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

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strength of any part in its place and proportion doth not make it usurp the place or execute the Office of any other nobler part 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist The measure of every part is the beauty and safety of the whole which cannot in naturall and ought not in Religious Bodies which are Churches be fitly disposed but only in such a way as God hath appointed for the daily forming building and well-ordering of his Church by such wisdom and Authority as Christ established in it Of which the Apostles and the Churches after them give us most evident testimony But to avoid destructive delusions But we must not be deluded either with the devils fulgurations and flashes or his transfigurations and disguises We must not forsake or stop up Gods fountains of living waters by digging the devils ditches Luke 10.18 I saw Satan fall like l●ghtning from Heaven 2 Cor. 11.14 Satan himself is transformed into an Angel o● l ght I a. 1.13 Eccl. 5.1 and wells which hold no water nay we may not wash our hands at the Devils Cistern to fit them for Gods service Nor may we take water from his troubled muddy and poysonous streams to water the plants of Christs Church We may not take strange fire from Satans Altar to kindle the sacrifices of God What need we cut off Dogs necks and offer swins bloud when we have so many clean beasts which are appointed for acceptable services that we shall not need any such vain oblations which are but the sacrifices of fools who consider not that they do evill nor look to their feet when they go to the house of God being as ready to stumble and fall and discover their nakedness and shame as they are forward to ascend to the altar of the Lord upon the steps of pride and presumption Exod. 20.26 which were forbidden to be made The humble heart being alwaies most welcom to God while others in vain arrogate to themselves power to perform those things which are not required at their hands Lev. 10.3 God hath said he will be sanctified of all these who come nigh to him in his publike service which is done not only by that inward sanctification of the heart by faith fear and reverence toward God but also by that exact observation of such rules of order power and Authority which he hath set who alone could do it in the publike way of his worship and service before the Sons of men We must not be such Children in understanding as to allow all to be gold which glisters when it will not endure the Touch-stone of Gods word Cai●itae Judae ●r●di●or● Evangelium o●●entabant Ophitae angelum in omni imunditie assistentem dicebant invocabant Hanc esse perfectionē aiebant sine tremore in tales abire operationes quas ne nominare fas est Iren. l. 1. c. 35. Nulla enoris secta jam contra Christi veritatē nisi nomine cooperta Christia●● ad pugnandum p●●silire audet Aust Ep. 56. or the probation of the Churches judgment We may not easily think that Gods Spirit in any private men runs counter to that holy order and clear Institution which the undoubted Spirit of God hath clearly set forth in the Scriptures and which the Church in all ages hath observed in the way of an ordeined authoritative Ministry All other or later inventions may well be suspected to be but Satans stratagems and devices There may be so many vermine crawling in a dead body as may make it seem to live and move when yet there is no true Spirit of life or Soul in it So it is no wonder if the various impulses wherewith mens secret and corrupt lusts stir them make some shew as if diviner gifts and endowments agitated them When indeed they have no other ayms or interests than such as Judas Iscariot or Symon Magus might have or those after Hereticks the Gnosticks Maniches and Montanists c. Who almost that had any shew of gifts or parts ever did mischief in the Church without great prefacings of holy and good intentions and pretensious of gifts and the Spirit of God There may be gifted Hypocrites devout devils angelized Satans Be mens gifts never so commendable if they want humility in themselves Miserrimis instabilibus fabulis tantam elationem assumpseruat ut meliores scipsos reliquis prasumpserunt Irenae l. 1. c. 35. de Caynitis Ophitis Judaeitis and charity to others which are the beauties of all endowments if they are puffed up seek themselves walk disorderly run unexamined unappointed unordained in scandalous and undue wayes they are nothing either as to private comfort in themselves or publick benefit to the Church The presumption and disorder of their example doth more hurt as the influence of some malignant stars in a Constellation than the light of their gifts can do they corrupt more than they either direct or correct If any of these Prophets or gifted men be indeed so able for the work of the Ministry that religion may suffer no detriment by them and people may have just cause to esteem them highly for their work sake God forbid they should not have the right hand of fellowship all incouragement from my self and all that desire to walk as becomes the Gospell when they are found upon just tryall fit to be solemnly ordeined set apart and sent forth with due authority to that holy service in Gods name let them be sent forth with good speed If they disdain this method of Ministeriall office and power which hath been setled by Christ and continued to this day in his Church which no wise humble and truly able Christian can with reason modesty or with conscience justly do but they will needs obtrude themselves upon the Church and crowd in against the true Ministers they may indeed be as sounding Brass and tinckling Cimballs fit rattles for Children or for the labouring Moon or for a Country Morice-dance and May-pole Nec veritate seneri nec charitate frugi●eri Greg. but they will never be as Aarons Pomegranates and golden Bells usefull Ornaments to Gods Sanctuary in words or works or any way becomming the Church of Jesus Christ which is as the woman clothed with the Sun the light of Truth and the lustre of holy Order And hath the Moon under her feet Rev. 12. not only all wordly vanities and unjust interests but also all humane inventions and novelties which have their continuall variations wainings disorders darknesses and deformities whereas Divine Institutions are alwayes glorious by the clear beams of Scripture-precept and the constant course of the Churches example Both which have held their Truth and Authority in the blackest nights of persecution wherein no untried and unordeined intruder was ever owned for a true Minister of holy things in any setled and incorrupted Church of Christ No more than any man shall be accounted an Officer or Souldier in an Army who hath not
deliberation humble resolution and good experience of that gift obtained which is able so to subject nature to the Empire of grace the body to the soule the flesh to the spirit carnall and sensuall imaginations to divine and spirituall * 1 Cor. 7.7 contemplations repressing innate flames by holy servencies so as preserves the purity both of body and minde together with the title of virginity so that votaries not strict and presumptuous or peremptory and absolute but conditionate upon humble and modest suppositions of that gift and mistery which * Mat. 9.11 12. God only can give them over themselves in order to an holy Celibacy have yet power of that Liberty in some cases to be enjoyed which the great and wise Creator hath allowed to humane infirmity without any reproach either to Himself who is the God of Nature as of Grace of the Body as of the Soul of the flesh as of the Spirit also without any uncomely or dishonourable reflexion upon any of his servants who thankfully and holily use that his divine indulgence Nil predest carnem habere virginem fimente mipseris Jeron ad Heliod We like the golden chain of Celibacy when it is sincere not copper gilded over but pure gold throughout when it is as an ornament or bracelet which may be taken off if need require and not as fetters or manacles so strait so heavy and so severely sodered on as weak nature cannot bear and true Religion doth not impost There have not been wanting many learned holy and excellent Bishops and Presbyters in this Church of England since the reformation who have glorified God not in a cl●istered and vowed but yet in an unspotted and voluntary Celibacy Pura perpetua virginitas est perseverans infant●a Cyp. de Bo. Pudic. as others have in an holy and allowed Matrimony Both of them abhorring those preposterous presumptions rash affectations necessitous snares and rigid impositions of a single life upon our selves or others which make many votaries like fair apples splendid to the eye but rotten at the core We find that of ten Virgins Matth. 25. Non carnis solum sed ment●s integritas virginem facit Amb. 1 Cor. 7.39 five were foolish Flesh will putrifie in a close cupboard as well as if it be abroad unlesse it be throughly seasoned with salt A Cloister is no security to chastity unlesse there be such a measure of grace as may keep from secret pollutions no lesse then from publique putrefactions wherein who so findes himself so frail and defective that he cannot conquer and command himself it is both wisdome and piety for him or her rather to chuse Gods Purgatory of marriage than the divels Paradise of a Monastery rather to sleep on Gods holster stuffed with thornes or hard as Jacobs stone at Bethel than to repose on the divels pillow stuffed with doun Fulnesse ease and idlenesse breeding and nourishing infinite swarms of lusts which may be hived up as so many Drones Wasps or Hornets in those receptacles which pious munificence intended only for piety and purity not onely in the title but truth of Virginity Experience of later ages hath much abated the glory of enforced Virginity and vowed celibacy restoring to Christians and to Ministers as well as others the honour and liberty of holy marriage which is by the * Heb. 13.4 1 Tim. 3.2 1 Tit. 1.6 Aposto●icall oracle asserted as honourable among all men and by Scripturall Canons granted to Bishops and Presbyters as well A bishop must be the husband of one wife 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 l. 3. p. 329. Ed. Lugd. Floruit cent 2. olim discipulus Clem. Romani quem Apost Paul●● salutavit as to any other Christians and so used and taught in Primitive times as Clem. Alexandr telleth us Against which by a preposterous imitation of that celibacy or single life to which the persecuting extremities of primitive times drave many holy men and women that so the Gospel in its first planting and propagating should not want among other Miracles this of holy mens and womens chastity and severer virginity in desert cels and solitudes first after that in Convents and Monastick societies some mens after zeal and emulations so superstitiously cryed up virginity as injuriously to cry down the honour of marriage especially among Churchmen Which yet was not done without much opposition and remonstrance to the contrary by many holy men in those times Among which Socrat. hist eccl l. 1. c. 8. most remarkable was that of Paphnutius a Confessor and worker of Miracles who had lost his right eye for Christs sake whom Constantine the Great the more loved and reverenced for that glorious defect He in the Councell of Nice where many holy men out of no ill minde but thinking it would tend much to the honour of Christian Religion to continue those strictnesses of Virginity in the Church in the times now of peace and prosperity which had so adorned it in times of persecution that so it might not seem a matter of necessity compelling but of devotion choosing a single life he vehemently opposed what was proposed touching making of Decrees and Canons against the marriage of the Clergy shewing by Scripture and ancient practise the lawfulnesse of marriage in Ministers of the Church and the many not inconveniencies onely but mischiefs also which would follow such prohibitions whose holy and weighty reasons then swayed the Councell 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is Pel. Ep. l. 3. that they made no such injunctions touching the Celibacy of the Clergy which after times plentifully cast upon them as so many chaines and snares which proved no lesse to the dishonour and stain as of the Ecclesiasticall order so of all Christianity than the primitive freedome of virginity or marriage had advanced the honour of both In both conditions of life we think a pure and chast minde the best rule or measure Ut Ecclesia ita foemana virgo esse potest de castitate quae mater est de prole Amb. ad Mesal de virg and a good conscience the highest crown or reward We are not at all taken with gilded frames and titles of * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. or 16. celibacy and virginity put to ill wrought and uncomely pictures of vitiated and deformed chastity which is a double imparity and of the divels deepest dye when it is but a colour and artifice of those that speak * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Carm. lies in hypocrisie forbidding both meats and marriage Nor yet doe we any whit dispise or undervalue any excellent modern piece of * Tim. 4.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Basil M. ad Lap. Virg. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysp Ep. 2. ad Olymp. holy Virginity wrought after those primitive patterns and pristine originals of sublime severities in holy retirements yet withall we give that due honor which holy antiquity the
performance of those duties which we ow to the One onely true God or to any Creature for his sake That is upon such grounds to such ends and after such maner as God requires them of us in the several relations wherein we stand obliged to him or them Internal Lux est religionis in conscientia lumen in conversatione Bern. 1 Cor. 2.11 1 John 1.3 3.19 Nec deest Christus ubi est fides nec ecclesia ubi Christus nec societas ubi charitas nec templum ubi cor sanctum Cypr. This Religion is discharged by us first Internally in the Receptions and Motions of an enlightned and sanctified Soul to which none can immediately be conscious but onely God and a mans own spirit Herein we conceive the very soul life and quintessence of true Religion doth consist so far as it is to be considered apart from all outward expressions visible Form Society or Church Communion onely as having spiritual inward converse and fellowship with God and Christ by the graces of the holy Spirit although Christians should be in desarts dungeons prisons solitudes and sick beds amidst all forced sordidness disorders and dissolutions of any shew and profession of Religion as to the outward man This sincerity wants nothing of extern fashion or ornament to compleat its piety but is satisfactory both to God and a mans own conscience by that integrity of a judicious holy and devout heart which hath devoted all its powers and faculties to the knowledge meditation adoration imitation love and admiration of God according as he was pleased in various times and maners to reveal himself to it Heb. 1.1 As partly yet but darkly by the light of reason in rational and moral principles seconded with fears and strokes of Conscience which is a beam and candle of the Lord in the soul of man Prov. 20.27 Lucerna Domini Scintillans in intellectu radians in voluntate ardens in affectu fumans in desiderio flammans in amore scrutans i● conscientia exhilarans in virtute torquens in facinore Bern. 2 Tim. 3.16 2 Pet. 1.19 Matth. 10.26 Gal. 6.1 Et solidè fundanda ad amussim Scripturâ aedificanda veritate stabilienda charitate consummanda religio August Eò pulchrior est anima quo ad summam Dei pulchritudinem propius accedit Bradward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. N. s but more clearly by supernatural manifestations in dreams and visions in audible voices prophetical revelations or angelical missions By all which religious light was onely occasional and traditional but now most evidently compleatly and constantly in that declaration of his will to mankinde which is contained in the lively oracles of his now written and perfect Word the onely infallible rule of a good Conscience and foundation of true Religion According to which onely we measure it both as to its internals which are summarily comprehended in the love of God and its externals which are compleated in that charity which for Gods sake we bear and really exercise toward all men but chiefly to the houshold of faith that is the Church or Society of those who profess to believe in Jesus Christ as the onely Saviour of sinners This well-grounded and well-guided Religion as it is then an Internal Judicious and Sincere devoting of the whole soul to God as the supreme good offered us in Jesus Christ We esteem the highest honor and beauty of the reasonable soul the divinest stamp or character on mans nature the noblest property and capacity of the immortal spirit in us demonstrating not onely its common relation to the Creator which all things have but the Creators peculiar favor and indulgence to man whom he teacheth to fear enableth to serve and encourageth to love him above all As also mans capacity to attain that knowledge of the divine wisdom and that fruition of the divine love which onely can make it truly and eternally happy For true Religion thus seated in the soul of man 2. True Religion not barely speculative but also practical is not barely a speculative knowledge of God according to what his wisdom hath revealed of himself in his works and word As that he is what he is not as to any defects what he is in all positive excellencies in himself which yet is a great and divine light shining upon mans understanding from experience and from the historick parts of the Scripture But further it also shew us what God is to us in Nature Grace Law Gospel Works Word Creation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Niss de prof Chr●stians and Christs Incarnation what we are to God in Christ for duty and dependance what all things are to us as they are in God that is in his wisdom will power providence c. either making or preserving or disposing them for our good and his glory According to which light we come to desire to love to enjoy God in all things Eph. 1.23 and all things in him that is within those bounds of honor order and those lesser ends which he hath set in reference to the great ends of our good and his glory which are as a lesser circle in a greater having both the same centres At length God becomes the joy life beauty exaltation and happiness of the believing soul by it s often contemplations of him and sincere devotions to him whence we come to have an humble sight ingenuous shame penitential sorrow and just abhorrence of our sinfulness vanity deformity vileness and nothingness compared to God and apart from him After this our wills come to be enclined to him as the most excellent good and perfecting Beauty drawn after him and duly affected with him to fear him for his power and justice to venerate him for his excellent majesty and glory to admire him for incomprehensible perfection to love him for his goodness in himself in all things and in Christ above all in whom his love grace and bounty is most clearly discovered and freely conveyed to us We come to believe him for his veracity or infallible truth in his Law and Gospel to be guided by his unerring wisdom and directions which are discerned in the mandates of his Word to us and agreeable motions of his Spirit in us which are always conform to each other Virtus Spiritus sancti in m●tibus veritas verbi in mandatis suavissi●● inseparabili nexu conjuncta sunt nec magis ab invicem distrahi possunt quàm calor solis à nativo lumine Quum à Spiritu sit veritas ut inveritate sit Spiritus necesse est August We come also to obey him in all things for his soverein Empire and Authority to trust in him at all times for his faithfulness and immutability to hope in him and to wait patiently for the consummation of his rich and pretious promises 2 Pet. 1.4 both in grace and glory All which we believe upon the divine testimony of the written
Spirit of Christ abstracts any mans faith from the Word or carries his practise against the Truth Order and holy Institution which Christ hath setled in his Church For it is most sure by all experience that the holy Spirit teacheth those Scripture saving-Truths by the ordinary methods and orderly means which the Wisdom of the same Spirit in Christ hath appointed to be used in the Ministry of the Church Ephes 3.10 Ephes 4.12 which who so proudly neglects and so despiseth Christ in them he may tempt grieve and resist the Spirit of God but he will never find the comfort of the Spirit in his unwarranted extravagancies which are but silly delusions and baby-like novelties having nothing in them of Truth Holinesse or religious Excellency beyond what was better known believed and expressed before in words and deeds by a far better way Christians ought never to turn such children and fools as to think Religion is never well unless it be in some new dresse and fashion of unwanted expressions and strange administrations we think that the Spirit of God teacheth all humble constant and exact obedience to the Word of God without any dispensation to any men at any time in things of Morall duty and Divine Constitution or Order according to the severall relations and religious capacities of Christians no reall sufficiency of gifts or graces doth justifie any Christian in any disorderly and unruly course of acting or exercising his supposed Inspirations in the Church no more then they doe in the Civill Offices of State Nor are these motions any thing of Gods speciall call in regard of the outward Order and Policy of the Church where the ordinary way of Calling Admitting Ordaining and sending forth right Ministers may be had in the Church 3. The vanity of of their wayes compared to the Word Be these impulses of the Spirit never so great yet they put no good Christian upon idlenesse or presumption so as not to use the ordinary means of study hearing reading meditating conferring praying and preparing c. Nor shall he either preserve or increase or profitably exercise any such gifts without study industry and preparatory pains which are the means by which God blesseth men with that Wisdome Truth Order and Utterance which are necessary for the Churches good The liberall effusions of some mens tongues their warm and tragicall expressions where there is something of Wit Invention Reading Method Memory Elocution c. in the way of Naturall and acquired Endowments alas these are no such rare gifts and speciall manifestations of Gods Spirit which these Anti-ministeriall men have so much cause to boast of There may be high mountains of such gifts ordinary and extraordinary as in Judas the Traitor which have no dews of grace falling on their barrennesse Nor are these boasters of Inspirations manifested yet either as equall or any way comparable to most true Ministers in any sort by any shewes of such gifts for the most of which they are beholding to Ministers labours and studies with whose heifer these men make some shift to plough the crooked and unequall furrows of their Sermons and Pamphlets A little goes a great way with these men in their supposed Inspirations and where they cannot goe far on they goe round in circling Tautologies snarled repetitions intricate confusions which are still but the same skains of thread which other men have handsomely spun and wound up in better method and order which these men have neither skill nor patience fairly to unfold but pull out here a thread and there an end which they break off abruptly to the confounding of all true Methods of Divinity and Order of found Knowledge The composednesse and gravity of true Religion in Publique especially admits least of extravagancies and uncomelinesse Haeretico conversatio quam futilis terrena humana sine grauitate sine autoritate sine disciplina Tertul. adv Haer. which dissolve the bonds or exceed those bounds by which Christ hath fitly compacted the Church together in a sociall way giving every part by a certain order and allowance established as the Standard in his Church that * Eph. 4 16. measure and proportion which is best for the whole This place and calling every Christian ought to own and to attend keeping within due bounds till God enabling and the Church so judging and approving of his abilities he be placed and imployed in some way of Publique service into which to crowd and obtrude a mans selfe uncalled and unordained regularly by the Church doth not argue such great motions of the Spirit which like strong liquor cannot be kept in any vessell but only evidenceth the corrupt spirits the violent lusts and the proud conceits which are in mens Hearts Certainly all Gifts Graces and Influences of Gods Spirit in truly gracious and humble hearts are in all Motions Habits and Operations as conform to the Scripture which are the Canon of Truth Peace and Order in the Church as any right line is to that rule by which it is drawn or as figures cast in the same stamp and mould are exactly fitted to one another The Truth of the Word and Graces of Gods Spirit cannot be separated or opposed any more than heat can be parted in the Sun from its light or its beams crosse one another in crooked and oblique angles It is no better Austin de Unit. Ecclesiae c. 16. Non dicant ideo verum esse quia illa vel illa miribilia fecit Donatus vel Pontine vel quilibet alius aut quia ille frater n●ster vel illa soror nostra tale visum v●gilans vidit vel dormiens somniavit Removeantur ista vel figmenta mendocium hominum vel po●tenta fallacium spiritum Remotis istis Eccclesiam suam demonstrent in canonicis sanctorum librorum autoritatibus than a proud and Satanicall delusion to fancy or boast that the Holy Spirit of Christ dwels there in speciall Influences and Revelations where the Word of Christ doth not dwell richly in all wisdome Col. 3.16 The lodgings of the Spirit are alwayes and onely furnished with the Tapistry of the Scriptures Else all imaginary furniture of any private spirits leaves the heart but swept and garnished with the new brooms of odd fancies and fond opinions to entertain with somewhat more trim and composed dresse the unclean spirit who loves to dwell thus in the high places of mens souls and hereby seems to make the later end of those filthy or silly dreamers in pride Iud. 8. vain-glory hypocrisie and lying against the Truth blaspheming the true Spirit of Christ contemning his holy and onely true Ministery and Ordinances and in all other licentious Apostasies worse than their beginning was in ignorance errors and terrors or in plain dealing sensualities and downright profanenesse For it is more tolerable to be without the Spirit of God Pope Hildebrand Cum haereticus malesicus sacrilegus esset pro sacratissimo se
