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A79995 The civil magistrates povver in matters of religion modestly debated, impartially stated according to the bounds and grounds of scripture, and answer returned to those objections against the same which seem to have any weight in them. Together with A brief answer to a certain slanderous pamphlet called Ill news from New-England; or, a narrative of New-Englands persecution. By John Clark of Road-Island, physician. By Thomas Cobbet teacher of the church at Lynne in New-England. This treatise concerning the christian magistrates power, and the exerting thereof, in, and about matters of religion, written with much zeal and judgement by Mr. Cobbet of New-England, I doe allow to be printed; as being very profitable for these times. Feb. 7th. 1652. Obadiah Sedgwick. Cobbet, Thomas, 1608-1685. 1653 (1653) Wing C4776; Wing B4541; Thomason E687_2; Thomason E687_3; ESTC R206875 97,858 126

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who must say why doe you thus unclean practises respecting the flesh may be punished but unclean spirits and doctrines must be suffered in the Land they would not have such as rob and spoyl others of their goods escape but it s no matter what havock any make of Church Ordinances Privileges and Liberties by any Tenents of theirs If they rob us of the Law and the Prophets and take away a great part of the holy Scriptures which was all given by Divine Inspiration and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Isa 49. 23. 3. 7. Rom. 13. 3 4. Correction for Instruction in Righteousness or if they plunder and strip us of the office Political power and care of the Churches Civil Nurse-fathers Physicians and Shepherds for their best good none must punish them for such like outrages And if at a dead lift Magistratical power be with much ado permitted to come within the range and reach of the first Table yet they will have it under so short a tether and lay such strong chains and heavy bolts upon it that it s there rather as in its prison than any way as in its privileged place they shall be permitted to punish Witches Sorcerers and Inchanters else say they what mischiefs will befal our Estates Families and Bodies But as for those good those white Witches that out of pretence of conscience bewitch souls Gal. 3. 1 c. to death by their inchanting doctrines let not Civil powers meddle with them Men of our times will not speak these in so many words but in their tenents and practises they speak in effect as much But good Reader be thou ware of such false Prophets that come in sheeps clothing will carry it towards thee as fruitful and Matth. 7. 15. spiritual Christians as humble meek gentle harmless self-denying mortified persons for a season till they have attained their ends will tell thee it is new light what the Spirit revealeth to them it is the tenderness of their consciences which maketh them scruple such and such things which others have long held c. And all this while they are inwardly ravening wolves I hope pious Reader I speak to one who yet hath an ear open to hear what may be spoken in the defence of that truth so much questioned and opposed now adays That the Lord hath not left Christian regulated Civil Commonwealths without their respective ways of Authoritative Redress of such like mischiefs in Religion for which end read and consider in thy retiring hours and times this little Treatise and the Lord give thee understanding in all things Thine in Christ Jesus Tho. Cobbet The Method and scope of the ensuing Discourse concerning the Civill Magistrates Power in matters of RELIGION By way of Introduction THe example of our Head Jesus Christ Iohn 2. 13. ad 17. who made it one of his first works to reform matters amiss in Religion is opened and applyed in many pious and seasonable observations pag. 1. ad 6. That this act of Christ is presidentiall and imitable according to the judgements of the Godly Learned Pareus Bullinger Tossanus Marlorate Dyke Ainsworth Musculus Suecanus and Beza pag. 6. ad 9. 2. Objections answered pag. 9. ad 12. The Thesis and Position propounded to be cleared is this That Corruptions in Religion outwardly breaking forth and expressed may yea and must be restrained and punished by such as are thereunto called pag. 12. In handling whereof the Author first propoundeth some 1. Distinctions pag. 12. 2. Some Conclusions about it are laid down 1. Negatively what may not bee done this way pag. 13. ad 16. 2. Positively what may and must pag. 16 3. The main Assertion is explained pag. 16 17. And proved by Seven Reasons grounded upon Scriptures pag. 17. ad 34. Five Corollaries or Instructions drawn from the Premises 1. The first is by way of Refutation and Answer to sundry Objections tending to undermine the Cocrcive Power of the Civill Magistrate in matters of Religion pag. 35. ad 46. 2. The second Instruction chargeth Rulers with the Duty of Endeavoring the exact knowledge of Gods law word and rules pag. 46. 3. The Third Instruction or inference from the premises That then the Highest Civill Authority are to make Coercive Lawes about matters of Religion pag. 46. Touching this particular The Author distinguisheth 1. Of Civill Magistrates pag. 47 48. 2. Of Kingdomes or Commonwealths in which they rule pag. 49. 3. Of Legislative power in matters of Religion p. 49. 4. Of Lawes about Religion pag. 50. Conclusions are laid down about this weighty matter 1. Negatively pag. 51. ad 54. where it is proved that humane laws formally and as such cannot bind the conscience 2. Positively Positive Conclusions about this Nomothetique power are sour 1. That Politicall Laws properly such may be made about matters of Religion pag. 54. This Conclusion is confirmed by seven Reasons pag. 54. ad 58. 4. Objections against this Conclusion are answered pag. 58. ad 67 2. Conclusion That in doubtfull matters Ecclesiasticall Assemblies are to bee called whose Counsels unto the Magistrate are Ecclesiastically Authoritative pag. 67. 3. Conclusion Civill Magistrates are to call upon Ministers to expound the whole Counsell of God pag. 68. 4. Conclusion Civill Authority must establish their Lawes with the consent of their people or their representatives p. 68. 4. A fourth Instruction from the Premises Then are the Civil Authority in their Politicall way to Judge which things acted by the outward man in cases of Religion are contrary to the word and which are not pag. 70. For further clearing of this from all gainsayers 1. Some distinctions are laid down pag. 71. 72. 2. The Conclusion is stated and cautioned pag. 73. 3. Five Reasons for proof thereof and the Objections against them answered pag. 73. ad 82. 5. The last instruction from the premises Then are not persons to be left to the liberty of their own Judgements or consciences pag. 82. For the better clearing of this weighty Conclusion so many waies opposed now adayes 1. Some distinctions about it are propounded and Rom. 14. 3. c. cleared pag. 82. ad 86. 2. The Conclusion is stated against a set fixed Toleration and proved by 10. Reasons from Scripture all which are vindicated from the severall Objections against them pag. 86. ad fin Errata In the Epistle Dedicatory pag. 4. line first adde cor pag. 29. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 reade 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pag. for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 32. for 1 John 14. 1. read 1 John 1. 14. This Treatise concerning the Christian Magistrates Power and the exerting thereof in and about matters of Religion written with much zeal and judgement by Mr. Cobbet of New-England I doe allow to be Printed as being very profitable for these times Feb. 7th 1652. OBADIAH SEDGWICK A Discourse concerning the Nature and Latitude of Civil Powers in matters of Religion IF
