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A94297 Of the government of churches; a discourse pointing at the primitive form. Thorndike, Herbert, 1598-1672. 1641 (1641) Wing T1055; Thomason E1102_1; ESTC R203782 63,264 216

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others most daring to innovate opinions in matters of religion especially as well as in those that concern other knowledge But he that calleth to remembrance that correspondence which in ancient times was actuated between Churches of severall nations people commercio formatarum as Optatus speaketh by traffique of those letters of correspondence which under set forms were wont to passe between Bishops in the name of their Churches the true form of that unitie which our Lord commended to his Church after it was become Catholick must needs lament to see that most beautifull peace of this Government in ancient time defaced and lost by the fault of them that hate to be reformed in the dissensions of Christendome alledged to destroy it The honour and esteem which the learned of the reformed Churches abroad have professed of the state of our Churches and our charity in excusing the necessities of theirs and acknowledging the efficacy of the Ministery which they use will be sufficient through Gods goodnesse to actuate the correspondence we desire to preserve with them without those innovations which they never required at our hands to such purpose But he that acknowledgeth and is glad to see these heads stand in their right place looking back upon their beginning which was to succeed the Apostles over severall Presbyteries in the place which they held over all for the time must needs misse their relatives the bodies of these Presbyteries in the government of Churches And though that alteration cannot be charged upon any man which is come to passe through time and insensible custome especially seeing it cannot be counted an alteration in this Church of England because we are to think it had prevailed in the Church before this Nation received the Faith yet must it needs be remembred by him that believeth all the evil consequences which this government is charged with whether in opinion or truth to have come from the discharge of Presbyteries from their part of the office One particular no man need to be nice in reckoning to be of that nature though it is not in the power of one man were he as much in love as I am with the primitive form or scarce of one age without a publick act to amend it That is the committing of jurisdiction at large even that which is proper and essentiall to the Church by the power of the keyes which our Lord hath given it as hath been said in effect to Lay persons Which jurisdiction though for the present it passe not upon present advise but upon Laws of the Church for the purpose yet so long as Laws are generall and few Cases particular and numberlesse will alwayes deserve to be exercised with mature and charitable advise of those to whose charge our Lord first committed it if we mean to attain the ends of correction and example Though the profession by which it is ministred deserve to retain the rank it holdeth in regard of those other points of jurisdiction in charitable causes by the favour of Princes and laws of Common-wealths annexed to the Church passing as it doth by the laws whereof they professe knowledge This inconvenience if such it be counted seemeth to proceed from that unsensible change whereof hath been said for had the Presbyteries continued as at the beginning upon the exercise of this Discipline of Penance it is not to be thought that power could have been so lightly alienated as from one wherein a number had their interesse But this and the like consequences seem to have brought this undue opinion upon the Church Government that as Cathedrall Churches long since so now the State of Bishops among indifferent men is counted a matter of indifference which had they continued in the Primitive charge must needs have been counted as counted they ought to be inviolable And therefore though as the case standeth it is neither possible nor desired to call the whole Presbytery of a Diocese to a share in the publick government yet let me have leave to say that the next course to retrive the Primitive form with the wholesome grounds and consequences of it is to reestate these Presbyteries in Cathedrall Churches and perhaps in other populous places seats of jurisdictions where the Diocese is great furnishing them with number of men of abilities and joyning them with and under the Bishops for assistance in all parts of the office hitherto proved common to both It seems the means that hath brought to passe that insensible change whereof we speak was from the beginning no other then this because the form of proceeding in particular Churches was never regulated by Canons of the Church but left to particular custome And therefore it is past my apprehension how more right should be done then distributing the common charge into particular interesse by such rules as may best expresse those generall terms which the purest Primitive times were content with that as without the Bishop nothing to be done so the Bishop to do nothing without advice of his Presbyters The performance of divine service in the Cathedrall common sense finds too slight a work for such persons the cures of all Churches within such populous places if they belonged to their titles would be a work sutable to such prime abilities Then the exercise of the power of the keyes in the discipline of Penance Triall and Approvement of persons presented to Cures or assistance of Cures according to laws excluding all Ordinations without such title Censure of offenses in doctrine or life of persons ordained alwayes under the Bishop and for his assistance are works that require mature advise and passe