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A34538 The kingdom of God among men a tract of the sound state of religion, or that Christianity which is described in the holy Scriptures and of the things that make for the security and increase thereof in the world, designing its more ample diffusion among the professed Christians of all sorts and its surer propagation to future ages : with The point of church-unity and schism discuss'd / by John Corbet. Corbet, John, 1620-1680. 1679 (1679) Wing C6258; ESTC R23940 125,145 296

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than Others saith the Author of our Profession When the Religious apparently excell the choicest part of unregenerate Men then is Wisdom apparently justified of her Children Natural men may have some amiable vertues by which they aim to commend themselves both to God and the World yet in other matters of no less manifest and necessary concernment they are licentious and remiss But the true Christian make it his business to fulfill all Righteousness And as the principle of true Piety causeth an intirene●… in all the parts of good Life so being duly improved and stirred up it will cause them that have it not only to acquit themselves in whatsoever things are acceptable and praise-worthy among the meerly vertuous part of Men but also to perform those things that are far above them and both a wonder and a reproof unto them Religion hath a good savour among all Men by the due observance of all relative duties and nothing renders it more unsavoury than the violating of those bonds and the non-performance of those dues which arise from natural or civil relations For these things are our proper sphere our dayly walk and constant business wherein we are most accountable to God and usefull to men Industry and providence in the affairs of this Life conduceth to reputation but idleness and improvidence is very scandalous Upon this account Godliness is sometimes reproached by occasion of some idle Pretenders and others that are Pious but inconsiderate and imprudent Religious exercises must be attended seasonably and in due order Idle and careless Persons that wander from their callings how full soever of good words must be numbred among those that walk disorderly When the Rules of Christianity are so agreeable to the temporal well being and so indulgent to the present necessities of mankind it is a great shame to expose it to contempt and prejudice by such perversness or improvidence as if it were inconsistent with industry and prudence in the necessary concernment of this World In like manner a discreet and moderate use of riches a generous frugality and frugal liberality avoiding fordid covetousness on the one hand and vain ostentation and deliciousness on the other is of good report and gains esteem but to live either too narrowly or too profusely taints a mans reputation and derogates from the honour of his Profession To be constant or always the same is a noble property and is had in much honour And hereunto true Christianity gives the greatest adnantage It s main principles are evident and unchangable with the allowance of prudential accommodations according to time and place in things indifferent It is a chief point of Wisdom to bring our might and main to the great weighty things of the Law and to watch with jealousie against every devise of man that would undermine them but to be more cautious and sparing in points of less importance yet the occasions of much contest among them that own the same Doctrine of faith We are ill advised if we lay our main stock where our main interest is not touched Several matters touching Religion have been carried in a vicissitude according to the change of times and yet the substance of Religion not altered It is not safe to fix a necessity upon such things from which the urgency of after-times may inforce us to drawback unless we will desert our Stations before we have a discharge from our Master in Heaven The espousing of some controverted Forms and Doctrines may end in a divorce dishonourable enough although it be conscientious And the reproach hereof may be aggravated by the pretended constancy of others in erroneous ways when it is indeed no other than the pertinacy of a selfish mind or an adhering to a worldly interest When there is a liberty some Forms may be safely chosen as most advantageous and yet not asserted to be the only necessary and again some others may be laid aside as inconvenient and yet not damned as impious or simply evil The parent of true constancy is Godly Wisdom having the sure foundation of evident and unchangable Truths with a just latitude in things not determined by the positive Laws of God And so there may ordinarily happen to the same man some diversity of practice at different times that deserves not the brand of time serving which is often too rashly objected For the same fixed principle of knowledge and integrity will direct to this way or method of a sacred Action at one time and at another time to that which is far different yea and when it cannot be avoided to a submitting to what hath sometime been rejected I mean rejected not as in it self unlawfull but as inconvenient or less profitable When we are at liberty we are obliged to take the best way but when confined we must do as well as we may in that state And the submission signifies an acknowledgment of the simple lawfulness but not of the comparative goodness or desirableness of the thing imposed Since our blessed Saviour hath given his Church a legacy of Peace in Him with tribulation in the World to suffer with reputation is not of little moment It sometimes comes to pass and that inevitably that the Godly suffer much in such cases which the looser sort account niceties and needless scruples in which cases their sufferings are precious in the sight of God who highly values the jots and tittles of his Law but they are not so honourable in the sight of men But when their cause is so unquestionable that all sober Spirits of Orthodox belief must needs regard it their suffering hath much more glory and all the faithfull will be more constant and uniform in adhering to such a cause Howbeit if they suffer for conscience sake in such things as the World accounts niceties yet an upright and prudent walking with a peaceable Spirit submissive in things clearly indifferent and bearing with others intolerable differences will be an ample defence unto them and gain respect and peradventure mollifie those that do the injury Furthermore let it be here noted that to the Sufferer it is no less honourable to suffer for the Life and Power of Christianity in opposition to the immorality malignity and hypocrisie of carnal Christians than in the defence of the Christian Faith or any Article thereof in opposition to Infidels Hereticks or Blasphemers For the Christian life and practice is the end of the Christian Faith and Doctrine and therefore cannot be of less regard Yet this kind of Suffering is more dishonourable to Christ in respect of the Persecutors who are his professed Servants and therefore in this respect it is more grievous to the persecuted than if they Suffered from those that disown his name or are his more avowed Enemies CHAP. XIX The most ample diffusion of the Light of knowledge is a sure means of promoting true Religion FAlse and corrupt ways bear sway by a Peoples ignorance but Religion in its right and sound
