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A05689 Cartain obseruations of that reuerend, religious and faithfull servant of God, and glorious martyr of Iesus Christ, Mr. Randal Bate, which were part of his daily meditations in the time of his sufferings, whilst he was prisoner in the gatehouse at Westminster Bate, Randal. 1625 (1625) STC 1580; ESTC S117192 109,500 280

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Lord to anger That you s●ould dare to send such a l●me and bl nde m●ss●nger to the Lord of Frosts and such sacr●fices withall comming from the drowned in ignorance and superst●t●on and that you should put the Lords name upon such a M●nister which is not s●●t nor allowed by him Doe you n●t depriue your selu●s of those excellent and p●ec●ous treasures in the Gospell of Christ because you want a man to preach them Ep●es 3 Doe you not hereby ●ndanger and loose your soules which liue in ignorance 2 Thess 2. Doe you know the anger of the Lord will be upon you for this Hos 6. Would you chuse for the bodies sake such a Physitian as hath no skill at all nor any good report to haue cured any under his hand Or such a Counsellour as could not advise but reade you a statute or book-case at all adventures Would you trust your sheep with an Idoll-shepheard that cannot tend them And will ye make so small account of your soules thus to passe them over O return and seek the Lord ye haue hitherto sitten in ignorance and in the shadow of death you never knew what the Gospell meant nor what a God the Lord is witnesse the base and wicked conceiving of him and carriage towards him in publique and private Wherfore let this moue you to provide you a man of understanding that may be able to f●ed you Turn you therfore from all your evill wa●es that yee may be brought to Sion the place where the Lord will be found and seen of all his people Let none be so hardy as to maintain these in their Callings SECTION XIIII THe next sort of Min●sters wherof some doubt whether they may hear them or no are such as conforme to these ceremonies now controverted Which howsoever it come in them from an utter hatred of Popish devises and an heart carefull to keep themselues unspotted of the world yet without all quest●on they erre Concerning th●s therfore that mor● clearly the truth may be boulted out we will propound some grounds to stay upon 1 The Ordinances of God remain pure and holy though men be corrupt that administer them and so are like the Lord. 2 Private men are bound to try the doctrine of M●n●sters and look to that rather then be examin●ng of their entrance into that Calling they are in this all the Scriptures run upon 3 God doth good to his Church by the gifts he hath given to wicked men for his people For they are f●om the Holy Ghost given to restore the Saints and for the work of the Ministry These things considered it may appear upon sufficient grounds that men may lawfully hear 1 Such as are conscionable in their Ministery though they erre in judgement for the Ceremonies and be ordained according to the manner of the times For first these haue the substance of a lawfull calling elect●on and approbation from the people 2 Dissention in lesser matters hath never hindred either Communion nor est●em●ng one of another twixt the servants of God Phil. 3. 3 These are sent of God though not by this way they are not unlike to Iacob whose the blessing was though he should not haue sought ●t by lying 4 Their sin in admission is their own personall sin and cannot hurt others not partaking with it 5 Men may and ought to receiue their send●ng not from men but from the Lord of the Harv●st Object It seemes to approue thei● sinne since men pertake with them in their Ministery which they haue gotten unlawfully Is it not to communicate in stollen goods Answ No for they ought to be admitted and the Ministery is the●rs and the Congregations choosing them onely it is their errour to come in by a wrong way Now to st●al is to take from men that which doth not belong unto them which cannot be applyed to them A second sort of Ministers are bad and corrupt in doctrine and manners these preaching many truths from God may be heard For 1 They sit in Moses chair Matth. 23.2 Moses chair is the doctrine of Moses otherwis● they should haue sit in Aarons chair if he had spoken of the Calling 2 Otherwise we should not yeeld absolute obedience to the doctrine taught except it were Moses doctrine 3 The main cause why the people should hear these is manif●sted by our Saviour but this is not so much succession in Calling as succession in Doctrine 1 These Pharisies had corrupted their Call●ng 2 They perverted the Law with their Glosses 3 Were ignorant of the righteousnesse of faith 4 Hipocrites in life and bitter enemies to the Kingdom of Christ 5 They preached the Word without authority coldly as did not stir affections 2 Argu● Doctrine and gifts are the Churches who may take their own from a very theife Yet these Cautions must be observed 1 That we be able in some measure to discern and try the spirits 2 That w● be compelled by necessity 3 That we b● careful to get what p●ivate and pub●●que help possibly we can 4 That we hunger after other powerfull meanes and as soon as the Lord offers any we remoue and follow the light 5 Refuse private conversing with them 6 Contend for the truth in any pa●t oppu●ned by them Object May not Popish Iesuits or the like then be heard Answ Th●se are the professed servants of the beast not of Ch●●st for they haue quite changed the Ministery into a Pri●s●hood 2 We are quite separated from this false Church by the commandement of the Lord and the Magist●ate and all Chu●ches assenting to the same 3 Th●se doe plainly seek to seduce us and withd●aw us from the wor●h●p of the true God all which cannot be found ●n these of our own Church from which wee haue ●o such warrant to