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A57540 Ohel or Beth-shemesh A tabernacle for the sun, or, Irenicum evangelicum : an idea of church-discipline in the theorick and practick parts, which come forth first into the world as bridegroom and bride ... by whom you will have the totum essentiale of a true Gospel-church state according to Christs rules and order left us when he ascended ... : published for the benefit of all gathered churches, more especially in England, Ireland and Scotland / by John Rogers ... Rogers, John, 1627-1665?; Rogers, John, 1627-1665? Challah, the heavenly nymph. 1653 (1653) Wing R1813; Wing R1805; ESTC R850 596,170 655

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unfeigned without flatteries Revel 14.5 having no guile or as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is no Hypocrisie falshood for mentiri is contra mentem ire reason 3 no defect of that nature Hebrew Mum Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is found in their mouths but it is found so in the multitudes Besides reason 4 because they are the Virgins that follow the Lamb Rev. 14.4 Virgins have the fin●st and sweetest voices and tunes and songs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hid and unknown to them without that are but men so Saints are hidden ones or as in Hebrew Porah the fruitfullest and followers of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into all conditions Now they know best the notes of high and low conditions and dispensations and they onely keep the tune best according reason 5 to the times they live in Besides they have grace in their hearts and have Christ dwelling in them richly and abundantly Col. 3.16 Now such in their praises to God which is their hardest and highest duty of a Christian do return of his own fulness and commodities in kinde grace for grace Joh. 1.16 and glorifie God Psal. 50.23 Whilst mixt Congregations abundantly abase God and rob him of his honor and in their best services and sacrifices bringing him rather the ratlings or what they can spare then the fatlings of their lives every day or the calves of their lips lives and loves Vse 1. It appears then by the bright beams of our Sun use 1 which shines in the Scripture-Elements in this Hemisphere of his Church here below That Parishes in this point are far from true Churches They fall short of the final cause not considering what conduces most to Gods glory but what is most for their advantage and gain this is the godliness of most Parochially opinionated In your Parishes prophane ones all sorts of sinners swearers drunkards whoremasters c. are all suffered as of their Churches which ought not to keep in or if they creep in ought to be cast out of Christs-Church wherein God is most to be glorified I say in such a Church as consists of Saints separated as before and that will not willingly or knowingly admit of or keep in carnal and openly sinful men c. Or thus The Members of Christs Church are the fittest to set forth the praises of God but the Members of that Church which consists of Saints separated and qualified as before are the fittest to set forth his praises Ergo c. Parishes are excommunicated for such a rabble-rout as have and yet do rob God of his due honor and praise and glory But Use 2. Better is the End of a thing then the beginning Eccl. use 2 7.8 Wherefore come forth ye that fear the Lord from those Dungeons of darkness those Babylons of unbelievers and lewd livers and Synagogues of Satan what is the fruit of those things whereof we are now ashamed And dearest hearts whom I bear in my bosom before my Father are any of you fond of Zion see that your End be good and then that the means be conducing and answerable thereunto The End though first and principal in your intention yet is the last and ultimate in the execution yea this End viz. the glory and praise of God is to be the Alpha and Omega the first and last of all or else our best will be but frustra agere bad in our building Wherefore Friend consider what is it we promise or propose to our selves sayes our Saviour Christ Luke 14.28 30 c. Which of you intending to build a Tower sits not down first to count the cost If he can finish it Least he be mocked and it be said he began to build but could not finish it This is but ordinary wisdom to weigh the End first and whither you can accomplish it or not or are fit to go through stitch with it or not or else what a scandal will you bring to the Gospel and dishonor to him whose name you profess Consider the End of your conversation Heb. 13.7 that is Look wishfully upon it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 consider what is the end of your ways walking c. is all for Gods honor and glory 2. This must be the principal End of your entring into the Church of Christ to honor him with the same honor wherewith the Son honored the Father and you shall receive the end of your faith viz. salvation 1 Pet. 1.9 To conclude Sing praises sing praises like the Nightingale who spends whole nights in her kinde to sing forth the praises of God as if the day were too short every Man must be a Preacher every Creature a Text every Occasion a Doctrine every Blessing a Reason every Providence a Proof every Thanksgiving an Use Men and Angels the Auditors and the whole Sermon is Gods honor and glory And yet how many like unwise Archers shoot and know not at what mark And others vile wretches praise with their mouths but they are like Samsons honey out of the mouth of a Beast or like the Quarester that sung Gloria Patri in the Church and Carmina B●ccho in the Tavern others there be that would blazon our Christs Arms Herald like but it must be their own device But the best flower in these Gardens enclosed to make God a Garland with is the Coronation flower to lay all our crown and glory at his feet When Thales had learnt Mandrita the Philosopher an admirable invention of the motion of the Heavens Oh Sir sayes Mandrita how shall I requite you No way sayes Thales Milesius but by acknowledging you learnt it of me So the Lord requires of us to give him the glory of all we learn in his Churches by his Spirit of the motions of the Heavens CHAP. XIII 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Alluph 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the true Church rightly defined that Christ alone is the Master Builder Ruler Repairer Head of Gold Lord Law-giver without any other Partner Paramount Competitor or Corrival whatsoever THen the Reed which hath measured both the true and false Church state presents unto us as vaste a disproportion and difference in all particulars essential as is possible between Parishes and true Churches For from the Essential Material Formal Objective Organical and Final causes we finde the Church of Christ lies thus defined from the false Antichristian Church which also we shall define by the rule of contraries The true Church of Christ then is 1. A society of Believers sanctified in Christ Jesus 2. Separate from the world false-ways and worships united together into one Body Independent or having a plenary power within its self without the least subordination to any but Christ 3. having the special presence of God in the midst of her 4. and being gathered and ordered by Christs rule alone 5. all her Members freely
on his Saints Ordinances Worships Churches wee must give Christ his due there which is to be the alone Head and Law-giver amongst them But thus far for this Chapter CHAP. XIV 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tsur That Christ is the onely Rocke and sure Foundation for his Church to be built upon All other Foundations being false sandy and such as will fail A House without a foundation cannot stand and to have an unsound sandy foundation is little better then none at all if not sometimes worse as being more deceitfull and dangerous Great is the fall of such an house Luke 6.49 Matth. 7.27 But this spirituall house hath a sure foundation if it be of Christs building which Christ hath laid with his owne hands as Zach. 4.9 Isa. 14.32 other places are founded by the arme of flesh but this by the Power and Spirit of the Lord. Palestina must fall but Zion i. e. sayes Sasbout the spirituall Zion meant Christs Church under the Gospel shall never fall for the Lord hath founded it upon a Rocke too so Mat. 7.25 Mat. 6.18 Luke 6.48 and this Rocke is Christ as 1 Cor. 10.4 2 Sam. 23.3 so that Christ is also the foundation of the Church which the Church is built upon Eph. 2.20 1 Cor. 3.14 Christ is not the Head of that Church whereof he is not the foundation sayes Cotton Christ is King Priest Prophet Head Master Lord and Lawgiver Advocate Husband Brother Builder and yet the Foundation of his Church what is hee not unto his people in any condition he is man and Minister to himselfe as God so that as he may be both the Prophet and the Word the Advocate and yet the Argument the Law-giver and yet the Law the Master and yet the member the Priest and yet the sacrifice even so may he be by the same rule and order the Founder and yet the foundation For as he preaches himselfe and this testimony was true as he pleads himselfe and this argument is full as he gives out himself and this Law is life as hee offers himselfe and this Sacrifice is precious and effectuall Even so he layes himselfe low to be our Foundation that wee might bee fitly built upon him and this Foundation will never faile for he is a Rockie foundation First Because the Rock is a sure and firme foundation which will not sinke nor shrinke per saxum foederis firmitatem notabant antiqui Venning but soft or sandy stones will give way and endanger the whole structure Now God in Christ is a sure and most firme foundation 1 Cor. 3.11 2 Tim. 2.19 which cannot faile us our Salvation lyes upon him he cannot deceive us The Church is like Mount Sion which abides for ever and is immoveable because founded upon the Rocke of ages Si nos ruemus ruet Christus una said that loud-tongued and liveli-spirited Luther If we fall Christ shall fall too and malo cum Christo ruere quam cum Caesare stare I had rather sayes another ruine with Christ then run with Caesar I had rather fall with Christ then stand with Caesar such can never fall 1 Pet. 2.6 as long as Christ the foundation stands Secondly A Rocke is high whence we have pleasant prospects and see far round the Horizon and Hemisphere whence wee look with delight and have the least hindrances Num. 23.9 Christ is such a high Rocke Psal. 61.2 and the Saints foundation lyes in him who is higher then all Rocks and mountaines Psal. 87.1 or places Isa. 57.15 Psal. 91.14 From this high Rock i. e. Christ the Saints see far and faire and have most eminent discoveries and the sweetest Survey of Heaven and happinesse all other things being below them And they have the least hindrance in their prospects either up or downe or round about being filled with loveliest liveliest richest highest and heavenliest soul-ravishing Discoveries Thirdly A Rocke is a place of refuge of great strength and security thither people run for refuge and safety Isa. 2.21 1 Sam. 13.6 and 23.25 a Castle in a Rocke is accounted impregnable and cannon proof Such a Rocke is Christ to the Church and his Saints Deut. 32.31 Psal. 18.2 Psal. 31.2 a strong Rocke and Castle of defence Hence it is Saints are so safe in Christ that they cannot bee stormed or taken Saints are secure in him when all Devils in hell let flye upon them For as Tertullian sayes the desperatest Bullets and Darts that men or Devils can shoo● at this impregnable and impenetrable Rocke are either returned with a powder or bounded backe upon the heads of them that shot them or else are fallen down dead and blunted without any more mischiefe The Gates of Hell shall not prevaile against them that is neither the power nor policy of Hell combined together no not though the Devill doth by himselfe or others plot with his seven-heads or push with his ten-hornes neither can all the fraudulent plots practises malices machinations policies powers or engines that Earth or Hell can bring forth bee enough to ruine the Church who is seated sure and safe upon a Rocke that is higher and mightier then they It is true they may batter but cannot conquer they may reach to her heel and peradventure bruise her heele but they cannot reach to the Head but they will break themselves a peeces They cannot make a breach in true Religion or a battery in this Rocke no though the Devill should discharge the Popes Cannons or the greatest Ordinances hee hath at them say they were as big as those two cast by Alphonsus the Duke of Ferrara the one of which he called the Earthquake the other the Grandiabolo or the Great-devill neither Earth nor Hell the Earthquake nor the greatest Devils can remove the Church founded upon this Rocke they may shake her but not shame her disturb her but not destroy her who may challenge the Venetian Motto Nec fluctu nec flatu movetur as Mat. 7.25 and Psal. 62.2 Hee onely is my rocke and my SALVATION he is my DEFENCE I shall not be greatly moved so vers 6 7. But to make haste Fourthly A Rocke keeps his place removes not and thus doth Christ who is the same yesterday to day and for ever hee alters not nor removes from being the foundation of his peoples principles graces happinesse joyes enjoyments and all he is ever in this place and therefore he is in Zion a sure foundation Isa. 28.26 and cannot bee removed Hebr. 12.28 immobile saxum Fifthly A Rocke is very lasting an Heiroglyphick of permanency durability and perpetuity so is Christ who can never decay or decrease but of the increase of his Government and peace there shall be no end Isa. 9.7 Sixthly A Rocke yeelds severall and singular Benefits it is a shade from the scorching heat