he separated from the Communion he recited for himself things done in the Reign of Decius and the exquisite observation of a certain severe Canon that they who after Baptism had fallen into that kind of sin which the Scripture calls a sin unto death ought not to be partakers of the Divine mysteries but to be exhorted to repentance and to expect the hope of remission not from the Priest but from God who hath power to forgive By this it appears that the Novatians did not deny the Salvability of the lapsed or others that had fallen into a sin unto death but only refused to admit them to Sacerdotal Absolution and Church-Communion And thus they made a very unwarrantable separation grounded upon an unjust rigor of very bad consequence Nevertheless their error was no other than what holy and good men might be ensnared in by the appearance of a greater detestation of sin and its tendency to prevent the lapse of Christians into Idolatry and to make them more resolved for Martyrdom And by as credible History as any we have of the ancient times they are reported to have had among them men eminently Pious and some famous for Miracles They unmovably adhered to the Homousian Faith and for the maintenance of it together with the Orthodox suffered dreadfull Persecutions They had some Bishops remarkable for Wisdom and Godliness and such as were consulted with by some of the chief of the Catholick Bishops and that with good success for support of the Common Faith against the Arrians and such like Hereticks Under a certain Persecution wherein they were Companions of the self same suffering it is said that the Catholicks and Novatians had Prayers together in the Novations Churches and that in those times they were almost united if the Novations had not utterly refused that they might keep up their old institutes yet they bare such good will one to another that they would die one for another These and many other things of like nature are reported of them by Socrates whom some indeed suspect to have been addicted to them yet upon no other ground but because he gives them their due upon evident proof And besides what he hath reported Sosomen thus testifies of them L. 2. C. 30. That when other Sects expired the Novatians because they had good men for the Leaders of their way and because they defended the same Doctrine with the Catholick Church were very numerous from the beginning and so continued and suffered not much dammage by Constantines Law for suppressing of Sects And Acesius their Bishop being much favoured by the Emperor for the integrity of his life greatly advantaged his Church Also L. 4. C. 19. He reports the great amity that was between them and the Catholicks in a time of common Persecution Whether the case of the Dissenters from the Uniformity now required be in point of Schism of the same or like reason with the above mentioned or any other anciently reputed Schismaticks is now to be considered And it is the case of those that dissent not in the substance of Religion but only in things pertaining to the Ecclesiastical Polity or external Order in the Church that is here taken into consideration Of these some being persuaded of the necessity of their own Church-Order desire to remain as they are in their severed Societies yet they do not nullify the legal Churches or Ministery or the dispensation of the Word Sacraments and Prayer therein performed Others being satisfied in the constitution of Parochial Churches and in the substance of the Established Form of Worship would gladly embrace a freedom of Communicating and Administring therein upon the removal of some bars that lie against them and which they think may well be removed Thereupon they seek an Accommodation and Union by a sufficient comprehensiveness in the publick constitution and withall a reasonable indulgence towards those Brethren who for the straightness of their judgments cannot be comprehended Neither Party of the Dissenters here described can be charged with any thing like the Donatistical fury before expressed If Austin sought the suppression of that Sect by the secular power in regard of the horrible outrages committed by them it cannot reasonably be urged for a precedent as it hath been by some for the suppression of men Sober and Peaceable and sound in the main points of Christian Faith and Life Nor can either Party of us be charged with that intolerable presumption and arrogance of the Donatists in confining the Flock of Christ to their own Party or the disannulling and utter denouncing of all Churches besides their own Nor is the ground of our dissatisfaction like theirs which began in a quarrel against a particular Bishop and was maintained by animosity against those that would not condemn him It is well known that another manner of account is to be given of our Dissents If it be objected that those Dissenters whose principles bind them up to persevere in their severed Societies seem in this respect to be as the Novatians who would not admit a re-Union with the other Churches it may be answered for them that reasons have been offered in the foregoing parts of this Discourse for indulgence to conscientious People who are intangled by the narrowness of their principles touching Church-Order Besides they do not stand off upon so harsh and rigorous a point as the Novatians did viz. The utter repelling of the lapsed though penitent from the Communion of the Church And they have ordinarily communion in the Word and Prayer with Congregations that are not of their Church way and occasionally in the Sacrament with those Congregations where they apprehend a care of the exercise of Discipline Nor may they be judged so irreconcilable to the Established Order but that the holy lives of those in the publick Ministery and their lively Preaching and a greater care of true and real Church-Discipline might do much to their recovery In the mean time why may not these be upon as good terms under the present Government as the Novatians were under the Government of their times Church History reports that they were cruelly Persecuted by the Arrian Emperours and Bishops and that they had great indulgence under Orthodox Emperours and with many Catholick Bishops and Patriarchs whose prudent and moderate Government did best provide for the Peace of their Churches But those Orthodox Bishops who took from them their Churches and Estates were chiefly either such as took to themselves a Secular Power and ruled imperiously and with violence or such as with their zeal had more of wrath and rashness than of meekness and prudence This can be easily proved in the particular instances if need were But this is not the case of all Nonconformists For part of them and upon good experiment made they may be found the greater part do not seek to abide in a severed State but desire a Union It is well known they are as sensible of the evil of Schism and