to his Soveraignty to purge out Church corruptions he now doth by his Vicegerents hands mediately Secondly It is answered he that was God and man who acted did act thus in a mixt way not onely as God but partly also as Man as man he gathered up the small cords as man he twisted them and made a scourge of them as man he laid on with his bodily hand in such sort as thereby to drive the beast-sellers out of the Temple herein therefore imitable in such mere humane acts by men of place Like acts for substance were put forth by David a man of place before Christs coming in the flesh and if typical in David yet verified partly in Christ as the son of David and so as man Yea the reason here suggested by the Holy Ghost to the Disciples as justifying Christs act namely the zeal of Gods house Joh. 2. 17. it must needs be yeelded to be an apt and just reason suitable to the act as the reason therefore is appliable to Christ as man the Antitype even as it was to David the type so is the Act grounded upon that reason and justified by it in the same way appliable to the Antitype Christ as to the type David Christ could have cast out these out of the Temple by a word of his mouth as he did cast Devils out of living temples of his peoples bodies or as he cast down those who came to take him Joh. 18. or he could by a Judicial cord have punished them spiritually as when he bid them fillup the measure of their fathers sins Matth. 23. 32. but he chose to act in such a humane way imitable by others thereunto called Secondly If any object that it was extraordinary in Christ as Object 2 man then to restrain or punish abuses in Religion in any forcible and corporal way I answer Admit it were so 1. Yet at least the act it self of such Answ outward restraint and punishment of abuses in Religion must needs be in it self that whereon the Image of Christs zeal is enstamped that which is in it self good and allowed of God in special wise for else Christ could not at all have acted thus without sin and if in it self it be of that nature why not imitable by such as are thereto called of God to do that in an ordinary way which he did in an extraordinary Secondly Be it that it were extraordinary in Christ as man to act thus so was Phinehas his act of killing Zimri and Cosbi Numb 25. 7 8. and Samuels in hewing Agag in pieces 1 Sam. 15. 33. and Elijahs slaughter which he made among Baals Priests 1 King 18. 40. yet it must be yeelded that there must be some who by office might and should in an ordinary way have punished such filthinesse murthers or Idolatries the Lord not using to stirre up any to an extraordinary way to do any such like acts but in the defect of acts of ordinary power and so here the same Spirit which stirred up them to supply that defect of the acting of ordinary power by extraordinary motions and acts did also stir up Jesus Christ in an extraordinary way to restrain and punish these corruptions in Religion which the present Civil power in duty unto the Lord as his Ministers ought to have restrained and punished and so to have revenged the Indignity therein done to the Lord whose house was so profaned According to that Rom. 13. 4. but they failing in their duty this way the same Spirit of zeal that stirred up David his type in the corrupter times of Saul to be vindicating such indignities against the Lord stirred up Christ his Antitype to do like work for substance in those corrupter times upon which he was cast Nor was this an extraordinary supply of the defect of ordinary Ministerial and Priestly power considered as Priestly and Ministerial for what had they to do as such with external and corporal restraint and punishment in any ordinary way in that way if Peter use the sword he must perish by it Matth. 26. 52. but it must needs be a supply of the defect of Magistratical power which in an ordinary way maketh use of the sword or whip or like instruments of corporeal punishment and vengeance Rom. 13. 4. rather then such like abuses in Religion shall not be in an external coercive way curbed and punished Jesus Christ himself will do something extraordinary to supply that defect So far is that from being Mosaical Jewish and much lesse tyrannical work outwardly to restrain and punish such abuses in Religion for which yet conscience to the Word might be pretended as that Law Deut. 14. 24. 25 26. might be for these that Jesus Christ thought it fit to become himself to put forth his hand to so good and blessed a Work when those whose duty it was to do it would not discharge their trust And now having thus far waded to find out some part of Gods Counsel in this famous History of Christs purging the Temple I shall leave the same to the Judgment of the godly wise The Thesis and Position which I shall propound to be cleared and confirmed from the Scriptures shall be that which before I hinted namely That Corruptions in Religion outwardly breaking forth and expressed may yea and must be restrained and punished by such as are called thereunto Now for the better Handling and the more full discovery of the truth of this point we shall first propound some distinctions 2. Lay down some conclusions about it 3. Confirm the point from Scripture 4. Draw three or four Corrolaries thence Touching the first 1. Corruptions in Religion are either Dogmatical or Practical And these again are either such as are more grosse and strike at the very fundamentals or vitals of Religion whether directly or collaterally or such as are of a more circumstantial and lighter nature Again Corruptions in Religion are either such as are secretly taken up and imbraced and so kept close in the minds and hearts of persons or such as come under mans kenne and view being outwardly expressed in word writing Action or the like And these again which come thus into open view are either such as are held forth with meeknesse peaceablenesse and real expressions of cordial readinesse to lay them aside and reform them upon better information or such as are carried on in any insolent and turbulent way or with expressions of contempt of Civil or Church order 2. Restraint and punishment of these is either that which is merely and immediately divine or that which is mixt partly divine partly humane in respect either of the agent or manner of Acting or that which is properly in the nature of the act person and manner of Acting Humane And this is either Political which is carried on in a civil way and by political means or Ecclesiastical which is carried on in a Church way and by Ecclesiastical meanes 3. A Call of God to restrain and punish