seperate nor doe seeke to draw us qu●te from Christ in fa th Yet thus far let me speak to you of the Ministry thus corrupted that are negligent and doe not sorwa●n the peop●e of God of danger You that look to your own wayes and make your belly your God You that preach as they Ier. 5 that other Lords may ●ule over the flock of Chr st Consid●r what you are Are you not men of God Should not you be holy that draw neer to the Lord Should you trouble the waters with your T●aditions that none can drink almost w th a good consc●ence Should you make the sacrifices of God abhorred by your d●ssol●tenesse Should you smite with your tongues your fellow s●rvants whose Min●stery and conversation you know is better then your own Should you use the flock of Chr●st as you doe never visiting of them many of you If woe be to them that joyn house to house what shall become of you that joyn Congregation to Congregation and to these prebenships D●anries c. Should you be terrible to the humbled and afflicted soules Surely the Lord will judge for his people Hear you that force men to things against their
2 Resolu that if you doe forsake all for Christ to giue his Gospell passage you shall haue all and more then you haue 3 God will finde out all the shifts and fair pretences wherby wrong to the brethren is done Our Ceremonies are farre worse now then they were at the first For 1 Because the danger was not then so discerned 2 Question was not made of them nor did the light then appear in these things 3 They had not been so abused a man though he like a stranger and could be content to marry her a virgin yet having plaid the whore openly who of any honest disposition would take her to wife 4 Now it is more scandalous to Papists 5 Then it brought no such losse of Ministers to the Church as now it doth Further it will not be amisse to explicate such grounds as those holy men haue brought to light in this matter especially since my chiefest indevour in this whole Treatise and aim is to inform the weake and ignorant Numb 15.37 to the end Where the Lord having taught the people his whole will before now addes some helps wherby they may keep in remembrance the things delivered whence we may note 1 The property of those times was to be taught by Ceremonies and shadows they being then children 2 The priviledg and care of the Lord that when his people are to bee taught by Ceremonies hee appoints and institutes them 3 The Lord institutes such Ceremonies as are in civill use to put his children in remembrance of good duties 4 The Lord appoints in Ceremonies the matter and manner both leaving nothing to man 5 Man may not appoint what helps hee will but must stick to the helps ordained by God which are sufficient 6 The Lord when he appoints Ceremonies of remembrance institutes such as are continually before us in sight or hearing 7 The Lord teacheth the signification and use of his Ceremonies so as hee appoints no Ceremony but for some speciall good unto man 8 Men in religion must not follow their affection to frame such a form of Religion as pleaseth nature 9 Men are directly forbidden to make their own wisedom any guide and leader in the things of God 10 It is spirituall whoring in the service of God to doe any thing by changing adding or detracting for to please our selues or by our own understanding 11 Men are exceeding prone both to invent and follow others inventions in the service of God wherby their hearts are turned from God It is a most dangerous practice and can never be justified to bring human ceremonies into the service of the Lord speaking against them will not prevail nor suffice to keep men from abusing them 1 While men teach the use of these their own inventions they leau untaught the doctrine of God 2 The most teach very seldom wheras these Ceremonies are used continually 3 Teaching and avoiding occasions of sin must goe together 4 Men are set on fire with lust after these before doctrine come and the heart being fixed upon them will not hear 5 Though teaching might prevail with those of understanding conscience and sound heart yet in every Congregation there are many ignorant and carnall both yong and old Who would say that it were wisedom charity or conscience to bring a whoremonger an harlot into the room with him and such a harlot as he delighted in onely bidding him not abuse her what though hee should not commit the fact which were strange there being great lust in one and no resistance in the other For human Ceremonies haue no divine power in them to hinder spirituall fornication but rather power to draw men on to commit this sin Yet would not the heart be stirred up For is it not the nature of the objects to stir up the faculties and bring to act what else should ly dead Wherfore without question this is a tempting of God when there is no necessity of these things that are so dangerous that they should be used and imposed with such necessity Further men so extoll them for the most part that with their praysing of them the simple are bewitched and their corrupt nature which should be mort fied is the more increased Plain experience witnesseth that this is not able to ●oot out that religious respect and kinde of holines men put in these Ceremonies Obje● If men affirm these and the like places are not to us but to the Israelits I Answer they are for us Rom. 15. 2 We haue the same corrupt nature and disposition 3 The Lord is as strict for himselfe as careful to prevent sin in us as in the Israelits 4 These are morall and therfore common to all 5 We haue the sins of these set down expresly in the new Testament which are equivalent to them 2 Cor. 6. 6 These are expositions of the second commandement therfore appertain to us Ezech. 