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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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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
served but mens amb tious thoughts never furthered the Kingdom of Christ Now this office is meerely devised by man For they deny them to be Elders mentioned in the Scriptures and how far different they be any man may see that compares them together Churchwardens haue no stroke in the disc●pline or excommunication Elders were to tend mens soules and procure their good by admonition reproofe c. Churchwardens are to tend the church walls and see that there be a fair surplus prov●ded and such Trumpery Elders sprung from Christ and m●ght look for a b●essing and protection in their calling These are from Rome and cannot expect any such blessing or protection from God in their course Elders were not annuall as these are 5 These officers uphold an unlawfull Hierarchy and Government they receiue their oaths wh ch is their enstalment from them wheras the church and congregat●on ought to choose and ordain them 2 They present all to them again giving them the power to punish and censure 3 They must obey every edict and precept that comes from them or the rurall deanes poore ignorant sotts more unlawfull officers then themselues This argument is firm against them since they that maintain Christs enemies are justly to be reproved and accursed if they doe not repent 6 Churchwardens as the government stands now are bound to most unlawfull conditions to present the true Min ster for not using superstitious rit●s to keep other Min●sters from preaching there except they haue licence to present men for not joyning with a dumb Minister and in a word to see that their Canons be exec●ted to the full and herein they are inst●uments of sin and m●anes of troubling the s ●vants of God which brings woe upon men This cannot be denyed The serpent was accursed for b●ing but the instrument of sinne 7 This is a great stumbling block to the Separation making them th●nk all our Church is and stands subject to Ant●christian government For these depend of the Bishop a●d Deanes and haue a k●nde of Regency in the Church Wherfore considering these things brethren who haue been through ignorance or want of consideration hitherto m slead hearken and leaue off hence forth Your witnessing of the truth of Ch●ists Government without all doubt will bring more true rest and peace to your soules then you can finde comfort in your outward peace which you may reap by conforming to mens wills and pleasures Consider how you undertake the profession of Chr●st with a full pu●pose to ●eau all to enjoy him Let me int●●at you for your own good that you will throughly and seriously consider of these things in your own hearts and cover not your selues with some fig leaues that you or others may find for you What a daunt ng will it to be the opposits when the peopl● stand against their courses And goe they cannot that want legges or feet which you are to them Think what every age hath given for Christ and his pure worship and shall wee giue nothing So metimes reformation and discipline beginnes with the servants who for shame driue others from their unlawfull courses Howsoever keep your selues that no unclean th●ng touch you and that you k●ep nothing unclean to defile others withall SECTION X. HAving shewed in the former Treatise what Officers are unlawfull springing up with Antichrist and therfore in all reason to die with him Now lest any should conceiu we herein would put all o●t of order It will be exped●ent to shew such offices as Chr●●s t hath left ●n his Church for the good of mens bodi●s which are a cording unto the●r necessities to be dis●●●buted ●nto E ther men want outward meanes for wh ch D●acons are appointed or are weak and sickly or t●avelling strangers and need attendance for tha● end the Lord hath appointed Widdows 1 For D●acons Act. 6 we haue the institution div●nely expressed the Apostles though carefull to still all complaints yet having greater care of mens soules would not be hindr●d in the Ministery of the Word know●ng and affirming that the preaching of the Gospell is the highest work of the Ministery Where men may obserue that consc●onable and w●se Min●st●●s that seek to doe the r duty to the Lords l●king w ll not ad●oyn other offices to the M●n●stery of the Word For men receiue grace but for th s or that Calling and one will hinder an other be men never so provident But by the way lest any should think Constables or Churchwardens or the like suffic●ent enough for this businesse as the Apostles we●e most carefull of their own Call ng so doe they teach an excellent course for the provision of the poore to choose men of good report full of the Holy Ghost and of wi●edom which they might set over this businesse Thi● being very gratefull and acceptable to the whole Assembly they set seven before the Apostles who by imposition of hands and p●ayer ordained them and admitted them into this office which greatry and wonderfully furthereth the Gospell as it is the nature and property of all Gods ordinances that comming together they may further one another the cōmon good which men receiu by thē whence we haue the necessity of this ordinance of God lest the Minist●r should be hindred in his calling 2 The institution by the cōmon co●sent of the Apostles which now b●nds all in the new Test they being the foundation of the church of the Gentils 3 Election by the church and ordination by the Apostles and 4 the benefit ar●sing hence This place is so plain that me thinks an ingenuous heart that loues the truth wayes of Chr●st reverenceth the min●stry of the Apostles shold not cav●l● but yeeld willingly hereunto For what the Apostles taught the people to doe Christ had cōmanded afore Mat. 28.21 For they in their Ministe●y could not erre Onely one exc●ption may be made That if this were so n●●dfull an Ordinance then why did they not teach ●t the ch●rch afore The Answer is plain 1 Because the Lord would haue men to see the want of this ordinance of God that so they m●ght discern the necessity of it and not think they were burthened with more Officers then need requires 2 H th●●to the church was but newly gathe●ed and as soon as ●t came to be inc●eas●d so soon t●ey appoint●d this Office A second g●ound is that 1 Tim. 3.8 where the Apostle sets down as of Ministers so of Deacons what men they ought to be honest c. Th●s belongs to us as well as the former of Minist●rs 2 The Apostle directly affirmes that T●mothy according to his direct on should carry himse●se in the house of God which is the Church of the living God and the pillar and ground of truth v. 15 which glorious titles why are they added but to shew that no man should dare to come and ex●cute any office in the house of God saue such as were called and fitted therunto 2
Church hath in command●ng 2 Let them teach how the people ought quietly to submit themselues to their Minister whatsoever and be content with him 3 Let them that seek Reformation be made odious to the people 4 Let them be taught not to search things doubtfull but beleeue their Minister And in cases controverted let men rely rather on the great learning of the present Church and reverend antiquity then to follow these new Geneva-like preachers that will haue nothing warranted but that which is approved by the Scriptures 6 Let not the Gospell be freely preached For these exercises of preaching and prophesying cut down the kingdom of the Pope This is so full of light that if it be preached so plainly as many doe it will lay open all 7 Let men haue such a kind of serving God as will not stirre nor trouble them but altogether please and delight Let them haue such preaching singing organs c. Are not these from Satan Are they not directly against Christ and his Kingdom And the Kings Majesty and his Kingdom which fals or stands not with a Bishop Ceremonies but with the Kingdom of Christ rather witnes that experience of the Fr. King who revolting from the truth how did the Lord meet with him Wherfore be wise ô yee Elders of Israel and sleep not you that are the Lords Watchmen The divell sows tares and th● peace of the King and weale of the Kingdom depends upon th● suppression of Popery Take hea●t every trueh●a●ted Christian and stand in your places aga●nst such courses as bring either Atheism or Idolatry Keep up the Word soundly preached by the Ministers of God which are the strength of the land Incourage the servants of God that are most ca efull to please the Lord. Cause that there be a generall turning to the Lord by fasting and prayer Let the Sabboths of God be kept and sanctified and t●y then wh●ther the Lord stay not his judgments and blesse the land more then ever Then you shall be called The Restorers of the Breaches And if you be not more carefull to seek the Lord and walk by his wisedom know that all human power cannot uphold your Kingdom against Satanicall d●vises SECT XVII Whether it be fitting to bury in Churchyards Answ IT seeems no For the Scripture and practise of all the Saints is against it 2 Men place religion and holinesse in it and when things indifferent come so be abused they are not lawfull to be used 3 This hath and doth cause so many prayers to be read over the dead 4 The covetousnesse of Priests and Friars hath been a speciall meanes of this course Whether it be not not needfull to pull down Churches built for the honour of Idols Answ It seems it is For 1 Hos 4.15 2 The house of Baal was destroyed 3 The high places ought to haue been d●stroyed 4 It is a part of holinesse to overthrow the Groues Deut. 7. 5 The name and memoriall of Idolls ought to be rooted out 6 To dedicate Churches to a Saint is Idolatry which ought to be removed 7 The gold of graven Images is an abomination to the Lord and an accursed thing therfore also Churches which ●are so defiled Object These places were unlawfull because the Lord had chosen a speciall place where be had put his name Answ That reason is never given 2 the pollution by Idolatry is ever urged as the cheife cause Meanes that the people may be fitted for Reformation 1 Men must hunger after all Gods Ordinances 1 Must set their hearts to seek the Lord by earnest praying and turning unto him 3 They must obseru an holy Discipline amongst themselues in admonishing and reproving one an other c. 4 Must touch no unclean thing abhorring all Romish Reliques and Ant●christ especially 5 When men mourn for the burdens laid upon them and groan for the misery of others 6 Rejoyce in the forwardnesse of them that are most zealous not envying one an other 7 That speciall prayers be continually offered up to the Lord for the Magistrate The danger of seperation after the manner now used by some Let none imagine that because I write gainst the practise of Seperat●on that therefore I hate the pe●sons whom I am pe●●wa●ed th●o●gh tende●nes of conscie●ce doe w●thsta●d these corrupt●ons Hear th●●fore a freinds reproof who tenders your good and desires the holy ordinances of God and in all th ngs to keep a good conscience Sometimes affection may outrun soundnes of judgment and in s●eking to fly more then is sin we fall into greater corr●ptions and nourish much ●vill in us Brethren disdain not to read a few lines which I know cannot abate your zeal and may through Gods blessing make your course more comfortab●e Consider well therfore of these g●ounds I lay as a way to that wh ch follows 1 That there is in each a naturall affect●on like zeal as in other graces the deceitfull hea●t will counterfeit gr●●e so in th●s witnes Iehu there is an errour on the right hand 2 That this blind zeal carries men headlong without examination or sea●ch of their waies to censure others when there is no power further to hurt 3 Men may oppose corruptions in publique and yet neglect to fight against sin resolutely and zealously in themselues therby thinking to please God highly 4 That Tolleration is not approbation Act. 17.30 5 It is the desire of Satan and our own● to seperate from the true children of God upon any occasion whatsoever these enemies much respect 6 Men rending themselues from the true Church as no Church cannot tell where to stay nor to whom to joyn themselues which makes their rents incurable 7 Men may joyn themselus to the purest Congregations if it be without condemning others as nothing 8 Christ is not ever accompanied withall his ordinances in act but many times he goes in one or two amongst his people A Church holding the foundation though it err in many particulars remaines a Church still 9 Many commands binde the Magistrate to redresse things amisse which private persons cannot possibly reform 10 Gods Ordinances make us one with the Lord and with men no further then they are one with the Lord. These things agreed upon I doubt not but men will yeeld to these Arguments following agai●st totall separation First there ●s a true Minist●ry in the Chu●ches of England therfore it ●s lawfull to joyn with them That there is a true Ministery it may appeare 1 B●cause men haue gifts to dispense the Word 2 Men are chosen by the people 3 Graue and godly Preachers doe approue of the ent●●ng ●n of many 4 Men haue ord●nation though not aft●r the purest manner but corrupt wh●ch comming to their knowledg they repent of 5 Men exercise their Ministery not by vertue of a●y power from men but because the Lord hat● s nt them 6 The hand of the Lord is with them to prosper h●s own wo●k so as men are brought to
to perfect and goe through w th what I haue rudely begun For mine own satisfaction in th s doubt this hath perswaded me to doe that which I haue done through Gods assistance 1 The light and resolution I haue attayned through Gods blessing by these grounds following 2 How wonderfull the Lord is to glorifie himselfe in weake meanes when men goe not beyond their calling and the gifts bestowed upon them 3 The comfort some haue had in the reading of these things A second doubt is that many may be hereby b ought into danger if they will follow these ruses taught and dissent from the common customes and received orders To which the answer is easy 1 The fire doth ever follow Christ where he is truely Preached and his Ordinances desired and followed 2 It is better Gods people be troubled by men then by their own conscience and liue in the least sin against God 3 Trouble is raised already and this is but to advise men for what willingly to suffer trouble Let no man therefore maligne this poore fruit of my prayers and meditations but reade it with the same spirit of loue I write it and so doing doubtlesse thou shalt gaine something that may profit thee in a good way Christ himselfe is a rock of offence for the rising and fall of many in Israel witnesse all ages wherein many in the visible Church haue been offended and stumbled at some part of his doctrine sacraments and government Many are not the sheep of Christ but belong to another Kingdome ne ther can they beleeue because we tell the truth It is not to be expected therefore th s poore writing of mine should finde any better intertainment in the world then the great Shepheard himselfe and all true Prophets that followed him Neverthelesse my desire and humble prayer is that men may not stumble and dash themselues in peeces by their falls and make others st mble to Wherefore deer Christian thou that tenderest thine own and others good take heed to thy selfe of falling upon this stone It is no small nor light matter either to deride scoffe at the truth when it is brought unto thee or to be made worse or turned further in affection from Christ and his servants reade Math. 18 howsoever men thinke by their witty and nice distinctions to evade the plain light and cast mists before their own and others eyes and joyning herewith power and authorized credit uphold their Kingdome yet the truth is they shall be broken in peeces and the Kingdome of God shall be taken from them and given to a people that will bring forth the fruit of it It is not possible to hold the Gospell among us and reject th●se truths and the like and persecute the servants of God for them Nay further danger then this comes for men stumbling before others come to be scandals and offences to others and so Mat. 13 shall be gathered by the Angels and cast into eternall fire Contrarywise blessed is the man that is not offended in Christ but receiues him as he offers himselfe in his Word to be the true and onely King Priest and Prophet of his Church Wherefore to prevent that which the wisest are in danger of for the builders cast away Christ and all others