THE KINGDOM OF GOD among Men A TRACT Of the Sound State OF RELIGION Or that Christianity which is described in the Holy Scriptures And of the things that make for the Security and Increase thereof in the World Designing its more ample diffusion among Professed Christians of all Sorts and its surer Propagation to future Ages With the Point of Church-Unity and Schism Discuss'd By JOHN CORBET LONDON Printed for Thomas Parkhurst at the Bible and Three Crowns at the Lower end of Cheapside 1679. THE PREFACE A Disquisition concerning Religion and the State Ecclesiastical wherein several Parties are vehemently carried divers ways whether right or wrong according to their different interests or apprehensions is apt to stir up jealousie and to meet with prejudice in a high degree and therefore had need be managed as advisedly as sincerely It is humbly craved that the present management thereof may find a favourable reception so far as it hath in it self the evidence of its own Sincerity and Sobriety This Treatise is not framed for a present occasion or any temporary design but insists upon those things that concern the Church universally and perpetually It aims at the advancement of meer Christianity and with respect to the common concernments thereof it leaves the things that are more appropriate to the several Parties and Persuasions to stand or fall It ingageth not in the controversies of these times touching Forms of Church Government but in any Form such depravations or deficiencies are blamed as hinder the Power Purity Unity Stability or amplitude of Religion Nothing prejudicial to Government to the rights of Superiors and Civil Pre-eminences or to Decency Unity and Order in the Church is here suggested Sedition and Faction are evicted to be a contradiction to this Interest which can hold its own only in those ways that make for the common good both of Rulers and Subjects Our design carries no other danger than the more ample diffusion of true Christianity and the power of Godliness among men of all degrees and the surer propagation thereof to future ages Here be some things that are the vitals of Christian Religion and cannot be removed and here be other things of conscientious or prudent Consideration and let these so far pass as they are found clear and cogent I had rather be charged with any defect or weakness than with uncharitableness and therefore am ready to renounce every line and every expression in this Book that cannot stand with true Christian Charity in the utmost extent thereof Let it not be taken amiss that to obviate suspicion or prejudice I declare my self in the things here following I am one aged in the Ministery and by reason of age and experience am not eager for any Party but mellowed with charity towards real Christians of all Parties I have vehemently desired the union of the more moderate Dissenters with the Established Order by reasonable accomodation as for others that remain dissatisfied about such Union yet believe and live as Christians I do as earnestly desire an indulgence for them within such limits as may stand with publick Peace and Safety Though I am cast into the State of Nonconformity yet I am willing to exercise the Ministery under the present Ecclesiastical Government if I were made capable thereof by the relaxation of some injunctions My principle is for a closing with things that are good and laudable in any Established Government and for a bearing with things that are tolerable And the Wisdom of the Governours of the Church will direct them to turn away from such Principles Orders or Practices as tend to the ruine or the great indangering of any Ecclesiastical Polity that retains them whilest the Apostolick Doctrine as it is now Established in the Church of England is maintained THE CONTENTS CHAP. I. THe nature of Christianity and the character of true Christians CHAP. II. Of things pertaining to the sound state of Christian Religion viz. holy Doctrine CHAP. III. The ordering of Divine Worship sutable to the Gospel Dispensation CHAP. IV. The due Dispensation of Gods word or publick Preaching CHAP. V. The due performance of publick Prayer CHAP. VI. The right Administration of Ecclesiastical Discipline CHAP. VII Religious Family-government CHAP. VIII Private mutual Exhortations Pious Discourse and Edifying Conversation CHAP. IX The prevalence of true Religion or real Godliness in the Civil Government of a Nation CHAP. X. Christian Unity and Concord CHAP. XI A good Frame of Ecclesiastical Polity CHAP. XII Of the corrupt state of Religion and first externalness and formality CHAP. XIII The Sectarian and Fanatical degeneration CHAP. XIV Of the way of preserving Religion uncorrupt CHAP. XV. The enmity of the World against real Godliness and the calumnies and reproaches cast upon it considered CHAP. XVI Religions main strength next under the power of God lies in its own intrinsick excellency CHAP. XVII Religion may be advanced by human prudence what ways and methods it cannot admit in order to its advancement CHAP. XVIII The Interest of true Religion lies much in its venerable estimation among men CHAP. XIX The most ample diffusion of the light of knowledge is a sure means of promoting true Religion CHAP. XX. The advantage of human Learning to the same end CHAP. XXI The general civility or common honesty of a Nation makes it more generally receptive of real Christianity or Godliness CHAP. XXII The increase of Religion is promoted by being made as much as may be passable among men CHAP. XXIII The observing of a due latitude in Religion makes for the security and increase thereof CHAP. XXIV The Care and Wisdom of the Church in preventing and curing the evil of Fanatical and Sectarian Error CHAP. XXV The advancement of the sound state of Religion by making it National and the settled Interest of a Nation CHAP. XXVI Of submission to things imposed by Lawfull Authority CHAP. XXVII The surest and safest ways of seeking Reformations CHAP. XXVIII Considerations tending to a due inlargement and unity in Church-Communion CHAP. XXIX Whether the purity and power of Religion be lessened by amplitude and comprehensiveness CHAP. XXX Factious usurpations are destructive to Religions Interest CHAP. XXXI Of leading and following and of Combinations CHAP. XXXII The Wisdom of the Higher Powers in promoting the Religionsness of their People CHAP. XXXIII The Churches true Interest to be pursued by Ecclesiastical Persons The Conclusion A Book Intituled The Interest of England in matter of Religion in Two Parts formerly Published by the same Author PAg. 7. lin 3. read Service pag. 19. l. 11. read whereas pag. 27. l. 24. read So pag. 28. l. 14. read is pag. 29. l. 14. read regardable pag. 31. l. 16. read this ib. l. 18. read apposite pag. 39. l. 14. read is able to make pag. 41. l. 31. read affect pag. 53. l. 19. read For the pag. 59. l. 5. read face of pag. 60. l. 12. read exercises pag. 67. l. 3. read Religions pag. 71. l.
