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A85854 Hieraspistes a defence by way of apology for the ministry and ministers of the Church of England : humbly presented to the consciences of all those that excell in virtue. / By John Gauden, D. D. and minister of that Church at Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1653 (1653) Wing G357; Thomason E214_1; ESTC R7254 690,773 630

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many sinfull evils and snares while they forsake or cast out and despise their rightly Ordeined and duly placed Ministers and either follow and incourage such seducers as are very destructive both to the Churches peace and to mens souls both in the present and after ages or else fall to a neglect indifferency yea and abhorrency of all Religion The Order Power 20. Summary Conclusion of the power and efficacy of right Ordination and Authority then by which right Ordination is conferred on the true Ministers of the Gospel as was here in England although they seem to proud scorners to unstable minds to ignorant and unbelievers as frivolous as the Gospel seems foolishness yet to the humble eye of Faith it appears as the wisdome holy order and commission of God for the continuall teaching well guiding and edifying of the Church of God by truth and peace to Salvation The blessed and great effects of which depend as I have shewed not upon any naturall power or vertue tranfused from the Ordeiners to the Ordeined but upon the Word Promise and appointment of Christ sending them in this method of the Churches triall approbation and ordination In which by the judgement and conscience of those who are of the same function and so best able to examine and judge of gifts and abilities the examined and approved is publickly authorised and declared to be such a Minister as the Lord hath chosen to be sent such as the Spirit of Christ hath anointed and consecrated by meet gifts and graces for the service of Christ and the Church in that great work of the Ministry One who is thus ordeined the Church may in any part of it comfortably receive and own in Christs name One who is partaker duly of the comfort of that promise from Christ Mat. 28. to be with his true Ministers to the end of the world which could not be verified as interpreters observe of the persons of those then living and first sent by Christ who were long since at rest in the Lord but of their lawfull Successors rightly following them in the same office and power Non sunt successores in officio qui ad officium accedunt alio modo quam institutum est Reg. Jur. without which they are not truly their Successors in the Ministry and authority from Christ No more than they can be Embassadors Deputies and Messengers from or to any one from or to whom they have no assignment of any power by letters or other way of commission which when most legally and formally done by deeds and instruments of writing yet these receive no naturall change of their qualities nor is any inherent vertue conveyed to them when they are made instruments to testifie the Will and convey the power of any to another but they have such a change in relation to their appointed use and end as alters them from what they were before in common and unlimited nature The like is as to religious ends and uses where some men are specially ordeined to be Ministers having all their efficacy and authority as to that work from the will of Jesus Christ from whom alone such power is derivable and that not in every way which the vanity of men list but in such as the Church hath constantly used according to the Scripture Canons and directions which are clear to Timothy and Titus which are the great paterns and evident commissions for right Ordination and Succession to the Ministry besides other places Against the undoubted Authority and pregnant testimony of which Epistles and Scriptures joyned to the Churches Catholick custome it will not be easie for any Novelist to vacate and abolish that holy Succession and due Ordination which the true Ministers of England have generally had in this Church which in my own experience I cannot but with all truth and thankfulness testifie to the glory of God to the honour of this Church and those reverend Bishops as Fathers of it who not only with great decency and gravity but with much conscience and religious care ordeined Ministers as very many so very worthy Nor on the other side will these Novellers easily perswade judicious Christians That any upstarts and pretenders in any other way which as it is poor and popular so it comes very short and unproportionate to what is required in and of a Minister can have the power and Authority of true Ministers Habentes cum iis consortium praedicationis habeant necesse est consortium damnationis Tertul. de Haeret. auditoribus Jo. 2.8 having no right Ordination to which no mans pragmatick pride and self-confidence nor the ostentation of his gifts to others by a voluble tongue nor the admiration and desire of his si ly and flattering auditors can contribute any thing either as to the comfort of the one or the other but much to the sin and shame of them both as perverters of Christs order and the Churches peace forsaking their own mercies while they follow lying vanities which cannot profit them 17. Yet meer form of Ordination makes not an able Minister Not that every man that is Ordeined a Minister as to the meer outward form in a right and orderly way is presently of the essence and truth of a Minister in Christs esteem or in the comfort of his own conscience The ordeined may be such hypocrites as Simon Magus was when baptised as have neither reall abilities nor honest purposes aiming at Gods glory or the Churches good but meerly at their own worldly ends and base advantages The Ordeiners also may be either deceived in the judgement of Charity or corrupted by humane lusts and frailties so as greatly to pervert and prophane this holy Institution No man hath further comfort of his being Ordeined a Minister than he hath reall gifts and competent abilities together with an holy and honest purpose of heart to glorifie God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Baz M. ep 187. The antient custom of the Church receives none to be Ministers but upon strickt examination before they are ordeined Concil Nic. 1. and ●he Concil Ca●ib 1. c 9. takes care that none be Ordeined Presbyters without due examination in the discharge of that holy office and power to which he is by the Church appointed Nor can on the other side the Ordeiners more highly offend in piety against God and charity against the Church than in a superficiall and negligent way of ordeining Ministers which antiently was not done but with solemn publick fasting prayer and great devotion Indeed nothing should be done in the Church of Christ with greater exactness both for inward sincerity and outward holy solemnity than this weighty and fundamentall work of carrying on the Ministeriall power and authority in a fit and holy Succession Abuses here are prone to creep in the Devill coveting nothing more than to undermine weaken and overthrow this main Pillar on which the Church and house of God doth stand Ministers either
all Truth and enables them for all Duties and Ministeriall Offices That this is their Call from God to Preach and to usurp the places of all Ordained Ministers whom they pretend as far to exceed in Inspirations as the Apostles did their former selves after once the power of that Spirit was come upon them To this Calumny and Ostentation my first reply shall be Answ 1. in all humble tendernesse to beseech God Of the Spirit of God in men how to be considered of to give me holy wisdome rightly to conceive of and graciously to expresse my self touching the Spirit of God that I may * 1 Cor. 2● 32. not give any offence or occasion any grief and mistake to any excellent Christians I * Delicat● res est Spiritus sanctus Bern. know well that the Spirit of Christ is a thing of pious curiosity and holy delicacy That in what way soever it manifests it self to the Church it is to be entertained in thoughts Flabat Spiritus fluebant lacrymae suspiria pr. ces Bern. Luk. 11.13 Ioh. 14.17 words and actions of Christians with all cautious tendernesse and religious reverence that so wee may neither conceive nor speak any thing unbeseeming its majesty and purity nor damping or afflictive to its holy influences gifts and breathings on the spirits of any true Christians whose highest honor happinesse and communion with God and Christ and one another 1 Ioh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us is by the Spirit of Christ I know that its motitions and inspirations are as most free * Ioh. 3.8 blowing where it listeth not where any man list to boast and pretend so they are not so easily discerned whence they come and whither they goe save onely by accurate watchings Sunt quaedam Spiritus sancti circ● no● dispensatoriae vicissitu●●es qua nisi vigilantissime observentur nec praesentem glorifices nec absen●●m desideres Bern. Cant. l. 17. and sober obs●●●●tion where the surest discoveries are made by those holy fruites and effects which are manifest in the habits of grace or formations of Christ in the new man of our hearts or in the works of our lifes which being done after a religious rule and way are in the judgment of Charity to bee esteemed as effects of Gods Spirit Rom. 8.9 Gal. 4.6 1 Thess 4.8 T●stimonium Spiritus sancti praesentiae praebent opera salutis vitae quae praestare non possumus nisi Spiritus Christi qui vivifice● adesset Ber. ser 2. S. An. I am far from doubting or denying that the Spirit of Christ dwels in the hearts of true Beleevers by speciall gifts of grace beyond Natures sphere nor do I question but that the Spirit of Christ doth furnish many men with speciall gifts above others for the service both of Churches and States in the outward visible way of Gods providence as to Bezaleel and Saul Nor yet do I deny but the Spirit of Christ may give extraordinary abilities that is beyond others and beyond mens own selves as to former common gifts and parts for the good of the Church in eases where ordinary means are defective Nor do I dispute this holy and usuall influence of Christs Spirit on Christians inlightning opening hatching fostring calming composing and specially comforting in particular cases Omnia sacra gusta●a afferunt mortem si ●on de Spiritu accipiune condimentum prorfus mors in ●ll● nisi Spiritus f●rinula dulcoren● Absque Spiritu sacramentum sumitur ad judicium caro non prodest litera accidit fides ●●r ●ua est Ber. s 33. Cant. also quickning to duties inabling in duties yea sometimes supporting with her●icall impulses and assistances in conflicts temptations and sufferings from men and devils also reviving in dejections desertions darknesses and exhaustings of our owne spirits and common gifts All this I willingly grant and earnestly desire that I may have daily more experience of in my selfe and from others not onely for private comfort but for publique good of the Church of Christ C●●lum fit ●●i●●a habitatio Dei facta ●●●●ia prerogative c. B●● I desire highly to prize the happy priviledge of those that doe truely enjoy these inspirations and humbly use them I wish all true Christians a blessed increase daily in this communion with God and one another by reall gifts of the Spirit which are beyond the best improvements of meer Nature I know no other heaven here or hereafter Tepidorum dissolutor●m est nolle esse m●liores Si●us Deut. seipso m●l●●● esse non 〈◊〉 quia non v●●●t Ber. ep 91. ad Ab. but the reall and full inhabitation of Christs Spirit in our spirits that of Naturall Rationall and Humane they may become Spirituall Gratious and Divine C●rtissin●um est praesc●tiae Spiritus testimonium amplioris gratiae desiderium Ber. ser 2. And. All that I fear is wilfull hypocrisie and weak delusions that which I most abhorre is false and proud ostentations such as some men are prone to affect Po●tentiloquium haereticorum Irenae and lowdly to boast of among credulous and simple people to which there can hardly bee given so exact and punctuall answers and confutations as both Reason and Religion afford to sober and wise Christians in all other Disputes For such pretentions of Gods Spirit 1 Ioh. 4.1 and of speciall Inspirations with which the primitive Churches were pestered and abused Iude 19.80 the Gn●sticks Montanists Catharists and others and by which the very Apostles were affronted and opposed are as meteors and comets so exalting themselves in high notions above the ordinary reach of Reason that they are not easily calculated by common accounts they are Raptures and Enthusiasmes by which cunning men seek to lose the eyes of spectators in clouds of obscurities and uncertainties Like some vaine and lunatick Christians who busie themselves more how to interpret the Revelation and to fulfill its mysterious prophesies then to understand Quantum ades● vera Spiritus sancti grati● tantum ●bes● omnis ●an● gloriola Ber. beleeve and obey the holy truths and clear precepts of the Gospell in all the other Scriptures Holy wise sober and humble Christians never boast rarely tell of those secrets of the Lord if ever they enjoy them Psal 25.14 Rev. 2 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 51.7 Vain weak and proud men doe often arrogate those speciall inspirations to themselves as being least discernible or confutable by vulgar minds who once dazeled with the glisterings and flashes of pretended Inspirations think they may safely disregard 2 Pet. 2.18 When they speak great swelling words of vanity they allure c. and not look so low as the Scripture oracles and the plain manifestations of Christ by the Word and his constant Ministry Lead common people once into this maze wilder their weak fancies in the Wood
their own or others clothes for their plainnesse or costlinesse for their novelty or Antiquity yea in the length or shortnesse in the laying out or hiding of their hair Hence their censures scandals or approbations of others their confidences and oftentations of themselves even as to piety purity and holinesse which are indeed seldome seen in ruffianly and dissolute fashions yet often in those proportions of elegancy and decency as to the outward garb and fashion which some mens rusticity severity or slovenliness cannot bear Because they doe not understand that in things of this kinde not Scripture but Nature gives rules to the Religion of them which is their usefulnesse and their comelinesse 1 Cor. 11.3 14. And this not by any morall innate principles but by those more gentium customes of Countries and dictates of sociall nature which not by written Lawes but by tacit consent and use doe for the most part prescribe what is agreeable to humanity modesty and civility which customary measures and civill rules of ornament and outward fashions in any countrey are not scrupulously to be quarrelled at nor cynically neglected nor morosely retained but may with freedome and ingenuity be used and altered according to the genius of all things of extern mode and fashion as cloathing dressing building planting fortifying speaking c. which depend much upon the fancies of men and so are mutable without any sin or immorality as all things are within the compasse of mortality How many mens Religion lies in their admiration of some mens persons gifts piety and supposed zeal in their being of his sect way body fraternity and confederacy when yet many times they have but an Idol for their God though they glory to have a Levite to be their Priest Able men may have great infirmities and learned men grosse errors foul diseases oft attend fair faces Doting sectaries will worship the pudenda of their Priests and magnifie what is most dishonest and uncomely in their ringleaders Yea many silly souls we see are every where much taken with other mens ignorance set off meerly with impudence where the want of all true worth for ability and authority is attended with the want of all shame and modesty Factious spirits in poor people makes them content to have their Religion hatcht under the wing and feathers of any foolish and unclean bird In how many Christians is their Religion blown up as the paper kites of boyes meerly with their own breath or other mens applauses setting off all that is done in their way with the Epithites of rare pretious holy gracious spirituall sweet divine Saint-like c. when yet wise men that weigh their boastings evidently finde much of those mens Religion to be deformed with Mimicall affectations of words and phrases with studied tones scurrilous expressions antick gestures and ridiculous behaviours Much in them is fulsome by the length lowdnesse tumultuarinesse unpreparednesse and confusednesse even of those duties which they count religious holy and spirituall which are so far scandalous and suspected to sober Christians as they finde them not onely full of faction but also destitute of that common sense order comelinesse gravity discret●on reason and judgement which are to be found in others from whom they separate not out of scruple so much as scorn not out of conscience but pride and arrogancy when yet they bring forth after all their swelling and tympanies nothing comparable to what others in an orderly way have done either for the soul and essence of Religion which is truth and charity or for the body and ornament of it so far as it appears to others in order and decency Many have little that they can fancy or call Religion in them but onely a fiercenesse for that side to which they take a morosenesse censoriousnesse and supercilious indifferency towards all but those whom they count theirs Vehemently opposing what ever Adversary they undertake abhorring all they doe or hold in piety or prudence branding all they like not with the mark of Antichrist and crying downe what ever by any Christians is diversly observed in the fashion of their Religion Hence many of the lowest form of Christians place much of their Religion in innovating Church government contending for discipline disputing against all Liturgies in scuffling with ceremonies in beating the air and fighting with the shadows of Religion the measure of all which as to piety prudence and conscience stands in their relation to the main end Gods glory the Churches peace and the salvation of soules which where-ever they are with truth holinesse order and charity carried on in any Church Christians need no more scruple the extern form and manner wherein they are decently set forth than they need quarrell at the roome table or dish where wholesome meat is handsomely presented to them whether in a plainer or more costly way Others of more airy and elevated fancies are altogether in Millenary dreams religious fantasms Apocalyptick raptures Prophetick accomplishments not caring much how they break any moral precept of Law or Gospel if they thinke thereby they may help to fulfill a Prophecy which every opiniaster is prone to imagine strongly portendeth the advancement of his opinion party and way in Religion untill they come to such a soveraignty as may be able to govern and oppresse others their Mopsicall humors being never satisfied but in fancying themselves as Kings and reigning with Christ Not in the inward power of his grace and spirit which is a Christians commendable ambition joined with an holy and humble subjection to God and man which makes them conquerours over the lusts in themseves and their love of the world whence flows the greatest peace both to Churches and States but in that extern worldly power and policy which enables them to rule others after the same bloudy arts and cruel methods of government which Zimri or Herod or Alexander or Caesar exercised and not the Lord Jesus Christ who was meek and lowly as one that served and obeyed And herein not onely the weak illiterate and fanatick vulgar are oft observed to act mad and ridiculous prankes in Religion but even men of some learning and seeming piety oft lose themselves in their wild and melancholy rovings which make all Prophecies sound to their tune and to be for their party and opinion though never so novell small and inconsiderable Nothing is more easily abused even by easie wits than Prophetick emblemes and allusions which like soft waxe are capable of severall shapes and figurations by which no doubt the Spirit of God aimed at the generall aspect and grand proportions of the Catholick Church in its visible profession and outward estate for whose use all Scripture is wr●tten and to whose elevation or depression either in the Orthodoxie or corruption of doctrine in its integrity or schismes in its peace or persecution prophecies are generally calculated and in no sort to those lesser occasions obscurer events or alterations incident to particular