THE CIVIL MAGISTRATES POVVER In matters of Religion Modestly Debated Impartially Stated according to the Bounds and Grounds of Scripture And Answer returned to those Objections against the same which seem to have any weight in them TOGETHER WITH A Brief Answer to a certain Slanderous Pamphlet called Ill News from New-England or A Narrative of New-Englands Persecution By JOHN CLARK of Road-Iland Physician By Thomas Cobbet Teacher of the Church at Lynne in New-England Take us the foxes the little foxes which spoil the vines c. Cant. 2. 15. Rulers are not a terror to good works but to the evill c. Rom. 13. 3. This Treatise concerning the Christian Magistrates Power and the exerting thereof ' in and about matters of Religion written with much zeal and judgement by Mr. Cobbet of New-England I doe allow to be printed as being very profitable for these times Feb. 7th 1652. Obadiah Sedgwick LONDON Printed by W. Wilson for Philemon Stephens at the Gilded Lion in Paul's Churchyard 1652. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE OLIVER CROMWEL Captain General of all the Forces of the Commonwealths of England Scotland and Ireland Grace Mercy and Peace be multiplied THrice noble Sir whom not Man alone hath honored with greatest dignity of highest Military Command but the God of Glory also hath dignified as with peculiar Interests in his speciall Grace and Favour in Jesus Christ and with an abundant measure of the saving Graces of his blessed Spirit so with a glorious and prosperous success in all your weighty undertakings let it not seem overmuch boldness in me who am a stranger to you by face that I send forth this following Discourse into the world under the shadow of your Lordships Name It seemeth according to our best intelligence here that the subject of this Discourse beginning to grow the great controversal business of these polemick times your Honour with some other of the Lords Worthies in England have expressed some desire of yours that something might be spoken thereunto Now I having begun to do something that way formerly and though the most unworthy of any such respect from such choice Favourites of the Lord being often moved by some of our honoured Magistrates and reverend Elders here to present it to publique view I began to conclude that it might be now seasonable so to do And although I were a very babe in comparison of others for abilities and wisdom to manage so weighty a cause of the Lord yet I remembred him that said Out of the mouthes of babes and sucklings thou hast ordained strength that thou mightest still the voice of the enemy and the avenger so that I was incouraged not alone to put forth this discourse but to make use of your Lordships Name therein Besides we receiving certain information Renowned Worthy of your dear respects to the Churches here as also to our Civill State which I trust New-England doth not nor ever will forget even your cordial appearing for us who are so much subject to the reproach of tongues at so great a distance together with your charitable frequent expressions of the good opinion you have of us This also Right Honourable the rather moved me as a Member of this Polity even in way of Gratitude to dedicate to your Excellency this Apology for Civill Christ an Governments why they ought in their Civil and Political way to restrain and punish abuses and enormities even in matters of the Lord of the Church You truly noble and valiant Sir have quit your self like a man of God in managing your Military weapons in defence of the Civill State in England against all opposers of them for their exemplary acts of Justice which they did both upon delinquent Statesmen and as they are called Churchmen too even the Prelates and their retinue Yea you have to your utmost in your Military way managed that cause at first covenanted by the State which was not alone the bringing of all sorts of Delinquents to their condign punishment but the reforming of matters of Religion in Engl according to the Word of God the pattern of the purest Churches wherfore right worthy Sir what you have fought so many bloody battels for in the field now stand couragiously and plead stoutly for it in peace Israels General Joshuah was not more famous for his prowess victories over the Canaanites in the field than for his care of setling Religion in the people acding to Gods mind when the War was ended witness those memorable passages that way recorded Josh 23. chap. 24. King David is renowned for the like care who after the inhabitants of the land were given into his hand and the land was subdued before the Lord and his people 1 Chr. 22. 14. Now saith he set your hearts and souls to seek the Lord your God and arise and build his Sanctuary c. And chap. 27. he gathereth the chief Civill and Military Commanders before him and ver 8. he chargeth them all in their severall places callings and conditions to keep and seek for all the Commandements of God and he joyneth with him in special the chief Commanders of the Army in a Civil way to help on the Work of Religion and of the Church mentioned 1 Chr. 25. 1 c. Let not therefore the least thought arise in your Noble breast Right honorable Sir that it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for you to meddle in such matters or to maintain things of that nature But let Holiness and the defence and maintainance thereof be written upon your hors bridle as it will be upon theirs whose Conversion we are even waiting for Zach. 14. 20. Who will be presently up in arms for Christ and his cause against which they were so long hardened That returning Shulamites Portraiture is represented by the company of two Armies Cant. 6. last of whom more also is spoken Zac 12. 5 6 7 8. Jesus Christ himself is represented as the Generall of the Field and owning the godly Souldiery as his Army who in a cause of Religion shall by the dint of the sword be instruments to bring Antichrist and his Abettors to their deserved ruin Rev. 17. chap. 19. Yea but could not Jesus Christ destroy them by his own immediate hand and is not his Truth and Word of force to overthrow all that is contrary to it Yea verily yet is it the will and pleasure of Jesus Christ by humane externall forcible means to restrain and punish such offendors in matters of Religion wherefore neither the State nor Souldiery of England have any cause to repent of their Covenant Ingagements in their several respective ways to endeavour the bringing it about that Religion there may be reformed according to the Word of God and the best patterns of the purest Churches Nor hath the State of England any cause to retract any wholsom penall Laws which they have made the 2. of May 48. or since against so many blasphemous and false Doctrines and
ever it were a time wherein the Zeal of Gods house should burn in the hearts of the sincere members of Jesus Christ or if ever the Lord called for the flaming forth of that holy fire in their zealous expressions and actions according to their several places and callings in way of vindication of the Lords abused Name Truth Ordinances and Wayes surely this is that time when under pretence of Spirituall Light so much hellish darknesse beginneth to overspread the face of the Churches of Christ Wherefore before that I do enter upon the main point which I intend in this Discourse I shall first present a memorable example of such holy zeal in our Head Jesus Christ to the Intent that such of his Members who are by office and place most concerned therein may in the fear of God wisely and seriously ponder whether that holy Zeal which was in Jesus Christ as in a Well-head and is doubtlesse in their measures derived to them also should not now be more abundantly exerted and exercised that way The example I intend is recorded in Joh. 2. 13 14 15 16 17. And Iesus went up to Jerusalem And found in the Temple those that sold oxen and sheep and Doves and the changers of money sitting And when he had made a scourge of small cords he drove them all out of the Temple with the sheep and the oxen and poured out the Changers money and overthrew the tables And said to them that sold Doves Take these things hence make not my Fathers house an house of Merchandise And his Disciples remembred that it was written The zeal of thine house hath eaten me up This History of Christs purging the Temple being the relation of one of his most glorious Acts in which he put forth his hand in publique view after his most solemn entrance upon his great work It is the more observable and doth call for more then ordinary Improvement by all such whose property it is as Saints to make narrow search into all the great Works as of God a Creator Psal 111. 