Their Union and Fellowship being chiefly mystical and invisible their Unity is far greater than what outwardly appears to the World and sometimes than what themselves can discern among themselves in particular by reason of many inferior yet very disquieting differences and discords Nevertheless it behoves them to provide that it might appear as much as may be what it is indeed and that it be conspicuous and illustrious in the sight of Men by their walking in love and peace Unity is the Churches strength and beauty the honour of the Faithfull and an argument for the certainty of their most holy Faith It makes Religion lovely and draws forth blessing praise from the Beholders of it and wins the World to a love and reverence of that Piety which makes the Professors of it to live in brotherly kindness and mutual charity But Division is the Church's weakness and deformity the reproach of Christians and a scandal against Christianity and an objection put into the mouths of Infidels against the Faith and an occasion of stumbling unto many In the present divided state of Religion each Party is apt to appropriate Godliness to themselves or at least to carry it towards others as if they did so And they that are loudest in accusing Dissenters of uncharitableness in this kind are themselves as uncharitable as any others It is true that God hath a peculiar People distinguished from all others by a peculiar Character but it is not confined to any Party of this or that Persuasion or Denomination that is narrower than meer Christianity And all true Christians are to receive one an other as God hath received them Indeed the best Christians are to be best esteemed and their fellowship is most desired But if they should be severed from the universality and in a strict combination set up as divided Party it tends to the Churches Ruine For a Kingdom divided against it self cannot stand and if the nobler parts of the Body forsake the rest the whole must needs die Christian Concord doth not signifie an aggregation of things inconsistent as the fellowship of righteousness with unrighteousness the communion of light with darkness the concord of Christ with Belial To set up Unity against Piety is a conspiracy against Christ who is King of righteousness and to pretend Piety against Unity is to oppose Christ the Prince of Peace whose Kingdom is the Reign of Love in the Soul Holiness and Peace must kiss each other and as inseperable Companions walk together It is the unity of the Spirit we are charged to keep in the bond of Peace But concord in any external Order without fellowship in the Divine Life is not the unity of the Spirit which is to partake of the same new nature and to walk together in the same holy way This is far more excellent than the greatest compliance in matters of meer external order and consequently much more regardable in our estimation and reception of Persons Though to meet in one place be not of so great importance as to be joyned in one Spirit yet it must not be counted a small matter The unity of Faith and Love is much concern'd in the unity of Church Communion it will be a matter of some difficulty for them to live together in Love whom one Church cannot hold Church divisions commonly divide affections and draw men into Parties and divided Interests and make them seek to strengthen their own Party by weakening all others to the great dammage of true Religion in general For which cause the unchurching of Churches and renouncing of Communion with them that are sound in the Doctrine of Faith and Sacrament and in the substance of Divine Worship should be dreaded by all sober Christians yea all unnecessary distances should be avoided least they lead to greater alienations and direct enmities and oppositions Those Churches that cannot hold local communion one with another by reason of differences that destroy not the essentials of Christianity should yet maintain a dear and tender Christian love one to another and profess their owning of each other as Churches of Jesus Christ and should agree together upon certain just and equal Rules for the management of their unavoidable differences so as may least prejudice charity and common good and least harden the ungodly and grieve the weak or dishonour God or hinder the success of common great and necessary truths upon the Souls of men amicably promoting the common cause of Christianity and every part thereof in which they are agreed and opening their disagreements to the People as little as they can Schism is an unwarrantable separation from or division in a Church and without controversie it is a heinous sin and to be detested both for its exceeding sinfulness and wofull consequents But it hath been so disguised and the odious name hath been so confusedly cast abroad and so unreasonably and maliciously misapplied that it is too slightly thought of where it should be sadly laid to heart For it is common with the strongest Party be it right or wrong to call themselves the Church and to have no better name for others than Schismaticks And so the reproach is but contemned by them that suffer it and the sin it self is too little feared on all sides But it is not a Temporal Law nor Secular Power nor any prevalence of Strength or Interest that makes a Church and none of these things will excuse them from Schism that act uncharitably against their Brethren and obstruct the progress of the Gospel and the increase of Godliness Nor are they forthwith to be counted Schismaticks who cannot in all points observe the Commandments of men and cannot neglect to yield their help to the saving of Souls that would otherwise want due means of Salvation when God hath called them to that Service with a woe unto them if they Preach not the Gospel For as much as all must dread the guilt of Schism truly so called let it be well considered that Ecclesiastical Superiors are as much concerned to take heed of Schismatical impositions as the People are to shun Schismatical Recusancy and Disobedience As well the Pastors Wisdom as the Peoples due submission is here importunately called for When Superiors know how to Command and Inferiors how to Obey things will go as well as may be hoped for in this our imperfect state here upon Earth As the Peace of a corrupt state of Religion is best assured by suppressing all conscientious inquiries into its Decrees so the Peace of the true Church and of the sound state of Religion is most secured by the most perfect exercise of sound Judgment and upright Conscience in all its adherents That Church that claims to her self an infallibility or challenges and obtains from her partakers an implicit Faith in her determinations without further enquiry needs not fear the breaking of the bond of her Peace if she multiply constitutions and impose any devised Doctrines and Ordinances sutable to
her own estate On the other hand it is most evident that a Rational Conscientious and truly Pious Concord among such Christians as know and care what they believe can never be procured without avoiding the imposition of things unwritten and unnecessary in which it is morally impossible for men of sound faith and good conscience generally to agree But when necessary things only are injoyned their weight and truth will soon be known and owned of all honest minds or at least are most likely so to be and much sooner and easier than the weight and truth of little and doubtfull things and by this means they would more easily move with joynt consent in one Godly order the matters of their difference being before hand taken out of the way This moderate course being held the union of unseigned faith and love will become a sure foundation of true Christian concord with sound judgment and good conscience and do that for the suppressing of Schism in the right state of Christianity which implicit faith and blind obedience doth in false corrupt and Antichristian State Here it is mainly requisite that those things that most promote or hinder the New birth and Spiritual life be by Pastors and people universally most regarded and those that make little for or against the same be looked upon as of little moment And the truth is when the greatest and weightiest matters are duely