sincere amendment of them hence it brings to a quiescency and comfort in no way but such as is conform to the Word of Christ burning with an unfaigned charity toward all men most fervently to the Churches service and welfare with an * In humili spiritu pura mente spaciose habitat immensus Deus high esteem of the excellency of the knowledge of Jesus Christ his Institutions and Ministry his Word and Spirit and Grace with a gratefull value and high respect of those * Phil. 3.7 1 Thes 15.12.12 13. Heb. 13.17 by whose Ministry they have been called baptized taught converted and are still guided in the paths light and breathings of the Spirit to the hopes of salvation the blessed expectation of which in Christs way raiseth them up many times to high yet holy resolutions to deny themselves and suffer any thing for Christs sake and the testimony of the Truth These and such like I conceive are the best fruits of Gods Spirit which are not the lesse excellent because they are common Gods children are not oft entertained with novelties and never pleased with such new toyes and ratles or hobbey horses in Religion which some men bragge of The wandering clouds which some mens fancies exhale of spirituall Motions and Manifestations beyond plain and ordinary Christians either for private comfort Iude 12. or for publique benefit are for the most part without water they darken but moisten not the Church or the soul they have so much of earthy or fiery exhalations in them that they have little of the dew of heaven with them Nor may they without great injury and high indignity be imputed to the Spirit of Christ Nor doe such sorry flowers which grow in every dunghill adorn the Garden of God the Soul or the Church not justly crown any with the most honourable name of holy or spirituall Which titles vain men much affect and boldly challenge sober and humble Christians do earnestly desire and seriously endeavour to merit Being an honour so farre above the naturall capacity of sinfull mortality that nothing but a Divine bounty and supernaturall power can conferre the Truth of that Beauty which is in holinesse and the right to that glory which is in every True Saint who are often hid as orient Pearles in rough shels in great plainnesse lowlinesse and simplicity which makes such as are truly Saints and spirituall as ashamed to challenge the name as they are afraid to come short of the grace Studying not applause and admiration from men but the approbation of a sincere and good conscience 2 Cor. 1.12 Iam. 1.17 Him they look upon as the father of every good and perfect gift the sender of the blessed Spirit by the due Ministry of the Word into mens hearts The searcher also of all hearts and tryer of the spirits of men far beyond what is set out in paints and outward appearances of extraordinary gifts of the Spirit under which mask and disguises Achitophel Heb. 4.13 and Jehu and Judas and Simon Magus and the sons of Sheva and Demas and the self-made Prophetesse Jezebel and Diotrephes all false Christs false Prophets and false Apostles all true Antichrists and true Ministers of Satan grievous Wolves studied to appear and did so for a while till the Lord stirred up the Spirit of discerning in his true Ministers and true Saints Which Spirit of Wisdome teacheth us to measure and judge of spirituall gifts and true holinesse 6. Reall power of the Spirit how discerned 2 Tim. 3 5. not by bare and barren forms but by the power and practise of godlinesse not by soft-expressions and gentle insinuations or melancholy sowrenesse and severer brows not by Ahabs sackcloth or Jehus triumphs or Pharisaick frownes Not by bold assertions lowd clamours confident calumnies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 te●ico aut tristi vulus vultuosi Pharisai Simplicissima est spiritus sancti virtus sine suco sine fraude omnia agit nulli gravis piis suavis omnibus utilis Ber. Nil tam● metuit quam ne dubitare de aliqua re videretur de Vellcio Quomodo certissimi esse possunt quum nihil certius est quam certos illos non esse de salute Ber. Certi non sunt qui solliciti non sunt Cyp. Sola integra fides secura esse potest Tertul. de Ba. precipitant zeal audacious adventures successefull insolencies Not by heaps of Teachers popular Sermonings long Prayers wrested Scriptures crowds of Quotations high Notions Origenick Allegorizings Not by admired Novelties vulgar satisfactions splendid shews of Religion empty noises of Reformation Nor yet by arrogant boastings uncharitable despisings confident presumptions hasty assurances proud perswasions pretended Revelations fanatick confusions All these either in affected Liberties or Monastick rigors oft bear up mens fancie of the Spirit and sanctitie like bladders meerly by their emptinesse Nothing being more prone to dispose a vain mind to fancy strongly that it hath Gods Spirit than the not having it indeed * 2 Tim. 3.13 Deceiving and being deceived To make men presume they are Saints than the not serious considering what true holinesse is Splendore magis quam fervore delectantur hypocritae Ber. Dum fallunt maxime falluntur and the way of the Spirit of Christ is In its infallible rule the Scripture in its noblest pattern Jesus Christ in its foundation Humility in its beauty Order and Symmetry in its perfection Sincerity in its glory Love and Charity in its transcendent excellency the Divine Nature The Devils Piracles are made as much by the frauds and fallacies of hanging out Gods colours the flags of the Spirit Hypocritae sanctitatis tineae cui adhaerere videntur v st●m tu piter viciant remedia in morbos sanctitatem in crimen vertunt Chrysost and shews of holinesse as by the open defiances of persecution and batteries of profanenesse Delusions in Religion as Dalilahs charms on Samson are oft stronger than the Philistins force against the Church Else our blessed Saviour would not have so carefully fore-warned and fore-armed his little flock against those grand Impostors whose deceit is no lesse than this * Luk. 17.21 Loe here is Christ and there is Christ As if he were no where in England or in all the former Catholick Church but only in the corners and Conventicles of new Donatists Loe here is Christ a most potent and plausible pretention indeed able by its native force and mans credulous frailty to deceive even the very Elect Mark 13.22 whom would it not move and tempt strongly to hear of a new Christ in New lights and new Gospels new Church wayes new Manifestations new Ministry and new Ministers Yea to heare of a Christ without means above means beyond the Scriptures deadnesse the old Sacramentall forms the Ministeriall Keyes and Authority Christ in the Spirit risen from the grave of dead duties of expired Ordinances and from the Carkuses of ancient Churches A
have a name to * Revel 3.1 live by the Spirit and covet to be called spirituall who are dead in their lusts and walk after the flesh * Prov. 30 12. They seem pure in their own eyes and yet are not washed from their filthinesse Yea there is a generation O how lofty are their eyes yet are their teeth swords and their jaw teeth as knives Nothing is more cruell than supercilious hypocrisie * Ioh. 18.28 They were forward to crucifie Christ who were shy of being defiled by entring into the Judgement Hall They are most zealous to destroy the true Ministers yea the very function and succession who seem most devoted to be Teachers Prophets and Preachers of a new Spirit and form Many seem rich in gifts and increased in spirituall endowments thinking they need nothing of Christs true Ministry Revel 3.17 when they know not that they are poore and naked and blind and miserable Ephes 6.12 There are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spirituall wickednesses usurpant in the high places of mens soules as well as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more sordid and swinish spirits that dwell in the lower region of mens lusts It is expresly stigmatized on the foreheads of some pretenders to the Spirit Iude 19. which was the glory of those first and purest times that they are sensuall not having the Spirit Irenaeus l. 3. c. 1. of the Gnasticks andValentinians Gloriantur se ●mendatores esse Apostolorum perfectam cognitionmen non habuisse Apostolos cap. 2. Dicunt se non tantum Presbyteris sed Apostolis sapientiores sinceram invenisse veritatem So the Circumcelliones Quae non viderunt confingunt opiniones su●s habentes pro Deo honores quos non habuerunt se habuisse protestantur Isid Hisp de off Eccl. l. 3. c. 15. Vain and proud ignorance as we see in primitive times is not onely content to be without the true wise humble and orderly Spirit of God but they must also study to cover their follies disorders and hypocrisies with the shews of it as if it were not enough to sin against its manifest rules and examples in the Word which have alwayes been observed in the Church unlesse they impute also to it their simplicities fondnesses impudencies filthy dreams extravagancies and confusions Counting it no shame to ascribe those unreasonable and absurd motions speeches and actions to Gods most wise and holy Spirit which any man of right reason and sober sense or common ingenuity and modesty would be ashamed to owne Our humble prayer is that these new modellers and pretenders to the Spirit may learn not to blaspheme not to grieve resist and doe despite to the Spirit of God which hath been and still is evidently manifest in the true Ministers of this Church and our earnest study shall be that we may be truly endued with such gifts graces and fruits of the Spirit of Christ that we may both speak and doe and suffer as becomes good Christians and true Ministers after the example of holy men and of our great Master Bishop and Ordainer Jesus Christ That so the judicious Charity of those that excell in vertue wisdome faith and humility may have cause to say the Lord hath sent us in the power as well as in the order and office of the Ministry to which we were rightly ordained On the other side we fear that the great earthquakes in the Church and darknesse over the Reformed Religion which may follow the true Ministers being set at naught and crucified by the malice and wantonnesse of men may in after times give too much cause to those Mat. 27.54 that now neglect us or afflict us to say as the Centurion did of Christ Doubtlesse these were the messengers of the most high God the true Ministers of Jesus Christ and of his Gospell to this Church While we have any liberty and leave to live as Ministers it will become us not to be so discouraged by the impotent malice of any enemies as to desert this holy calling whereto the Lord by a right ordination in this Church hath duly called us Not to look back to the world having once put our hands to this plough to consider our persecutors no further than to pity them and pray for them notwithstanding all the injuries and blasphemies not against us so much as against God while they fear not to ascribe the great and good effects which the Lord hath vouchsafed to work by his Ministers upon the hearts of thousands in England to Beelzebub Mat. 12.24 to the spirit of Antichrist or to any thing rather than to own the Spirit of Christ among us which hee hath promised should ever be with his true and faithfull Ministers in an holy succession of authority and power to the end of the world Scandalous inconstancy of Professors Indeed the greatest grief to the Soules of all godly Ministers and which hath brought the greatest scandall and dehonestation on their Ministry next to some of their own grosse failings is this when the world sees so many of those who seemed to be baptized with water and with the Spirit to have been illuminated and sanctified by their teaching to have tasted of the heavenly gift Heb. 6.5 and the powers of the world to come that is of the authority and efficacy of the Evangelicall Ministry which was to come after the Leviticall and Aaronicall order Many who seemed to have rejoiced for many years in those burning and shining lights of this Churches Ministers to have by their Ministry been well instructed reformed washed and escaped from the pollutions of this world That I say some of these like Jesuru● should thus lift up the heel and thus kick against the Ministers and Ministry like Demasses thus to forsake them like Judasses thus to betray them whom lately they kissed and followed as Disciples like Swine that they should thus turn and revile those that cast pearl before them returning to the wallowing in the mire and dirt of unjust covetous ambitious erroneous seditious licentious perjurious malicious and sacrilegious courses No more now ashamed of their lusts then those unclean beasts are of their filthinesse in the midst of the fairest Sun-shine day and when they are neerest to the most pure and Crystall streams But the light which they will not see in this their day shining on them and discovering the frauds and evill of their wayes they may after see in that darknesse to which they are hastning and to which they seem even of God to bee condemned But to conclude my answer in this particular 15. Conclusion and resignation of our Ministry if c. wherein the Antiministeriall adversaries pretend to such spirituall gifts and speciall calling beyond the ordained and setled Ministry if any excellent Christians or any of those that have either wisdome to discern or power to dispose of things to the advantage of this Church and State if they doe in
that is willing without hurting and cure without afflicting Giving no cause of complaint to any but such as are unwilling to be healed of their * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 5. shamefull and dangerous diseases who love ignorant and flattering Mountebankes more than the most learned and faithfull Physitians of soules which are the ablest and best Ministers who cannot bee lesse necessary for the inward health of the minde than these are for the body who are one sort of those whom learning hath fitted for the common good For I doe not think Learning and true study to be onely a couch to rest a soft and wearied minde upon or a tarasse to please a wandering spirit with some variable and pretty prospects or as a Tower for a proud soul to raise and magnifie it self upon as Nebuchadnezzar on his Babel or as a Fort for a contentious Sophister to keep in a disputative war and Logicall defiance against all the world Nor is it as a shop for a covetous man to drive his trade and get gain by the brokage of some ancient pieces But it is as a grand Magazine and Catholick Storehouse of all divine and intellectuall excellencies affording to all men upon all occasions happy advantages by which to glorifie the wise and admirable Creator and also to furnish both a mans self others with what may most conduce to his temporall and eternall felicity Good learning is neither a wanton Courtisan onely for dalliance and pleasure nor yet a slave and drudge entertained meerly for a sordid and illiberall profit but as a chast and nobly spirited Wife for sweet society and legitimate productions worthy of such parents a reasonable Soul and good Literature happily espoused and marryed together We oft see that moderate mindes with but a small stock of learning well managed attain to be masters of great affaires and become as usefull so very desirable in humane societies in practicall wayes others of more speculative retired and sublime learning are not lesse in * In animis speculativis obscuritatem sublimitas compensat L. Ver. magnitude but farther remote from sublunary things having that in their height and neighbourhood to heaven which they seem to want in their light and eradiations downward In both besides the private contents they enjoy in the contemplations of reasons and Religions beauty both which fair faces are best represented in the glasse of learning they have a kinde of Empire and Soveraignty over all things and all men in all times who appear at the tribunall of their judgements fall under their cognizance and stand to that censure they passe upon them both in present and after ages either for vice or vertue honour or basenesse gallantry or villany How ever Arms and Military power have carryed the * Bonarum literarum potentes verè sunt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nec in se ipsos tantum sed in universum naturae regnum jus quoddam ac dominium exercen● rerum hominum quae omnium Imperatores augustissimi Pro. 18.1 Rex sacrorum P●ntifex apud Rom. dicebatu● Kingdom and swayed the Scepter which rules mens bodies yet learning hath ever carried the Priestly service and in that a kinde of soveraignty over mens soules and consciences None being ever thought so fit by the light of nature and all * Celebrandis Deorum mysteriis optimi sapientissimi sunt adbibendi viri ne sacrorum sint opprobria ipsi sacerdites Tull. Nations to teach the service or dispense the Mysteries of the most wise God but those that were esteemed the wisest men lest the folly and meannesse of the Priest or Minister should prove the reproach of that Divinity which he serves I might adde if any colours could expresse or adde to this intellectuall beauty Learning what had we not lost of Reason and Religion or what had we enjoyed as men of our forefathers more than beasts doe of their sires and dams if those had not left us the benefit of their piety and experience the inheritance of their wise observations the issues of their braines and pens which farre exceed those of their goods lands and bodies Since the immortall remaines of their mindes in piety Aliud est uti aliud frui quae habeas bona cujustibet illud est hoc prudentis tantum Amb. Multum distat interesse vivere vadere saper pascere discere Priora cum brutis communia vtris bonis propria sunt haec posteriora Sen. wisedome honour and vertue teach us to enjoy what otherwayes we onely should have had or used and to live where else wee should have onely had a beeing and bare existence in the world not many degrees above the beasts who have all that is needfull for the body but neither consider what they have nor from whose bounty nor to what end nor within what bounds of vertue all things are to be used These excellencies peculiar to mankind above all creatures we owe beyond all dispute to those records of learning and piety left us in all kindes by our famous predecessours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. and to the studious industry of those sublimer spirits who have been impatient to suffer those inestimable reliques of our forefathers Souls to be devoured by time and moths to be buried in dust and forgetfulnesse who never thought it enough for a rationall and immortall soul to fill its belly to clothe its back to satifie its lusts * Vita enervis luxatu nimi● o●io quo non recreatur sed evanescit virtus Val. Max. to idolize an horse to dote upon a Dog or to court a wanton Mistresse But disdaining all these low sensuall and momentary enjoyments or debasements rather when excessive chief or sole of their soules dayly are raised up by generous virtuous and religious excitations to advance their own and other mens both mindes and manners And this Illud quam degener generoso viro indignum Homo cum sis brutis animalculis inservire brutis colere boula deperire brujum officiis omnibus amore prosequi mentem interra negligere animam sempiternam longe pretictissimam prodigere inhumaniter perdere Bern. Ego me ex eorum esse numero profiteor qui proficiendo scribunt scribendo proficiunt Aust Ep. 7. Qui voluptatitus dediti quasi in diem vivunt vivendi causas quotidie finiunt 5. illis mors nunquam non acerba immatura Qui verò posteros cogitant immortale aliquid proferume memoriam sui scriptis extendentes illis nulla mors repentina nisi praeclarum aliquod opus inchoatum abrumpat Plin. l. 5. Ep. 5. Maxima pars ejus in me p●oriam posteritatem prominet Liv. l. 28. Non potest quicquant humile objectum cogitare qui seit de se semper loquentum Manier Paneg. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Synes de Insom not onely during this transient
made the beauty of his works to consist and to be evident in those distinctions which he hath set upon every thing both in the species and individuall God I say cannot be displeased to see mankinde on whom is the beauty of Reason or Christians on whom is the beauty of Religion to use such order distinction and decency in all things which becomes them both as men and Christians after the examples of the Apostles and Christ himself Matth. 9 35. who went about all the Cities and Villages teaching in their Synagogues and preaching the Gospell of the Kingdome which also befits and adorns Christians as to extern profession which is all that appears of any mens devotion or Religion to the eye of man setting forth in comely sort that duty relation and service which we publiquely professe to owe and pay to God who abhors sordidnesse and confusion as much as profane vastators love it Necessity indeed admits no curiosity of place nor affects any elegancy Aegrotantium amicorum sordes toleramus non item valentium Sidon but excuseth that which in plenty and freedome is esteemed sordidnesse and sluttishnesse Religion requires externally no more than God hath given of extern power and opportunity where these are wanting and by providence denyed a sick bed a Barn a Lyons den a Dungeon a Whales belly is as a Temple or Church consecrated by the holy duties which any devout soul there performs to God But as the Church of Christ considered in its extern communion or profession is visible and Christians are exemplary to each other and to the world it is warrant enough for Christians to build and to set apart to those publique holy duties some peculiar places upon Gods and the Churches account which grant we have in that great Charter and principle of Church policy which like a common rule 1 Cor. 14.40 measures all things of extern sociall Religion Let all things be done decently and in order Both which fall not properly under the judgement of Religion but of Reason not of Scripture but of Nature not of piety but policy or society nor need we other command to doe them than the judgement and consent or custome of wise and holy men which we have for this use of locall Churches thus peculiarly applyed to holy services ever since Christians had either ability to build them or liberty to use them which is at least 1400 years agoe If humane or Romish superstition used or affected or opined any thing in consecrating Churches which is beyond true reason and sound Religion yet we do not think that to be a Leprosie sticking so to the wals of the buildings that they must be scraped all over or pulled down else they can't be cleansed No But as places are not any more than times capable of any essentiall gratious or inherent holynesse which is onely in God Angels or Men so neither are they capable of inherent unholinesse The superstition is weak on either side weighs little but the worst is on this side to which these men so incline which tends more to profanenesse supinenesse and slovenlinesse in the outward garb of Religion which is not either so Cynical Sacerdoti maxime convenit ornare Dei templum decore congruo Amb. off l. 1. c. 21. or so tetricall as these men would make it What ever there is reall or imaginary of Superstition in the places or rather in mens fancies of them who possibly ascribe too much to them it will as easily recede and quit them when they come to be consecrated by the Churches reall performing of holy services or publique religious duties in them as dreams doe vanish when one awakes or as the dark shadowes of the night depart from bodies when the Sun comes to shine on them or into them if these poore objectors mindes and spirits could as soone be freed from those profane superstitious and uncharitable tinctures with which they are as with a jaundise deeply infected against those places and against those that use them with the decency becoming duties done to the Majesty of God and in the presence of the Church of Christ as those places justly called Churches may be freed from all misapprehensions of their name of their dedication If the former were as easie as the latter both locall and rationall materiall and mentall Churches both places and persons might long stand and flourish Psal 74.6 Both which some furies of our times seek utterly to break down and demolish that there may be neither Christian Congregations nor decent Communion in any publique place beyond the beauty of a Barn or Stable But these men have so much tinder and Gunpowder in them against Ministers 22. Answer to other quarrels against Ministers publique duties that whatever they enjoy say use or doe in their function be it never so innocent and decent yet they kindle to some offensive sparkes or coales and flames against them As if all the Ministers of this Church knew not what to doe as they should till these new masters undertook to School and Catechise them If any Minister prayes publiquely with that gravity understanding and constancy either for matter words or method which best becomes a poore sinfull mortall on earth when he speaks to the God of heaven It is they say but a form and a stinting of the Spirit If they preach with judgement weight exactnesse and demonstration of truth it is not by the Spirit but of study and learning If they read the Scripture 't is but a dead letter and meer lip-labour If they celebrate the Sacraments with that wisdome reverence and decency which becomes those holy mysteries they quarrell at the place or time or gesture or company or ceremonies used Not considering that Ceremonies in Religion are like hair ornaments though not essentials and ought to be neither too long lest they hide and obscure it nor too short lest they leave it naked and deformed Since the end and use of them is no more but to set forth piety with the greater comelinesse and auguster majesty to men If they name any Apostle Evangelist or other Christian of undoubted sanctity with the Epithet of Saint they are so scared with the thought of the Popes canonizing Saints that they start at the very name so used as if it were an unsanctified title and not to be applyed to the memory of the just which is blessed but onely arrogated to some persons living who frequently and ambitiously call themselves and their party 2 Tim. 1.13 The Saints If they use the ancient Doxology giving glory to the Father Son and holy Ghost which all Churches Greek and Latin did the Socinian and Arian Ears of some men are highly offended at it as if Christians must ask them leave to own the holy Trinity and to give solemne publique glory to the Creator Saviour and sanctifying Comforter of the Church If Ministers use those wholesome forms of sound words which are