best in cōmon for satisfaction to the publick matters of religion being by nature more popular then the Common-wealth If this be not enough such may be mēs abilities that all these Presbyteries may become schools of the Prophets and Seminaries of able Preachers through the severall Jurisdictions or Dioceses A thing wished on all hands but not to be expected without means to bring it to passe This hath been alwayes desired at the hands of Cathedrall Churches and some steps of it remain still in some of ours though the staple of this education being long since drained from other places to the two Universities the charge hath been sustained by them alone with unspeakable benefit to the Church as well as to the Common-wealth yet the assistance of these places with them for the service of the Church is not to be counted their prejudice leaving intire unto them the place they possesse of Seminaries of the Common-wealth FINIS
his purpose because he saith no more but this that the First to Timothy was sent from Macedonia But the Apostle having resolved if it were possible to be at Jerusalem the day of Pentecost Acts xx 16. maketh hast and overtaketh his company at Troas Acts xx 6. And thus we see the reason why there is no respect of Timothy in his instructions to the Elders of Ephesus Acts xx 18. because that then he began to enter upon his charge there and because of the instructions he had received from the Apostle by his first Epistle besides word of mouth So the upshot of all this discourse is thus much That within compasse of the time of this voyage at the beginning whereof the Apostle said in the Spirit that when he had been at Jerusalem he must also see Rome Acts xix 21. at the midst whereof he writeth to the Romanes chap. xv 23. that he had no more place in those parts and at the end whereof he saith to the Elders of Ephesus Acts xx 25. And now behold I know that all you among whom I have gone preaching the kingdome of God shall see my face no more knowing by revelation that he was to serve God no more in those parts appointeth his two Disciples Timothy and Titus to be in his stead over the Churches of Asia and Crete Now that the charge of Timothy and Titus giveth them a power as great as that of Bishops was from the beginning no question is made if they prove not more then so the businesse is clear For true it is something not ordinary in Bishops we must acknowledge in Timothie's person when he is called an Evangelist 2. Tim. iv 5. Do the work of an Evangelist To which we must referre that grace whereof the Apostle speaketh 1. Tim. iv 14. Neglect not the gift that is in thee that was given thee by prophecy with the laying-on of the hands of the Presbytery Whereof again 2 Tim. i. 16. I put thee in mind that thou stirre up the gift that is in thee by the putting-on of my hands And 1. Tim. i. 18. This charge I commit unto thee sonne Timothy according to the prophecies that went afore of thee In this the Disciples case is somewhat like the Apostles as you shall see it anon Acts xiii 2. where the Prophets in the Church of Antiochia having foretold through the holy Ghost what God would do in the planting of his Gospel by his hands and Barnabas and declared his will for setting them apart for that purpose hereupon they receive imposition of hands So likewise we must conceive that these prophecies went afore of Timothy to inform the Church of the will of God concerning him and the work he had appointed him to perform As for the grace he receiveth by imposition of hands what other can any man imagine it to be then that which is designed in the name of an Evangelist which the Apostle meant when he said Ephes iv 11. that our Lord hath given to his Church some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists Or how can we further distinguish it otherwise from the gifts of Apostles and Prophets then placing it in the extraordinary temporary indowments of the holy Ghost inabling such persons according to the exigence of that time to publish the Gospel and to perswade it which neverthelesse cometh short of the personall qualitie of witnesses of our Lord and his doctrine and of the measure and kind of those graces of miracles languages and the like that make an Apostle But he that would draw this into consequence and argue that Timothy was no Bishop because an Evangelist may with more reason conclude that Philip was no Deacon because he was an Evangelist and contradict the Scripture that saith Acts xxi 8. We entred into the house of Philip the Evangelist which was one of the seven For if an Apostle in that eminence of graces and priviledges neverthelesse abiding upon a certain charge and taking care of it is to be counted Bishop of a particular place as was argued afore much more may an Evangelist for his extraordinary gift be a Bishop for his severall charge which is to say thus much in English That the gift of an Evangelist may fall upon any rank of ordinary Ministers as we see Philip for his place in the Church one of the seven Deacons at Jerusalem Acts vi 5. is neverthelesse an Evangelist for the graces God had bestowed upon him by his means to convert Samaria to the faith Acts viii 15. Nay further if the gift of an Evangelist be competible with a Deacons place it must be granted that Timothy as an Evangelist is no Governour of Churches And whereas it is argued that it was but a Commission for the time which Timothy and Titus are trusted with from the Apostle because it appeareth they were otherwhiles imployed otherwhere by the Apostle 2. Tim. iv 9 10. as any Bishop in case of publick necessities of the Church must be without the Apostle let me be bold to affirm that the rules of continued settled government directed to them by the Apostle to be executed by them in their persons are sufficient evidence that they were appointed by him for perpetuall