prized and most contended for contentions about little things will soon expire And if this course be taken hypocrites will lose their advantages of seeming Religious by zeal for those things wherein Religion doth not consist and carnal designs and interests that now rend the Churches and trouble all things would be defeated and abandoned Moreover to maintain peace they that Rule had need consider what mistakes and weaknesses are competible to true Believers and sometimes to the best and choicest of them that they might not bear too hard upon them And they that are ruled must consider that the best polity or Constitution so far as it is of mans regulating hath defects and inconveniences and affairs will be complicated and therefore they must not be too unyielding but bear with what is tolerable and not easily remediable though they may not in any wise do a sinfull act or omit a duty in the season of it For by want of such forbearance they may sooner destroy the good part than mend what is amiss It is not seldom in such cases that men seek remedies that prove worse than the disease If the healing of breaches require an yielding or receding from what hath been stood upon it should be on that part where equity and necessity declares it should be It is not so easie for every Christian to resolve what is right in many opinions and usages as for those in power to omit the inforcing of them Unnecessary injunctions may easier be parted with than mens judgments can be altered or their doubting consciences well setled This tenderness and forbearance is no lessoning of the Church ' s honour and power And a little diversity i● little things cannot rationally move derisi●… in the irreligious nor justly give scandal to any But there be things of that slightness that an over-precise and importunate unifo● mity in them may occasion contempt and suspition of hypocrisie or superstitious folly Unity of faith and life is the glory of the tr●… Church and uniformity in external order is 〈◊〉 be indeavored with Sobriety and is best effecte● by cutting off superfluous institutions and lay ing no greater burden on the faithfull tha● things necessary And this pacifick state may b● as well hoped as wished for if the Guides o● the Church would seek the things of Christ mor● than their own things But alas the usurpations and impositions o● proud and selfish men even in pretence o● suppressing Schism have hindred Christia● people from uniting in the true center of unity which is Jesus Christ as set forth in the doctrin● of the Apostles and Prophets and which 〈◊〉 the same yesterday and to day and for ever In deed they that prevail by power to advanc● their own devised ways and crush Disenters may make a desolation and then call it peace an● union but it is not the peace of Christs Kingdo●… Divisions are caused by men of corrup● minds and partly by the weakness of Good men ascribing too much to their own apprehen sions and inclinations and not considering th● condition of others as their own nor minding the necessity and usefulness of lawfull compliance or of mutual forbearance and discention CHAP. XI A good frame of Ecclesiastical Polity THe promoting of true Christianity and all the things before named pertaining to the sound state of Religion depends much upon a good frame of Ecclesiastical polity Undoubtedly our Lord Jesus Christ hath appointed Spiritual Officers to guide and rule his Church and in the government thereof there be some things of divine right and unalterable by the will of man and there be many things necessary to the support and due managment thereof that are of humane determination as to the particulars Both kinds are liable to depravation and great abuse Things of divine right may be corruptly managed and perverted to wrong ends And things of mans appointment are sometimes not only ill managed but ill ordained as being wholly incongruous and perhaps pernicious to the right ends of goverment Now a good polity is the whole compages of things laid together in the fabrick of the Church fitted and directed to promote the Christian life or the power of Godliness and to prevent or remedy the decay thereof And the more notably and powerfully conducible it is to this end it is by so much the more excellent According to this rule it hath most regard for sincere Christians and insists most upon their incouragement and the increase of their number and it makes all its external orders and interests subservient to the prosperity of the Church regenerate The order wherein it excells is an orderly management of those things which are of divine Command in matter of Doctrine Worship Discipline and Conversation in such manner as is most effectual for the obtaining of their ends by such necessary rules of Prudence as are requisite in all Human actions It prefers purity and spirituality before external pomp though it neglects not those necessary decencies and Ornaments that should attend the Service of God according to the awfull regard that is to be had thereto and the reverend demeanor to be used therein It provides able Ministers of the Gospel and that every Pastor be resident with his own Flock and that he duly feed them and labour in the Word and Doctrine and that the People be not left in the hands of a Mercenary procured at the cheapest rate It provides by a liberal maintenance worthy endowments and priviledges for that meet support and honour of the ministery which is requisit to preserve the
common remisness in this matter is deplorable Sometimes the manner of opposition against Seducers is unadvised and prejudicial To contend for truth by wrath and clamour and contumelious language and usage inhanceth the price of Error and adds to its reputation But the surest way is to converse much with our plain hearted People and to season them with right principles and to detect the subtile methods of deceitfull workers and the dangerous issues of their allurements and by honest and inoffensive applications to prepossess those holds of which deceivers seek to possess themselves And here it is of chief importance that the influence of the Pastors and other prudent and able Persons upon the common multitude of professors be more prevailing than the influence of the common multitude upon the Pastors and other prudent Leaders Servile temporizing with vulgar fancies degrades the Authority and Wisdom of prudent Guides and lifts up a vulgar Spirit and will bring it to that pass that the weakest and most inconsiderate shall sway the Churches Interest Let Persons of approved worth be more faithful and noble than by such servility and treachery to raise to themselves a power in the hearts of the weaker sort Let them rather commend themselves by their known Integrity Wisdom and Goodness and by being ready also in all condescention to serve and please them to their Edification And such faithfulness is the surest means to gain them love and honour Let the Religious beware of seeking to be admired and magnified among one another or of overprizing each others esteem This latter seems to be the cause that drew Peter to a fit of dissimulation and separation from the believing Gentiles while he sought too much to please them that were of the Circumcision Sometimes we know not our own Spirits It is good to beware of provocations like to be given or taken Upon a supposed affront or injury men of parts have been hurried into dangerous contests and to make head against petty passionate opposition they have run beyond their own thoughts and wrought strange confusion Discretion and charity seeks to convince and satisfie and not to exasperate an offended Brother It is well observed that no turbulent Opinion or Party doth usually arise in the Church but by the Church's neglect of some truth or duty Wherefore if an evil spirit seek an occasion of mischief reform the abuse and so prevent his working upon the simple And forasmuch as some of upright hearts being deceived with a fancy of a more sublime and perfect way may pass into the tents of Sectaries so far as conce●ns Church Order and external Worship a compassionate regard must be had of such as walk honestly and retain those fundamental Truths that may be a ground-work for saving Faith and