by them I desire thee before thou judge of these things following see thou be one fitted for this businesse And therefore 1 See thou haue learned so●ndly the maine grounds of Religion m lk must be well d●gested afore men can d●gest strong meat It is a shame indeed that m●n should be so ●gnorant in such times as God hath given under Christ an Princes and it is one sinne that brings captivity and desolation Learn these Principles well therfore thou ●na●t be the better able to discern of every spirit otherwise he that cannot reade nor see the great things of the Law it is not possible he should see any lesser points 2 See thou be well acquainted with thine own blindnesse and brut●sh folly for such shall be made wise by Christ that become fooles in themselues a man that knowes not this shall be like the Pharisies that when Christ is preached most plainly their eyes shall not s●e nor their ea●es heare the things of God 3 Men must be such as turn from their sinnes at the correction and reproofe of God that profit by the word and judgements they haue been under then the Lord will be their Teacher and powre out his minde unto them and cause men to understand his wayes till then the vail covers them The naturall man discernes not these things such therefore as deteyne the truth in injustice liue in sinnes against their conscience or goe on in a secure course being never changed let them never expect that further truths should be made known to them but that which they haue shall be taken from them 4 Such as exercise themselues in prayer much and often med tation with feeling and hunger after knowledge Iam. 1 It is well known this is the key to open the closet of God and where should men see the truth but in the presence of God Such therefore as through their unbele●fe and prophane contempt of this Ordinance of God set themselues to schoole to men onely and think by a little study at furthest to comprehend any truth deceiue themselues as well as the ignorant and impenitent person that cannot or dare not come to God whose heart respecting wickednesse accuseth and daunteth him if not seared up or benummed Prov. 2.1 5 See thine heart be not set much upon these earthly treasures and wordly happines for such an heart will neither cry nor call earnestly for nor esteem of the truth but sell it for a morsell of bread It is well known affection corrupts the judgement and a man for the present evill world will make the Lord speak pleasing th ngs and entertain any lye for the truth that may br ng earthly possessions and prosperity Phil. 3 2 Pet. 2.14.15 6 Such as make conscience of small matters n●their own practice as petty othes justing lyes idle speeches which is the true sea of the Lord Prov. 3 Psal 25 For as for men of the Pharisies judgement to w t that the Lord onely forbids great sinnes no marvell if they swallow such lesser matt rs Thou must therfore exercise thy self in this namely n all things to keep a cleer conscience towards God and man especially herein that thou be carefull to giue no offence through the use of thy Christian liberty to thy brethren Rom. 14.13 1 Ioh. 2.10 and account nothing sma● that God commands Math 5.19 7 That thou haue a sound loue of the truth and Christ especially 1 Cor. 8 for the divell will pluck treasures from thy minde and rob thine understanding if thou doe not receiue the truth in loue 2 Thess 2. The truth therfore must be deerer then thousands of gold or silver unto thee the Gospell and every branch of it
as the pearle As for them that respect the Word as they respect an other history or never busie themselues about either knowledge faith or p●act●se From these Truth the heavenly Manna shall be taken away and chaffy Traditions which w ll damn their soul●s shal be sent them Thou therfore must loue the truth rather then thy cred te be content to change thy minde when the light comes buy it at any rate 8 That thou be resolute to walke in the truth Ioh. 7.17 though it cost thee all thou hast For he that hates not father mother house lands and all for Christs sake cannot be his disciple men must cast up their accounts afore what the truth will cost and resolue to giue the full price even to hate their life for Christ All must deny themselues therfore take up their crosses and follow Christ Math. 6. All that e●de to know and reason onely all fearfull ones that dare not follow the light darknes shall cover them they shall be l ke Pauls companions Act. 9 that heard a sound but saw not Christ neither heard what the Lord said unto him 9 That men hate the whoore of Babell throughly all her abominations Apo. 14.4 it is ●hewed who she is how dangerous a thing it is to communicate with her Apoc. 14.9.10 else how shall they come out from her Such therefore as th nk it no way so dangerous to communicate with Antichrist and are of such quiet disposition that they can well enough brook Popery shall be like the scorners that seek wisedom but shall not finde it for men must hate all vain inventiventions that will haue the truth dwell with them 10 Such as judge not of Religion and the worship of God either by the pleasing of our senses liking of our own heart or judgment of carnall reason Numb 15.39 for these are not admitted to judge of the Lord nor his wayes nothing but the Lord and that which is from him can or may judg of the Lord. As for such as seek for carnall delight rather then true edification and judge by themselues what the Lord requires and approues no marvell if they like a strangers face better then of their own husband For nature goes a whoring after mens devises and is ever fond of it own inventions Math. 15 like the Iewes that would offer up their children to Moloch but robbed the Lord of his tithes 11 Such are willing to be instructed of very babes becomming little children like eloquent Apollos that was content to be catechised by Aquilla and Priscilla men must learn the truth especially where it is practised and many Truths from them that are weaker and farre more ignorant happily ●n other things then thy selfe hum●●ity and wisedom dwell together Paul though he had seen Christ ●n the way he must goe to Ananias to learne further what hee should doe Act. 9. Such therfore as despise learning of any saue the great Rabbins and ancient Fathers and will not be beholding to any ●eane pers●●age for most dif●●cuit truths are like the proud Cor●●thians 1 Cor. 12 doubtlesse such shall goe astray with the Pharisies Ioh. 9. 12 Such as by the spirit of God in themselues understand the Scriptures in some measure and try the spirits both writings and speeches not depending upon any 1 Ioh. 4 1 Thess 5. For every man is a lyar and may er●e and the Church must be built upon the foundation of the Prophets and Apostles upon the Rock Chr st Wherfore such as ground onely on mens opinions or the Traditions of the Elders are mens Disciples and God may justly deny them the knowledge of saving Truths Let all men take heed of this Popish evill of an implicite faith for it is naturall to all men it giues way to all superstition it is grosse negligence not to respect what seed is sown in thy soule And to end all remember these two things 1 That men depending on others shall ever be uncertain for men doe change and vary 2 In all times some points of Religion very needfull to be known are mysteries to the learned world hid from the wise and prudent Math. 11. 13 Receiue each truth for conscience nothing for singularity or novelty to content the state present or to please men for such are hypocrites that Christ is an offence unto For though in some things corruption be resireyned and the branches cut off for a time yet hereby corruption is dangerously nourished and more deeply lodged in the heart which will break out at last with much violence to the great discredit of the profession witnesse Iudas Saul and them that goe out of the Church in all times such hang upon the Church but are dead members neither let any thinke we desire such schollers and followers nor let the world imagine they haue gotten a great prey when they haue perverted a learned scholler For he is but as a withered branch that Christ hath cut off fit enough and for nothing else fit but to build up the Kingdom of Satan Nor let Gods servants be discouraged as though they were quite overcome when they loose a seeing Champion for his spirit that was good he leaues behind him in the Church an other shall inherit it and injoy his Talent even he that had most afore and is found most faithfull See thou be not content with a form of Religion denying the power thereof such a one as comest neere the Lord with thy lips and honourest him with thy mouth but thy heart is farre from him Such the world is full of in all ages which makes men ready to entertain will-worship and any devise of man if therefore thou seek not to proceed by sound judgment in Gods service doing nothing but what thou hast warrant for from the Word or coldly worship God without any zeale or chearfulnesse or without true reverence of his great Majesty and faith in Christ Never expect the Lord should manifest his will unto thee in these Truths following SECTION II. THus Christian Reader thou seest what to repent of in former times and what haue been the mayn lets and impediments of thine ●ucrease in knowledge using the meanes wherfore when thou dist●●t●●t and scornest happily at the grounds following see thy consc ence accuse thee not in some want of preparation which doing I doubt not but we shall be of the same judgement or at least haue the same heart and mutuall loue according together For pride and prophanenesse and men-pleasing cheifly sunders the affection when thou readest set thy se●fe as in the presence of God to learn from him and doe not wi fully shut thine eyes against any light that shines from heaven Now that with more facility wee may passe to the severall doubts controverted I will propound through the grace of God some generall grounds from whence light may be fetched to determine all o● the most of th●se or the like questions 1 The first ground that all will-worship
which is worship devised by man and arbitrary or free is abhorred by the Lord. The second commandement forbids making to our selues the least sign fying ceremony Numb 15.39 Col. 2 noth ng pleaseth God but what comes from heaven for outward service pleaseth no further then it is done in obedience to God and is an expressing of inward worship Therefore this wil-worship being done not in obedience to God but to our own and others will Isa 24.13 it is not accepted of God To this all agree for it was the Pharisies sinne that they took up of themselues many washings not commanded of God nor forbidden by him but indifferent in themselues 2 The Lord hath given a perfect Platform and absolute Rule how hee will be worshipped in the time of the new Testament For Christ that hath ever taught the Church and directed Moses and David much more comming in his own person hath fully manifested the will of his Father Else he should be lesse faithfull then the servant in him are hid all the treasures of wisedom and knowledge so as in him we are compleat and need not further to seek nor borrow any light from the greatest Angells in heaven for matters concerning God or his worship Therfore they are accursed Gal. 1 that preach any other doctrine besides that the Apostles haue preached and left unto us 2 Tim. 3 The Scripture makes the man of God perfect and absolute to every good work and it is a light unto our feet and to our pathes so as not a foot is set towards heaven but where and how it should be placed is evidently shewed The Scripture is so large that it meets with all doubts else the Lord should not be so provident as man who meet in their lawes with all they can conceiue Now the Lord foresees all doubts Further the Scripture g ues direction how to use things indifferent 1 Tim. 4 in our common use therfore much more in a religious This for the substance is held by all our sound Divines against the Papists 3 The Lord is very strict for observing every thing commanded in his service without any addition or detraction in the least things Deut. 4.2 Moses must doe all according to the pattern shewed in the mount The Lord punished Aarons sonnes for offering strange fire Vzzah for offering to stay the Ark hee forbids to be called Baali Hes 2. The Lord is a jealous God 2 Com. and his authority is weakned when men presume to doe any thing in his worship and serv ce God will be the same in punishing that he is in forbidding Math. 5 the least jo e or title shall not passe but all must see fulfilled 4 The least sin may not be committed to injoy all the Ordinances of God Rom. 3. For 1 The Lord may take men away in the act of doing evill afore they come to any good 2 It is is a great dishonour to God to doe any sinne to a good end as though the Lord could not provide for thy soule without sinning against him and s●rving Satan first 3 It opens a gap to all superstit●on upon a good meaning and a gap to injust●ce in mens dealings 4 The least sinne done espec●ally witt●ngly and willingly brings judgement upon the doer 5 God in such times when without sinning against him wee cannot enjoy them calls us for the while to humiliation or removing his glory from that place calls otherwhere to ab de Matth. 15 Men Men may not deny duety to these parents in rele ving them to offer unto God it makes the commandement of God of none effect which for to doe for any man whatsoever is a most ho●r b●e sinne 5 A little leaven leavens the whole lumpe 1 Cor. 5 men dote ever upon their own dev s●s and hav ng o●c● 〈◊〉 the bounds God hath set them run fu●t●er further Besides the Lord so kn●t●a h●s worship and o●dinances togeth●r that ●orruption of one co●rupts the ●est and without curing and restoring in time expells all Gods institutions and leaues men nothing but their own stuffe For men withholding the truth in injustice are forsaken of God and become fooles because they worship not God as God that is as he reveales himselfe in his workes and word Leaven is a Gangreen 2 Tim. 3. 6 The offence of the weak in the abuse of things indifferent much more superstitious which none in earth can command this may bring damnation unto thy brother Therfore that is most uncharitable and none can command against charity The Mag●strate is keeper of this Law and ought not to see it broken This is a sin against Christ Woe be to him that offends the least of these little ones Math. 18. In this the Scripture is so large 1 Cor. 10 Rom. 14 because men are witty having no sense nor tendernesse of conscience in themselues nor true loue towards the sincere servants of God and therfore no care of their growth in grace and prosperity of their soules onely puft up with knowledge and a forme of Religion that they haue devised I say they are so cunning to offend their weak brethren for which Christ dyed under colourable pretences Math. 12.23 ad 8. Divine order it selfe giues way to charity towards mens bodies much more a humane to mens soules All power is to edification not destruct on 7 All men are bound to protest and stand out against all superstitious will-worship especially that of the Church of Rome so as they may leaue the pure truth to posterity now in this light of the Gospell 2 Cor. 6 Apoc 14.4 Saints are redeemed and bought from among men and virgins which are not defiled with women that is w th whorish and idolatrous service Else how doe wee answer the great mercy and goodnesse of the Lord if we deny not all ungodl●nesse Tit. 2. 2 They are guilty of former superst tions if they cast not away all idols 2 Command 3 They wrong their posterity making them e ther to drink troubled waters or suffer persecution for standing against that wh ch they yeelded unto 4 This is a part of that victory which Christ hath gotten for all his over the world that will lay claime unto it 8 To doe a th ng doubtingly by the example of others may bring damnat on to the party so sinn ng Rom. 14.23 Men may sinne aga nst the r conscience and so stumble and fall 2 Men may be given over in other things to the like to follow men And this holds in following any one though never so learned For not many nor prudent haue the truth revealed unto them in every age there being some misteries in Religion which learning or study cannot attain to without a speciall assistance and working of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2. 9 It is a great sinne to obserue pleasing Traditions because they are commanded by men and haue a shew of wisedom Col. 2 Esa 29. It argues men are led onely by an humane