Governours and not for temporary Commissaries Indeed as there is something more then ordinary in Timothie's person so is there something more then ordinary in Titus his charge in that he was left in Crete to ordain Presbyters in every citie Tit. i. 5. by which as appeareth in the sequele of the Epistle the Churches of those cities were to be governed under Titus as was observed afore The like to be said of Timothy whose instructions qualifying Presbyters and Deacons alone leave him alone superiour to all the Presbyteries he should institute according to his instructions Now if we observed the custome of the Apostles hitherto set forth of instituting Presbyteries in populous cities and observe the custome of the Church after their time wherein a Bishop was alwayes head of one of these Presbyteries Quid est enim Episcopus nisi primus Presbyterorum saith S. Augustine it will not be hard to espy a difference between the place of a Bishop and the extent of their charge For it will not serve the turn to say as some do that Titus was Archbishop of Crete and so intrusted with divers Churches For an Archbishop is a chief among Bishops not a person to govern divers Churches seats of Bishopricks Besides that these degrees among Bishops came in afterwards when the Church became incorporate into the State of the Romane Empire as having the charge of Churches in head-Cities of Provinces or according to the precedence of places wherein the Emperours or chief temporall Powers made their residence But in the mean time let me use Epiphanius his words The Apostles could not settle all things uniformly at once Is it a reasonable thing to argue that because S. Paul taketh no order for the heads of these Presbyteries which were
the Bishop in chief and upon the Presbyters in consequence whether in private upon particular occasions whereof we find much argument of practice in S. Cyprians Epistles or in publick in the assemblies of Christians For thus the matter went afterwards the principall parts and offices of Divine service that is the Sermon and the celebration of the Eucharist were wont to be reserved to the Bishop in honour of his place and the eminence of it unlesse he were absent or it were disposed of otherwise Which I take to be the reason why Justine Martyr in the place alledged afore related that the Sermon was wont to be made and the Eucharist celebrated by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which name compriseth Bishop and Presbyters both as hath been said because the office belonged to the Bishop in the first place to the Presbyters in case of his absence or the like And you shall heare even now Ignatius his argument to perswade the Ephesians not to assemble for the Eucharist but with the Bishop For saith he if the prayers of one or two have that force that Christ is in the midst of them much more the prayers of the Bishop and Church Therefore it was the Bishop whose prayers the Eucharist was celebrated with And in the Life of S. Augustine is related that it was not the custome for Presbyters to preach in the Churches of Africk that is not if the Bishop were present whereupon the Bishop Valerius being a Greek and not so fit to speak to the people in Latine brought that into use there which he had seen practiced in the East and assumed S. Augustine to assist him by preaching in his presence The Commentarie under S. Ambrose his name so often alledged having said upon Ephes iv 11. as we had it afore that at the first all sorts preached in the Church but afterwards it was otherwise settled prosecuteth it with these words Vnde nunc neque Diaconi in populo praedicant And of Baptizing Tertullian l. De Baptist c. 17. Dandi quidem jus habet summus sacerdos id est Episcopus dehinc Presbyteri Diaconi sed non sine autoritate Episcopi propter Ecclesiae honorem quo salvo salvapax est To shew us That all services of the Church even to baptize belonged in chief to the Bishop in respect to his place that for the same reason the Presbyters were silent in their presence and the Deacons not suffered at all to preach at that time Now as the office common to Bishop and Presbyters was and is seen in the services of the Church so was it also seen in appointing the assemblies of the Church for that purpose This we have here to observe out of Ignatius his Epistles in consequence to that which was produced afore out of S. Paul and Clemens concerning the disorders of the assemblies at Corinth that to correct them and to prevent the like the order of the peoples Oblations of the Presbyters celebrating the Eucharist of the Assemblies of the Church for that purpose was regulated by the appointment of the Bishop and Presbyters His words are these Epist ad Smyrn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That without the Bishop neither the people might bring their offerings nor Presbyters consecrate the Eucharist nor both celebrate the feasts of Love used at these assemblies And for the purpose of this particular it is that he is so earnest and frequent throughout his Epistles in exhorting to be subject to the Bishop and Presbyters Epist ad Trall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that is within the Altar saith he is pure wherefore he obeyeth the Bishop and Presbyters But he that is without is he that doth any thing without the Bishop and Presbyters He that is without the Altar in Ignatius his terms that doth things without the Bishop and Presbyters is meant of those of the people that assembled or those of the Presbyters that celebrated the Eucharist without the Bishop and Presbyters or their appointment which was called erecting Altar against Altar in the Primitive time For so Ignatius again in the Epistle to the Ephesians Let no man mistake saith he if a man be not within the Altar he cometh short of the bread of God For if the prayer of