43.7.8 The Holy Ghost brings in and describes the practise of men truely repenting and turning unto God 1 Shewing that their former evil courses begin to be utterly loathed especially corruption in Gods worship which is his Name Hence obseru that the Lord accounts nothing his but what he himselfe institutes 2 That mans institutions though intended to Gods honour defiles his name 3 Men truely turning from Popery should not nor wil not defile Gods worship with their devises 4 All human devises joyned to the word worship of God are abominable in his sight 5 Conjoyning of mens devised Ceremonies to the Lord though men retain the worship of God and his institutions defiles the name of Gods holinesse 6 Adjoyning of mens devises makes a separation twixt the Lord and his people 1 It remoues Ministers 2 It lessens Gods gifts in many 3 It withdraws the peoples hearts from the pure worship of God 4 It grieues the spirit of the Lord in his children 7 Mens joyning of inventions brings down the wrath of the Lord upon a people 8 The full removing of mens corrupt inventions brings the Lords continuall presence 9 When men are ashamed of their own devises then the Lord will shew them how he will be worshipped All which are strong Arguments to an heart tendring the good of his own and others soules to root out and cast far away all these devised Ceremonies of man therfore as Eliah said to Ahab It is not I that trouble Israel but thou and thy fathers house that forsake the commandement of the Lord. So I say from God that it is not we that trouble the land but it is these men that will haue on foot their own devises as though the Lord should haue no lights in his Sanctuary It is they that bring in Popery they that provoke the Lords anger it is they that fight and speak against heaven they hinder a learned and able Ministery they rent in sunder Pastour and people they make the Altar of the Lord and his worship either to be despised or to be covered
seats of more ambitious spirits though inferiour in gifts did challenge superior●ty by a kinde of succession 5 The dignity of the Cities and liberallity of the first Emperours did much help forward this businesse not intending any hurt For the mystery of iniquity did worke cunningly and invisibly Having removed out of thy minde what blinds many an eie now a little consider what grounds the Scripture affoords against this form of government And first that Luk. 22.24.25.26 wh●re the Disciples contending who should be greatest our Saviour remoues this conce●t by shewing them plainly they stroue for that their condition was not capable of For the k●ngs of the Gentiles and their officers haue both t●mporall authority and great Titles fitting their estate But you shall haue neither such authority one over another nor such titles but he that is greatest in gifts and respect let him arrogate no more over his brethren then if he were the least This place is plain not onely against ambition but superiority in degrees authority and titles 1 Because it is made a property incommunicable of Princes and Civill Magistrates to haue such authority 2 Because Christs Kingdom must not be like the kingdoms of earthly Princes but like Christ conversing amongst his schollers In the 27 vers hee shewes directly though we were masters yet we should be amongst them that are under us as if we were servants The first part therefore shewes their foolishnesse in desiring that which could not be given them which was indeed ambition The other reproues their desire of commanding and Lording over their fellows 2 The second Argument against Lord ruling Diocesan Bishops is from Acts 20.28 where the Apostle shewes the office and nature of an Apostolicall Bishop which is a person set over a flock by the Holy Ghost to feed that Congregation of Christ with others Heere by feeding according to the usuall manner of Scripture Discipline is meant too as may be gathered from Ezech. 34 and Ioh. 20. In which places feeding extends to all Ministeriall duties whereby the good and salvat on of the flock may be procured This place proues 1 that there should not be one alone but many which haue the care of the same flock 2 That they are all bound to tend the flock exercising discipline to the same for the Apostle speaks to all 3 Though there be difference in respect of the dispensation of their Ministery yet they are alike in respect of the generallity and extent of their charge secondly in that all are to concurre and haue their severall gifts and diligence imployed both in doctrine and discipline 1 This place upon this ground quite overthrows Diocesan ruling Bishops because they are alone 2 They haue no pa t cular flock and so by consequence are no Ministers 3 They challenge sole jurisdiction to themselues and their officers debarring all others from medling 3 A third place of Scripture 1 Pet. 5.1.2.3 Elders are to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 overseeing the state of the flock over which they are If therefore the Elder and Bishop bee all one and that the Lord hath put no d●fference b●twixt them then there ought not to be one alone which either is to arrogate the name or nature of Bishop This place is strengthened from the place fore-alledged Act. 20 where the Elders are first called Presbyteri afterwards Episcopi This is plain in Tit. 1.5 compared with the 7 vers where Elder and B●s●op are all one Where God hath appointed many to one common businesse man may not restrain it to one This is to adde to one and dimin●●h from others both which bring c●●ses upon the doers 4 Phillip 1 There were divers Bishops in one Cit●e therefore in those times one alone had not any such Diocesan Bishoprick as ours claym All that were exercised in any Ministeriall function or imployed for government are saluted by the name of Bishops Therefore it is plain one alone was not Bishop nor one more then another By which may bee shewed plainly that the Angell Revel 2 signifies the whole body of the Ministery For Metaphoricall places must be