spirit and follow corrupt nature that studies more to please it selfe and men then to please the Lord. This giues way to all idolatry whatsoever Apoc. 21 the fearful haue their portion with idolaters It is to giue away the Lords right and makes men they cannot with any zeale or loue preach or practice the main truthes of God Our Saviour Christ refused to be subject to the Pharisies washings a ceremony out of Gods worship not corrupted so by idolaters but in other kinds commanded and appointed by God 10 A thing indifferent having holinesse put in it ceaseth to be indifferent and becomes simply evil and abominable for then it is will-worship as the brazen serpent 2 God onely must sanctifie things Relatiuely for an holy use Io. 2 Mark 11. 11 That is not a thing indifferent which the holy Scriptures hath commanded or forbidden in generall or speciall in any infallible example or by consequence For every man is bound to the will of God simply being made known That men are bound to examples it may appear 1 Because the Holy Ghost records them for our learning and practice Rom. 15 Christs example is brought to proue we must not please our se●● es so that divine examples binde when they are not against a divine Rule 2 It is the manner of Scripture to propound divers duties onely in examples because they moue much 3 Infallible examples were guided immediately by the holy Ghost and therefore are sure rules for us to follow even in circumstances And see Math. 21 how our Saviour Christ proues by consequence the resurrection against the Sadduces 12 Circumstances of holy actions are commanded by the Lord in the generall as time to meet to hear the word and receiue Sacraments the Table to set bread and wine upon but in the particular the Church may appoint what is fittest for order and edification from the generall rules and examples of holy Scriptures ever knowing we are bound to follow the Traditions and Ordinances of Christ and his Apostles as they they haue delivered them unto us 1 Corinth 11.12 13 This word onely is to be understood in every commandement yea in every part of Gods worship so as no other god may be adored saue I●hovah nor after any other manner then he commands Mat. 4.10 with Deut. 6.10 For to fear the Lord and keep his commandemants is the whole duty of man 2 Men going beyond the bounds appointed by the Lord sin against him 3 Men are expresly tyed to the Law and Testimony Isa 8. 4 Men are in darknesse and know not which way they walk except the light of the word guide them 2 Pet. 1. 14 Every particular Congregation assembled lawfully in the name of Christ that is after his own institution with the Officers given and appointed hath full liberty of her ●elfe to execute Discipl ne being independant to any other Ecclesiasticall power on earth whatsoever Math. 18 Having reproved the offender by 2 or 3 then tell the Church or Congregation after which is no higher power Whatsoever they binde on earth is bound in heaven Paul reproved the Corinthians that they had not excommunicated the incestuous person Bu●erus ibi totum Christi Regnum there is Christs whole Kingdom neither may any take away that which Christ hath given for upon his shoulders is the government and he hath all authority and will haue it thus dispensed wherfore if Naboth would not sell the inheritance of his fathers much lesse may wee sell the inheritance of Christ Nor did Christ subject one Congregation to another for that step to the Popedome came in long after And all Pastors being equall by Gods institution are forbidden to exercise authority one over an other or expect any such title as may import it or affect preeminence like Diotrophes 15 Commanding or following humane Traditions for carnall policy or good intent brings an utter ruin and insensible judgement upon any Kingdom Hos 5 witnesse Ieroboam in the Kingdom of Israel Gideon for making the Ephod Then men 1 grow strangers from Gods own worship 2 To think Religion is but a devise of man 3 They put down the servants of the Lord 4 They despise and resist the Lords word brought by his servants 16 Of all men Ministers are bound to abhorre the least reliques of idolatry and can be least forced to the use therof Lev. 21.5 For first they draw neerest unto the Lord who is a consuming fire and will be sanctified in them that come neer him 2 Ministers must leade the people in this as in other duties 3 The most zealous servants of God haue been ever very forward against all superstitious monuments 4 Magistrates and people haue a speciall charge Lev. 21.5 to sanctifie the Priest which was then the Lords Minister 17 The Church hath not all her light at once nor by one instrument Christ comes to his people as the Sun riseth first the day dawnes then darknesse is quite expelled and at last the Sunne is in his strength For 1 the servants of God at first doe set themselues against the great and maine corruptions of the time as Luther and the former servants of God did against the foundations of Babell 2 The Lords manner is to proceed from lesser to greater as may evidently be seen in the six daies work in the creation of the world 3 All men receiue the spirit but by measure and for a speciall work 4 That the Church might be carefull to bring forth many children to God and fervently and ardently to pray for the conversion of the Iewes at whose coming home wonderfull light shall appear to the whole world 18 A whole visible Church when it abounds with men of excellent graces for Magistrates and Ministers may yet omit duties commanded by the Lord and doe many things without warrant from the Scriptures So in all the daies of the Iudges and good Kings they on itted keeping of the feast of Boothes as it appeares They sacrificed in the high places in Iehosaphats time So the first and purest times after Christ began shortly in many ceremonies to bee too superstitious For 1 much ignorance is in us all and Gods Spirit is promised to l●ade us no further then wee doe take heed to the Word 2 In things absolutely necessary 3 The Church is too carelesse in some things and we all are too prone to rest before wee haue done our whole work 19 Consent of Writers Orthodoxall is had though not mentioned where Scripture is plain for any point This appeares 1 because the Church is led by the same Spirit the Scriptures were penned and inspired by 2 God hath in all times and ages some witnesses to stand for him and his truth 3 Gods children haue the same minde and walk in one way This consent is either in the grounds and common principles though they doe not come to the particulars because these things were not then controverted Or in will and heart as if such truthes
had been propounded to Iohn Hus and Ierom of Prage as are now they would haue heard and approved the voice of Christ or in the like of that kinde as in all ages Gods servants haue to fight against and doe evercome some speciall enemies and corruptions that trouble the Church So Wickliffe in his time against some errours of the Romish Synagogue Luther against more Calvin and Beza against more 20 Reason inlightned and guided by the spirit of God and subject to the Word is the voice of God This is part of the image of God even that wisedom which God renewes by his Spirit Mat. 12.13 This holds so as these cautions be observed 1 The Scriptures must be the ground upon which reason is built The Scriptures are the premisses reason drawes the conclusion from thence 2 The like reasoning appeares in the Scripture 3 That mans reason be never used against any part of Scriptures nor experience for either Scriptures or experience to the contrary overthrows all the shewes of reason 4 So as men by reason presume not to understand the deep things of God that is the mysteries of Religion which the Scriptures reveales not Col. 2.5 Reason must submit to the Word and beleeue the truth therof though wee cannot conceiu the manner how it should be Ioh. 3.6 Reason especially in divine things and the worship of God serues onely as a watchman to discern what the will of God is which is our wisedom Deut. 4. So then part of our faith must be built upon reason thus informed It is a thing no lesse dangerous then odious to meddle with Princes authority not that they themselues cannot endure any higher power though naturally all men would be as Gods but chiefly because inchanting flatterers seek to bewitch Princes and themselues being voide of all conscience of duty towards God full of hatred towards his children and divellish blinde zeale for superstition and selfe loue towards themselues and would perswade Princes as Iesabel did Ahab that because they are Kings they may doe what they please and usurp not mens onely but Gods right too and sit in his Chair Such were they that came to Ioash 2 Chron. 24. Such were Davids enemies And these men to the intent they may bring about their divelish and malicious intendments pretend to be the onely true hearted subjects in the Kingdom and that men of another disposition though farre more faithfull to God and his Magistrates yet dissenting severing from their errours and not bowing down to them are factious and trouble the peace of the Kingdom So did Haman report of the Iewes Esth 3. And that their accusation may not seem frivolous they bring some complaints for the breach of lawes devised by themselues as snares to take the righteous in no way tending to the safety or honour of the Prince or the publique good of the Church or Common-wealth Though these men abound in every age and by their policies ra●se themselues to high plac●s their kingdom being of this world and the Lord disposing and appointing them as scourges for his own people yet because it is the Churches duty to teach all the truth and seek the good of mens soules and of Princes especially by whose meanes so much good is injoyed and that this is true loue to shew the way of life though it be by sharp reproofes therefore for Princes good ●f so be the wise and gracious God so appoint that these things may be v●iwed of them and for the peoples good that they may know how to cary themselues towards Authority I haue indevoured from the rule of justice that appoints every man his standing and office and bounds them with strait charge that none shall passe the lists prescribed to man fest this point which I acknowledge is farre fitter for the more judicious to haue handled The name of Kings and Princes is sacred they are stiled Gods by the Lord himselfe and children of the most High next to himselfe to be honoured of all men Wherefore from the Scriptures these things following are evident concerning them 1 That this high calling is an Ordinance of God immutably to continue for the good of man till Christ restore the Kingdom to his Father for it is morall and of necessity never abrogated by God This all firmly hold against Anabaptists Secondly for their authority that they are highest and supreme in both kinds civill and ecclesiasticall this is plain ●n David Salomon Iosiah who were chiefe the high Priest being under them the Prophets in like manner This is not doubted of therefore no stay is to be made in it The onely question and thing is 1 That Princes haue authority in things Ecclesiasticall to see the service of God done in due and beseeming manner so did David so did Iosiah This authority is in ordering fit circumstances in performing holy duties as times of meeting and of humbling themselues by fasting c. Princes are bound to this for the carelesse serving of God brings judgement upon the people 1 Cor. 11.2 The more care they haue for the Lord to be reverenced the more carefull will he be of their honour Psal 2. 2 Princes haue authority to examine and try all canons and constitutions of men to see that nothing bee thrust into the Church by deceivers This authority is in binding Ministers to the true word of God both for matter and manner in preaching prayer administring Sacraments and execution of discipline Thus they are straightly bound to keep the charge of the Lord 2 Chron. 13. The Magistrate is the keeper of both Tables this is the treasure of his Kingdom that which makes him victorious against enemies the happinesse of his own soule and his subjects the glory of God and the good of posterity 3 Princes haue authority to bring all things both Callings and Ordinances to tho first inst tution abrogating all former customes and pract ses which dissent from the Law of God and disanull such statutes as make them to be in force and credite So did Iosiah reform Salomons errours and all the idolatry set up before This reacheth to the overthrow of all Antichristian rites that are brought into the house of God This he is bound unto in the second commandement So did Moses break in peaces the golden Calfe and the good Kings took away the Groues and high places their ancestors had set up Magistrates must not suffer whorish bravery to be provoking the eyes of Gods glory Thus did our Saviour Christ 4 Pr●nces haue authority to remoue things of a good use at first when they be corrupted and abused and of no use So did Ezekiah the brazen serpent This reacheth to all things not actually abused but in danger to be abused such were Idoll Temples that the good Emperour overthrew So may the Magistates remoue Witnesses out of Baptism now b●ing unprofitable This rule they are bound unto both by the second and third commandement by that care they owe to
their subjects in preventing their hurt It is the Lord onely that must keep others from abusing holy th●ngs now the Lord w●ll keep onely things of his own appointment and such as are profitable If amongst the Israelites an oxe were used to push and gore and it were testified to the owner and he did not put him to death if any were hurt by him the owner was to answer either with his life or goods Exod. 21.29.30 So Magistrates not removing dangers are accessary to all the falls which thousands catch thereby 5 Princes haue authority to compell all their subiects to covenant with the Lord to serue him onely according to his will So did Iosua Ios 24. So did Asa and Iosiah So did Moses and the Elders of Israel Deu. 26.5 So did the great King Nebuchadnezzar that saw but one speciall work of the Lord in the delivering of his faithfull servants So did Ezekiah And this reacheth to make Lawes and publique Edicts that binde all To punish the obstinate offenders with death to send for men with command to come to the service of the Lord so did the former Pr●nces This men are bound to Psal 101. For 1 all men are superstitious or Atheists naturally and therfore they need to bee kept in compasse and drawn to the meanes 2 All men following their own inventions pollute the land and bring judgments therupon like the men that claue to Baal-Peor 6 Princes haue authority to send out Ministers fitted with gifts to preach the Word so did Iehosaphat The Magistrate is to s●e that the Lord may haue most glory in the publishing of salvation that Christs Kingdom be set up that none perish for want of meanes Therefore are they called Gods especially 7 Princes in things not commanded by the Lord but left indifferent ought rather then otherwise to make distinction twixt their people and Idolaters Deut. 4.1.2 For first Gods people are the children of the Lord God to be holy unto him in a peculiar manner Secondly The Lord hath used so to put many barres twixt us and Idolaters and then indeed things indifferent so used most edifie the Church Thirdly Idolaters are made hereby the sooner to consider of their Religion Fourthly of all persons Ministers are most bound to abhorre the least reliques of idolatry and can be least forced to the use thereof Levit. 21.5 they draw neerest to the Lord that is a consuming fire 2 Magistrates and people haue a speciall charge to sanctifie the Priest Lev. 21.8 8 Magistrates are bound to be so carefull that the people fall not back to idolatry that they are bound to remoue all idolaters especially false Prophets and Seducers Deut. 13.6 Deut. 17.2 Deut. 7.2 Exod. 32 Ex. 22.20 2 King 10 Iehu Iosias 2 King 23 Elias For 1 these pervert the straight wayes of the Lord. 2 It is as great a sinne now to call upon a Saint or an Angell as it was to offer to an Idoll Therfore all Princes should follow Asaes worthy example 2 Chron. 