in God and man to forgive our fallings as David did who no sooner had confessed I have sinned against the Lord but he heard that gracious reply The Lord hath put away thy sin thou shalt not die In the first place this for certain we may conclude That it is not the galling and stinging of these flesh flies 1. Peccator celando non facit nescium at confitendo sacit propitium Deum Aug. now our busie and bitter enemies of the Anti-ministerial faction that first brought this sore and rawness upon us but it is some foul and corrupt humor from within us which first brake out to such putrified sores and wounds which have invited those to feast upon our ulcers and deformities In a matter then most fit for deep and serious repentings I cannot be so superficial Confessio fallax periculosior est quā procax obstinata defensio Nonnulli delosaconfessione se subtilius defendunt Bern. de Humil. as some have been who like Lapwings cry out loudest when furthest from their Nests being severe censurers of all men but themselves loth to see and confess their bosom sins or to own the deformities of their darlings hardly perswaded to cast away to the * Isa 2.20 Moles and Bats to the dark and deformed crew of Heretical novelties and Schismatical vanities those specious and gilded Idols Teraphims of their own imaginations which their fancies have forged and with Micahs devotion set up to themselves as Divine 2. Former due Conformity not the sin of the Clergy Sure it is but a very poor and pitiful account the product of Passion not of Reason which some men give while their with a vulgar vehemency accuse all the Clergy and Ministers of England for their former conformities and subjections to Authority in things to some men disputable for their nature and use yet then according to Law that is approved established and enjoyned by the * In quibus nihil certi statuit Scriptura divina mos populi Dei vel instituta majorum prolege tenenda sunt Aug. ep 86. Rom. 14.1 5. Let every man be fully perswaded in his own minde and whether they act or act not both are accepted of God in those things whereof there is no precise command So 1 Cor. 10.30 Master Hooker 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in his Ecclesiastical Policy with incomparable Learning and gravity of Judgement hath beyond any Reply vindicated both the integrity of his own Conscience and the honor of this Church in things of extern order 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 publick consent wisdom and piety of all estates in this Church and State And which things very holy and learned men generally used accounting them If burthens to weaker consciences yet to wise and stronger men as lawful as it was for St. Paul to fail in the ship whose sign was Castor and Pollux Acts 28.11 Yea and so far necessary as being agreeable to their judgements the use and extern observation of them was enjoyned in the Church by due Authority and approved by their own personal subscriptions being no way destructive to any thing of Christian Faith or Holy Life Certainly a sober and good Christian must not tear in pieces or cast away his Bible because it is not so neatly bound as he would fancy Nor would I believe any humble Primitive Martyr or Confessor have despised Salvation by Jesus Christ alone duly exhibited in the Word and Sacraments as they were in this Church nor have refused Communion with this or any part of the Catholike Church truly professing Christ Crucified although the * Ipsa mutatio consuetudinis etiam qua adjuval utilitate novitate pert●●bat August ep 19. nails of the Cross had been much sharper and heavier than any thing was in the stablished Order and Ministry of the Church of England which few Churches since the first hundred years wherein the Apostles lived ever enjoyed with more Purity Order and Simplicity as to the main than the Reformed Church here in England did So that many wise and good men begin now to think since these unhappy disputes have by attrition been kindled and far driven on to fire and sword seeming heretofore to have risen from humble meek and charitably tender spirits That the greatest sticklers against those things which were oft declared to be not any part of piety duty or devotion in themselves But onely as matters of extern order decency and circumstance were rather curious for the most part than * Discipl●●● nulla est melior gravi prudentique viro in his quae liberas habent observationes quam ut eomodo aga● quo agere vi●●●n ecclesiam ad quam cunque fortè devenerit Quod enim neque contra fidem neque contra bonos merit inju●gitur indifferenter est habendum pro eorum inter quos vivitar sacittate servandum est August ep 118. ad Jan. Cavendum est ●e tempestate contentionis sermitas charitatis obnubiletur August ep 86. conscientious Dissenters being either very weak or very wilful And some have since sufficiently appeared rather wantonly nice loose and given to change than any way grave fetled or seriously solicitous in matters of Religious Order and Publick Ministrations Possibly it was not the least of our follies and sins that we did not with more thankfulness enjoy the many rich mercies Hinc in bella civilia praecipitamur quod mal a mitiora nimium cavemus Eras we then had instead of that regret and querulous impatience which was so loth to bear any such defects or burthens as some men imagined wherein for the most part ignorance or easiness or vulgarity of mindes and maners made * Qui in levibus à quotidiana recedit consuetudine Magnus licet vir sit certis tantum horis illum sapere noris Verulam greater out-cryes and aggravations than either truth of judgement or tenderness of well-informed Consciences The after-instability in some men mindes and stupidness of their maners shews the Vertigo and Lethargy of their Brains For many men who when it began to be in fashion strained at those gnats which formerly for many years they had digested yet afterward made no bones to swallow Camels of grosser innovations such as no distinctions can mince or chew small enough for a good Conscience And it is confessed by those that have now attained their after-wits that those former conformities enjoyned by Law were but motes in comparison of those beams which now threaten to eclipse the lights of this English World and to put out the very eyes of the Seers and Watchmen of this Church Many excellent Ministers for Learning Piety and Industry besides innumerable other Christians did in former times grow up to great thrift in sound knowledge and all beauties of holiness even amidst those so much suspected and decryed weeds of Conformity which if they were not as sweet Marjoram very savory yet sure they were not as mors in olla Colloquintida or
banishment prison captivity sickness c. Yet that Christian belief love and charity which such an one bears to Christ and to the Catholike Church of Christ scattered in many places and different in many ceremonial rites and observations These I say do infallibly invest this solitary Christian in communion and holy fellowship with the whole Church of Christ in all the World as brethren and sisters are related as near kinred when they are never so far a sunder in place which owns the same God believes the same common salvation by the same Lord Jesus useth the same seals of the blessed Sacraments Ephes 4.5 Jude 2. professeth the same ground of faith and rule of holiness the written Word of God and bears the like gracious and charitable temper to others as sanctified by same Spirit of Christ which really unites every charitable and true believer to Christ and so to every M●mber of true Church however it may want opportunities to express this communion in actual and visible conversation either civil or sacred by enjoying that society as men or that ordinary ministry as Christians which is by Christ appointed in the Church as well for its outward profession distinction and mutual assistance as for its inward comfort and communion with himself The willing neglect of all such extern communion and the causeless separation from all Church-fellowship in Word Sacraments Prayer Order and charitable Offices must needs be inconsistent with any comfort because against charity and so far against true Religion and the hopes of salvation For those inward graces wherein the life and soul of Religion do consist are not ordinarily attained or maintained but by those outward means and ministrations which the wisdom of God in Christ hath appointed for the Churches social good and edification together In the right enjoyment of which consists that extern and joynt celebration or profession of Christian Religion which gives Being name and distinction to that society which we call The Church of Christ on Earth And this indeed is that Church properly which is called out of the World which as men we may discern and of which both in elder and later times so many disputes have been raised which we may describe to be An holy company or fraternity of Christians who being called by the Ministry of the Gospel to the knowledge of God in Christ do publickly profess in all holy ways and orderly institutions that inward sense of duty and devotion which they ow to God by believing and obeying his Word Also that charity which they ow to all men especially to those that profess to be Christs Disciples and hold communion with his Body the Catholike Church Herein I conceive That the social outward profession of Religion 7. Of the Church as a visible society of Professors believing in Christ. Ea est Catholica ecclesia quae unicam candem semper ubique fidem in Christo veram Scripturis sundatam profitetur V●n Lyrin Eph. 2.9 As Fellow-Citizens of the Saints and of the houshold of God Ye are built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ being the chief corner stone c. as it is held forth in the Word of God in its Truths Seals Duties and Ministry makes a true Church among men And the true Church as Catholike yea any part or branch of this true Catholike Church whose Head Foundation Rites Seals Duties and Ministry are for the main of the same kinde in all times and places cannot but make a right profession of true Religion as to the main essence and fundamentals which consists in truth holiness and charity However there may be many variations differences and deformities in superstructures both of opinion and practise For however particular Churches which have their limits of time and place and persons circumstances which necessarily circumscribe all things in this world are still as distinct arms and branches of a great Tree issuing from one and the same root Jesus Christ and have the same sap of truth and life conveyed in some measure to them 1 Cor. 3.12 If any man build upon this foundation gold c. st●bble c. V. 15. If his work be burnt he shall suffer loss but he himself shall be saved Eph. 4.4 There is one Body and one Spirit one Lord one Faith one Baptism c. V. 16. The whole body is fitly joyned together according to the effectual working in the measure of every part c. U●us Deus unam sidem tradidit unam ecclesiam toto orbe diffudit hanc aspicit hanc diligit hanc d●fendit Quolibet se quisque nomine tegat si huic non societur alienus est si hanc impugnet inimicus est Oros 7. c. 35. Joh. 15.2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit my Father taketh away 2 Pet. 2.1 2 Tim. 2.18 1 Cor. 12.25 That there should be no schism in the body 2 Joh. 9. Whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ hath the Father and the Son by the same way of the right Ministry of the Word Sacraments and Spirit so that in these respects they are all of one and the same Catholike Body communion descent and derivation yet as these have their external distinctions and severings in time place persons and maners or any outward rites of profession and worship so they usually have distinct denominations and are subject to different accidents as well as proportions Some branches of the same Tree may be withering mossy cancred peeled broken and barren yea almost dead yet old and great and true Others may be more flourishing fruitful clean and entire though of a latter shooting for time and of a lesser extension for number and place yet still of the same Tree so far as they have really or onely seemingly and in the judgement of charity communion with relation to and dependance on the Root and bulk being neither quite broken off and dead by Heretical Apostacies denying the Lord that bought them or damnable errors which overthrow the Faith nor yet slivered and rent by Schismatical uncharitableness proud or peevish rents and divisions Which last although they do not wholly kill and c●op off from all communion with the Church of Christ yet they so far weaken and wither Religion in the fruits and comforts of it as each Schism pares off from its sect and faction that Rinde and Bark as it were of Christian love and mutual charity through which chiefly the sap and juyce of true Religion with the graces and comforts of it are happily and most thrivingly conveyed to every living branch of the Catholike Church so as to make it live at least and bring forth some good fruit however it be not so strong fair and ample as others may be As the Church of Sardis which had a * Rev. 3.1 name to live and was dead in some part and proportion
yet is bid to watch and strengthen the things that remain which are ready to die c. 8. Of the Church as called Catholike See learned Dr. Field of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In this point then Touching the true Church of Christ in regard of outward profession and visible communion to the touch of which part my design thus leads me I purpose not so far to gratifie the endless and needless janglings of any adversaries of this Church of England as to plunge my self or the Reader into the wide and troubled Sea of controversie concerning the Church Considering that many good Christians have been and still are in the true Catholike Church by profession of that true faith and holy obedience which unite to the Head Jesus Christ and by charity which combines the members of his Body together although they never heard the dispute or determination of this so driven a controversie As many are in health and sound who never were under Physicians hands or heard any Lecture of Anatomy Yea although they may be cut off and cast out of the particular communion of any Church by the Anathemaes and excommunicating sentences of some injurious and passionate Members of that Church yet may they continue still in communion with Christ and consequently with his Catholike Church that is with all those who either truly have or profess to have communion with Christ My purpose is onely to give an account as I have done of true Religion in the internal power of it so also of the true Church as to the external profession of Religion That thereby I may establish the faith and comforts of all sober and good Christians in this Church of England That they may not be shaken corrupted or rent off by their own instability and weakness or by the fraud and malice of those who glory more in the proselytes they gain to fanatick factions by uncharitable rendings from this Church than in any communion they might have in humble and charitable ways with the Catholike Church or any of the greater and nobler parts of it which they most impertinently deny to be any Churches or capable of any order power joynt authority larger government or ampler communion For the Catholike Church of Christ that is Ignat. ep ad Phil. Cypr. de unitate Eccl. Solis multi radii unum lumen August lib. de unitate ecclesiae Et omnes patres Eph. 1.22 Christ the Head over all things to the Church 1 Tim. 3.15 The Church of the living God the pillar and ground of truth Heb. 12.23 The Church of the first-born Tot ac tanta ecclesia una est illa ab Apostolis prima ex qua omnes Tertul. de prae ad Hae. c. 30. Eph. 3.10 21. 