Eph. 4.4 We are one Body and have one Spirit that is As one Soul in the Body quickens moves governs comprehends all and every Member so doth one Spirit in the Church every Member Eye Ear Hand Head Foot c. It is one and the same Soul that acts in every one and all the Members though in a different way as the Eye to see with Ear to hear with Hand to work with Foot to walk with tongue to speak with Head to plot with c. And so many several ways the Soul works and yet is but one and the same so the Spirit works in divers ways and sundry manners 1 Cor. 12.4 in several Members some to prophecy some to teach some to exhort some to oversee some to direct and rule some to distribute c. Rom. 12.4 6 7 8. some to one thing some to another and yet it is but one and the same Spirit This one and the same Spirit rests upon every Member and we must by this one Spirit be brought into this Body of Christ which is his Church Thus I have done with the inward instrument of working in us and winning upon us to enter into Church-fellowship Now in this there is an apparent difference between Hypocrites and true Saints entring into this way A true Saint is made willing and spontaneous by a principle within but a Hypocrite or any other man is moved as the Automata are moved or things of artificial motion as Clocks Jacks or the like engines of ingenuity It is some weight without that poyseth them and puts them upon motion so something or other that is without swayeth and worketh and weigheth upon the hearts of Hypocrites to make them willing as we said before concerning Dublin and not an inward principle But thus we have done with the instrumental or organical reason 6 causes of carrying the will on in the way of Christ which is matter for a Reason of the necessity of a voluntary cause that is because the Word and Spirit are the two arms which the Lord hath appointed to pull them out of Babylon with and into Sion and no other instruments or means must do it until these hands of Jesus Christ do lead them out of their carnal corrupt or Antichristian condition they have no call to come and when they are thus called and convinced as before they come running by a voluntary instinct and consent flowing up more fluminis as the tide by a natural instinct and not by compulsion into the mountain where the Lords house is on the top of all mountains Isai. 2. But consider 7. Lastly That because the will of man is inclined and reason 7 carried on into the way of Christ as we said before ab interiori principio by an inward instinct and principle and all kinde of coaction or violent compulsion comes from without ab exteriori principio therefore it is a high absurdity a groundless and irregular opinion and positively repugnant even to the principles of one spiritualized and made willing by the power of Christ to call for compulsive powers to promote the ways of Christ or to bring in any man that way seeing violentia directe opponitur voluntario violentia causat involuntarium he must be a voluntier And this will serve as the seventh Reason to ratifie this truth That men must not be compelled but come in voluntarily for violence is inconsistent with the will Thus under several considerations hath this point been offered for a voluntariness to be wrought in us by the power of Christ before we venture or enter into his Church-way Now a man may be said to be voluntary two ways directly or indirectly 1. Directly Then the will is the agent of his willingliness having an inward principle even as the fire having the principle of heat is the agent of heat in the water But such a one as is 2. Indirectly voluntary is made so by some outward means promises or threatnings hopes or fears or the like and such a one will be a dangerous doubting and disturbing Member But such men and women as are directly voluntary by the means I have mentioned in this Chapter may come with welcome For they are called and invited and if there be first a willing minde saith the Apostle you are accepted 2 Cor. 8.12 For Christ will enjoy sayes one his Spouses love and person by a willing contract and not by a ravishment He is none of them he will have the heart to consent with all the heart O then let us say with the Apostle The love of Christ constraineth us and with Job 32.18 The Spirit constraineth us These are the best and sweetest compulsive powers But thus for this Chapter CHAP. III. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sagad Dur. or Pagad Dur. After this full perswasion and voluntary motion and concurrence comes in the communion of Saints by an orderly uniting and embodying together in a solemne order suitable to the solemnity of the Ordinance and that in some publike place MAny there be that in the time of the Churches tranquillity will intrude and pretend willingnesse with the Lords people to goe about the Lords work and build especially when earthly powers and Rulers look kindly upon us and allow us our liberty to go and build and when they as Patrons and protecting Fathers prove favourers and abetters of what we are about But let us have a care and say with Zerubbabel and the rest of the Fathers of Israel Ezra 4.2 3. It is not for you and us joyntly to build an house unto our God you have nothing to doe with us but we our selves together will build it unto the Lord God of Israel Remember that wee are a people that must be separate the cleane from the uncleane the holy from the prophane and by one free consent being fully convinced concurre together in this worke of the Lord without the unclean hands or help● of them without who are adversaries to Sion Now because our Ruler is the God of order and not of confusion he would have all things done in decency and in order 1 Cor. 14.40 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is compositis moribus fitly for use and ornament to the Church which is a rule saies one of great request and inquest both for real and ritual decency which is to be observed and is of much concernment And for this Colosse was so largely commended Col. 2.5 and Christ himselfe our sweet Master intimates so much in setting downe the people on the grasse Matth. 14.18 and 15. and feeding them ranke by ranke as it were as they sat So his Churches are called beds of spices Cant. 6.2 that is as beds and borders orderly set out to s●ew us what delight he hath to live in an orderly and well set out society Order is Gods Ordinance Now to make up this order some things are
God for him and the Church had prayed for him And that God had stayed his hand now and had forgiven him his sins past he was sure upon his promise to amend and that his Master tooke a great deal of pains with God and would not be quiet till the Lord had commanded the Serpents that had tormented him for his sinnes to fly back for a time c. with a great deal of such like language which yet the more amazed them they thinking him half frantick to talk so and looking on him as a man drawing on but as on the morning or last night and not like to live and yet he would needs be gone to the Pastor to tell him what God had done for him and had already got on his cloathes and got out of doores but being very weake and ready to reele downe in the way about a field off his wife and neighbours running after him much against his own minde got him in again But his wife and neighbours perceived him another manner of man then what he was before by his good motions prayers discourses and desires heavenward it being a great delight to him to acquaint them with his experiences of God under this sharp dispensation After a day or two he feeling strength would not be stayed from coming to the Pastor and it fell out to be upon a day when the Church gathered together to break bread but the Pastor coming to him called him aside and in a roome by themselves he set very severely and plainly upon the man in many particulars and especially for his presumption to enter into this way being such unsound and unfit matter and therefore that he could not long have continued with so fair an outside but the inside rottennesse would at length have broken out and he be cast from the rest of the building as 2 Tim. 3.5 1 Tim. 6.3 4 5. 1 Cor. 5.3 4 5 11 12 13. Tit. 3.10 Matth. 18.18 19 c. 1 Tim. 1.20 c. For though he had done contrary to the rules we must doe according to them Withall dealing with him upon such Scriptures as Jer. 7.9 10. Psal. 50.16 17 c. Isai. 35.8 9 10. questioning and expostulating with him upon them and those Ezek. 44.7 8. Jo. 4.23 and many others and charging it home upon him the wrong that he had done to Christ and his Church by opening the mouthes of her malitious adversaries to speak against Christs way the worst words in their hearts to vilifie and slander his Saints to deride Religion to wax proud against profession and grievously to offend those weak in the Faith yet though he had mocked men he could not mock God but now that the Lord had opened his inside to us that we might see what a Traitor he was to the Truth what a hypocrite to God and what not As the Pastor was opening him to himself yet more this Osborne told him that the Lord had pardoned him upon his promise to amend and the prayer of his Church for Christs sake and that he saw his pardon writ before him and his sinnes blotted out c. The Pastor urging it upon him how he knew he was pardoned and what he meant by seeing sinnes blotted out who then began to tell the whole story of his agony and torments and deliverance which being long the Pastor desired him to cut off and to acquaint the whole Body with them after the last Sermon before they dispersed to their severall homes Because that as there was visible offence given to Christ and his Church so there must be visible repentance and apparent evidences of his conversion c. So the Pastor parted with him the Church could not admit of him into Communion but hee must hold off till he could give satisfaction onely he had liberty in the converting Ordinances and to converse with any of the Society or the like In the Evening about five or six a clock the said Osborne was called into the Society to answer to such things as were laid to his charge and first the Pastor earnestly seeking God that nothing might be done or concluded on but what should be agreeable to the minde of Jesus Christ and the rules of the Gospel and to stablish all that are present in the faith and that they might be the more strengthened by what did or should of Gods power appeare to have been upon this man to punish him and of his love to deliver him and that this Church might not be deceived through the subtilty of Satan as to believe a lye or to give no credit to the Truth but to make them discerning in his wayes and to eye him in all his goings c. After the Pastor had prayed and the Church joined with him very devoutly the charges being uttered against this Osborne still hee continued his former story how God had forgiven him and he had seen his sins blotted out and how the Serpents were suffered to feed on him for his sins So urging on him what he meant by these things and straitly requiring him not to believe a delusion No! he said he was sure the Lord did not delude him and thus he began After the fits left me sayes he I sent for my Master i. e. the Pastor because I was to dye as I thought Then this being on May 2. the Lecture day at night when he despaired so that the Pastor was there I thought that I had dyed and was gone into Hell for my sinnes where God stretcht out his rod and then came out a huge great Serpent which God bid to goe and torment me and presently out of the belly of the great Serpent came out seven Serpents more so many Serpents for so many sinnes and they all together seised upon mee and stung and gnawed me and eat off all my flesh below and my thighes and gnawed all clean to the very bone and I heard my Master pray and say Lord punish him till he amend Let him be punished for a time and still these Serpents continued on mee and tormented me more and more for a long time as wee conceived for the space of two dayes or thereabouts by the Pastors words who acknowledged to the Church that there might be some likelyhood in what Osborne said because that he did indeed pray for two dayes or thereabouts in his study privately that the Lord would punish him severely in the flesh that his Spirit might be saved in the Day of the Lord which the Church never knew till he told them Moreover the said Osbornes tongue was bit quite through and a peece of his lip pulled off which hindred his speaking so as he could scarce be understood and being asked how it came he said he knew not unlesse the Serpents had bit it which hee thought because he knew nothing but that he was in Hell not so much as imagining that hee was