expounded by plaine places So Psal 34.8 79.2 and in many other places 5 Ephes 4.11 1 Tim. 3.1 where the Apostie describes the Ministers and Officers of Christ he hath not mentioned any such one which should haue the superiority and jurisdiction which proues firmly there ought to bee none such for no work no office Now the holy Ghost hath not assigned any such work to any 2 The Holy Ghost describeth most exactly the office of the high Priest and his garments apart from the ordinary Priests So hee would now if there had been any such order in them 3 1 Tim. 3 H●e describes the o●lice of Deacons and Widdows and would hee not these 4 The Apostle salutes in his Epistles all Orders Phil. 1.1 and there is no mention of a Diocesan Bishop 6 Argum. Discipline is in the hands of the Ministers and Elders whole Church Math. 18. Therfore not in one mans hands This place is firme for the Church is made the highest to which the last appeale is and that which rents and severs corrupt members from the body This therfore cannot be one man For Ecclesia ever signifies a company and number comming together All these places are firm and mainf●●● plainly the unlawfulnesse of any Diocesan Bishop Now follow some reasons proving the same truth that there ought not to be Diocesan Bishops Reas 1. Christ measureth out gifts to all according to the place and office they sustaine and are to discharge But no man hath gifts sufficient now to dischage this great and weighty calling to execute discipline over a whole Province That this is plain appears in that the Apostles themselues appointed in every Congregation Discipline to be executed and did not arrogate authority over the Churches but gaue charge that each Congregation should execute discipline it selfe 2 It as hard if not more difficult to execute discipline as to feed all a Diocesse or Province by teaching But who dare arrogate so much to himselfe 3 Who is there now a daies that hath an hundred times more sufficiency then an able Minister which hee must haue by proportion having so many charges under 2 It is not lawfull for man to devise a calling and office which excludes any Ordinance and Calling appointed by the Lord for that never comes from heaven But Diocesan Bishops exclude Elders that are appointed by the Lord as may appear 1 Tim. 5.17 and ●ha● more fully hereafter God willing be shewed 3 If Diocesan Bishops were from God they should haue place in the Church according to the quality of the work wherin they are exerc sed and for which they are cheifly instituted But they haue no place according to the work of Discipline vvhich is infe●●our to the M●nistery of the word as serving onely to make it effectuall whereas they hold a place aboue the most painfull Ministers of
greater care must be had of all that we doe not suffer his policies to prevail 3. Men should not speak with strange tongues in publick without interpretation 4 No publique duty is to be performed which doth not edifie 5 Prayer and thanks-giving are to be conceived by one alone 6 Private persons are to giue assent and testifie the same by voice in the end by this word Amen every one in his own person not one called Clark for others 7 Good things not done in a good manner cease to be good 8 The whole Church ought to meet together to perform publique worship 9 Vnbeleevers may be suffred and admitted to hear 10 Such things as may discredit Gods Ordinances and worship to simple persons and men of different religion being not commanded by the Lord ought to bee avoyded as kneeling in the Sacrament c. 11 True preaching must be such as makes ignorant and wicked men acknowledge Gods presence with his Ordinances 2 Such as layes open the very secrets of mens hearts 12 They whom the word soundly works on will worship God reverence his Ministers It is not ceremonies that maks Ministers known but the Word preached soundly 13 Every man ought so to imploy his gifts as the church may haue most benefit by him 14 Two or three Prophets at the most are to speak at one publique ordinary meeting 15 Prophets must discern for the people that no false doctrine be broached by any 16 Prophets ought to speake one by one 17 The church hath need of all mens gifts 18 Since the end of the Ministery is to gaine knowledge and comfort to all men all must labour in the word for these ends 19 Men must so order things as all may exercise their gifts for the publique good 20 Every mans doctrine and preaching may and should be tryed and discerned by the Prophets 21 The disorder and dissension which is in the church springs not from the Lord. 22 The order appointed by the Lord keeps peace 23 No woman ought to speak in the publique congregation 24 All holy actions must be done with a seemly decency which is in fitting and reverent manner sutable to the action we goe about So as the benefit of the exercise may redound to others 24 All holy things must be done in order so as one holy action be not confounded and drowned by another but each part of divine worship and every person is to haue his proper place Meanes for Decency and Order 1 The nature and use of each gift and duty must be known 2 Men must carry themselues not so as they please themselues and win credit but as they may profit best the church and keep peace with others 3 Obserue in the like case what Gods servants haue done afore that are mentioned in Scriptures This place binds because it is the commandement of the Lord. 2 All the reasons are generall Tit. 1.5 Titus must doe all things in Crete according as Paul had commanded him nothing was left to his own a bitrament now Titus was an Evangelist and had greater power and authority then any ordinary Pastor therfore the church may not a●ter the government left by the Apostles For out of these words these positions arise naturally 1 That Paul taught a form and manner of ordering churches 2 Titus was