5.23 Christ the Head of the Church and the Saviour of the Body V. 32. Christ and the Church Col. 1.18 Christ the Head of the Body the Church 1 Cor. 12. The Body is not one Member but many c. vid● the universality of those who profess to believe in the name of Jesus Christ according to the Scriptures That this is primarily and properly called a Church often in Scripture there is no doubt As the whole is called a Body in its integrality or compleatness of parts and organs whose every limb and part is corporeal too and of the Body as to its nature kinde or essence This Church which is called The Spouse and Body of Christ is as its Head but one in its integrality or comprehensive latitude as the Ark containing all such as profess the true faith of Christ And to this are given as all powers and faculties of nature to the whole man primarily and eminently those powers privileges gifts and titles which are proper to the Church of Christ however they are orderly exercised by some particular parts or members for the good of the whole The essence integrality and unity of this Catholike Church consists not in any local convention or visible communion or publick representation of every part of it but in a mysterious and religious communion with the same God Ecclesia in universum mundi disseminata unam domum habitans unam animam cor os abet Iraen l. 1. c. 3. Eph. 4.4 5. Jude 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just M. Dial. cum Tryphone by the same Mediator Jesus Christ and to this Mediator Jesus Christ by the same Word and Spirit as to the internal part of Religion also by profession of the same Truth and common Salvation joyned with obedience to the same Gospel and holy Ministry with charity and comly order as to the external In this so clear an Article of our Faith I need not bestow my pains since it is lately handled very fully learnedly and calmly by a godly Minister of this Church of England * Mr. Hudson of the Catholike Church Tot tantae ecclesiae una est illa ab Apostolis prima dum unam omnes praebent veritatem Tert. de prae to whose Book I refer the Christian Reader 9. Of a National Church or distinct and larger part of the Catholick This name of Church being evidently given to the universality of those who by the Ministry of the Gospel are called out of the way of the World and by professing of it and submitting externally to its holy Ministry Order Rules Duties and Institutes are distinguished from the rest of the World It cannot be hard for any sober understanding to conceive in what aptitude of sense any part of this Catholike Church is also called a Church with some additional distinctions and particular limitations visible and notable among men and Christians by which some are severed from others in time place persons or any other civil discriminations of policy and society Which give nearer and greater conveniences as to the enjoyment and exercise of humane and civil so of Christian communion and the offices or benefits of religious relations 1 Cor 1.2 To the Church of God which is at Corinth Acts 13.1 The Chu ch of Antioch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 14.23 Tit. 1.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 2. 3. Ecclesiam apud unamquamque civitatem condiderunt Apostol● à quibus traducem fidei semina doctrinae caeterae ecclesiae mutuatae sunt Tertul. de Prae. c. 20. Consuetudo est certissima loquendi norma Quin●il The Spirit of God in the Scripture gives sufficient warrant to this stile and language calling that a Church as of Rome Ephesus Corinth Jerusalem Antioch c. which consisted of many Congregations and Presbyters in a City and its Territory or Province So the Apostle Paul in his Epistles to several Churches distinguisheth them by the civil and humane distinctions of place and Magistracy and the Spirit of Christ to the Asiatick Churches calleth each a Church distinctly which were in great associations of many faithful under many Presbyters And these under some chief Presidents Apostles Angels or Bishops residing
neglect when they have set us in every corner so many copies of it I answer We have indeed in the Church of England from its first Christianity been wholly without this covenanting way and I think both happily and most willingly we had been so still since there appears no more ground for it in Scripture precept or Churches paterns nor is there any more need of it as to the peace and polity of the true Church of Christ than there is of rents and patches in a fair and whole Garment Who knows not Jon●h 4.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that like Jonah's gourd it is filius noctis the production of yesterday risen from the darkness and divisions of mens mindes The fruit of discontent separation and self-conceit for the most part though it may be nursed up by devout and well-meaning Christians yet it looks very like those bastard brats which the Novatians and Donatists of old began every where which were like Ismaels to Isaac mockers and contemners of the true Churches Communion Order and Peace VVe do not think this Covenant any more essential to the Being of a true Church than John Baptists Leathern girdle was to his being a Man or a Prophet It is an easie and specious novelty therefore pleasing to common people because within their grasp and reach which its Proselytes that forsake and abhor the English Churches Order and Communion do wrap and hug themselves in as much as any Papist doth in his adherence to the Roman party or in his hopes to be buried in a Monks Cowl Besides it carries this great temptation with it of gratifying the common professor with some shew of Power and Government which he once covenanted into that Church-way shall solemnly exercise But in good-earnest to sober Christians who have no secret byas of discontent or interest to sway them this new fashion of their Church-Covenant seems to have as no command or example in Scripture so no precedent in antiquity nor is it recommended for any excellent effects of prudence or peace which it produceth either to private Christians or the publick welfare of the Reformed Churches Some look on it as a mark of Schismatical confederacy which carries in its Bowels viperine principles which are destructive to the quiet of States and Kingdoms as well as of Churches If any finde any good or contentment in it as a tye or pledge of love in private fraternities yet they vastly overvalue it to cry it up as a matter no less necessary to the Being of a Church or well-being of Christians than the skin is to the Body when alas it is but a cloak lately taken up which never fell from Elias his shoulders and serves rather to cover some mens infirmities and discontents against this Church of England than much to keep them warm or adorn them as Christians VVe shall give a poor account of former Churches or Christians if this covenanting invention should be of such concernment to Christianity To which it seems to many wise and good men as superfluous as it were to binde a man with wisps of straw when he is already bound with chains of gold with more firm and pretious tyes For every true and conscientious Christian knows and owns himself to have upon his Conscience far more strict and indissoluble tyes not onely of nature and creation but of the Law and Word of God yea and of Christian covenant and profession by his baptismal-vow besides that of the other Sacrament also his private vows promises and repentings c. All which strictly binde the conscience of all good Christians to all duties of piety and charity according to the relations private or publick civil or sacred wherein they stand to God or man And further we see by daily experience That these sorry wit hs of mans invention obtruded as divine and necessary upon Christians and Churches binde not any of these new small bodies or bundles so fast but that they continually are breaking separating and scattering into as many fractions and subdivisions Error sibi semper dispa● est discolor quantò magis à veritate tantum ab unitate discedit August Eph. 3.17 as they have heady mindes fancies and humors among them And this they do without any sense of sin or shame yea for the most part with an angry glorying despising and defying of one another when but lately they boasted in how rare a way they were of Church-fellowship and Saintly-communion not as Members of Christs Body the Catholike Church grounded and grown up in truth and love but onely as pieces of wood finely glued together by reciting a form of words which they call a Church-Covenant which a little spittle or wet dissolves Nor do they make any scruple to moulder and divide if once they come to dispute and differ in the least kinde So hard is it for any thing to hold long together which is compacted of weak judgements and strong passions Last of all It is evident in the experience of all wise Christians That this narrow and short thong of private Bodying Church-covenanting cannot extend so far as is necessary for the Churches general peace order and welfare in reference to its more publick relations and necessities which oft require stronger and more effectual remedies Yea these small strings and cords binding each particular Congregation apart as if it were a limb to be let blood makes them at length grow benumed and less sensible of that common spirit of love and charity by which each Member is knit to the larger parts and so to the whole Body of the Church to whose common good they ought wisely and charitably to be more intent than to their particular Congregations which are but as the Pettitoes or little Fingers of the Church Which may not act or be considered otherways than as they are and subsist which is not apart by themselves nor onely in relation to an hand or foot to which they are more immediately conjoyned but as in an higher relation to the whole Body of which they are real parts servient to the whole and as much concerned in the common good and preservation of the whole if not more than of themselves or any particular part or Member A Christian must not deal out his charity by retail and small parcels onely as to private Fraternities and Congregations but also by whole-sale to the ampler proportions of Christs Church according as he stands in large and publick relations the due regard to the peace order and welfare of which is not to be dispenced withal nor shuffled off by saying 1 Cor. 12.21 I am of such a Congregational-Body or Covenanting Church no more than the hand may say I am not of the head nor neer it and so will have no care of it We are therefore so far from being admirers of the small talents and weak inventions of those men in so great a matter as the constituting and conserving of a true Church by
know how to use them unless it be to break their heads with them whom Christ hath set as stewards in his houshold These rustick and rash undertakers to reform and controul all are onely probable to shipwrack themselves and many others and the whole Ship of this Church by driving the skilful Pilots the true Bishops and Ministers from the Helm and putting in their places every bold Boatswain and simple Swobber Yet are the populacy flattered by some to this dangerous insolency and error who putting fire to this thatch instead of the Chimney do but provoke the poor people to their own hurt to forsake their own mercies and to injure both their own and others souls Mean time sober and wise Christians cannot but smile with shame sorrow and indignation to see how some Plebeian Preachers who are new risen as from the slime of the earth in whom no Prometheus hath breathed any spark of heavenly fire of spiritual divine and truly ministerial power to see I say how these Teachers have brought themselves by a voluntary humility to depend on peoples suffrages and charity not onely for maintenance but for their very Ministry being now sunk so low as to flatter their good Masters with this paradox or strange principle That they as the people or body be they never so few and mean have a reciprocal power to beget those who are to be their Spiritual Fathers that by a more than Pythagorean Metemphycosis the Power Spirit and Authority of Jesus Christ who was sent by his Father John 20.21 and so sent his Apostles and they others in the same Spirit to be Fathers Pastors Rulers Stewards c. That at length this Spirit and Authority should transmigrate we know not how nor when into the very mass and bulk of common people if they be but Christians of the lowest form animating them in the whole and in every part or parcel of them with such plenitude of Church power as enables them to be all Kings and Priests Pastors and Teachers Prophets and Apostles if need be and if they list and if they have leisure or if not to act so in their own persons having more profitable employments yet they have virtually and eminently in them as much power as Christ had and used or left to any men whereby to consecrate and ordain true Ministers to try and teach those that are to teach them to rule their Rulers to discipline their Shepherds to govern their Governors to turn not onely Religion out of doors but even all Reason Order and Civility upside down rather than not exercise this imaginary power especially if it serve to secular advantages And all this because they are told they are the Church and so may erect all Church power as in them and from them This fancy is able to make a plain Country-Christian stand on his Tiptoes and to bring all his family to see him and his other-like members making up this glorious Body which he calls his Church that they may be witnesses with how much folly and simplicity and clamor and confidence he with his Neighbors examines approves or reproves refuseth or chooseth and ordains all officers and some new fashioned Minister or Pastor Who poor-man must neither Preach nor Pray not eat nor look otherways than pleaseth these sad and silly yet very supercilious pieces of popular pride and itching arrogancy nor can such an hungry and timorous Pastor ever be setled or safe in this Pastoral Authority 26. Common people not fit to manage Church power in chief unless he have the trick of Faction which is still to ingratiate with the major part of this his flock who will otherways as easily push and beat him out of this fold or break all to pieces as ever they admitted him by a profane easiness and popular insolency But I must with less flattery and more honesty tell this Generation of perverse Usurpers this truth which is not unwelcome to sober spirited Christians That the weight of Christianity doth not at all hang on this popular pin which is no where to be found but in their light heads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Or. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Id. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. and heavy hands neither Reason nor Religion since men were redeemed from the barbarity of Acorns Nakedness and Dens ever thought the plebs or common people ought to be all in all if any thing at all either in conferring or managing either Civil or Church power but least of all that part of Church power which is proper for the making of a Minister in the way of due Ordination of which I shall after give a fuller account For this is that to which they generally have least proportion either of knowledge learning holiness or discretion Besides it would thence follow that so soon as any Sect or Faction of people can get but numbers and courage they may do what they list in this plenitude of power without the leave of Magistrates or Ministers in Church or State These are pestilent principles which are not onely pernicious to the Church but to any civil Societies threatning not our faith onely but our purses and throats Nor did ever any wise men what ever is pretended at any time to amuse the people and to serve an occasion intend or suffer the community or vulgar people with their massie bodies and numerous hands really to attain use or enjoy any such supreme power in civil administrations If once soverain power be gotten though by the means of such credulous assistants yet whatever the populacy may flatter themselves with it never is nor can wisely and happily be managed by them but rather without them above them and many times against them Power precarious that is such as depends upon a popular principle or plebeian account such as sometime was among the Grecian State and Romans is for the most part but an Empire of beggery or flattery or falsity Where at best wise and valiant men may oft be forced to prostrate themse ves to the arbitrement of the vulgar who are injurious esteemers and ungrateful requiters even of the most publick merits But oftentimes the peoples pretended power and interest is made use of in specious terms and cunning agitations onely to serve the turn of turbulent ambitious and factious spirits in Church and State whose envy or ambition easily teacheth the credulous community to esteem the over-meriting of the best men and Magistrate● to be their greatest oppression and most deserving Ostracism banishment or disgrace Per paucorum hominum virtute crevit Imperium Salust Rom. 13.4 The Life of Government and Soul of Dominion is that real power and resolution which is in the hand of one or more wise and potent men who are always intent to deserve well of the people yet always able to curb and repress their insolency and inconstancy Without this
