by them who are not stated Officers of the Church 1 Cor. 14.24 25. Phil. 1.14 15 18. 1 Pet. 4.10 11. But yet this hinders not but that the Administration of the Glorious Gospel of the blessed God as unto all the ends of it is committed unto the Pastors of the Church And the First Object of the Preaching of the Gospel is the World or the Men of it for their Conversion And it is so in the Preaching of all them unto whom that Work is committed by Christ. The Work of the Apostles and Evangelists had this Order in it First they were to make Disciples of Men by the Preaching of the Gospel unto Conversion and this was their principal Work as Paul testifieth 1 Cor. 1.17 And herein were they gloriously instrumental in laying the foundation of the Kingdom of Christ all the World over The Second part of their Work was to teach them that were Converted or made Disciples to do and observe all that he did command them In the pursuit of this part of their Commission they gathered the Disciples of Christ into Churches under ordinary Officers of their own And although the Work of these Ordinary Officers Pastors and Teachers be of the same nature with theirs yet the Method of it is changed in them For their first ordinary Work is to conduct and teach all the Disciples of Christ to do and observe all things appointed by him that is to Preach unto and Watch over their particular Flocks unto whom they do relate But they are not hereby discharged from an interest in the other part of the Work in Preaching the Word unto the Conversion of Souls They are not indeed bound unto the Method of the Apostles and Evangelists yea they are by virtue of their Office ordinarily excluded from it After a Man is called to be a Pastor of a particular Church it is not his Duty to leave that Church and go up and down to Preach for the Conversion of Strangers It is not I say ordinarily so for many cases may fall out wherein the Edification of any particular Church is to give way unto the glory of Christ with respect unto the calling of all the Members of the Church Catholick But in the discharge of the Pastoral Office there are many occasions of Preaching the Word unto the Conversion of Souls As 1. When any that are Unconverted do come into the Assemblies of the Church and are there wrought upon by the Power of the Word whereof we have experience every day To suppose that a Man at the same time and in the same place Preaching unto one Congregation should Preach to some of them namely those that are of the Church whereunto he relates as a Minister with Ministerial Authority and to others only by virtue of a Spiritual Gift which he hath received is that which no Man can distinguish in his own Conscience nor is there any colour of Rule or Reason for it For though Pastors with respect unto their whole Office and all the Duties of it whereof many can have the Church only for their Object are Ministers in Office unto the Church and so Ministers of the Church yet are they Ministers of Christ also and by him it is and not by the Church that the Preaching of the Gospel is committed unto them And it is so committed
preserved in its purity according unto the mind of Christ. But that which was directed by the Apostle Paul in the Church of Corinth towards the incestuous Person is express 1 Cor. 5.1 2 5 6 7. 1. He declares the Sin whereof the Person charged was guilty with the Ignominy and Scandal of it Ver. 1. 2. He blames the Church that they had not been affected with the Guilt and Scandal of it so as to have proceeded to his Removal or Expulsion out of the Church that he might be taken away or cut off from them Ver. 2. 3. He declares his own judgment in the case that he ought to be so taken away or removed which yet was not actually effected by that Judgment and Sentence of his Ver. 3. 4. He declares the causes of this Excision 1. The Supream efficient cause of it is the Power or Authority of the Lord Jesus Christ instituting this Ordinance in his Church giving Right and Power unto it for its administration In the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ and with his Power 2. The declarative cause of the Equity of this Sentence which was the Spirit of the Apostle or the Authoritative Declaration of his judgment in the case with my Spirit 3. The Instrumental Ministerial cause of it which is the Church do it in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ when you are gathered together Ver. 4. and thereby purge out the old Leaven that you may be a new Lump Ver. 7. whence the punishment of this Sentence is said to be inflicted by many 2 Cor. 2.6 that is all those who on his Repentance were obliged to forgive and comfort him that is the whole Church Ver. 7. 