bound to this and to none other 3 Deacons and Elders and the least things are described by the Apostles and left us in their writings as afterwards shall appear God willing These things binde us as Moses writings bound the people of the Iewes for they were sent to us to make us Christs disciples and plant churches therfore discipline is no wayes arbitrary 4 The Apostles are injoyned to teach the churches to obserue all things which Christ had commanded Whence it is plain that men must be taught the will of God for the way and meanes of salvation 2 they must be dedicated to the Lord by Baptism 3 they must be taught to keep all things besides which Christ hath commanded Sacrament of the Lords Supper c. and Discipline 4 Christ is present where these things are to blesse them to the churches good 5 they ought to continue to the end of the world 6 the church ought not to be burthened with things not commanded by Christ This place bindes firmly 1 because Christ Mat. 18 gaue such commandement 2 the Apostles taught these things to the churches therfore they were commanded by Christ before Ephes 4 Christ hath given gifts unto men both callings and abilities which are sufficient onely profitable to his church These gifts are for restoring of the Saints and work of the Ministery therfore contain discipline under them which both restoreth the Saints and is a work of the Ministry therfore the churches government is not arbitrary From hence note 1 It is Christs priviledg to appoint Ministers and the degrees therof 2 That he appoints both extraordinary and ordinary 3 Hee appoints sufficient for his church 4 The same that teach men by the Word are to execute discipline over them Hitherto by the Scriptures hath this truth been proved Now evident reason grounded on holy Scripture proues the same Reas 1 Christ by Moses taught how the church should be governed in the time of the old Testament both for the officers Priests high Priests and Levits therfore it cannot be but that he comming in his own person that was the Day-star Sun of righteousnesse from whence all the other borrowed their light must needs teach his church how it should be ordered and governed for the light foretold extended to all things concerning the churches good 2 The Church is the house of God and therfore to be governed according to his own will which he hath manifested for that end and it is not to be supposed since the Lord requires us to set our houses in order he amongst men is counted a carelesse unthrift that leaus his servants to doe what they l●st that he will himself neglect to giue order how both steward and children and servants should be dealt withall And if it be presumption for meaner persons to dare to intrude and govern noble mens houses according to their own will what is this to rush into the house of God and sway all all things there by affection or carnall reason without direction from God 3 No human wisedom is sufficient or able to govern the church of Christ wherin so many diseases are to bee healed and businesses to be dispatched for the good of men soules and preserving the people of God and upholding the Kingdom of Christ Who is sufficient when hee hath all things to his hand for doctrine both matter and manner Then much lesse is he able to govern when ne●ther the pe●sons nor manner is expressed And if the worth est servants of God were not able not durst order any thing but what they learned from the Lord who are they that conce●t their own w●sedom
as though they were able to bear this burden and undergoe this task not being extraordinarily qua●●●ed by the Lord For all the instruments of the materiall Tabernacle Temple or Church in the new Testament had both extraordinary direction from the Lord and extraordinary gifts for that they should doe 4 No man can shew any licence or patten● from God wherein he is warranted to govern the church according to his own will but rather contrary not to adde or diminish from that which is written in the book of God 5 The Scripture is perfect making the man of God perfect and absolute to every good work therfore how to govern the church is taught in the Scriptures which are the will of God 6 Christ left not his church without government and a speciall form of discipline for that were confusion that would lay open the church to all dangers and no Polity or Soc●ety can long continue wherin Order and Discipline is not observed therfore it cannot possibly stand with Chr sts care and wisedom that Discipline should be neglected 7 Arbitrary forms of government overthrew the face of the church and brought in the Popes Supremacy which is an argument it is not from God who vaunts himselfe as God appointing what lawes he will and decrees to hold men in awe and subjection to himselfe that he might Lord it over Kings and Princes nor is it to be supposed but that which is arbitrary will ever be corrupted for mans will and minde being naturally so vain and wicked wanting a law to direct and contain it in obedience of it selfe grows corrupt and abuseth the power which is given to it Here two Questions are to be answered 1 Whether this form of discipline instituted by Christ may be altered The Answer s it may not by any whosoever The grounds of it are these following 1 It is a speciall priviledge of Christs Kingly Office to govern his Church outwardly by discipline as well as by the Word Chr st hath this Scepter and Rod and none ●●e for the soules of men he hath the Key of David he that is Prince over the Kings of the earth wherfore no man hath power to alter this for that were to advance man aboue Christ 2 The Lord useth to for●shew his people what should be altered before it come to passe that changes disturbe not their minds This is plain for thus be did before hee placed his name in Ierusalem before Christ came before the Gentiles were to be called Wherfore if