scandal speedily reform abuses restore defects execute all power of the Keys in the right way of Discipline without which there is no true at least no compleat and perfect Church for these men think Christians can hardly get to Heaven unless they have power among them to cast one another into Hell to give men over to Satan to excommunicate as they see cause to open and shut Heaven and Hell gates as they think fit Must all things that concern our Church say they lie at six and sevens till we get such Bishops and Presbyters such Synods and Councils such Representatives of Learned men as are hardly obtained and as hard to be rightly ordered or well used when they are met together They had rather make quicker dispatches in Church work as if they thought it better for every family to hang and draw within it self and presently punish every offence than for a whole Country to attend either general Assizes or quarter Sessions Answ Truly good Christians in this Church at present are in a sad and bad case too as well as their Ministers if they could make no work of Religion till they were happy to see all things of extern order and government duly setled Yet sure we may go to Church and to Heaven too in our worst clothes if we can get no better nor may we therefore wholly stay at home and neglect religious duties because we cannot be so fine as we would be Both Ministers and people must do the best they can in their private sphears and particular Congregations to which they are related whereby to preserve themselves and one another as Brethren in Christ from such deformities and abuses as are destructive to the power of godliness the peace of conscience and the honor of the Reformed Religion until the Lord be pleased to restore to this Church that holy Order antient Government and Discipline which is necessary not to the being of a Christian or a true Church as its form or matter which true Believers constitute by their internal union to Christ by Faith and to all Christians by Charity but onely as to the external form and polity for the peace order and well being of a Church as it is a visible society or holy nation and fraternity of men 1 Pet. 2.9 professing the truth of Jesus Christ Yea and Christians may better want that is with less detriment or deformity to Religion that Discipline which some men so exceedingly magnifie as the very Throne Scepter and Kingdom of Christ under Christian Magistracy as they may the office of Deacons where the law by Overseers takes care for the poor where good laws by civil power punish publick offences and repress all disorders in Religion as well as trespasses in secular affairs Better I say than they could have been without it in primitive times when Christians had no other means to repress any disorders that might arise in their societies either scandalous to their profession or contrary to their principles of which no Heathen Magistrate or Humane Laws took then any cognisance or applied any remedy to them Not but that I do highly approve and earnestly pray for such good Order comely Government and exact Discipline in every Church both as to the lesser Congregations and the greater Associations to which all reasons of safety and grounds of peace invite Christian Societies in their Church relations as well as in those of Civil which were antiently used in all setled and flourishing Churches Much after that patern which was used among the Jews both in their Synagogues which they had frequent both in their own Land and among strangers in their dispersions and also in their great Sanhedrim which was as a constant supreme Council for ordering affairs chiefly of Religion to one or both which no doubt our Saviour then referred the believing Jew in that of Tell it to the Church that is after private monition tell it to the lesser Convention or Consistory in the Synagogues which might decide matters of a lesser nature or to the higher Sanedrim in things of more publick concernment both which were properly enough called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coetus congregatio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Philo. Jud. calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nihil hic à Christo novum praecipitur sed mos rectè introductus probatur H. Grot. in loc Ecclesiae i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theoph. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato Every polity hath in it power enough to preserve it happiness Coimus in co●tum congregationem Ibidem orationes exhortationes castigationes censura divina Praesident probati quique seniores Tert. Apol. Solebant Judaei res majoris momenti ultimo loco ad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multitudinem referre i. e. ad eos qui eadem instituta sestabantur quorum judicia conventus seniores moderabantur tanquam praesidet Grot. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ign. Bas in Chrys Beyond this sense none could be made of Christs words by his then Auditors to whom he speaks not by way of new direction and institution of a Soverein Court or Consistory in every Congregation of Christians to come but by way of referring to a well known use and daily practise then among the Jews which was the onely and best means wherein a Brother might have such satisfaction in point of any offence which charity would best bear without flying to the Civil Magistrate which was now a forein power When Jews turned Christians it s very certain they altered not their Discipline and order as Christians in Church society from what they used before in their Synagogues Proportionably no doubt in Christian Churches of narrower or larger extensions and communion among the Gentiles the wisdom of Christ directs and allows such judicatories and iurisdictions to prevent or remove all scandals and offences among Christians to preserve peace and order as may have least of private or pedantick imperiousness and vulgar trifflings of men unable and unfit to be in or to exercise any such holy and divine authority over others who are easily trampled upon and fall into reproach and the snare of the Devil by reason of divers lusts passions weaknesses and temptations but rather Christ commends such grave Consistories solemn Synods and venerable Councils as consisting of wise and able and worthy men may have most as of the Apostolical wisdom eminency gravity so of Christs Spirit Power and Authority among them Such as no Christian with any modesty reason conscience or ingenuity can despise or refuse to submit to the integrity of their censure when it is carried on not with those heats peevishnesses and emulations which are usually among men of less improved parts or ripened years especially if Neighbors Such a way wisely setled in the Church might indeed binde up all things that concern Religion in private or more publick respects to all good behavior in the bonds of truth peace and
Mendacia mendicabula and slow to teach as St. James adviseth As for those Histrionick Players and vaporing Preachers who with a Theatricall impudence in many places seek to fill the world with meer noise and clamor crying down all the antient Ministry as Antichristian and the Ministers as no way called sent or authorised by God or the Church turning all either into spirituall or new prophetick gifts to which they highly pretend certainly their vanity can move wise Christians no more than those cheats and wanderers do who swear they have found out and can sell you the true Elixar the Philosophers stone which will turn baser metals into gold while yet poor men their raggs sords and beggery sufficiently confutes their rare skill proclaiming to all but fools their lying and proud beggery which more needs anothers charity than is any way able to relieve any mans necossities If this Gentleman be in good earnest for a duty and office of prophecying besides and not against the order of the Ministry let him study how to restore to us the reall and usefull gifts of primitive Prophets Of the primitive prophetick gifts in the Church which may serve worthily to demonstrate beyond what is already done by excellent Writers the true sense of the Scriptures as to the great mysteries of Jesus Christ the Messias God forbid such should not have a primitive use and esteem in the Church But let us not be abused with such triflers as shall either darken what others have well explaned or shall only produce old protrite and stoln notions of other mens works as if these were the rare and new fruits of their own private prophetick gifts Possibly with this Gentlemans good leave the Church of Christ neither hath now nor needs any such prophetick gifts as were primitive and may truly be so called No more than it doth tongues miracles Chrysost orat 88. Gives reasons why Miracles are now ceased in the Church So Isid Pel. l. 4. Ep. 8. Rev. 2. and healings which it had and wanted too in those first times and dispensations when the Gospell of Christ was strange and new to the world and to the Churches which were but newly planted or in planting which now it is not specially in England after the Church hath enjoyed those plentifull diffusions of Evangelicall light from Christ and the Stars in his right hand for many hundred of years so that knowledge hath abounded as the waters of the Sea It is very probable the Churches in ages succeeding the Apostles gave over the form of the exercise of prophesying when once they saw the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or speciall gift ceased I remember no mention of this Prophecying among the publique officers duties or privileges of the Church No Councill no Father that I find regulates it or reckons upon it nor doth this Gentleman produce any one testimony for it out of the Churches after-practice in Ecclesiastick Histories and antient Records which may best distinguish for us Tacito omnium consensu per desuetudinem abrogantur Blond what things were of temporary what of perpetuall use in the Church It is evident that all things that were primitive and occasionall are not therefore to be made perpetuall or after long cessation to be restored many things used in the infancy and minority of some or all Churches have soon after been disposed as the collections on the first day Those collections for the poor on the Lords day Cyp. calls Gazophylacium and Corbona de Eleemos And St. Chrysost endeavoured to restore them in Constantinople See Bero. Ann. Anno Christi 44. In Tertul. time Christians abstained from blood Nec animalium sanguinem in esculentis habemus Apol. c. 9. yet in St. Austins time they did not abstain from blood or things strangled Aust cont Faust l. 3. c. 13 Mat. 2.20 1 Cor. 16. So the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Agapae or love feasts 1 Cor. 11.20 were by divers Councills forbidden when they degenerated from the Primitive simplicity and purity Jude 12. Spots in your feasts feeding themselves without fear So the Holy Kisses or salutings Rom. 16.16 1 Thes 5.26 The common stock of goods Acts 4.32 publikely dedicated to the relief of the Church in which the poorest believer had as much interest in what was given though they contributed nothing as he that gave most of his estate So the annointing of the sick James 5.14 So the Celebration of the Lords Supper every Lords day The peoples Amen 1 Cor. 14.16 which Jerom sayes was in his time as a Clap of Thunder such consent lowdness and alacrity was in that voice of Christian Assemblies The observation of the Jewish Sabbath with the first day of the week The abstinence from blood and things strangled and the like Nothing is more ridiculous in Religion than as some fond or fraudulent Papists do their exercisings and shews of daily Miracles to continue the ordinary use of all those things in the Church which we read were practised in Primitive times upon some extraordinary account either of necessity or charity or speciall gifts then only conferred Which when they were at the highest tide among professors yet were never wont to ouerflow the constant banks of the divinely established calling of the Ministry but still were kept within those modest holy and humble bounds which became the Christian flocks toward those Guides and Pastors which were to be constantly over them in the Lord with whom Christ promised to be as by his Authority and blessing so by his Spirit and assisting gifts to the end of the world As for this Gentleman whose devotion and charity hath raised him to so good hope and expectation of finding or making fit Prophets among the common people truly if he can bring forth any Gentlemen either Lawyers or others of so pregnant parts so ready in Scriptures and of so good utterance as in him appears together with so much gravity candor and equanimity as for the most part he expresses to the Ministry as a peculiar Calling and divinely instituted office such Prophets will be so far welcome as they shall be usefull to the Church Both Ministers and others wou●d be g●ad to see the Inns of Court or Chancery come in like Zilpah and Bilhad to supply the feared barrenness and decayes of Rachel and Leah Gen. 30. the two Universities which were wont to be the fruitfull Mothers and carefull Nurses of the true Prophets and Ministers Nor would it be a less acceptable wonder to all true Christians and Ministers to see such Zenasses 2 Tim. 4.10 devout Lawyers run cross to Demas his steps and forsaking this present world to follow after St. Paul than once it was to see Saul also among the Prophets 1 Sam. 19.24 Talis cum sis utinā noster esses Ages ad Farnabasum inimicum ac mobilem Men that can write I presume speak too after so serious and Spiritual a way as that
feaverish flames and evacuate the vicious humours Vulgar spirits are rude and riotous R●formers which come only with their Axes and Hammers without any Chissels or finer tools they are all for battering down and breaking in pieces nothing for pol●shing and cleansing Hence it is that they do no more Vid. Bishop Davenant determin 12. Against peoples reforming without the Supreme Magistrates consent Necesse est verā religionem unica cum sit canaem semper esse Lact. than pull down Crosses and set up Weathercocks on Chutches disposing Religion to perpetuall vicissitudes and inconstancies which are most contrary to its nature Like weighty Pendants once violently swayed beyond the perpendicular line and poyse they are a long time before they recover the point of fixation and consistency Such are popular heady and tumultuating Reformations usually carrying things at the first impetus as much beyond the medium or centre of true Religion as they were formerly either really or imaginarily deviated Plebeian Constitutions are as subject to be Paralitick as Apoplectick to be ever trembling and troubling Religion in their jealous furies as to be otherwhile stupid and supine in their superstitious follyes Sir Kenelm Digby relates the story in his book of Bodies But once in motion and throughly scared as the youth of Leeds with Souldiers with those Panick terrors of superstition irreligion popery heresie Antichrist and the like they hardly keep or recover themselves to any bounds becomming sober men and good Christians Thence it is as in many other excesses and transports that some men seek to pull down all locall Churches because they may have been somtimes superstitiously abused Possibly at the same rate not one place of their Conventicle meetings should stand So they would have all Church-windows either broken to let in the cold and weather or quite stopped up so as the light should be wholly shut out Non usus rerum sed libido utentis in culpa est Aust doct Christi because the Glasse was somtime painted Such immoderation is just as if Country-men should not esteem or use their fertile Meadews because they are somtime squallid with inundations or as if they would suffer none to sing again because some have sung out of tune and break all Instruments of Musick because they may be set to wanton ayres Of Musick and dittyes Whereas no doubt in this as in other excellencies to which the ingenuous industry of Christians as men may attain for singing and use of Musick either Orall or Organicall in Consort or Solitary which the sad severity and moroser humor of some men would utterly banish from all devout and pious uses as if all Musick and Musicall instruments had been prophaned ever since the Dedication of Nabuchadnezars golden Image even in this I say of Musick or melody Dan. 3.7 the great Creator may be glorified both in privat and publick either by the skilfull or the attentive Christians who have with David harmonious souls joyned to devout and gracious hearts which like a good stomack digests all in Natures and Arts excellency to Piety Like a modest Matron making a vertuous use of those ornaments and jewels which either vice or vanity are prone to usurp and abuse It is true the most blessed God whose transcendent perfections of wisdome power justice mercy love c. as so many strings of infinite extension and accord make up that Holy harmony which is his own eternall delectation as also the ravissant happiness of the blessed Angels and souls of just men made perfect This God I say is not immediatly and for it self delighted with any singing or melody of sense any more than with other expressions of a reasonable soul in Eloquence Praying or Preaching yet since the use of Harmonious sounds is a gift 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Alex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. which the Creator hath given to Man above all Creatures and wherewith Man may be so pleased and exercised in the use of it as thereby to be better disposed and more affected even to serve the Creator either in more spirituall holy humble calm affections or in more flaming Devotions and sweet Meditations which are the usuall effects of good and grave Musick on sober and devout souls who though they do not dwell and stay on this ladder of sensible melody yet they may be still ascending and descending by the s●aves of it in fervency charity and humility to God others and themselves I conceive no true Religion but such as is flatted with vulgar fears can forbid Christians Vid. Basil in Hom. 24. de leg gent. lib. 1 Cor. 10.31 Col. 3.16 to make the best which is a religious use even of Musick referring it as all honest and comly things to the highest end Gods glory And this not only in reading or hearing such Psalms and Hymns and spirituall songs in which the divine truth of the matter affects the enlighened judgement and the quieted conscience with the neerest conformity to the holy minds and spirits of those sacred Writers who have left us the matter so endited though we have lost the antient tunes of their holy Psalmodies but also in that audible singing and melodious delectation which is sensible in good Musick and which hath a secret sweet and heavenly vertue to allay the passions of the soul A corporalibus ad spirituales à mutabilibus ●numeris perpenitur ad immutabiles Aust l. 6. de Musica and to raise up our spirits to Angelicall exaltations by which we may more glorifie and praise God which is a part of our worship of him And wherein the Spirit of God in David and other holy men of the antient Church hath set us allowable commendable and imitable examples Wherein the immusicall rusticity of some men of more ferine spirits which no Harp can calm or cause to depart from them as Sauls did must not prejudice the use and liberty of those Christians who are of more sweet and harmonious tempers even in this particular gift and excellency of Musick than which nothing hath a more sensible and nothing a less sensuall delectation So that if there be not Musick in Heaven sure there is a kind of heaven in Musick yet even in this so sweet and harmless a thing we see that the immoderation and violence of Christians which hath in it a vein of the old Picts and Sythian barbarity is an enemy even to Humanity as well as to Divinity while it seeks to deprive men and Christians of one of the divinest Ornaments most harmless contentments and indulgences which in this world they can enjoy I the rather insist in this most innocent particular of singing and Musick because no instance can shew more those rude and unreasonable transports to which men are subject in what they call religious Reformations If they do not carry all things with very wise hearts and wary hands that so the leaven of