one or two be of such force that Christ standeth in the middest of them how much more shall the prayer wherein the Bishop and Church agreeth that is at the Eucharist which he spoke of when he mentioned the bread of God afore prevail And therefore in the end of that Epistle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Obeying the Bishop and Presbyters without distraction of mind breaking one bread which is the medicine of immortalitie A plain case The intent of his exhortations is to perswade them to assemble without schisme because that to assemble and celebrate the Eucharist besides the Bishops appointment was then the due marke of aschismatick And that the Presbyters concurred with him in ordering these matters appeareth by the obedience he requireth to both And so still in Ignatius the Presbyters are assistant to the Bishop in all things And this is the meaning of that vith Canon of the Councel at Gangra whereof the tenour is If any man assemble in private beside the Church and will perform Ecclesiasticall Offices in contempt of the Church no Presbyter being there with assent of the Bishop let him be anathema Providing herein against schisme as the occasion of that Councel evidenceth Wherewith agreeth the xxxii Canon of the Apostles And in the viith and viiith Canon next following of the same Councel there is provision against bringing or receiving oblations otherwise then to the Church beside the Bishops mind or his that is trusted for these things for the benefit of the poore under pain of anathema The heavinesse of the sentence proceeding upon the mark of schisme which the action forbidden importeth though there is in it a respect to the maintenance of the Church and poore arising for that time out of the oblations of Christian people the dispersing whereof was then another particular of the office common to Bishop and Presbyters For as we reade acts xi 29. that the benevolence of the brethren of Antiochia was directed to the Elders at Jerusalem by the hands of Barnabas and Saul though the seven Deacons were made afore to attend upon the poore so are we not to think that their office went so high as to dispose of their maintenance but to execute the disposition of Bishop and Presbyters For when the Church of Antiochia mainteined foure thousand poore as is read in a passage of S. Chrysostome the Church of Rome two thousand and five hundred in Cornelius his time as is to be seen in his words related by Eusebius Eccles hist vi 43. it is not reason to imagine that all this means was put in the power of the Deacons Whose office S. Hierome well expresseth when he calleth them mensarum ac viduarum ministros as those that ministred
not disposed of their maintenance Though perhaps the advantage of fingring money was it that made them take so much upon them in his time whereof he complaineth Nay it is plain this must rest in the power of Bishop and Presbyters by the portions and divisions thereof wherein each of them had interesse as his maintenance whereof we find remembrance in S. Cyprians Epistles In the last Canon of the Councel of Antiochia is provided that the Bishop shall not alienate the Church-goods which though immovable were given for the same purpose without consent of his Presbyters And in those which are called the Canons of the Apostles which the world knoweth are not theirs but yet do expresse very ancient customes of the Church Can. iii. iv having ordered what sorts of first-fruits should be sent to the Church what home to the Bishop and Presbyters it followeth Now it is manifest that they are to be divided by them among the Deacons and Clergy to the Deacons for the maintenance of the poore to the Clergy for their own Where you see the interesse of the Presbyters in disposing of such oblations CHAP. XI Of the discipline of Penance Those that have the Keyes remit sinnes by prescribing Penance The intercession of the Church Particular persons excommunicated among the Jews Our Lord prohibiteth their course among his Disciples Two degrees of Excommunication as well in the Church as in the Synagogue The Keyes are given to Bishop and Presbyters The interesse of the people and what is required at the hands of the Common-wealth THere remaineth now two particulars of the office common to Bishop and Presbyters wherein the people also claim their interesse the one is the discipline of Penance the other the making of Ministers The due course whereof assigned by our Lord and his Apostles will best be discovered laying together first what we find of them in Scripture and then comparing of it with the proceeding of the Primitive time which we shall perceive the right to go along with The Keyes of the Kingdome of heaven are given by our Lord to the first of his Disciples in those words Matth. xvi 19. And I will give thee the keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven and whatsoever thou bindest on earth shall be bound in Heaven whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in Heaven If mens minds were not possessed with prejudice it would soon appear to be the same power that is given to all the Apostles John xx 24. Whosesoever sinnes ye remit they are remitted unto them and whosesoever sinnes ye retein they are reteined But Matt. xviii 17 18. to the same purpose though more at large And if he shall neglect to heare them tell it unto the Church But if he neglect to heare the Church let him be unto thee as a heathen man and as a publican Verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven To this must be added the proceeding of the Apostle in delivering to Satan the incestuous person at Corinth 1. Cor. v. 3 4 5. which he also did to Hymeneus and Alexander 1. Tim. i. 20. Now in the practice of the Primitive Church those that exercised this power were in part Judges Censours you may call them if you please and