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ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A42763 CXI propositions concerning the ministerie and government of the Church Gillespie, George, 1613-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing G752; ESTC R21587 30,033 52

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had for besides that it would be a great inconvenience that plaintifes persons accused and witnesses bee drawne from the most remote Churches to the generall or universall Councell the visible communion it self of all the Churches on which the universal Counsel is built and whereupon as on a foundation it leaneth is not so much of company fellowship or conversation as of Religion and Doctrine All true Churches of the World doe indeed professe the same true Religion and faith but there is beside this a certaine commixture and conjunction of the Churches of the same Nation as to a more near fellowship and some acquaintance conversing and companying together which cannot be said of all the Churches throughout the habitable World 38. And for this cause as in doctrinall controversies which are handled by Theologues and Casuists and in those which belong to the common State of the orthodoxe Churches the Nationall Synode is subo dinate and subjected to the universall lawfully constituted Synode and from the Nationall to the Oecumenicall Synode when there is a just and weighty cause an appeal is open So there is no need that the appeals of them who complaine of injurie done to them through the exercise of Discipline in this or that Church should goe beyond the bounds of the Nationall Synode But t is most agreeable to reason that they should rest and acquiesce within those bounds and borders And that the ultimate judgement of such matters bee in the Nationall Synode unlesse the thing it selfe be so hard and of so great moment that the knot be justly thought worthy of a greater decider In which case the controversie which is carried to the universall Synode is rather of an abstract generall Theologicall proposition then of the particular or individuall case 39. Furthermore the Administration of the Ecclesiastick power in Consistories Classes and Synodes doth not at all tend to weaken in any wise hurt or minish the authority of the civil Magistrate much lesse to take it away or destroy it yea rather by it a most profitable help cometh to the Magistrate forasmuch as by the bond of Religion mens consciences are more straitly tyed unto him There hath been indeed phantasticall men who under pretence and cloak of Christian liberty would abolish and cast out Lawes and Judgements Orders also Degrees and Honours out of the commonwealth and have been bold to reckon the function of the Magistrate armed with the sword among evill things and unlawfull But the Reformed Churches doe renounce and detest those dreames and do most harmoniously and most-willingly confesse and acknowledge it to be Gods will that the World bee governed by Lawes and Policy and that hee himself hath appointed the civill Magistrate and hath delivered to him the sword to the protection and praise of good men but for punishment and revenge on the evill that by this bridle mens vices and faults may be restrained whether committed against the first or against the second Table 40. The Reformed Churches beleeve also and openly confesse the power and authority of Emperours over their Empires of Kings over their Kingdomes of Princes and Dukes over their Dominions and of other Magistrates or States over their Commonwealths and Cities to be the Ordinances of God himself appointed as well to the manifestation of his owne glory as to the singular profit of mankinde And withall that by reason of the will of God himself revealed in his Word wee must not onely suffer and be content that those doe rule which are set over their own territories whether by hereditary or by elective right but also to love them fear them and with all reverenee and honour imbrace them as the Ambassadours and Ministers of the most high and good God being in his stead and preferred for the good of their Subjects to powre out Prayers for them to pay tributes to them and in all businesse of the Commonwealth which are not against the Word of God to obey their lawes and edicts 41. The orthodoxe Churches beleeve also and doe willingly acknowledge that every lawfull Magistrate being by God himself constituted the keeper and defender of both Tables of the Law may and ought first and chiefly to take care of Gods glory and according to his place or in his manner and way to preserve Religion when pure and to restore it when decayed and corrupted And also to provide a learned and Godly Ministery Schools also and Synodes as likewise to restraine and punish as well Atheists Blasphemers Hereticks and Schismaticks as the violaters of Justice and Civill Peace 42. Wherefore the opinion of those Sectaries of this age is altogether to be disallowed who though otherwise insinuating themselves craftily into the Magistrates favour doe deny unto him the authority and right of restraining Hereticks and Schismaticks and do hold and maintaine that such persons how much soever hurtfull and pernicious enemies to true Religion and to the Church yet are to bee tolerated by the Magistrate if so bee he conceive them to bee such as no way violate the Laws of the Commonwealth and in no wise disturbe the civill Peace 43. Yet the civill Power and the Ecclesiasticall ought not by any meanes to be confounded or mixed together Both powers are indeed from God and ordained for his Glory and both to be guided by his Word and both are comprehended under that precept Honour thy father and thy mother So that men ought to obey both civill Magistrates and Ecclesiasticall governours in the Lord To both powers their proper dignity and authority is to be maintained and preserved in force To both also is some way entrusted the keeping of both Tables of the Law also both the one and the other doth exercise some jurisdiction and giveth sentence of judgement in an externall court or judicatory But these and other things of like sort in which they agree notwithstanding yet by marvellous vaste differences are they distinguished the one from the other and the rights of both remaine distinct and that eight manner of wayes which it shall not bee amisse here to adde that unto each of these Administrations its own set bounds may bee the better maintained 44. First of all therefore they are differenced the one from the other in respect of the very foundation and the institution For the politicall or civill power is grounded upon the Law of nature it selfe and for that cause it is common to Infidels with Christians The power Ecclesiasticall dependeth immediatly upon the positive Law of Christ alone that beer longeth to the Universall Dominion of God the Creator oveall Nations but this unto the speciall and Oeconomicall King dome of Christ the Mediator which hee exerciseth in the Church alone and which is not of this World 45. The second differences in the object or matter about which The power politick or civill is occupied about the outward man and civill or earthly things about Warre Peace conservation of Justice and good order in the Commonwealth