unity of the Spirit For as Mr. Bradford said Fox p. 1622. col 1. the Idolatrous Israelites were one in their sinfull way and might have pretended to uniformity were that the argument of a true Church or worship See Latimer epist. ad Dr. Bainton So Roger Holland Fox 20●0 col 2. What is the unity of the Antichristian Church but idolatry suspicion tradition commandments of men and to persecute the poor people of God that can't in conscience be one with them And to this we subscribe and shall say with Helvetia Harm sect 10. p. 306 chap. 17. the Church is a company of faithfull gathered out of the world separated from false worships and in communion together by one spirit And Bohemia ch 8. Harm 316. that whosoever hath not the Spirit of faith and true love is but a dead member and with Auspurg Harm sect 10. p. 320. that saies true unity is not to agree on traditions or such doctrines but all to agree in the doctrine of the Gospell and truths of Christ. Add Helvetia chap. 27. p. 499. that the Church is one and the members all one and agree in one though there be diversity of rites and thereupon they may differ yet they are one in faith and in the Spirit O that all our Churches would minde this more and the Antichristian form of fleshly and outward rites and formes lesse 6. Presbyterians and Papists are too nigh one another in the Foundation which they lay for the Lords house being both sandy for see the Papists they will have Peter the Foundation of the Church and so the Pope as his Successor but since this hath been to use Mr. Hookers own words hissed out of doors and cast to the dunghill arises another Doctrine which is it that the Presbyterians hold viz. that the profession as Mr. Hudson hath it of Christ is the foundation or confession of faith as many of them have disputed it with me vide Trap in Mat. 16.18 But we differing from both deny the Doctrines of both and do with the Apostle disclaim all other foundations whither persons or confessions but Christ Jesus 1 Cor. 3.11 which is a rock and will hold chap. 4. lib. 1. and so we answer with the Protestants against the Papists in Synopsis Papismi 2. controv Q. 1. 7. Presbyterians and Papists are too nigh one another in laying their foundation by persecution both with carrying on their discipline and branding such as differ from them for Hereticks Schismaticks factious and seditious spirits persons not fit to live and of late some three years since would needs have a Petition the Presbyterians were so bitter against al that would not be Presbyterians i. e. really or dissemblingly so that they might have no indulgence which is their own language so that the Presbyterian would hear of no other thing but tyranny and cruelty to the Independent or indifferent brother non sequens ecclesiam sed persequens Now we declare against them both whilest we affirm the Word and Spirit the weapons of our warfare in chap. 2. of this Book and say meerly for judgement no man must be so persecuted Tit. 3.10 2 Tim. 2.25.26 but with all gentlenesse and meeknesse instruct ●pposers if God peradventure will give them repentance to acknowledge the truth Wherefore the Lord will powre his viall on that bloudy Antichristian spirit of persecution and Popery yet among us 8. The Presbyterians and Papists agree about the subject of the keys i. e. power of opening and shutting Mat. 16.18 20. which power the Papists say is the Prelates Rhemist 1 Cor. 5. sect 2. Bellarm. lib. 1. de clericis cap. 7. and as the Jesuites apply it to their Clergy whence they have their name Clergie or Key-bearers So the Presbyterians do to their Classes see but Mr. Rutherfords ninth Argument for a Presbyte●iall Church taken out of Mat. 16. That is the Church saith he to whom the keyes are given but the keyes were given only to a classicall Church there And furthermore lib. 2. p. 9. he saith the keyes were given to Peter as representing the Church-guides viz. officers Ministers as the first subject of the keyes which is the same in nature with the Iesuites and Papists not a pin to choose between them Of this judgement Vindiciae clavium proves the Presbyterians too So the Jus divinum regim eccles p. 108 109. But we differing from both do affirm the Church of Christ the congregation of beleevers to be the first subject of the keyes which Mr. Parker and the Parisian Schoole grants which Cotton in his keyes p. 40 41 42 43 44. sufficiently proves so Philips answer to Lamb p. 150. and Augustine on Mat. 16. saies Peter received the keyes not in his own name but in the Churches and Christ gave the Churches the keyes as the first subject so the Church in Peter received the keyes for all the Church is built on a rock ejusdem est instituere destituere So saith Fulk on 1 Cor. 5. sect 3. against the Rhemists So saies Walter Brute who lived in Richard the second 's daies out of Joh. 20 2● argues thus in Fox p. 492. To whom the Holy Ghost is given to them is given the keyes or power of binding and losing but to the whole Church of beleevers is the Holy Ghost given So saith the Bohemians Confess Harm Sect. 10. p. 335. c. 14. which power is committed to the Church of Christ. Wherefore throw down this Popery for shame sirs which makes Prelates or Classes the first subject of the keyes 9. The Presbyterians agree with the Papists about Assemblies and Synods or the like severall waies in all which we dissent from them both 1. Concerning the necessity of them the Papists say there is a necessity of them and they can't be without councels Bellarm. de concil lib. 1. cap 11. the Presbyterians also plead for a necessity of Synods and assemblies out of Act. 15. Whilest we assert no necessity but an usefulnesse of them orderly called together having a consultative power and being a wholesome means to prevent evils and provide good for the Church as the Protes●ants answered the Papists so Whittaker de Concil p. 23. saies they are not necessary 2. Concerning the calling the Papists will have them called by the Pope Bellarm. lib. 1. de concil cap 12. Presbyterians by the Civill powers Princes and Magistrates but we dissent from both of them and others too when we assert it to be properly the Churches power to call and convent Synods or Assemblies as Dell saith in 's Way of peace p. 77. The world can't call Councels of the Church no more then the Church can call the Councels of the world being dist●n●t from each but all the Churches Synods or Assemblies must have their power and authority from the Church who hath power to call out and
varietate unity in verity though in variety of formes and ceremonies yet true unity stood well with the differences and varieties of formes c. because it was in the Spirit Psal. 45.13 the Church was all glorious within though without her outward cloathing was wrought with variety and diversity of needle-work Thirdly One Faith in all therefore Vnity is urged seeing all Saints in all ages Moses David Daniel Apostles and we now and all that were are and are to come under all forms live in one and the same mystery and truth of Faith 2. Cor. 4.13 apprehending the same Christ applying the same Salvation so are all the Churches Independent Baptized c. in one Faith though not in one Forme they live not by forme whether you call it a Conformity with the Prelates or Vniformity with the Rhemists or either with the Presbyterians or neither with us but they live by faith Not on this or that forme or worship so as to think our selves therefore good and others evill this is contrary to our life of faith which is all on Christ. This onenesse of faith est una eadem totius Ecclesiae Zanch. which is one and the same in every particular Church and throughout the whole agrees very well with the diversity of gifts parts formes c. so in and through all one and the same Christ be apprehended Therefore Vnity may well stand with it in all the Churches Fourthly he calls for Vnity from all that are called into one hope of their calling all that are called by the inward and effectuall voice of God into one and the same hope All hope for the same thing none for better or greater then another Unit as consist it in hoc quod una eademque sit omnibus spes una eademque omnibus proposita haeraditas coelestis Zanch. For 1. Cor. 1.9 God is faithfull by whom ye were all alike called into the fellowship of his son Jesus Christ our Lord. All the Churches doe a like expect the appearances of Christ the day of his comming the effusion of his spirit the restauration of Zion the reigne of Christ and the inheritance of the Saints Ergo Vnity for it is for such as differ in their hopes to differ in their love and waies Fifthly One Lord no more Lords but Jesus Christ nor no other Lawgiver in and to all the Churches therfore all should come under one Lord. For 't is divers Lords and masters that make divers Lawes and minds and wills and ends Hence a rise divisions indeed but one Lord and one Law one master and one mind should be in all the Churches Besides he is Lord to all alike as much to one as to another Ergo Vnity Sixthly One Baptisme with which all Churches are Baptized 1. Cor. 12.13 For by one spirit wee are all baptized into one body This is not the signe which hath beene often altered but the substance which will never be altered not the powring on of water but the powring on of the Holy Ghost in gifts and graces which is in all Christs Churches and the Baptisme of Christ indeed All that are thus Baptized with the spirit are Baptized into Vnity into one Body wherefore the Welsh Curat with his Welsh Crue would doe well to learne better English seeing he would insinuate that he is a Welshman of Cardiff yet is the Apostle of the English as he saith as Paul a Jew of Tarsus was yet the Apostle of the Gentiles then to asperse and despise those Churches of Christ that are under the administration and baptisme of the spirit He professes openly and in Print proclaims himselfe to have Pauls spirit he might have sayd Sauls spirit not to build up but to destroy so I thought the Churches For many of them are indeed such seducing dangerous spirits which cause division which I confesse I feare are many of them crept into some Churches Now as fi●e with fire and water with water agrees well enough so will all the Saints till there come in an Antipathy of spirit amongst them and as fire with water cannot agree together but make a ●●ge n●yse quarrell and fight together and oppose one another violently with thundring threatnings till one destroy another unlesse one be thrown from the other So is it with such contrary spirits as are crept into the Churches till they be out againe fire with fire agrees because being of one and the same principle and spirit it addes to and edifies one another so the Saints with Saints c. but water and fire cannot because the water is of another principle and spirit and seeks to destroy the fire so it seems the Ranters spirits are Christ-Crucifying and Church destroying spirits by their owne confessions and in Antipathy to the Churches and Saints in fellowship that seek to build up and edifie one another and all in Christ but when this spirit comes the Welsh Curate tells us 't will doe all that may be to destroy us O that the Churches would then have a care in the admission Of such who as in Rev. 2.2 say they are Apostles but are not for they are Apostats And the Church of Ephesus was highly commended for their strict triall of them and for finding them liars seducers and false Teachers so let us doe and let us all march on to the Land of Promise under one and the same hope of our calling whereunto we are called and as baptized by one spirit into one body Seventhly Vnity is urged among all the Churches for that they have one God and Father of all One Father without respect of one more then another God and Father to all alike all alike deare to him 2. Cor. 6.17.18 who delights in all alike and walks in the midst of the seven golden Candlesticks without respect more to one then to another as that one is better me●tall then another seeing all are alike borne of God and all alike in one Covenant and in one Jesus Christ Mediator and Head of the Covenant therefore he calls for Vnity for that we are all a Kingdome of Brethren Mal. 2.10 one God and Father of us all 2. Above all We are not one above another but one aequall with another but only our God and Father in Christ is above us all Mat. 23.8.9 we are all his children and all alike live in his Will he alone commands and blesseth us all alike therefore we should be all in unity Psal. 133.1 O sweet for Brethren to live together in unity 3. Through all All alike professe him possesse of his nature and he through all the Churches and Ordinances appeares abroad too Isay 2.3 Micah 4.2 Ergo unity amongst all 4. And in you all He dwels in all the Churches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. Cor. 6.16 Jo. 14.23 his presence is in this body of Christ mysticall as it was it was in Christs body when
