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A15828 A treatise of the honor of Gods house: or, The true paterne of the Church, shewed in the parts and pietie of it with a discovery of the true cause and cure of our present contentions, and an answer of such objections as may offend the weake. Yates, John, d. ca. 1660. 1637 (1637) STC 26089; ESTC S120542 57,719 94

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faithfull in all obedience to their Bishops as the chiefe of Pastours and the Presbyters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epist ad Trall as his consiliarii assessores english it as you will so you erre no more in your base account of Bishops What hath not Rome made offensive to vulgar eares the name of a Bishop Priest Altar Sacrifice and all Church-service is set at nought and wee abhorre to heare of veneiable antiquitie it s to small purpose to presse any thing upon them that have sworn to believe nothing but their own novelties and late inventions of discontented persons set on foot to trouble the peace and quiet of our Church which I beleeve holds in the most holy manner the Doctrine Fellowship Altar and Prayers expressed Acts 2.42 Storme not at the word Altar for breaking of bread cannot be without it in that sense which is so often inculcated in the Epistles of Saint Ignatius and think no man can be ignorant that will not wilfully blinde his eyes with prejudice to an Altar and rather make it any thing then an holy Table surely from fellow ship with Bishops he concludes his Altar as Saint Luke does breaking of bread from fellowship with the Apostles I would wish the separation of our times to take need lest to avoid Pope ry they part with puritie it selfe and do not so much find as forsake what they seek for if they take not ministerie from us they have none Then they can have no Baptism break no bread and where will they finde the marks and notes of their Church if they brand ours for none of Gods our Doctrine Fellowship Altar and Prayers will find footing when I feare they will faile in all if they opposeus in any May I conclude not be thought to flatter for I professe what I have said hath ever been my opinion that Bishops are by divine institution CHAP. VII The Cause and Cure of all our Contentions Vnitie in the Church is the path of peace which Papists and Sectaries disturbe in a contrary course The one misplacing the head the other the feet and both set them where they should not The Papists place their Popc where they should place all Bishops and Sectaries seeke that in the feet which is onely to be found in the head Saint Cyprian de unitate Eccles compares the universall power and jurisdiction of Bishops to an head which derives all the vertue to the bodie To a root which feeds and fils all the branches To a fountain from which flow all streams To the Sunne that sends forth all rayes and beames c. This head root fountain and Sun the Papists make their Pope all Bishops but members branches streames and beames of him Ab uno Episcopatu tanquam ab uno capite radice fonte sole oriuntur omnes Episcapi hujus Episcopatus a singulis in solidum pars tenetur A singulis in solidum every Bishop holds wholly for his part whatsoever is in the whole The head root fountain and Sun are similar and alike in all the members The same vertue is in one Bishop that is in all Bishops and the body being univocall hath but one essence in al the parts of it Order jurisdiction is the same and nothing heterogeneall but the Popes challenge to take all to himselfe and make Bishops stand to his courtesie for their calling and power as if all the Sea were in Tyber or the whole Sunne in the Romane Sphere the root in one branch and all the vertue of the head in one member Sectaries are as senslesse that take off the head to give life to the feet raise up the root that the branches may flourish Cut off the fountain that the streames may flow and remove the Sun out of its Orbe that they may enjoy the light These be our diseases whose causes and cure we are now to seeke out and hope it will helpe us to recover our misery I suppose I may reduce all the causes to two heads Envie and Ignorance Envie of the persons Ignorance of the calling of our Bishops Their persons and practices are so hated that Timothy and Titus must be unbishoped for their sakes We imagine corruptions in Bishops and cast such eyes of discontent upon them that we cannot abide to heare of their calling I am confident till that be established our contentions will never cease They are the words of holy Ignatius breathing with the sweet spirit that was in the beloved Disciple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fly the division of unitie his arguments which are as medicines to cure the disease are foure Epist ad Philad First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one faith to be beleeved of all Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one predication of the same as an effectuall meanes Thirdly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one Eucharist to seale it wherein are many unities to perswade us from division First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one flesh of our Lord Iesus Christ given for us Secondly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one bloud shed for us Thirdly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one bread visibly broken to us Fourthly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one cup distributed to us all Fiftly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one Altar or Table where we communicate The last argument is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one Bishop together with the Presbytery and Deacons This laft unitie being disturbed disturbes all the rest and because all the spite is against the Bishops wherein lyes the Churches unitie we will vindicate the truth thereof and prove plainly that Bishops as the best instruments derive all power and peace to the Church and that without them no unitie can possibly in all the rest be imagined or mayntained We will begin with the mayn text Eph. 4.11 12. There is a double calling for a threefold end First extraordinary in Apostles Prophets Evangelists Secondly ordinary in Pastors and Teachers Vpon these two hangs the perfection of the Saints work of the Ministery and edification of the universall Church In the first wee have that calling which is of God and by God alone In the second that which is also of God but by man and here we must inquire by what men the Scripture resolves us by the Apostles and by no others and therfore Timothy and Titus could be no Evangelists for two reasons First because they were not called immediatly of God and by God but of God by man and Saint Paul witnesseth hee ordained Timothy 2. Tim. 1.6 and no question the same is to be said of Titus Secondly both these ordained others which was effected by no extraordinary persons before them since the Apostles The objection is that Timothy is bidden doe the work of an Evangelist and therefore is one of their number By this reason I must reckon also the foure Evangelists and reduce them to the same order and so confound Apostles and Evangelists A cleere distinction will remedie this confusion First some Evangelists were writers of the Gospel Secondly others