also of that holy Spirit of truth and Ministeriall power which Christ gave to the Apostles and they to their chief successors the Bishops by whose learned piety and industry such mighty works have been done in all ages and in all parts of the Church and in none more I think than in this Church of England chiefly since the Reformation of Religion whereto godly and learned Bishops contributed the greatest humane assistance by their preaching writing living and dying as became holy Martyrs Can. 6. Concil Nicaeni I am vehemently for the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 antient and holy customs of the Catholick Church 8. Primitive Customs how far alterable in the Churches Polity Consuetudo major non est veritate aut tatione Cyp. Ep. 73. Valeat consuetudo ubi non praevalet Scriptura aut ratio Reg. Jur. Praesracti est ingenii contra omnem consuetudinem disputare morosi nimis pertinaciter adhaerere so far as they may be fitted to the state and stature of any Christian societies Not that I think all things of external Polity discipline and government by which Christians stand tyed in relations publique to one another were at first so at once prescribed or perfected by Christ or the B. Apostles as might not admit after addition variations or completions in any Church or Congregation Christian according to those dictates of reason and generall rules of Prudence which are left to the liberty of Churches by which so to preserve particular Churches as not to offend the generall rules of order and charity which bind them by conformity in the main to take care of the Catholick Communion We are not I think tyed so strictly to all the precise paterns of primitive and Apostolicall practise which might well vary in the severall states conditions and dimensions of the Church I read no command for Presbyters to choose a Bishop or President among them and in so not doing they are defective not as to the Precepts of Scripture 1 Cor. 11.16 If any man l●st to be contentious we have no such Custom nor the Churches of Christ In his rebus de quibus nihil certi statuit Scriptura mos populi dei vel instituta majorum pro lege tenenda sunt Aug. Ep. 89. ad Cal. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Or. 34. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Or. 37. but to the rules of right reason and the imitation of usefull example in primitive times Nor do I find any Precept to one or more Presbyters to ordein others after them who yet ought to take care both of their own being rightly Ordeined and of after succession according to that patern Analogy and proportion of holy order and government which was at first wisely observed by the Apostles and the after Ministers of the Church either as Bishops or Presbyters The same Coat would not serve Christ a man grown which did fit him a Child or Youth Only it is neither safe comely nor comfortable for any Christians wantonly and without great and urging reasons next dore to necessity to recede from or to cast off the antient and most imitable Catholick customs of the Church which truly is seldom done upon conscientious and reall necessities pressing but most what upon factious humours and for secular designs carried on under the colour of Church alterations For how ever the alteration may at present please some mens activity and humour whose turn it serves yet it cannot but infinitely scandalise grieve and oppress far more and better Christians who are of the old yet good way Hence many wee see are at a loss now in England how to justifie their past religion shaken by changes as if they had had no true Ministry nor holy Ministrations and Sacraments hitherto while some mens zeal without knowledge cries down Bishops and that whole government with the Ministry for Antichristian others are extremely unsatisfied and solicitous for the future succession Not seeing any ground for any Presbyters in this Church so to challenge to themselves a sole divine power of Ordination and Jurisdiction without any President Bishops which was the antient way in England ever since we were Christians as in all other Churches And it is most sure that neither power of Ordination nor Jurisdiction was ever conferred by Bishops on any Presbyters here either verbally or intentionally as without and against Bishops Nor did the Laws or Canons ever so mean or speak Nor was it I believe in any of the Presbyters own thoughts that they received any such power to Ordein other Presbyters without a Bishop when they were Ordeined Ministers And sure though acts of state and civil Magistracy may regulate the exercise yet they cannot confer the holy power and order of a Presbyter or Bishop on any man which flows from a spiritual head even Jesus Christ as I have proved and not from any temporall Authority Ordinances of Parliament can hardly with justice or honour batter or dismount the Canons of generall Councils the Catholick laws or constant Customes of the Church If it be supposed that the two Houses of Parliament lately did but restore and the Presbyters resume that power of Ordination which was only due to them as such and deteined by Bishops usurpation from them Bo●a consuetudo velut vinum generosum vetustate valescit Tert. It is very strange they should never here nor elsewhere have made claim to it for 1600. years in no ages past till these last broken factious tumultuary and military times If it were their right only in common with and subordinate to Bishops they needed not then to complain for they did or might have enjoyed as much joynt power as was for their conveniency and the Churches peace The eminent power at least for Order sake was even by their consents lawfully placed in and exercised by the Bishops The levity and ambition of ingrossing all to themselves without and against Bishops hath almost lost all power both of Bishops and Presbyters too since Presbytery alone is but as Pipe-staves full of cracks warpings and unevenness which will not easily hold the strong liquor of power and government unless they be well hooped about and handsomly kept in order by venerable and fatherly Episcopacy which carried a greater face of majesty and had those ampler and more august proportions which ought to be in government beyond what can be hoped for or in reason expected from the parity and puerility of Presbyters in common many of whom have more need to be governed than they are any way fit to bear any great weight of government on their shoulders however they may discharge some works of the Ministry very well 9. Calm mediations between Episcopacy and Presbytery As it hath never yet been shewen any where so it is least to be hoped for now in England that any better fruits should arise from Presbyterie thus beheaded cropped and curtayled of its crown Episcopacy which it might not stil have as formerly it
Spirit of Christ abstracts any mans faith from the Word or carries his practise against the Truth Order and holy Institution which Christ hath setled in his Church For it is most sure by all experience that the holy Spirit teacheth those Scripture saving-Truths by the ordinary methods and orderly means which the Wisdom of the same Spirit in Christ hath appointed to be used in the Ministry of the Church Ephes 3.10 Ephes 4.12 which who so proudly neglects and so despiseth Christ in them he may tempt grieve and resist the Spirit of God but he will never find the comfort of the Spirit in his unwarranted extravagancies which are but silly delusions and baby-like novelties having nothing in them of Truth Holinesse or religious Excellency beyond what was better known believed and expressed before in words and deeds by a far better way Christians ought never to turn such children and fools as to think Religion is never well unless it be in some new dresse and fashion of unwanted expressions and strange administrations we think that the Spirit of God teacheth all humble constant and exact obedience to the Word of God without any dispensation to any men at any time in things of Morall duty and Divine Constitution or Order according to the severall relations and religious capacities of Christians no reall sufficiency of gifts or graces doth justifie any Christian in any disorderly and unruly course of acting or exercising his supposed Inspirations in the Church no more then they doe in the Civill Offices of State Nor are these motions any thing of Gods speciall call in regard of the outward Order and Policy of the Church where the ordinary way of Calling Admitting Ordaining and sending forth right Ministers may be had in the Church 3. The vanity of of their wayes compared to the Word Be these impulses of the Spirit never so great yet they put no good Christian upon idlenesse or presumption so as not to use the ordinary means of study hearing reading meditating conferring praying and preparing c. Nor shall he either preserve or increase or profitably exercise any such gifts without study industry and preparatory pains which are the means by which God blesseth men with that Wisdome Truth Order and Utterance which are necessary for the Churches good The liberall effusions of some mens tongues their warm and tragicall expressions where there is something of Wit Invention Reading Method Memory Elocution c. in the way of Naturall and acquired Endowments alas these are no such rare gifts and speciall manifestations of Gods Spirit which these Anti-ministeriall men have so much cause to boast of There may be high mountains of such gifts ordinary and extraordinary as in Judas the Traitor which have no dews of grace falling on their barrennesse Nor are these boasters of Inspirations manifested yet either as equall or any way comparable to most true Ministers in any sort by any shewes of such gifts for the most of which they are beholding to Ministers labours and studies with whose heifer these men make some shift to plough the crooked and unequall furrows of their Sermons and Pamphlets A little goes a great way with these men in their supposed Inspirations and where they cannot goe far on they goe round in circling Tautologies snarled repetitions intricate confusions which are still but the same skains of thread which other men have handsomely spun and wound up in better method and order which these men have neither skill nor patience fairly to unfold but pull out here a thread and there an end which they break off abruptly to the confounding of all true Methods of Divinity and Order of found Knowledge The composednesse and gravity of true Religion in Publique especially admits least of extravagancies and uncomelinesse Haeretico conversatio quam futilis terrena humana sine grauitate sine autoritate sine disciplina Tertul. adv Haer. which dissolve the bonds or exceed those bounds by which Christ hath fitly compacted the Church together in a sociall way giving every part by a certain order and allowance established as the Standard in his Church that * Eph. 4 16. measure and proportion which is best for the whole This place and calling every Christian ought to own and to attend keeping within due bounds till God enabling and the Church so judging and approving of his abilities he be placed and imployed in some way of Publique service into which to crowd and obtrude a mans selfe uncalled and unordained regularly by the Church doth not argue such great motions of the Spirit which like strong liquor cannot be kept in any vessell but only evidenceth the corrupt spirits the violent lusts and the proud conceits which are in mens Hearts Certainly all Gifts Graces and Influences of Gods Spirit in truly gracious and humble hearts are in all Motions Habits and Operations as conform to the Scripture which are the Canon of Truth Peace and Order in the Church as any right line is to that rule by which it is drawn or as figures cast in the same stamp and mould are exactly fitted to one another The Truth of the Word and Graces of Gods Spirit cannot be separated or opposed any more than heat can be parted in the Sun from its light or its beams crosse one another in crooked and oblique angles It is no better Austin de Unit. Ecclesiae c. 16. Non dicant ideo verum esse quia illa vel illa miribilia fecit Donatus vel Pontine vel quilibet alius aut quia ille frater n●ster vel illa soror nostra tale visum v●gilans vidit vel dormiens somniavit Removeantur ista vel figmenta mendocium hominum vel po●tenta fallacium spiritum Remotis istis Eccclesiam suam demonstrent in canonicis sanctorum librorum autoritatibus than a proud and Satanicall delusion to fancy or boast that the Holy Spirit of Christ dwels there in speciall Influences and Revelations where the Word of Christ doth not dwell richly in all wisdome Col. 3.16 The lodgings of the Spirit are alwayes and onely furnished with the Tapistry of the Scriptures Else all imaginary furniture of any private spirits leaves the heart but swept and garnished with the new brooms of odd fancies and fond opinions to entertain with somewhat more trim and composed dresse the unclean spirit who loves to dwell thus in the high places of mens souls and hereby seems to make the later end of those filthy or silly dreamers in pride Iud. 8. vain-glory hypocrisie and lying against the Truth blaspheming the true Spirit of Christ contemning his holy and onely true Ministery and Ordinances and in all other licentious Apostasies worse than their beginning was in ignorance errors and terrors or in plain dealing sensualities and downright profanenesse For it is more tolerable to be without the Spirit of God Pope Hildebrand Cum haereticus malesicus sacrilegus esset pro sacratissimo se
ostentabat miranda quaedam Magicis arti●us patrabat prunas subinde è manica excutiebat co●am populo Car. Sigon ad an 1057. Avent pag. 455. 470. 2 Pet. 2.21 than to lye against it and blaspheme it or oppose and resist it after some knowledge of the Truth It had been better for such men not to have known the way of Christs Spirit in the Scriptures and the Church It is far more veniall to erre for want of the Spirits guidance and light than to shut our eyes against it and to impute our Errors Dreams and Darknesses to it 'T is better to have the heart wholly barren than to lay our adulterous bastards to the Spirits charge when they indeed are issues of nothing but Pride joined to Ignorance 4. Like pretentions of old confuted by mens practises Nothing indeed is easier and cheaper at the World now goes than for * Portentiloquium haereticorum vain and proud men to pretend to speciall Inspirations and Motions of Gods Spirit on them as many in the old times did who yet were sensuall not having the Spirit * Se spiritales esse asserebant Valentiniani Demiurgum animalem virginales Gnostico●um spiritus gloriabantur Iren. l. 1. 3. So the Gnosticks called themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiritual men as well as knowing men So the Marcionites and Montanists pretended that their Master Montanus knew more than the Apostles had more of the Comforter was the Com●orter it self and told him what Christ said his Disciples could not then bear Joh. 16.12 The like lying fancies had the Valentinians Austin de Haeret. Epiphan l. 4. de Haer. c. 40. and Circumcelliones and Manichees who being idle-handed grew idle-headed too not caring what they said nor what they did for they fathered all on the Spirit So the Cathari and Encratitae calling themselves Chast and Pure and Apostolici Apostolicall and above the Gospels both of old and in * Sermo 66. in C●ntica Cerdom Apelles Marciontae privatas lecturas habuerunt quas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apellant cujusdam Phihamenae puellae prophetissa libium syllogismorum quibus p●obare vult quod omnia quae Moses scripserit● de Deo falsa sunt Tertul. prae ad Hae. ● 44. St. Bernards time time and in later times too both in Germany and other places rising to ostentation of Prophesying speciall Inspirations strange Revelations shews of Miracles and lying Wonders fulfilling and interpreting of Prophecies enthronings of Christ c. by which strong delusions they sought to deceive the very Elect if it had been possible but they could never perswade truly excellent and choise Christians to any belief of their forgegeries and follies since neither the temper of their spirits nor their works nor their words were like the rules marks or fruits Sleid an Com. l. 4. Cainit● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fingebant Epiph. Hae. 38. The Cainites pretended they had a book containing the Raptures of Saint Paul what he then heard c. of that holy and unchangeable Spirit of Jesus Christ set forth in his Word and owned in the Church But rather the effects of that depraved spirit which is most contrary to God and most inconstant in it self which after all its fair glozings and praefacings of Purity Gifts and Inspirations is still but * Borboritae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coenoli Tertul. and Austin call those hereticks the Gnosticks Cathatists and others who called themselves Apostolici Pneumatici Angelici purgatores electi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Longinus Manes the Father of the Maniches called himself an Apostle of Christ the Comforter and Spirit chose twelve Disciples despised water Baptism said the Body was none of Gods work but of some evill Genius and his followers full of impure lusts and errours yet said they were called Maniches from flowing with Manna 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They said the soul was the substance of God to be purified to that end they mixed the Eucharisticall bread with their seed in obscene pollutions and ●apes● ut isto mod● Dei substantia in homine purgetur Aust de Hae. Borborites a swinish and unclean spirit and differs as much from the Purity Truth Beauty and Order of the true Spirit of Christ which shines in the Word as the most noisome Jakes and filthy sink doth from the most sweet and Crystall fountain of everflowing waters True Ministers find it hard having done all 5. True fruits of the Spirit to obtain those competent Ministeriall gifts and graces of the Spirit which are necessary to carry on that great work of their own and others Salvation to any decorum and comfort which these Gloriosoes pretend as if they were bred and born to * Venit vadit prout vult nemo facile scit unde venit aut quo vadat Ber. Brevis mora rata hora mira subtilitate sua vitate divinae suae artis ircessanter actitat in intimo nostri Idem or were suddenly and at once endowed withall few of these ever think they want the Spirit if they have but confidence to undertake any Ministeriall work and publique Office Yea and the best Christians no lesse than the ablest Ministers find it hard in truth to obtain the sanctifying gracious influen●es of Gods Spirit by which with much diligence and prayer they are enabled to private duties nor doe they find it so easie to flesh and bloud to obey those holy directions of the Spirit or in conflicts to take its part against the flesh and to rejoice in the victories and prevalencies of the Spirit Whose publique donations for the common good of Christians edifying them in truth and charity are chiefly manifested not onely by his servants the true Ministers but in the blessing of that very Order Office appointment and function of the Ministry Eph. 4.8 11. both as instituted and a● continued so long time by the wisdome and power of this Spirit of Christ And by this great Gift of gifts as by the Sunne in the Firmament all others are ordinarily conveyed to private Christians which chiefly consist and are manifested in true beleevers not in quick strokes of fancy passionate raptures strange allusions and allegoricall interpretations confused obscurings of Scriptures which some men with Origen make so much of In veritate qua illuminaris in virtute qua immutaris in charitate qua inflammaris serenata conscientia subita insolita mentis latitudin● praesentem spiritum intellige Ber. but in bringing men from this childish futility of Religion to a manly seriousnesse which sets the heart soberly to attend read hear study and meditate on the Word of God to prefer that Jewell before all the hidden treasure of their own or others Fairy fancies to assent to the saving Truths both of Law and Gospell zealously to love them strictly to obey them by hearty repentance for sins against God or man ingnuous confessions of them honest compensations for them