in part Physicians Both parts comprised in S. Cyprians words Ep. 51. Vbi lapsis nec censura deest quae increpet nec medicina quae sanet Judges they are in shutting Gods house upon offenders and binding their sins upon their consciences And the effect of this censure such supposing the proceeding of it to be due that as the disease of sin is not to be cured without the medicine of repentance no more can this knot wherewith sinnes notorious of themselves or otherwise known are tyed to mens consciences be undone without known repentance For since the worst of the souls sicknesse consisteth in not acknowledging her disease it pleased God to give his Church power and charge to constrain offenders to take their Physick which the grief of bodily diseases is able to do alone Physicians they are then in prescribing the medicine of Repentance and in that respect alone are truly said to remit sinnes God himself saith not to the Soul I absolve thee from thine offenses but upon supposition of the means his own gift of repentance that worketh the cure so farre it is from the power of his creature to pronounce forgivenesse without knowledge of the effect which the medicine of repentance hath wrought But if we say true when a Physician is said to cure a mans disease though all the world know he doth no more but prescribe the medicine or at the most see it applyed with as good right is it to be said that mens sinnes are cured by them that prescribe the course by which they are cured Onely whereas he that is cured of a bodily disease is able to tell himself when he is well he that is once sensible of the maladies of his soul is not easily satisfied when the cure is done It hath therefore pleased the goodnesse of God to provide an office and charge in his Church to assure men of forgivenesse of sinnes upon due knowledge of repentance by taking away that knot wherewith they remained tied upon their consciences Firmilianus Bishop of Caesarea Cappadociae in his Epistle to S. Cyprian the lxxvth in number of his Epistles thus writeth Lapsis quoque fratribus per poenitentiam medela quaeratur Non quasi à nobis remissionem peccatorum consequantur sed ut per nos ad intelligentiam delictorum suorum convertantur Domino pleniùs satisfacere cogantur To this purpose was the time and order and fashion of Penance regulated in the ancient Church that the diseases of the soul might receive every one their competent cure and therefore it is plain that among them it was a favour to be admitted to Penance in opposition to Novatianus Qui nemini dandam poenitentiam putavit saith Saint Ambrose De Poenit. 2. 1. exhorting men to repentance indeed but leaving them for pardon to God who had power to give it as his Disciple Socrates writeth Eccles hist iv 13. That is not imploying the power of the keyes and the benefit of it to the cure of their offenses Whereupon S. Ambrose you see calleth it dare poenitentiam as on the offenders side it was then called petere poenitentiam demanding and granting of Penance For this cause it was that this medicine of repentance was wont to be joyned with the prayers of the Congregation but in the chief place of the Bishop and Presbyters which if repentance be Physick is correspondent to that which is given to make Physick work And this is called in Tertullian Presbyteris advolvi Caris Dei adgeniculari Omnibus fratribus legationes deprecationis suae injungere and in S. Augustine Gemitus columbae the Mourning of the
turtle procuring their release at Gods hands And to this purpose was the Imposition of hands so often repeated in Penance because as S. Augustine saith of it in confirmation wherein he followeth Tertullian the one in these words Quid enim est impositio manuum nisi oratio super hominem the other afore him in these Dehinc manus imponitur per benedictionem advocans invitans Spiritum Sanctum That it is but a Ceremony of benediction imploring the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost which it representeth So was it in Penance nothing else but a form of benediction interceding for their reconcilement This may very well be thought to be the intent of the words of our Lord in the Gospel alledged Matth. xviii 19. For having delivered to the Church the power of binding and loosing in the words recited it followeth straight Again I say unto you that if two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven for where two or three are gathered together in my Name there am I in the midst of them For as in the words next going afore he sheweth how mens sins are bound and loosed to wit by the power which he giveth his Church to that purpose so he may well seem in the next words to point at the course by which this power may become effectuall to the loosing of sinnes to wit the intercession of the Congregation of Gods people At least thus much hath been observed by men of excellent learning that lamenting is a work specified by the Apostle himself in the businesse of reducing offenders by Penance 1. Cor. v. 2. Ye have not lamented to put away such a transgression from you And again 2. Cor. xii 20. I fear that when I come unto you I shall not find you such as I desire and shall bewail many which have sinned already and have not repented of the uncleannesse and fornication and lasciviousnesse that they have committed meaning that he should put them to Penance by consequence This maketh the interesse of the Congregation in the work of Discipline to be considerable but intituleth it not to the keyes of Gods house For to conceive our Lords meaning aright let us take notice that there was among the Jews much use of excommunicating by particular persons as is to be seen in their writings Maimoni in Talmud Torah c. 7. Arba Turim or Shulchan Aruch in Tore Deah Hilcoth Niddui Vcherem and that many times upon causes of their particular interesse For example