Monarchicall Aristocraticall and Democraticall as in civill policies so also in religious administrations some are for primacy and p●iority others for p●ucity and parity a third sort for popularity and vulgarity where as indeed the best constitution in any government is rather from the harmonious temperament and proportionate mixture of all three than from the predominance of any one so as to oppresse the other two Men of eminent parts are prone to affect to govern alone without any flatnesse or allay from inferiours Men of moderate abilities are content to goe in a joint stock mutually supplying those defects to which singly they are conscious Men of low and mean endowments are for huddles one and all where no one man is so much confident of himself as indeed he is envious at all others and impatient to see any thing done without him Whereas in true wisdome the eminency of the first the mediocrity of the second and the meannesse yet multitudinousnesse of the third should be fairly modelled and composed as the head hands and other members of the body are to the common welfare And certainly they did of old in the best times and tempers of Christians all meet in a most happy harmony Church-order and constitution no lesse than the humours bloud and spirits doe in healthy and vigorous bodies All experi●ience tels us that the disorder of any one of them causeth sicknesse weaknesse or dissolution of Christian charity society and sweet communion as to their extern polity and profession of Religion Which sad effects or symptomes at least of them in this Church this Author with grief and shame beholding hath endeavoured with the greatest serenity and expeditenesse of soul before he leaves this Bacha and Aceldama this valley of tears contention and confusion to ascend himself and lead others as much in him lies to the height and top of that Primitive verity unity and charity which made Christians so much admired and venerated even when they were most cruelly persecuted From which free and un-ingaged prospect both he and they may with a clear and full view behold the later and worser changes in extern matters of Religion wherein various opinions and different designes of Christians have either strayed from or quite crossed the great road of pious and plain hearted Antiquity which no doubt best knew beyond all the censorious Criticks and factious Novelists of after times what was the minde of the blessed Apostles of the Primitive Martyrs and Confessors who most exactly followed those methods which the Apostolical wisdome and piety had prescribed to those Churches they planted watered and preserved chiefly aiming at the Catholick good and common benefit of all Churches From which private fancies aims and interests afterward varying both in opinion and practise occasioned those many uncomfortable schisms and uncharitable factions which in all times and now as much as ever so divide the unity destroy the charity and deform the beauty of Christian Religion That many if not most Christians doe not onely read and hear write and dispute pray and preach but they believe and repent love or hate damn or save communicate with or excommunicate one another most-what out of their naturall constitutions as they are of more calm and cholerick tempers or out of those prejudices and prepossessions which custom and education have formed in them or from adherence to parties and mutuall agitations whereby they hope to drive on some worldly and secular concernments rather than from true and impartiall principles of right reason Scripturall precept and Ecclesiasticall practise which threefold cord twisted into one is not easily broken And which beyond all disputes affords both in doctrine and discipline in opinion and practise as to inward piety and outward polity the surest measures of Religion and bounds of conscience which are then most pure and unblameable when they look directly to those great designes and ends of every wise man and good Christian the glory of God the honour of Christ the peace of the Church and Soules eternall welfare without any sinister squintings to secular ends or warpings to worldly designes which are the moths of Religion the pests of society the overlayings of charity and the Incubusses of Conscience easily seising upon Christians of weak judgements and strong passions for which we need not goe far to see many and unhappy instances For what serious and well advised Christian sees not how vehement drawings and impulses in matters of Religion are made upon men by weak and at first scarse perceptible byasses of opinions and hopes of advantages How want of solidity or sincerity is the greatest motion of violent affections in most men How the lesse they weigh those things they call Religion and Reformation the more eagerly they pursue and extoll them The most wise and gracious men being alwayes the most grave and calm the most serious and constant Vulgar devotion and heats like weak fires and dubious flames are usually kindled by light fewell and fomented with fear materials Blazing like Comets the more prodigiously by how much they have more of grosse and earthly vapours Hence not onely the glory of outward successes and worldly prosperities attending the number policy or prevalency of any faction makes many Christians ere they are aware of it turn Turkes and secretly subscribe to Mahumetanism which for many centuries hath outvived Christianity in point of victorious progresses military advantages and latitude of Empire The current of worldly events like quick-tides easily and undiscernibly carrying many Christians from that course of pious strictnesse and conscientious exactnesse in truth justice and charity which they ought alwayes to steere without any variation according to the clear and fixed Word of God in Scripture and not according to his dark permissions or unsearchable workings in providence which are alwayes just and to be admired as from the divine wisdome and justice but not alwayes to be approved or imitated as from mans wickednesse and folly which like poysonous drugs are in themselves deadly and to be abhorred however the skill of the great and good Physitian God knows how to attemper and apply them as Physick and Theriacals to purge or punish to cure or correct the distempers of his Church and people Nor is it this temptation onely of events in which is a strong delusion able if possible to deceive the very elect which none but steddy judgements and exact consciences can resist But even the smallest differences the most easie and triviall considerations which are but as the dust of the balance in Reason or Religion in piety or prudence these like motes falling into some mens eyes presently appeare as mountaines and so possesse their sight that they will owne nothing for Religion in any men or any Church which appears not just after that colour figure and notion which they are taken wi●hall How many peoples Religion consists much in the very extern modes or dressing themselves or others in the fashion of
Christ and his Church for his and your true Ministers Heb. 11.25 or else to chuse with Moses rather to suffer with them than to be any way assistant to rejoycing in or compliant with the ruine of them that so in all things you may adorn the doctrine of Christ Tit. 2 10. and honor the true Reformed Christian Religion established and professed in this Church of England To your judicious Zeal sincere Piety unbyassed Charity holy Discretion which have no leaven of sinister ends or unworthy policies being got above the vain hopes fears diffidences and designs of meer men I do in all Christian Charity and Humility present this Apology in the behalf of those Pearls the true Ministers of this Church of England whose worth is not abated though their lustre be obscured Matth. 7.11 nor are they less precious when trampled by Swine under their feet Rev. 2.11 nor less Stars in Christs right hand and fixed in the Firmament of the true Church when they are clouded by these Fogs and Vapors Rev. 9.2 which ascend from the Earth or from the bottomless pit from the malice and rage of men or devils Godly Ministers sufferings are their Glory Heb. 5.9 2.10 Luke 22. Nothing more adorned and perfected Christs divine Person and meritorious Patience than his being blinded buffetted scourged mocked reviled stripped crowned with Thorns and Crucified * Inglerii desormes esse non possumus quocunque modo ad Christi imaginem conformamur cujus nunquam magis enituit gloria quam quae sputo sanguine vibicibus operiebatur Chrys Isai 53. 2 Pet. 2.6 1 Cor. 4.13 Matth. 5.11 Phil. 1.29 Col. 1.24 1 Pet. 4.14 Psal 4. Acts 6.15 Jude 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor was he less a King and Saviour when his Purple Robe was taken off and his own Garments divided among the soldiers He was not less the Messias the sent and anointed of God the Great Preacher and fulfiller of Righteousness when he was the scorn and outcast of men nor a less precious Foundation and corner Stone when refused by foolish builders who dashed themselves against him instead of building and resting by Faith upon him In like sort the true Ministers of this Church whom the pride and wantonness of some men glories to account as the filth and off-scouring of all things to speak and do all maner of evil against them falsly and injuriously if they may be so far blest of God and honored as to suffer after Christs example and to make up to their measure the remainder of the sufferings of Christ in his Body the Church there is no doubt but the Spirit of Glory will more rest upon them the power of Christ be more perfected in them and the light of Gods countenance be more shining on them than when their Corn and Wine and Oylincreased their faces will then appear most as Angels of God when with Saint Stephen they are beset with showres of stones overwhelmed with all maner of hard speeches and rude indignities Thus it becomes the proud and petulant world to act and thus it becomes learned able and humble Ministers to suffer Who have then least cause to be ashamed when they are most opposed and oppressed for Christs sake For troden in the wine-press of mans displeasure they may then yield the noblest juyce and most generous expressions of their Zeal Courage and Constancy Wherefore I have adventured although the weakest and unworthiest among many of my Fathers and Brethren the Ministers of this Church of England so far to satisfie the worlds curiosity as to give them some prospect and view of the Ministers of England in their present distresses feare and afflictions that men may see with how stedfast countenances they can look upon their adversaries Acts 6.15 while they stop their ears against them gnash their teeth at them and threaten utterly to destroy them that their causeless and implacable enemies may behold with what divine comfort and assurance they can walk both cheerfully and uprightly amidst their fiery furnaces Dan. 4. into which they are therefore cast because they will not fall down and worship * As Idols so are false Teachers Dolores Vanitates Labores Stultitiae Abominationes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mordii Res vana nihili Mark 3.14 And Jesus ordained twelve that they should be with him and that he might send them forth to Preach Acts 25.11 Toto caelo distant benè operari desperare Sibi conscia virtus Dat animos those Idol-shepherds those False-prophets Zach. 11.17 those Meer-images of Ministers which have set up themselves as gods in the Church of God such as neither they nor their Fore-fathers nor any Church of Christ for One thousand six hundred yeers ever knew or heard of who were ever blessed and thankfully contented in all times either of persecution or peace with those true Ministers who in a right way of due Ordination descended from and succeeded in the place and ordinary power of the Apostles and the other Disciples which were first sent and ordained by Christ Which the true Ministers of the Church of England being conscious to themselves as I shall after prove that they have rightly received they have this confidence still That they are neither so forsaken of God nor destitute of good Consciences nor despised by good men nor do they despair but that they may have leave be able and permitted with just freedom and modest courage to plead their cause before any Tribunal of men not doubting but they may have so fair an hearing as St. Paul their Great Predecessor both in Preaching and Sufferings hoped from Felix Festus Agrippa or Caesar Of whose piety the Apostle having no great perswasion yet he charitably presumed to finde so much equity and common humanity in them as not to be condemned by them being unheard or to be acquitted as to any crimes falsly laid to his charge if he had but the favor of a fair Trial and impartial Hearing So hard it is for a good man ever to despair in a good cause And however my confidence be just and wel-grounded 3. Reason of this Address as to the merit of that Cause which I have by Gods help undertaken yet when I consider my strength which is small my infirmities which are many my defects which are manifest my interest with men of place and power which is very little and the prejudice against whatever I or any other Minister can do in this kinde which may be great and many I have as feeble Creatures Quod deest viribus habent cautelâ conscious to their weakness are wont to do fled to the refuge and assistance first of Gods grace which is sufficient for me and which in the midst of threatnings Acts 27. storms and shipwrack bids me be of good chear Next to that of your mediation O excellent Souls who are every where dispersed in this Nation
Hemlock very hurtful or death in the pot being judged by the wisdom of the Church and State here and by the most learned Divines abroad to be within the liberty and compass of those things of Order and Decency 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut ordinata acies As an Army with Banners in Rank and File where nothing may be deformed by being disorderly which by that one grand charter 1 Cor. 14.40 are allowed by God to be ordered by the prudence of any particular National Church And in which all Churches in all ages and places have esteemed their several Customs as Laws to them without any breach of Charity or prejudice of Christian Liberty or blemish of the Faith yet never perhaps without the offence of some particular Members in the Churches whose fancies easily finde fault with any things whereof themselves are not Fathers or at least Gossips Humble Christians will thank God for moderate enjoyments nor are they bound to contend for what they think best to the perturbance of the publick Peace Patience is a remedy always near easie and safe nor is it likely that the state of any Church on Earth will ever be so happily compleated as to have nothing in it which may displease any good man Cato optimè sentit sed nocet interdum reipublicae Tacit. or which may not exercise his tollerancy and charity which are generally more commendable and unsuspected virtues than those of zealous activity and publick opposition which commonly draw somewhat upon the dregs of self either as to Passion or Interest Et multis utile bellum Luc. Party or Concernment For who is so mortified that doth not hope to get something of credit profit or honor by adhering to any side or new faction against the former setlings How many learned and godly men are and ever will be till better grounds be produced from Scripture Reason and practise of the Primitive Church unsatisfied with the parity and novelty yet pretended Divine Right of the sole-headless-Presbytery which chalenges to it self as from Christ such a supreme power as is exclusive and destructive of all Episcopacy that is of the constant Presidency of one among other Presbyters so placed by their own choice and consent And no less unsatisfied are thousands of learned and good Christians with that power of Lay Elders for so they are best called for distinction sake and not Ruling Elders lest by that title of Ruling they should fancy and usurp the sole power of rule to themselves which undoubtedly is equally if not eminently due to the Preaching Elders who labor in the Word and Doctrine Touching which point of Lay Elders in the Church I have read two Books written above thirty years since by a very learned godly and impartial Divine Master Chibald of London In the first of which he proved these Lay Elders to have no place office use Mr. Chibalds two Books of Lay Elders power or maintenance assigned them by Scripture nor ever in any Church of Christ which he demonstrates in the second Book which is full of excellent reading as to the Fathers Councils and Histories of the Church In none of which he findes them to have any footing as to office and power upon any Divine Right ever owned in the Church nor can they now have in every little Parish or private Congregation where the Country plainness may afford careful Over-seers for the Poor and Church-wardens but not fit men to match with the Minister and to fit as Rulers to govern their other Neighbors who will hardly believe they have authority from Heaven to rule them unless they see more abilities in them than usually can be found What use may be made of such Elders in the way of Prudence among greater Representations of the Church as in Synods and Councils he leaves to the wisdom of those that have power in such Conventions to call and regulate them But he denies any thing as of Divine Right belonging to them so as to binde every Parish or Congregation to have them which would be ridiculous and most inconvenient Both these Books being seven years since committed to the hands of Master Coleman as then a Licencer were unhappily either smothered and embezzled or carelesly lost to the great detriment of truth in that particular For truly in my best judgement and in other mens of far better to whom I imparted them never any thing was written of that subject more learnedly more uprightly more copiously or more candidly especially considering the Author was one that scrupuled some things of Conformity In like maner how few Christians in any Reformed Church are satisfied with those new and strange Limbs rather than Bodies of Independent Churches which word of bodying into small Corporations is as a novel so a very gross expression and hath something of a Solecism not onely in Religion which owns properly but one Body of Christ Rom. 12.5 We being many are one body in Christ 1 Cor. 12.13 By one Spirit we are all baptized into one Body which is Christs which is his Catholike Church whose communion with Christ the onely Head and one another as Members in several Offices and Operations is by the same Faith the same Scriptures the same Ministry the same Ministrations and as to the main and substance the same Christian Profession But it is also incongruous and absurd in ordinary significancy of Language while by such a singular Bodying they mean a Spiritual Union of those that pretend to be most Spiritual Christians Which names and novel inventions about constituting and compleating Churches in so many fractions parcels and places a part from all others by the means of an explicit Church Covenant as they call it how unscriptural how unconform to the examples of all ancient Churches how impertinent as to Piety how dangerous and destructive to the Truth Union Harmony and Dependance which ought to be among all Christians 1 Cor. 12.25 That there be no schism in the body i. e. In that one Body of Christ the Catholike Church and all Churches to avoid Schism in that one Catholike Body of Christ do they seem to many judicious and gracious Christians who think themselves and all others that profess to be Christians sufficiently added and united to the Church as the Primitive Believers being once baptized were without any more a do yea and declaredly bound by their * Acts 2.42 They that gladly received the word were baptized and the same day there were added to the Church about 3000. souls Baptism and Profession to all Christian conversation charitable communion and holy walking by these Publick Bonds and Sacraments of Religion which they owned and of which they were publickly partakers and professors So that not onely in these but in many other things we see the remedies which some men apply to former seeming distempers do to many men seem worse than the diseases ever were The little finger of grievances scruples