some Scripturall expressions which they have attained beyond their former selves or their equals were rare immediate and speciall gifts of the Spirit Then because they should seem no body if they carry their small wares in an old pack * Quos diabolus a veritatis via in veleri charitate detinere non p●tuit novi itineneris erro●e circumscribit decipit Cyp. they invent some new fashion of Religion or some modell of a Church-way which they strongly fancy after they have once brought forth their fancy to any form and shape they are strangely inamored with it all old figures never so uniform Catholick and comely seem deformed ugly Antichristian Then follows those quick emotions and stirrings upon their spirits which have the quicknings only of Self in them these are presently cryed up for motions and * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Marcionites had private lectures which they called Manifestations or Illuminations from a Prophetesse Philumena Tertul. prae ad Hae. c. 44. manifestations and excitations and impulses of Gods Spirit on them then they are easily moved to extraordinary heats and irregular vehemencies as counterfeit possessed are by the looking on and applauses of others whose sillinesse makes them gentle spectators and obsequious admirers of any thing that seems new to them or is above them Nothing troubles these pretenders so much as if you look too neer and too narrowly on their practises * Impostoribus nihil est lumine inimicitius Nothing angers them so much as what they fear may discover them you must not ask them where are their miracles where their Empire over Devils where their languages where their prophecies either as predictions of things to come or as interpretations of obscure Prophecies in the Scripture referring to Jesus Christ These questions though they are but just to be put where extraordinary Inspirations are pretended are too hard for them these pose them and afflict them when they are thus urged by Ministers or any sober Christians who expect no satisfactory answer in any of those particulars which are the proper effects and demonstrations of the Spirit in its extraordinary motions when indeed they observe in these pretenders so little of ordinary sound and saving knowledge so nothing of that meeknesse of wisdome which every true Christian in whom the Spirit of Christ dwels injoyes in some measure so utter desolation of any thing that may argue any thing extraordinary and excellent which may justly own the Spirit of Christ for its speciall Author and infuser But quite contrary grosse ignorance in many things yet puffed up with intolerable pride poysoned with errors kindled with passions sharpned with violence delighting in furies boasting in discords schisms and confusions either begun or increased or continued by the restlesse agitations of their fierce and unquiet spirits whose impetuous temper is impatient of nothing so much as true Christian patience of Peace Order and charitable harmony in any part of the Church of Christ There is nothing they can lesse endure Magi Augures nihil suis actibus successurum Iuliano affirmabant nisi Athanasium primo velut omnium obstaculum sustulisset Ruff. l. 1. c. 32. Hist Ecc. Gal. 1.7 than able learned godly and resolute Ministers in whom dwels indeed a far more excellent Spirit of God full of wisdome of power of courage full of Christ who can and dare detect the deceits and juglings of these vain mindes manifesting their folly discovering their nakednesse emptinesse and nothingnesse in respect of any extraordinary Illuminations or Inspirations of Gods holy Spirit in any way of Religion After all the cry and noise and glorying of these mens inspirings at the best all amounts to no more than the same Gospell the same Duties the same Sacraments the same Jesus the same God who was with far more knowledge purity peace love zeal and constancy owned served and honoured in this and other Churches in that ancient way and holy Ministry which the Church ever used which Christ instituted and with which God was so well pleased that he blessed it as the means to preach the Gospell to plant Religion to settle and govern the Church in first and after times amidst all the persecutions and heresies that opposed it This is the best of their Inspirings the setting of some new glosse and fashion on Christian Religion whose purity and simplicity like gold cares not be thus painted over But take these Inspired men in their degenerations depravings and worstings of Religion and you will easily see how such equivocall generations and imperfect mixtures and meer monsters of Religion presently putrifie and pervert to error faction licentiousnesse violence rapine civill oppressions tyrannies against all that applaud not or approve not the rarity of their conceits and inventions which first kindle with modest sparks Modestiora sunt errorum initia blandientia venena Lactant as if they would enlighten warm and refine the Church Religion and Ministry but after they have got to them vulgar fewell they arise to such dreadfull flames and conflagrations as threaten to consume all that was ever built before them that so the goodly Palaces of ancient and true Religion being demolished they may have a clearer ground where on to set up the feeble cottages of their new framing and erecting Poor men thus once * Omnes tument omnes scientiam pollicentur ante sunt perfecti quam eslocti Tertul. de Hae c. 41. puffed up with their tympanies of self conceptions and getting into some warmer Sun having once over-looked their first errors they never after have leisure patience or humility to discern the grosse yet secret distempers which are in their spirits * Not raptures and gifts but humility and charity give the greatest evidences and surest instances of Gods Spirit and of salvation the many distinctions and disguises and windings by which worldly lusts passions and interests slily creep in and concealedly worke in their hearts even then most securely and so most dangerously when under this blind of Gods Spirit when the Lord shall be intitled to the whole plot and project of their follies and furies both in its softer beginnings and its rougher proceedings Of these fallacies in point of speciall Inspirings and motions of Gods Spirit there are no surer detections than these 1. 9. Evidences of their folly That these so moved and active spirits do always finde lesse content and pleasure in have lesse zeal and contention for the great things of God which are Faith Righteousnesse Peace and Holinesse than they doe for their little novelties and fancies 2. They finde lesse comfort and joy in themselves to be kept within and humbly to walk in those holy bounds of religious Truth and Order which the Word of God hath clearly set before them and all holy Christians and the purest Churches alwayes observed than to be alwayes busily disputing for and acting over those petty parts of their scruples
novelties and extravagancies Which have nothing in them but a verminly nimblenesse and subtlety being bred out of the putrefactions of mens Brains and the corruptions of the times in matters of Religion and are rather pernicious than any way profitable in comparison of the more sober strength and usefulnesse of nobler creatures Nor is it by gracious persons disputed but that one serious Christian of the old stamp one able and faithfull Minister of the Church of England whom these so contemne and hate hath heretofore done and still doth more good and gives greater demonstrations of the Spirit of Christ dwelling in him with wisdom gravity learning humility diligence peaceablenesse and charity by which many have been restrained or converted from sin or established and confirmed in the ways of God than whole heaps of these novel Teachers and swarms of Inspired pretenders who like drones do but seek to rob the hives and starve the Bees who serve in some fits to scratch itching ears to some tune of pleasure liberty profit novelty or preferment but not to teach the ignorant to settle the shaken to compose the tossed to heal the wounded or to wound the ulcerated Consciences of any men to any soundnesse of mind or true holinesse of manners Aedificantur in ruinam illuminantur in caciores teneb●as Their Proselytes are rather perverted than converted made theirs by a schismaticall and factious adherence rather than Christs by a fiduciary obedience or the Churches by a charitable and humble communion Faction and confusion and every evill work are the fruits of pertinacious and pragmatick ignorance as Vnion Peace and Charity are the genuine effects of sound knowledge and humble wisdome In which wayes onely true Christians have ever judged the highest gifts and graces of Christs Spirit to be both derived and decerned I am sure there is a vast difference between a wanton Fancy and a holy Spirit between a glib Tongue and a gracious Heart We may add to these discoveries of fallacious pretentions to the Spirits speciall motions Abominanda religionis ludibria colentia temporum rationes non leges Dei Naz or Lat. Hypocritarum pietas est temporum aucupium Cyp. That both in the first broaching and after drawings forth of their new projects and inventions the authors of them more look to men than to God how it may suit with secular aimes and politique interest private or publique than how it sorts with Gods Word or the rule of Christ or the Churches practise in purest times or its present distresses whose frame as to the main both for Doctrine Ministry and Government hath alwayes been the same both in times of persecution and of peace when favoured and disfavoured hy men And such it ever was in England and possibly it will be if it out-live this storm I am sure these Novelties so much opposing this Church and true Ministers in it would never have so quickned by any inward heat of Spirit if they did not presume that the Sun did shine warm on them which yet is no infallible sign of Gods blessing If these Antiministeriall adversaries these now so Inspired men who join in their plots and power and activity by which they either secretly undermine by evill speaking and separating from the publique Ministry or openly invade and arrogate the Office or wholly deride and oppose the Function if they expected nothing but Winter and persecution and such measure as they mete I believe it would damp their spirits very much They would then think it a part of prudence in a Christian Spirit to sleep in a whole skin by keeping themselves in that station wherein God and the Lawes both of Church and State have set them As they did very warily in those times when there was just power restraining them in those due bounds which then they thought became them best and they would no doubt have thought so still for all the fullnesse of their spirits and ebullition of their rarer gifts if strange indulgences in matters of Religion and Church Order had not tempted them to safe extravagancies and unpunished insolencies chiefly against the Church and Church men In other things of civill affairs where it is very likely their spirit prompts them as much to be medling because more is got by those activities they know how to keep their spirits in very good order being over-awed with evident danger attending any factious seditious or tumultuary motions None of these small spirited m n who are seldome little in their own eyes are powerfully moved to usurp any place in the Councell of State to arrogate the office and authority of an Embassadour or publique Agent to set himself in the Seat of Justice un commissioned or to intrude into any place Military or Civill without a Warrant from other than their own forward spirits though their pride and ambition * 2 Sam. 15.3 Nunquam defuit ambitioso praeclara sui ipsius opinio summa de seipso expectatio Sym. like Absaloms may fancy they could better dispatch businesse doe exacter Justice and speedier than any in Authority yet here the danger and penalty of intrusion cowes their zeal curbs their heady spirits and cuts their combes Nor are they often either so valiant or so fool hardy as to act by their pretended impulses in any way but where they think there may be safety which they now find as from many men in what ever they say or doe against the honour order and Ministry of this reformed Church of England which they see hath not many souldiers to defend it nor advocates to plead for it nor Patrons to protect it Wanton and petulant servants which were formerly but as the * Iob 30.1 Insolentioris animi propri● est calamitosam viriutem indigne tractare dicteriis appetere injuriis afficere de iis quae immerita patitur maxime exprobrare Plin. dogs of the flock will easily insult over the children of the family when they see them Orphanes and exposed to injuries either wanting true * Isa 49.23 Nursing Fathers and Mothers or these wanting that tendernesse toward them which is hardly to be expected in step-mothers and onely titular parents It is no adventure for timorous beasts to goe over where they find the fence trodden down and the gap made wide So much more prevalent with vain and proud men are the impressions of fear from men than those from God whose commands and threatnings are attended with Omnipotent Justice which is slow paced but sure Nor doe I doubt but those subtle and insolent enemies against this Reformed Church and the Ministry of it doe already * Prima est baec ultio quod se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur Iuv. Occultum quatienti animo tortore flagellum Id. find the first strokes of Divine Vengeance in their own ingratefull breasts The further triall of these pretenders to the Spirit I must leave to the impartiality of judicious Christians in that experience
nor raising any building of piety or sound knowledge in others for the same small stock always serves their turn in their severall gests and quarters By this meanes they hope the Church and State in a short time will be spoiled of all those fair flowers of good Scholars and able constant Ministers which were well rooted in learning and plentifully watered with the dew of heaven the gifts and graces of Gods Spirit that so there may be room enough for those rank and ill weeds to spread all over this English garden and field under whose specious covert of spiritualty all sort of venemous Serpents and hurtfull beasts may be hidden till they are so multiplied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. that through mutuall jealousies and dissensions they fall to tearing and devouring one another for however like Serpents wicked men may for a while twine together yet their different heads will soon find wherewith to exercise their stings and teeth against each other Impious mens confederacies are not friendship but faction and conspiracy Nothing being more in consistent than ignorance error and impiety which having no principles of union or order in them can have nothing of firmnesse or stability among them I doubt not but there are 12. The blessings which good Christians owe to good Ministers under God notwithstanding so many bitter spirits and rebellious children have become ungratefull Apostates against this Church and ●its worthy Ministery thousands of excellent Christians who have not bowed the knee to these Baali●s who have both cause and hearts to confesse that the feet of these messengers the true Ministers of England have brought light and peace to their soules That their pious and constant labors have not been either so weak or unfruitfull as might in any sor● deserve or justifie such hard recompenses as these now are with which a foolish and unthankefull generation seeks to requite the Lord Deut. 32.6 and his faithfull servants the true Ministers whose names shall yet live among good Christians with durable honour Eccles 7.1 and their memories shall be pretious as sweet Ointments when these dead yet busie flies who seek to corrupt them Eccles 10.1 shall rot as dung on the face of the earth Their unsavory stench is already come up and hath greatly defiled many parts of this Church being justly offensive to all wise and good men in the present age and for the future they will be memorable for nothing but illiterate impudence ungratefull malice and confused madnesse who like beasts were able to waste a fair field and desolate a well reformed Church but never to cultivate or plant any thing like it The field of this Church in many places by the blessed labours of true and able husbandmen was heretofore full of good corn the valleys and hils did laugh and sing poore and rich were happy in the great increases with which the Lord of the harvest crowned the labours of his faithfull Ministers before the enemy had such liberty to sow his tares even at noon day yea in many places to rout the true labourers to leave many places desolate and only to scatter that self-sowing corn which is like to that which springs on the house top whereof the Mower shall never fill his hand Psal 129.7 nor he that bindeth up the sheaves his bosome Who sees not that one handfull of that crop which was formerly wont to be tilled by the skilfull and diligent hand of true and able Ministers was for its weighty soundnesse in knowledge