Selected quad for the lemma: kingdom_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
kingdom_n king_n law_n tyrant_n 1,714 5 10.0635 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A86197 A sermon preached before the Right Honourable House of Lords, in the Abbey-Church at Westminster, Wednesday the 28. of May 1645. Being the day appointed for solemne and publick humiliation. / By Alexander Henderson, minister at Edenburgh. Henderson, Alexander, 1583?-1646. 1645 (1645) Wing H1443; Thomason E286_3; ESTC R200073 26,557 39

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

King of Kings and Lord of Lords the Lord of all By these Titles is he known in the way of eminencie What is most eminent in Rulers Princes or Kings all their excellencies and flowers of perfection are most eminently and egregiously found in him in the way of negation all their errors infirmities and imperfections which are many and too many are farre from him and in the way of causation as they speak for with him is the originall and prime cause of all that is excellent in them Secondly by the many great and glorious promises and prophesies of the Kingdome of Christ which cannot be reckoned up so many are they in this shortnesse of time and are to every one that readeth the Prophesies of the old Testament so obvious Thirdly the same is manifest by the administration and execution of his office in giving lawes unto his people and executing them in giving gifts unto his servants for the good of his people in ruling his people by his Word and Spirit in defending and delivering them from their enemies and in subduing and destroying their enemies in the end Fourthly the same is evident also by the homage and honour which the whole Church militant and triumphant give unto him And I beheld and I heard the voyce of many Angels round about the Throne and the living Creatures and the Elders and the number of them was ten thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands saying with a lowd voice Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power and riches and wisdome and strength and honour and glory and blessing And every creature which is in heaven and on the earth and under the earth and such as are of the sea and all that are in them heard I saying Blessing honour glory and power be unto him that sits upon the Throne and unto the Lamb for ever and ever Rev. 5.11 12 13. It requireth an heart ready to indite and a tongue as the pen of a ready Writer to set forth the praises of this King Psal 45.1 Only three things I would say from the descriptions which we have in Scripture One is that the Kingdome of Christ was first made known to the Church when the promise was made to our first parents The seed of the woman shall bruise the head of the serpent Gen. 3.15 The second is that since that time till this day he hath been reigning in the midst of his enemies not onely after his coming in our flesh but before the times of the Patriarcks and Prophets and ever was known to the subjects of his Kingdome The third is that his Kingdome hath been sometimes more obscure and under a cloud as in the times of the old Testament howsoever even then his hand was stretched out in delivering his people out of Egypt in leading them through the wildernesse and possessing them in the land of promise And at the time of his suffering howsoever the beames of his bringhtnesse did shine through the dark cloud at other times the lustre and brightnesse thereof hath been more apparant as at the time of his exaltation Thou art my Sonne this day this day of thy glorious resurrection have I begotten thee fulfilled the decree and declared thee to be the Sonne of God A Commentary whereof we have Phil. 2.9 10 11. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a name which is above every name that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earch and things under the earth And that every tongne should confesse that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father And Ephes 4.8 When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men These were his servants who were sent forth to preach and proclaim him to be King And although men ought to be sparing in determining the manner the measure the time and indurance of a greater glory of the Kingdome of Christ on earth to come yet have we reason to hope for great things at the bringing in of the ancient people of God but ought so to hope for it that for the present we may behold Christ reigning in his spiritual Kingdome and to take heed that the expectation of that which is future be not a prejudice to that which is present and is come to passe in our dayes more then in former times Some perhaps may think that this is no great matter or deep mystery since no man can acknowledge Christ to be the eternall Sonne of God but he must also confesse that he is King and Lord and that all honour and Titles of honour are due unto him To which I answer first that there be many whatsoever for their credit they may professe to the contrary who do not in their hearts beleeve that the Lord God as a great King ruleth the world for they fight against the light of Nature and abuse their power and policie no lesse then if they could rule the world without God God is not in all their thoughts Psal 10.4 Secondly a man may know that God is King and Ruler and yet be ignorant that Christ God and Man is King Nature which teacheth that there is a Godhead leadeth also to a providence but the other is a grand mystery which cannot be conceived but supernaturally Thirdly we are to understand that Christ hath a twofold right unto his Kingdome one by nature as he is God the other by donation as he is Man To me is given all power in heaven and in earth so that the man Jesus Christ which is a great mystery and which the world beleeveth not hath prerogative and power above all creatures in earth and in heaven above all Nobles Princes and Kings and which is more above all Angels Principalities and Powers Having thus shewed that Christ hath a Kingdome which made him to say My Kingdome I would now make some use of this point but that I conceive it to be more convenient first to speak of the quality of the Kingdome of Christ and having joyned both together That he is a King and that his Kingdome is not of this world to give the uses of both at once The quality then of the Kingdome of Christ negatively is this That his Kingdome is not of this world it is not an earthly or worldly Kingdome and therefore by consequence must be a spirituall and heavenly Kingdome As it is a Kingdome it hath many things common with the Kingdomes of the world both the one and the other are of God both for God and his glory both for the good of the people This being a perpetual difference between a Tyrant a King that a Tyrant conceiveth the people to be for him and his ends but a King knoweth that he is set over the people for their good both have their Lawes and rule by them both have their enemies which oppose and disturb their peace But this is the great