Ministerial Power and Authority have digged to themselves Jere. 2.13 empty broken cisterns of novel and divided ways which can hardly hold any water Jude 12. but like wandring clouds without water affecting Supremacy or Parity or Popularity in Church power they have almost brought it to a nullity through the incroaching and over-bearing of Blebeian Insolence who finding Ministers thus divided among themselves and scrambling for Church power in common without any order or distinction either of Age or gifts and parts the common people being the most begin to conceit and challenge to themselves first a share next the supremacy and original of all Church power as if in the illiterate heads illiberal hearts and mechanick hands of the common sort of Christians and without reproach the most part of them and the forwardest of them against the Function of the Ministry have been and ever will be of no higher rank breeding or capacity Jesus Christ had placed the Keyes of Heaven the power eminent and paramount of all Church authority and holy administrations which Christ eminently and his Apostles ministerially had and exercised afterward committing them to able and faithful men such as doubtless were many degrees raised above the vulgar and distinguished in gifts and power Ministerial both ordinary and extraordinary Thus from the head and shoulders and arms Jesus Christ the Apostles the succeeding Bishops and Presbyters which were of Gold and Silver Church power is by some forced to descend to the belly thighs and feet of the people which are part of Iron Dan. 2.32 and part of miry-clay Most of whom so much stickling to be controlers of Christs houshold the Church are not in any discreet and sober mans judgement fit to be stewards or scarce in any degree of ingenuous service in a well ordered family They may make good Gibeonites for the house of God but very ill Levites or Priests Thus I have shewed how the sparks of many Ministers passionate opinions and violent practises flying up and down in their many disorderly breathings and extravagant Motions both in Church and State they at last lighting upon the thatched houses the combustible stuff of common peoples mindes and maners have set their own houses on fire to the deformity discontent and danger of all that dare own themselves and their holy Function as delivered to them from a better and diviner hand And indeed it is of the Lords mercies that we have not been ere this utterly consumed both root and branch for our follies and strange fires by the malice cruelty and despight of those to whose rage as to the Seas the Lord hath hitherto set bounds who are our enemies not for our sins and failings but for the reformed truths and Gospels sake which we preach and profess Amidst the sequestrings plunderings silencings wastings affronts calumnies indignities and discouragements cast upon or threatned by some against those of the Ministry above any other calling as if the Crosses taken down from Steeples and Churches were to be laid on the necks and shoulders of Ministers It is a wonder that any remnant of godly able and true Ministers hath hitherto escaped through the indulgence of God and the favor or moderation of some in power who know not it seems how to reprobate all those as Antichristian by whose Ministry they may hope themselves and others either are or may be brought to the saving faith of Jesus Christ and to the hope of Gods elect Exod. 2.8 Nor can they yet be perswaded to act as Pharaohs that knew not Joseph So that we cannot but wonder with thankfulness to God and to those who now exercise civil power among us that the Reformed Ministers and Ministry in this Church have not been made like Sodom and Gomorrah when we consider how many showres of fiery darts from violent and cruel men like thick clouds pregnant with thunders and lightnings hang over our heads J●lian took away from the Clergy all immunities honors and provisions of corn formerly by Emperors given to them he abrogated all Laws in favor of them Sozonen l. 5. c. 5. Who like Julian the Apostate are impatient of nothing so much as this That their should be any true Ministers or Ministry in due order holy Authority Evangelical succession and setled maintenance continued in this or any other Reformed Church Who seeking to joyn the Lyons skin to the Fox's would fain leven Military spirits against the Ministry that so the Soldiery might use or rather abuse their Helmets as Bushels * Matth. 5.15 under which they may put the Candles of the Ministry thereby to overwhelm and extinguish those lamps of true Religion pretending that some Troopers flaming swords as the guard of Cherubims will be more useful to keep the way of the tree of life than all those burning and shining lights of the true Ministers who are rightly called and ordained in the Church whose learned labors and patient sufferings in all ages from the Apostles times have undoubtedly planted watered propagated and under God preserved the true Christian Religion either from Heathenish ignorance Idolatry Atheism Prophaneness and Persecution on the one side or from Antichristian Errors Superstitions Corruptions and Confusions on the other 16. Politick and Atheistical Engines used by some against the Ministry Yet are there now not onely secret underminings but open engines used by which some men endeavor utterly to overthrow these great boundaries firm supports and divine constitutions of Christian Religion the Authority Office Power and Succession of the true Ministers and Ministry of the Gospel Which plots and practises can be nothing else but the devils high-way either to utter Atheism Irreligion and Prophaneness or to the old grosser Popery Error and Superstition or at best to those detestable and damnable formalities in matters of Religion which our late Seraphick Sadduces or Matchiavellian Christians have learned and confidently profess Some of whom like Jezebel Rev. 2.20 that made her self a Prophetess or like the old * Irenaeus l. 1. c. 35. Carpecratis Gnosticorum dectrina per fidem operationem salvari homines reliqua indifferentia secundum opinionem hominum bona aut mala vocari cum nihil natura malum fit Gnosticks Montanists Moniehes Carpocratians Circumsellians Valentinians and the like rabble of wretches have their wilde speculations beyond what is written in the holy Scriptures or ever believed and practised in the Churches of Christ who teach men to think say and write That God Christ Jesus the holy Spirit good Angels and Devils the Scriptures Law and Gospel Ministry and Sacraments the Souls immortality and eternity the Resurrection and Judgement to come all Virtue and Vice Good and Evil Heaven and Hell all are but meer fanciful forms of words fabulous imaginations feigned dreams empty names being nothing without us or above us That all this which men call Religion is nothing else but the issues of humane inventions which by the
edification and well-governing of the Church 1 Cor. 14.40 Wherein it had as all particular National Churches have an allowance from God both in Scripture and in Reason 27. Things of Religion ought first and most to be considered by Christian Rulers But as if nothing had been reformed and setled with any wisdom judgement piety or conscience in this Church nor hitherto so carried on by any of the true and ordained Ministers of it infinite calumnies injuries and indignities are daily cast upon the whole Church and the best Ministers of it The cry whereof no doubt as it hath filled the Land so it hath reached up to Heaven and is come up to the ears of the most high God And therefore I hope it will not seem rude unseasonable or importune to any excellent persons of what piety or power soever if it now presseth into their presence who ought to remember that they are but as Bees in the same Hive as Ants on the same Mole-hill and as Worms in the same clods of Earth with other poor inferior Christians whom they have far surmounted in civil and secular respects The swarms and crowds of worldly counsels and designs we hope have not as they ought not overlaid or smothered all thoughts care and conscience of preserving restoring and establishing truth good order and peace in matters of Religion Which are never by those publick persons who pretend to any thing of true Christianity to be so far despised and neglected that those above all other matters of publick concernment should be left like scattered sheaves to the wastings and tramplings upon by the feet of the Beasts of the people Meritò à Deo negliguntur quires Dei secularibus post ponunt negotiis Cypr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Primum quod sanctum Plat. Matth. 6.31 Hag. 1.4 Is it time for you to dwell in your ceiled houses and this house lie waste V. 5. Now therefore saith the Lord of hosts consider your ways 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arat. Phainom ungathered and unbound by any civil sanction and power agreeable to holy order divine method Christian charity and prudence Possibly it had fared better with all estates in this Church and State if they had learned and followed that divine direction and grand principle in Christian politicks First seek the Kingdom of Heaven and the righteousness thereof and all these things shall be added to you The neglect of Gods house the Church and its beauty holy order and ministry hath been a great cause of overthrowing so many seiled houses which were covered with Cedar and decked with Vermilion and Gold Certainly no men employed in publick power or counsel have any business of so great concernment or of so urging and crying necessity as this The preservation of the true Evangelical Ministry in its due power and authority Upon which without any dispute among sober and truly-wise men the very life being weight honor and succession of our Religion doth depend both as Christian and as reformed For it is not to be expected that the ignorant prating and confident boasting of any other voluntiers will ever soberly adorn or solidly maintain our Religion which hath so many very eloquent learned and subtile enemies besides the rude and profaner rabble besieging it both learned and unlearned oppose true Religion as the right and left-hand of the Devil the one out of ignorance the other out of crookedness the one as dark the other as depraved the one cannot endure its light nor the other its straitness Against neither of them can these afford help Anserum clangere crepituque alarum excitus Manlius capitolium propugnat Gallos deturbat c. Livi. Dec. 1. l. 5. any more than the confused cackling of a company of Geese could have defended the Roman Capitol Which noise is indeed but an alarm to sober and good Protestants intimating the approach or assault of enemies and should excite the vigilancy and valor of all worthy Magistrates conscientious Soldiers and wise Christians of this Reformed Church to resist the invading danger as by other fit means so chiefly by establishing and incouraging a succession of learned godly and faithful Ministers Nor in any reason of State or of Conscience should those who exercise Magistratick power in this Church and State so far neglect him who is Higher then the highest * Eccles 5.8 He that is higher than the highest regardeth and there be higher than they John 19.11 Thou couldst have no power except it were given thee from above Christ to Pilat 1 Cor. 12.1 1 Pet. 4.10 Stewards of the manifold grace of God Luke 1.16 by whom all power is dispenced or so far gratifie the irreligious rudeness the boisterous ignorance and violent profaneness of any who are but Gods executioners the instruments of his wrath and ministers of his vengeance as for their sakes and at their importunity to despise and oppress those who are by Christ and his Church appointed to be Ministers of Gods grace and conveyers of his mercy to men The meanest of whom that do indeed come in his name the proudest mortal may not safely injure or despise because not without sin and reproach to Christ and God himself For he that heareth you heareth me and he that despiseth you despiseth me and him that sent me is signally and distinctly spoken in favor to true Ministers and for terror to those that are prone to offer insolency to their worldly weakness and meanness Such as despise and oppose the Ministers of Christ are more rebellious than the devils were for of these the seventy returning testifie Luke 10.17 Lord even the devils are subject to us in thy Name If then we have immortal souls which some mockers now question sure they are infinitely to be preferred before our carkases and the instruments which God hath appointed 1 Cor. 1.21 It pleased God by the foolishness of preaching to save them that believe as means to save them are proportionably to be esteemed beyond any that are oft the destroyers at best but the preservers of mens bodies and outward estates Who can dissemble or deny That the banks of equity piety modesty and charity yea of common humanity are already by some men much demolished through the pride presumption insolence scurrility and profaneness of some spirits who are set against the Reformed Religion the Ministers and Ministry of this Church Who sees with honest and impartial eyes and deplores not to behold how the deluge of Ignorance Atheism Profaneness and Sottishness also of damnable Errors devilish Doctrines and Popish Superstitions together with Schismatical fury and turbulent Factions are much prevailed of later years both in Cities and Countreys here in England And this Gaudet in malis nostris diabolus latatur in miseriis dilatatur augustiis delectatur angoribus triumphat ruinis Bern. since men of Antiministerial tempers have studied to act the Devils Comedy and this Churches Tragedy endeavoring to render not onely
flourishing Churches Whether I say these should continue in their place and power wherein God hath set them and out pious Predecessors have maintained them in this Church and Nation or these yesterday-novelties the politick whimseys and Jesuitick inventions of some heady but heartless-men should usurp and prevail in this Church after sixteen hundred years prescription against them and which are already found to have in them besides their novelty such emptiness flatness vanity disorder deformity and unproportionableness to the great end of right ordering Christian societies of saving of souls by edifying them in truth and love Eph. 4.10 11 12 13. that they have been already productive of such dreadful effects both in opinions and practises Mirabutur ingemuit ●●h● se tam citò fieri Arianum Jeròn cont Lucif John 14.16 The Comforter even the Spirit of Truth he shall ab●de with you for ever that they make the Protestant and Reformed Churches stand amased to see any of their kinde bring forth such Monsters of Religion as seem rather the fruit of some Incubus some soul and filthy spirits deluding and oppressing this Reformed Church than of that blessed and promised Spirit whose power whose rule whose servants have always been the most exactly and constantly holy ●ust and pure For any true Christians then to allow and foster such prodigies of Protestant Religion as some are bringing forth seems no less preposterous than if men should resolve to put out their eyes and to walk both blindfold and backwards or to renverse the body by setting the feet above the head Indeed it is putting the Reformed Religion to the Strapado and crucifying Christ again as they did Saint Peter after a new posture with his head downwards As if in kindness to any men they should take away their souls and make them move like Puppets by some little springs wyars and gimmers or by the Sorcery of some Demoniack possession For want of the favor of such a publick tryal and vindication of the Ministry 31. Therefore this Apology endeavors the Ministers defence Gen. 41.14 Zach. 3.4 I have adventured to present to the view of all Excellent Christians in this Church this Apology By which I have endeavored to take off from the Josephs and Josedecks of this Church those prisons and filthy garments wherewith some men have sought to deform them and to wash off from their grave countenances and angelike aspects the chiefest of those scandals and aspersions under which for want of solid reasons or just imputations against their persons and calling by some mens unwashen hands and foul mouths whose restless spirits cast out nothing but dirt and mire against them they are now so much disfigured to the world Isai 57. The wicked is as a troubled sea when it cannot rest whose waters cast up mire and dirt Tertul. Apolog. 2 Cor. 10.10 His bodily presence is weak and his speech contemptible so the false apostles the ministers of Satan 2 Cor. 11.13 The deceitful workers reproached St. Paul behinde his back That so odious disguises as of old to the Christians may render them less regarded and more abhorred by vulgar people This art of evil tongues and pens serving to colour excuse or justifie the injustice cruelty barbarity unthankfulness and irreligion of those who seek first to bait them in the Theatre by all publick disgracings and then to dispatch them Veri criminis defectus falsis supplet calumniis factis innocentes verbis deturpat matitia Sulpit. Docratistarum antesignanti B. Augustinum seductorem ani marum deceptorem clamitabant ut lupum occidendum tale facinus perpetra●i remistionem peccatorum obventurum Possid vit August For against these Beasts as Saint Paul sometime at Ephesus whom no reason learning gravity merit parts graces or age doth tame or mitigate the true Ministers of the Gospel even in this Reformed Church of England have now to contend for their Calling Liberties and Livelihood yea for their lives too if the Lord by the favor and justice of those that have wisdom courage and piety answerable to their places and power do not rescue and protect them 32. What Ministers I plead for 2 Cor. 2.17 Not as many which corrupt the Word of God 2 Cor. 11.13 Tit. 3.10 Nihil deformius est sacerdote claudicante qui non aequis rectis pedibus incedit in viis Domini Greg. Plus destruit s●nistra pravae vi●ae quàm astruit dextra sanae doctrinae Bern. Non confundant opera tua sermonem tuum Proditores su● non praedicatores Christi quibus factis deficientibus vi●a crubescit Jeron ad Nepot Nisi prae●●es quod praedicas mendacium non Evangelium videbitur Lact. Inst lib. 3. cap. 16. Exemplum operis est sermo vivus efficatissimus Bern. U● sumenti cibum non digerenti perniciosum est ita docenti non facienti peccatum est Id. Animata virtus est quae factis honestatur Cadaverosa qua verbis tantum macrescit Leo. Mysterium Theologiae non ut olim Philosophiae barba tuntum pallio celebratur Sed doctrinae sanitate vitae sanctitate Lact. If in any thing as weak and sinful men any of the true Ministers of this Church are indeed liable to just reproaches either of ignorance or idleness factiousness sedition any immorality or scandalous living and what Church of Christ can hope to be absolutely clear when even in Christs family and the Apostles times there was dross and chaff in the floor by Judas and Demas Simon Magus false Apostles deceitful workers Ministers of Satan c I am so far from excusing or pleading for them as to their personal errors and disorders that I should be a most severe advocate against them if after two or three admonitions they should be found incorrigible And this upon the same ground on which now I write this Apology namely in behalf of the honor of the Gospel the dignity of the true Ministry and the glory of the most sacred name of the Christians God and Saviour which idle evil unable and unfaithful Bishops and Ministers beyond all men cause to be blasphemed when they pull down more with the left hand of profaneness than they build with the right hand of their preaching betraying Christ with their kisses and smiting the Christian Reformed Religion under the fift rib when they seem with great respect to salute and embrace it Confuting what they say by what they do and hardning mens hearts to an unbelief of that doctrine which they contradict by the Solecism of their lives and maners either rowling great stones upon the mouth of the Fountain or poysoning the emanations of living waters or perforating the mindes and consciences of their hearers to such liberties and hypocrisies that they retain no more of true Religion and serious holiness than sieves can do of water As Salvian lib. 4. Facta verba sivi occinant Ambr. de Bo. m. Verba
Word however we cannot by bare humane reason comprehend or demonstrate them oftentimes praying to God as all sufficient omniscient omnipresent and omnipotent supplicating for that from his grace power and bounty which we have not deserve not nor can attain otherways in this lapsed corrupted and cursed estate of our nature Eph. 2.5 By g ace ye are saved Which owes all its reparations onely to the free grace of God manifesting himself in his works and words also in those secret inward operations of the Spirit upon the conscience and whole soul by illuminations Blanda violentia victrix delectatio Aug. restraints terrors convictions conversions sweet yet powerful attractions victorious yet delectable prevailings agreeable to the nature of the soul and the liberty of the will which then recovers its true liberty Quò strictius ad Deum ligamur eo perfectius liberamur à peccatorum pondere pravitatum vinculis nec reatu nec terrore nec infirmitate amplius detinemur aut opprimimur August Non dii facti sumus sed divini non in Dei essentiam transmutamur sed in sanctam hoc est divinam naturam reparamur quantum satanae lapsi tantum Deo reparati confirmamur Prosp when by the cords of Gods love its unwillingness is bound up and its chains of violent lusts are taken off Whence such great impressions and real changes are made upon every rational faculty in the soul as those from darkness to light from captivity to freedom from death to life according to the several representations of Gods excellencies in nature in morals and in mysteries wherein the exceeding great riches of his free-grace and love to us in Christ Ephes 1.9 2.7 hath the most softning melting and transforming influence which fully received upon the soul the whole-man in minde and spirit in fancy understanding judgement memory will appetite affections passions and conscience becomes partaker through grace of a divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 compared to what he was and becomes a * 2 Cor. 5.17 new creature not as to its essence but as to all ends principles motions and actions which are begun and continued designed and ended in holiness that is in humble and unfeigned regards to the glory of God and exact purposes of conformity to the will of God in his written Word New creatures by a newness of grace in which we remain what we were Men but are made what we were not Saints 3. Scripture the only rule of true Religion 1 Tim. 3.15 Heb. 4.12 Acts 7.38 Rom. 3.2 To which Word of God in the Scriptures we being guided and directed by the constant and most credible testimony of the Church of Christ that pillar and ground of Truth so as to receive and regard them They at length by Gods grace on the heart demonstrate themselves by their native and divine light to be the very Word of God those lively oracles which set forth most divine precepts paterns prophecies histories and mysteries proffers also and promises of such good things as the soul would most desire most wants and onely can truly delight in living and dying and to eternity Religion consists in no fond fancies Beyond * Hoc prius credimus non esse ultra Scripturas quod credere debeamus nobis curiositate non opus est post Christum nec inquisitione post Evangelium Tertul. de praes ad Hae. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Niss 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Nos tantum Scripturas sacras habemus plenas inviolatas integras eas vel in purissimo fonte vel in pura translatione bibimus Sal. de Gub. l. 5. Tantummodo sacris Scripturis canonicis hanc ingenuam debeo servitutem quà eas solas ita sequar ut conscriptores earum nihil omnino in eis e●rasse nihil fallaciter posuissè non dubitem August ep 19 ad Jeron Si canonicarum scripturarum authoritate quidquam firmatur sine ulla dubitatione credendum est Aliis verò testibus tibi credere vel non credere liceat August ep cap. 12. these Scriptures which we justly call The Word of God understood in their true sense and meaning we do not own any thing for a ground rule or duty in Religion N●r are we at all moved by those bold triflings and endless janglings about Religion Grace Spirit and Inspirations which weak and vain men looking to their own foolish fancies and not to the divine Oracles do scatter too and fro as chaff to blinde the eyes of simple and credulous people which would make Religion a matter of novelty and curiosity of cavilling meerly and contending of censuring and condemning others of self-confidence and intollerable boastings of sequaciousness and feminine softness of custom onely and paternal example or of ease and idleness where out of a lazy temper neglecting all ordinary means Ministry and duties some men expect by special inspirations and dictates to have their defect of pains and industry supplied Or else they place their Religion in the adhering to some party and faction in popular and specious insinuations and pretensions or in admiration of mens persons and gifts or in the prevailencies of power and worldly successes or in unjust gain and sacrilegious thrift or in great zealotries for some new form and way of constituting disciplining and governing Churches or in boldness to affirm to deny and to do any thing or in meer verbal assurances and loose confidences of being elected and predestinated to happiness of being called to be Saints and Preachers and Prophets in a new and extraordinary way to advance such opinions and practises as no holy men of old ever knew acted or owned for Religious or lastly in railing upon despising and seeking to destroy all those that approve not or follow not those self-conceited confidences and violent extravagancies which some men affect in their rude and unwarrantable undertakings Such were the fanatick mad and at last sad Religion of those Circumcellions of old and those Anabaptists and other later Sects in Germany * Sleidan Com. l. 10. ad an 1535. who wanted nothing but constant successes and continued power to have made all men as wilde and wicked as themselves or else to have destroyed them Alas who sees not how far different and much easier to sinful flesh and blood to vain ambition and proud hypocrisies these pretty soft fallacies these froths and fumes those great swelling words 2 Pet. 2.18 and titles of vanity That God is their Father that they are Saints and spiritual inspired Prophets sent of God to call the World to repentance to reign with Christ Those rotten sensualities of Religion as some blasphemously call it those libidinous excrescencies those lying prophecies c. How much easier I say these are than those humble sober exact and constant tyes of Conscience and duties of true Religion by which holy men and women in all ages have given all diligence to make their