godly Life Now towards such the greatest charity is exercised in labouring to remove the stumbling-block of their error and to make it plain before them that the Faithfull whose Communion they forsake contend for the Perfection of holy Scripture and the explicit Knowledge of the doctrine of Salvation and the reasonable service of God according to his Word and spiritual Worship sutable to the Gospel Dispensation and the lively use of holy Ordinances in opposition to unwritten Traditions Mens inventions implicit Faith ignorant devotion and meer formality That they declare by word and deed against the iniquity and impiety of this evil World and therefore the world hates them that they insist upon no forms or usages in Religion but what are commanded by the positive Laws of Christ or are necessary in their general reason by the law of Nature that they seek no worldly advantages or advancements in the Church but what are necessary for the support of the Truth according to Gods ordinary Providence and lastly that human infirmities must not be thought strange in them that have not obtained Angelical perfection These and the like things should be laid open before honest People that have been seduced into Sectarian error CHAP. XXV The advancement of the sound State of Religion by making it National and the settled interest of Nation CHrists little Flock cannot go out of the World nor retire within themselves alone from the Nations of the Earth but they must needs remain a part of Kingdoms Commonwealths with the World in general They must take themselves to be concerned in the civil Powers for the Powers that are will take themselves to be concerned in them and their ways For which cause their aims and actions as far as their Sacred Rule allows must be fitted to the capacity of the civil Government and directed unto the generall peace and quietness of the nation whereof they are in which they enjoy their civil rights By this means religions interest may incorporate with the general interest of a nation run in the same channel That pure Religion may take root and spread and prosper it is necessary to bring its external frame to the consistency of a National settlement The just ●a●aude hereof is laid in the doctrine of Faith and substantials of Divine Worship and things necessary to Church unity and order but it goes not beyond these And being fixed in this extent it is in a way to gain besides the support and power of the Law the Nations unstrained compliance and approbation As on the one hand Ecclesiastical tyranny is a root of bitterness always bearing gall and wormwood so on the other hand unfixedness and unlimited liberty consists not with that stability wherein all prudent Governors would settle their own affairs as also with that general tranquillity and repose which is the health of any People If one were raised to empire by a meer Fanatick Party he cannot settle himself nor stand upon firm ground till he wind his interest out of their hands and turn himself to the way of general satisfaction To the same intent and purpose it is of great importance so to fix the terms of Church Communion as not to set a perpetual bar against the main body of the People A Church state so barr'd though it were asserted with a veterane Army and could inclose all preferments both of honor and profit within it self to be at its disposal yet it is hard to see how it could ever obtain a firm establishment For a Christian Nation in general being shut out of the Church or barr'd of such Privileges as are supposed to belong to them as Christians are inraged and likely to be ingaged as one Man to oppose that which they take for intolerable oppression Or if they care not to be admitted they will turn to a contrary interest and Party in Religion or to infidelity Barbarism Atheism or some destructive way or other Now the intention here propounded may take effect if the Constitution shut out none from Sacred and Spiritual Priviledges but such as make not Profession of true Christianity or be destitute of that knowledge which is absolutely necessary to true
well reckon that they have made the most of their advantages when they can secure its interests in the common interest of a Nation A firm liberty and security founded in a national interest is more agreeable to the condition of regenerate Christians than an intire potency to themselves alone For they would scarce well comport with so great a weight of power Hypocrites for carnal ends would addict themselves to their party and overact them The sincere would prove but men corruptions would appear and miscarriages would marr their reputation which is not their least Support Hereunto may be added many incongruities that would happen to them The Gallantry and Splendor of the world will be no help to that humble and contrite frame of Spirit and real mortification and holy walking and heavenly mindedness which is the power of Christianity The various and versatile ways of worldly policy turning to innumerable occasions are not very passable to truly tender Consciences Besides if the power were inclosed within these narrow limits many of low Birth and Breeding must needs be lifted up both to the envy of the excluded party and the disesteem of Magistracy And persons of low condition being raised above their own Sphere upon the account of Religion may be easily tempted to think more highly of themselves than they ought to think and to grow busie peevish and rigid in needless matters which will provoke a People and fire their Spirits and though the rage be pent up for a season within their breasts it will at length break out into a flame The power of Christianity as to human strength is best established and extended by leaning upon some common interest with which it falls in as the Vine is born up and spreads abroad by the support of a wall or frame It is therefore most sutable to the terms upon which it stands in this world to be in a complex state with some other just large and stable interest such as is the common peace and safety both of Prince and People And being a holy and wise Profession it leads its Followers in safe and right Paths and teacheth them to wait therein with patience The nature of its interest will bear such patient waiting For it is not carnal consisting of the great things of this world which may call for an eager and quick pursuit and daring interprizes but it is the upholding of such a cause as needs not fear a sinking if it catch not hold of every sudden offer that is not clear in regard of Conscience or prudence but by an unchangable reason it indures throughout all ages and if it fall it shall rise again It needs not the making of Parties and drawing people to its side by a pragmatical importunity nor to enter into any suspected ways but wheresoever it is managed like it self in righteous and prudent Counsels it makes the fairest progress and of longest continuance The reasons aforegoing do hold in due proportion against the ingrossing of privileges in particular in corporate Societies and the making of Parties to interrupt the settled order of promotions and to keep back persons legally intitled that the Religious alone might be promoted Such Practises make sad breaches and upon change of Affairs will turn to the great detriment if not the depression of the Party so advanced CHAP. XXXI Of Leading and following and of Combinations GOds Providence useth to dispose into all quarters some men not only of known integrity but eminent for wisdom and reputation who see more than the ordinary sort of good men and are able and meet to give advice like those children of Issachar men that had understanding of the times to know what Israel ought to do These are much the stay of this Profession and by their influence keep things right and preserve the weaker sort from manifold aberrations It is supposed that they seek not their own glory in being made Heads of Parties but that in sincerity and self-denial they follow truth and peace and use their Authority and ability to promote a Catholick interest and true concord among all Christians Nevertheless sometimes the understanding of the prudent fails and Counsel is hidden from them It pleaseth the only wise God