2. so of Jesus Christ God-man their Redeemer but especially by all such whose duty it is by their office and place to be Reformers of matters amisse in the house of the Lord. Twice at least it is clear Christ acts thus once in the beginning of his Ministry as John noteth in this Chapter and another time towards the end thereof as the other Evangelists shew Matth. 21. 8 9 10 11 12 13. Mark 11. 15 16 17. Luke 19. 37. to 47. Jesus Christ then when acting his publick Ministry upon earth he made it one of his first so one of his last works to reform matters amisse in Religion At first buyers of oxen and sheep are outed the Temple but at last sellers too At first Dove-sellers are gently spoken to to carry away their Truck but at last their seats also are overthrown Christ saith at first you have made my Fathers house an house of Merchandise but at last ye have made it a den of theeves He is then more severe at a second time against such who reform not by his former check If any enquire after the time when this was It was immediately upon Christs first coming to Jerusalem after his solemn Initiation into his office Joh. 2. 11 12 13. compared If any ask what the occasion of this Act was It is noted in that he found in the Temple those that sold oxen c. if any would know in what manner he Acted that also is expressed with some he dealeth by blowes violently driving them out with his scourge made of small cords so that the Instrument he maketh use of to correct them in such sort is a whip or scourge the materials thereof were small cords namely which those traders brought with their Cattel with this scourge so made he layeth on so violently that he driveth out not so much the beasts as the Beast-sellers also he drave them all out and the sheep and the oxen or with the sheep and the oxen which the Greek text cleareth using the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in reference to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as also to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Beast-sellers and money-changers If any would demand the ground why Christ did thus It is given partly in that himself spake Make not my Fathers house an house of Merchandize It was his Fathers house which was so profaned and polluted and he as his son is nearly concerned in it and partly in that which the Spirit of God suggested seasonably to the Disciples from the Book of Psalmes The Zeal of thine house hath eaten me up And now may not the Saints learn for their Instruction sundry things hence which concern them also even all of them in their several callings especially those in higher place Yes verily From a more general Consideration of this history as holding forth the dealing of Jesus Christ with sinners amongst his people we may all note that which godly Interpreters hint hence to us As from this that is said he found such and such and dealt so with them Learn first That the sight and assured knowledg of sinnes acted especially by persons pretending to Religion it provoketh the Lord Jesus some way or other to expresse his deep displeasure against them Secondly that sometimes the Lord Jesus dealeth with sinners and punisheth them in the very Act of sinning as he scourged them here which he took in the manner From what is here said he took small cords and made a whip thereof even of the very Cords which they sinfully abused to bring their Cattel into a forbidden place for any such use Learn that sometimes the Lord Jesus maketh punishing scourges for sinners even of the very instruments themselves abused to sinne From the manner of Christs dealing here that with his whip he driveth out the beast-sellers as the beasts using them therein as their beasts Learn that such as under the means of grace grosly abuse and prophane the same they are of basest esteem in the sight of the Lord Jesus Furthermore these abuses were not without religious pretences of Scripture grounds God had of old said Deut. 14. 24. 25 26. If the way be too long for thee so that thou art not able to carry it namely the tythe of their corn and firstlings of their flock which they were to eate before the Lord v. 23. Or if the place be too far from thee which the Lord thy God shal chuse to set his name there which afterwards was Jerusalem and the Temple there then shalt thou turn it into money and bind up the mony in thy hand and shalt go to the place which the Lord thy God shall chuse And thou shalt bestow that money for whatsoever thy soul lusteth after for Oxen or for sheep c. And thou shalt eat it before the Lord thy God c. It might therefore seem convenient to have the beasts at hand to be sold there
effectual meanes they did use of conviction may appear by that gracious speech made to the two tribes and half by their Messengers Josh 22. 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20. verses compared So in Church Courts an Heretick must be rejected but yet not till after once or twice Admonition 7. Although neither powers Civil or Ecclesiastical may inforce upon Aliens from the true Religion any of the wayes of it yet may not the Civil power suffer Aliens either openly to vilifie or blaspheme the true Religion or to abase the Preachers and professours thereof or any way to disturb them in the holy exercise of it Christ would not suffer the man possessed to make disturbance in the Sabbath solemnities but casteth out the devil Mark 1. Or least of all may they induce them to practise openly their Jewish or Pagan Religions 8. Neither Powers may equally censure or correct all sorts of corruptions in Religion which come into publick view but as the corruptions are more grosse or the persons more contemptuous and turbulent in their way so to lay on the more load upon them Some are Seducers and Ringleaders in the offences and abuses some seduced neither all errours nor all erring persons are of equal guilt and Justice must suum cuique tribuere Positively we affirm that both Church Officers with their Affirmat Conclus Churches in a Church way and highest Civil Authority and Rulers in their political way they may yea they must restrain and seasonably and suitably punish all grosser corruptions in Religion manifestly crosse to the Word when they are outwardly and openly expressed to the Just offence of the Saints and hurt of others To explain this a little We say they may do so not as a matter of their own liberty to do or not to do so a thing may be lawful which in case is not expedient but this is a duty to which they are bound and with which they cannot wholly dispense it s therefore added they must do it oft times indeed they do it not but in duty they are bound to it Albeit they may for a time sometimes suspend the acting of it yet it s added they must seasonably do it not too suddenly before some paines and patience be used nor yet too slowly delaying over-long till such evils spread too far grow to too strong an head or become incurable or at least uncontroulable They must also doe it suitably that is observing proportions of persons offending of matter manner times and places of offence that way And they must so deal not with every lighter matter of offence but in case of grosser offences striking at the weightier matters of God tending to invalidate and undermine or to invert or pervert his choicer institutions And they