yet punctually been fulfilled chiefly in the coming of the Messias the sum center and consummation of all prophecies and promises which setting forth the nature love life and death of Jesus Christ were all most exactly accomplished in him and by him on whom were those notable signatures and characters of the divine wisdom and power John 1.14 that his glory appeared to men as the glory of the onely begotten Son of God full of grace and truth The freeness and fulness of this Evangelical grace and truth by Jesus Christ the faithful Soul further discerns in the sacred emblems and seals of the holy Sacraments by which the divine goodness is represented and conveyed to us under the notions and efficacy of those things which are most necessary to our lives either for Being or Ornament to nourish us to cleanse us and to chear us Moreover the pious Soul sees God in the exemplary patience of the holy Martyrs in the miraculous constancy of the heroick Confessors in the humility of true Penitents in the purity and amendment of real Converts in the contentedness of true Believers in the mertifulness and charity of true Christians in the mortifyings and self-denyings as to this world of all true Saints which are followers of Christ and lastly in that holy ordination and succession of the Evangelical Ministry which as Christ instituted for the Churches good so he hath through all the vicissitudes of times amidst all oppositions preserved it to these days and by it the knowledge of God and the faith of Christ in the World The devout Soul still guided and going on by the light of the Ministry discerns something of God which is yet more retired secret and ineffable in the enlightnings softnings serenities enlargements calmings and comforts which are made by a divine power and supernatural influence upon it self where it beholds the brightest glimpses of divine glory through the face of Jesus Christ and by the efficacies of his most sweet and holy Spirit who is both God and man subject to our infirmities sensible of them and victorious over them Him the Soul answerably loves as man with a love of union and complacency as God with the love of admiration and extasie as both God and man with a love of adherence and satisfaction Heb. 7.25 As one that hath undertaken and is able to save it to the uttermost reconciling it with preparing it for and uniting it to the supreme Good God All these excellencies of Christ it sees diffused and derived to it by convenient means instituted and continued in the Church which as pipes laid into the Oceans unexhaustible fulness draw from it not to what measure it can give but to what we want and can receive At length this devout Soul by this daily confluence of many heavenly Meditations holy Motions and happy Experiments flowing like lesser rivolets from all parts of the Creation from Scripture and from its own with others experiences to this stream of the knowledge of God It findes it self by degrees advanced like Ezekiels Ezek. 47. waters from vulgar and shallow conceptions and answerable affections to mighty and profound contemplations which gathering strength by their daily increasings like an imperious and irresistible torrent carry away the devout Soul in its holy propensities and impetuous fervencies toward God Impatient of any stop or hinderance till at last it comes as all Rivers into the Ocean to be wholly resigned and happily resolved into its Alpha and Omega its principle and perfection its fountain and its fulness God So then when the Soul in ways of true Religion comes to know and love and serve God it is not conversant in vagrant fancies in uncertain speculations in in-significant notions but it so far really enjoys him as it loves him and loves him as it sees him and sees him as it seriously and deliberately observes him there being nothing of true Religion in volatile spirits and transient glances which it doth most evidently though not perfectly darkly yet truly in those glasses of the Creatures in the Scriptures 1 Cor. 13.12 and in its own Conscience in all ways of Goodness Truth and Holiness in lights Natural Moral and Evangelical by all which the Soul as the Eye sees somewhat of the divine glory of that invisible Sun in the descents scatterings and aptitudes of its beams whose infinite and intire brightness it cannot without injury to it self fully and immediately behold Exod. 33.20 So that herein we see true and solid Religion both by its light and holiness its truth and practise abundantly discovers the fancifulness levity pride vanity fondness and futility of all those giddy opinions and pretensions by which some men seek to amuse the world and to abuse honest hearts And also it shews its own real worth beauty dignity fulness usefulness wisdom and power by all which it fits and fills the Souls various faculties and vast capacity And in so doing it gives the devout Soul the greatest evidences and surest demonstrations of its own immortality Malunt impii extingui quàm ad supplicia reparari Mi. Fael Souls immortality discovered in true Religion beyond what any arguments drawn from ordinary reason and philosophy can do All which the Atheistical impudence of some men easily e●ude having no experimental knowledge of God and living without God in the world they are content to imagine an utter extinction of their souls Whereas the sanctified Soul concludes and glories in its immortality which it endeavors to improve to a blessed eternity when it considers seriously and alone whence can those high and holy enlargements desires and designs arise so far above and beyond all worldly objects and enjoyments whence that unsatisfiedness which carries the soul of man with ambitious impatiencies to this height of coveting after a blessed eternity Rom. 2.7 and the supreme Good God blessed for ever Whence this magnetick tendency and divine traction of love to God and to his infinite goodness but onely from the Father of our spirits and Fountain of our souls God And why all these meditations desires and motions planted in us by so good and wise a Creator if never to be enjoyed by us in those satisfactions which onely can flow from some divine and perfective object Sure it is all one to omnipotent goodness to fill us with the perfect good desired as to endue us with the desires of that good which are but our torments and imperfections if never to be in completion Our very desires of Heaven would else be our Hell and our longings after happiness our misery Nor is it agreeable to the methods of divine wisdom and goodness to plant frustaneous and vain desires or Tantalising tendencies in mans nature which he hath done in no other Creature who attain whatever they naturally covet or have innate propensities to The same divine power having prepared the object hath also implanted the desire This unproportionableness of the Creators dealing with
man is less to be imagined when we consider in the sacred story That man had most of divine counsel and deliberation in his Creation Gen. 1.26 not as needful to God who can work by omniscient and omnipotent power in an instant but implying to us those most exact and accurate proportions observed by the great and all-wise Creator in his formation of man All other Creatures rising up as bubbles on water so soon as the formative Word of God in its several commands fell like distinct drops from Heaven on the face of the great deep the Chaos or Abyss But man as a signet or seal was graven by a special hand and deliberate method of God with the marks and characters of his own holy image in spirituality wisdom righteousness purity liberty eternity and a proportionate capacity to enjoy whatever felicity he can understand and desire 5. Mans improvement That if we raise man to the highest glory and perfection which he covets and is capable of in this world of vanity and mortality we shall see something in him of a little god like the figure of a great monarch expressed in a small model or signet For bring him from the sords of his nativity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. from his infant infirmities from his childish simplicities from his youthful vanities redeem him by the politure of good education from his rustick ignorance his clownish confidences his brutish dulness Stolida ferocia Tac. his country solitude his earthy ploddings his beggarly ind●gences or covetous necessities rack him off further and refine him from the lees of sensual and inordinate lusts from swelling and surly pride from base and mean designs 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. de Cupiditat from immoderate affections violent passions unreasonable impulses and depraved temptations from within or without Then furnish him with health procerity and beauty fortifie him with competent strength both single and social endue him with all wisdom both divine and humane which the minde of man is capable of compass him with all fulness and plenty invest him with that publick honor which as beams of the Sun concentred in a Burning-glass arising from the consent of many men to unite the honor of their protection and subjection in one man makes up the lustre of a majesty something more than earthly and humane coming neerest to the resemblance of what is divine and heavenly Adde to these endowments of power opportunity and place to do good those real and useful graces those charitable and communicative virtues which enlarge the nobler soul to a love of the publick good and a zeal for the common welfare of mankinde in works of humanity gentleness pity patience fortitude justice mercy benignity and munificence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Alex. è Menandro How goodly a creature is a man while he continues a man Exod. 22.28 Psal 82.6 John 10.34 Magistrates are called gods Paternum est docendi munus Psal 34.11 Jer. 9.34 Beatitudo est interminabilis vitae perfecta possessio Boet. What can more lively express to us a terrene visible Deity whom we may without Idolatry own and reverence so far as without blasphemy we may call such a man a God while he wisely teacheth and instructeth others a work worthy of a Parent a Prince a God or he powerfully protects or he bountifully rewards or justly punisheth or mercifully pardoneth or graciously loveth others and rejoyceth in their well-do●ng and happiness without any design or interest of his own Yea what do we ordinarily wish and expect or fancy more from God than all these excellencies of which we see there are some sparks and beams even now in mans nature sublimated to infinite perfections and extended to us with eternal durations is not this that estate of full enjoyment which we call Heaven Wherein we hope never to want those divine and immediate communicatings with the all-sufficient bounty and unenvious benignity of God is as well able so no less well pleased to impart to the soul than its necessities do require and its desires ambitiously and unsatiably covet to be supplied by them Not one●y in order to this natural and politick Being which as men we have with men for a moment which is daily pressed upon with the fatal and inevitable necessity of dying which is a ceasing to enjoy God by the mediation of the Creatures in this visible world but also in reference to that rational religious spiritual gracious perfect and unchangeable Being whereto we naturally aspire for who would not be ever happy by enjoying himself in the wisdom strength beauty fulness love and sweetness flowing for ever from the excellencies of the Creator The fruition of whom is onely able to exclude a●l defects and fears to satisfie all desires to reward all duties to requite all sufferings to compleat all happiness to crown and perfect all true Religion which in Heaven shall be no other than what we desire it to be here on Earth that is a right knowledge and a willing performance of that duty which the reasonable creature Man ows for ever to God First as his Creator Conservator and Redeemer by Jesus Christ. 6. True Religion internal instates the Soul in Christ and in the true Church 1 Cor. 2.10 11. John 15.5 He that abideth in me and I in him c. 2 Tim. 2.19 The Lord knoweth them that are his Extra ecclesiam non est salus This then we look upon as the Religious frame and temper of a reasonable Soul in its internal dispositions and private devotions toward God it self and others By which it is daily preparing for a glorious and blessed immortality of which holy frame it self onely can be conscious with God and the greatest evidence is That sincerity of heart which hath no other rule but Gods Word no other end but Gods glory and no other comfort but in the constancy of this disposition which is the fruit of Gods holy Spirit in it Certainly such a Soul cannot but be in and of the true and to man invisible Church of God so far as it hath a mystical spiritual and invisible life which consists in the union to Christ as the head by faith love and all other obediential graces of his Spirit which are common to every true believer Out of this Church its most true There is no revealed salvation possibly to be had for any that live to be masters of their own reason will and actions Yea further such a religious soul hath a capacity of and right unto that external visible politick and social communion with the Church of Christ where ever Christians enjoy outward fellowship with one another in publick profession Which communion however such a soul solitary it may be and sequestred from all Christian company may not actually enjoy being forcibly denied that happiness of which many do wilfully and peevishly deprive themselves by proud or peevish and uncharitable separations through
banishment prison captivity sickness c. Yet that Christian belief love and charity which such an one bears to Christ and to the Catholike Church of Christ scattered in many places and different in many ceremonial rites and observations These I say do infallibly invest this solitary Christian in communion and holy fellowship with the whole Church of Christ in all the World as brethren and sisters are related as near kinred when they are never so far a sunder in place which owns the same God believes the same common salvation by the same Lord Jesus useth the same seals of the blessed Sacraments Ephes 4.5 Jude 2. professeth the same ground of faith and rule of holiness the written Word of God and bears the like gracious and charitable temper to others as sanctified by same Spirit of Christ which really unites every charitable and true believer to Christ and so to every M●mber of true Church however it may want opportunities to express this communion in actual and visible conversation either civil or sacred by enjoying that society as men or that ordinary ministry as Christians which is by Christ appointed in the Church as well for its outward profession distinction and mutual assistance as for its inward comfort and communion with himself The willing neglect of all such extern communion and the causeless separation from all Church-fellowship in Word Sacraments Prayer Order and charitable Offices must needs be inconsistent with any comfort because against charity and so far against true Religion and the hopes of salvation For those inward graces wherein the life and soul of Religion do consist are not ordinarily attained or maintained but by those outward means and ministrations which the wisdom of God in Christ hath appointed for the Churches social good and edification together In the right enjoyment of which consists that extern and joynt celebration or profession of Christian Religion which gives Being name and distinction to that society which we call The Church of Christ on Earth And this indeed is that Church properly which is called out of the World which as men we may discern and of which both in elder and later times so many disputes have been raised which we may describe to be An holy company or fraternity of Christians who being called by the Ministry of the Gospel to the knowledge of God in Christ do publickly profess in all holy ways and orderly institutions that inward sense of duty and devotion which they ow to God by believing and obeying his Word Also that charity which they ow to all men especially to those that profess to be Christs Disciples and hold communion with his Body the Catholike Church Herein I conceive That the social outward profession of Religion 7. Of the Church as a visible society of Professors believing in Christ. Ea est Catholica ecclesia quae unicam candem semper ubique fidem in Christo veram Scripturis sundatam profitetur V●n Lyrin Eph. 2.9 As Fellow-Citizens of the Saints and of the houshold of God Ye are built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ being the chief corner stone c. as it is held forth in the Word of God in its Truths Seals Duties and Ministry makes a true Church among men And the true Church as Catholike yea any part or branch of this true Catholike Church whose Head Foundation Rites Seals Duties and Ministry are for the main of the same kinde in all times and places cannot but make a right profession of true Religion as to the main essence and fundamentals which consists in truth holiness and charity However there may be many variations differences and deformities in superstructures both of opinion and practise For however particular Churches which have their limits of time and place and persons circumstances which necessarily circumscribe all things in this world are still as distinct arms and branches of a great Tree issuing from one and the same root Jesus Christ and have the same sap of truth and life conveyed in some measure to them 1 Cor. 3.12 If any man build upon this foundation gold c. st●bble c. V. 15. If his work be burnt he shall suffer loss but he himself shall be saved Eph. 4.4 There is one Body and one Spirit one Lord one Faith one Baptism c. V. 16. The whole body is fitly joyned together according to the effectual working in the measure of every part c. U●us Deus unam sidem tradidit unam ecclesiam toto orbe diffudit hanc aspicit hanc diligit hanc d●fendit Quolibet se quisque nomine tegat si huic non societur alienus est si hanc impugnet inimicus est Oros 7. c. 35. Joh. 15.2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit my Father taketh away 2 Pet. 2.1 2 Tim. 2.18 1 Cor. 12.25 That there should be no schism in the body 2 Joh. 9. Whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ hath the Father and the Son by the same way of the right Ministry of the Word Sacraments and Spirit so that in these respects they are all of one and the same Catholike Body communion descent and derivation yet as these have their external distinctions and severings in time place persons and maners or any outward rites of profession and worship so they usually have distinct denominations and are subject to different accidents as well as proportions Some branches of the same Tree may be withering mossy cancred peeled broken and barren yea almost dead yet old and great and true Others may be more flourishing fruitful clean and entire though of a latter shooting for time and of a lesser extension for number and place yet still of the same Tree so far as they have really or onely seemingly and in the judgement of charity communion with relation to and dependance on the Root and bulk being neither quite broken off and dead by Heretical Apostacies denying the Lord that bought them or damnable errors which overthrow the Faith nor yet slivered and rent by Schismatical uncharitableness proud or peevish rents and divisions Which last although they do not wholly kill and c●op off from all communion with the Church of Christ yet they so far weaken and wither Religion in the fruits and comforts of it as each Schism pares off from its sect and faction that Rinde and Bark as it were of Christian love and mutual charity through which chiefly the sap and juyce of true Religion with the graces and comforts of it are happily and most thrivingly conveyed to every living branch of the Catholike Church so as to make it live at least and bring forth some good fruit however it be not so strong fair and ample as others may be As the Church of Sardis which had a * Rev. 3.1 name to live and was dead in some part and proportion
know how to use them unless it be to break their heads with them whom Christ hath set as stewards in his houshold These rustick and rash undertakers to reform and controul all are onely probable to shipwrack themselves and many others and the whole Ship of this Church by driving the skilful Pilots the true Bishops and Ministers from the Helm and putting in their places every bold Boatswain and simple Swobber Yet are the populacy flattered by some to this dangerous insolency and error who putting fire to this thatch instead of the Chimney do but provoke the poor people to their own hurt to forsake their own mercies and to injure both their own and others souls Mean time sober and wise Christians cannot but smile with shame sorrow and indignation to see how some Plebeian Preachers who are new risen as from the slime of the earth in whom no Prometheus hath breathed any spark of heavenly fire of spiritual divine and truly ministerial power to see I say how these Teachers have brought themselves by a voluntary humility to depend on peoples suffrages and charity not onely for maintenance but for their very Ministry being now sunk so low as to flatter their good Masters with this paradox or strange principle That they as the people or body be they never so few and mean have a reciprocal power to beget those who are to be their Spiritual Fathers that by a more than Pythagorean Metemphycosis the Power Spirit and Authority of Jesus Christ who was sent by his Father John 20.21 and so sent his Apostles and they others in the same Spirit to be Fathers Pastors Rulers Stewards c. That at length this Spirit and Authority should transmigrate we know not how nor when into the very mass and bulk of common people if they be but Christians of the lowest form animating them in the whole and in every part or parcel of them with such plenitude of Church power as enables them to be all Kings and Priests Pastors and Teachers Prophets and Apostles if need be and if they list and if they have leisure or if not to act so in their own persons having more profitable employments yet they have virtually and eminently in them as much power as Christ had and used or left to any men whereby to consecrate and ordain true Ministers to try and teach those that are to teach them to rule their Rulers to discipline their Shepherds to govern their Governors to turn not onely Religion out of doors but even all Reason Order and Civility upside down rather than not exercise this imaginary power especially if it serve to secular advantages And all this because they are told they are the Church and so may erect all Church power as in them and from them This fancy is able to make a plain Country-Christian stand on his Tiptoes and to bring all his family to see him and his other-like members making up this glorious Body which he calls his Church that they may be witnesses with how much folly and simplicity and clamor and confidence he with his Neighbors examines approves or reproves refuseth or chooseth and ordains all officers and some new fashioned Minister or Pastor Who poor-man must neither Preach nor Pray not eat nor look otherways than pleaseth these sad and silly yet very supercilious pieces of popular pride and itching arrogancy nor can such an hungry and timorous Pastor ever be setled or safe in this Pastoral Authority 26. Common people not fit to manage Church power in chief unless he have the trick of Faction which is still to ingratiate with the major part of this his flock who will otherways as easily push and beat him out of this fold or break all to pieces as ever they admitted him by a profane easiness and popular insolency But I must with less flattery and more honesty tell this Generation of perverse Usurpers this truth which is not unwelcome to sober spirited Christians That the weight of Christianity doth not at all hang on this popular pin which is no where to be found but in their light heads 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Or. 25. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Clem. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Id. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. and heavy hands neither Reason nor Religion since men were redeemed from the barbarity of Acorns Nakedness and Dens ever thought the plebs or common people ought to be all in all if any thing at all either in conferring or managing either Civil or Church power but least of all that part of Church power which is proper for the making of a Minister in the way of due Ordination of which I shall after give a fuller account For this is that to which they generally have least proportion either of knowledge learning holiness or discretion Besides it would thence follow that so soon as any Sect or Faction of people can get but numbers and courage they may do what they list in this plenitude of power without the leave of Magistrates or Ministers in Church or State These are pestilent principles which are not onely pernicious to the Church but to any civil Societies threatning not our faith onely but our purses and throats Nor did ever any wise men what ever is pretended at any time to amuse the people and to serve an occasion intend or suffer the community or vulgar people with their massie bodies and numerous hands really to attain use or enjoy any such supreme power in civil administrations If once soverain power be gotten though by the means of such credulous assistants yet whatever the populacy may flatter themselves with it never is nor can wisely and happily be managed by them but rather without them above them and many times against them Power precarious that is such as depends upon a popular principle or plebeian account such as sometime was among the Grecian State and Romans is for the most part but an Empire of beggery or flattery or falsity Where at best wise and valiant men may oft be forced to prostrate themse ves to the arbitrement of the vulgar who are injurious esteemers and ungrateful requiters even of the most publick merits But oftentimes the peoples pretended power and interest is made use of in specious terms and cunning agitations onely to serve the turn of turbulent ambitious and factious spirits in Church and State whose envy or ambition easily teacheth the credulous community to esteem the over-meriting of the best men and Magistrate● to be their greatest oppression and most deserving Ostracism banishment or disgrace Per paucorum hominum virtute crevit Imperium Salust Rom. 13.4 The Life of Government and Soul of Dominion is that real power and resolution which is in the hand of one or more wise and potent men who are always intent to deserve well of the people yet always able to curb and repress their insolency and inconstancy Without this