sometimes to permit strange resolves to proceed from good and wise men that our main stress of hope might rest upon him alone and on his infallible Word and that we might not become the absolute Disciples of any Masters upon Earth One or two eminent men in a Country though wise and faithfull may not be followed as it were by implicit Faith which may lead into great mistakes It is to be supposed that there be many discreet persons though not of eminent ability whom it may become to hear and reverence their eminent men yet to see with their own eyes that is to judge by their own reason In this matter there be two extreams either to be too morose or too sequacious the one being the effect of a sullen pride and Self-conceit the other of pusillanimity temerity and such like weakness and both tending to make breaches and lead into parties We may have the persons of Worthy men in due veneration but not in excessive admiration Avoid precipitate Leaders for though the service of hot Spirits may be sometimes prosperous yet in this temperate cause their conduct is pernicious And there is as much reason to avoid such Leaders as care not or at least consider not what they do against the common interest of Christianity to advance a particular Form or Party But above all beware of such persons whose apparent worldly interests lead them to adhere to some divided Party to cherish Faction If much be committed into such hands we shall be lead into a wrong course or disabled to follow the right though we see it plain before us Yea the cause of Religion will be inthralled to the service of a Faction and be left with disgrace enough when men have serv'd their turns of it A people of honest zeal may easily be over-credulous of great and powerfull men that pretend to favour Religion and take it into their Patronage Yet the more discerning sort will look to it that while Grandees retain them with such favour and Friendship they overact them not to the dishonor and dammage of this Profession which is more worthy than to be held in vassalage and made to lackey after corrupt designs and more noble than to bear such indignity It is good for the younger sort of Professors to reverence the ancient and more experienced and for all sorts in their choice of Guides and Patterns to prefer solid judgment with integrity of Life and Conversation before taking parts heat of zeal and high affections Amidst diversities of Parties and Persuasions it is safe to hold communion with the generality of Serious and Pious Christians and yet to receive with love the several disagreeing Parties who for the main walk in the truth and to have
chiefest point thereof being in the essentials and weighty matters of Christian Faith and Life the highest violation thereof and the chiefest point of Schism lies in denying or enormously violating the said essentials or weighty matters And it is directly a violation of the Unity of the Catholick Church and not of particular Churches only Not only particular Persons but Churches yea a large combination of Churches bearing the Christian name may in their Doctrine Worship and other avowed Practice greatly violate the essentials or very weighty matters of Christian Faith and Life and be found guilty of the most enormous breach of Unity It is no Schism to withdraw or depart from any the largest combination or collective body of Churches though for their amplitude they presume to stile their combination the Catholick Church that maintain and avow any Doctrine or Practice which directly or by near and palpable consequence overthrows the said essentials The next point of external Unity being about the essentials and integrals of Church state the Sacraments and other publick Worship the Ministery and Discipline of the Church considered as of Christs institution the next chief point of Schism is the breach hereof And this may be either against the Catholick or a particular Church Of such Schism against the state of the Catholick Church there are these instances 1. When any one part of professed Christians how numerous soever combined by any other terms of Catholick Unity than what Christ hath made account themselves the only Catholick Church excluding all Persons and Churches that are not of their combination 2. When a false Catholick Unity is devised or contended for viz. a devised Unity of Government for the Catholick Church under one terrene Head personal or collective assuming a proper governing power over all Christians upon the face of the whole Earth 3. When there is an utter disowning of most of the true visible Churches in the World as having no true Church state no not the essentials thereof and an utter breaking off from communion with them accordingly Of Schism against a particular Church in point of its Church state there be these instances 1. The renouncing of a true Church as no Church although it be much corrupted much more if it be a purer Church though somewhat faulty 2. An utter refusing of all acts of communion with a true Church when we may have communion with it either in whole or in part without our personal sin of commission or omission 3. The causing of any Divisions or Distempers in the state or frame of a true Church contrary to the Unity of the Spirit But it is no Schism to disown a corrupt frame of Polity supervenient to the essentials and integrals of Church state in any particular Church or combination of Churches like a leprosie in the Body that doth grosly deprave them and in great part frustrate the ends of their constitution The last and lowest point of external Unity lying in the accidental modes of Religion and matters of meer order extrinsick to the essentials and integrals of Church-State the violation thereof is the least and lowest point of Schism I mean in it self considered and not in such aggravating circumstances as it may be in Those accidental Forms and Orders of Religion which are necessary in genere but left in specie to human determination are allowed of God when they are determined according to prudence and charity for Peace and Edification and accordingly they are to be submitted to Consequently it is one point of Schism to make a Division from or in a Church upon the accountal of accident Forms and Orders so determined according to Gods allowance But if any of the accidentals be unlawfull and the maintaining or practicing thereof be imposed upon us as the terms of our communion it is no Schism but Duty to abstain from communion in that case For explicitly and personally to own errors and corruptions even in smaller points is evil in it self which must not be committed that good may come In this case not he that withdraws but he that imposes causeth the Division And this holds of things sinfull either in themselves or by just consequence And herein he that is to act is to discern and judge for his own practice whether the things imposed be such For Gods Law supposeth us rational creatures able to discern its meaning and to apply it for the regulating of our own actions else the Law were given us in vain Submission and reverence towards Superiors obligeth no man to resign his understanding to their determinations or in compliance with them to violate his own conscience Persons meek humble peaceable and throughly conscientious and of competent judgment may not be able by their diligent and impartial search to see the lawfulness of things injoyned and t is a hard case if they should thereupon be declared contumacious Seeing there be several points of Unity the valuation whereof is to be made according to their different value mens judgment and estimation of Unity and Schism is very preposterous who lay the greatest stress on those points that are of least moment and raise things of the lowest rank to the highest in their valuation and set light by things of the greatest moment and highest value as indeed they do who set light by soundness of Faith and holiness of Life and consciencious observance of Divine institutions where there is not also unanimity and uniformity in unscriptural Doctrines and human ceremonies And they that make such an estimate of things and deal with Ministers accordingly do therein little advance the Unity of the Spirit or indeavour to