must so punish corruptions manifestly crosse to the word not matters which in themselves are meerly disputable both wayes but which are in themselves clearly crosse to the Word if not in the expresse letter of it yet in respect of conclusions unavoydably and necessarily deducible from the Word It is further added when they are outwardly expressed c. Namely in word writing in gesture or deed uttering or acting the evils themselves in an open and offensive way or else contemptuously and turbulently expressing distaste some way against the contrary truth and way professed and practised by Religious Common-wealths or by the purer Churches in them But because in these latter times so many depart from the faith giving heed to seducing spirits and doctrines of Devils and because that civil government is now so much despised and too many are not afraid to speak evil of dignities in Kingdomes and Common-wealths making them usurpers for medling in such matters of Religion or for daring to improve their civil power to restrain and punish such enormities in Religion I shall therefore onely addresse my self at present to prove and confirm this Position that it is the dutie of highest civil authoritie and of the civil Rulers in a religious State to restrain and punish corruptions and abuses in religion breaking forth within their jurisdiction according as even now explained and stated in the foregoing conclusion This I prove by several reasons grounded upon the Scriptures Reason 1 The first reason hereof is taken from the nature of such work of such political restraint and punishment It is a choice piece of service to the Lord from them therefore no usurpation nay rather therefore their dutie therefore well becomming them When Moses the chief Magistrate would be putting forth his authoritie to call forth some as instruments of his authoritie to punish by the temporall sword those open corruptions in religion in the Actours thereof Exodus 32. 4. c. verse 26. He asked Who was on the Lords side 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who is for the Lord It is therefore in the very nature of the thing to be for the Lord or on his side to punish such corruptions in such offenders And verse 29. speaking of the same work Moses authoritatively biddeth them Consecrate your selves to day to the Lord even every man upon his sonne and upon his brother adding this blessed motive to that work That he may bestow a blessing upon you to day It is in the Hebrew Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Fill your hand a phrase borrowed from sacrifices and such as offered sacrifices or had their hands filled for that end Hence when Aaron and his sons are to be consecrated to the Lord for offering sacrifice Exod. 10. 9. It is said in the Hebrew and thou shalt fill the hand of Aaron and the hand of his sons Acts of justice against enemies to the Church watching to make advantages of their weaknesse as did the Amalekites They are a choice service and sacrifice to God yea preferred by Samuel before Sacrifice 1 Samuel 15. 2. 3. 18. there is Gods charge And verse 22. Obedience to that Charge is made better then Sacrifice Hence when God by others sword doth punish the Churches enemies Esay 34. 6. He saith of it The sword of the Lord is filled with bloud He calleth it his sword and addeth For the Lord hath a sacrifice in Bozra and a great slaughter in the land of Idumea That Act of justice is owned by the Lord as his Sacrifice and Ezechiel 39. 17. speaking of those grand enemies of his Church Gog and Magogs just slaughter He calleth to the Fowles Come to my sacrifice c. And this place is the more observable In that the like speech is expresly applied when the overthrow of such as follow the whore and beast and false Prophet of Rome in his wayes worship and government and when the overthrow of all such as support that man of sinne is described Revel 19. 17 18 19. It is there called The Supper of the great God come and gather your selves unto the Supper of the great God So delightfull and contentfull and pleasing to the great God are such acts of
politicall Justice by the civill Sword upon such as are grosly corrupt in matters of Religion It is to him as a Sacrifice as a Supper If any say that was Old Testament surely this is New Testament Doctrine and that with Jesus Christ himself commended to John to communicate to his Churches If such Acts be in their own Nature acts of persons for the Lord or on the Lords side or if as a very acceptable sacrifice to the Lord then It is so now would not underminers of Magistrates power this way have godly Magistrates for the Lord and on his side now as well as formerly or to do him such choice service which may be to him as a very sacrifice now as well as then Besides such as are zealous this way in doing such acts of civill Justice upon corrupters of Religion and persons grosly corrupt in Religion such as were Antichrists Abb●tters and followers they also are said to be with the Lambe or on his side Revelations 17. 14. And they that are with him are called and chosen and faithfull and Chapter 19. 19. They are called Armies And those not rude prophane souldiers but as before called chosen and faithfull or the Armies which were in heaven followed him persons of heavenly Spirits aimes and conversations arrayed in white single sincere hearted ones in the cause of Christ nor will this be evaded As meant of a Spirituall way of fighting against Antichrists Adherents by the sword of Christs mouth taken onely for his Word and his sword considered onely as a Prophet or taken for his Word applied in sharpest Church censures of Excommunication of them and so his sword of his mouth considered as King of the Church but it is by the Temporal sword of Christ considered as King of Kings and Lord of Lords For therefore in this war It is his blessed Motto as I may say and that which he giveth in his Banners King of Kings and Lord of Lords This sword also is in some respect the sword of his mouth for as Supream over all civill powers he sentenceth that whore and beast of Rome with his Adherents to such a doome to be executed by such as have power under him and from him to avenge his quarrells by the Temporall sword which onely are civill Magistrates Romans 13. 4. He giveth the word of Command to them and biddeth them smite and the judgement so executed it is the Lords according to the expression Deuteronomie 1. 17. The retinue of Antichrist fight not against Christ his Lawes and Subjects onely by dogmaticall and doctrinall weapons or such like but as Revelation 17. 14. By external violent wayes and weapons they have their Captains their mightie men their horses the Fowles also are called upon to devour not their soules but their carkasses Revelalation 19. 17 18. which surely are slain by that opposite Armies by like wayes of violence without which so great temporal forces and power would not be brought to become meat for the Fowles And this punishment upon persons so corrupt in matters of Religion is in the dayes of the New Testament set forth as so renowned and acceptable a piece of service to the Lord. To like purpose Esay Prophesieth of these dayes of the Gospel Esay 66. When the glory of God shall be declared among the Gentiles Verse 19. When they shall be brought to his Holy Mountain or Church Verse 20. yea When some of them shall minister to him there Verse 21. When there shall be a new face of all things Verse 22. And all flesh shall come and worship before the Lord Verse 23. Now will the Lord judge with his sword all flesh and his slain shall be many Verse 16. Namely Of such as sanctifie and purifie themselves in Gardens eating unclean things as the Swine and Mouse alluding therein to the forbidden meats of the Jewes Leviticus 11. These shall be consumed together even these that are corrupt in matters of Religion shall be punished by Gods sword As Verse 16. Not alone immediately but mediately even by the civil Magistrate who beareth Gods sword for that end And as Verse 24. Expresseth this punishment to be corporal is their carkasses which others shall look upon and so hear and fear That speech Canticles 2. 