the Law Quicquid deficiunt aliae unica supplet charitatis gratio qua in aeternum non de ficiet Bern. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nis Prius chari quā proximi Min. Fael 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just M. T●ypl o. and all Churches was Scripture Truth the Cement Charity the Beauty Unity and the Strength orderly and social Government O thou fairest of ten thousands Christian Charity which were the wonder of the World in the Primitive times Which didst so spread thy wings over all the Earth like the Spirit of God on the face of the great deep the ocean of mankinde that every man might and every Christian did enjoy the vital heat and diviner influence of thy fosterings on their souls So far that what weaker Christians came short of in believing or failed in understanding or were defective in doing they made up in loving of Christ and for his sake one another Yea what the very enemies and persecutors of Christians wanted of that humanity which is as the morn and dawning of Christian Charity true Christians sought to relieve them by their prayers and to cover their horrid cruelties with their own kindness to them while killed by them and devotions for them while they were dying under them as the b●essed Martyr Stephen did and the Crown of Martyrs Christ Jesus They forgat not to pray for those that persecuted them which made Christians in their furthest dispersions greatest distances and grievousest sufferings still admired by all men though hated by them still endeared well acquainted and united in love to each other before they had seen or were personally known to each other O thou potent flame of celestial fire which the love of Christ Charitas est oleum unde clara virtutū omnium lampas sustentatur Religio sine charitate est lampas sine oleo Bern. ep 42. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Or. 28. So Just Martyr Ep. ad Diog. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Or. 14. stronger than death had kindled in the souls of the first and best Christians No Seas no solitudes no poverty no pains no sufferings no torments no offences no injuries were able to damp or quench thee of old but still thou didst gloe to so fresh an heat that it warmed and melted the hardest Rocks of Heathen persecutors and tormentors Who before they believed the Gospel or love of God in Christ covered to be of that Christian society where they saw men love one another so dearly so purely so constantly as to be ready to die with and for each other Alas now every small drop of fancy every novelty of fashion in Religion every atome of Invention every dust of Opinion every mote of Ceremony every shadow of Reformation every difference of Practice damps rakes up buries puts out thy sacred sparks and embers in Christians hearts yea and kindles those unholy cruel and dreadful fires of contrariety jealousies scorn hatred enmity revenge impatience of union and zeal for separation to so great heights of all-devouring flames that nothing but the flesh of Christians will serve for fuel to maintain them and nothing but the blood of Believers to extinguish them So that no Christians now love further than they conspire and contend to destroy and conquer all but their own party and faction Thus the want of this holy grace of charity wastes us by the fires of unchristian fewds and even presages the approaching of those last dreadful conflagrations which shall consume the world and those eternal flames which shall revenge this sin of sins among Christians the want of charity which sins against the love of God the blood of Christ the Churches peace and our own souls How shall we uncharitable wretches not dread the coming of our Judge or how can we love his appearance in flaming fire who have thus singed and burnt that livery of Christs love wherewith we were clothed which was dipped and died in his own blood that so it might stanch the further effusions of blood among Christians and cover the stayns of that bloud which had been passionatly shed among them How can we hope our souls should be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus when we spend our dayes in damming and destroying each other and scarce suffer any to possess their souls in patience or in any degree of charity amidst the wasts and troubles of this conflicting and tottering Church Which like a great tree whose roots are loosned round and almost cut through stagger too and fro threatning to fall on every side being nothing now but weakness over-laden with weight and labouring with the burthen of it self is ready to destroy both it self and others by the suddenness and violence of its fall O you excellent Christians hasten as Lot should have done out of Sodom to withdraw your selves from the interests designs zeal devotion and Religion of this uncharitable and self destroying world wrap your selves in the mantle of charity peaceableness and patience hasten to hide your selves in the holes of this rock the love of Christ your Redeemer till he come who is at the dore and will not tarry Charitas sanctitatis Custos Chrysol ser 94. O pretious and inestimable grace of Charity the only Jewel of our lives the viaticum for our Deaths the greatest ornament of a Christian profession the sweetness of our bitterness the Antidote of our poysons the Cordiall in our infirmities the comforter under our dejections the supplyer of our defects the joy in our sorrows the witness of our sincerity the Crown of our graces the Seal of our hopes 1 Joh. 3.14 the stay and Pillar of our Souls amidst the tears tossings Dilectio sūmū fidei sacramentum Christiani nomini thesaurus Tertul lib. de Patientia Mat. 5.44 Humanum est amicos Christianum inimicos diligere Hilar. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. de Christian dissid or 14. fears and conflicts of our mortall Pilgrimage In which we then only joy when we either love or are loved by others but then we have most cause of pious joy when being hated and cursed and persecuted by others we can yet love them and pray for them and bless them for Christs sake Thou that madest Martyrs and Confessors and all true Christians more than Conquerors of death and enemies men and Devils O how have we lost thee how have we banished thee how have we not injured thee yea how have we grieved thee more in this that we are loth to find thee But most in this that we seek thee among Heresies Schisms Apostacies seditions furies perjuries tyrannies superstitions sacrileges causeless disputes endless janglings yea cruell murthers of bodies and Anathemaes of souls But the highest indignity and greater than the greatest insolency offerd thee is That we boast and proclaim we have found thee in what we have most lost thee that we have raised thee by what we have ruined thee that we are most Churches when we are least Christians or most
merited of him by suffering on the Cross and enduring the shame for his Churches salvation yet he left not his Disciples comfortless but as he promised sent his Spirit publickly and eminently upon the Twelve principal Apostles Acts 2. John 20.21 whom he had formerly chosen and appointed in his and his Fathers Name to Preach the Gospel to whom he gave the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven as to the Stewards and chief Deputies or Ministers of his houshold in his absence instructing them what to do on what foundation of faith in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All Authority i. e. Legitima potentia Matth. 28.18 19 20. Mark 16.15 to build his Church by what Sacramental seals to confirm believers giving them full power and commission to go into all the world by Teaching and Baptising to make Disciples confirming this power to them by breathing on them and conferring farther Ministerial gifts of the Spirit upon them promising also to be with them to the end of the world which could not be meant of their persons who soon died but of their successors in that Office and Ministry that the same power authority and assistance should be with them in that holy way to which he thus ordeined and sent them by a divine charter and durable commission After all this for further publication of this great Authority and Ministerial power given to the Apostles and their Successors and for the confirmation of it both to their own consciences John 14.17 Acts 2. and to all the world the holy Spirit as was promised came upon them in the shape of fiery cloven tongues filling them with miraculous gifts and all Ministerial power both extraordinary in their persons and ordinary derivable to their Successors such as the wisdom of Christ thought most fit both for the first planting of the Church with miraculous gifts attending the Ministry of the Gospel and the after propagating of it by the same Ministry confirmed by the constancy of the Martyrs and Confessors which were in stead of daily miracles This whole frame polity and divine constitution of the order power and Ministry that should succeed Christ Jesus in his Church was no other than the proper effects of Christs prophetick power and wisdom for the instructing his Church an act or ordinance of his Kingly power for the governing of it and a fruit of his Priestly power and care for a right Liturgy or officiating to be continued in his Church thus furnishing it with an holy Succession of Evangelical Priests and Ministers in his name and authority who might always teach guide and govern also supplicate for consecrate and offer holy things with the faithful and for them namely the sacrifices of prayers thanksgiving and praises especially Heb. 9.14 10.12 that Eucharistical memorial of that one great oblation of himself once made on the Altar of the Cross for the Redemption of the World which is the great accomplishment of the Jewish Prophecies the abolishing of their Types and Ceremonies the main foundation of the Christians Religion and the chief subject of that Evangelical Ministry which Jesus Christ himself hath thus evidently instituted and sealed in his Church For whose sake he hath given those Ministerial gifts with a distinct power and authority making some not all either Apostles or Prophets or Evangelists or Pastors and Teachers Eph. 4.11 12. 1 Cor. 12.4 5 21 28. For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the Body of Christ c. And this by as manifest a distinction both for gifts and place and use as is in the parts of the body between the eyes and the hands the head and the feet Vers 29. So that all are not Apostles nor Prophets nor Teachers that are Believers and Members of the Body of Christ his Church no more than every part is an eye in the natural body however it partake of the same Soul as Believers do of the same Spirit 1 Cor. 12.6 7. yet in different manifestations of which difference of gifts and office those onely are to judge whom the Spirit of Christ hath enabled with gifts and indued successively in the Church with power from Christ to judge of them and accordingly to invest them 1 Cor. 14.32 The spirits of the Prophets are subject to the Prophe●● V. 33. For God is not the Author of confusion c. by solemn and holy ordination into the orderly power of exercising those gifts which they are judged to have received from the Spirit of Christ for the good of the Church both for Instruction and for Government of it Without which divinely-constituted Order and Office of Ministry began in Christ by him derived to the Apostles and by them and their successors constantly and duly observed to these days the Church of Christ had long ere this been a monster made up of confused excrescencies a very heap and huddle of Ignorance Heresies Schisms all maner of erroneous blindness and extravagant madness like those mishapen prodigies which we may often see among those who having cast off the lawful succession the sacred and antient order of the Ministry do in their varieties exceed even the mixtures and productions of Africa After Christs Ascension 5. The Apostles ordain and command other to ordain Ministers we have no less evidence of Scripture for the undoubted practise of the blessed Apostles when they had by a divine lot first filled up that place and part of the Ministry from which Judas had faln Acts 1.25 For having received power Ministerial immediately from Christ they did duly conscientiously orderly and effectually fulfil their own Ministry and also took care to ordain others that might do so too both in their times and after them distributing their own labors into several Countreys and to several sorts of people Gal. 2.7 some to the Circumcision of the Jews others to those of the uncircumcised Gentiles Among whom they exercised their Office and Ministry 1 Co● 5.20 As A●●●●sadors ●o● Christ as though God did be eech you by us we pray y u in Christs stead be ye reconciled to God 1 Cor. 3.9 2 Cor. 11.2 Esth 7.8 Eph. 4.11 Acts 14.23 And when they had ordained them Presbyters in every Church in Lystra Iconium Antioch c. Acts 20.28 Take heed to your selves and to all the flock over which the holy Ghost hath made you Bishops or overseers to feed the Church of God c. Pauls speech to the Presbyters of the Church of Ephesus V. 17. 1 Tim. 3. 5.22 Lay hands i. e. by way of ordination to the Ministry 2 Tim. 2.2 The things thou hast heard of me commit thou the same to faithful men who shall be able to teach others also Tit. 1.5 I left thee in Creet that thou shouldst ordain Elders in every City as I had appointed thee Non tam solicitus de cura Timothei sed propter successores ejus ut
of those strange speculations those unwonted notions those pretty legerdemaines in Religion which some men a● Juglers study more than any solid trade of Piety they are hardly able to know a long time where they are as to true Religion or to find and owne any faire path of holy Truth and Order which might lead them out of that Fooles paradise wherein some men take delight to lose themselves and others 2. False and proud pretentions of the Spirit The ordinary Sophistry and craft when men want solid ground and true Principles of right Reason Order Law and Justice of Scripture Precept and holy examples from Christ or any truly gracious Christians whereby to justifie their opinions or practises their * Transgressor p●aecepti Dominici spurios sibi sociat Spiritus ad aerendo eis unus efficitur Daemon Bern. Ser. Ben. Ab. retreat is as Foxes when eagerly hunted to hide and earth themselves in this The spirit hath taught and dictated these things to them or impulsed and driven them upon such and such ways which are in congruous uncomely unwonted to and inconsistent with either the Catholick Ten t s or Examples generally held forth in the Church of Christ according to the plain sense and tenor of the Scriptures * The Fryers Mendicant p etended they had a fifth Gospell which they called the Aeternum Evangelium this they preached and defended saying the old Gospels must be abolished and theirs received Mat. Paris an 1154. Nauclerus an 1●54 This is done with the same falsity yet gravity and confidence as Mahomet perswaded the credulous Vulgar by the help of Sergius a Monk that his fits of Falling-sickness and the device of his Pigeon coming to his Ear where he had accustomed to feed it were Monitions and Inspirations which he had from God by his Blessed Spirit * Whose hypocriticall sanctity G●ilielmus De Sancto Amore vir doctrina pietate illustris opposed Pope Alex. 4. caused their blasphemous book to be burnt Platina Vit Al. 4. Just as weak and confused Writers of Romances having not well laid the plot and design of their Fancifull story are wont to relieve their over venturous Knights with unexpected enchantments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which salve all inconveniences superate all hyperbolies and transcend all difficulties as well as all rules of Reason or Providence So many men defective in their Intellectuall Morall and gracious Principles of true and sound Religion which all sober Christians own to be derived from and directed only by the holy Scriptures both in Faith and Manners they presently pretend the Spirit to be Patron of their most extravagant fancies and deeds the Deviser of their most incredible opinions the Dictator of their most indemonstrable dreams which no Jew or credulous Greek or Gypsy would ever beleive nor any man who were not willing to depose his reason and to suffer a rash and fancifull credulity to usurp the Throne and Soveraignty of his Soul This in generall I may reply to all those that forsake ordinary Precepts and follow New Revelations or pretend the speciall motions of the Spirit against the constant Rules and Institutions of Christ in the Word and I may tell it upon grounds of far greater certainty both of Reason and Religion than any of them can assure me or any man that they have these speciall impulses and graces of the Spirit beyond others who walk in the ordinary way of means and received methods of Christian Religion 1 Joh. 4.1 First discovery by the Word of God V. 3. First We are forbidden to beleive every Spirit because the Spirit of Antichrist may pretend to the Spirit of Christ we are commanded to try the Spirits whether they be of God or no we are told that every spirit which confesseth not that Christ is come in the flesh is not of God but is of that Spirit of Antichrist which is to come into the world as Christ foretold many should come in his Name and say loe here is Christ and there is Christ But beleive them not Mat. 24.23 What I pray doth more deny the coming of Christ in the flesh that is by a visible way of the Ministry to his Church in his person and in his succession then to say he is gone away again without taking any Order or leaving any Command or Institution for his Worship and Service to be continued in the Church by which his first coming might be made known in Preaching the Gospell and confirmed by the Seals of the Sacraments to his Church To say that Christ is so come now in the Spirit here and there by speciall Inspirations that he never came in that other old way of the outward and Ordained Ministry of Word and Sacraments hath so much of the spirit of Antichrist as it is against the evident testimony of the Word of Christ against the practice and the command of the Apostles and against the Catholick custome of the Church of Christ which hath always thus set forth and witnessed the first coming of Christ and must ever doe so till his coming again Which second coming onely shall put a period to the Word Sacraments and that true Evangelicall Ministry which now is by Christ Ordained in the Church As the first coming of Christ did to the Leviticall Priesthood and Ministry by Sacrifices c. We know That as the Illuminating Spirit of God guideth the humble 2. Joh. 16 13. Ioh. 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy truth thy Word is truth meek and industrious souls into all saving necessary Truths so these Truths are confined to and contained in the compasse of those which are already once revealed to the Church by the Spirit in the Word of God and which are by the Ministry of the Church dayly manifested and in this way are sufficient to make the man of God perfect to salvation 2 Tim. 3.17 Which is that one anointing from Christ and the Father which hath lead the Church into all truth by the sure Word which the Apostles taught and wrote so that no Christians have need that any man by any other spirit or as from this Spirit should teach them more or other as to salvation 1 Joh. 2.27 They that gape to heaven for the Manna of speciall Revelations when they are not in the Wildernesse but in the Canaan of Christs true Church may easily starve themselves or feed on the wind and ashes of fancifull presumptions while they neglect and despise the ordinary provisions God hath made in his Church It is clear that whatsoever is said or done beyond or against this written Word of Christ and surest rule of the Church is to be accounted no other then apocryphal lying vanities and damnable hypocrisies * Hoc prius c●edimus non esse ultra Scripturas quod credere debeamus Nobis curiositate non op●● est post Christum nec inquisitione post Evangelium Tertul. de prae ad Hae. c. 3. No
ostentabat miranda quaedam Magicis arti●us patrabat prunas subinde è manica excutiebat co●am populo Car. Sigon ad an 1057. Avent pag. 455. 470. 2 Pet. 2.21 than to lye against it and blaspheme it or oppose and resist it after some knowledge of the Truth It had been better for such men not to have known the way of Christs Spirit in the Scriptures and the Church It is far more veniall to erre for want of the Spirits guidance and light than to shut our eyes against it and to impute our Errors Dreams and Darknesses to it 'T is better to have the heart wholly barren than to lay our adulterous bastards to the Spirits charge when they indeed are issues of nothing but Pride joined to Ignorance 4. Like pretentions of old confuted by mens practises Nothing indeed is easier and cheaper at the World now goes than for * Portentiloquium haereticorum vain and proud men to pretend to speciall Inspirations and Motions of Gods Spirit on them as many in the old times did who yet were sensuall not having the Spirit * Se spiritales esse asserebant Valentiniani Demiurgum animalem virginales Gnostico●um spiritus gloriabantur Iren. l. 1. 3. So the Gnosticks called themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiritual men as well as knowing men So the Marcionites and Montanists pretended that their Master Montanus knew more than the Apostles had more of the Comforter was the Com●orter it self and told him what Christ said his Disciples could not then bear Joh. 16.12 The like lying fancies had the Valentinians Austin de Haeret. Epiphan l. 4. de Haer. c. 40. and Circumcelliones and Manichees who being idle-handed grew idle-headed too not caring what they said nor what they did for they fathered all on the Spirit So the Cathari and Encratitae calling themselves Chast and Pure and Apostolici Apostolicall and above the Gospels both of old and in * Sermo 66. in C●ntica Cerdom Apelles Marciontae privatas lecturas habuerunt quas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apellant cujusdam Phihamenae puellae prophetissa libium syllogismorum quibus p●obare vult quod omnia quae Moses scripserit● de Deo falsa sunt Tertul. prae ad Hae. ● 44. St. Bernards time time and in later times too both in Germany and other places rising to ostentation of Prophesying speciall Inspirations strange Revelations shews of Miracles and lying Wonders fulfilling and interpreting of Prophecies enthronings of Christ c. by which strong delusions they sought to deceive the very Elect if it had been possible but they could never perswade truly excellent and choise Christians to any belief of their forgegeries and follies since neither the temper of their spirits nor their works nor their words were like the rules marks or fruits Sleid an Com. l. 4. Cainit● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fingebant Epiph. Hae. 38. The Cainites pretended they had a book containing the Raptures of Saint Paul what he then heard c. of that holy and unchangeable Spirit of Jesus Christ set forth in his Word and owned in the Church But rather the effects of that depraved spirit which is most contrary to God and most inconstant in it self which after all its fair glozings and praefacings of Purity Gifts and Inspirations is still but * Borboritae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coenoli Tertul. and Austin call those hereticks the Gnosticks Cathatists and others who called themselves Apostolici Pneumatici Angelici purgatores electi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Longinus Manes the Father of the Maniches called himself an Apostle of Christ the Comforter and Spirit chose twelve Disciples despised water Baptism said the Body was none of Gods work but of some evill Genius and his followers full of impure lusts and errours yet said they were called Maniches from flowing with Manna 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They said the soul was the substance of God to be purified to that end they mixed the Eucharisticall bread with their seed in obscene pollutions and ●apes● ut isto mod● Dei substantia in homine purgetur Aust de Hae. Borborites a swinish and unclean spirit and differs as much from the Purity Truth Beauty and Order of the true Spirit of Christ which shines in the Word as the most noisome Jakes and filthy sink doth from the most sweet and Crystall fountain of everflowing waters True Ministers find it hard having done all 5. True fruits of the Spirit to obtain those competent Ministeriall gifts and graces of the Spirit which are necessary to carry on that great work of their own and others Salvation to any decorum and comfort which these Gloriosoes pretend as if they were bred and born to * Venit vadit prout vult nemo facile scit unde venit aut quo vadat Ber. Brevis mora rata hora mira subtilitate sua vitate divinae suae artis ircessanter actitat in intimo nostri Idem or were suddenly and at once endowed withall few of these ever think they want the Spirit if they have but confidence to undertake any Ministeriall work and publique Office Yea and the best Christians no lesse than the ablest Ministers find it hard in truth to obtain the sanctifying gracious influen●es of Gods Spirit by which with much diligence and prayer they are enabled to private duties nor doe they find it so easie to flesh and bloud to obey those holy directions of the Spirit or in conflicts to take its part against the flesh and to rejoice in the victories and prevalencies of the Spirit Whose publique donations for the common good of Christians edifying them in truth and charity are chiefly manifested not onely by his servants the true Ministers but in the blessing of that very Order Office appointment and function of the Ministry Eph. 4.8 11. both as instituted and a● continued so long time by the wisdome and power of this Spirit of Christ And by this great Gift of gifts as by the Sunne in the Firmament all others are ordinarily conveyed to private Christians which chiefly consist and are manifested in true beleevers not in quick strokes of fancy passionate raptures strange allusions and allegoricall interpretations confused obscurings of Scriptures which some men with Origen make so much of In veritate qua illuminaris in virtute qua immutaris in charitate qua inflammaris serenata conscientia subita insolita mentis latitudin● praesentem spiritum intellige Ber. but in bringing men from this childish futility of Religion to a manly seriousnesse which sets the heart soberly to attend read hear study and meditate on the Word of God to prefer that Jewell before all the hidden treasure of their own or others Fairy fancies to assent to the saving Truths both of Law and Gospell zealously to love them strictly to obey them by hearty repentance for sins against God or man ingnuous confessions of them honest compensations for them