and modest fulnesse in humility far more worth than many sheaves and cartloads of these burnt and blasted ears whose pride pretends in one night to grow to such eminent gifts of the Spirit for preaching as shall exceed all the parts and studies of Ministers when it 's evident to all that will but rub them in their hands that these wild oats and smutty ears by lifting up their heads so high doe but proclaim their emptinesse and lightnesse And 't were well if they were onely such cockle such trash and light gear they now grow to sharp thistles thornes mixed with true weed which seeks to starve choak and pull down to the earth all the hopes and joy of the true labourers that rich crop of truth order piety charity and sincerity which was formerly in great plenty and still is in good measure on the ground Yea thousands of Christians in many places of this Nation doe already grievously complain of the sad and desolate estate to which they are reduced for want of able and true Ministers Amos 8.11 Psal 106.15 residing among them crying out that a famine of the Word is come upon them and leannesse is entred into their soules having none to sow the immortall seed of the Word or to dispense the bread of life to them but a few straglers now and then of whose calling and authority to minister holy things no wise man hath any confidence and of whose insufficiency every way all men have too much experience where ever they obtrude themselves That most Christians had rather yea and better want the Word and Sacraments than receive them so defiled so nullified by such unwashen and unwarranted hands For it is hardly to be beleeved that those who are so much enemies to the spirit of Christ in true Ministers of which there hath been so great and good demonstrations in gifts lives and successes should either have or come in the power of the same Spirit which they so much despise and blaspheme Sure the Kingdome of Christ is not divided against it self but is uniform and constant not depending on the various impulses of mens humours fancies and worldly interests but established and governed by the most sure Word and those holy rules both for truth and order therein contained It is little sign of Christs Spirit in men to sow those seeds of errors and divisions which holy men have been alwayes plucking up or to build again that Babell which so many godly Ministers have pulled down But it becomes us Ministers not so much to dispute with these men about the Spirit to which they so highly pretend as to continue to outdoe them in the fruits of the Spirit as our famous and blessed forefathers have done and to leave the decision to the Consciences of true and wise Christians and to the great Searcher of mens hearts and tryer of mens spirits and workes who hath the Spirit of burning and refining Isa 4.4 and who if he hath not determined for the superfluity of wickednesse and ungratefull wontannesse of this Nation to lay us quite wast and desolate will in his due time after these days of triall throughly purge his floore and weed his field even this Mal. 3.12 so sadly havocked and neglected Church In which there are still some fruit that have a blessing in them Isa 65.8 and which we hope he will not destroy who knows how to separate between the
the mind and manners of men who sees not by miserable experience how mankinde runs out to weeds who le nations degenerate to brutish barbarity as among the Tartars Negroes and Indians Yea even among people where some are civilized by literature and the profession of Christian religion we finde by daily experience that the unlearned sort are either grosse dull and very indocible St●lide feroces Tac. or else they are rough impolished and insolent prone to a rustick impudence and clownish untractablenesse especially when they imagine they have or dare arrogate to themselves a power and liberty of speaking and doing what they list Nothing is sacred nothing is civill among those that carry all by ignorant confidence and brutish strength Scientia non habet ●●micum p●aeter ignorantem we see in those of the Antiministeriall faction that by want of learning whereof they are generally guilty men onely learn this Indian or Turkish quality to hate contemne and seek to destroy all good learning which is nothing else but the good husbandry and great improvement of the reasonable soule in it self to God and to others Therefore the ambition of these Ignoramusses 2 Tim. 3.8 is like the magick cunning of Jannes and Jambres chiefly vented and exercised by a most impotent pride and malice in despising and resisting those Mosesses the true Ministers of the Church the planters preservers reformers and vindicators and deliverers under God of true Religion who have been and are many of them eminently learned most of them competently so as at least to make a fair and ingenuous use of other mens more accurate and solid labours who are their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brethren of the same holy function and Ministry who have generally been in all ages and places the magazines or storehouses of all good learning which I may affirm without any envy or diminution to those many excellent Gentlemen of this or other Nations who have added to the honour of their birth and other accomplishments of breeding this most eminent crown and beauty of all Good learning It is a work then fit for Lucifer 3. To cry downe good learning is only fit for Luciferians so to contradict his name by his deeds to pretend light and intend darknesse to cry up the spirit which is easily done that he may cry down learning which is hardlyer attained than the other is said Who can wonder if the Philistines would fain put out the eyes of our Samsons having once bound and hampered them with poor and straightned conditions that so they may lesse fear their strength Iudg. 16.21 and safely mock them and their reformed Religion which never so thrived after miraculous gifts were ceased as when the forces and glory of the Gentiles came in to Christ Isa 60.11 Rev. 21.26 Vid. Clem. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. Vult 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when Christianity was graffed on the old stock of heathen learning and philosophy which now brings forth fruit not after the old crabbed sowrnesse but after the sweetnesse of the new Olive-cion with which it is headed yea we see when Christian Religion ran out to much barbarity illiterate ignorance and superstition for many centuries till the last for want of the culture and manuring of learning it brought forth little fair fruits but much of Legendary fables lying wonders religious Romances stories of Chivalry in holy warres and E●ra●tries in Religion The best effects were the Schoolemen● cloistered curiosities and intricate disputes who rather hewed and cut the pillars of Christian Religion into small chips and shavings than added much to the polishing and establishing of them so intangling Philosophy with Divinity as confounded both much advanced neither all excellent things worthy to be known being wrapped up in obscurity or set forth in such barbarous and fulsome Latin that they were like fair Irish bodies in course and ragged mantles And this for want of that method and texture of learning which might so card and fever each matter from other as might give both beauty and distinctnesse to them Which we see hath been done this last hundred years and more The advantages to religion by learning in which so many men of admirable learning and industry have by the help of printing with which the world is now rather surfeited than nourished brought forth to their beauty by an happy regeneration so many of the ancient writers both Christian and heathen which were formerly buried in obscure cloisters and uselesse retirements as in their graves eaten with worms and covered with dust So that no Sanhedrin of the Jews no Senate at Athens or Rome no Synod or Councell of Christians were ever so at once compleated and furnished with excellent men in all kinds as our Christian Libraries now every where are In which there are attending on Christian Religion which is as the Kings daughter Psal 45.23 all glorious within those virgins which bee not her fellows so much as her handmaids who clothe her with garments wrought with needle-work in divers colours embroydered with the sublimity and gravity of Plato with the method and acutenesse of Aristotle Of Plutarch it is said if all Authors were lost he alone might supply with the morals and suavity of Seneca and Plutarch who alone is a Library with the eloquence and oratory of Demosthenes Tully and Quintilian with the florid language and sober sense of Xenophon Caesar Livy Tacitus and other excellent historians with the various observations of the most learned Varro whose life was spared in civill dissensions for his incomparable learning Vivat Varro doctissi●us Romanorum so of Pliny Ptolemy and other searchers into all curiosities of Nature and Art Besides these the very goats hair Exod. 37.7 and badger skins too are made to serve the Tabernacle of the Lord the elegancies of Homer Virgil and other Poets who are magazines of fancy Of Virgil it is said if all Sciences were lost they might be found in him and masters of wit are usefull which way of expressing truth and religion in pathetick and poetick wayes of devotion the Spirit of God abhorreth not as we see in some holy Poets who were writers of some part of the Scripture as in Job Psalmes Canticles Lamentations and other places where piety and poetry truth and elegancy Divinity and sacred curiosity in meete●s and Acrostichs meet together Teaching us That God who is full of infinite varieties and yet but one perfect simplicity is to be seen served and praised in his severall gifts to any of which Christian Religion which is of all religions the most absolute perfect and comprehensive can have no abhorrency Grata de Deo fama in artibus sparsa since they all flow from God and return to him through any wise and gracious heart which as a limbeck or hot still extracts somewhat spirituall out of every thing of nature art experience or history From these
these cheats in the pillory of publique infamy that they may loose their Ears that is their * Vt tandem male audiant qui male di●●●nt agunt hearing well that credit and fame of gifts which they cover and captate among the Vulgar and which they would enjoy by reason of their many wiles and artifices by which they ly in wait to deceive with good words and fair speeches as the Divels setting Dogs the well affected and plain hearted Christians Rom. 16.18 if they were not every where routed and confounded by the Ministers of the Church who are both far abler and honester men and to whose charge the flock of Christ in its severall divisions and places is committed that they may take care it suffer no detriment either in truth or in peace in faith or manners in Doctrine or in holy order Thus then although the soules and faith of the meanest true Christians be alike pretious and dear to God 2 Pet. 1.1 as the most learned men's yet they are not pieces of the same weight for gifts of the same extension for endowments of the same polishings for studies nor of the same stamp and authority for their calling and office All which as they are not to the essence of true grace and religion so they are much to the lustre power beauty order usefulnesse and communicativenesse of those gifts which goe with true Religion and are by the Lords munificence bestowed on the Church and faithfull for their well being safety and comfort even in this world besides their happinesse in another which ought to be the grand design of all true Christians both Laymen and Churchmen both learned and unlearned both Governours and governed But these Illiterato's further object with open mouth 11. Object Christ and his Apostles had no humane Learning That they are sure neither Christ nor his Apostles had themselves or commended to the Churches use humane learning Answ My answer is They needed none as humane that is acquired by ordinary education or industry being far above it by those glorious and miraculous endowmen●s of the Spirit of wisedome which can easily shine in a moment through the darkest lanterns men of the meanest parts and grossest capacities So that those might as well dispense with the absence of all acquired humane learning as he that hath the Suns light needs not the Moon or Stars or Candles or he that had Angels wings and swiftnesse would not want the legge of man or beast to carry him or he that is neer a living and inexhaustible spring needs not labour to dig wels as Isaac did and so must we too Gen. 26 1● in the barren and dry land where we live which none but inhumane Philistims would stop up This therefore of Christ and his Apostles is not more peevishly than impertinently alledged by these men in these times against the use of good learning in the Churches Ministers unlesse the reall experiences of these men pretended Apostolicall gifts extraordinary endowments and immediate sufficiencies from the Spirit of God could justifie these allegations either as fitted to them as to the present dispensations of Christ to his Church Although the Lord sometime gave his Church water out of a rock and refreshed wearied Samson by a miraculous fountain which suddenly sprung up in Lehi not in the Jaw-bone but in the place so called from Lehi i.e. the Jaw-bone Iudg. 15.19 by which instrument he had obtained so great a victory there where it continnued afterward yet I beleeve these men will think it no argument to expect every day such wonderfull emanations and neglecting all ordinary means to expect from the Jaw-bones of Asses water or drink to quench their thirst I am sure this Church hath not yet found any such flowings forth or refreshing from the mouths of these Objecters whose lips never yet dropped like Hermon so much as a Dew of sweet and wholesome knowledge upon any place and how should they whose tongues are for the most part set on fire and breathe out with much terrour nothing but ashes and cinders like Vesuvius or Etna whose eruptions are vastatious to all neere them Col. 2.3 Matth. 12.42 Unus verus magnus est magister Christus qui selus non didicit quod omnes doceret Amb. off l. 1. Matth. 5 45. As for our blessed Lord Christ we know he was filled with all the treasures of wisedome both divine and humane for being greater than Solomon he could not come short of Solomons wisdome in any thing who was in all his glory but a Type and shadow of Christ and no way comparable to him Our Saviours design indeed was not as Platos or Aristotles to advance naturall Philosophy meer morality humane learning and eloquence the beams of which Sun by common providence God had already made to shine by other wayes on the bad as well as the good on the heathens as well as the Jews and Christians but Christs intent was Mal. 4. 1 Cor. 1.26 by word and deed to set forth the beams of the Sunne of righteousnesse the wisdome of the Father the saving mysteries of his Crosse and sufferings in order to mans improvement not by humane learning but by divine grace And however our Blessed Saviour hath crucified as it were the flesh and pride of humane learning as well as of riches honour and all worldly excellencies which are infinitely short of the knowledge and love of God in Christ yet he quickned and raised them all by the Spirit which teacheth a sanctified and gracious use of them all to his Church Luk. 2.48 and true beleevers Our Lord Jesus did not disdain to converse with the learned Doctors and Rabbies of his time among whom he was found after his parents had sought him sorrowing because in vain otherwhere yet our wanderers and seekers are loth to seek afraid to find and disdain to own Jesus Christ when they have found him among the learned men and Ministers of this Church lest in so doing they should seem to confesse they had lost Christ and true Religion 12. The objecters may not argue from the Apostles gifts against learning now since they have neither of them in their illiterate Conventicles and ignorant presumptions As for the blessed Apostles who were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 immediately taught of God by conversing with the Son of God the Lord Jesus Christ the Christian world well knowes their miraculous and extraordinary fulnesse of all gifts and powers of the Spirit both habituall and occasionall so that they wanted neither any language nor learning which was then necessary to carry on the great work of preaching and planting the Gospell And no lesse doth the wiser world know the emptinesse and ridiculous penury of these disputers against good learning even as to the common gifts of sober reason and judicious understanding wherewith the blessing of heaven is now wont to crown onely the prayers