the Lord would haue altered this he would haue told it his Disciples else Christ should not be so faithfull a Prophet as Moses who shewed that covenant was to endure till Christ should come else Christ should not shew all things needfull to his Church 3 The Lord shakes the heaven and the earth but once after Moses the Prophets Hag. 2 Heb. 12 therfore there is no alteration afterwards of any thing touching the worship of God The Lord joyneth a renewing of his covenant with the institution of all things any way needfull for his Church 4 To desire a new form of government is to cast off the Lord from raigning over us 1 Sam. 8.7 which place binds in Ecclesiasticall as firmly as in Civill 1 Because the Lord instituted this as well as that 2 there was no expresse commandement that the people should ever be tyed to this form of government but that it was rather appointed that they should haue a King his duty described 3 the people desired it because they would be like the world in state and pomp 4 they did not first know the Lords pleasure but headily followed their affections This place shews that men who alter the government appointed by the Lord though it should be into another form lawfull in it selfe despise the Lord 2 that such exclude the Lord from raigning over them Like to this is that Iudg. 8.22 where Gideon being offered the Kingdom refused it for this cause that the Lord might raign over them which plainly shews what wrong they doe to the Lord his people which bring in another government then the Lords For the Lord else would raign defending his people from all spirituall enemies gently carrying his lambs upon his shoulders and leading them that are great with yong Esay 40.11 whereas now Satan is every where let in by seducers and idle shepheards the Lords name is not known his goodnes mercy obscured and hid men are tossed up and down hindred in their callings loosing their money and maintaining unprofitable d●oans A second quest●on how may the discipline of Chr st be known Answ by the●e notes 1 For the persons Christ precisely forbids any one man to exercise Lordship and A●thority over his people Luk. 22. This w●ll bee more apparant hereafter therfore the government wherin any one Lo●ds ●t over the rest is not Christs but where there is equality for jurisd●ction 2 That which is most ancient neerest or rather one with the form followed by the Apostles undoubtedly is Chr●sts Now such is not primacy of one over an other 3 That in the which men proceed in th●ir censures by the rules of the Word which teacheth who ought to be bound and who ●oosed But so doe not they which govern by Popish canons by forced oathes but such as proceed by admonitions rep●oofs c. according to Mat. 18. 4 That which best provides for the safety of mens soules and most furthers every man in the di●charge of his duty that is from Chr●st for he onely so governes none else having such w●sedom or will Such is not the government by some one person over many congregations which hee is not able possibly to oversee but the contrary 5 Which proceeds not after the manner of a worldly government fearing men with outward to●ments fines imprisonment and the like but in the power of the spirit and giv ng men over to Sathan Christ maintaineth his government by no such forcible meanes 6 That which is contrary or much opposite to the gove●nment of Rome for Antichrist corrupted 〈◊〉 Sacraments and all and ●t were worder ●f this should not be corrupted by wh ch hee raignes most and most effectually e●●ablisheth his kingdom amongst men By all which men not prejud●cate and desirous to learn and practise the truth may understand what that is so much urged and pressed rather by force of armes then evident ground of Scr ptures SECTION XII SAtan hath many devises to bring in errours amongst men to be entertained he changeth himselfe into an Angell of light comes in the name of Christ Mat. 24 in the name of his best servants 2 Thess 2 and of the Church he comes under pretence of glorious ends to bring in devises of men Wherfore that we be not deceived by him it shall not be amisse to speak something of the Churches authority and what power it hath Herein I propound some grounds 1 That all the authority of the Church
Testament wherin there is more abundance of spirit promised and more plentifull declation of Gods will the Ministers ought to be able to teach Gods people twixt good and evill This argument holds firm since the Lord hath as great care of his Church now as then and is as carefull to haue them avoide sin 2 Where vision faileth the people perish Prov. 29.18 these men are no Seers nor haue any vision but darknesse and night 3 They are dumb doggs Isa 56 that cannot barke blinde watchmen shepheards that cannot understand What a liuely description of a reading Minister here is He cannot understand what pasture is good or fitting for the people he is a blind Watchman that can foresee no danger nor plague comming when they doe hear Wolues are towards and amidst the flock yet they haue no mouthes to bark and fright them away Let no man be so bold as to cavill at the Scriptures which are so plain that he which runnes may reade them 4 They cannot divide the Word rightly which is the chiefe work of the Minister of the Word 2 Tim. 2.15 which who so cannot doe at all is none of Gods workmen they who cannot nor will study to doe well and righteously are none of the Lords servants 5 They cannot defend the truth nor stop the mouths of gain-sayers which every Minister ought to doe Tit. 1. Else how shall errours and heresies be prevented and to runne to others in this case will yeeld small releefe considering the unwillingnesse of the most to be taught or take any paines at least to seek instruction 6 The Lord thrusts out Labourers not Loyterers into the Harvest such men as doe some execellent work for the good of