Christ who is already come to judgement with whom his Saints are now risen and dayly rising seeing him not as in a glasse of means darkly but by immediate Visions glorious Manifestations speciall Inspirations plenary Inhabitations thus fitting on Thrones and Reigning with Christ in his Kingdom Whom would not these Trumpets awake and these alarms call forth if we were not forewarned by Christ and if we had not seen such follies formerly acted and manifested to all the Christian world and sufficiently confuted in all ages which never amounted to more than Religious Tragedies G●mi●a deformitas at nocumentum tragicum miserorum religiosa delicta for when the masks of personated Prophets and necess●tous Saints and hungry Enthusiasts and idle Seraphicks were taken off which they put on either by the power or presumptions they had among the Vulgar presently there appeared the horns of the Beast in pride ambition luxury polygamy cruelty Cyp. Ep. 2. Sleidan Com. l. 4. tyranny confusion That those who seemed to have come down from heaven in the shews of the Spirit and pretentions of Sanctity were but Satans lightnings falling down from heaven and his most abominable eructations out of the bottomelesse pit If we other poor Christians who still remain on the other side of this Jordan which those Spiritosoes pretend to have passed if wee who creep on the ground as worms and no men who have dayly cause to abhor our selves in dust and ashes who are forced dayly to strengthen our faith to renew our repentance to poure forth our souls oft in sighs tears prayers with broken hearts and contrite spirits contending with corruptions wresting with temptations having enough to doe to fortifie our selves with the compleat armour of Gods Word in Precepts and Promises and of his Spirit in gracious habits excitations to and assistances in duties 2 Pet. 1.10 Thus giving all diligence to make our calling and election sure not counting our selves to have comprehended but pressing on to the mark of the price of the high calling in Christ Jesus Glorying in nothing but in the crosse of Jesus Christ Phil. 3.14 Gal. 6.14 by which we are crucified to the honours riches policies successes flatteries and glories of this inglorious world yea to the Liberties Religions Devotions Sanctities new Churches new Reformations and new Ministers of this world who forsaking the wayes of Christ and the holy Apostles and the ancient Churches and the true succession of Ministers and all Power have turned grace into wantonnesse liberty into licentiousnesse godlinesse into gain and very much embraced the present world falling down before Mammon and worshipping the false gods of this world If we who when we have suffered much and done something in our endeavours and purposes of holinesse yet find cause to cry out Wretched men that we are who shall deliver us from this body of death Rom. 7.24 if we could indeed believe or find by experience that the exaltations and Raptures of these new pretenders to the Spirit were more comfortable than the bufferings of those good old Christians That their triumphs in the world were beyond the others sufferings from the world that there were more of Christ in their new Crowns of glory which they boast of than in the others Crosses which they patiently bare If we could discern a more self-denying Spirit a more Christ-enjoying Sanctity That they were Saints that is Not crucifiers of the world but crucified to the world If we could see the wounds of Christ in these glorious apparitions these Christ-like phantasms as Antony the Hermite required Non credam esse Christum nisi vulnera videam crucifixi in vita An● when Satan appeared to him like Christ in glory If that Purity Chastity Justice Honesty Contentednesse Patience Charity Meeknesse Humility Peaceablenesse Fidelity Constancy and Orderlinesse shined in them wherein those holy men and women of old the Professors Confessors and Martyrs not getting but loosing Saints imitated the holy Lord Jesus and the most holy God according to the lively characters of true holinesse set down in the Scriptures If we saw such fruits of reall holinesse in their words pens and actions in their Doctrines and duties in their self-denials and Mortifications in their meetings and Fraternities in their Church Orders and Ministrations as might convince us that these pretenders to the Spirit and despisers of the Ministers have indeed more o● that light life and power of the holy Spirit of God than either true Christians or godly Ministers formerly had or now have in this or any other true Church of Christ How should we envy their blessednesse with an holy emulation How should we as Saint John to the Angell whom it may be he took for Jesus Christ be even ready to fall at their feet Revel 19 10. to kisse their footsteps to attend their directions to imitate their examples to partake of their raptures to pry into their third heavens to rise ascend reign and triumph to enjoy the holy Spirit and Christ and God with them to all which they in word and fancy pretend 7. Fallacies in this kind frequent among Enthusiasts But the triple Crown of meer titular and verball holinesse which is but copper gilded over moves us not further than to pity the sinner and to scorn the pride The Gnosticks Montanists Catharists of old the later rude and cruell phanaticks in Germany cryed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holy holy holy to their parties and factions As if there were holy ambitions holy seditions holy covetousnesses holy sacri●edges holy obscenities holy cruelties holy confusions in the conversations of true Christians and spirituall men Or holy ignorances holy errours holy darknesses holy heresies holy schisms holy hypocrisies in their hearts and spirits As if no duties no Scriptures no Sacraments no Ministry or Ministers no Government or Governours of the Church were heretofore holy which were primitively and universally and constantly owned and observed in the Church of Christ as derived from him As if private fancies and solitary dreams and single imaginations of weak and silly men or women were now holyer or had more in them of the Spirit than the publique Oracles of the sure Word of God which the Catholick Church hath received from God by the hands of holy men and by a constant succession of an holy Ministry hath delivered to us with constancy and fidelity as to the main however particular branches or members of this Church may have failed and withered If these Antiministeriall Novellists have nothing whereby to set off their pretended gifts of the Spirit and singular holinesse but only novelty fancy and uncertain Inspirations nothing to cry down all former holy ways of the Church but this that they are conform to all Antiquity and Scripture regulations The least beam of whose glorious light alwayes either equalls or far exceeds their new either superfluous or dubious illuminations Truly they must give all learned and godly Ministers together
are to take Christ with swords and staves O how fain would some men that the Sun were set that their glowormes might shine that the light of the house were extinguished In subversione fidei nullum ab ignorantia remedium est Saresb. that so their sparkes might appear which they have kindled to themselves in their shining corners and upon their private hearths Truly this calumny against good learning hath as much surprized me and my brethren the Ministers of this Church as the accusation of Fimbria did question Scaevola Quaerentibus quid●in Scaevola sam vulnerato ess●t accusaturus respondit qu●d totum corpore ferrum non receperat Tul. orat pro Sex Ros Vero deficiente crimine laudem ipsam in vituperium vertit invidia Tul. Act. 18 24. 28. Act. 26.24 who was impleaded by the other for not receiving that poynard deeper into his brest wherewith hee stabbed him and intended to have dispatched him The learned and godly Ministers in England never thought this would be laid to their charge as a fault the want of which had been a foul shame and a just reproach to them As the enjoyment of it was a great honour and advantage both to them and to the Reformed Religion They little suspected that among Christians Apollos should be forced to excuse his eloquent and potent demonstrations or S. Paul his sober and sanctified learning in which hee excelled worthy of that famous City and University Tarsus of which he had the honour to be free and pleaded it as a priviledge Act. 21.39 Which learning made him not so mad as those were who suspected and accused him that much learning had made him mad And if humane learning be such old clouts and rotten rags as these men of most beggerly elements pretend and wee confesse it is so compared to and destitute of those soul-saving Truths which are divinely revealed yet there may be good use of them Ier. 38.11 if it be but to help the Jeremies the Prophets and Ministers of the Lord out of those dungeons and mire where otherwayes their enemies would have them ever to be lodged both sordidly and shamefully and obscurely Nothing O you excellent Christians is lesse necessary than to paint this Sun or polish this pearl to set forth to you the use and necessity of good learning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just in d●cu● Tryph. of the benefit and blessing whereof in this Church your selves are so much partakers and whereof you are so great esteemers and encouragers And nothing shews good learning more necessary to the Church and true Religion both as Christian and reformed than this That the Divel by vain and fallacious instruments often hath and still seeks to deprive them of that weapon and defense which he hath used with great strength and cunning for his chiefest arms both offensive against the truths of religion and defensive for his own most damnable doctrines and delusions What havock would he soon make of sound doctrine Cres●onius the heretick oft complained that Saint Austin was too full of his Logick and Syllogisms when he could not answer his reasons In the Emperour Charls 5. time 1524. as in former ages he endevoured by those learned and subtill Sophisters his instruments and emissaries on every side if there were none on the Truths side able to encounter him and his agitators in that post of learning No wonder if the Woolf would have the Flock without Mastives or these without teeth it were much for his little for the flocks ease and advantage Although the Divel an old accuser must needs be a cunning Orator too and be furnished with all the swasive arts of insinuation which he fits to the severall geniusses of men and times yet he never till of late in Germany and now in England had confidence to make use of this place of Oratory to perswade Christians to burn all other Bookes that they might better study and understand the Bible yea and the Bible too that they might better understand the minde of God Which is all one as if the Israelites should have beene perswaded to have rid themselves of the cumber of their swords spears and shields that so they might better defend themselves or that they should have neither file nor grindstone to sharpen the naturall bluntnesse 1 Sam. 13. or clear the rustinesse of their weapons while yet the Philistims were all well armed and dayly preparing to battell Against whom there was no such warrant of a speciall divine protection as to make the people of God presume to neglect the use of those armes which art had prepared and use had taught how to imply We see that Jonathans heroick motion carries him not upon that successefull and great adventure without his sword and armour-bearer 1 Sam. 14.13 Nor did Davids confidence in Gods protection of which he had former experiences when he was without any arms against the Lion and Bears nor yet the assurance he had 1 Sam. 17. of the goodnesse of his cause or of the pride and profanenesse of his enemy none of these made him neglect to take and use such armes 2 Sam. 5.6 2 Pet. 3. as he thought most convenient The blinde and the lame men of feeble and confused spirits unlearned and unstable minds which are hated of Davids soule are ill assistants in Davids wars against the Jebusites who study to defend against him or to surprise from him the City of David or rather the City of God which is the Metropolis where grace and truth doe dwell It is certain that next to the primitive gifts of miracles 2. Humane learning succeeded miraculous and extraordinary gifts the gifts of humane learning have stood the Church of Christ in most stead For ever since the Apostles and Ministers of Christ assisted with extraordinary endowments of the Spirit had by the foolishnesse of preaching as by Davids improbable weapons against Goliahs compleat armature vanquished that old Idolatrous power * Nec miracula● illa in nostra tempora durare permissa sunt ne animus semper visibilia quareret eorum consuetudine frigesceret quorum novitate flagravit Aust de ver Rel. c. 15. of heathenisme which prevailed in the world and was long upheld by shews of learning eloquence and in that way vaine philosophy The Church of Christ hath ever since the cessation of those Miraculous gifts which attended onely the first conquests made use of that very sword of that prostrated Gyant good learning both to dispatch him and to defend it self finding that both in humane and divine encounters there is none like to that if managed by a proportionate arm and strength Quantum ratio dat homini tantum lit eratura rationi religio literaturae religioni gratia Casaub Quantum a bestas d●stamus eo magis ad Deum appropinqua●● Sen. For hereby the mind and all intellectuall faculties of mens souls which are the noblest and divinest
of fixation as to the publique profession else there will hardly be any civill peace preserved among men who least endure and soonest quarrell upon differences in Religion each being prone to value his own and contemn anothers Nulla res effic●cius homines regit quam religio Curt. l. 4. These things of publique piety thus once setled by Scripture upon good advice ought by all swasive rationall and religious means to be made known by the publique Ministry to the people for so Christ hath ordained and the Church alwayes observed to which Ministry which I have proved to be of Gods institution Separatim nemo habessit Deos neve novos Tul. de leg Rom. and so most worthy of mans best favour and encouragement publique and orderly attendance for time place and manner ought to bee enjoyned upon all under that power for their necessary catechi and instruction And this with some penalties inflicted upon idle wilful and presumptuous neglects Nihil ita facit ad dissidium ac de Deo dissensio Naz. orat 8. Solos credit habendos Quisque Deos quos ipse colit Iuv. Sat. 15. Aegypti cum diversi cultus De●● habe●ant mutuis bellis se imp●tebant Dio. l. 42. when no ground of conscience or other perswasion or reason is produced by those that are not yet of years of discretion if any of riper years and sober understanding plead a dissent they ought in all charity and humanity be dealt with by religious reasonings and meeknesse of wisdome if so be they may so be brought to the knowledge of the truth 2 Tim. 1.25 But if either weaknesse of capacity or wilfulnesse and obstinacy suffer them not to be convinced What toleration becomes Christians and so to conform to the publique profession of Religion I doe not think that by force and severities of punishment they ought to be compelled to professe or to do that in Religion of which they declare an unsatisfaction in judgment yet may they both in justice and charity be so tyed to their good behaviour that they shall not under great penalties either rudely speak write or act against or openly blaspheme profane and disturb or contradict and contemn the Religion publiquely professed and established And however the welfare of this publique is not so concerned in what men privately hold as to their judgement and opinion thoughts being as the Embryos of another freer world yet when they come to be brought forth to publique notice in word or deed they justly fall under the care Facientis culpant obtiner qui quod poterit corrigere negligeremendare Reg. Iur. and censure both of the Magistrate to restrain them as relating to the good of community and of the Minister to reprove them as his duty and authority is in the Church If in lesser things which are but the lace and fringe of the holy vestment the verge and Suburbs of Religion established Christians doe so dispute and differ Ordo Evangelici Ministerii est cardo Christianae religionis Gerard. Tolle Ministerium tolle Christum is one of the divels politick maximes as not to trench upon fundamentall truths neither blaspheming the Majesty of God or of the Lord Jesus Christ or of the blessed Spirit or the authority of the holy Scriptures nor breaking the bounds of clear morals nor violating the order of the holy Ministry of Christs Church which is the very hinge of all Christian Religion nor yet wantonly dissolving that bond of Christian communion in point of extern order peace and comely administrations of holy things other private differences and dissentings no doubt may be fairly tolerated as exercises of charity and disquisitions of truth wherein yet even the lesser as well as greater differences which arise in Religion are far better to be publiquely and solemnly considered of prudently and peaceably composed if possible than negligently and carelesly tolerated as wounds and issues are better healed with speed than tented to continued Ulcers and Fistulas I am confident wise humble and charitable Christians 8. The mean between Tyranny and Toleration in publique eminency of power and piety would not finde it so hard a matter as it hath been made through roughnesse of mens passions and intractablenesse of their spirits raised chiefly by other interests carryed on than that of Christ true Religion and poor people soules if they would set to it in Gods name to reconcile the many and greatest religious differences which are among both Christian and reformed Churches if they would fairly separate what things are morall clear and necessary in Religion from what are but prudentiall decent or convenient and remove from both these what ever is passionate popular and superfluous in any way which weak men call and count Religion if the many headed Hydra of mens lusts passions and secular ends were once cut off so that no sacriledge or covetousnesse or ambition or popularity or revenge should sowre and leaven reformation or obstruct any harmony and reconciliation sure the work would not be so Herculean but that sober Christians might be easily satisfied and fairly lay down their uncharitable censures and damning distances Instances in Church Government It is easie to instance in that one point of Church government as to the extern form what unpassionate stander by sees not but it might easily have been composed in a way full of order counsell and fraternall consent so that neither Bishops as fathers nor Presbyters as brethren nor people as sons of the Church should have had any cause to have complained * ubi metus in deum ibi gravitas honesta diligentia attonita cura solicita adlectio explorata communicatio deliberata promotio emerita subjectio religiosa apparitio devota prof●ssio modesta Ecclesia unita Dei omnia Tertul. ad Haer. c. 43. or envyed or differed So in the election triall and ordination of Ministers also in the use and power of the keyes and exercise of Church discipline who in reason sees not that as these things concern the good of all degrees of the faithfull in the Church so they might as in St. Cyprian's and all primitive times have beeen carried on in so sweet an order and accord as should have pleased and profited all both the Ordainers and the ordained with those for whose sakes Ministers are ordained So in the great and sacred administration of the mysterious and venerable Sacraments especially that of the Lords Supper which concerns most Christians of years how happily and easily might competent knowledge an holy profession of it and an unblameable conversation be carried on by both pastors and people with Christian order care and charity so as to have satisfied all those who make not Religion a matter of gain revenge State policy or faction but of conscience and duty both to God and their neighbour Secular interests the pests of the Church and their own soules