15. Take ye us the Foxes the little Foxes which spoile our Vines for our Vines have tender Grapes Is of weightie consideration here Some would have it to be spoken to the Ministers of the Church but there is no reason so to restrain this indefinite speech some would have it to be the voyce of Christ some of the blessed Father Sonne and Spirit most agree that it is to be referred either to God or to Christ the owner of the Church Now the word Take ye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In the most usuall and proper rendring of it signifieth an externall forcible taking as with the hand or something equivalent As when David tooke the Amalekite and after slew him 2 Samuel 1. 10. So when the men of Gilead tooke the Ephraimites and after slew them Judges 12. 6. So when the Philistims took Sampson Judges 16. 21 And so when Babylons Children are commanded to be taken and slaine Psalme 137. 9. The same Hebrew word is there used As it is likewise used of Moses his taking the Scrpent by the tail Exodus 4. 4. Of Jacobs taking his brother by the heel Genesis 25. 26. Of Sampsons taking the Gates of Gaza Judges 16. 3. Of Abrahams taking the Ramme by the hornes Genesis 22. 13. besides divers like instances of forcible taking and therefore the Hebrew word is rendered by the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which in the New Testament is constantly used of such forcible taking Twise of taking Fishes John 21. 3. 9. Sixe times of their taking of Christ which at least they desired and intended John 7. 30. 32. 44. and 8. 20. and 10. 39 and 11. 57. Of Peters taking by Herod Acts 12. 4. Of Pauls taking at Damascus 2 Corinthians 11. 32. which yet both narrowly escaped Of the taking of the Beast and false Prophet Revelation 19. 20. And never but of an externall taking as with the hand And indeed such externally forcible taking must needs be most proper to the nature of the resemblance in that Text of Canticles which is the taking of the Foxes which spoile the Vines Evident then it is that this taking of the Foxes there injoyned is not to be restrained to Church Officers acts if at all understood of them but must be referred to such at least whose place and work it is to act in an externally forcible way of taking or of restraining and punishing such Foxes which spoile the Vines or Churches of Christ compared to Vines Psalm 1. So Esay 5. Matthew 21. John 15. Some would have these Foxes to be errours heresies and other hurtfull offences against the first or second Table which must be thus restrained and punished in the Actours and Authours of them Others
understand the persons rather so offending which must be so taken as Hereticall persons blasphemers and such like Whence false Prophets compared to Foxes Ezekiel 13. 4. Concerning these the Churches well beloved Canticles 2. 10. Even Christ the Churches Spouse whose Dove is the Church Verse 14. He giveth this order Verse 15. Take ye us the Foxes Whether the speech he utter were in his own name as some think or in the name of the blessed Father and Spirit also as others think or whether spoken with respect had to his Spouse the Church Take ye us that is for me and my Church or for my sake and hers or on my behalf and hers yet to be sure Christ spake this as Spouse to the Church his welbeloved Dovelike Spouse and so he spake it as head at least as political head of the Church and so also as Mediatour and therefore what herein he injoyneth is to be the more observed undeniably holding forth First That this is a charge of Christ as Mediatour unto all such who by place and office under him are to restrain and punish not by the use of a spiritual rod or sword so much as are Church Officers but specially by the use of the temporal sword as our Civil Rulers who in their political way are here injoyned forcibly to take such corrupters and disturbers of Religion as well as of good manners Secondly That such taking of such Foxes is in the nature thereof a special service to Christ Jesus as Mediatour and Political Head of his Church Yea and to the blessed Father and Spirit in whose name and to the Church it self also on whose behalf he may seem to speak not thus Take ye for me but thus Take ye for us the Foxes yea the least of them which may seem not to do so much hurt as others the taking of all sorts of such Foxes then who by their tenents or practises do hurt and spoyl in the Churches or the restraining curbing and punishing of them in some external forcible way this must needs be very acceptable service to the Lord. So Numb 25. 11. 1 2 6 7 8. verses compared that extraordinary act of zeal in Phinehas corporally punishing not merely an act of corporal fornication which then was not of it self death though Adultery was but a joynt act of spiritual whoredome too in that Idolatry there mentioned which then was punishable with death by the civil Magistrate in an ordinary way Deut 13. 17. I say this that he did is by God reckoned under this head as for him or for his sake vers 11. while he was zealous for my sake and vers 13. because he was zealous for his God God then looked at himself as in a very special manner both concerned and respected in that service of Zeal All which places thus cleared may help to expound that Psal 2. 10 11 12. where the Kings and Judges of the earth are required to serve the Lord the Son Gods Anointed vers 6. Now this service being not injoyned them as men barely but as Kings even Kings upon the Throne Job 36. 7 11. compared It cannot be restrained to service in common with other godly persons but looketh also to Authoritative service as Civil Rulers Whence this Argument may be formed in reference to that before spoken All Authoritative service whatsoever of civil Rulers unto Christ is by command required of them For serve the Lord that is Christ is indefinite and so extendible to all such service also but as hath been before proved forcible restraint and punishment of corruptions in Religion by the temporal sword is one special part of such service therefore forcible restraint and punishment of corruptions in Religion by the use of the temporal sword is by command of God required of Civil Rulers And it must here further be noted to what times this Psalm must be referred the comminatory and threatening part of the Psalm vers 1 2 3 4 5. Peter applyeth to the times of the Gospel Acts 4. 25 26 27 as is that Psal 2. 9. by John Revel 2. 27. 12. 5. and 19. 15. The Instructive part of this Psalm as that vers 7. is by Paul applyed to Christs Resurrection Acts 13. 