keep it in the bond of Peace Seeing the word of God is the rule of Church Unity a breach is made upon it when other bounds thereof are set than this rule allows An instance hereof is the devising of other terms of Church-communion and Ministerial liberty than God hath commanded or allowed in his Word to be made the terms thereof Also any casting or keeping out of the Church or Ministery such as Gods Word doth not exclude from either but signifies to be qualified and called thereunto God doth not allow on the part of the Imposer such tearms of Church communion or Ministerial station as are neither Scriptural nor necessary to Peace and Edification nor are any part of that necessary order and decency without which the Service of God would be undecent nor are in any regard so necessary but that they may be dispensed with for a greater benefit and the avoiding of a greater mischief And they are found guilty of Schism that urge such unscriptural and unnecessary things unto a breach in the Church Such Imposers are not only an occasion of the breach that follows but a culpable cause thereof because they impose without and against Christs warrant who will not have his Church to be burdened nor the consciences of his Servants intangled with things unnecessary Nevertheless such unscriptural or
as Studious of the Churches Peace and Concord as any others And though they have not the same latitude of judgment with others in some points yet they have a right Catholick Spirit to promote the common Interest of Religion and more especially the Protestant Reformation and dread the weakning and shattering of it by needless Divisions and are ready to go as far as conscience will allow in compliance with the injunctions of Rulers But they are cast and kept out of the Established Order by the injunction of some terms which in regard of their present judgment they can not comply with but under the guilt of so great a sin as dissembling in the matter of Religion Touching Church-Government they admit the Episcopacy that was of ancient Ecclesiastical custom in the time of Ignatius yea or of Cyprian Bishop Usher's model of Government by Bishops and Arch-bishops with their Presbyters was by some of them presented to the Kings Majesty for a ground-work of Accommodation They acknowledge the Kings Ecclesiastical Supremacy according to the Oath in that case required His Majesty in his gracious Declaration concerning Ecclesiastical Affairs gives a Testimony concerning the Ministers that attended him in Holland in these words viz. To our great satisfaction and comfort We found them Persons full of affection to Us and of zeal to the Peace of Church and State and neither Enemies as they had been given out to be to Episcopacy or Liturgy but modestly to desire such alterations in either as without shaking foundations might best allay the present Distempers They are ready to engage that they will not disturb the Peace of the Church nor indeavour any point of alteration in its Government by Rebellious Seditions or any unlawfull ways Those points of Conformity wherein they are dissatisfied are but some accidentals of Religion and external modes and the Declarations and Subscriptions importing an allowance of all and every thing contained in the Liturgy And they think that these points are not so necessary in themselves or in their consequents but they are very dispensable as the Wisdom of Governours shall see cause If it be objected that if any thing should be yielded to them there would be no end of their cravings that which I have to say is That reasonable men will be satisfied with reasonable concessions and if Subjects know not what is fit for them to ask Governours know what is fit for them to give By granting the desired relaxation the Church would not as some alledge be self-condemned as confessing the unlawfulness of her injunctions or as justifying the Opinions of the Dissenters For it can signifie from her no more than either her indulgence to the weak or her moderation in things less necessary and more controverted which would not turn to her reproach but to her greater justification I have here nothing to say to them that object against any relaxation after that manner as if they desired not our Conformity but our perpetual exclusion Such may be answered in due season And I have here nothing to do with those that argue against us from Politick considerations respecting a particular Interest too narrow for an adequate foundation of Church-Peace and Christian-Concord But my scope is to consider what may be done by the Higher Powers and Church Guides for the healing of breaches according to the Wisdom which is from above which is first pure then peaceable gentle and easie to be intreated full of mercy and good fruits without partiality and without hypocrisie I have made particular observation of those too most remarkable Parties which have been looked upon as the chief instances of Schism in the more ancient times The other Schisms that I find of any remark in those times were raised sometimes by Persons cast out of the Church for their Crimes and thereupon drawing Disciples after them as was that of Meletius a Bishop in Egypt who was desposed for having sacrificed to Idols Sometimes by offence unjustly taken at some supposed faultiness in a Bishop as was that of an Orthodox Party in Antioch against another Meletius an Orthodox and right worthy Bishop of that City only because he was at first brought in by the Arrians sometimes by the exasperations of the People for injuries done to them or their Pastors and outrages committed by their opposites as was that of the Johannites at Constantinople upon the banishment of Chrysostom and somtimes by meer animosity and humor of discontentment as was that of Lucifer a Bishop in Sardinia who separated from Eusebius Bishop of Vertellis and others because they disliked his rash act of Ordaining Paulinus to be Bishop of Antioch as tending to perpetuate the Schism there begun Touching all the said Parties it may be observed that they did not plead that any Opinions or Forms were imposed on them to which their consciences did reluctate nor did they desire others forbearance towards them in such things as might bear too hard upon them but they themselves would not bear with others in that which they supposed faulty but did nither choose wholly to abandon the Communion of the Churches and did not seek nor care for accomodation with them But this is not the case of at least a great part of the Dissenters of these times For they importune an accommodation with the Churches of the Established Order and for Peace sake are willing to bear with the practice of others in that which themselves dislike or doubt of but they cannot obtain a Dispensation from others in some things which are very dispensable points according to their judgment but are forced to abide in a severed state unless they will profess what they believe not or practice what they allow not Now because the judgment and practice of antiquity is much insisted on I pray that it may be considered whether in the Primitive or ancient times of Christianity men yea many hundreds of men duly qualified for the Ministery by sound Faith and good Life as also by their Learning and Industry and offering all reasonable security for their submissive and peaceable demeanure were or would have been cast and kept out of the Church for their Nonconformity to some Opinions Forms and Ceremonies which at the best are but the accidentals of Religion and of the truth or lawfulness whereof the Dissenters were wholly dissatisfied and which the Imposers judged to be but things in themselves indifferent And I further pray that it may be considered whether it be easier for the Nonconformists to be self-condemned in Conforming to some injunctions against their consciences and in deserting the Ministery to which they are dedicated than for Superiours either by some relaxation to make them capable of Conforming or to bear with their peaceable exercise of the Ministery in a state of Nonconformity while some of their injunctions confine them to that state CHAP. V. Of making a right estimate of the guilt of Schism and something more of taking the right way to