sweet unity love and harmony was among the Puritans and Professors when they were under persecution how they priz'd one another and so it will be again and much more Secondly This Vnity of the Churches will be honoured from Heaven with a large effusion and powring out of the spirit upon them for in that day they shall know the Lord to be their God and as one people they shall acknowledge and never be ashamed and then shall it come to passe that he wil powr out of his spirit upon all Joel 2.27.28 And by this they will bee yet more one then ever before as appears Act. 2.17 and 4.31.32 when those that were filled with the holy Ghost were of one heart and one mind and of one soule neither sayd any of them that ought of the things which he possessed was his own and then great Grace was upon them all Great grace then indeed Having favour with all people Act. 2.47 This blessed day is hard by us when Jerusalem shall be a praise in the whole Earth round about us but we must be purged first In Ezek. 37.7 as the bones there came together by the shaking bone to bone so will the Churches by the shaking before mentioned in the time of triall cling and come up closer together then ever before Church to Church and all as one Though they were before as the bones scattered so in their affections and far asunder they shall bee shaked together beleeve it and then they shall receive life and breath from God more then ever before v. 9.10 Yea they shall not only be shaked together but tied together with sinewes and cords and lawes of Love that shall never break and this is to be before the full winde from all 4. parts blow upon them and fill them with breath and life So I am assured from the Lord and the Churches shall find it that they must be united together with strong ties and lawes of Love even with the liveliest sinews and strength of affections before they shall enjoy that great and notable effusion of the spirit which is the winde that blowes where it lists in such a measure as from all parts in all gifts graces and admirable administrations as from all quarters to enliven them and multiply them for in that day they will be as an exceeding great army Eze. 37.10 Lastly consider the great and notable day of the Lord is then the next that comes upon us Ioel 2.31 and Zion shall be glorious In the mean time as the lines of a circumference the nigher they come to the center the more they are united and the nigher they are one to another So for certain Sirs the nigher we are to that time the more we are united and the nigher we are one to another So that we shall see every yeare the Churches more and more united and that in the spirit untill the dispensation of the fulnesse of times when all things shall be in one Ephes. 110. The Lord hasten these happy daies I was pressed in my spirit to acquaint the Churches thus much and to call upon them to unity that the enemies might not have such advantages against us as they doe take for our defect in this duty and that our unity consist not in formes but in the spirit as for practicall rules heerto I shall refer the Reader to the following book But thus I have shewn wherein the Presbyterians and Papists agree and are alike in Discipline Doctrine Ordinances and Practises In Discipline for the Church Catholike Head of the Church matter of it force of it foundation of it and in laying their foundation and about the Keyes and Synods and in Officers to all which we have declared our dissent and abhorrance and so for Doctrine and Practises in all in neere fifty particulars wherein I have clearly instanced the Lord make his people in England wise enough to avoyd such Popish tenets and doctrines and give our Brethren that power and will to cry Down with Antichrist Down with Babylon as we do that hear the voice lest pertaking of her sins they pertake of her plagues Rev 18.4 And let them not think me their enemy for telling them the Truth Gal. 4.16 But to the 3. Consid. The 3 Consideration to come to a Conclusion is that the consideration 3 Gospel Order in the Congregationall Church-way which wee have treated of restored to its primitive purity and beauty is one of the great promises of these latter dayes and the spirituall glory of it sparkles in sight of the saints out of many promises prophesies and varietie of the richest types and is to stand apparently distinct by its selfe from all other orders wayes worships or Churches whatsoever as the visible Kingdome of Jesus Christ for his subjects to walk in That it is one of the great promises to bee accomplished in these latter dayes appears Isa. 2.2.3 Micah 4.1 Isa. 35.1 8 9.10 Isa. 30.21 Psal. 110.3 Ps. 46.2.3.4.5 and 48. P. 3. Malach. 3.17.18 Isa. 51.3.4 Dan. 2.32.33.34 Act. 3.21 Dan. 8.3 The higher is last the best wine at last and the glory of the latter house shall be greater then the former Hag. 2.6.7.9.21.22.23 For further Explication though I have beene full in former Chapters yet to conclude this I shall name these 6. speciall Heads which ensue to prove this Generall Assertions without exception The Prophesies and mproises are full for Christs reigne as Head and alone Ruler in his Church especially and most visibly in these latter dayes He alone shall reign over them in Zion and for ever Micah 2 17. Psal. 99.1.2 Isai 9.2.7 and 22.23 Psa. 2.6 And is set up King in Sion He will be greatest in Zion· Rev. 2.26 Yea and rule the nations to Rev. 11.15.17.18 Zach. 14.9 Therefore all power is given him in heaven and earth Church and State Mat. 28.18 to rule all as being more excellent then the mountains of prey Ps. 76.4 till all be under him 1. Cor. 15.25 Thus he ●ides in our dayes conquering and to conquer But to speak to his Headship In his Zion his most speciall habitation and Kingdome Hee is the alone Head of whom all members aptly joyned receive life and growth And this he is to us as he is one with the Father Jo. 17.21 From whom we have life and grace In especiall maner hee is to bee manifested such a Head in these dayes of restauration Hosea 1.11 the children of Judah and Israel though they differ as to form as Independents and Anabaptists c. shall be gathered together and appoint to themselves one Head and come up out of the Land for great shall be the day of Jezreel So the Churches of Christ shall be all one as we said before in Vnity under one Head viz. Jesus Christ. For although the Churches have stood off hitherto one from another as the 10. Tribes did from Iudah and
hath a few Friends and tryed Subjects but such Craterus's are rare too wherefore let all the faithfull friends of Christ of what judgement soever that are under his Command and Lordship come and enter into these Gospel-wayes of Worship into Christs order and path ordinance and Discipline for the Lord of the Mannour I meane the God of this world will take up all wefts and straies that are out of this way and empound them wherefore for shame friends make haste Hye out of Babylon flye into Sion into the Fellowship and Church-way of the Gospel wherein Christ is King and Lord and where this Sunne is highest brightest and swiftest in his ascendent motions wherein Christ appeares in his richest perfection and fulnesse For as Nature who hath drawne with her Pencill a perfect Grasse-greene in the Emerald as Pliny sayes a skie-colour in the Saphire a fire colour in the Carbuncle a sanguine in the Rubie and a starry in the Diamond hath also drawne all these together in one viz. the Ophal so hath Christ by his Spirit in his Church for there is one gift and grace in one Saint another gift in another and other graces in others and blessings in the Gospell and power in the Word and sweetnesse in the Ordinances and all in one viz. the Church Some excell in one thing some in another but the Church is the summary of all all excellencies are there in one viz. in one Christ who is in every Church the fulnesse and perfection of all Christ sayes Bernard De advent serm 2. is the Bee which flew into the City of Nazareth which is interpreted Flower and there he alighted on the sweetest flower of Virginity that ever the earth bore and so doth Christ now in the Churches finde sweet flowers who hath Et mel aculeum sayes Doctor Rawlinjon on 's Mercy to a Beast p. 13. both Mercy and Judgement yea he is both Love and Law in all his Churches yea the Law of Love and the Lord grant we may finde it so in these dayes Heare O Ireland heare the Lord run into his Courts live in his Sanctuary for in a special manner I speake to you from the Lord for whose sake I dare not bury these truthes as dead or in silence which doe so much concerne you and seeing I am now with you I wish from my soule that most of your Professors prove not Moone-sicke I meane Lunaticks that sometimes fall or plunge into the water and sometimes into the fire of persecuting the Saints that wil not over head and eares with them in the waters yee know what I meane for I shrewdly feare this wherefore I say forsake not Aegypt to fall into Babylon nor Babylon to fall into the forme againe and to make a Church of forme meerly and to drive in or draw in poore hearts through ignorance and folly into a formall Discipline by urging the forme or tying others to such a judgement with you for this is clearly against God's designe and Christs Gospel-Discipline which is to be in the Spirit and in truth and therefore I have many precious and pregnant truthes to hand forth and handle to you as they are hearted in me from the Fathers bosome of light in this ensuing Treatise especially in Lib. 2. but in the meane time make haste into Sion into a pure orderly Gospel Spirituall way of Worship and the Lord be with you and speed you But if before I have done some doe say Why then we shall be persecuted by Presbyterians or some call'd Independants or the bitter ones of the Anabaptists or the like as well as by Malignants and open enemies I say that they shall be but like Sampsons Foxes who were themselves burnt amongst the Corne which they fired but the Land brought Corne againe and the ground was made the better by it and the fruitfull●r but the Foxes came up no more so be yee sure that such will by their persecutions burne up themselves but better the true Churches though it may be some members may suffer in the fire first yet take us the Foxes the little Foxes saith the Lord Cant. 1. he will not suffer them to escape scot-free Phil. 1.28 for it is to them a token of perdition sayes Paul but to you of salvation the true Churches shall maugre all their might and malice appeare again and triumph the more and be yet the more glorious and fruitful but these persecuting Foxes can never come up againe but must lye buried in the field which they have fired and so be the Authours of their owne end Wherefore feare not my Friends their frownes nor crownes but as Alexander was wont to say to his Souldiers when they were in danger or went on any designe Sed habebis Alexandrum my brave Blades you shall have Alexander with you so say I you shall have Christ with you in the midst of you and engaged for you feare not and then you shall no more be termed desolate or forsaken but be called the Lord's Hephzibah and Beulah but thus for the second chapter 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Midbar CHAP. III. That the Churches full deliverance drawes nigh and is upon entrance at first gradually her Discipline shall be restored as at first First proved by parallel from the Wildernesse wherein she hath been long lost as to true Discipline and Doctrine TO proceed the Call continues to hast us out of Babylon It is Historied of Darius's Generall that when he had Orders from Darius his King to revenge the wrongs done him by the Athenians that he commanded his Servants every day at every dish of meat they brought in to the Table to say Sir remember the Athenians Now Christ hath sent to us and calls upon us every foote to Remember the ruine of Babylon and the rising of Sion for Babylon must fall and Sion must fill and grow up apace to perfection-ward but although this is graduall at first yet the restauration shall be universall at last In the interim we heare how long and how lamentably the poore despised Church hath been in the Wildernesse wofully bewayling but now followes what hopes we finde of her deliverance now Mr. Brightman the brightest man of his age that I have met with lends his Light to this Age out of Revel 12.14 where we read the Church was to continue in the Wildernesse for a time times and halfe a time besides the thousand two hundred and threescore dayes in ver 6. which is all one with that in Rev. 11.2 of forty and two months for at thirty dayes to the moneth it comes to one thousand two hundred and sixty dayes which if we account from Christ's time was to begin one thousand sixe hundred and ten dayes viz. three hundred and fifty and one thousand two hundred and sixty and the thirty three yeares that Christ lived makes it one