Apostles Gal. 1.1 Saint Paul professeth himselfe to be an Apostle but neither of man nor by man neither of man as the author nor by man as the instrument but immediatly of God and by God as author and meanes of his vocation A plaine distinction of a threefold calling whereof two are as the extreames and the third as a meane betweene both first some are called of God and by God immediatly and this is the extraordinary calling of Prophets and Apostles who are the first founders of our Religion and the chiefe Governors under Iesus Christ Secondly some are called of men and by men and such are all humane callings in Gods Church I deny not but many may be appointed to doe service in the Church that have no divine calling but that which is meerely of men and such are Church-wardens Sides-men yea and higher callings as Chancellors and Ecclesiasticall Judges which are lay-men whose authoritie is no more contrarie to Gods Word than the appointment of seven Overseers for the poore or Church treasurie Act. 7.3 Looke you out seven men c. I finde no other election made but this in all the New Testament that in the Act. 14.23 Ordination of Elders by election is both a corruption of the text and of the truth for none were ordained Elders in the Apostles dayes by election Act. 2.3 4. the holy Ghost is given without hands to the Pastors as also to the people Act. 10.44 Extraordinary gifts were common to Pastors and people but the calling of a Presbyter or Priest was either of God and by God immediatly or else of God and by man mediately and this for Ordination was alwayes the imposition of the hands of the Apostles or Bishops Act. 8.15 6 17. Philip Preached and Baptized and converted Samaria but had not the power to confirme or ordaine them Pastors therefore is sent unto them from Ierusalem Peter and Iohn to impose hands and give the holy Ghost the Bishops the Apostles left to succeede them had the power of Ordination and every Pre●byter had it not and it was the he esie of Aerius that denied Bishops this p●erogative above others That seate is not sure nor Ordination justifiable that is not by a Bishop who is able to derive his succession in that respect from the Apostles Bell. de Eccl. lib. 4 cap. 8. saith truely that an argument from succession proves negatively against Schismatikes but not affirmatively for Heretikes Adferri praecipue ad probandum non esse Ecclesiam ubi non est successio ex quo tamen non colligitur ibi necessario esse Ecclesiam ubi est successio there can be no visible Church where there is no succession from the chaires of the Apostles But the Greeke Churches prove as good succession this way as the Latine and therefore both being suspected for Doctrine wee must have recourse to that memorable faying in Act. 2.42 They continued st●dfastly in the Apostles Doctrin Fellowship in breaking of bread and in Prayer These notes will torment all our Adversaries Papists with Doctrine Schismaticks with the Apostles Fellowship and both in breaking of bread the one because they breake no bread in substance the other because they distribute meere bread As they dislike an Altar so they dislike to be within it by denying communion with Bishops and doing many things without them Prayers except they be private cannot please them and Church prayers specially at an Altar they spit and spend their tongues in talking against them They say we take Gods Name in vaine by advised repetitions and remember not their owne iterations and sudden irruptions to be incident to vanitie I have stood the longer upon the number to shew us the course of Ministery and must make haste in the rest as not able in a short Treatise to insist fully on all our heads Their names are Presbyters contracted Priests and we cannot abide the title of the holy Ghost because our times have polluted it I will not be so nice as to name the child otherwise than it was first Christened Their offices are honourable in waiting immediatly upon the Lambes Throne their Ornaments are either a white vesture for the body or crownes of gold for the head They are no ordinary Priests but of the chiefe ranke Eusebius in his Panegyricke Oration discribes them to be cloathed like Christ himselfe Rev. 1.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It must needes be a Priests garment Rev. 4.4 and to him that will reade Eusebius and Saint Iohn together it will prove a white Surplesse or a white garment downe to the foote He hath likewise this to make S. Iohn Historicall as well as mysticall to every mans meaning the Priests in the Temple of Tyre are said to have upon their heads Caelestes gloriae coronas crownes of heavenly glory Order is that they begin the Church Service and end it Rev. 4.9 must warily be read least we make the people goe before their Pastors when they are about to give glory then rise the Elders from their seates and fall downe first The Churches Service is performed by singing Rev. 5.8 9. to the end The Elders and the Saints about the throne are furnished with Harpes and Vials instruments of Musicke and Melodie be they Voyces or other Organs of Gods praise for I will precisely determine nothing their gold Vials are said to be full of odors and these odours to be prayers a right service in Gods house Their song is a new song of the Lamb 〈◊〉 to the Lamb with these joyne the holy Angells and in divine straines of the sweetest musique sound with a loud voyce in Gods eares as they end with blessing so all creatures like an Echo lay hold of that last word say blessing c. Then conclude the Beasts with a voyce as a thunderclappe for so speakes Saint Hierom of the word Amen The Elders end the service as they began with prostration for as that is before confession Phil. 2.10 11. so it is after all service and the whole body is prepared before that member the tongue take in hand to utter a word Hee were impudent that would talke standing with his God and beginne to speake before hee hath shewed his feare by falling downe to so great a Majestie as he seekes to serve neither were it fit a man should stand by and take his leave as if two equalls were met we neither come so into the presence of out parents neither doe we so depart from them and shame our selves as if wee had met none in Gods House better than our selves The Elders as they fall first so they are found last in the like posture and so we leave them and come to our third thing in Gods House CHAP. V. Concerning the standards of the people and the gurd of Angells that is the place of Lay-Christians and the attendance of holy Angells in Gods House Signa Sanctorum REv. 4.6 7 8 9. The Standards Ensignes Banners and Badges borne