1● 13 The summe of all is that Princes may reforme abuses and establish the pure worship of God among their people If it be said This seemes to be a burthen and abasing to Princes rather then any honour the Answer is plain That it is the honour of the creature to procure the honour of God Thus doe the Angels 2 It is great honour to be about the Lord in any place 3 All offices are but ministeries 4 None but the Magistate can doe this This Authority though the Scriptures manifest that others executed it yet with all they doe it with the consent of the Princes 2 By the advice and d rection of the Prophets of God so did David 3 By drawing on the people in the demolishing of Idotry Thus thou seest in part wherin the Magistrates Authority consists now follows to shew wherein it is limited in the positions following 1 The Magistrate cannot institute any thing in the outward worship of God None of the Kings of Iudah without extraordinary warrant did but reform which is to remoue superstition and bring men to the true worship of God 2 The Lord hath commanded that men should not adde which binds directly in outward worship 3 The Lord hath given direction for as much service as he requires of men and will accept Isa 29.13 Io. 2. What better colour then to haue mony-changers and sheep in the Temple to further and speed the service of God and dispatch the unacquainted Israelites that came from far But this as all humane helps not sanctified by the Lord doe prophanes the house of God and therfore justly banished thence by our Saviour Christ Nothing may come neerer the Lord then hee appoints and all that comes from man is filthy and defiles both the Lord and the user 2 Circumstances in Gods worship are not free neither in these things may Princes command what they please 1 Chron. 28.19 Salomon hath a pattern of the Temple and direction for the place 2 Chron. 3.1 So for the ordering of men to these and these offices Because all things being inexpedient edifie not Acts 1 Acts 6 1 Corinth 10. 3 The Princes commanding of a thing indifferent is no sufficient ground for the usage of it in the service of God For first all things must be sanctified by the Word which shewes the right use of these things Also Princes commands in things indifferent in many cases are not to be obeyed As 1 if the party cannot be resolved of the lawfulnesse of them then the Lord forbids to use them 2 If they hurt or destroy for all power is for the good of others 3 Though they be indifferent in themselues yet having been monuments of Idolatry or being now abused by Idolaters in state of divine worship Hes 2. 4 When they are commanded for ill ends as to be signes of the new covenant of grace for men may not ordain new signes of the covenant of grace 4 Princes may not appoint significant ceremonies the second commandement forbids it Ezech. 43.8 These are parts of Gods outward worship for they are religious actions 2 They lessen the esteem of Gods own Ordinances 3 There is no such example in the whole Scripture of any holy Prince that did any such thing 4 Christ is the onely Teacher of his Church therfore all doctrins and ceremonies not appointed by him are to be rejected for we are bound to hear his voyce onely 5 As these abound so hath the Lord withdrawn his presence from the visible Church Ezech. 43.8 6 The Lord accounts nothing his but what he appoints 7 The wil of God only makes things acceptable to him and profitable to the Church 5 Princes haue not power to binde the conscience Isa 33.21 Iam. 4.12 For 1 they cannot make a thing simply evill 2 They canot discern nor punish the inner man that is onely the priviledg of the Lord. 3 Christians are not servants of men but onely of Christ that hath purchased
his right over thē dearer then any creature is able to doe To bind the conscience is properly to enact such laws as binde all men simply both inwardly and outwardly at all times and in all places to obedience as to things good in their own nature under pain of eternall damnation Neverthelesse understand this without any prejudice to the Magistrates authority that all men are bound for conscience to obey Magistrates in their lawful commands not for conscience to him but to Gods ordinance and commandement and the common good intended in political laws which charity bindes unto 6 No Magistrate can exempt from obedience to the Lord. Therfore none can binde wherin God either simply will haue us free Act. 15 or wherein he hath bound us afore otherwise by his word or example recorded for our direction wherein Scripture is not plain in any rule For then examples binde Act. 4 Col. 2. Magistrates are but servants of the Lord therfore cannot exempt from obedience to him 2 Men cannot saue us from the wrath of God therfore cannot binde against God 3 Th●s is to set up another God when mens commands are observed against Gods It is foolishnesse therfore to imagine because the Magistrate commands men may doe such things as are not justifiable in the sight of the Lord and think that the sin lies onely upon the Magistrate and that they are free for it is but a cloake worse then that of Adam the woman gaue it me and therfore I eat what duty the Lord injoynes men or what sin he forb●ds no man can dispense w●thall 7 No man can exclude any officer or debar the execution of callings appointed and injoyned by the Lord Christ which is King of his Chrch Math. 28.19.20 For 1 No calling is appointed by Christ but it is a member and part of the Body and it is dangerous to lame or maym his Spouse 2 These are the gifts which the Lord bestowes upon his beloved and to rob her of them is a kinde of sacriledg 3 These all further the Kingdom of Christ and his glory and the good of men Who dare therefore or can hinder or take away any of these 4 This is to vaunt themselues as God like Antichrist 2 Thess 2. Wherfore a common errour is detected plainly to wit when men imagine Christian Magistrates may put down whom Christ hath set up Of such let all men beware for they seek themselues and not the Lord and to please men and with all hurt both Commanders and Obeyers 8 Princes haue no authority to giue to one calling that which the Lord hath appropriated to another that which is the Minister to giue to the Magistrate nor the Magistrates to the Minister These are severed of the Lord and therfore cannot be conjoyned by man Vzzah the King which is the head might not take to himselfe the office of the Priest much lesse giue it to others This is stealth Rom. 12. Our Saviour Christ would not take the office of a Iudge upon him Why is this written but to teach that though men haue gifts to discharge two such callings yet they may not conjoyn them 9 Princes are simply prohibited from making any mixture of Religion even in small matters Deut. 12.2.3.4 Lev. 19.19 For 1 it is a dishonor to the Lord to borrow fiō Idolaters 2 Every humane device abused by Idolaters is accursed and men may not convert it to the worship of God 10 Princes must stay where the Lord bids stay till they haue particular direction from the Lord what to doe further 1 Sam. 14. It was Sauls sin that went further then he should If men will doe but so much as the Lord enjoyns they will never doe more Also it is dangerous especially for Magistrates to transgresse the bounds prefixed them 11 The summe of all is that a Christian Magistrate cannot alter the outward worship of God Deut 12. This was Ieroboams sin it was Ahaz sinne it was Manasses sin the sin of the false Apostles Col. 2. For when the Lord will haue any thing altered he makes it known extraord●narily to his servants N●●ther is this any disparagement to Princes authority that they cannot enact and injoyne any of these th●ngs for th●s is the right of God who in this kinde hath committed all authority to Christ onely upon whose shoulder the government is in these things Princes may punish Hereticks and are bound to deal severely with such as haue made them and others even the Israel of God to sinne and so bring many plagues upon themselues their Kingdom for presumption in these sinnes See how the Lord punished Saul for daring but to sacrifice to the true God a right sacrifice afore Samuel came ●t lost him his Kingdom What is this written for but to teach us that Kings who will usurp upon Gods right the Lord will make them no Kings For he spoyles them that spoyle him How dealt the Lord with Vzzah for presuming upon the Priests office Did not leprosie cleaue unto him for ever for his proud presumption in breaking the bounds God appoint●d Why was Ioash puni●●ed for hearkening to his Pr●nces a●d turning from the stra●ght way of the Lord but to teach men that though they think the State will not beare another course then superstition and mens invention hatcht yeeld●ng thereunto they shall loose more by declining then possibly they can by withstand ng corrupt on What did the Lord to Manasses for setting up himself in the house of God And hath not th●s sinne chiefly overthrown the Roman Emp●re brought the Turk in amongst us because Princes g●ue the beast their authority suffering him to appoint execute what lawes he would though never so much derogatory to the Lords own right Against th●● sinne the Lord manifests his anger soon either threatning by his Proph●ts spir tuall judgen ents in loosing their respect w●thin a while poverty and weaknesse l●ke sicknesse to the body to se●z upon the Kingdom Wherefore be wise ô yee Princes and learned yee Iudges of the earth to discern not what best likes us and brings mo●t liberty This they Psal 2.2 did well enough discern and chu●e nor what hath been of some continuance for E●rours are ancient and Tares are sown when men sleep nor what is b●st agreeable to humane w●s●dome or grounds of Machivilian policy That is earthly wisedom and sensuall the bane of the Church But what is best pleasing unto the Lord. Discern who seek themselues and who Christ who are the servants of God and who worship Baal And serue the Lord in reverence kissing the Son lest he be angry and yee perish in the way of your desires Nource up no longer such cruell children as destroy their parents and take all in time to themselues as all doe to whom Princes giue more then they should Nource the Church and be as rain to the new mown field refreshing the righteous of the land that many soules may blesse you SECTION III.
the guiding and governing of the Church They are called Elders in respect of their age and office which was to govern with the Ministers and perform all private duties for the good of the congregation as necessity required as to pray w●th the sick to admonish reprou and joyn with the Minister in excommunication to ordain officers for the congregation and to provide by all good means for the outward good of the Church That these ought to be●n eve●y Congregation we hold firmly aga●●st the maintainers of this strange and uncouth discipline And it may appear first out of Math. 18 where Christs institutes what is needfull for the Church whereof this is one secondly the Church doth what it doth not confusedly but by the ministry of some thirdly the promise is made ●n binding and roosing to two or three which imposts that though the right of the keyes bee in the whole Church yet the Ministery therof is in some few selected and chosen out for that purpose Our Saviour alludes to the custome of the Iewish Synagogues wherein there were Eld●rs But howsoever this place may seem too weak at first sight to build the erection of this office upon yet the practise of the Apostles withall compared and the directions they haue left to the Church in this case will put all out of doubt to him that wrangles not for himselfe and to please men To goe along therfore in the Scripture and first the Acts of the Apostles which conta ns a type and map of the prim●tiue times and purest Chu●ches that ever were in the world ment●on these Acts 15.4 22 wh●ch place cannot be understood but of such ●u●ing Elders of the people as were amongst the ●ewes not of teaching Elders For the Apostles were as the Ministe●s and did perform all Ministeriall duties having none their Curats under th●m as Bishops had afterward For Evangelist were to accompany the Apostles in planting Churches neither ●s there any mention of any such here 2 They are d●stinguished here both from the Church called the brethren and Apostles Neither can this title be understood of Pastors because the Apostles were wont to appoint them onely when Churches were gathered and they were to leaue them as may appear Acts 14.23 Tit. 1.5 3 These here mentioned are as assistants to the Apostles governing and ordering the Churches businesse as both here and Acts 21 where they are present with the Apostles and in none other office nor use imployed but onely this Lastly Paul and Barnabas and some others came up to Ierusalem to the Apostles and Elders which had ca●e of the Discipline and Religion with them The third place is Rom. 12.8 he that rules in or with dilligence where first the Apostle distinguisheth this ruling both from the ministery of the Word and from distributing and shewing mercy Hence therfore there must be some to rule in the church 2 Men are charged according to their callings and measure of gifts received to exercise themselues for the churches good who sees not plainly that the Regiment of the church is not in one Lord Bishops hand since Bishops are not in each congregation where they rule 2 That this ought to be where the Ministry of the Word is 3 This diligence cannot be meant of a three yeares visitation nor yearly Synods wherein presentments are Rece ved what bold and impudent face once dare think so wickedly of the Apostles but of that continuall care and oversight which they should shew towards the sheep of Christ which ever need some spirituall med●cine and Phisick for their soules 4 A fourth place is 1 Cor. 12.28 where the Apostle reckons up the severall gifts and offices which God himselfe hath set and appointed in his church Apostles are chiefe then Prophets and Governments There the Apostle distinguisheth Governments from the Ministry of the word 2 Being appointed by the Lord none can remoue them but he againe 3 The Lord giues extraordinary meanes for soule and body in extraordinary times when a church is to be planted because there want ordinary means 2 to procure the more authority and respect to the church then and ever he giues sufficient 4 The Lord hath s●t government in the church which the Magistrate cannot alter 5 The church is a perfect body that hath members sufficient to uphold and m●n●ster to all its own necessities neither is this to be neglected that the holy Ghost both here and Rom. 12 sets Government after Deaconship as though hee saw how some would arise and conjoyn things severed by the Lord which to prevēt he shews these are not to be so conjoyned as though the Minister should haue all the government in his own hands but some speciall persons are to be assi●n●d wh●ch may govern the Minister themselues 5 1 Tim. 4.14 with imposition of hands of the Presbytery which is to be understood of the Colledge of Presbyters contayning these amongst others For these had a speciall hand in electing and ordaining all church-officers 2 these joyned in making decrees for the government of the church Act. 15 therfore much more in executing of them 3 Timothy was called ordinarily at first not to be an Evangelist as appears Acts 16 Paul called him to that after the Churches had witnessed of him 4 The Apostle Paul Acts 20 speaks to them amongst others that they ●●ould tend the Church and they hav ng government in their hands were to suffer no wolues to come in But because men of a contentious spirit whose greatest hopes depend upon the contrary discipline will ha●dly yeeld t●ll plain force driue them nay force of the word will not till the sword of the Magistrate compells therfore the next place is 1 Tim. 5.17 in deluding of which place many sweat much in vaine for the Apost●e being to giue direction to Timothy how to carry himselfe in the Church of God shews h m his duty towards every condition as widdows in the beginning of th s chapter next Elders and such as rule well are worthy of double honour especially such as labour in the word and doctrine which first words implyes necessarily that there were then in the Church Elders that did govern the Churches which did not labour in the word and doctrine 2 Such ought to be had in speciall account that doe rule well 3 Such as labour in the word and doct●ine ought more to be respected then they that onely governe 4 That all M●n●sters are to haue a spec●all hand in the governing of the Churches commuted to them I will not much insist upon this place more for I know some adversaries need not so much conv●ct on as to haue their h●a●ts perswaded Pray thou that readest that the Lord would perswade them to dwell in the t●nts of Shem and be content to suffer here with their brethren that th●y may ●a●gn with Christ hereafter Many adversaries will not set themselues to learn the t●●th but being drunk with selfe-concert th●nk nothing good