difference that the Kingdom of Christ is not of this world For first Christ being called before Pilate and being demanded whether he was a King answered That his Kingdome was not of this world therefore his Kingdome is not a temporall and earthly Kingdome nor would Pilate have pronounced him innocent and guiltlesse if he had made any claime to Caesars Kingdome This is very strongly proved by the following words If my Kingdome were of this world then would my servants fight that I should not be delivered to the Jews which yet maketh nothing against the taking of Armes by such as are in authority for the defence of Religion and the just Liberty of the Professors thereof Secondly Christ refused to be a King when it was offered unto him and told his Disciples That the Kings of the Nations have dominion over them and they that are great exercise authority but that it should not be so with them but that whosoever would be great among them must bee their Minister Matth. 20.25 Thirdly he refused to be a Judge of secular quarrels or a divider of inheritances Luke 12.14 He came from heaven for things divine to work upon the consciences of men and was appointed to be Judge of quick and dead but never medled with the office of a temporall King Fourthly he acknowledged that Caesar was King saying Render to Caesar the things that are Caesars Nor did the Prophets prophesie of any earthly Kingdome of Christ For the Kingdome that they prophesied of was to bee established and confirmed by him but the Kingdome of Judea was ruined and overthrown for refusing him to be their sprituall King There shall not a stone be left upon a stone in Jerusalem the chiefe Citie of that Kingdome because thou knewest not the time of thy visitation saith Christ This yet appeareth further if we consider the qualities of these two kinds of Kingdomes more particularly The Kingdomes of the world endure but for a time and the periods and endings of them are matter not onely of discourse before they come but of tragedies after they are come but the Kingdome of Christ shall not be destroyed for ever And of his Kingdome there shall no end Dan. 2.44 After his departure out of the earth his Kingdome was in the greatest strength and in a most flourishing condition he then was gloriously manifested to be a King The Kingdomes of the world are governed by the rules and counsels of humane prudence and policie but the Kingdome of Christ by lawes of another kind by the simplicity of the Gospel which to the naturall man is foolishnesse The Kingdomes of the world are supported by taxes and tributes ceasments and subsidies but no such thing in the Kingdome of Christ The Kingdomes of the world consist in riches honour power of men externall splendor and earthly greatnesse but in the Kingdome of Christ poverty and humility triumph over the world under the Standard of the Crosse The Kingdomes of the world have carnall weapons and strength of Armes to pursue their ends but the weapons of the Kingdom of Christ are spiritual to procure spirituall obedience unto him Many such differences may be observed by which we may clearly perceive that the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world Yet one thing we must remember for preventing mistakes and which being rightly taken understood would put an end to many of the questions which are so much debated at this time about Chruch-government It is this That we are to distinguish between that which is of this world and that which is externall and visible in this world The Kingdome of Christ is not of this world yet some part of this Kingdome is externall and visible in this world for there be two parts of the spirituall administration of Christs Kingdome the one is the internall operation of the Spirit accompanying the externall means which are his Ordinances appointed by himselfe and his owne authority the other is the externall dispensation of these means and Ordinances by such officers as are called the Ministers of the Kingdome of Heaven This doth appertaine to the Kingdome of Christ and shall continue no lesse then the former till he render up the Kingdomes into God the Father 1 Cor. 15.24 This part of the administration of Christs Kingdome although it be externall yet it is not of this world but spirituall for it comes from the Spirit and is done by the gifts of the Spirit The Word and Sacraments which are the matter of it are things spirituall for the manner of doing it is by the evidence of the Spirit the spirits and souls of men are the object of it the end thereof is spirituall edification and the effect the ministery of the Spirit So that in this respect also the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world but a spirituall Kingdome in both parts of the administration theoreof The Text thus expounded is a fountaine full of springs of Doctrine As first that although Christ was a King a Governour and Commander as hath been formerly shewed and was a Prophet also and it may be now exercising that office and testifying of his own Kingdome before Pilate yet is it no warrant for Captaines or Commanders to preach the Gospel and to become Prophets because first he was a spirituall King and Commander and not a temporall and next because he had a speciall calling The Apostle Rom. 10.14 telleth us that men cannot preach unlesse they be sent And this calling the Apostle judgeth to be so necessary that the Son of God would not undertake that charge without a singular vocation Heb. 5. Although a private man who runneth unsent and an Ambassador who is authorized and sent speak the same things yet the one wants the authority which the other hath Secondly although Jesus Christ knew well that all that he could say was not able to deliver him from death or to do any good to the heart of Pilate for his conversion yet he findeth himself bound to answer calumnies and unjust accusations and to give a testimony of the truth And so must the servants of God do although their words do no more but serve to blindfold and indure blind and hard hearts yet must they speak out the truth It was the practice of the Prophets Apostles and holy Martyrs and in this as in other things Ministers and all others who have by their place any calling to give testimony to the truth must do their duty committing the event unto God Thirdly although Christ at this time was brought very low in the eyes of the world yet he spareth not to speak of his Kingdome and to call himself a King Humiliation and exinanition is in it selfe no derogation to right but the right is the same in the estate and case of humiliation and in the estate and case of exaltation the case may change and the estate be altered but the right is without change and standeth unalterable So was it with