5. The nature of the Sentence is the delivering of such an one to Satan for the destruction of the Flesh that the Spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus Ver. 5. Not the destruction of his Body by Death but the through mortification of the Flesh whereby he was shortly afterwards recovered and restored into his former condition The whole of what we plead for is here exemplified as 1. The cause of Excommunication which is a scandalous Sin unrepented of 2. The preparation for its execution which is the Churches sence of the Sin and Scandal with Humiliation for it 3. The warranty of it which is the Institution of Christ wherein his Authority is engaged 4. The manner and form of it by an Act of Authority with the consent of the whole Church 5. The effect of it in a total separation from the Privileges of the Church 6. The end of it 1. With respect unto the Church its purging and vindication 2. With respect unto the Person Excommunicated his Repentance Reformation and Salvation IT is usually replied hereunto that this was an extraordinary act of Apostolical Power and so not to be drawn by us into Example For he himself both determines the case and asserteth his presence in Spirit that is by his Authority to be necessary unto what was done Besides it was a delivery of the Man to Satan that is into his power to be afflicted and cruciated by him to be terrified in his Mind and punished in his Body to the destruction of the Flesh that is unto Death Such was the Delivery of a Man to Satan by the Apostle mentioned here and 1 Tim. 1.9 20. in the judgment of many of the Ancients But there is no such Power in any Church at present to deliver an offender unto Satan nor any appearing effects of such a pretence Wherefore this is a matter which belongs not unto Churches at present I ANSWER 1. What the Apostles did in any Church whether present or absent by their own Authority did not prejudice the Right of the Churches themselves nor their Power acted in Subordination unto them and their guidance So it is evident in this place that notwithstanding the exerting of any Apostolical Power intimated the Church it self is charged with its Duty and directed to exercise its Authority in the Rejection of the Offender 2. There is nothing extraordinary in the case 1. It is not so that a Member of a Church should fall into a scandalous Sin unto the dishonour of Christ and the Church giving offence unto Persons of all sorts 2. It is an ordinary Rule founded in the Light of Nature confirmed here and elsewhere by express Divine Commands that such an one be rejected from the Society and Communion of the Church until he give satisfaction by Repentance and Reformation 3. It is that without which the Church cannot be preserved in its purity nor its being be continued as both Reason and Experience do manifest 4. The judgment both of the Fact and Right was left unto the Church it self whence it was afterwards highly commended by the Apostle for the diligent discharge of its Duty herein 2 Cor. 2. In brief it is such a Divine Order that is here prescribed as without the observance whereof no Church can long subsist 5. There is no difficulty in the other part of the Objection about the Delivery unto Satan For 1. It cannot be proved that hereon the Offender was delivered so into the power of Satan to be cruciated agitated and at length killed as some imagine nor can any instance of any such thing be given in the Scripture or Antiquity though there be many of them who upon their rejection out of the Church were enraged unto an opposition against it as it was with Simon Magus Marcian and others 2. Yea it is evident that there was no such thing included in their delivery unto Satan as is pretended For the design and end of it was the Mans Humiliation Recovery and Salvation as is expresly affirmed in the Text and this effect is actually had for the Man was healed and restored Wherefore this Delivery unto Satan is an Ordinance of Christ for the exciting of Saving Grace in the Souls of Men adapted unto the case of falling by scandalous Sins peculiarly effectual above any other Gospel Ordinance Now this cannot be such a Delivery unto Satan as that pretended which can have no other end but Destruction and Death 3. This Delivery unto Satan is no more but the casting of a Man out of the visible Kingdom of Christ so giving him up as unto his outward condition into the state of Heathens and Publicans which belonged unto the Kingdom of Satan For he who by the Authority of Christ himself according unto his Law and Institution is not only debarred from a participation of all the privileges of the Gospel but also visibly and regularly devested of all present Right to them and Interest in them he belongs unto the visible Kingdom of Satan The gathering of Men by Conversion into the Church is the turning of them from the Power of Satan unto God Act. 26.18 a delivery from the Power of Darkness that is the Kingdom of Satan and a translation unto the Kingdom of Christ Col. 1.13 Wherefore after a