lightly passed over And the rather because they must liue in some pompe and worldly dignity and haue so many in their courts which liue upon the same meanes By this we may discerne what to judge of their excommunications for there ought to be for open sinnes unrepented of the persons being admonished therof and to be denounced by the M●nister and agreed upon by the whole Church Whese therfore the cause is meerly good for which men are excommunicated that is to say either for performing some Christ an duty or refusing subjection to mens trad●tions in the service of God there Christ absolues Ioh. 9. 2 When it is not done by the church that hath the keies but by some usurper that hath no right unto it it is like the sentence of a drunken man upon an other to be hanged or stabd because he will not pledg him or carrouse No mans sentence but the Iudges condemns nor any but they that God appoints judges Neither may men seek absolution from them for they haue no authority 2 Their excommunication is the crosse the Lord would haue men bear if we cannot avoide 3 They sever us but from the world and driue us neerer to Christ 4 It maintaines them in their usurpation covetousnesie and pr●d● to seeke unto them Quest 2. Whether a man may sue in their courts Answ For causes Ecclesiasticall o● criminall which come within compasse of the to be punished I think ●●s unlawfull For 1 men must rather protest against this wo●k of darknesse 2 These things may and ought to be ordered by Arb●t●ators if it be possible if the lawfull Magistrate fail suffer all c. And the a gument against suing one another 1 Cor. 6 holds more firmly against this first those were lawfull courts these unlawfull secondly it was scandalous then so it is here for they are as great enemies to sincere Religion as these were thirdly though a mans cause be never so good yet thou being one that fearest God truely they will sentence thee and pronounce unrighteous judgement against thy person not minding the justice of thy cause For a good man makes a good cause bad there as an evill man procures favour to a bad cause fourthly their authority is as Ecclesiasticall which is not in the K●ngs power to grant but must proceed from Christ fifthly they haue lost the keyes to whom they were g●ven Wee haue spoken of the first of those call ngs which flowing from the office of Diocesan Bishops is unlawfull Now of the second that as Church wardens comprehending those other bound to the same things they are enjoyned to Against which though the former grounds overthrow the●r call●ng yet more speciall are to be adjoyned because it ●s hard to root out any such long customary office though unlawfull For besides that most men preferre custome before the law of God they doe not once make scruple of any thing ●stablished but swa●low all that is presented unto them without examination Wherfore that with more facility wee may end this controversie obserue these grounds 1 That all men are bound to preseru that liberty which Chr●st hath purchased and bestowed upon them Gal. 5.1 And we are expresly b dden that men should not haue dominion over us e●ther over our soules to beleeu ye ld to what they teach Col. 2 or bodies in spiritual consideration for we are Christs 2 Every subject is bound to fight and striue with spirituall weapons ●or Christs Government and Kingdom to be set up where he is 3 That the meanest office under an un●awfull forme of gove●nment ●s part of that government and though not to deeply p●●nged in sin as oth●rs yet g●ilty of the●r sinns that are chief in a measure 4 That the●e ●s no part of Christs Kingd m nor no truth of the Word so small b●t ●t is worth suffering for and dying for as the godly Iewes surfered b●cause they would not cat Swines flesh Vpon these grounds and the like how discrepant and opposite these are to the government of Chr●st Fo● 1 these keep out the Lords own Officers of ruling Elders which we ha●e proved Christ hath left in h●s church they being in the Apostles t mes not contradicted b●t approved and therefore of Divine Institution In this resp●ct t●erfore they are like Diocesan Bishops who keep out Ministers and people too from their right in government of the church though they doe not equall them That they doe k●ep them out it is plain for they take upon them now to order things for the churches government so that ignorant people can discern no want This argument is firm because one ordinance of God doth not hurt nor keep out an other 2 That which keeps out Gods ordinance keeps out the Lord w●th some spec●all blessing for his children present in each of his o●d nances 3 This in part s●uts the Kingdom of God A second argument against Churchwardens is because these are corrupted and degenerated like the office of the m●nistery that was quite changed ●nto a Priesthood in times of popery So as now they ha●e lost their right in government of the church and yeelded shamefully to Ant●christ whose servants and vassals they were so long time together So as it is not more lawfull to be a Church warden then a Masse-priest for both of them receiu their present being from the man of Sin This argument is firm because such retain the Mark of the b●ast in part 2. The same l ght comming and the same spirit in a great and powerfull manner that was in the Apostles times all darknesse and corruption ought to be removed 3 These keep out the Deacons who are expresly commanded and appointed Acts 6 1 Tim. 3 and confound this with their office which shews both their office to bee new and unlawfull For that the Holy Ghost establi●hed the Apost●es both gaue charge th●y should be elected and they were in the p●●m●t●ue Church many yeares tog●ther t●●l Ant christ got the day and s●t up ●●s throne This is no small wrong to the church to keep out those that were to d●str●bute to the poore so carefully in each congregat●on that there should be no want to any they ea●●d the Mini sters and therfore are called Helps of which hereafter Wherfore as Ester spake of Haman in procur●ng the overthrow of the Iewes The enemy could not recompence the Kings losse no more can they fo● they wrong the poor giue not such testimony of their loue and liberall●ty wh●ch the office of the D●acon doth proclaim and make v●sible to the world Neither must wee think it enough that there are good lawes established For experience witnesseth the necessity hereof n●●ther ought men to confound what Chr st hath severed The Chr●stian Mag st ates duty is to see both Min●sters and people subject to Christs Ordinances not to invent any new 4 An office dev●sed by man ever serues man not God witnesse all the Hierarchy dev sed by Pope who
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
are reckoned up that are allowed by Christ which place is left as a rule of trying Ministers Try them by their office and use of the same 4 Math. 28.19.20 Ministers must goe and teach making others Christs Disciples and teach them to obseru what he hath commanded Reading Ministers hence are none for he that hath no authority from Christ hath none for he hath all authority in earth as well as in heaven Reading Ministers are not sent by Christ 2 They cannot so teach as others may be made the disciples of Christ 3 They cannot teach the converted to keep the Ordinances of Christ unto the end of the world which is added lest any should think that either men converted and Churches planted should not need the Ministery of the Word or that in some times of scarcity men may put in Readers 5 Math. 24. He that is not faithfull nor wise is not set over the family of the Lord to giue them their portion in due season But Reading Ministers are not faithfull nor wise neither know mens portions neither the portion of one nor another for they cannot discern twixt a civill man and the child of God neither know the portion of the weak nor of the strong neither can they giue each one their portion in due season This is plain by Experience 6 Whom the Holy Ghost hath not set over the people he is none but these are not set over by the Holy Ghost for there is no rule nor example to warrant them This Argument is grounded on Acts 20.28 where the Holy Ghost is the Author of the Ministery 2 The persons are Elders that are and ought to take heed to themselues and others 3 Are to feed and govern the Church of Christ which doth not agree to the order of Reading Ministers 7 He who is a Bishop of God must be apt to teach but these are not for they haue no Ministeriall gift nor haue they the form of wholesom doctrine This Argument is grounded upon Pauls Canons 1 Tim. 3.1 His wrok who is a Minister is so excellent that who is sufficient for these things But reading ministers haue no such work of excellency but any yong Scholler may be sufficient for this work Every true Minister is successor to the Apostles in the substance of their Calling which is teaching the whole counsell of God to that Congregation they are set over by the Holy Ghost But these Readers are successors to dumb Dogs and blind guides All divine relation is grounded either on the nature of the thing or some divine Institution which indeed is the proper ground To be a Minister is a Divine Relation and hath no such ground in these men Object 1. These are sent by the Church therfore they haue authority Answ It is the priviledge of Christ by his Spirit to send forth Ministers as may appear Math. 28 compared with Acts 20.28 2 the Church hath no authority against the Word this is against the Word to haue such Ministers 3 the Church hath no more authority in Ordination then in Excommunication but Ioh. 9 whom men had unjustly excommunicated the Lord absolved Object 2. These are called dumb dogs therfore Dogs Answ The argument is not firm from the name to the thing For the divill raised up by the witch of Endor is called Samuel 2 they are so called that it may be known to whom the Holy Ghost speaketh From hence it is plain how unlawfull a thing it is to joyn with Reading ministers in any ministeriall duty either praying or administring the Sacraments For 1 All worship done to the Lord must be justifiable by the Word and warranted by same But this worship is not There is no place of Scripture to proue the lawfulnesse of this service done by a Reader This argument is strong For the Scripture is a perfect rule for all things but especially for the worship of God And to use another worship then can be warranted is to sin against the Lord and to follow blind devotion without judgement which brings us to death 2 It was the sinne of Ieroboam that as he devised a new worship so new Priests of the lowest of the people This is both a new worship never known in the Church t●ll Antichrist got in to haue onely a s●t form of prayer and they are of the lowest of the people that are ministers of it wherfore it is but as Ieroboams worship 3 Christ is not there by his institution gifts nor spirit which is the very life of Christian duties And the servants of God must be where their Master is which is where m●n are gathered together in his name which is by his institution and gifts and presence of his holy Spirit 4 These are no true Ministers as is proved before therfore not safe to joyn with them that which they doe is not pleasing to God they having no Calling therunto it is like the sacrifice of Core and Dathan and the sacrifice of Vzzah 5 Men cannot thriue nor grow in grace by such exercis●s that haue grace already they cannot come to see the●r misery nor be st●rred up to r●nue the●r ●ep●ntance that haue this grace already nor can they keep the Sabboth hereby W●tn●sse the exper●ence of poore Christians ●n this case t●at are spirituall and can judge of th●ngs these being wells and clouds without water 6 Men cannot possibly be fitt●d to ●eceiu the Lords Supper by such a M●nistery for th●s requires that each should b● able to examine himselfe which none can doe but such as are taught the g●ounds of Relig●on 2 Men should be st●rred up to this duty being all so backward as is pla n in the practise of the Cori●t●●ans which these m●n cannot doe Now what dang●r it is to receiue the Lords Supper unwo●thily you may see 1 Cor. 11 What good or benefit can a man haue by a dumb Dog or a blinde Gu●d● 7 The people should seek the law at his mouth whose lippes prese u knowledge Mal. 2 and goe to that shepheard that can feed them and that Watchman that can admonish them of danger but th●se mens lips doe not preseru knowledge 8 These make no difference having no discerning but reade Apocryphall writings and all that is in their way wh●ch being directly aga●nst the Word command●ng Chr●st on●ly to be hea●d how can men joyn in the same w●th any comfo●t 9 Men hard●n the ●gnorant in this ev●ll way and g●ue offence both to the b●nd Min●st●●s and people mak●●g as t●ough this were s●fficient to salvat on 10 Men by this p●oclaine the●r small accou●t of Gods own Ord●nances which they might enjoy by the same pa ne● cost o● removall or ●lse profite themse●ues more in pr●vate You therfore dear br●thren that liue under such consid●r wh●t you do● you liue as Athi●sts indeed upon the ma●te● For what are your prayers and rec●iving of Sac●am●nts which you th nk is the best serv ce of God but a provoking of the
conscience without warrant from the Word You that accuse the truth of God of fa●●ood that oppose ho●●nesse and sincere obedi●nce to the whole word You that make sad the hearts of the righteous and preach●ng pleasing things st●●ngthen the hand of the w cked that none can ret●r● from h●s wickednesse that propound the truths you teach generally and confusedly in frothy eloquence glorying to fill your Sermons with patcht up sentences of heathens Beware and turn and flie from the wrat● to come You lay open the land to m●sery Will not that moue you to pitty And to stir up your selues to preach sincerely and dilligently you bring the bloud of soules upon your heads Ezech. 34. Woe be to you without repentance for the Lo●d will be sanctified in them that come neer him and you shall be despised or destroyed The Lord will raise him a faithfull Samuel in your sted who shall speak his words faithfully to his people Shift it not off saying this is the word of some malicious foolish Puritan for these woes are against such sinnes which whether they be in you I referre it to the Lord your own conscience and all indifferent men to judg This I would not haue thought as spoken against all that conform God forbid But against such as conforming or not conforming liue scandalously and are ●nemies to the Gospell of Christ not enduring others should exceed them ●n g●fts or pa●●s in their M●nistery or in strictnes●e of l●fe Hear you or else the Lord will curse your blessings and your great l●v●ngs shall make you the more miserable SECTION XV. TO proceed without w●tnesses by the oat● ex officio is not lawfull against any especially against M●n●sters For 1 It ●s aga●nst the law of God Deut. 17.4 19.15 this law is confirmed by Chr st and his Apostles in the new T●stament 2 It is aga●nst the law of nature to accuse our selues nature teacheth men to procure their own good 3 It is against the direct command of our Saviour Math. 18 where he would haue no censure of the Church to p●sse upon men except they being admoni●●ed be proved by two or three w●tnesses to bee obstinate 4 It is against common reason that Ministers and Christians that are subj●ct to most vile and false reports should be forced to purge themselues upon every light and vaine persons informat●on 5 It is against the rule of Paul 1 Tim. 5 Against an Elder receiu not an accusation under two or three witnesses 6 It is against the laws of the land both Statute and Common laws 7 It is against the nature of an human law which is but to punish for open sinnes Deut. 17.4 8 It is to search the th●ngs God leaues by his providence to be revealed in their time 1 Tim. 5.24 Some mens sinnes goe before and some follow after 9 It is against all equity For men may be both judges and parties 10 It is against the law of loue to accuse our brethren and it it is to play the divels office 11 No law nor custom of Nations saue the Spanish Inquisition useth this for searching out of true Christians Acts 25.16 12 It is against the speech and solemn profession of Doctor Whitgift that any should haue this oath urged against them in case of life liberty or scandall 13 It is against all conscience that a man should bring himselfe into trouble If the Lord or his Magistrates do inflict a punishment patience may bear and the Lord may giue strength But who can look for such peace when we are our own executioners 14 It is against the pract●se of our Saviour Chr●st who being accus●d and asked many things of scandalls would answer nothing onely he witnessed a good confession touching his person and his office Matth. 