A SERMON PREACHED BEFORE THE RIGHT HONOURABLE HOUSE OF LORDS IN THE ABBEY-CHURCH AT Westminster Wednesday the 28. of May 1645. Being the day appointed for solemne and publick humiliation BY ALEXANDER HENDERSON Minister at Edenburgh MAT. 6.10 Thy Kingdome Come LONDON Printed by F. N. for Robert Bostock dwelling in Pauls Church-yard at the signe of the Kings-head 1645. To the Christian Reader NOt any desire or confidence of mine owne but submission and obedience made me first preach and now print this Sermon Not any opinion or esteeme I have of it but example and custome have moved mee to set some words before it These have I directed generally to the Christian Reader that I may not onely include the Noble Lords of Parliament if any amongst them shall be pleased to looke this way but may also invite all other Christian Readers and such I wish all Readers to be to bestow some of their most serious thoughts upon so precious and excellent a subject as is the Kingdome of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ which is here but generally hinted and briefly touched but is represented to the life in Scripture and to the full treated and debated by Divines Jesus Christ by vertue of the three Offices of his Prophesie Priesthood and Kingdome is made unto us of God Wisdome and Righteousnes and Sanctification and Redemption His sufficiency and sutablenesse to be unto us a Saviour consisteth in the dignitie of his Person and in his willing undertaking and faithfull administration of these his Offices The Summe of the Grace given us through communion with him is comprised in these inestimable benefits Without the one he could not be a perfect Saviour without the other our salvation cannot be perfect It hath been of old and is at this day a just complaint that of the Offices of Christ his Kingdome is least considered of and most mistaken Which as it is dishonour to his Name so is it a mightie hinderance to the comfort of some to the sanctification of others and to the salvation of many and is a maine cause of the many disorders and scandals in the Church of Christ The Papists will have their Pope by reason of the Kingdome of Christ to be the head and which is the same the King of the Church and at least in ordine ad spiritualia to be the head and King of the Kings of the Earth A seect of Politicks which subject Religion to Policie and Christ to the world will have the supreame civill power at least in ordine ad temporalia to be the Head and King of the Church And both the one and the other doe turne the Kingdome of Christ into a worldly Kingdome Ignorant and carnall Professors are content to be served with Christ as a Prophet to teach them and a Priest to satisfie and make intercession for them but are not willing to serve Christ as their King that he may rule over them And many modest and peaceable Christians suffer themselves to be robbed or cousened if not of the one halfe yet of a necessary and large part of the Kingdome of Christ while they either satisfie themselves with the internall influence of Christ their Head upon their own spirits or give way to such as for their owne ends would have them beleeve that the whole administration of the Kingdome of Christ is internall not distinguishing betwixt that which is spirituall and that which is internall nor considering the externall administration of the Kingdome of Christ although it be in this world yet to be spirituall and heavenly and not of this world Judicious Martin Bucer in the beginning of the Reformation wrote to pious Prince Edward the sixt two books of Church-policie to which he prefixeth the title De Regno Christi of the Kingdome of Christ The complaints powred forth by him at that time against the wise-men of this world and the common sort of people as enemies to Christs Kingdome may be now renewed and with new aggravations so rare a thing is it in any age to finde a people disposed to receive the whole Kingdome of the Sonne of God It should not seeme strange that formerly such as desired to decline the one extreame of Prelaticall tyranny having nothing to stay them in their way nothing in the middle to rest upon and to associate themselves unto did run to the other extreame of popular Anarchy But now when from the mercy of God by advice of the Assembly and Authoritie of Parliament the case shall be changed and a remedy provided the people of God will know where to fix their judgement and choice Can any wise-man imagine that such a Chaos of Anarchy Libertinisme and popular confusion as now covereth the face of this Kingdome and wherein all errors and sects cover their Heads under the Catholick Buckler of Independency that such a Tohu Vavohu can be the face of the Kingdome of Christ or the work of the new Creation of which it may be said And God saw that it was good Can any of the godly think that the Kingdome of Christ draweth the minds of men from the humble exercise of faith to the ambition of new and vaine opinions that it transformeth Religion into fancy vertue into speculation zeale into contention truth into policy and charitie into faction Doth not the present posture of Religion and the constitution of the Church which yet is not so Independent as it is by some desired to be call as loud for a Reformation and for setling of Religion as the former did before a Reformation was begun And may wee not say that wee have spent our strength in vaine and purchased our misery at a great price if wee shall rest where wee are that is in Independency I should not exceed if I should say Were wee all agreed in all things except in the point of Independency wee would quickly run againe into divisions And that nothing in a Family in a Citie in a Kingdome in a State or in a Church hath more need of Reformation then that Independency which all men in all Societies naturally love and seek after The Government of the Church by subordination of Assemblies hath endured much opposition and many tryals and is at this day set upon at all hands yet is the Proverbiall speech of the Hebrewes verified concerning it Myrtus stans inter urticas Myrtus tamen est vocatur Myrtus The myrtle standing amongst nettles is for all that the myrtle and is so called And necessitie will drive all that love the preservation of Religion and peace of the Church unto this shelter and sanctuary at last although in faire weather some kicke against it and would not onely pull at the branches but pluck it up by the roots When after all these tempests and troubles the Kingdome of Christ is uniformly setled in the Land Christ Jesus will be seene in his beautie and strength his people will be filled with truth and peace and the