his Church Math. 9 Eph. 4 1 Tim. 3.1 These men are idle their work is not so excellent nor is it speciall and proper 7 The Shepheard that hath nothing more then the Sheep haue cannot possibly keep the sheep well for then sheep might keep themselues and the calling of God is unprofitable These haue not so much as many sheep 8 They are not fit to meddle with the soule to seek it in time being distempred they cannot shew man Gods righteousnesse neither pray for him they cannot seek that which is lost nor bring back that which is driven away nor heale the sick Now Ministers are chiefly sent thus to benefit the soule And if they cannot help in time of distresse they are miserable comforters like Iobs friends 9 A Min●ster must preach and be instant in season and out of season 2 Tim. 4.2 Hence it is plain what preaching is namely an expounding and applying of the word of God to build up the people of God improving errour rebuking sin and exhorting upon sound doctrine Are men so blind that they cannot see the truth in this but would make reading preaching 10 2 Tim. 2.25.26 Ministers must instruct with meeknesse such as are contrary minded proving c. It is plain hence the Minister must be able to instruct all that are misled through errour and instruct them in the right way 2 That mens salvat●on depends upon the right applying of the Word 11 The word thus barely read hath not the power and majesty that is mentioned in Scripture neither that efficacy and power in converting soules which argues it is not the arm of God 12 Ministers are the Lords Embassadours and Stewards these men cannot speak nor sue to the soules for Christ to beseech men to receiu him neither can they be faithfull unto their Lord. They are the shame and dishonour of Christian Churches as though the Spirit of God were not purchased by Christ for the furnishing of men for his Church It is in effect to deny Christs victory over the enemy of our salvation 1 Pet. 5.1.2.3 13 He that winneth soules is wise these are not wise I suppose none will vouchsafe to Reply for these that haue any spark of piety to God or pitty towards his people Onely some Non-residents that keep poore underlings or greedy Patrones or Popish Atheists that would haue the light of the Gospell die or poore ignorant people that never knew what the Gospell meant or men that would liue at their own wils in all licentiousnesse these happily would undertake the plea against Christ But it were better their tongue should cleau to the roof of their mouth then they should once dare goe about the overthrow of Christs Ministry Heare therfore and consider that it may goe well with you Having shewed the insufficiency now follows the nullity of these men which the rather I insist upon because many would be content if they were insufficient being Ministers carnall men never so much regarding how the Lord is served But being no Ministers in Gods acceptance I hope it will work upon them 1 Therfore Hos 4.6 God pronounceth them none to him that is in his acceptance they are none whom God pronounceth to be none reading M●nisters are pronounced none in the sense mentioned by the Lords own mouth wh●ch cannot lie Who are you therfore oh ye Prelats that ye dare admit of such Or who are you ô yee people that ye are contented with such as cannot come to the Lord for you whose prayers are not accepted by the Lord for you This Argument is firm and cannot be gainsaid For if the authority of man be enough to displace whom God hath sent shall not the Lords authority much more displace whom man onely hath sent 2 He which wants either the nature or essentiall property of a Minister is not a true Minister for the nature and property of things cannot be severed from the things themselues But reading Ministers want either the nature or at least the essentiall property of a Minister This appears because the Minister is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts Mal. 2.7 and his lipps should preserue knowledge To teach the people is an essentiall property and difference twixt the Minister and people Whence it also appears that there is no difference amongst Gods Ministers for the substance of their Calling For each one is the Messenger of the Lord of Hosts 2 He which is not a Messenger is no Minister for that is common to all 3 He whose lippes doe not preseru knowledge is no Messenger Who sees not that the Reading Minister differs in the substance of his Calling 2 That he hath no Message 3 That his lippes doe not preseru knowledg but loose it rather How dare yee counterfeit therfore the Lords place any of you whom the Lord hath not sent 3 Christ hath not gifted nor appointed for the good of his Church Reading Ministers therfore they are none of his For he is the King of his Church and men can no more bring in Readers then Friers amongst the people of God 2 Ministers run because they are sent by him 3 Christ will blesse none but such as he sends That reading Ministers are not gifted nor appointed it is plain from Eph. 4 where all