26 27. 15 It is to approue of some speciall priviledg in these men which is not in any other of his Majesties officers for just●ce that these ex mero officio should proceed against men 16 From the inconveniences men fall into that take this oath The a●ticles and interrogatories being drawn as snares to intangle men in and to get matter against them when they can finde none apparant 17 It is against the law of friendship to reveal secrets and especially for Ministers 18 As it is now used it will not free men from trouble for they use extremities to them that take it except men forsake their sincerity and yeeld to their wills 19 It is against the nature of an oath which is to end a controversie amongst men in causes criminall before Iudges neither can any use hereof be given 20 It is against the word of the Lord in Ieremy Thou shalt swear in judgment 21 Wisedom in Governours hath other means then this to find out secret offences w●tnesse Solomon Object 1. The woman suspected of adultery was to purge he● self Answ The thing there suspected is very evill such as might dissolue marriage 2 It is Ceremoniall witnesse the Ceremony annexed to it having joyned with it a miraculous event in the guilt e. 3 The thing is known about which shee is to be sworn 4 It is but one particular case not many interrogatories Object 2. Exod. 22.10.11 The man that is suspected of theft ought to clear himself by an oath Answ It was before the Iudges of the land 2 It was in cases criminall that were simply evill and not in cases of conscience 3 There was an open wrong and losse to the one pa●ty 4 It was but to one particular not to ●nsnare him any way 5 His oath ended the controversie Now these things cannot be found in this for it is not b●fore the Iudges of the land though I would not much stand w●th them for it yet it hath ever been of evill report for Ministers to deal by vio●ence in so much as in t●mes of Popery the Clergie so called were abashed themselues to condemn any 2 These things for which they object the oath to us are meerly good and not punishable by any of the laws of the Land It is necessary first to convince the party that to doe such things as are objected suppose to meet together and pray are simply evils and sins 2 to proue them punishable by the laws of the Land 3 Here is no wrong by the exercises of Religion to any but much good what difference there is then any may discern 4 Here are many insnaring interrogatories and men search not so much for the truth as to wring it out after such a manner as may be prejudiciall to him that sweareth there is as much subtilty and uncharitablenesse shewed herein as in any thing 5 In this oath the controversie is not ended but many times begun SECTION XVI HEre it will not be amisse to insert some ●hings of the communion wh ch the 〈◊〉 may haue in private to perfo●m private duties F●●st therfore o●serue these grounds 1 What duties cannot be perform●d in publ●que ought to be performed in p●ivate
the Lord. Secondly where the Gospell is soundly preached and men yeeld obed●ence to the known t●uth therto we may saf●ly joyn For these are the ●eep of Christ Ioh. 10. Object The Gospell is not faithfully preached many truths are concealed Answ The main and fundamentfull truths which giue life to a Christian are purely and wholly taught as the doctrine of fa●th and ●epentance 2 Other circumstantiall truths are taught too 1 generally to the und●●stand●ng of the w●se 2 in practis● in that men doe abstain from all things they judg● to be sinne 3 They suffer that is sa●d upon them for refusall hereunto 4 Some haue taught th●se t●uths controv●●t d by writing and private R●solut●on Suppose ●t bee a want amongst us as I confesse men haue been too wary for the most part in this kinde yet notwithstanding consider each want doth not bring a nullity of the Ministery 3 Reason Men must not separate till the Lord separate for Gods people must follow th● Lo●d not goe before him and they must not be holyer then hee who is of purest eyes Now the Lord is not s parated till hee giue men over and send no mo●e Prophets to turn them to h●m for till then though men haue forsaken th● Lord yet he forsakes not them 4 All Christians are bound to follow the Lamb whersoever he goes and joyn with him against the sinns of the times therfore m●n should not separate so and leaue Christ but each to help and stand for Reformation incouraging the servants of the Lord that are sent out to protest against corruptions 5 No instance can be given that ever the servants of God haue severed or were commanded to seperate further then from the corruptions of the time to haue no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darknesse to touch no unclean thing 6 Men mourning for sin not acting nor joyning in consent in any known evill are not guilty of others sins therfore Lot was not guilty of Sodoms sin seeing they vexed his righteous soule 2 Pet. 2.7 Eze. 9 in the Churches of England men may doe thus 7 This kinde of separation obscures the good providence of God towards the land which giues some liberty in his service but with some paines cost and other crosses which usually accompany the pure worship of God This is no small sin to bereaue the Lord of the glory of so great mercy in spiritual blessings as he hath shewed towards our land Secondly this passeth rash judgment upon many reverend Preachers and godly people Thirdly men hereby despise and so loose the b●nefit of the prayers of the Saints which is the greatest ben●fit in the wo●ld next to t●e min●ste●y of the Wo●d Fourthly men so separate as they joyn to no reformed Church that holds and pract●seth the same holy Ordinances of God which they desire and walk in the same way of obedi●nce with them 8 Wheras they might giue testimony to the truth in suffering for the Ordinances of God now they suffer for separation from the Word preached 9 The power of the Gospell doth as much app●ar in any of the Professors being in our Chu●ch as it doth when they are separated wh●ch should not if they onely had t●e O●d●nances of God 10 Gods children may eat their own meat though dogs and sw●ne be admitted through the neg●●gence of th●m that should exerc se Discip●●n● Wherfore b●●thren follow after truth b●t●n loue that you may haue the more inward pe●c● and doe the more good Oppose errour b●t not any truth fight against t●e world but s●●rr not agai●st the ch●●d●en of God Make not the Church weak by your r●nting from it nor giue occasion to the adversaries to speak evill of those truths you hold and ordinances of God which you seek SECTION XVIII BEcause it is so often in the mouths of men that these things controverted are things indifferent therfore it will not bee amisse to set down some speciall rules for discerning and using things indifferent A thing indifferent properly is a mean twixt good and evill and in it selfe neither good nor evill 1 It is a mean seated twixt the extreams having not the nature of either extrem So that a thing commanded or forbidden by the Lord is not indifferent 2 Twixt good and evill therfore that which is a mean in respect of some other sin is not indifferent as fornication is lesse ●vill then adultery yet evill and not indifferent the like may be said of degrees of goodnesse 3 In it selfe that is in its own nature for in the particulars every action is good or evill So that the goodnesse or evill of a thing indifferent is not from it selfe but from the user if he be pure or impure from the circumstances from the manner of doing it So that an action of the same kinde may be evill in one in another commendab●e The laws of man cannot make the th●ngs that are indifferent simp●y good or evill ●o● t●en they should change the very nature of things which men cannot What things are indifferent THe things that are indifferent are such as are left unto mans free cho se for the exerc●se of wisedom fa●th sobriety loue and the l●ke graces of God in h●m Where by the way we may obserue why some things are left indifferent 1 Because in their own nature they are neither good nor ev●●l and therfore not to be commanded or fo●b●dden 2 Because the Lo●d would haue a●l his grac●s and the powers of mens soules to be the more exerc●sed for the hardest th●ngs in Religion are often about things in●●fferent 3 There s●ould be infinite rules given then for these cases are innumerable and so the knowledg of things absolutely needfull should be hindred The particular kinds of things indifferent are 1 Meats and drinks it is true there is nothing of it selfe unclean 2 Garments are things indifferent 3 Recreations 4 The time of publique assembling together upon the Sabboth 5 And lastly whatsoever a man may doe w●thout impiety towards God or wrong to man In the use of things indifferent first every man must learn the right use from the Word 1 Tim. 4 for our own reason is very bl●nd here●n and custom exceeding corrupt and this must the rather be rememb●●d Because 2 Man must giue account to Christ for his using things indifferent 3 Every man must be fully perswaded in h●s own conscience that the thing hee doth is lawfull n it selfe this perswasion is a certain knowledg in his own heart and conscience from the light of the Word and the sp●rit of God shining in him This excluds doubting 1 that is sin So is 2 depending upon others or following others example 3 When men are perswaded but by shews of reason or of men not by sound grounds out of the Scripture 4 Each man must be very wise in using this liberty 1 Men must discern what is expedient and may further to edifie others 2 Men must discern times and circumstances 5 Men must
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
but they must learn by hearing the Word of the Lord. Which things are plain against our Ceremonies For 1 men haue no word for these therfore they are unlawfull 2 Men adde by carnall reason unto the ordinances and worship of God these Ceremonies which is as unlawfull as to detract any Ceremony and ordinance God hath appointed to his people 3 These hinder the keeping of Gods Commandements 1 Because carnall reason is unmortified that leads men 2 Men please their affections both which hinder Gods Commandements from being kept Rom. 8. 3 Men dote upon their devises whē they are used which hinders them frō●ouing the Lord and his ordinances with all their hea●t 4 Men so striue to bring in these and to keep them in as that all their labour is spent herein If it be said that this is meant of adding or detracting in the substance of Gods worship Answ This cannot be so understood 1. Because the Lord forbids all adding and this in Ceremonies is adding 2 Because the Lord binds to the manner prescribed as well as to the matter Deut. 32. 3. Men may not adde in doctrine nor detract therfore not in Ceremonies 4 Because the Lord punished them when they varied in the least Ceremonie and circumstance from the pattern in the mo●●nt Arg. 5. Deut. 7. All the monuments of Idolatry should be destroyed 2 The Church ought to haue speciall outward holines more then any other people hath a part wherof is in overthrowing such pollutions 3 The Lord will haue all sorts of Images to be destroyed The Lord will not have his chidren communicate with Idolaters either in their religious Ceremonies or outward communion Hence we learn 1 That these ought to be destroyed since they are to us monuments of Popery they bring that to our remembrance 2 Now they are appendants of that religion onely at this day 3 They are as dangerous to us as the monuments of these Gentils were to the Iews 4 The Lord will haue his children goe as far from Idolatry as is possible now wee retayning their Ceromonies haue Communion with them If it be said this place speaks of them that are open Idolaters and had devised these things themselues The Answer is that Papists are open Idolaters 2 They devised these things of themselues and though they should be before Popery yet they might be and were beginnings of Popery Arg. 6 Dev. 7. two last verses Things dedicated to Idols and abused in state of worship may not be turned to private uses much lesse to publick in the service of God 2 That men should utterly detest and shew their greatest hatred against the monuments and things abused to Idolatry 3 These are accursed things and men coveting the same become accursed 4 Man may not pick things lawfull in themselues out of idolatrous worship and apply them to what use he will This place is against these Ceremonies in question that haue been in state of religious worship therfore ought to be abandoned 2 Men are bound both inwardly and outwardly to manifest their great detestation and loathing of such things therfore ought not to use them 3 The retaining of th●se things brings curses upon minister and people God Layes a speciall curse upon his own creatures abused to Idolatry much more upon mans devises Object This place holds but for the individuals not for the generals For Gold might be used and that afterwards about the service of God Answ 1. These Ceremonies were never in use but Religious and therfore the Argument holds firm à pari from the like All the Gold that was defiled by Idolaters ought to be abhorred So all Crosses and Surplusses haue been abused for they had no other use therfore to be abhorred 2 Gold in it selfe as it is the creature is not here detested but in this form and for this use So the matter simply of a Surplus as it is the creature is not unlawful no the other Ceremonies but in this form and applyed to this use which is in the generall of Crosses and Surp●esses which was but in speciall for the other 3 The Lord brought in Gold and Images too of diverse creatures into the Temple But this Law is not to binde the Lord as none other is For laws binds the creature not the Creator therfore it remains firm that these being such accursed things should be utt●r●y abandoned and though pickt out amongst many yet without question far worse then the gold about the Images Arg. 7. Deut. 12.3 the very names of idols ought to be rooted out of the places where they haue been worshipped and v. 30 31 men may not chuse how they will seru the Lord. 2 God will not be served by his people in the manner nor with those things appointed by man that Idolaters worship their God withall for they bring in every thing that the Lord abhors 3 Men are not to adde any thing to the worship commanded of God though they keep the substance and adde but little 4 Whatsoever is not commanded in the worship of God is forbidden These grounds are plain out of the text and they are sufficient if we had no more places of Scripture to overthrow these Ceremonies For 1 if the names of Idolls should be destroyed then much more these ceremonies which are much more accursed 2 These Ceremonies were of mens chusing at first and therfore unlawfull then 3 Idolaters worship God at their Idols after the same manner with these things therfore they are unlawfull and if these be admitted why not all Popish trumpery upon the same grounds 4 Our Churches retain the substance of Gods worship yet they adde these of their own devising which is directly against the commandement 5 They are not warranted any where wherfore forbidden to all Arg. 8 Deut. 14.1.2 1 Men in civill things should not be like Idolaters nor follow their fashions 2 Holy people must avoide all outward things which may defile them and they must be as the Lord would haue them 3 The Lord severs his people from all other people in their Rytes and Ceremonies This place is very direct against these things 1 Because it is more to be like Idolaters in religious reverence then in civill fashions And suppose these should be used but for a civill respect amongst us they were unlawfull as they are now used in the Colledges of the Vniversities 2 It is not in any mans power to ordain and appoint what garment they will or Ceremonies to be used 3 It is sin to joyn and be one with those from whom the Lord severs now the Lord severs us from Papists and the Lords will is we should differ from them in these rites as well as in doctrine Obj. This was spoken to the Israelites in respect of the heathens Answ The causes are generall wee are the children of the Lord 2 We ought to be as holy as they 3 the Lord hath chosen us to be a peculiar people unto himselfe from Popery