instruments of so good a work especially such as remove impediments out of the way shall against all envy and aemulation have their own testimony and honour according to the Hebrew Sentence Nisi ipse elevasset lapidem non fuisset inventa sub eo haec margarita if the stone had not been lifted the pearle had not been found under it Die Mercurii 28. Maii. 1645. IT is this day ordered by the Lords in Parliament that Mr. HENDERSON who preached this day before the LORDS in Parliament is hereby thanked for the great paines he tooke in his Sermon And is desired by their Lordships to print and publish the same which his not to be printed or reprinted by any but by Authority under his own hand Jo Browne Cler Parliament ERRATA PAge 5. line 10. read forth p. 10. l. 9. for indure r. obdure p. 22. l. 26. r. naturall l. 28. r. him p. 25. l. 11. r. clownishnes A SERMON PREACHED Before the Right Honorable House of LORDS JOHN 18. 36 Jesus answered My Kingdome is not of this world if my Kingdome were of this world then would my servants fight that I should not be delivered to the Iewes But now is my Kingdome not from hence 37 Pilate therefore said unto him Art thou a King then Iesus answered thou sayest that I am a King To this end was I borne and for this cause came I unto the world that I should beare witnesse of the truth every one that is of the truth heareth my voice IT is acknowledged and universally confessed that Justice or Righteousnesse is a noble and most excellent vertue When the di●pute was betwixt Justice and Fortitude Righteousnesse and Courage whether of the two should have the first place both of them being most noble Vertues Justice was preferred because Courage without Justice is of nouse but if all men were just there should be no need of Courage or Fortitude This Justice is a constant and perpetuall will of giving unto every one his due it rendreth to the inferiour what is due to him to the equall what he ought to have and to the superiour but most of all to God and to his Sonne Jesus Christ who are supream what belongeth to them There be in these dayes many complaints of the want of military skill and courage for the truth and cause of God but the complaint of the want of Justice is more just For if all men were just the former complaint would be silenced And there be many complaints of inferiors of equals and of superiors that they receive not that which belongeth unto them but the Sonne of God who is supream and soveraigne above all may more justly complaine that he getteth not his right which is the greatest injustice in the world and the cause of so great injustice amongst men And therefore the cause of the great wrath of God which to deprecate and to turn away we are humbled before God and doe afflict our souls this day Oh that the conclusion might be a resolution in all according to their places and callings to render unto Christ his own right This parcell of Scripture containing the answer of Jesus Christ unto Pilate before whom hee witnessed a good confession holdeth forth his right for being accused by Pilate of the highest degree of ambition sedition and rebellion and indeed of no lesse then laese-Majestie he desendeth himselfe by discovering the causes of these Tragedies and by revealing the mysteries of his Kingdome confessing that he was indeed a King but withall shewing that his Kingdome needed not to be formidable either to Pilate to his master Tiberius or to any in authority because his Kingdome was not of this world This he maketh manifest from the common condition and manner of earthly Kingdomes and Kings which have their Souldiers and Guards that fight for them and defend them from violence but he maketh not use of any this being the end of his Kingdome that the truth of the Gospel may prevail and reigne in the hearts and lives of men against the tyranny of darknesse and lies Nor should it seeme any thing strange that hee hath so many adversaries and his Kingdom findeth so great opposition in the world there being so few whether of the Church or State that submit themselves to be captived and ruled by the truth none are subjects of his Kingdome to obey his voyce but such as by regeneration are the children of the truth which is parallell to what he saith Matth. 11.19 But wisdome is justified of her children There be four principall points aimed at in the Text First the dominion and soveraignty of Christ My Kingdome Secondly the condition and quality of the Kingdome of Christ negatively expressed as best serving his present intention My Kingdome is not of this world Thirdly the end and use of his Kingdome that the truth may have place among the children of men for their salvation and eternall happinesse To this end was Iborn and for this cause came I unto the world that I should be are witnesse unto the truth Fourthly the subjects of the Kingdome of Christ such as heare the voyce of Christ and obey his will Every one that is of the truth heareth my voyce The knowledge of the first is necessary that the Son of God may have his due and we may be humbled for not rendring it unto him The knowledge of the second is necessary that Kings Princes and great ones in the world may have what is due unto them lest from their unjust suspitions and evill grounded jealousies they become enemies to the Kingdome of Christ and that they may be humbled for lodging any such thoughts or fears in their hearts The third is necessary to be knowne that we may have the benefit intended for us in the Gospel and be humbled that we have not endeavoured as we ought to find the comfort and power of the truth in our hearts and lives And the fourth is necessary that wee may henceforth shew ourselves to be the children of truth and willing subjects of the Kingdome of the Sonne of God That Jesus Christ is not onely our Prophet revealing unto us the whole will of God by the Law discovering unto us our sinne and wretchednesse and by the Gospel righteousnesse and life and our Priest by himselfe offered in a sacrifice purging us from sin and arraying us with long garments clean and white which is the righteousnesse of the Saints but that as our supream Lord and King by his mighty power and soveraignty he ruleth in us and over us conserveth and maintaineth our blessed estate thus revealed and purchased against all enemies is a truth as necessary for us to know but never enough acknowledged so very much insisted on in Scripture as may appeare First by the Titles of honour and dignity put upon him A Commander a Captain a Ruler of Governour a Prince Michael the great Prince a King the Prince of the Kings of the earth the