8.3 divers that had been cured ministred to Christ and his family of their substance and Matth. 10.10 he declares the Ministers right to be as good as the labourers to his hire If he that receiveth you receiveth me and he that despiseth you despiseth mee and he that giveth to a Prophet a cup of cold water in my name gives it to me if these be true and Evangelicall why is it not as true and Evangelicall He that payeth Tithes to you as my Ministers payes them to me Whether it be by private and solitary or by publique and joint gift and dedication Sure the highest right and claim Paramount must be eminently in Christ who is Lord of all more then in Melchisedeck and so either the obligation to pay them or the lawfulnesse to accept them in Christs name as a right to him or as a free gift offered from beleevers to the honour and service of Christ must needs be evident in all justice and religion As water is purest in the Fountain and light clearest in the Sun so is Melchisedeks right most in Christ Nay I think in good earnest that a Christian Jew would hence draw an argument although he were of that tribe of Levi to which Tithes were after commanded to be paid among the Jews that he ought now to pay them to the Christian Ministers Heb. 7.4.8 9 c. or to Christ as in relation to his service and as an agnition of him to be Lord and God since even Levi in Abrahams loins paid Tithes to Melchisedek that is to the type and representer of Christ And since the Lord Jesus Christ is the perfection and sum of the Priesthood and order of Melchisedek he may justly claim what ever was typified as a due or honour to be done to him of which this is one that he should receive Tithes who never dyeth Heb. 7.8 15. So that this Evangelicall right of Christ as those promises to Abraham being before the Legall establishment is not to be annulled by that law of the Jews Gal. 3.17 which was 400. years after As to the intervenient appointment and after custom of paying Tithes divinely setled by a positive Law among the Jews as the then onely Church of God it carries not any frown in its face against Christian Ministers now receiving Tithes or others paying them under the Gospell if there were no Law of the Land devoting Tithes to God and enjoyning the payment of them to Ministers as a rent charged upon lands and estates what sin could it be for any Christian as many primitive Christians spontan ously did to devote set apart and give yearly the tenth of all his encrease to the Ministers of the Gospell Sure nothing of right reason Scripture or true Religion which onely should rule the conscience of any sober man doth teach any Christian to abhor what ever was instituted or practised among the Jews if it be but after the law of common equity gratitude piety or civility toward God or man Else these Antidecimists must think they sinned if they should but cover their excrements Deut. 23.13 which was once a law of cleanlinesse among the Jews yea the example of God so confirming by a positive law in that his ancient Church of the Jews those generall dictates of nature and the preceeding practise of Abraham paying Tithes to Melchisedek as to the Priest of the most High God and a type of Christ according to grounds of common equity and naturall piety or gratitude to God and man This consideration I say should have the greater inducement to assure Christians that what is neither meerly Typicall nor Ceremoniall as Tithes were never thought to be by any learned or wise men but rather a thing of common equity and piety confirmed by a divine positive command and the choice of God this cannot but be as acceptable to God now when dedicated by the consent of any Christian people to his Evangelicall service and Ministry as it was before either from the hand of Abraham or his posterity since it is no where forbidden in the Gospell and by Gods wisdome hath been chosen as the fittest proportion under the Law Yea and to those that have not the loosest but the liberallest consciences among Christians it seems expressely recommended after that pattern Even so hath the Lord ordained Cor. 9.14 v. 13. that they that preach the Gospell should live of the Gospell Even so as they did who served at the Altar so far as the imitation can now hold which though it cannot in the Sacrifices yet it may in the Tithes and in first fruits and free-will offerings which were frequently and plentifully brought to the Bishops and Ministers of the Churches in primitive times for their own support and the Deacons with the poor If the Tenth or quantum How much be not here expressed yet it is vehemently implyed Else the Apostle had proved nothing nor given any directions either for Ministers fitting support or for Christians regulating of their retributions if he doth not command them to pay at least a Tenth sure he doth not condemn their paying a Tenth part which they may freely doe if there were no such divine right pleadable as this indeed is to all Christians whose covetousnesse doth not teach them to cavill against reason and Scripture too However this is the least that we can make of that place if in difficult times such as the primitive were something were left to the gratitude ingenuity love and largenesse of Christians hearts towards their Ministers wherein sometime they even exceeded their power and estate in munificence yet in quiet times and in a plentifull land it may well be expected by God at least it cannot be blameable for any Nation Church or private Christian to give and settle such a portion as the Tenths of the increase upon those that serve the Lord and the Church in the Ministry of the Gospell It is easily computed that Tithes were not one half of the Leviticall maintenance What reason can these men give beyond their will and despite why the Christian Ministry should fare worse or have lesse honour than the Jewish since it is in many things Heb. 7.19.22 Heb. 8.6 a better Ministry 1. Clearer in the light of Doctrine promises and prophesies 2. As venerable in the Mysteries 3. Far more glorious in its chief Minister and Mediator Jesus Christ Heb. 3.5 the Son of God the other by servants 4. Much easier in the burthen both of labour ceremony and charges to beleivers and worshippers 5. Yet not lesse painfull to the Ministers whose spirits are more exhausted by studies preaching and other Ministeriall duties than the Jewish Priests by more grosse and bodily labours 6. Not lesse comfortable to devout and pious soules 7. More universally diffused as more convenient for all mankind 8. And never esteemed lesse necessary to the Church or lesse acceptable to God save onely by Atheists or Niggards who
these men had been Lay Pa●●sts nothing would have converted them from Popery so much as to have seen the rich lands the goodly revenews the plentifull tithes oblations and donaries which are there paid to their Bishops and Churchmen without any grudging yea with much conscience by the people who in that point are very commendable as in a matter of justice gratitude and devotion whose sincerity is never more tryed than when it makes men conqu●●●rs of covetous desires And truly in this part of a free and liberall spirit most Papists are far beyond these men who make so great a stir with their thrifty reformations who are still driving the bargain so hard with God and their Ministers even in those matters which concern their soules Triobolares Christiani that all their piety cannot be worth three half pence since they grudge if their Religion cost them one penny This wretched temper as it is little to the honour so little to the advantage of the reformed Religion That men should be alwayes thus sharking upon God and his Church under shews of piety 8. Covetous reformers the greatest hinderers of reformation And truly I am strongly of this heresie against all these penurious reformers That nothing hath more nipped and hindred the progresse of true and necessary reformations in this western world as to matters of doctrine discipline and manners or will occasion a greater relapse and Apostasie than these sacrilegious projects and covetous principles with which the Divell hath alwayes sought to blemish and deform that which is called and justly in some things reformation Many reformers are but kites though they sore high yet they have an eye to their prey beneath some men still so propound and manage Church reformation as if it could not take place in any Church without devouring all the lands of the Church and beggering all the Church-men That to be reformed never so well in doctrine and manners would not serve the turn unlesse the Clergy suffer those Lay cormorants to devoure all and to reduce the State Ecclesiastick every where 1 Tim. 5.19 from that dignity and plenty the double honour with which pious predecessours endowed them to beggerly and shamefull dependences even upon those mens courtesies from whom when they have truly hunted and by learned paines gained a just reformation in points of doctrine and outward manner of religion yet they shall as Ministers be then rewarded with nothing but the very garbage some poore and beggerly stipends It is very probable that the wholesome waters of true Reformation which by the confession of many of the learned and moderater Romanists was in many things of religion necessary among them had been willingly ere this drunk by many of the Romish party if this Sacrilegious star which may well be called wormwood Revel 8.11 although it seem to burn as a lamp had not faln upon the waters of Reformation of which many in Germany and other places have dyed because they were made bitter with such sacrilegious and sordid infusions Reducing their reformed Ministers to such necessitous and beggerly wayes of life that could be little to their comfort or to the honor of their profession and no doubt infinitely to the other mens prejudice and abhorrency of what they so called their reformation Indeed it will be hard to perswade wise and learned men how ever in other points of controversie they may be convinced and willing to agree with the Reformed Churches that they must without any other cause but this that they belong to the Church presently forsake and forfeit their lawfull and goodly possessions to some mens unsatiable sacriledge who make Church Reformation but the Lay mens stalking horse to get estates Men doe naturally chuse to attend on fat and ointed errors rather than on lean and starved truths Ita a natura ficti sunt h●mines ut pingu●s potius sectentur errores quam macilentas veritates Nor doth any thing render the Christian and reformed Religion more dreadfull and deformed to the view of the ingenuous and better bred world than when it is set forth like the Gorgon or Medusaes head compassed with sacrilegious Serpents and circled with the stings of poverty and contempt threatning by poysonous bitings quite at length to destroy and devour all true piety Then which nothing is lesse envious of others enjoyments or more prodigally communicative of its own The word of Christ bidding Christians sometimes Matth. 19.25 as that young man to forsake all and follow him doth not oblige alwayes nor doth it become these mens mouths who care not who follow Christ so as they may get the spoiles of his naked followers Reforming Christians cannot sin more in themselves and be a greater temptation to others hindring them from due reforming than when by their covetous principles and cruell practises they shall so●re men from true reformation and indeed from all good opinion of such mens religion who in the peace and plenty of all other estates and degrees of men study to recommend piety to Church men onely attended with poverty and contempt As if Ministers could not be godly Ministers ought to be by their liberality as Synes was called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 except they were beggerly nor worth the hearing till they were not worth a groat That they could never trust sufficiently in God till they were brought to mean and shamefulld pendences for their bread upon the shrunk and withered hands of such men as these Antidecimists are It was one of the scoffs of Julian when he robbed the Churches and the Christians He did it that the Galilaeans might goe more expedite to heaven 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which they are alwayes stretching out against God and his Prophets Christ and his Ministers Although piety be a Jewell to be taken up where ever we finde it though in the dust of poverty and Christ is beautifull when he is stripped yet none but rude and barbarous hands would treat Christ in such a manner as exceeds their wanton cruelty who crucified him for when they * Matt. 27.35 parted his garments among them they did not own him for their Saviour or the Messias as these self-inriching reformers pretend to doe O sad and sordid soules O mean and miserable reformers with whom the Ministers of this Church of England have now to plead for their last morsell that little remnant of their Oile and Meal Magis aurum suspicere consueti qua● coelum Min. Fael Avari poenalibus cumulis oppressi Cyp. Charity forbids me to condemn you and your Sacrilegious faction to be punished with your own manners and designes which are most wretched and unworthy the name of the Christian profession which above all Religions ever incouraged most the * Prov. 11.25 2 Cor. 9.7 God loveth a chearful giver chearfull givers and abhorred rapacious scrapers I might say to you as * Act. 8 20. St. Peter did to Simon
〈◊〉 both in health and sicknesse both of their bodies and soules goe along with the Word preached whom many Sermons and good words will not move some charitable good workes seasonably applyed as a hotter fire or warmer Sun may soften melt and convert To all which your plentifull or at least competent estates piously and prudently managed will give you greater advantages than most of the ordinary Ministers can have Matth. 25.21 Non minor est de bene tolerata paupertate gloria quam de bene collocatis divitiis Sen. whom for the most part necessity drives into this port of the Ministry and there keeps them so under hatches or on the Lee that they are seldome able to adventure upon any way further then their country Congregation and obscurity afford them who have onely this glory of being faithfull in a little and bearing poverty with great patience A few persons of your rank and quality by some such heroick and exemplary zeal as so many brave Christians of old against the Saracens would much confound the insolency of our Antiministeriall Jannes and Jambres 2 Tim. 3. It would put the divell to new shifts and inventions when he and they shall see the Lord stirring up in a way not usuall the spirits of gentlemen eminent for estates and relations who then chuse to put their hands to the Churches Oars and helm when they see the danger greatest and the tempest blackest You as Hercules may come in to relieve those Atlasses of the faithfull Bishops and Ministers who finde some mens new heavens too heavy for their shoulders and their new earth an unstable foundation to set their feet upon Your learned humility cannot easily be seduced by popular novelties and pretentions to climb over the wall Joh. 10.2 or to break in upon the Ministry by new wayes and posternes of factious and fanatick presumptions but will rather chuse if God moves your hearts to his work to keep your feet in his way that you may come in by that ancient and holy ordination wherever it may rightly be had in this Church This will make not only the true sheep of Christ Joh. 10.3 but the true shepheards also glad to hear your voice and to partake of those excellent gifts which God hath given you which study prayer and exercise will dayly increase upon you It is great pity so many of your learned and pious abilities should lie idle or not have imployment worthy of them especially when they are fitted for the Lords service and the Lord hath need of them Doe not despise the calling though it be black yet it is comely as the curtaines of Solomon though it be now forced to dwell in Meseck and to have its habitation in the tents of Kedar The first founder of our holy function was a man of sorrowes an outcast of men in whom the world thought there was no form or comelinesse Affliction hath reformed us by restoring Ministers to Christs image Which of you that hath the true sense what it is to be a good Christian and what honour it is to serve Christ in saving of souls but will at the first word Matth. 21.2 which Christ sends loose the Asse which is tyed it may be to some small secular businesse pleasure or study and let it be brought to Christ being fit for his service That so being strowed and adorned with the richer ornaments wherewith your condition is cloathed Christ may with the more conveniency and decency sit thereon vers 7. and ride as it were in an extraordinary triumph to Jerusalem and many may follow him with Hofunnat Blessing you vers 9. that come in the name of the Lord to save them The lesse incouragements you can now expect as Ministers of Christ from men the greater will be your honour the sincerer your comforts and the ampler your reward from God when the world shall see that you honour the work of the Ministry for the work sake and love Christ for himself no lesse than others doe where that service is attended with great revenues and dignities There will shortly be need more than enough of some Ministers who can undertake the work and not want the wages even the meanest minded men now begin to divert their studies and education to another way rather than that of the Ministry finding that there they are like soonest to come a ground and to dash against the necke of poverty and contempt A few of you like Davids worthies furnished with due and divine authority for the Ministery as well as with gifts would mightily stand in the gap repell and confound the vanity and insolence of those 1 Chron. 27. who are risen up to lay wast and desolate this sometime so famous a Ministry and flourishing Church But this is onely an occasionall digression humbly offered to those worthy Gentlemen who have parts learning piety and courage enough to make them dare to be good and to doe good in so high and eminent a way in the midst of a degenerate and declining age which knows not how to prise the Gospell of Salvation not worthily to entertain the Ministry and Ministers of it But to return to my former subject The taking away Tithes will be a great burden to the people it is most evident that these projectors against Tithes are no wayes friends to the Farmers any more than to the Gentlemen and Landlords for when Tithes are once taken away from Ministers and being in Lay hands are as easily cast into the ballance of secular businesse as other Church lands have lately been if then Christian people any where would be desirous to have a true and able Minister and cannot satisfie themselves with those false Prophets and unordained Preachers which are so cheap truly they will finde a new burthen must then lye wholly on their estates and purses to maintain their Ministers while yet they must pay their Tithes other where These just considerations and most undeniable reasons have already made the honest Yeomen so wise as in stead of petitioning against Tithes to cry aloud to all those busie projectors Before you take away Tithes from our Ministers first provide a better way for their maintenance Exchange will be no robbery if it be no detriment that is such as shall be neither more chargeable in a new way nor lesse comely and honourable where a legall right may give claim against all impediments else vile dependents on any mens favour or good will will abase both the calling and spirit and carriage of our Ministers below what is comely for them or willingly seen by us who know that in our true Ministers welfare the good of our own and our childrens soules under God is bound up Deprive not them of that due and double honor which the piety and gratitude of this Nation hath given to them lest you deprive us and our posterity of the true Christian and reformed Religion which we fear
fitted to the memories and capacities of the meanest hearers containing short summaries of things to be believed practised or prayed for as in the Creed the ten Commandements and the Lords Prayer Presently these men fancy them as the recitation of some charmes and look on the Minister as some Exorcist confined to these Articles of stinted spels and formes Yea so far hath the prejudices affectations and ignorance of these men prevailed against all Reason and Religion in some places that many Ministers in other things not unable or unworthy men are carried away with fear and popularity to comply with those mens fondnesse in a way of dissimulation Forbearing to use publiquely at any time either the title of Saint due to holy men or the Lords Prayer and the Decalogue which are both Scripturall Summaries and commanded to be used So also they lay aside the Creed which is an Ecclesiasticall compendium taken out of the Scripture Vid. Voss de Symbolis and very ancient in the chief articles of it containing the main foundations or heads of Christian Faith nor was any of these ever neglected or not both frequently and devoutly used in the publique Liturgies or Services of sober Christians either ancient or modern O how sowre and spreading a leaven is the pride passion and superstition of mens spirits which run after faction and novelties that even learned and grave men should be not so much infected with it in their judgements as to be swayed and byassed or over-awed by it in their practise contrary to their judgements meerly Gal. 2.12 as St. Peter with his dissimulation gratifying these pretenders to novelty speciall sanctity by the not using of those divine and wholesome forms of sound words in which neglect the presumed perfection of these Antiministeriall men disdains to condescend to the infirmities of novices and weaklings in religion the babes in Christ Those Lambs which good Shepheards Joh. 21.15 must take speciall care of as well as of their stronger sheep feeding them with milk or cibo praemanso the often repeated Catechisticall rudiments and chewed principles of Religion which are by the wisdome of God and our Saviour most fitly and compendiously set forth in the ten Commandements and the Lords Prayer as to the main of things to be done or desired by a Christian as also the summe of things necessary to be believed were anciently comprised in the Articles of the Creed according to that wisdome of the Apostles or the primitive Fathers which imitated those patterns set by the Lord to his Church That so the Infants or younglings of Christs family might not be starved because they have not such teeth as these mens jaw-bones pretend to who before they have well sucked in the first principles are gnawing bones or cracking kernels and nuts exercising themselves or vexing others with odd questions and doubtfull disputations more troubled with their Familisticall fancies about their own partaking of the divine Nature their identity with Christ and when and how it is in what manner and what measure they may be said to be God and Christ and the Spirit than soberly establishing their mindes in the fundamentall points of things to be beleived obeyed and desired to the glory of God and the honour of the Gospell But I must leave these envious and unquiet Spirits to their censorious separations wrangling themselves into vanities and errors at length falling like Lucifer into the blacknesse of darknesse to unjustice and cruelty after that into grosser blasphemies and presumptions against God Christ and the holy Spirit while they proudly affect and presume to be not like to the most High but the same with him not in the beauties of holinesse grace and godlinesse which are the clear Image of God set forth in the Word but in the glory and majesty of the divine Essence which is inscrutable not to be communicated or comprehended in its superessentiall being and superintellectuall perfection no more than the vast and glorious body of the Sun which is 160 times bigger than the earth can be locally contained in the eye to which yet it is by its beams in some kinde imparted and united Such superfluity we see there is of folly ignorance weaknesse pride and malice in some spirits who upon very peevish and perverse grounds forsake our Christian publique Assemblies and duties celebrated in our Churches which are sanctitied by the Word and prayer scorning and condemning what we doe upon the best grounds of Scripture and Reason separating themselves from the true Ministry and fellowship of the Church of England as if they were most spirituall and refined when yet they seem to be so grossely ignorant so passionate and some of them so sensuall as is no argument of their having the Spirit of God which is wise in all holinesse 7 Calumny Act. 24.5 BUt our Antiministeriall Adversaries object as Tertullus and the Jews did against St. Paul that the ordained Ministers of the former way Against Ministers as seditious and inconform to Civil government are pestilent fellows stirrers up of the people factious turbulent seditious not so supple conform and well affected to the present constitution of powers and publique affaires So that it is not onely lawfull but necessary either to bring them to a plenary conformity and subjection or to exautorate and suppresse them as to all publique influence in the Ministry Thus doe these Wasps and Hornets buz up and down who hope with their noise and stings ere long to drive all the ancient and true Ministers of God out of the land or at least out of the service of the Church that so they may be possessed of the Hive though they make no Honey Answ Answ This Calumny is indeed of the promising advantage to the enemies of the Ministers and their calling and therefore it is with most cunning and earnestnesse every where levelled by some men against their persons Naz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. actions and function It is like the policy of Julian the Apostate who to ensnare the Christians set the statues of the Emperours with the Idols of the Gods That if Christians did civill reverence as to the Emperours they should be defamed as Idolaters if not they should be accused as despisers of the Emperours And because I perswade my self that all excellent Christians how potent soever can bear an honest freedome and plainnesse I shall onely as to this sharp and poysoned arrow oppose the shield of plain dealing that in a matter so much concerning the satisfaction of others and Ministers civill safety there may be no such obscurities as may harbour any jealousies First of all I need not tell you 1. Some Ministers compliances what all the English world knows aboundantly That there are many Ministers of very good abilities who are not at all blameable in this particular as to any restivenesse and incompliancy in civill subjections they have sufficiently testified how Arts and ingenuous