a Rabbi or Rabbies Mate was able to excommunicate for his credit when he found himself slighted True it is they count it commendable in a Rabbi to passe over all disrespect to himself in private but he that shall do it in publick they bind him to remember it and watch his party like a Serpent till he seek favour and reconcilement Maimoni n. ult And true it is that in some cases they void excommunication that is grounded upon particular interesse and not for the honour of God Jore Deah out of the Hierusalem Talmud and R. Joseph Karo upon it f. 364. And generally he that excommunicateth without cause is to be excommunicated himself it is the last of twenty foure causes for which they excommunicate but what disorders might come upon such practice is easie to imagine And therefore there is great cause to think that our Lords words whereof we speak are aimed on purpose to abrogate this course among his followers though covertly to avoyd offense For two things he prescribeth in opposition to it first to aim at a brothers reformation and nothing else in all the proceeding Matt. xviii 15. If thy brother shall trespasse against thee go and tell him his fault between thee and him alone If he shall heare thee thou hast gained thy brother The second is that they shall proceed no further then contestation in private the rest he prescribeth to be referred in publick to the Church So it followeth But if he will not heare thee then take with thee one or two more that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established And if he shall neglect to heare them tell it unto the Church Now this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Church as also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is first used in the Greek of the old Testament to signifie the Congregation of the people of Israel The Jews that have lived since the Prophets have espoused and appropriated this later word the Synagogue to signifie sometimes the whole body of that Nation or rather of that Faith as among the Fathers the Synagogue standeth for the Jews in opposition to the Church of Christians sometimes particular Congregations of it and by consequence the place of their assemblies as in the Gospel He loveth our nation and hath built us a Synagogue And just so in all respects is the word ECCLESIA the Church used in relation to Christians our Lord in the Gospel having begun to appropriate it to the Congregation which he now began to institute Matt. xvi 18. Vpon this rock will I build my Church and in the text in hand Matt. xviii 17. Tell it to the Church So that it must not be denied it is not usuall for the Church which signifieth the whole Congregation of people to signifie the chief part of it But it is as certain on the other side that looking backward to the Synagogue upon which our Lord reflecteth as was said such censures as these are whereof our Lord speaketh proceeding from the public private ones being excluded as hath been said issued all from the Courts of Justice mentioned afore without respect to the Congregation of the people As thus There were among them two degrees of Excommunication and no more the lesse called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Separation the greater 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Anathema and the effect of them to cut a man off more or lesse from the Congregation of the people as is to be seen in the late most learned work De Jure Nat. Gent. sec disc Ebr. iiii 9. The ordinary sentence of Separation which is that we spake of afore was for thirtie dayes unlesse the Court thought fit to abbridge or inlarge the term for that time no man must come within foure cubits of him that stood excommunicate besides those of his house he must not be reckoned among three which is the number required at Blessing of meat he must not be reckoned among tenne which is the number required to make a Synagogue under that they go not to prayers in the Synagogue And how it is in the power of the Court to aggravate this is to be seen in Shulchan Aruch as afore Num. x. At thirty dayes end they iterated the sentence and stayed thirty dayes more If then he stood out it was in their power to excommunicate him with curses which is that
which is called Anathema With these the proceedings of the Christian Church keep some correspondence according to Scripture For when our Lord saith If he heare not the Church let him be unto thee as a Heathen man and as a Publicane he intimateth withall a course the Church had to take for his correction and amendment that should give car to it Which as it might perhaps end in a verball admonition of the Church and reall amendment of the party yet those that were under the discipline of Penance we know were in a sort excommunicate because they were not admitted to the Communion of the Eucharist besides that as those which were separated among the Jews they put upon them the state and fashion and habit of mourners And I shewed afore what we find in Scripture to argue this course directed by our Lord and practiced by the Apostle But here was a difference that in that state we find not that a man was cut off from the conversation of Christians those which were admitted to Penance being alwaies accounted in the way of salvation supposing the performance of their injoyned Penance That was the effect of that grievous censure whereof our Lord speaketh Let him be unto thee as a Heathen man and as a Publicane Not because he meaneth to forbid Christians to converse with Heathen men and Publicanes who being to be converted from among them must needs be compassed with them on every side And therefore that case the Apostle hath resolved 1. Cor. v. 9 10. where he informeth them that whereas he had written to them not to converse with fornicatours his meaning was not to forbid them to converse with the