produced by another power whether of the body or of the soule as by the Understanding at the commandment of the Wll For the Will may command the Mind or Understanding quoad exercitium although not quoad specificationem The Magistrate hath actum elicitum as his proper operation about civill matters as his proper object but in spirituall things not so He may neither preach nor minister the Sacraments nor exercise discipline yet hath he actum imperatum he may and ought by his place to command Ministers to do all these duties And if he be negligent in this he sinneth against God Upon the other part the Minister may not judge civill or criminall causes nor performe the proper offices of the civill power yet as the Minister hath actum elicitum for performing of spirituall duties so hath he although not actum imperatum yet actum excitatum for exciting and in the name of Christ exhorting and charging the Civill Powers to the performance of their duty This generall use of Doctrine may be brought neerer home by the following use which is for reproof of two main errors which at this time make a great deal of trouble in the Christian world and which being once removed there might be greater peace and quietnesse in Churches and Common-wealths The one is of the most unjust tyrannous claim made by the Pope of temporall dominion over the whole world or at least to intermeddle with the affaires of Princes and Kingdomes in reference to the Church or as the Papists expresse themselves in ordine ad spiritualia For the Pope not contenting himselfe with the transcendency of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction over the whole Church though he hath no warrant for it in his boundlesse and endlesse ambition did climb yet higher and partly by the favour or foolishnesse rather of Christian Princes and partly by his own fraudulent and violent dealing as the son of him who hath been a murtherer a lier from the beginning hath set himselfe up first amongst and next over the greatest Princes and mightiest Emperours to dispose of their Crownes and Dignities at his pleasure which is the mark and character of him who is spoken of by the Apostle 2 Thess 2.4 Who sitteth in the Temple of God as God shewing himself that he is God and opposing and exalting himselfe above all that is called God As the Text sheweth that Christ was no earthly King that he left no Regal power to Peter and therefore the Pope can have no temporall power as the Vice-gerent of Christ so the supream power to dispose of Kingdomes and temporall things in reference to things spirituall and the lawfulnesse of civill dominion which the Pope claimeth by the donation of Princes are overturned by the grounds laid in the Text The Kingdome of Christ is not of this world About this point there be three things which may astonish our hearts and indeed are matters of admiration one is the wonderfull patience of God suffering that man of sin so long to rage and to be drunk with the blood of the Saints which should make us to say with the Spirit and Bride Come Lord Jesus come quickly the sins of that Sea are long since at the height Lord why tarriest thou Never since the beginning of the world was there such an example of divine patience Learned men have applied themselves to search into the causes of the so long continuance of the Sect of Mahomet and conceive that the detestation of Idolatry and of persecution of the Gospel are two principall causes thereof the contrary whereof is found in the Church of Rome which makes the patience of God so much the more admirable A second is that he who calleth himself the servant of servants doth make himself the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and yet the Kings and Lords of the earth do still give their strength and power unto the Beast and lie under his yoke drunk with the wine of his fornications nor will they yet awake after so full a discovery of that mystery of iniquity which is from the spirit of slumber in the justice of God possessing their spirits And the third is that such Kings and Kingdomes as are begun to hate the Whore and make her desolate and naked doe suffer themselves by whatsoever tentations or worldly respects to be divided or retarded in accomplishing the work And here we have just reason to lament that the work of God maketh so slow progresse in this Land And it may be unto us this day just cause of deep humiliation that our sins in former times and since the beginning of this work of Reformation are such as make obstruction unto it The Lord I confesse hath done much already especially in removing the Prelats and other members of that Popish Hierarchy who had transformed the Kingdome of Christ in this Island into a wordly Kingdom very conform unto the Pope the head of the Hierarchy In this England hath as great cause to rejoyce as any Nation under heaven because never any nation hath felt more of Popish and Prelaticall tyranny then England and that both of old and of late witnesse your own Histories There is also another error to be reproved which is upon the other hand and may be called a new Papacy the former error is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Court-parasites politicians and such other enemies to the Kingdome of Christ would introduce into the reformed Churches ascribing to the highest civill authority or to the supream Magistrate the same place in the reformed Church within his dominion that the Pope hath in the Roman Church and making him head of the Church by which the Pope is changed but not the Papacy the Dominator but not the Domination Nor is there any difference but 1. that this opinion maketh as many Popes as supream Magistrates which would cease if Caesars or Emperours as of old did rule the world 2. That it will be acknowledged that such civill Popes are subject to error which is no great difference for the chiefest Doctors in the Roman Church do admit that the Pope may erre and for this cause will have him subject to generall Councels For clearing of this great difficulty and that we may give to Caesar what is Caesars unto Christ and his Ministers what belongeth to them we are to observe these three distinctions 1. We are to distinguish times in the times before the Law the Civill and Ecclesiasticall power might be in one person as in Melchisedeck Job c. not so after the Law when the Republick and Church of Israel were once constitute and setled The Lord that maketh Summer to succeed after Winter the day after the night and youth after infancy would have it to be so The saying of the wise Physitian Vindiceanus quia ego non jussi belongeth to God in matters of this kind August Epist 5. 2. We are to distinguish between cases in extraordinary cases