no person but the sin for in forsaking Ordinances Assemblies Christian-duties c. They run a desperate hazard Heb. 10.23 24 25. which some say is the Prodromus or Harbinger of that pardonless pitiless sin of the Holy Ghost Vers. 26 27 28 29. and of ruine V. 39. But this I have offered on the first part of this use to show a necessity of being well-grounded upon this Rock Christ and Secondly To be well-united in and to this Rock Christ by communion as 1 Cor. 1.9 God is faithful by whom ye are called unto the communion of his Son Jesus Christ our Lord This is the voice of all the Oracles sayes Mr. Ainsworth to raise men into communion with Christ the Rock and then with one another 1 John 1.3 7. Hence it is that there be such variety of similitudes to resemble this communion and to illustrate it as Christ the Head we the Members and all by due joynts arteries and sinews united to the Head receiving life motion and government in all actions and affairs from the Head and yet by the same arteries sinews joynts and spirits united one to another so Christ is the Vine we the branches i. e. One with the vine the stock the root all participating of the same juice fatness sap sweetness and yet one branch deriving from another refreshed by another growing to another and one with another So Christ is the foundation we are the building Eph. 2.21 1 Cor. 3.9 all fastned knit and united to the foundation Christ although one may differ from another in form shape order place c. And although some be of a courser and some of a finer substance and appearance in this building although some be greater and some lesser some in one fashion and some in another yet all alike do depend upon and are set upon Christ the foundation all are rooted in him Col. 2.7 Eph. 3.17 grounded and built upon him and pinned fastned and united to him and yet are so to one another in faith and love as if they could not live or stand one without the other for they be many in particulars and some are under one form and some under another yet all are coupled together tacked and nailed together so that they grow together up unto an holy temple in the Lord. Now if we lie loosely and not firmly fastned as I said before we shall slip aside and fall out 1 Joh. 2.19 20. and thereby bring danger to the whole building This communion makes us in unity without which is neither comfort nor continuance in a Church-state neither am I of opinion with some that they must be all of one judgement and under one form and of one opinion in one body or society c. that hold together in love and faith For I finde no building no body no Church that ever was or will be without different forms opinions appearances c. according to the nature of the Members and Matter they are made up of There be many Members and particular parcels of several shape and use and yet by the wisdom of God all are so well-united and set together that there appears so admirable a decorum so goodly a frame and lovely a proportion and symmetry of the whole I say of the whole that not the least Member though the most differing from others in form or fashion could be spared for the Lord hath use of all his people under what dispensation soever to build up his house withal as I shall if the Lord please shew in the second Book Wherefore I am perswaded those Churches that consist so much in and subsist so much of and upon an uniformity will fall for they are not of Gods building but those the Lord builds as before though many Members be in them that differ in opinions forms or the like yet all shall be very useful and necessary in the place the Lord hath put them in by his holy Spirit and shall be so far from making fractions or divisions that they shall promote the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace being all are borne up by one foundation upon whom all are built one as well as another and that foundation which is the strength of the building is as able and fit to keep up one as another so fastened in him bee hee of what judgement soever and under what shape soever hee appeares to others so he be but good matter Now those Churches are of the Lords building doubtlesse that doe agree in Spirit though differ in forme and though they have in them of sundry Nations natures languages judgements or opinions yet are all one in Christ the foundation and are firmly cemented and united one to another in Christ by his own and the same spirit which enlivens enlightens quickens comprehends acts inables moves and governs all though under diversity of gifts and administrations And these are they that shall stand by his wisdome though not in the wisdome of flesh and blood or of the world Well in a word Sion thus governed thus grounded and thus united as before must be the delight of the whole earth beautifull for scituation not onely in a faire air lovely climate and good land but lying on a fair full and sure foundation which shall never bee removed but which he will establish for ever Psal. 48.2.8 SELAH Wherefore thus saith the Lord of hosts let your hands be strong ye that heare in the day the foundation of the Lords house is laid Christ being for that purpose preached that the Temple might be built For the building is all in vaine that is not laid upon this Foundation And to conclude The Lord make our Builders wise in laying the Foundation first I feare too many and I desire to deale home with my owne naughty deceitfull heart herein that have sought more their owne fame then others felicity more to glorifie themselves then God in gathering the godly into Fellowships and so they have gotten a good many and those great ones too and made themselves some body then they Christen their Churches into their owne names The Lord shame us for it whom he findes guilty Constantine the Great called Trajane who was a Great Builder the wal-flower for that his name was engraven on so many walls So indeed are many mens names most shamefully if not impudently ingraven on your Churches This was not in Primitive times we never read of any Churches called by mens names then as St. Pauls Church or Peters Church but all called the Churches of Christ for they were built upon him for a foundation upon this Rocke which Eagles flye up to but the Ostridges have their nests in Sand. So that all true Churches and Saints have one and the same substantiall Foundation For as Rhetoricke is said to be a Fist extended and displayed into an open hand but Logick a hand contracted into a close Fist
So the Church is dilated into many Congregations but every good Christian is the Church contracted and condensed into one Bosome being alike built upon the Rockie Foundation which will never faile CHAP. XV. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ahezachecha That all the children of Sion called home are bound to make haste and to enter into this Way of Christ among his Companions in the Gardens THe next newes is that wisdome stands in the streets and calls to all yea the simple and poore to eat of her bread and drinke of her wine to forsake the foolish and to goe in the way of understanding she cries at the gates at the entry of the City at the coming in at the doores Prov. 8.1 2 3. yea shee hath sent out her Maidens the Ministers to cry aloud by preaching her doctrine Prov. 9.4 and her Discipline Prov. 9.1 For wisdome hath laid the foundation and hewed out her pillars as you have heard before what follows why hearken unto me O yee children blessed are they that keep in my wayes blessed is the man that heareth mee watching daily at my gates waiting at the posts of my doors The gates of Zion are the particular Churches of Christ into which Christ calls all that have communion with him Arise and come away which as Ainsworth sayes Beleevers are bound to doe and must labour forthwith to enter in and being come in to abide there and to contend together for the faith Phil. 1.27 which was once DELIVERED to the Saints For this is foretold in Isa. 2.3 and he will teach us his wayes the very next step is this and we will walke in his pathes as soone as ever we know the way of Christ the Lawes Ordinances Institutions and Discipline of Christ wee must make no delay at all but put into practise and enter into his way It argues carnality to procrastinate and put off Christ and to delay our comming at the call of Christ when wee have clearly and distinctly heard it Luke 14.18 and alwayes observe that it is something or other of the world that is the let but as Micah 4.2 sayes and Jer. 50.4 They shall go and seek the Lord and aske the way to Zion saying Come and let us joyne our selves to the Lord in a perpetuall Covenant I●unt non subsistent ad vocationem Christi non moras trahent Oecolamp in loc So Psal 110.3 besides the Precepts Psal. 45.11 Mat. 28.20 and loud calls a● before the many menaces used in the Scriptures against Rebels and such disobedient subjects doe sufficiently testifie to this truth Psal. 2.12 Luke 19.23 1. Cor. 16.22 and the practises of the Saints in primitive times yea though times of hottest persecutions and fiery trials yet their then ready obedience to this order of Christ doth very much manifest the reality of this assertion viz. that Saints are bound by vertue of positive Precepts to joyn together somewhere in a Gospel-way and order as hath been before handled Act. 2.41 42. 1 Thes. 1 4 5 6 7. 2 Cor. 8.11.22 2 Cor. 8.5 Cum multis aliis Now is there not reason enough for it For First What other visible way for Beleevers to walke in together reason 1 and to worship in hath Christ brought out of his Fathers bosome and left behinde him when he ascended on high till his second coming but this see Eph. 4.11 12. Secondly What an apparent peece of disobedience and contempt of Christs Call and Command is this to live in Babylon streets or as Lot in Sodome notwithstanding the Angel of the Sunne is sent to cry aloud in our eares to come away into Sion and to make a habitation for the Lord to live in Isa. 52.11 Rev. 18.4 2 Cor. 6.16 17. Eph. 2.21.28 yea and the Spirit is to be our conduct Jo. 16.13 and 14.26 and knocks at our doors and tarries to know if we are ready and to put us in minde of making haste by many motions and instigations and instincts O then how roughly doe they resist the Holy Ghost and quench the motion of the Spirit that stirs in them and strives with them Act. 7.51 1 Thess. 5.19 which is a sinne of the saddest consequence if after they are convinced Mat. 12.31 Marke 3.28 29. Heb. 10.26.27 agnitam veritatem flagitiose insectari So Saul Julian Latomus of Loraine and many others sinned the sinne of death that is they madly and maliciously resisted the truth despised and despited the wayes of Christ notwithstanding their consciences checks and the Spirits motions and so did Stephen Gardiner Fox Act. and Mon. Fol. one thousand nine hundred and five and divers others O sad sad sinne to sinne against the office and operations of the good Spirit of grace which is more then to speake against his person in ignorance for so did the Sabellian Eunomian and Macedonian hereticks who yet found mercy Wherefore have a care how yee dare to live in the loathsome Babylonish wayes of confusion after yee are called out thence and convinced by the Spirit since of the gates of Sion whilst the Spirit moves in you to make haste into Church-fellowship he is doing his office in you look you to reason 3 yours Consider the abundance of ill consequences which must unavoydably follow this disobedience to Christ or this neglect or omission of these wayes of holinesse or Gospel-fellowship for First The worship of God or service to Christ Jesus which should be our joy and meat and drinke suffers by it which is more acceptably and orderly performed with joynt consent and in communion of Saints Rom. 15.16 1 Cor. 1.9 10. Zeph. 3.9 the Lambe is said to solemnize publick service upon Mount Sion with a hundred forty and foure thousand Saints there their voice is like the voice of many waters and mighty thunders Rev. 14.1 2 3. in the songs of praises and in their prayers but for this I refer to Ainsworths Communion Chap. 16. Secondly without this the Saints must needs fall short of that duty of edifying one another and of building up one another in the most holy faith but then they grow Jer. 23.3 4. Ezek. 34.14.16 and walke in light Isa. 60.3 1 Jo. 1.17 and love Eph. 5.2 1 Thess. 4.9 1 Pet. 1.22 and unity of the Spirit Phil. 2.1 2 3. 2 Cor. 13.11 Eph. 4.3 instructing and provoking one another to holinesse and good works Mal. 3.16 Jude 20. 1 Thess. 5.11 Heb. 10.24 therefore are they implanted together to flourish in the Lords Courts and to bring forth fruits Psal. 92.13 14. which will not faile for the waters run out of the Sanctuary Ezek. 47.1 Thirdly otherwise they have not that mutuall aid and assistance for the counsel and comfort of one another which they ought to have Rom. 12.3 1 Cor. 12.22.26 Fourthly nor is there that unanimous compliance or united force made against the opposers of the truth