33. that verse 8. concerning the Heathen or Gentiles becoming Christs possession and the utmost coasts of the earth his Inheritance all will yeeld must respect the times after the partition Wall twixt Jewes and Gentiles was broken down and the Gentiles made the Lords habitation Ephes 2. this was the time to which that Now verse 10 11. looketh Be wise now ye Kings serve the Lord with fear Kisse the Son c. verse 12. namely thus risen and reigning as vers 6 7 8 9. do expresse So then it was not a Mosaical Injunction respecting the Kings of Israel and Judah who might be types of Christ but it is a command lying upon Gentile Rulers in the dayes of the New Testament to serve Christ with their Authority in restraining and punishing corruptions in Religion And the Argument hence is undeniable That Command of God which is expressed with peculiar reference to Gentile Rulers which should rule after Christs Incarnation that command must needs be of force in the dayes of the New Testament But this command unto Princes and Judges in their Authoritative way also to serve Christ is of that nature or is referred to the dayes of the New Testament therefore that Command is of force or bindeth in these dayes of the New Testament The Proposition is evident because the Commands of God must needs bind the persons respected and intended in those very commands The Assumption was before cleared So that the Conclusion remaineth undeniable and there wanteth not now a binding command of God requiring such Authoritative service of Christ by Civil Rulers as that is and was proved to be namely Authoritatively to restrain and punish such corruptions in Religion A second Reason of the Assertion is taken from the end to Reason 2 which the Civil Magistrate is appointed of God whether that end be more General or Special In the General he is appointed for the good of such as are under his subjection he is the Minister of God to thee for thy good Indefinitely Rom. 13. 4. whether that good be natural as life and safety of their bodies or moral as temperance chastity honesty and the like or civil as civil peace civil liberties mens Lands goods estates c. or Spiritual as the free passage of the Word and Ordinances of God the purity of all the worship of God and of the Doctrine and Discipline of Christ dispenced and the like Now if God make the Civil Magistrate the Minister of all this good to the subjects then hath he armed them with civil power in a civil way and by political meanes to promote that good of the Subjects and to rescue from whatsoever externally breaketh forth tending to impair that Good of the subjects and who seeth not that
17. and that way rather to have encouragement from Pagan Rulers would be to comply with them in the wayes of their prophanenesse and heathenish outrages and abominations which God forbid 2. As the Civil Powers in or with Christians are ordered of God for there is no power saith Paul but is of God meaning especially civil power Rom. 13. 1. and as every soul by vertue of that word is also to be subject in all lawful things to Higher Powers amongst Christians and exercised by Christians so Anabaptists themselves will acknowledge that Rom. 13. 4. taketh in the Christian Magistrate as bearing Gods Sword and being Gods Minister for Civil vengeance against evil doers against the rules of the second Table and so the case is yeelded by them that the place in Romans 13. looketh at the Christian Magistrae also 3. Those Rulers to whom what is here spoken touching their Magistratical work doth best agree and by whom it is best performed they must be here principally intended by the Lord but to the godly Christian Magistrate the Magistratical work here mentioned doth best agree and by him is it best performed therefore the godly and Christian Magistrate is here principally intended As for instance Rulers are not a terrour to good works but to evil who maketh more conscience of this order of the Lord the highest Ruler then the Christian godly Magistrate who is wont else to fulfill that so fully and faithfully unto the Christian and godly Subject if thou do that which is good thou shalt have praise of the same who is actually and effectually the Minister of God for thy good the Best good as well as other Inferiour good of the Subject so properly as the Christian godly Magistrate Who maketh conscience but he to come up fully and regularly to that also vers 4. he is the Minister of God the Avenger to execute wrath upon him that doth evil A second Answer to the Objection from Esay 11. is That Answ 2 the just execution of offendors by the Civil Magistrate is not doing of hurt to any but a meanes in it self of good yea as to others who hear and fear and learn to do no more so wickedly so sometimes is it sanctified of God to the good of the delinquents themselves who are corporally punished by them as some in the dayes of the Gospel who shall be punished by their Christian Rulers shall acknowledge it to Gods praise Thus was I wounded in the house of my friends Zech. 13. 6. This is crosse to that Rule Judge nothing before the time Object 11 1 Cor. 4 4. It is spoken in opposition to rash censuring of others according Answ to that Matth. 7. 1. Judge not that ye be not judged but Paul never intended that no matters of a sacred or civil nature should ever be judged of by such as were called thereto of God but all left unmedled with to the Judgment day for 1 Cor. 5. 4. he chargeth in Church matters that the Church proceed to censure the incestuous person and 1 Cor. 6. 1 2 3 4 5. he would have some of the Saints to be chosen by them to judge in their civil matters amongst themselves the rather because the Saints shall as Assessours judge the world at the last day A second Instruction from the premises is that surely then persons in Civil Authority are in duty bound even as they are persons in civil Authority under God and Christ as they are Ministers of God to indeavour the exact knowledge of his Law Word and Rules as other under-Rulers are to know the Lawes of their Soveraign for if they must restrain and punish what is crosse to those Rules they ought to know the Rules else how should they know what is crosse to the Rules of the Word or before they punish the same how will they be able to use such means of conviction of offendors against those Rules as God requireth God put this principle into the heart even of Artaxerxes that such as knew the Lawes of God should be set in Authority to punish such as did contrary to the Law of God Ezra 7. 25 26 27 28. compared God by Jethro counselled that Rulers should be men of Ability even in Scripture as well as other Lawes and learning Exod. 18. 21. and Deut. 1. 13. compared the book of the Law was ever to be with the Rulers set over Gods people Deut. 17. 18. Josh 1. 7 8. Esay 32. 1 2. 33. 6. wisdom and knowledge in such as rule is the stability of their times It is Gods Ordinance to Gentile Rulers that they should be wise and instructed even in the things wayes and words of God Psal 2. 10 11. Pagan Rulers indeed whilest Pagan do not know the Word and so cannot so well punish what is crosse to it but of right and duty they are bound to know both A third Instruction hence is that if such corruptions in Religion are to be so restrained and punished by highest Civil Authority then are highest Civil Authority which chiefly require such punishment to be executed to make Coercive Lawes about matters of Religion For if so to punish then in an ordinary way to do it either by vertue of some political Law established and promulged for that end and then the case is granted or else without such a Law and then way is made to bring in Arbitrary and tyrannical Government Yea when a Civil State doth agree in such or such matters of God to be guided by the Word of God and necessary deductions thence what punishments to inflict upon such or such corruptions in Religion Now that which is materially considered the Law and Word of God yet formally considered as thus politically ratified and promulged It is so far forth of the nature of a political law and doth but strengthen this Conclusion That what a Civil State must punish they must make political Lawes for that end in that extraordinary case Moses without a law must punish that blasphemer Leviticus 24. 11 12 13 14. but in reference to ordinary execution of Justice that way for the future God biddeth Moses to promulge a solemn Law in Israel that whosoever blasphemeth the name of the Lord shall surely be put to death vers 15 16. Touching this particular 1. we distinguish of Civil Magistrates 1. Civil Magistrates are considered either Indefinitely or in a limited sense Indefinitely considered they are the Ordinance of God the Civil Powers that be are ordained of God there is no power but of God Rom. 13. 1. yea they are of Christ under whom they rule and by whom they decree whatsoever Justice they do decree Prov. 8. 15 16. by me who that is is explained vers 30. then I was by him and I was daily his delight and vers 31. Rejoycing in the habitable part of his earth c. by this essential wisdom of God Princes decree Justice whether just Lawes against evil doers or just censures according to those