a main difference the flock under their charge is dealt with by them not by way of command or compulsion but by moving intreating and perswading them to receive the commandements of Christ They are therefore no other then fire-brands and instruments of division that would raise jealousies of this kind betwixt these two kinds of government both which are appointed of God to serve for the good of the people of God each in its own way Whatsoever hath been or can be spoken against Church-government may as wel be spoken against the Gospel and Kingdome of Christ and the contest is not properly betwixt the Magistracy and the Ministery or betwixt Civill and Ecclesiasticall authority but betwixt the Kingdomes of this world and the Kingdome of Christ which is a great unhappinesse and the cause of a world of miseries unto the Kingdomes of this world wherein the ambition of Church-men transforming the Kingdome of Christ into an earthly Kingdome and cloathing the Church with the pomp of the world beareth a great part of the guiltinesse if both were kept within the just limits and moved within their own spheares their motions and influences might be comfortable to the souls and lives of the children of men I come now to the third use which is Correction against such as say with those Citizens Luke 19.14 We will not have this man to reigne over us There be many divers sorts of enemies in the kingdom of Christ that say so some open professed enemies such as are Pagans Jews Turks some more secret dissembled enemies who under the pretence of the doctrine of Christ oppose him and his Kingdom such as have been false Christs and are this day Antichrist with all his members and followers Hereticks Schismaticks Politicks and all worldly meer naturall men And there be many sundry causes that draw them into by-parhs and make them run into errors greater or lesser but it may be coafidently a vouched that the main cause by which Satan prevaileth upon the corrupt heart of man to make him an enemy to Christ and his Kingdome is the dislike he hath of this principle and fundamentall of Christian Religion That the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world All men naturally love the world and the things of the world which are the lusts of the flesh the lust of the eye and the pride of life and finding that the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world nor doth promise unto them the things of this world but that it is a spirituall Kingdome binding up their spirits and interdicting their hearts the love of the world it must of necessity follow unlesse the light and power of the Spirit of Christ shine in their minds and work upon their hearts that either in profession or in hear or both either more or lesse they prove enemies unto Christ especially in that which would break the bond that tieth them fast to the world If men might be pleased to examine themselves narrowly and descend into their own hearts they would find that their hearts deceive them and while they seem to others to themselves to be despisers of the world they are either by covetousnesse or vaing-lory or love of carnall liberty or some other such tie intangled and keeped fast by the world and are either directly or indirectly drawn to oppose the Kingdome of Christ He that will consider the grounds of Paganisme Judaisme and Turcisme and for what reason they doe not receive Christ when he is offered unto them shall find this to be a principall cause He that will search into the histories of particular heresies and schismes wil often meet with this and find the world in the bottome of the hearts of men I do not speak of the simple seduced people but of the wisest and learnedest of their seducers and of the great wits of the world which make the world their Idoll and bow down before it But leaving this I come to the fourth use for instruction in such duties as are required of us all at this time and after a speciall manner of those that are in high places First of all seeing the Kingdome of Christ is not of this world but is a spirituall Kingdome it is a necessary duty to study the nature and search into the mysteries and secrets of this Kingdom The kingdome of Satan and Sin have many deeps and secrets the Kingdomes of the world have their secrets of policie and government and the Kingdom of Christ hath greater secrets and more hid mysteries Great ones in the world know many things of the mystery of Iniquity and of the secrets of Kingdoms and States of the world but the truth is many of them are ignorant of the mysteries of the Kingdome of Christ The Princes of this world whether Princes for knowledge as the Philosophers were or for power and greatnes as the Nobles and great ones be do not know those mysteries for had they known them they would not have crucified the King of glory But as it is written Eye hath not seen nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man the things that God hath prepared for them that love him which the Apostle speaketh of the Kingdome of grace in this world 1 Cor. 2.8 9. Natural reason calleth for fit instruments for every work and the matter well prepared to work upon but the Apostles were neither noble nor learned but poor and simples and the world altogether indisposed to receive them being at that time as much as at any time before or since full of learning of power and of policie yet they went on subduing conquering and bringing all unto the obedience of the Gospel of Jesus Christ The laws of this kingdome were in stead of revenge Love your enemies in stead of lust Look not on a woman to lust after her in stead of covetousnesse Forsake all instead of ambition Deny your selves And yet the supernaturall lawes by the Spirit and power of the great Law-giver were setled and written in the tables of mens hearts The promises of reward were not worldly pleasures or ease but let every man take up his crosse and follow me All things in this kingdome were above the reach of naturall reason yet the spiritual man by a new faculty created of God knoweth the deep things of God and judgeth all things Some Divines have observed seven things in the passion of Christ altogether contrary to the judgement of the naurall man the greatest impotency and weaknesse in him who was omnipotent the greatest suffering in that was impassible the greatest foolishnes according to the judgement of men in the deepest wisdome greatest poverty in the God of all riches greatest shame in the greatest glory and majesty greatest dereliction and forsaking in the most perfect union and great severity of the Father against his Son in the greatest love of the Father to the Son in the very time of his suffering Many more might be