art subject to wandrings now and may be runnest in a full career without stop or stay warning or check besides you have not here without in your Parishes the benefit of many ordinances as exercising of gifts prophesying one by one and frequent communication and conference in the things of God Mal. 3.16 And such-like pretious benefits as are in this Church-way to be had at large for your edification 4. And lastly it is just with the Lord to leave thee to thy lusts to swear in his wrath thou shalt never enter into his rest never to make one motion more at thy soul by his spirit to enter into this way or once to encline thine heart thereunto If now now I say after so many clear calls thou doest resist the Holy Ghost Wherefore as Heb. 3 10 11 12 13. harden not your hearts 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which comes of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to dry up or wither do not snib or nip off those buds or blast those blooms which are in you and like to set so fair for fruit nor by the hardness of your hearts and unkindness and cruelties to the conceptions of Christ within you do not dry up those sweet sappy motions which are made in your heart by his spirit if you do you will prove but a barren branch a withered sear stick to be cut up for the fire John 15.16 Heb. 6.8 they are nigh the curse that do so in the deceitfulness of sin i. e. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ex à privat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drawn out of the way of Christ by some fallacy or other who ever refuseth this way of Christ runs a desperater hazard then he is aware off wherefore then let him take heed take heed And let Ministers so called look about them too and beware for a greater alteration is yet to come and to befal them then ever hath been before O then Sirs that they would be busie about the Lords house and no longer delay it or do it by halves Numb 14.24 or by haltings between too Do they yet know what was the meaning of the last lightning and thunder the last year which grew so angry at their Morter-Churches and Parish-Temples what houses were burnt or beaten down to the ground but those Churches and on that day of worship too and in several Counties too and which is not without a Mystery but it shall be plain and made an History ere long in the interim it were well that Ministers and all would take warning and sin no more by dishonoring God in idolizing forms and humane inventions or in worshipping of Christ in Anti-christian ways and traditions least a worse thing happen unto them Was there ever any that hardned his heart against the Lord and prospered at last Job 9.4 But some it may be will say Sir You forget your self and so I would whilest you urge so much your Form of Discipline For we look for Zion more spiritually and for spiritual worshippers Answ. 1. It is not so much the Form as the Faith that I would urge I mean obedience to Christs positive commands as I told you before although some soar too high into the air that account the Practical Part of Worship a meer Form 2. I urge it not so much to be Church-members as Christs-members but first to have fellowship with the Son and then with the Saints as I said before but I say both these are enjoyned to be enjoyed Yet I say further whilest in the Form out of the Form and whilest under it yet above it and so are all Saints in the Church spiritual worshippers of God John 4.23 yea in spirit and in truth together Wherefore let none be so censorious as to say We are all for the form of Discipline when indeed we are least for it and would have all our Brethren to live above it in their Spirits with God and with Christ in the Temple and the Light of the New Jerusalem We live in them as Abraham lived in Tents and David in Tabernacles 3. We also look for Sion more spiritually but this is in order thereunto Before we can get into the City which is all glorious within we must pass through the gates as appears Psal. 87.2 3. His foundation is in the holy mountains The Lord loveth the gates of Zion more then all the dwellings of Jacob. Glorious things are spoken of thee O City of God! There is first the foundation laid by the Lord himself and then secondly the particular Churches or the gates of Zion which the Lord so loves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And then thirdly the City its self which is so glorious But I say before we can come into the City we must enter through the gates which are these Churches gathered So that this is in the way to that City where Salvation is placed Isa. 46.13 This is the way to Zion as Jer. 50.5 They shall ask the way to Sion with their faces thitherward saying Come let us joyn our selves together c. We must ask first the way i. e. the Churches and when we are in the way then for Zion And thus the Saints come to Sion Jer. 3.14 Isa. 51.11 35.10 i. e. By this way and through these gates we must first live in Tents and then in the City Heb. 11.9.10 First in Tabernacles then in the Temple and that those that would live in Sion in her glory and full effusion of the Spirit must be in the Churches in order thereunto which appears plainly in Chap. 9. lib. 2. For the Lord will be known in her Gates Towers and Palaces Psal. 48.3 44.12 Quaere How we should groundedly know we are fitted for this Communion of Saints in Church-society as hath been pressed answer 1 Answ. 1. There must be clear satisfaction to your judgement and full perswasion in your brest Rom. 14. the whole Chapter especially Vers. 1 2 4 14. Acts 2. 19. 8. Saints ever first believed and were fully perswaded and then they entered 2. You must be exceedingly longing and desirous after it and then make ready for it be freely willing to it by the Spirit of Christ in you Psal. 110.3 Jer. 50.4 5. For all in Christs Kingdom are voluntiers 1 Thes. 1.6 7. Acts 4.32 2 Cor. 8.3 5. 3. Such are made free to follow Christ any where soever Revel 14.4 And as they come at his call Mark 1.18 so they are prepared to leave all and to take up the cross Mat. 19.27 accounting before hand what it will cost them so that they pass not a pin for storms and afflictions which they expect before hand as 1 Thes. 3.3 Phil. 1.27 28. but they will hold out to the end 4. What is the object ye look on in these overtures of your affections It is the King in his beauty O the sweet Soul-ravishing presence of
as are fully perswaded as before must become voluntary and freely assent to what they are so perswaded of persuasio importat assensum intellectus ad id quod creditur before they enter into it or act in it which we offer proof for under several considerations whence the reasons are raised to ratifie this truth As First A principio agente from the principle that moves them and makes them a willing people which is either in se or extra se a natural principle which produces natural effects and natural actions and natural motions from natural reasons for natural ends or else a principle above nature that is a principle of grace which produces acts of grace flowing from divine reason for divine ends and such a kind of voluntarinesse I speak of here as from such a principle which carries the soule on through a thousand difficulties and dangers though it cost never so much though flesh and blood and world and devils be all against it yet he will do it because hee is carried on by an high and holier and more God-like principle and power thus the Spirit is said to be willing Mat. 26.41 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or free with alacrity and readinesse to run Psal. 119.32 Gal. 5.7 thus Luke 15.18 I will arise and I will goe to my Father I will come what will come come death come life come temptations come troubles come all that can come yet I will home to my fathers house there is bread enough and I will no longer be starved with husks among a swinish multitude no but I will arise and runne into the Lords house thus to will 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is present with me sayes Paul that is Chapter 2. an efficacious will which takes in both the principle and the act O then the heart is hurried away indeed upon the Chariots of a most noble people Cant. 6.11 with strong and lusty flaming affections and desires I will goe in the Lords way I will get out of this bondage this Babylon this Cage of unclean birds I will not have the Cage-door shut I will be set at liberty though the flesh be never so violent though my friends nothing but frown on me though all the devils of Hell rage yet I will be gone for Zion and get into those assemblies c. This may serve for a reason why this voluntary consent is so reason 1 requisite viz. because it is a living principle which produces such gracious effects And this is the act of a perfect heart 1 Chron. 28.9 Serve him with a perfect heart and willing minde they come otherwise without hearts Psal. 119.145 dead to duty and heavily forward but when men are made willing as before they have a principle of agency and need no constraint at all 1 Pet. 5.2 not by constraint but willingly O then a man is in motion indeed and will doe the will of God and go into the way of God! though no body else of his friends or family will do it nay though he be hated of all his neighbours and acquaintance for it and have no thanks at all among men by it but hee being carried on by a divine principle extra se considers not what he suffers as what hee seeks which is abundantly above himselfe therefore Secondly Consider that omne agens seu motum agat moveatur propter finem every man who is moved as before by the above-said principle in the day of his power whereby hee is become a cordial Volunteer I say that every such a willing man proposes to himself some end that suits his principle a divine end for his divine principle but a carnal principle seeks a carnal end for alwayes observe the end to which the principle carries is evermore of the same make and nature with the principle be it good or bad spiritual or carnal if the principle by which he is moved be above himselfe then the end for which he is moved is above himselfe see but in a stone which you throw up to hit such a mark with the up-motion of the stone is by a power which is not in it it flyes upward by a principle extra se and a power seated in the man that throwes it and therefore the up-mark of the upward motion is the end extra se which is appointed by him that throws it and according to that principle that appoints it but in the falling downe of the said stone again this downward motion is by a principle of its own in se and seeks its owne Center viz. the earth which is the end answerable to the principle Now I say it is not enough for a man to move but to move to some end Non solum ut moveantur sed ut moveantur in finem What is the end of those things whereof ye are now ashamed saith the Apostle Rom. 6.21 the end of those things is death but the end of holinesse is everlasting life Destructive principles have destructive ends but saving principles saving ends wherefore the Apostle would have us look to the end We have used to say every one knows his beginning but not his end Yet in this sense I say men may know their end if they know their principles And now I am upon it I must presse the knowledge of the end at well as the motion to the end lest ye bring but the sacrifice of fools Eccles. 1. a wise man sets the end of his motion or action ever before him both before hee begins and when he hath begun and as he is proceeding Every one who is wise in Christ and would fain be in the wayes of Christ who is carried to Zion-ward by such a principle as before hath a certain knowledge of the end which hee purposes promises and proposes to himself and he hath not onely his principles to move but to move for that end proposed as if it be for the honour and glory of God to set forth his praises as a peculiar one called thereto 1 Pet. 2.9 But he that hath no knowledge of the end though he hath in him a principle of motion or action yet the principle which moves or acts him for such or such an end is not in him but in another as was shewn before in the simile of the stone by whom hee is said to be moved for such an end Now I say a Saint who is moved by the Spirit hath spirituall ends and by a principle from above hath ends from above glorious divine ends above himselfe but a natural principle hath natural ends and so such as are carried on into these assemblies of Sion by carnal principles come alwayes in for carnal ends reason 2 Now this is another reason why such as would be Church-members must be volunteers and carried on by divine principles into these divine wayes that is to say for divine ends Now when a man knows the end to be