fornicatours of this world that is Gentiles or with the covetous or extortioners or with idolaters for then must ye go out of the world and as it followeth vers 12. For what have I to do to judge those that are without do not ye judge those that are within But our Lords meaning is that Christians should shew that respect to a brother that should be refractary to the Church as the Jews did then to Gentiles and Publicanes which the Apostle secondeth there vers 11. Now I write to you not to converse if any man that is called a brother be a fornicatour or covetous or an idolater or a railer or a drunkard or an extortioner with such a one no not to eat which is to avoid them as the Jews did him that stood separate And the sentence whereupon this is to be practiced is intimated in the next verse For what have I to do to judge those that are without Do not ye judge those that are within And this censure it seemeth the Apostle presupposeth when he writeth to Titus iii. 11. A man that is an Heretick after the first and second admonition reject For his meaning is not to instruct Titus alone what he in his person should do but in the person of Titus to instruct all the Church to reject and avoid refractary Hereticks and therefore in the consequence of avoyding them it seemeth he intimateth the censure whereupon they are to be avoyded The same censure against the incestuous person at Corinth he intimateth by the same consequence when he saith 1. Cor. v. 13. Therefore put away from you that wicked person which he calleth giving over to Satan in the same case vers 5. afore and in the case of Hymeneus and Alexander 1. Tim. i. 20. and which he signifieth 1. Cor. xvi 22. If any man love not the Lord Jesus let him be anathema Maranatha where anathema is the term that cometh from the Synagogue and so doth the other as some men think So that this censure cutteth men off from the conversation of Christians which forfeit the priviledges to which they pretend and so delivers them to Satan by consequence as those that lodged without the camp of Israel were in danger to be lickt up by the Amalekite Which course neverthelesse as it was preservative in regard of some members that they might not be tainted as the Apostle signifieth when he saith 1. Cor. v. 6. Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump So was it medicinall in respect of the sick shame and grief being a good way to the cure which the Apostle seemeth to respect when he directeth 1. Cor. v. 6. to deliver him to Satan for the destruction of the flesh that the spirit might be safe in the day of the Lord Jesus and 1. Tim. i. 20. whom I have delivered to Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme This is the correspondence between the proceeding of the Church and Synagogue And therefore as looking backward to the Synagogue whereupon our Lord reflecteth when he saith Dic Ecclesiae we see to whom they had recourse so shall we see looking forwards upon the Church which our Lord pointeth towards in the same words to whom he directeth his followers to have recourse The Keyes of Gods house are given in the Gospel to S. Peter with the effect of binding and loosing and the same power to all the Apostles in equivalent terms of reteining and remitting sinnes For if there were advantage it were an inconvenience that in the third place the power of binding and loosing should be given to the Church which is pretended given to S. Peter for a priviledge beyond the Apostles Well then might S. Cyprian argue Epist 27. that because our Lord promised to S. Peter the keyes of his Church therefore the acts of government of it were to passe through the Bishops hands and without him Apostates could not be reconciled And it is the same which S. Augustine affirmeth so oft as he teacheth which many times he doth that S. Peter in receiving the Keyes represented the Church as Ep. 79. Si hoc in Ecclesiâ fit he speaketh of binding and loosing Petrus quando claves accepit Ecclesiam sanctam significavit For what was promised to S. Peter was given the rest of the Apostles but was to rest in the Church to which it is also given in the same terms as S. Cyprian is willing to acknowledge so oft as he calleth the Presbyters his Colleagues and professeth to do nothing without their advise So that it is not possible to give a more impartiall meaning to the words of our Lord in the Gospel then the practice of those times hath expressed when that power was exercised in common by the Bishop and his Presbyters This it is Tertullian hath shewed us Apolog. c. 39. alledged afore where having commended the gravitie and integritie of Ecclesiasticall censures to shew by whom they were done he addeth as afore Praesident probati quique seniores honorem non pretio sed testimonio adepti And S. Augustines words are plain which we had afore Veniat peccator ad Antistites per quos ipsi in Ecclesia claves ministrantur à praepositis sacrorum accipiat satisfactionis suae modum And in S. Cyprian there is so much mention