added in the administration of the Kingdome of Christ after his ascension into heaven both at the first planting of the Gospel in the primitive times and in the time of reformation of Religion in divers Kingdomes and Nations And therefore as naturall sense correcteth the errors of our imagination and maketh us see the folly of our fancies and as naturall reason correcteth the errors of our sense and maketh us judge otherwise then our sense teacheth so must the divine power and superior faculty of faith correct the errors of our naturall reason If we will acquaint our selves with the secrets of the Gospel and with the proceedings of the Kingdome of Christ we begin no sooner seriously to think upon them but we seem to our selves to be transported and carried to another world and are constrained to acknowledge and confesse to the glory of God that flesh and blood doth not reveale these things unto us The second duty required of us is this When the Lord hath opened the eyes of our understanding to behold somwhat of the secrets of this spiritual Kingdome we are to draw neere to joyn our selves unto it and become the subjects of Jesus Christ To which purpose it is necessary to expresse the matter briefly that we first know our estate by nature all of us by nature being subjects yea slaves to the Kingdome of Sin and Satan no man is excepted Kings Princes Nobles as base slaves this way as any other although walking in gold chains Next that we acknowledge Christ to be King and Lord of his people putting our confidence in him as having all sufficiencie for life liberty salvation and every good thing yea endevouring to feele the Kingdome of God within us and his Scepter set up in our souls formerly tyranized over by strange Lords And thirdly that we make a resignation of our selves in all humility and obedience to do his will for it is the quality of his subjects to be a willing people or a people of willingnesse Psal 110.3 If every one of us had many wills we ought of sacrifice them all and turn each one of them in a willingnesse to serve him According to this is it that his people are called Amminadib or my willing people Cant. 6.12 The word used to expresse willingnesse signifeth Generosity or Noblenesse opposed to Churlishnesse Isa 32.5 The vile person shall be no more called liberall nor the churlish said to be bountifull Nabal shal not be called Nadib The true subjects of Christ were they never so meanly born although like the wretched infant described Ezek. 16. yet being born again they deal nobly with him but others whatsoever be their extraction and were they never so nobly descended they deal but churlishly with Christ A noble man that giveth not himselfe willingly and cordially to the Son of God accounteth it not his chiefest honor to be a subject of his Kingdom in Scripture language is not a Nobleman but a Nabal a Churle and surely to deal churlishly with Christ who hath been so benigne and bountifull unto us and is so worthy to be served is the most base churlishnesse and the greatest churlishnesse in the world If we would consider what we are without him what we may be through him and that there is a necessity either to be the slaves of sin or to become the subjects of Christ yea either to be his free subjects or his bound-slaves and captives we would willingly offer our selves in this day of his power The third duty is when we are acquainted with the nature and secrets of the Kingdome of Christ and are now become his willing subjects then to be zealous in using all good means each one according to his place for advancing and establishing the kingdom of Christ A point very necessary to be considered because as Herod and all Jerusalem with him were troubled when they heard that the King of the Jewes was born So are great ones that are in authority and the multitude of the people much troubled when they heare of the Kingdome of Christ Kings and great ones because they conceive the advancing of Christs Kingdome to be a diminution of their greatnesse and power wherein they bewray both their ignorance and ingratitude ignorance of the nature of his kingdome which is spirituall not only in the internall but externall part of it He that would establish a spirituall Kingdom doth not take away but on the contrary doth both confirm and sanctifie the temporall Kingdome wherein it is established The Son of God never imposed such a hard condition to Kings and Nobles that were to become Christians as to forsake their crowns and dignities except in their affection and in comparison of the excellency of the Kingdome of Christ Ingratitude not only because by him Kings reigne but Jesus Christ having proclaimed a Jubilee a great liberty to Kings Kingdomes from the tyranny the servitude the usurpations and impositions of the Pope This is all the thanks that they return that they either put away the Gospel from themselves and their Kingdomes or will receive but so much of it as they think meet which is rather to reigne over Christ then that Christ by his Scepter reigne over them As for the multitude of the people they have no desire to heare of the setting up of the Kingdome of Christ because they are afraid of poverty and other such miseries as may be brought upon them by innovations measuring all by their worldly gain and ease and considering no other wayes of changes but as they import some earthy benefit to their own privat So was Jerusalem troubled when Christ was born so were the Gadarens when he came into their countrey It cannot be denied but the Lord hath done a great work in this land yet there be many of all ranks that wish it had never been begun by reason of the trouble and losses they have sustained not considering nor knowing that a little of God and of Christ and of his Spirit and of the Word and of the Ordinances is much more then the greatest things of the world and that it is better to suffer with the people of God and for God then to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season When things are equally ballanced the worst things of Christ that is his crosse and sufferings is better then the best things of the world Upon the contrary therefore I shall desire these seven things about the Kingdome of Christ and the matter of religion may be diligently taken heed unto 1. Take heed of selfe respects these are of two sorts one is privat when men look so much to themselves that they forget the publick or if they look to the publick and seem to be zealous about it it is alwayes with reflection upon their own privat were the circumference never so wide themselves are the center and all the lines of their actions have their concentration there Privat spirits are evill spirits whether they