proved in thus using them 1 Many dissemble and professe they dare not otherwise doe then use these and so deny that liberty Christ bath purchased 2 Many a weak brother is exceed●ngly grieved hereby 3 Many are drawn to doe that which they are not perswaded of 1 Som● to their dashing so as they turn from Christ to the world again and prone bitter enemies to Christ 2 Some fall fearfully 3 All are h●ndred and made lesse zealous and carefull in the work of the Ministery and lesse resolute against Popery Fiftly here is a great shew of evill and conformity with Antichrist wherby the ministry of men is made lesse glorious amongst others So that from hence we see we haue ground sufficient not to conform to these ceremonies Wherfore doe yee judge oh ye censorious and ridged brethren such who you know of conscience abstayn from doing these things The command of a dread Soveraign we acknowledg and one whose good and safety we every way desire SECTION XIX THough it may seem lost labour to goe over this subject which is so largely and learnedly handled by men of excellent gifts yet since the ceremonies remain and are more straitly urged then before Therfore it is fitting we should never rest till these bleyns of our Church be removed we must contend for the faith and leaue many testimonies to posterity of the dislike of these human inventions First therfore to propound some generall grounds touching the nature and use of these things 1 It must be remembred that the Communion book contains in the judgment of our adversaries a briefe and summe of Gods outward worship This is plain since themselues call it divine Service 2 They require more reverence to this then to the Ordinances of God 3 They command this chiefly and punish men most for absence from this 4 They giue charge none of this should bee omitted for preaching 5 They appoint such Ministers as can doe nothing else but read this 6 They binde men to this though they haue no preaching in the Congregation 2 These now controverted Ceremonies are imposed to stir up the dull mind of man to the remembrance of his duty in their Preface to the Ceremonies 3 They are so imposed as men must be in bondage to them and use them without respect of any mans weaknesse whatsoever 4 Men deem them fitting not onely for these times and this present Church but fitting every place for they desire and labour to bring all strangers to the same Ceremonies 5 In experience these Ceremonies are utterly unprofitable and doe not further the Gospell of Christ 6 These ceremonies haue been too long in the Church 7 They were brought in in times of darknesse when many corruptions had gotten in The Surplus and Kneeling can not bee proved to haue been before the height of Popery 8 These Ceremonies haue been all grosly abused to Idolatry and will-worship by the Papists from whose hands we receiu them 9 There is no damage nor hurt at all to any Ordinance of God or Calling he hath set in his Church by the removall of them 10 They are chiefly held and maintained now as it seemeth by the Prelates words to uphold their Lordship For no Ceremony no Bishop If they haue not these Ceremonies wherewith shall they smite their fellow-servants whose abode in the Ministery by the light of the Gospell would cause such light to shine that all would easily discern the unlawfulnesse of thes● Callings 11 They are burdens and matters of griefe to all or the most conscionable Ministers in the land 12 They so count of these that they had rather loose 300 godly able Preachers then not haue these Ceremonies used every where The first argument against Ceremonies is out of Ex. 20.24.25 where note these two Conclusions 1 That the Lord loues not outward pompe nor mans inventions in his service for the Lord will haue the altar of earth or if it be of stone it must not be of hewen stone 2 That mans pollishing and adorning any thing without speciall warrant defiles the same These arguments are firm against our Cemonies 1 Because they are but outward pompe and mans inventions as themselues grant 2 Outward adorning of the Minister with this surplus-garment pollutes him since they haue no warrant for the same Argum. 2. Lev. 18.3 After the doings of the land of Aegipt and after the doings of the land of Canaan shall yee not doe neither walk in their Ordinances This place proues that men must not doe as idolatrous heathens doe Whence obseru 1 That which is an ordinance of the heathens ought to be abhorred being not grounded on the Word or light of nature To worship God outwardly after their own manner with any thing whatsoever men devise is the manner of heathen and idolaters This place and the like made the Cemonies unlawfull at the very first bringing in of them 2 That we must not walk in their Ordinances but to use the Crosse and Surplus are the ordinances of the Papists now they straightly injoyn them they can and doe lay best claim unto them other Reformed Churches haue rejected them If any man say this place is meant of their abomination in uncleannesse defiling themselues after their manner The Answer is plain the place is generall including all their manners and customes as may be gathered out of the text Ordinances signifie for the most part if not ever the Ceremonies 2 Because the Lord binds them onely to his Statuts and Ordinances v. 4. 3 The Lord abhorrs as much or more the inventions of men and the manner of the heathens in his service as outward uncleannes Therfore argumentum à pari necessario concludit Arg. 3. The Lord will haue his children unlike Idolaters outwardly and especially the Ministers of his Word This proposition is grounded on Lev. 19.27.28 compared with Lev. 21.5 Whence it is plain that to injoyn ministers conformity with idolaters is unlawfull for him that commands and him that obeys For the Lord forbids it by this reason which none can satisfie for he offereth the bread of the Lord. Whence learn that he that performes publique worship to God must not be like Idolaters Ministers now perform publique worship to the Lord. Neither let any say that the Crosse Surplus and Kneeling are trifles for so men might say of cutting round the corners of their head or marring the corners of their bea●d Argu. 4. From Deut. 4.3.4 c. Whence we learn 1 That the Lord w●● ha●e no more done in his worship then he teacheth and commandeth in his Word 2 That adding or detracting n the service of the Lord by doctrine or ceremonies without speciall warrant hinders the keeping of Gods commandements 3 That the keeping of those things God commands will onely make people wise and happy 4 That the Lord is neer in mercy to them that walk in his wayes 5 That men must make no similitude or likenesse of any thing in the service of God