of reconcilement by imposition of hands of the Bishop and Clergy that I will say no more of it because this point of all the rest hath continued a chief imployment of Presbyters in the corrupt and pernicious opinions and customes of the Church of Rome Let not any man think now that the Apostle communicateth this power with the Congregation of the Church of Corinth when he writeth to them 1. Cor. v. 4 5. being assembled with his Spirit to deliver the incestuous person to Satan For it is plain that the sentence is given by the Apostle vers 3. where he writeth For I verily as absent in body but present in spirit have judged already as though I were present concerning him that hath so done this deed And to cause this proceeding to be the better digested he hath vouched his power in the end of the chapter afore verse 18. Now some are puffed up as though I would not come unto you but I will come unto you shortly if the Lord will and will know not the speech of them that are puffed up but the power What will you shall I come unto you with a rod or with the spirit of meeknesse Which power otherwhiles he setteth before them in case of their disobedience And therefore it must be acknowledged that he writeth to them to see his sentence published ratified and executed which the Presbyters there had either neglected to do as was touched afore or perhaps were not able to bring the people under the discipline of Christs Kingdome which must needs oblige the Apostle to interpose And therefore the Italian glosse of Diodati which maketh the Apostle in this place speak of assembling the Pastours and Guides of the Church as in Matth. xviii 17. though in effect true because for certain what is to be acted by the Congregation therein the Presbyters are to do their part by the meaning of the Apostle yet must leave us room to think that the words are to be understood of the publick assemblies of the Church there for Divine service seeing we find in Tertullian the place afore quoted that these censures were exercised at and in the assemblies of the Christian people Ibidem etiam exhortationes castigationes censur a divina saith he speaking of their Assemblies And S. Cyprian in the great case of those that fell away in persecution writeth to the Presbyters that he doth not think to do any thing in it without their counsel the consent of the people And this without doubt is the reason why the Apostle writeth in these terms 1. Cor. v. 12. For what have I to do to judge those that are without do not ye judge those that are within speaking to the Church in generall though the sentence passed as hath been said by Bishop and Presbyters because matters were censured in the Congregation and executed by the people And thus the practice of that time giveth a reason without straining why our Lord seemeth to refer these matters to the Congregation when he saith Tell it to the Church because they passed at their assemblies though under censure of Bishop and Presbyters And great reason there is why this regard should be had by the Apostle and by the Church afterwards to the people because the Church being a mere spirituall Commonwealth and not indued with temporall strength so much as to execute those sentences which the power of the keyes given by Christ obligeth it to inflict alwayes setting aside that power of working miracles which was in the Apostle upon which some think he reflecteth in some passages of those Epistles requisite it was then the Congregation should be satisfied of the course of those proceedings which must come into execution and effect by their voluntary submission to the will of God and the office of his Ministers And as the matter is now that things of this nature proceed not upon mens private consciences and judgements in particulars but upon generall rules of common right requisite it is that the Cōmon-wealth have satisfaction of those laws according to which the Church now must proceed in their censures it being acknowledged that they cannot proceed with effect but by virtue of those laws that are put in force by the secular arm But as it is now no longer time to leave matters to the Conscience of mens places which may be regulated by laws which experience maketh commendable so is it no longer time to expect at the peoples hands voluntary submission to the discipline of the Church further then it is inabled by laws of the kingdome to exercise it And therefore it is much to be wished that the laws by which the Ministers of the Church are inabled directed constrained to exercise this prime part of their office may prove so sufficient and that the power of the keyes given it by our Lord in the Gospel may be so strengthened by the secular arm and rules put in force by it that it may be able to reduce all hainous and notorious offenses under the discipline of Penance and to cut them off from the Church that refuse it Is it to be believed that our Lords intent was in settling such a power as this is that it should take hold of sinnes of incontinence or the like letting all others of as deep a stain and as well known escape uncensured Or could any man devise a more puissant means to discountenance malefactours in a Christian Common-wealth then that which our Lord hath appointed by making them know that when they have satisfied the laws of the kingdome with losse of goods or fame or have escaped with life by the gentlenesse of them the fact being proved neverthelesse they can not communicate with the people of God till the Church be satisfied of their correction and amendment Nay shall we imagine that the institution of our Lord Christ is satisfied and in force in a Christian Common-wealth so long as the case of particular offenses upon occasion whereof it is settled by him in the Gospel is scarce understood among us because it is so farre from common practice by the law of the kingdome whereas it might easily appear what an excellent and charitable course our Saviour hath chalked out to us if a good Christian heart desirous rather of his brothers amendment then of his own satisfaction and able to make an appearance of such an offense as our Lord intended by witnesses the Church inabled by rules of law established by the secular arm should call the person offending to the acknowledgement of wrong on his side cutting him off in case he refused amendment Thus much for certain if the zeal of well-affected Christians towards the state of this Church did not mistake the true mark the discipline of Penance must needs be thought one of the first points to be reformed in it And then the rest of that satisfaction which the people can demand of the Church will consist in not releasing the correction inflicted