be in Church or Parliament and I may adde that they are foolish spirits seem they never so wise for being once imbarked how shall they hope to escape if the publick shall perish Another sort of selfe respect is publick which may seem a paradox and yet is it a certain truth when men would draw all to the Parliament not only negotia Regis Regni the matters of the King and Kingdome but negotia Jehovae Ecclesiae the matters of God and the Church Many things indeed may yea must be done pro tempore and in this corrupt state of the Church but it is the worst kind of sacriledge to take the power which Christ hath given to the Church and put it in the hands of the State 2. Beware of luke-warmnesse and indifferency in matters of Religion that we be not like Gallio that cared for none of these things or like Pilate in this place who spoke so coldly of the truth What is truth He declared by his question that it was a thing he cared not for or like Saul I Sam. who when he had commanded to advise with the Oracle of God what he should do yet before he received an answer led forth the Army into battell It is a rare thing in great men to take Religion to heart and to be solicit about it There may be here a twofold indifferency one is when matters of Religion come in debate we care not what way they go nor to what side they be determined The other is that having past an Ordinance we care not what become of it whether it be put in execution or not or whether it be spoken or written against or not which is nothing else but a vilifying of the Ordinance of God and the prostituting of that authority which God hath put upon men unto contempt and reproach 3. Take heed of division the most destructive thing both to your selves and the cause that can be There be many causes of division from Satan who is a factious and schismaticall spirit from the world which delighteth to run in divers channels and from our selves every man having a seed of division in his own heart It is true that all men by nature love unity as well as being for unity preserveth but all men through the corruption of nature incline to division and destruction yet there be some spirits whose predominant it is to be hereticall schismaticall and factious and it is as naturall to such to delight in divisions as it is for others to wallow in uncleannesse or excesse If we will have the Kingdome of Christ setled these are to be noted and either avoided or kept in order otherwise there will be no end of division in the State and of schisme in the Church And take heed of division from the Kingdome of Scotland with whom ye are so neerly united both by nature and covenant were I there I would say no lesse unto them in relation to this Kingdome There be some pernitious instruments who bufie themselves in fishing of faults and use the damnable art of Tyberius he was earnest to have a Virgin strangled some mention particularly the daughter of Sejanus others as Suetonius more indefinitly speake it of Virgins but because it was not lawfull amongst the Romans to strangle a Virgin he will have them first defiled by the Executioner and thereafter strangled Immaturae puellae quia more tradito nefas esset virgines strangulari vitiatae prius a carnifice dein strangulatae I leave it to your own application It is knowne amongst the people that he that would kill his Dogge can easily find a staffe and it is not unknown to the State that they who would be rid of a good subject or servant can easily lay treason to their charge But so long as that Nation abideth constant to the cause of God and honest in their endeavours towards you ought they to be so talked of as they are by many If in saving themselves and serving you they should be disabled from saving themselves and serving you ought ye to adde affliction to the afflicted When the truth which is the daughter of time shall appeare I hope men will be ashamed of their speeches and eat up their own words and therefore I will speak no more of this sad subject 4. Beware of delayes and procrastinations in setling of Christs Kingdome The setting up of the Discipline and government of the Church had been a more easie work long ago then it is now and is more easie now then it will be afterward For the longer we go down by the river side wee will find it grow the deeper broader and parting if selfe in more divided channels Had the Discipline and Government of the Church been set up at first it would have proved very serviceable to the Parliament and saved them much labour in the doing of their work The ordinances of Christ have much power and strength in them and they are accompanied with many blessings The spirituall and secular Arm like the two Arms of the body when both are stretched out and exercised are very effectuall for the publick good 5. Beware of discouragements from the power of the world the Kingdomes of the world or any other kinds of oppositions whatsoever while ye are about the building of the House of God and establishing of the Kingdome of Jesus Christ If the enemies had been able to hinder it it had never found any setling on earth Principalities and powers in high places the Kingdomes of this world and the spirits of men have been alwayes bent against it no power no plot or policy hath been or wil be unassaied Beside many particular hinderances of the setling of Religion in particular places and Nations do but lift up your eyes and look back to the course of the world in the generall In the first Monarchy we find a fiery Furnace in the second a den of Lions in the third the madnesse and fury of Antiochus justly surnamed Epimanes which exceeded the former two and in the fourth Monarchy the ten Persecutions ten times more bloody and grievous then all that went before The Kingdoms of this world are resembled by most bloody monstrous wild beasts Dan. 7. and by mountaines that are full of wild beasts because of their craft and cruelty against the Kingdome of Christ Psalm 76.4 Cant. 4.8 But we may bee comforted by that Zach. 4.7 What art thou O great Mountain And I may adde All yee wild Beasts Be not troubled with the feares of the Kingdomes of the world in building the Kingdome of Christ For my part I think it nothing strange that the world and the God of this world stand in a continuall opposition It is a greater wonder that any especially of great Ones are found to have any courage for the Kingdome of Christ It is a miracle which we heare of Isai 11. The Wolfe shall dwell with the Lamb and the Leopard with the Kid and