and Mahumetanism and Iudaism and Heathenism Arg. 9. Deut. 16.21 Men must not bring any thing of their own devising neer the Ordinances of God 1 Men may not set up statues or pillars for religious use This place is firm against the Ceremonies controverted because Crosse Surplus and Kneeling are brought neer the Ordinances of God which makes the same unlawfull as if they were parts of Gods worship in their Confession 2 They are statutes and pillars for religious uses Iudg. 8.29 Good intents not directed by the Word proue very hurtfull in the end to the devisers 2 All men take the least occasions to follow superstition 3 Mens inventions draw their hearts wholly to them from the Lords true worship since they are their own children as it were This place is direct against our Ceremonies they haue good intents as order and decency c. But men are not directed by the Word no more then Gideon was in his Ephod therfore they will proue hurtfull even to be a snare to them that establish them and their posterity And they are not friends nor Seers to the State that draw authority to presse these upon any 2 When occasions and stumbling blocks are laid before men they fall straight generally neither will doctrine prevent the same therfore these ought to be abandoned and it is presumpt on in any to use or retain them 3 These rob the Lord of that due worship he should rece●u from us wherfore as theeus such ceremonies ought to be severely dealt withall and quite cast out like Agar when she beganne to be so presumptuous as to exalt her selfe aboue her Mistresse as these doe already the most more esteeming them then they doe the Ordinances of God Arg. 10. From examples 2 Chron. 29.25 David and Salomon did nothing in the service of God but what they had expresse particular direction for 1 Chron. 28.11.19 Hence we obseru that that which was not lawfull for Prophets and men of such excellent pa●ts and authority is not lawfull for any other Magistrate or Minister These had shewed them how they should build the Lords Temple in every particular work for his service This reason is firm because all the Kings of Iudah as they were zealous and forward for the truth so they had care to bring the people and Priests to that form which David and Solomon left for Religion And hence it may appear that mens wisedom is to doe things according to the will of the Lord not to vary any thing from the pattern given and bring in Ceremonies or their own devising Arg. 11 out of 1 King 12.28 Ieroboams sinne was in departing from the pure worship of God 1 In regard of the place he chose Dan and Bethel 2 In the manner hee set up Calucs as signes of Gods presence 3 He made a house of high places where they should offer sacrifice 4 That he made Priests of the lowest of the people 5 That he ordained a feast of his own heart 6 All this hee did for carnall policy lest the people should again return to Rehoboam 7 This he did in shew with great advise and counsell wheras he had resolved afore what to doe As for the first things cannot be committed so now since the Lord hath not bound his people to any certain place yet this is to be observed how they doe enjoyn men not to go where the Word is most purely sincerely taught and take such places where there is nothing many times acceptable to the Lord. 1 Though men set not up graven Images yet these Ceremonies are breaches of the second commandement as those were since they are similitudes for Religious ends 2 Men tye the Lord to teach by them and put his children in remembrance and work upon the affections by them to stirre up the dull minde of man and to teach man not to be ashamed of Christ 3 What are their great Cathedrall Churches but houses of high places First because they draw men from their particular Congregations Secondly because they are built in that form and for such use as is not warranted to haue their singing and chanting which is as meer Barbarism as if they did it in a strange language 4 Doe not these make their Priests of the lowest of the people ignorant sots This is too plaine Doe they not admit their singing men to offer up prayers and thanksgiving unto God 2 Every man that hath some learning though unfit to teach and scandalous in life is suffered 5 Doe they not ordain feasts of their own heart as are all the feastivall daies 6 Is not their fear if the people should haue the true manner of Gods worship they would depart from their Canonicall Obedience 7 Doe they not seem to consult and proceed by advise in their Convocation house when it is plain they had determined what to doe before Arg. 12 2 King 21.4 7 In Ierusalem will I put my name Hence Obseru 1 that the worship of the Lord is his name 2 Where the Lord is worshipped nothing but of the Lords appointment ought to come This place is direct against these ceremomonies First because none is to manifest the Lords face in any manner or institution besides the Lord himselfe Secondly the Lord being worshipped amongst us none of these being humane inventions ought to come in place Arg. 13. 2 Kings 23. 1 All the instruments of Idolatry ought to be destroyed 2 The places that haue been hallowed for Idolatrous service men ought chiefly to pollute 3 The Priests that haue been Idolaters should not bee admitted to the Altar of God This proues these Ceremonies should be quite abolished since they haue been and are instruments of Idolatry as it is apparant in Popery 2 If places should be defiled then much more ceremonies that are more ta●nt●d secondly lesse necessary 3 Ministers may repent and yet in this case not be admitted What then shall wee say of Ceremonies that cannot be sanctified nor cleansed by any man as men may be and are repenting by the Lord Grounds of this law and practise 1 The great purity and holinesse of the Lord. 2 The detestation and hatred all ought to haue and to shew against all Idolatry and false worship we ought to be jealous as the Lord is 3 To prevent apostacy and backsliding in times to come 4 To prevent danger to the weak Arg. 14 2 Chron. 15 The order amongst Ministers and publique persons ought to be observed v. 10. 2 True Ministers must keep the charge of the Lord v. 11. Hence it is plain that Gods order and that distinction he hath made should stand and none of mans be brought in 2 Ministers must serue the Lord onely according to his commandement and not worship God according to mans will Argum. 15 2 Chron. 15.17 the high places ought to haue been removed Hence obseru 1 that all worship ought not onely to be for the substance allowed of God and 2 for the person performing it
for the minister of the gospell such are these therfore not fit to come near the Lord nor are decent garments for the minister of the Gospell 5 Men must protest against it and goe as far as is possible frō it But now men protest for the covering though they forsake the Idolatry 2 Men cast it not away but draw it near unto them and come near the Papists herein 6 Men cast them not away with disgrace but honour them in bringing them into the service of the Lord and speak well of them Hence we see it is not nicenes but a care to keep a good conscience makes the ministers and people of God abhor these Ceremonies in question Arg. 21. Out of Hos 2.16.17 Things lawfull abused to Idolatry are defiled and ought to be abandoned as the name of Baali 2 The Lord will haue nothing like Idolaters in his service he hates all names and memorialls of Idols 3 The Lords people should not name Idols without detestation 4 The utter abolishing of Idolatry is the way to all happines for a kingdom This place is playn against our Ceremonies though they were lawfull at first institution yet now Idolatry defiles them and they ought to be abandoned 2 The Lord will not haue us serue him outwardly like Idolaters in the least Ceremonie For names are lesse then Ceremonies Therfore what the Lord abhors no man must dare to bring near him But he hates and forbids these as it is playn in the text 3 The Lord is wonderful Iealous of his true worship he will not haue the heart lift up unto vanity nor the mouth speak of Idols except it be to reproue them the Lord makes all his people such Consider yourselues therfore all yee that can endure well enough these Ceremonies whether the Image of God in this respect be in you or no Hence it is playn men are bound to that utter detestation and loathing of idolatrous signes and garments and gestures which some shew in England Because this promise must be fulfilled 2 Men are married to Christ therfore it fits they should be chast and far from all shew of whorish behaviour and lightnesse such as the whore of Rome teacheth 3 This is the best way to root out Idolatry utterly and to establish the true service of God 4 This is the best way to all happinesse to a Kingdom which we ought by all lawfull meanes to procure What haue they deserved therfore at your hands that you should thus deal with them that seek your good in all their courses Their preaching praying and living you cannot deny And in this the Holy Ghost clears them Be encouraged therfore every faithfull subject and good Christian to continue thine hatred of all Romish Reliques for certainly this will bring good to your selues and the land too Arg. 22. Mat. 15.3.4.5 1 All Traditions that cause the breach of any commandement are utterly unlawfull 2 It is the property of humane Traditions to cause the breach of Gods commandements 3 Men that joyn their traditions with Gods commandements doe what lies in them to throw the Lord out of his Throne 4 It is a sign of hipocrisie to be zealous in urging humane Traditions 5 The breach of a human Tradition doth not defile men 6 Men are not bound to the Traditions of the Elders This place is plain against our Ceremonies 1 Doe they not cause the breach of each commandement of God as is learnedly proved in a discourse of the Crosse and especially this commandement that men should be apt to teach and carefull to teach which now is made voide by this For men say if he be a quiet peaceable conformable man it is well 2 They cause those the Lord hath sent to be thrust out and the fathers of mens spirituall life to be neglected 3 That which causeth breach of Gods commandements should not men abandon and abhor 2 Should men bring their own traditions into the Church 3 These Ceremonies will doe hurt if they be not cast out before it is their nature and property to doe hurt and they are ever worse in the latter end then at first 4 Is it not presumption and rebellion against God to joyn mens own devises to the Ordinances of God without warrant from God And are not men to keep the Lords right in standing against them 5 Should such hypocrisie be seen amongst us that men should presse with violence their own traditions and be like the Scribes who when they teach the law of God are without power Mat. 7. 6 These commandements of men are made doctrines to teach So are all our Ceremonies as it is plain by the Preface to them Grounds therfore besides these mention●d why we should stand against them are out of this place 1 The servants of God are not bound to mens traditions 2 The great esteem men haue of their own traditions which Gods servants should protest against 3 The great inconvenience that comes by some of their traditions in sight as hath been shewed before and shall be God willing hereafter 4 The true zeal men should bear to haue the Lords commandements kept which cannot be where these are so much esteemed 5 Avoyding hypocrisie 6 It is but lost labour to worship God thus 23 Arg. out of Mark. 11.16 1 Things of good use out of Gods service ought not to come into the house of the Lord. 2 Nothing but that which the Lord hath s●nctified ought to come neer him witnesse Na●ab and Abihues strange fire This place is plain against all our Cereremonies even Kneeling because though of good use in other parts of Gods worship yet in this it ought not to come 2 These Ceremonies should not be admitted n●ere the Lord since they are not sanctified and men endanger themselues that presum to bring them neer the Lord. Wherfore Ministers ought to their uttermost power seek the abolishing of these ceremonies in this they are like unto Christ Arg. 24. Ioh. 2.15.16 1 In darksome times many things are corrupted in the service of God as twixt Malachy and Christ which the light comming burns up 2 The Lord will not admit any mans devises to further the service of God besides the Word 3 Mens colourablest devises in Gods worship when they are considered by a zealous heart are vile and odious 4 True zeal is for the Lords pure worship and service 4 True zeal is with fervent desire of reformation of small matters in shew being amisse This place is plain against our Ceremonies they came in in the times of Popery and the light of the Gospell discovers them to be filthy and hath cast them out of many places already 2 The Lord will not admit these ceremonies to further his worship what he saw convenient and fitting he commanded neither let men think their comelinesse and decency shall be omitted for these are commanded by the Word These Ceremonies haue not so good use as those mens commodities wherin they seemed to doe good and
shew care both of Gods worship that it might be ever provided for and mans ease and speed that he might haue ready at hand sacrifices to offer 3 What true zeal abhors ought to be constant but true zeal abhors these therfore Here are Grounds therfore to stand against all 1 Because shew of reason is no sufficient ground to bring any thing into the service of God 2 Bringing in of these things defiles the house of God It is not therfore foolish precisenesse but the image of Christ that would haue these things utterly cast out of Gods worship Arg. 25 out of Ioh. 4.22 23. 1 Men that worship the true God after their own manner worship they know no● what 2 The worship of God in the time of the new Testament is not carnall but spirituall This place is directly against all our Ceremonies now in controversie 1 Because men worship without ground as the Samaritans did neither doe they know they are accepted 2 This worship is carnall and Iewish we ought to worship God in spirit and not in any outward things of mans appointing This place therfore doth warrant men to stand against these traditions of men 1 Because every one ought to be assured that that which he doth unto the Lord bee accepted of him which the Word onely doth teach 2 The true worship of God onely brings salvation and good unto men 3 Men must worship God in spirit and truth and so they haue all such promises made good unto them as the Lord manifests in his Word Such are promised to haue their hearts circumcised to judg themselues vile c. Hence therfore it may well be demanded how men can suspend Ministers for not conforming to such things as ought not to be used in time of the new Testament Arg. 26 out of Col. 2. 