many to live well which is the work of true Ministers whose labours are great their burdens many their incouragement small and those greatly envyed * 2 Tim. 4.16 Verè magnum est habere fragilitatem hominis securitatem Dei Seneca their enemies encreased on every side their comforters few their defense little or none unlesse God be on their side Which he will not fail to be though all men forsake them as they did St. Paul And he alone is able to bear them up amidst the rough encounters of these times with that Christian patience courage and constancy that becomes learned and religious men who know whom they have served in whom they have beleived and may conclude there are more with them then can be against them whose upright soules and generous consciences are like Elishas mountain 2 King 6.17 full of fiery charets and horsemen that is devout flames of judicious zeal which have upon them the harnesse of wisedome and are managed with the reins of Christian meeknesse and discretion farre from those politick presumptions and enormous confidences of some Phaetons who never think they enlighten the Church enough unlesse they set Kingdomes and States on fire with wild and extravagant furies who are far from being the charets and horsemen of Israel for these though they are fiery yet they are orderly and are patient of government though they excell in gifts 12. Pathetick to true Ministers To such Ministers I here crave leave as Elihu did to make my addresse with all humility and charity as to my reverend Fathers and beloved Brethren You who have upon you the marks and characters of right Ordination and true Ministeriall power accompanyed with competent gifts * Iob 32. sanctified learning devout industry holy zeal unblameable lives and good consciences toward God and toward all men whose grand designe is to give full proof of those Ministeriall gifts and endowments which you were upon due triall found to have and to exercise that divine authority which you solemnly and rightly received to discharge that holy duty which in the Name of Christ and by the power of his Spirit was enjoyned you in the day of your Ordination by those through whose hand the succession of that Ministeriall authority is derived from the Apostles By all which you were qualified and disposed not to get a good living or two but to cast into the Sea of the world the net of the Gospell at Christs word to gain soules to God and Disciples to Jesus Christ to teach and guide by sound doctrine and holy discipline the flocks committed to you in your severall places and proportions Your earthly entertainment is from the munificence and devotion of men but your heavenly calling and authority to be Ministers is from Christ in whose Name you doe all as Ministers and not in the peoples whom some have taught to grow tumultuous against you and imperious upon you Neither your work nor your chiefe reward depends upon men Minimum sit mercedis quod a seculo expectamus Chrysol 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys It is the least of your comfort or incouragement that can from thence be expected as nothing of your authority is from thence derived Levell not your selves by popular crowchings and base compliances in this high point of your Ministeriall power It matters not much how you be levelled as to your maintenance for which you chiefly do depend not upon envious men but upon a bounteous God who will either give you liberally to enjoy all things or contentedly to want them 1 King 13. The withered hands of these Jeroboams which are stretched out against you may at your prayers be restored to the ancient fulnesse and favour used toward the Prophets of the Lord in this land If bonds and imprisonment poverty and contempt attend you in this world yet be of good comfort Christ your great Master hath gone before you and both by word and example by his life and death hath called you out of the world armed you against it and set you above it while insolent dust flies in your faces and proud wormes fight against God in you remember the battail is the Lords Ephes 6.12 The weapons of your warfare are spirituall and of greatest proofe in sharpest affliction If you are to contend with principalities and powers it must be not by ill language by railing and Satyrick invectives by secret plottings and practise but by the primitive Ammunition of Patience and Prayers by holy perseverance in your Ministry such as becomes the spirit of the Gospell in wisdom learning gravity between the extreams of fear and flattery with humble love and charity to all men Sueton. Vespas Vit. Imperatorem stantem mo●i oportere moriens dixit inter manus sublevantium extinctus It becomes you as Vespasian said of Emperours to dye upright in your spirituall armes and harnesse intent to your duty fighting the good fight of faith till you have finished your course with joy In the midst of crosses comforts grow best as Lilies among thornes The clouds of your enemies darts poysonous opinions corrupt doctrines fraudulent dealings sharp arrows of bitter speeches fiery trials of persecuting menaces your adversaries cruell mockings and insultings your friends prevaricatings with you withdrawings from you and forsakings of you all these must onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stir up the more to quicker flames of study prayer meditation devotion and holy resolution those many gifts and graces that learning eloquence and sufficiency which are in you as Christians and as Ministers wherein to the praise of God you are not behind even the chiefest Ministers in the Christian world You are not now to expect Prebendaries and Deaneries and Bishopricks as the honorary rewards and incouragements of your studies pains and piety This age could not bear your enjoying of them though you used them never so well It is your part to know as well to want them as to have them Honoribus divitiis carere posse magni est animi at recte uti posse est maximi and in stead of those to prepare for poverty contempt and imprisonment you may be then at your best when the evill world thinks you deserve no better Never study by any mean ways to merit better of sacrilegious spirits Be sure your treasure be out of these mens reach It is your part to doe well and worthy of your high calling Leave it to God how well you shall be rewarded here and hereafter Paul never preached with greater authority than in his chaines Act 26 29. Phil. 1. nor wrote with greater eloquence and majesty then when he styled himself a prisoner of Jesus Christ well doing will be reward enough and a good conscience will be good chear at all times You cannot but observe that your great enemy the divell hath commanded as the King of Syria did his Legions of Hereticks Schismaticks Fanaticks erroneous superstitious idle
fitted to the memories and capacities of the meanest hearers containing short summaries of things to be believed practised or prayed for as in the Creed the ten Commandements and the Lords Prayer Presently these men fancy them as the recitation of some charmes and look on the Minister as some Exorcist confined to these Articles of stinted spels and formes Yea so far hath the prejudices affectations and ignorance of these men prevailed against all Reason and Religion in some places that many Ministers in other things not unable or unworthy men are carried away with fear and popularity to comply with those mens fondnesse in a way of dissimulation Forbearing to use publiquely at any time either the title of Saint due to holy men or the Lords Prayer and the Decalogue which are both Scripturall Summaries and commanded to be used So also they lay aside the Creed which is an Ecclesiasticall compendium taken out of the Scripture Vid. Voss de Symbolis and very ancient in the chief articles of it containing the main foundations or heads of Christian Faith nor was any of these ever neglected or not both frequently and devoutly used in the publique Liturgies or Services of sober Christians either ancient or modern O how sowre and spreading a leaven is the pride passion and superstition of mens spirits which run after faction and novelties that even learned and grave men should be not so much infected with it in their judgements as to be swayed and byassed or over-awed by it in their practise contrary to their judgements meerly Gal. 2.12 as St. Peter with his dissimulation gratifying these pretenders to novelty speciall sanctity by the not using of those divine and wholesome forms of sound words in which neglect the presumed perfection of these Antiministeriall men disdains to condescend to the infirmities of novices and weaklings in religion the babes in Christ Those Lambs which good Shepheards Joh. 21.15 must take speciall care of as well as of their stronger sheep feeding them with milk or cibo praemanso the often repeated Catechisticall rudiments and chewed principles of Religion which are by the wisdome of God and our Saviour most fitly and compendiously set forth in the ten Commandements and the Lords Prayer as to the main of things to be done or desired by a Christian as also the summe of things necessary to be believed were anciently comprised in the Articles of the Creed according to that wisdome of the Apostles or the primitive Fathers which imitated those patterns set by the Lord to his Church That so the Infants or younglings of Christs family might not be starved because they have not such teeth as these mens jaw-bones pretend to who before they have well sucked in the first principles are gnawing bones or cracking kernels and nuts exercising themselves or vexing others with odd questions and doubtfull disputations more troubled with their Familisticall fancies about their own partaking of the divine Nature their identity with Christ and when and how it is in what manner and what measure they may be said to be God and Christ and the Spirit than soberly establishing their mindes in the fundamentall points of things to be beleived obeyed and desired to the glory of God and the honour of the Gospell But I must leave these envious and unquiet Spirits to their censorious separations wrangling themselves into vanities and errors at length falling like Lucifer into the blacknesse of darknesse to unjustice and cruelty after that into grosser blasphemies and presumptions against God Christ and the holy Spirit while they proudly affect and presume to be not like to the most High but the same with him not in the beauties of holinesse grace and godlinesse which are the clear Image of God set forth in the Word but in the glory and majesty of the divine Essence which is inscrutable not to be communicated or comprehended in its superessentiall being and superintellectuall perfection no more than the vast and glorious body of the Sun which is 160 times bigger than the earth can be locally contained in the eye to which yet it is by its beams in some kinde imparted and united Such superfluity we see there is of folly ignorance weaknesse pride and malice in some spirits who upon very peevish and perverse grounds forsake our Christian publique Assemblies and duties celebrated in our Churches which are sanctitied by the Word and prayer scorning and condemning what we doe upon the best grounds of Scripture and Reason separating themselves from the true Ministry and fellowship of the Church of England as if they were most spirituall and refined when yet they seem to be so grossely ignorant so passionate and some of them so sensuall as is no argument of their having the Spirit of God which is wise in all holinesse 7 Calumny Act. 24.5 BUt our Antiministeriall Adversaries object as Tertullus and the Jews did against St. Paul that the ordained Ministers of the former way Against Ministers as seditious and inconform to Civil government are pestilent fellows stirrers up of the people factious turbulent seditious not so supple conform and well affected to the present constitution of powers and publique affaires So that it is not onely lawfull but necessary either to bring them to a plenary conformity and subjection or to exautorate and suppresse them as to all publique influence in the Ministry Thus doe these Wasps and Hornets buz up and down who hope with their noise and stings ere long to drive all the ancient and true Ministers of God out of the land or at least out of the service of the Church that so they may be possessed of the Hive though they make no Honey Answ Answ This Calumny is indeed of the promising advantage to the enemies of the Ministers and their calling and therefore it is with most cunning and earnestnesse every where levelled by some men against their persons Naz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. actions and function It is like the policy of Julian the Apostate who to ensnare the Christians set the statues of the Emperours with the Idols of the Gods That if Christians did civill reverence as to the Emperours they should be defamed as Idolaters if not they should be accused as despisers of the Emperours And because I perswade my self that all excellent Christians how potent soever can bear an honest freedome and plainnesse I shall onely as to this sharp and poysoned arrow oppose the shield of plain dealing that in a matter so much concerning the satisfaction of others and Ministers civill safety there may be no such obscurities as may harbour any jealousies First of all I need not tell you 1. Some Ministers compliances what all the English world knows aboundantly That there are many Ministers of very good abilities who are not at all blameable in this particular as to any restivenesse and incompliancy in civill subjections they have sufficiently testified how Arts and ingenuous
learning soften the spirits and manners of men how they supple in them that roughnesse and asperity which remains in others how of okes it makes them become willowes and in stead of hard wax which onely fire can tame makes them gentle as soft wax so good natured that they are not at all pertinacious of any former signatures and stamps either as civill or sacred made upon them but readily and explicitely yeeld to any formes and impressions though never so new and different which the hand of power is pleased to make And this not only as to a passive sequaciousnesse in the externall fashion of their civill conversation and profession but as to those internall characters and perswasions which their judgments have made upon their consciences Nothing is more tractable and malleable nothing more easily runs into any State mould and receives any politick figure and mark than many Ministers doe whose judgements or policy or fears or necessities have taught them how they may * Rom. 12.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza interp Domino servientes ut Chryso Basil c. Erasmus Tempori servientes i. e. Temporum incommodis sese accommodantes patientia charitate serve the Lord and the times too how to become all things to all men in regard of things civill and extern they have many wholesome and prudent latitudes of evasions absolutions cautions and distinctions by which they unravell the cords of any Oathes and untwist the bonds of any Covenants or Protestations They have in things meerly politick as many distinctions as would furnish any good Casuist for the absolution of entangled or the satisfaction of grumbling consciences Thus furnished no wonder if in civill changes which are fatall and by them unavoidable they can never be brought to Baalams straits Numb 22. where an Angell should meet them with a drawn sword and the Asse either fall under them Utriusque fortunae documento didicerunt ne contumaciam cum pernicie mallent quam securitatem cum obsequio Tacit. hist l. 4. or crush them against the wall on either side These Ministers acting according to their consciences cannot justly be blamed for any refractarinesse many of whom are so much every where in any civill conformities that you can hardly lose them in any State alterations or labyrinths nor doe they doubt but the Lord will be mercifull to them in this thing which not private choice inconstancy but publique force and necessitie puts upon them Charity commands to judge and hope that these doe all things according to that light and latitude which is in their consciences as to things secular Wherein they conceive that the Providence of God Mic. 6.9 which is as his voice teaching us by the event of all humane affaires what is his will is a sufficient absolution as to all preceeding ties civill or sacred which they look upon as obligatory onely in relation to power Magistratick publique and effectuall in what men and in what manner soever they see it placed and exercised Thus some learned men and Ministers plead it as a matter of not onely necessity and prudence but also of justice and gratitude that what ever power Christians are by providence cast under and by that doe in any order of justice enjoy civil protection there they should pay a civill and peaceable subjection according to Conscience and equity while they have the benefit of Lawes and government they ought to yeeld obedience according to Law and this not so much to the persons of men governing who may be unworthy but to the Ordinance of God civill government which is managed at present by them 2. 2. Others more pragmaticall and fierce There are indeed other Ministers who are not only of harder metall but of hotter tempers of more cholerick constitutions and feaverish complexions who love to be moving in the troubled waters of secular affaires who seem most impatient of any order or publique rule in which they have not some stroke and influence ready to undoe what ever is done without them Their breast is as full of turbulent and seditious spirits as the Cave of Aeolus is of windes forgetting what spirit becomes the Ministers of the Gospell in all times who though they may denounce hell fire against all impenitent sinners yet they may not kindle civill flames of sedition Luk. 9.54 or imprecate revengefull fire from heaven upon any men to destroy them To the misguided activity of such Ministers some think the publique may owe much of its troubles for whom the best Apology is their repentance for any transports and excesses whereto they have been weakly or wilfully carryed beyond those bounds of duty and gravity which as Ministers and subjects they ought to observe both toward God and man All that can be pleaded in any veniality for their folly and fury is the * Excuti●●●omnem ingeniis mediceribus constantiam fatales regnorum rerumpub motus Ju. de pictur l. 2. c. 13. Plarimum refoert●n quae eujusque virtus tempora inciderit Plin. l. nat common genius and generall distemper of times which slackening by civill dissensions the cords of humane lawes and loosning the ties of wonted modesty and observance to Superiours gave so great temptations that many Ministers of more forward spirits knew not how to resist them Alas who hath not sufficiently seen in our dayes by sad experiences that even among Ministers there are not onely poor weak and credulous but also heady turbulent and factious men prone to affect any miserable way of popularity and to debase their function and profession to most pragmatick impertinencies as in Ecclesiasticall so also in Secular affaires though their gifts be other wayes above the ordinary size very usefull and commendable yet they retain much of the vulgar masse and leaven and are subject to the same passions and common infirmities yea no men are more prone to rash indeavourings and bold activities by how much they have many specious fancies and pretty speculations suggested to them by those bookes they read which to some men is a kinde of Necromancy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a conversing with the dead and conjecturing by their counsels So that some of them like Alchymists by their reading of chymicall lights grow so possest of their Elixars or Philosophers stones as if it were within a stones cast of them counting it a sinfull and shamefull lazinesse for them to sit still when they are tempted to such goodly prizes as their notions and conceptions hold forth in some way of reforming or wholly changing the State of Religion and government of any Church and in order to that they shake even the civill frame of things to which they doe not think themselves longer bound in subjection then they want a party strong enough for opposition nor will they easily be perswaded that is the sin of Rebellion which carries the face of Reformation easily dispensing with obedience to man where they