make them Now we all concur Schoolmen Ministers and all That where there is true grace experienced Saints know it sweeter then the drops from the honey comb and qui accipit gratiam per quandam experientiam dulcedinis novit se illam habere quam non experitur ille qui non accipit as we have amply before mentioned Such men must needs know the love of God is sweet who have tasted and digested it They can comfortably use Laban's words in Gen. 30.27 I have learned by experience that the Lord hath blessed me Jehovah hath raised me and increased me I have experience of it by comparing my former condition with my present So the Saints do tell by experience how Jehovah hath helped them and blessed them even with spiritual blessings in heavenly places Some of which though not so perfectly as they were delivered yet as well as I can collect them out of the Notes which I took of them from their own mouths when they were admitted into the Church I shall present as a sweet posie of some of the chiefest flowers that I have met with this spring-time in the Garden of the Lord the Church of Christ which is growing apace up to an Eden from flowers to fruits from Plants to Trees of Righteousness planted by Rivers of Water Examples of Experiences OR Discourses and Discoveries of the dead hearing the voice of the Son of God and now living As they were delivered in Dublin by divers Members admitted into the Church Being a clear account to the judgement of charity of the work of Grace upon their hearts in divers ways and sundry manners converted some extraordinarily and some ordinarily When where and how with the effects But before I begin I shall premise this for the godly Readers sake that I must contract much their experiences as they were taken least they be too voluminous And although in the choicest and most extraordinary ones I shall gather the stalk longer least I hurt the beauty and hide the excellency of those flowers yet without hurt to the rest in those which are ordinary I shall be very short being prevented by others in that little Treatise of Experiences newly put out I shall gather out the flowers onely and give you the sum of what they said and so tie them up together for a conclusion of the whole matter The most of these are mens and some womens and a very great many more I might adde to them which I have met with in England Essex and London and in Ireland and at Chester Holly-Head in Wales and in my travels but that I say I am I hope seasonably though unexpectedly prevented although many more do lie prepared by me But to the business as coming last from Dublin to declare some of those precious ones and which are the greatest treasure that I brought with me from thence The savor of which I hope will be attractive and encourage others over into Ireland where the Lord hath his Garden enclosed and full of Spices with the Mandrakes laid up for the Beloved against his coming which is looked for every day there as well as here and there the ●ride saith O! come Lord Jesus come quickly The Testimony of Tho. Huggins Preacher of the Gospel given in at the publick place Octob. 8. 1651. of Brides in Dublin IT is my joy to see willingness in Gods people to walk together in fellowship with the Father and the Son and such I desire to have fellowship with where Christ the King in his beauty appears most I do acknowledge as you have heard that account of faith before made by our Brother R. and do experimentally know and therefore must acknowledge that glorious Being of one God in his three distinct relations of Father and Creator Son and Redeemer and Spirit and Sanctifier and I finde in me by his Spirit and the several operations of this his Agent these things I believe the Scriptures Old and New Testament to be the very minde of God and do heartily desire my soul may be turned into the nature of those truths therein declared but to that which is expected from me most I come viz. to my conversation I was but yong when I began to be warmed yea within being under a zealous Ministry and much put upon duty I did use to read the Scriptures every night and to repeat Sermons often and so spent the first scene of my youth till I came to be sent by my friends to London and there I lived for a year or two but in that time as often as I saw any Minister I could not but weep and always wished that I might be one to be able to preach too After this I was sent to one of the Vniversities there but being wilde with youthful company I was soon after sent hither to this Colledge of Dublin where I am well known and here I continued till the Rebellion brake out at which time I left it and went for England into the North-parts and about Liverpool where I preached till now I returned hither But all this while I was but formal and as the yong-man that said he had kept all these from his youth So was I from my youth religious well-given loving the means following of them and seeking to serve God But alas yet all this while was I in darkness and did not know it but afterwards I saw that I was blinde and but carnal For about the year 1645. I began to be in great doubts and troubles and very much clouded in my spirit and was exceedingly bound and tyed up for a time under the sence of my formal holiness and sins till the Lord was pleased to give me light Once as I was walking all alone sadly upon the Mountains he immediately powred his Spirit upon me and satisfied my soul in Jesus Christ and filled my heart with heavenly joy and peace and with most ravishing contemplations which continued without a cloud for six weeks together which gave me full assurance of Gods love and ever since I have lived in the righteousness of the Lord Jesus though I have met with many clouds and storms since yet such as have passed away and cannot hinder me as long as Christ mine is above them Being thus translated from the form into the power I do heartily propose my self to be one with the members of Christ in his Church And although before I was not free in England or elsewhere to joyn thus it being so in controversie and disputable yet now I am fully satisfied and do see God building up his Jerusalem apace and am confident of what he is doing to Nations yea I joy to see that you all seek to unite by one Spirit and all to be one in Spirit if not all in one Form and so do I not doubting but this Ministration will be most to edification A further Testimony added to the truth by the experience
properties of the Precious stones and certainly Zion will be a beautifull scituation and the joy of the whole Earth And who will not in those dayes desire to have a right in them and highly prize them that are members of the Churches which make up this great and holy City the Jerusalem as Precious stones though now they are contemned and cursed by many and thought fit for the most furious and spurious foote of disdaine to trample upon Oh alas be they poore to look upon plaine simple in appearance many of them yet their worth is not known to men as yet but dogs do rent them and swine would trample them into the mire But then when the seven Vials are poured out they shall be no more reviled or vilipended there shall be no more death or sorrow or trouble or paine upon the Churches but they of a little one shall become a thousand and as Isay 60.5.6 and Isay 49.18.19 their destroyers and those that made them wast must be gone packing v. 7. and then saith the Lord lift up your eyes round about and behold all these gather themselves together and come to thee to be joyn'd and he sayes they shall be ornaments to the Church and all her waste desolate places shall be re-edified and yet too little to hold such a company of Zion-Citizens and Inhabitants insomuch as the Church shall say the place is too strait give me roome make way yee Kings Nobles Nations I must have more and more roome every year till this now very little stone grow greater and greater till it fill the whole earth looke for this hastily and be assured the Jewes will be admirable ornaments and excellent Church matter by 1666. and many before but of all the Tribes the Church must have matter as appears by the twelve stones which had the names of the twelve Tribes engraven though some apply them particularly one by one to the twelve Apostles Oh! that in the mean time every Church and every member would make one or other of these Precious stones and let them but study by the properties and excellencies of ev'ry stone how far the following Ages will exceed ours and Saints exceed us and Churches exceed ours who shall be more and more to be accounted of for their inward excellencies spirituall and divine vertues with varieties of them then they shall be for their outward appearances or professions or formes c. But thus for the matter fore-told which I chose to demonstrate from the signification of these Precious stones that I might not labour in vaine Thirdly The Prophecyes and Promises to be made good in the latter dayes are very full for the forme of the Church which we have sufficiently proved in many Chapters before and which appears Ezek. 37.19.21.22 Zeph. 3.9 so in Hosea 1.13 Isaiah 35.8.9 2 Cor. 6.17.18 and in a word all Churches shall admit her m●mbers one way therefore all the Gates through which men enter into this City are Pearles all the Gates of one Pearle i. e. Christ the Pearle of price in and by whom alone shall be entrance into all Churches and Pallaces of Sion Rev. 21.21 and no other way Act. 4.12 but something to this afterwards only this know that his fanne is in his hand now Mat. 3.12 to make separation betweene Wheat and Chaffe Saints and Hypocrites to the purpose ere long Fourthly the finall cause of the Church is also promised in the latter dayes at large what this finall cause is we have showne in 1 lib. which some make two-fold so Zanch. lib. 4. cap. 10. S. 39. 1. the glory of Christ to be thereby known as Jo. 17.10 I am glorified in them saith Christ now this is foretold Mat. 16.26 Act. 3.13 with 21. Mat. 24.30 Rev. 5.12 thou art worthy of all glory 2. the latitude of Gods love even to East West North and South as before Jer. 31.3 to gather the Elect from all corners of the Earth Mat. 24.31 Oh how this doth commend his love Rev. 5.8 Ezek. 16.6 Hosea 14.4 Rev. 1.5 Jer. 31.3 But in a word the general end promised and prophesied in the latter days is to set forth his glory and praise as Ephes. 2.21 so is it in Isay 65.17 as if he should say saies Brightman I will make to me a new people in whose Assemblies I will be praised and glorified so is it in Ier. 31.7 Rev. 21.11 Isay 66.18 to Isay 49.3 in whom in whose Churches of Israel I will be glorified Isay 43. 21. so 1 Pet. 1.7 1 Pet. 2.9 Rev. 15.2.3 this is especially a worke that will lye upon the latter dayes let the Churches look after it But the finall cause with reference to us is that God may dwell with us 2 cor 6.16 Rev. 21.3 let the Churches make these their end Fifthly the Vnity and Order of the Churches is prophesied and promised two to be excellent and spirituall in the latter dayes Jer. 24.7 Isay 54.13 Isay 56.6.7.8 Isay 60.21 worshipping him in spirit and in truth Jo. 4.23.24.25 Eph. 2.19.22 and 1 Pet. 2.5 then shall there be gold for brasse silver for iron brasse for wood c. Isay 60.17 spirit for forme truth for tradition life for letter power for appearance both in unity and order 1 cor 13.9 and that which is more perfect shall do away that which is more imperfect but I have spoke to this also at large before I shall conclude with Christs prayer John 17.21.22 which as appears in v. 20. does include us in these dayes as much concerned that the Saints and Churches may all be one as the Father is in Christ and Christ in the Father that is spiritually and in power mystery and in truth And for that end sayes Christ the glory which thou hast given me I have given them those Saints Churches that I pray for what glory is that see v. 5. i. e. with thine own selfe not with the worlds earthly pomp jollities or terrene enjoyments but with thine owne presence and divine being this glory saith Christ that thou hast given me I have given them that is of this divine phesence power grace and being communicated to them by the holy spirit why so that they may be one there is unity and order meant spiritually as we are one one with us one one with another by one and the same spirit this will be especially in these latter dayes because Sixthly the Promises and Prophesies are very pregnant and big-belly'd for the breaking out of his spirit upon his Saints and Churches in these latter dayes Ioel 2. so Isay 59.20 the Redeemer shall come to Zion and then v. 21. my spirit shall be upon thee and my words which I put in thy mouth shall never depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed nor of thy seeds seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ever