1 Vers 3. All the Church needs to know is manifested by Christ in his Word Sacraments and Discipline 2 Vers 6. As men haue received Christ so they must walk in him without adding or diminishing or altering 3 V. 8. Traditions of men that are not from Christ deceiu● and ought to be taken heed of 4 V. 10. Whatsoever the Lord would haue us know or doe in his service hee hath revealed by Christ therfore Order is taught 5 Men that walk according to the light received by Christ are perfect and need not nor ought they take from any other 6 V. 18. Men must not subject themselus to be taught or judged by others without the word and except they haue that doctrin and judgment from Christ 7 V. 20. It is a thing very absurd for Christians freed by Christ from Ceremonies of God to be brought in bondage to mens traditions 8 It is the world not the true Church that stands upon human devises 9 V. 21. False Teachers sanctifie that which God leaues indifferent 10 V. 22. Mens meer commands and doctrine in matters of religion are of small value the word of God onely giues life to outward Ordinances to be the worship of God 11 Mens devised traditions haue but a shew of wisedom men endued with the spirit can see foolishnesse in them 12 Mans most glorious inventions in any will-worship are of no reckoning or worth 13 Mens traditions that seem most to profit in any kinde doe not but nourish corruption directly These grounds plainly overthrow all our traditions and government Ecclesiasticall as may appear in each particular 1 If these things had been necessary Christ would haue taught them and they might haue been learned from his Word 2 Every man is bound out directly from altering any thing or adding in doctrine or traditions to the Church Therfore wee are bound to the primitiue times and the example of Christ and his Apostles Now we haue nothing for these Ceremonies nor this Government from Christ but receiu him without Crosse or Surplus from the Apostles therfore wee ought not to receiue the same nor walk in them 3 Men doe but deceiue others that urge these Ceremonies 2 We are in effect bidden here not to Crosse wear the Surplus or Kneel since they are but traditions of men 4 This order is not from Christ nor is it pleasing to the Lord. 5 It is foolishnesse to superad to Christs bond of perfection which hee hath set Christians 2 Nothing devised by man can make any jot better for they are perfect by Christ 3 None ought to put away such as obseru Christs rules from the service of God being Ministers or people since the Lord counts them perfect 4 to receiue these as better then without is to deny perfection by Christ 6 The Churches doctrine if it be not Christs doctrine is nothing 2 Men must not beleeue such as preach things they cannot proue by the Word 3 Mens judging thee except the Word condemns thy doing and thy person should not fear thee 7 It is not the spirit of the Apostles to urg humane Ceremonies so strictly upon men 2 Christ hath set us free from all manner of Ordinances in his worship that are not from him and will justifie our not conforming to them 8 To urge these upon us is to make the Church like the world Christs Spouse like the whore of Babel 2 It is a note of worldlings that they urge and yeeld with all willingnesse to humane traditions 9 Doe not men sanctifie the Crosse and Surplus Festivall times and this Government which Christ hath never commanded but forbidden 10 There is no word for these Ceremonies and therfore they are none of Gods worship 11 These ceremonies are but the commandements of men and doctrines of men and therfore in Gods worship not to be yeelded unto since human authority is not sufficient to bind in Gods worship 12 This government seems onely to be but is not a wise invention for it is a means rather of much confusion and hurt as is shewed before 2 Ceremonies haue done no good but hurt both to Papists and Protestants though in carnall policy they were retained at first therfore all arguments for these are but a shew of wisedom let none be deceived with them 2 Men that refuse these ceremon●es haue true knowledg and discern that the opposits are deceived and missed 3 Men are not to use them since Christians are to be truely wise not in shew onely 13 Men are not to offer up that to the Lord which is nothing worth halt and maimed things 2 Men are not one whit the worse for omitting humane traditions 3 How can this be justified in the sight of God to depriue Ministers of their Ministery and people of their food for trifles 14 These Ceremonies please the flesh onely and therfore are not to be used By all these it may appear that Christians haue great cause to withstand all human traditions 1 The commandement of the Apostle speaking immediatly from Christ 2 Christian liberty dearly purchased for which we are to stand 3 These things are meerly unprofitable Therfore doe not please your selues
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
the Word makes that their ministery grow farre lesse respected People should be driven from Formality and superstition that now come to delight themselues in unprofitable Ceremonies and so delude the Law Then should that be fulfilled Hos 2.18 Popish grounds for maintaining their devises should fall and so Babell should bee cast down and the way shut against all superstition hereafter Thus men shall bring that blessing upon them Psal 137. The people that are in bondage so as they may not examine things but receiu all should freely try the spirits and so hold that which is good Peace should be established 1 With the Lord where they that break the least of his commandements and teach men so shall be counted little or none in the Kingdom of God 2 Peace with our Christian Prince that is over us when as the adversaries of Gods people shall haue nothing like the adversaries of Daniel to accuse them off then shall the King be to the just as the rain upon the mowen grasse Psal 72. 3 Then shall there be peace twixt inferiour Magistrates and Ecclesiasticall persons who should not intermeddle confusedly each in others Province nor one be so adverse to the other 4 Peace twixt Ministers whose hearts burn on against another for these trifles some count us schismaticks and hereticks and others count them Popish to plead for Baal How happy a thing it is and profitable for brethren to dwell together in unity 5 Peace twixt Minister and his people the Minister shall not be then an hatred in the house of God nor shall he spy to intrap others that sincerely and purely worship God as Hos 5.1 6 Peace twixt a man and his neighbour wheras now men reproach and revile one an other for no other cause but dissenting in these then should be fulfilled that Esa 13. 7 Peace with the reformed Churches from whom to dissent having had so long and prosperous a time to get knowledg in and to reform things that are amisle and to speak evill of them that brought such light into the world is shame and sin it indangers their estimation we being so great and happy a Nation But if we doe abuse our prosperity and vaunt our selues because of that to please the Lord and so draw others to us we shall drink deep of the cup of Gods anger 8 Peace with our enemies when our waies please the Lord Prov. 16.7 We shall not need fear the power of the Papist when we hate their sinnes Grounds and certainty of this peace 1 Then men shall be of one judgment when these fire balls shall be removed 2 The blessing of the Lord shall be upon us if wee doe heare and obey Psal 82. 3 All shall set themselues more to please the Lord and drawing neerer to him is the best meanes of concord amongst our selues 4 Wicked profane men shall haue the staffe taken out of their hands wherwith now they smite the Kings faithfull subjects 5 Popish and superstitious persons that now lie hid amongst us and kindle this fire shall be discerned and expelled Are they then enemies to peace that desire reformation and the removall of these Are they not such as pray for the peace of Ierusalem Why are they troubled as enemies to State and Prince And most high and mighty King how happy shall you be if as labouring to set such peace amongst Kings you set this peace in the Church SECTION XXI BY the former grounds I doubt not but men desirous to haue the Lords name sanctified his Kingdom flourish and his will done will easily condiscend to haue these things removed which so trouble the servants of God being meerly unprofitable as all humane inventions are Onely now for the time till they be removed men must know how farre they may joyn in the worship of God where these things are in use which part is needfull for all to learn since the servant of God must haue no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darknesse but reproue them rather Therfore first consider these grounds following 1 That these Ceremonies in controversie are imposed upon the people as well as Minister as may appear in the Preface to the Ceremonies in the Service book and that in the name of the people the Minister pronounceth We receiue this child c. 2 That the Church of Rome is an Idolatrous Church full of Idols 3 To eat of things offred unto Idolls and partake in Idolatrous Ceremonies is sinne 4 It is the property of superstitious and idolatrous things to infect and pollute the places where they are 1 Our Saviour Christ cast out all those mony-changers that had seated themselues in the house of the Lord before hee taught in the Temple and Iosiah cleansed the Temple before he offred in it This therefore shews men should not offer their sacrifices where there are abominations and filthines 2 Men must shew an utter dislike and hatred of the garment spotted by the flesh Deut. 7 they must not take it into their house 2 Cor. 6 it must not be touched 3 Men must flee from all Idols and Idolothits and must not look upon them Though men may cavill at the former places as being meant of the innner man yet the latter are plaine This toucheth men in that it is imposed upon all 2 Men doe not flee from it but draw neer unto it 3 The worship there performed is not pure but mixt for men are commanded to break the second commandement 4 Though the personall sins of the Minister doe not hurt the people yet his Ministeriall and publique sins doe hurt which he performs from the people to God 5 What example can be brought where the holy men of God haue communicated with such things 6 Men are bound to protest against all these corruptions Obj. Men hate them in heart Answ The Lord in each commandement in the second especially forbids the least inward respect from the body 2 It it an appearance of evill by which many may be offended weak ones especially Obj. 2. Presence is not approbation since men are not present for that purpose and secondly men may be present to hear corrupt doctrine taught therfore where corrupt ceremonies are used Answ Presence onely is not approbation if men haue a calling thither 2 If they protest openly against the same 3 Consider that the Lords bids thee come thither but man bids thee sin if thou come to worship God after the order of the Congregation wherin this is injoyned it is not onely thy bare presence that argues thine approbation but this thy yeelding in shew to Ceremonies 4 All mens presence together doth uphold and continue them Obj. Men may be present at false doctrine Math. 23 why not at these then Answ 1 Men are not certain that then and there he will preach false doctrine 2 Men in that case are bound if it bee possible to hear sound Teachers and ordinarily to frequent where false doctrine is taught is dangerous and a
grown farre more licentious and vain c. 14 What are these men zealous against but plain sin and such things as zealous men in Scriptures haue been adverse unto as ceremonies devised by man and abused to Idolatry 15 This way teacheth that men ought freely of loue to giue all respect obedience subjection and life too for the good of the Prince Rom. 13. 16 This teacheth that it is onely in the power of the Civill Magistrate to punish offenders 17 Where this way hath been soundly and faithfully taught there men are most easily held in subjection to the Magistrate 18 What painfull and conscionable Minister but justifies this way This way is schism in many mens account and termed damnable and many things which they cannot proue are objected against this in the cares of his Majesty But truth will overcome and Christ must prevail though they haue brought us to 300 yet these are enough to vanquish the great army of the Aramites Nay if there were but two men they should overcome All that haue fought for it haue overcome and Christ hath gotten victory for us bee wise therfore and kick not against the pricks The Lord is with us fight no more against the Lord but let there be peace amongst us onely hinder us not in our Ministery and saving mens soules And for you brethren whose eares are filled with bitter invectiues daily thrown out against you judg righteous judgment Paul may striue with Peter though his ancient much in the service of the Lord neither let our miseries and crosses cause you to think our standing not to be sound Consider Christs own servants the Prophets how they haue been dealt with all Hath not the visible Church that had the Keyes then under shew of zeal for God and lo●e to the Church cast them out Esa 66. And must not times come that he shall think he doth God good service that kils you which is not meant of the heathens that alwaies were so minded but of the visible Church And is not Christ a rock of offence and a stumbling block Are not many offended at him Think of this each that reads that you haue no understanding naturally of the things of God to discern but rather yee are prone to misjudge both of the persons and things SECTION XXII HAving spoken touching their Ceremonies and communion with them In the next place it remaineth to speak of their prayers wherin much is controverted For set form of prayer wherin though I think them not unlawfull yet for the Minister I am perswaded be sins 1 Because experience shews that prayers conceived are more pertinent and doe more affect then set form of prayers 2 All might be more briefly and plainly done for the profit of the Auditory 3 It is a disgrace to the Gospell to borrow from Papists any of their Liturgies as though we had not the spirit of God to help us in this as well as in preaching 4 It is the duty of the servant of God to pray for the people as well as teach them and as he varies in the one so ought he in the other and exercise the gift of the Holy Ghost 5 It is a dangerous stumbling block to many others to content them selues with a set form of prayer and striue for no more 6 As the Lord in preaching for the good of his children doth minister many things in the present besides our best meditations when we haue to our utmost endeavoured ourselues so in prayer who knows but the Lord would affoord more plent full matters and affections to profit the people with all 7 We haue no example in the new Testament for any prescript Leiturgy 8 Conceiving prayers would expell our Idoll Ministers and stir up men with more affection and preparation to come thither even Ministers themselues and it would manifest the Ministers care over his people for the best triall of a Minister is by his prayers wheras the contrary upholds an insufficient Ministery and makes the Minister ordinarily doe no more then if amongst heathens he were to read a Grammer lecture and consture some harsh barbarous Latine to his Country Auditors 9 The Holy Ghost is given to help in prayer as well as in any other part of the Ministery Obj. It is not required of a Ministery to be able to pray Answ This is supposed as he is a Christian 2 The man that can preach conscionably for the most part hath gifts to pray Obj. Many cannot pray Answ Nor never striue for it having this glorious but blasphemous pretence that these prayers of then selues where there is nothing else are good serving of God 2 That they are better then such as are conceived by the assistance of the Holy Ghost Answ 2. There ought to be two in every Congregation a Pastor and Teacher and if gifts were denyed to one yet no doubt but the Lord would giue to the other Obj. 3. There would be many idle prayers offered up Answ This doth more corrupt and is more dangerous for the manner the heart which is the chiefe thing in prayer aboue the matter then this for the matter 2 They would doubtlesse if there were the like ignorant and unconscionable Ministers that are now but this Discipline would sweep them away 3 Men should be admonished for this and if they did continue then order to be taken with them Wherfore considering this that many inconveniences come by this which we haue now we desire that there might be a consultation how to reform in this as well as there hath been in the preaching of the Word Now for the people how farre they are forbidden to joyne in any unlawfull prayers Answ 1 Where unlawfull things are asked either such things as are not blessings or such things to be removed as are not evill simply 2 Wherin they professe to aske without faith 3 Wherin the people are to be their own mouths to the Lord. 4 Needlesse and idle repetitions of the same thing and words after the Popish manner as Oh Christ Oh Lord c. 5 To patch in prayers amongst the commandements Grounds why we may not joyn in these and the like 1 That which the Minister offers from us to God is ours hee susteyning all the peoples person 2 All these are to take Gods name in vain and men therby may bring a curse rather then a blessing if after knowledg and consideration they should doe it 3 What an horrible thing is it that there should be such prayers used in the publique worship of God which men should be abashed in private to offer unto God not enduring the light and judgement of the Word 4 Hereby we shall be able to answer all that is or can be objected against any worship of God in the Churches of England Otherwise vvhere no such prayers are used to joyn with a set form we hold not unlawfull being performed by a true Minister 1 Because this is true prayer to offer up lawfull requests unto the true God in the name of Christ 2 Some things may and ought to be asked being in all times necessary and for all persons 3 Therin the spirit of God may be exercised in us in being stirred up to joyn with him 4 This is his sin meerely that is the Minister if he doe not exercise his Ministeriall gifts ●n prayer besides as the Lord requires upon the present occasion 5 Therin is no evill done onely some good omitted not all good but the perfection and excellency of this good of prayer FINIS