way it is according to the Mind and Word of God And this now sayd may help also to take off another Objection Obj. 2. Some object That then Heathen Kings as they are Civill Magistrates have right to make Laws about matters of Religion and of the Church although not able to doe it not knowing the Matters of God or of Churches and not Members of the Church and so not censurable by the Church which were to make a King-Pope to give out Laws to the Church and not to be censured by the Church Ans 1. We especially intend the Conclusion of a Magistrate regulated according to the rules of the Word of God whose Minister he is and so the Civill Magistrate is no Heathen or Ignorant of Religion or out of the Church If he be otherwise it is his sin that way See more pag. 48. 2. Although the Civill Magistrate fail in that part of his duty that he knoweth not the Lord who girdeth him with that Princely girdle yet that sin in that particular doth not wholly Is 45. 1. 4. 5. excuse another sin of omission of another duty namely Authoritatively to keep the first second third or fourth Commandement Rulers may be Ignorant of many matters of the second Table and disabled so far from making good coersive Laws about them yet both are sins of omission In both he hath a right essentially and actu primo but in respect to the execution of that Nomothetique right in reference to matters of the first or second Table he hath that power virtually onely 3. Heathen Kings not of the Church and not censurable by the Church may give out Laws to the Churches under their jurisdiction touching matters of Righteousness and Honesty yet that maketh them not King-Popes no more doth the other Nebuchadnezzar might as commendably make a coerfive Law upon civill penalty against the Jewish Church Officers or Members under his jurisdiction as execute any such corporall punishment upon them both for false Doctrines vented by them under pretence of Gods name a sin against the first Table as also for committing Adultery for a Law made that way doth leave the subject more inexcusable and had been no other than a politicall Legislative Sanction of the Laws of God whose Minister considered as a civill Magistrate he was the Lord himself by law having made such sins capitall Deut. 13. 5. Lev. 20. 10. Now that exemplary act of Justice in Nebuchadnezzar upon a member of the Jewish church under his jurisdiction as well for false Doctrine as for Adultery is renowned and a form of Imprecation thence borrowed Ier. 29. 22 23. The Lord make thee like Zedekiah and like Ahab whom the King of Babylon rosted in the fire because they committed adultery with their neighbours wives and have spoken lying words in my name which I commanded them not even I know and am a witness saith the Lord. 4. When Heathen Kings come to know their duty in matters of the first or second Table and accordingly they establish Laws about Religion they doe it not now by any new right when Christians and knowing Christ no more than a Parent becoming Christian and knowing Christ giveth out parentall commands to his children with respect to bodily corrections if they do not such and such Religious duties doth this by any new Parentall right which he had not intrinsically when Pagan The case is alike in those Fathers of the Common-wealth 5. Heathen Kings whilst Heathen may and must make Laws about the matters of God and his Religion so far as their right guiding light extendeth else should they hold the truth of God in unrighteousness now it s certainer that they whilst Heathen have or may have much light so as to see into matters of the true God and of his Religion 1. By the light of Nature Heathens know and have known that there is a God that he is one God that he hath made all men as his Offspring that he is to be worshipped according to his spirituall nature that he is to be called upon that he is not to be blasphemed nor belyed nor called to witness in a false thing that images of him are not to be made that men are not to take his name in vain by rash or false Oaths that some time is to be set apart for his Worship and the like Rom. 2. 14 15. By the work of the Law within their hearts many things contained in the Law may be and have been done 2. The light of Gods Works both of Creation and Providence may help them much this way Rom. 1. 18 19 20. see more Ezek. 36. 23. 36. 38. 16. 39. 21. 28. The notable Providence of God rescuing by his Angel Shadrach Meshach and Abednego from Nebuchadnezzars fury for not worshiping his Idoll of gold made him make that coersive Law mentioned Dan. 3. 28 29. Therefore I make a Decree that whosoever shall speak amiss of the God of Shadrach c. shall he cut in pieces c. 3. They may have some common light of the Spirit that way communicated by means of some of their godly subjects whence such expressions of that Darius mentioned in Ezra 6. 10 12. and no wonder then he make that penall Decree ver 11. Also I have made a Decree that whosoever shall alter this word let timber be pulled down from his house and being set up let him be hanged thereon and let his house be made a Dunghill 4. None will deny to Pagan Princes a right of Authoritative praising and incouragement of such as doe well in regard of duties either of the first or second Table to which also God in speciall wise stirred up the spirit of Cyrus the first Ezra 1. 1 2 3 4. Though he knew not the Lord savingly then Isaiah 45. 4. 44. 28. compared And why shall not Heathen Rulers have a right with like latitude of respect to first or second Table to be a terror to evill doers by making coersive Laws for that end so far at least as their right guided light extendeth yea we have shewed before divers of them are in Scripture commended for this So that the truth hereby is further strengthened thus That which Heathen States Kings and Princes remaining Heathen have done and been commended in Scripture for doing it as Princes or higher Civill powers that must needs be essentiall to them as higher Civill powers and imitable by others in like Civill power but as hath been formerly declared such use of Legislative power by Heathen Higher powers as Higher powers making coercive Decrees in matters of the Religion of the true God hath been commended in Scripture therefore such use of the Civill Legislative power is essentiall even to Heathen Rulers and imitable by all others in like Civill power Obj. 3. God hath left others to Govern and Feed his Church 1 Cor. 12. 28. Eph. 4. 8 11 12 13. who must give an account of their soules And the