God said to take Councell as it were to create man whilest for other things he said let them be they were so i. e. to shew that Man was the excellency of all his worke and Creation So will God himself plant his Churches as in Isay 5.2 he fenced it and gathered out the stones and planted it c. so Mat. 21 33 he planted the Vineyard hedg'd it about dig'd the Wine-presse built the towre So he p●omises in these dayes as Ezek. 36.34 35. the desolate Land shall be tilled and shall become as Eden the Garden of the Lord for know v. 36. it is I the Lord that will build the ruined and plant the desolate I have spoken it and I will do it saith the Lord. All this is to shew the Excellency of his Church in the latter dayes which shall be of his planting above all others of mens plantting when we shall be the Lords own Husbandry 1 cor 3.9 and workmanship in Christ Jesus Ephes. 2.10 2. It is not called a House or Pallace but a Garden 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hortus which comes of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a word which signifies to protect and keep that is a place which the Lord in especiall manner hedges to keep out beasts and such as would hurt it Now this is a latter dayes promise and tends much to the happiness of the Churches tha● the Lord will protect them Isay 27.3 Zach. 2.5 Jer. 32.40.41 Ezek. 28.26 Isay 35.8.9 that they shall be for ever in one Joel 3.17.20 and no strangers shal be there so that Mr. Erberies spirit the Ranters spight to the Churches must and live and die in their own breasts 3. The name of this Garden is Paradise so it is in Hebrew so in the septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so sayes Zanchy it is in the Persian language one and the same and in the Germane Lu●tgarten and in the Latine call'd Paradisum and in severall other languages one and the same viz. a most pleasant place 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in voluptate and to me it signifies much that so many languages have one and the same name for surely the latter dayes promise must reach to all Nations and this Paradise shall take in of all languages and tongues Zach. 8.22.23 Many peoples and strong Nations in that day shall seek the Lord in Jerusalem i. e. his Churches and in those dayes it shall come to passe that men out of all languages of the Nations shall take hold of him that is a spirituall Jew saying we will go with you for we have heard that God is with you so Rev. 7.4 four Angels at the foure corners of the Earth stood there in their Offices whilest another Angell was sent to seal● in the sealing day of the spirit some of all the tribes Rev. 21.24 and Nations shall bring their glory to Zion and shall walke in the light thereof or in the light of the Lambe who is the light thereof It is certaine that as the name takes in of all languages so the thing will and Jewes and Gentiles and Hebrews and Grecians Italians and French and Latines and Germanes and all must be brought in to the Church of Christ or this earthly Paradise restor'd in these latter dayes according to Promise Prophesie 4. From the Seat of it the Questionists have been very busie to know whe●eabouts in the world this Eden was some say in Mesopotamia a part of Syria others about Babylon vid. Plin. lib. 8. ● 17 others in one part of Syria and others in another others in the upper part of Chaldea others take in Syria Arabia and Mesopotamia others take in Armenia Assyria and all Aegypt others say it was in the torrid Zone under the Aequinoctiall line and others make it to comprehend the whole world but as Paraeus observes these discrepant opinions and perplexable differences arise from the ignorance of the Rivers the Head and Branches of Euphrates so among the Fathers and Schoole-men and Academians with Ministers and many others are there different mindes and judgements of the Seat and place of the New Jerusalem Rev. 21. but what need such Cont●stations Praestat enim dubitare de occultis quam litigare de incertis but this is certaine that where ever the new River the typified Euphrates runs in Rev. 22.1.2 I meane the spirit of God according to the flowings of these dayes comes a City shall be found whose builder and maker is God there shall be the streets as well as the streams of the New Jerusalem and this spirit will be poured out on all flesh I mean on all Nations and they shall come from far So that it is mens ignorance of this River that is cleare as Chrystall that makes them question where Paradise will be found in the world I say not of the world therefore let none say lo here or lo there but when the spirit is pour'd out they 'le know and understand 5. Eastward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is properly from before which is here in Text Eastward or from the East ab Oriente and in the Septuagint 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is very considerable for Eden was Orientall or Eastern sayes Lactant. lib. 2. Paradise was then a part of the East So is the latter dayes Paradise to be but by the East I intend Christ for where the Sun rises there we say is the East and where it goes down there we say is the West or Occidentall both East West Orientall and Occidentall so call'd from the rising and the setting of the Sun for there is not really a place or point of Earth at the bottome of the Horison or Hemisphere as far as you can see Eastward that is the East no for when you are there you are as farre off as before and so you may goe round the world and never come at it but where the Sun rises I account the East Now the Paradise promis'd viz. the Churches are to be all East-ward Zion-ward Christ-ward yea all ab Oriente from Christ yea 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all in Christ the East from whence the Sun rises the Gospel-light burgeons and breaks out in golden brightnesse and light must go forth as from you the Churches in the sight of others and gild the Ayre all about and shine abroad to the world Thus the Churches in the latter dayes being all from Christ the East all in Christ the East all for Christ the East are the Paradise in the East and are of Christ as the first of all whence the Sun of righteousnesse shall arise and shine to all the World Thus far for the thing in generall now to the speciall Priviledges that appertain to this Paradise which are under these two Heads 1. From the Trees 2. The Rivers First in that Paradise was full of Trees it did signifie the Saints
Bastards shal not be receiv'd i. e. Hebr. Mamzer one that is of an Whore viz. the Whore in Rev. 17.5 the fruit of uncleannesse Too too many of them it is to be feared enter in as yet that have relation to the Whore and that don't heartily hate her and all her trumperies and toyes but then it shall be that none but those that hate the Whore and that shall labour to lay her open to all the World and burn her with fire Rev. 17. And such as shall be glad of the day wherein they may dash her little ones against the stones Psal 137.8.9 and may serve Babylon as she hath served Sion that shall enter indeed in that day and not the bastards that are born of the Whore But such as have gotten the victory over the beast and over his image and his marks and over the number of his name Rev. 15.2 Then will be the great and apparent distinction indeed Yea then v. 3. The Ammonite and Moabite must not enter in c. yet the Edomites shall v 7. being turned Proselites and received into the faith by Idumea or Edom I would understand the red people as the Word signifies and as it relates to the latter dayes I do believe it may take in the bloody Jewes who have so ●ong lay under the guilt who will e're the third generation enter apace into the Churches in the mean time Remember O Lord these children of Edom the Jewes in the day of Jerusalem the gathered Churches in the day of Jezreel who sayd and so they shal say as zealously as any of Babylon rase it rase it even the foundation thereof O Daughters of Babylon who ought to be destroyed happy shall he be that rewardeth thee as thou hast served us Psal. 137.7.8 In that day every eye shall see and every ear shal heare that ●srael is a people distinct from all others and so made by the instinct of the spirit which leads them out of Babylon into Zion and into all truths To conclude all the Prophesies Promises Precepts Practises of Primitive Saints Preachings and Epistles and Acts of the Apostles which is our Directory yea all the Types and Titles of the Church as Mount Zion Jerusalem Temple Tabernacle spirituall house peculiar people royal Priesthood City Spouse Vineyard Paradise and Garden of the Lord and golden Candlesticks and Kingdome of Heaven and all other titles that belong to her do call aloud in our ears to come in unto her and out of false adulterine wayes of worship Wherefore Hosea 2.1.2.3.4 Say to the brethren come my people and to the Sisters we will joyn with you arise sing for there is mercy offered us Wherefore let us all plead Plead with your mother plead for she is not my wife neither ●●n I her husband saith the Lord Wherefore let her put away her whoredomes out of her face and her adulteries out of her brest Plead strive against her Litigate Et rixamini Zanc. in loc viz. your mother the Nationall Church so called and her children v. 4. viz. parochiall Synagogues which are full of whoredomes and adulteries and are not the Lords Churches or his Spouse but Adulteresses and as Churches the Daughters of the Whore the Quean the soul strumpet who shall be burnt up Therefore awake O ye people of England Ireland and Scotland and plead and expostulate in good earnest with them For their Whoredomes are in their faces and their adulteries in their breasts in their face that is their externall worship and ordinances and discipline And in their breasts that is in their hearts For Parish-Church Members are ful of whoredoms uncleaness idolatry superstitions and adulteries in their hearts They love the Whore in their hearts Yea furthermore most impudently and imprudently like the most brazen faced Whores they will commit sin incest adultery in open sight and without blushing for shame call for their Lovers in the open congregations and will have their Sacraments their Services their Idols and wil-worship in their Synagogues yea and they have their Priests too to preach up and paint out their idolatry as Whores are painted to give them the Sacraments in their sins O sad dayes I like Sodomes but the Lord will judge her I remember Mr. Cawdrey in 's storehouse and similles sayes to this that his high felony as 't is for a subject to counterfeit his Kings Letters or Seales so for men to make new Lawes and Orders and not to take Christ's but to alter the word to counterfeit the Sacraments and most impudently with the Whores forehead to maintain traditions Customes though of long standing which are not Christ's but Anti-Christ's and to administer the Sacrament and Seales otherwise then the Lord hath appointed and then Christ hath instituted in his Gospel yea and to aggravate their wickednesse too to do it in the Kings Christs name too and to pretend his Commission which they have counterfeited and invented is horrible felony and high treason and renders such as so receive them from their Ministers an Harlot of Anti-Christ What can the Parish Ministers and Presbyterians then say for themselvs or any that receive from them Seeing it is Felony Treason and Harlotry Her Whoredomes and adulteries are so open as makes a modest man to blush and detest her whilst other lewd ones and her Lovers that seem yet to carry a fair face do defend and professe her to be honest and honorable Aye 't is for their credit so to do● who trade with her as long as they can keep it which will not be long now For the Lord sayes v. 3. Let her put away th●se her stinking whoredomes lest I strip her naked and set her 〈◊〉 in the day that she was born c. The Lord hath promised to strip these strumpit-Churches and Temples of Dagon The whore and her children the Daughters of Babylon viz. Nationall and Parish-Churches as naked as they were the first day they were born they shall be as poore and miserable as ever they were yea as in the time of their nativity how is that Why thus First They shall be quite stripp'd of cloaths for covering and ornaments and not have so much as men of gifts i. e. Learning that is graced or abilities of the spirit that shall plead for them but all against them even those that are as yet the Whores Lovers and commit adultery with her they shall loath her when they see her l●wdnesse and nakednesse so that she shall be stripp'd of all and bee as naked as ever she was borne 2. When these Parishes and Sinagogues and false Churches were borne as they were naked so they were besmear'd in bloud begun in bloud and born in bloud so the Lord will shew their abominable filthinesse in the very eyes and sight of all her Lovers v. 10. and lay her crimes and iniquities and contamination