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A90276 Of schisme the true nature of it discovered and considered, with reference to the present differences in religion. / By John Owen D.D. Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1657 (1657) Wing O780; Thomason E1664_2; ESTC R203088 121,002 281

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and by him to us Joh. 14. 16. being of old the great promise of the Covenant Is 59. 21. Ezek. 11. 17. cap. 26. 36. Now in the participation of the Divine nature consists the Vnion of the Saints with Christ Ioh. 6. 5. our Saviour tells us that it arises from eating his flesh and drinking his Blood he that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him This he expounds v. 63. it is the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth not By the quickning Spirit inhabitation in Christ and Christ in it is intended And the same he manifests in his prayer that his Church may be one in the Father and the Sonne as the Father is in him and he in the Father Ioh. 17. 21. for the Spirit being the Love of the Father and of the Son is vinculum Trinitatis and so here of our Union in some resemblance The unity of members in the body naturall with one head is often chosen to set forth the union of the Church 1 Cor. 12. 12. 1 Cor. 11. 3. Eph 5. 23. Col. 1. 19. now every man can tell that union of the head and members whereby they become all one body that and not another is onenesse of soule whereby the whole is animated which makes the body be it lesse or greater to be one body That which answers hereunto in the mysticall body of Christ is the animation of the whole by his spirit as the Apostle fully 1 Cor. 15. 45. The union between husband and wife is also chosen by the Holy Ghost to illustrate the union between Christ and his Church For this cause shall a man forsake his Father and his Mother and cleave to his Wife and they two shall be one flesh this is a great mystery but I speake concerning Christ and his Church Eph. 5. 31 32. The union between man and wife we have Gen. 2. 24. they be no more twaine but one flesh of Christ and his Church that they are one spirit For he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit 1 Cor. 6. 17. See also another similitude of the same importance Ioh. 15. 5. Rom. 11. 16 17. This I say is the fountain radicall union of the Church Catholick in its selfe with its head and formall reason of it Hence flowes a double consequentiall Vnion that it hath also 1. Of Faith All men united to Christ by the inhabitation of the same Spirit in him and them are by it from and according to the word taught of God Is 54. 13. Ioh. 6. 45. so taught every one of them as to come to Christ v. 46. that is by bilieving by faith They are so taught of God as that they shall certainly have that measure of knowledge and faith which is needfull to bring them to Christ and to God by him And this they have by the unction or Spirit which they have received 1 Ioh. 2. 21 27. accompaning the Word by vertue of Gods Covenant with them Is 59. 29. And hereby are all the members of the Church Catholick however divided in their visible profession by any differences among themselves or differenced by the severall measures of gifts and graces they have received brought to the perfection aymed at to the unity of the Faith to the acknowledgement of the Son of God to a perfect man to the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ Eph. 4. 13. Nor was this hidden from some of the Papists themselves Ecclesia sancta corpus est Christi una spiritu vivificata unita fide una sanctificata saith Hugo de Victore de sacram lib. 2. as he had said before in the former Cap. sicut scriptum est qui non habet Spiritum Christi hic non est ejus qui non habet Spiritum Christi non est membrum Christi in corpore uno Spiritus unus nihil in corpore mortuum nihil extra corpus vivum See to the same purpose Enchirid. Concil Colon in Symbol With peculiar reference to the members themselves there is another necessary consequence of the union mentioned and that is the mutuall love of all those united in the head as before towards one another and of every one towards the whole as so united in the head Christ Jesus There is an increase made of the body to the edifying it selfe in love Eph. 4. 16. And so it becomes the bond of perfectnesse to this body of Christ I cannot say that the members or parts of this Church have their union in themselves by Love because they have that with and in Christ whereby they are one in themselves Ioh. 17. 21 23. they are one in God even in Christ where their life is hid Col. 3. 3. but it is the next and immediate principle of that communion which they severally have one with another and the whole body in and with it selfe I say then that the communion which the Catholick Church the mysticall body of Christ hath with and in it selfe springing from the union which it hath in and with Christ and in it selfe thereby consists in love exerting it selfe in inexpressible variety according to the present state of the whole its relation to Christ to Saints and Angells with the conditions and occasions of the members of it respectively 1 Cor. 12. 26 27. What hath been spoken concerning the union and communion of this Church will not I suppose meet with any contradiction Granting that there is such a Church as that we speake of Coetus praedestinatorum credentium the Papists themselves will grant that Christ alone is its head and that its union ariseth from its subjection to him and dependance on him Their modesty makes them contented with constituting the Pope in the roome of Christ as he is as it were a politicall head for government they have not as yet directly put in their claime to his office as a mysticall Head influencing the body with Life and Motion though by their figment of the Sacraments communicating grace ex opere operato and investing the originall power of dispencing them in the Pope only they have contended faire for it But if any one can informe me of any other union or communion of the Church described as above then these laid downe I shall willingly attend unto his instructions In the mean time to carry on the present discourse unto that which is aimed at it is manifest that the breach of this union must consist in these two things 1. First the casting out expelling and looseing that spirit which abiding in us gives us this union 2. The losse of that love which thence flowes into the body of Christ and believers as parts and members thereof This being the state of the Church under the first consideration of it certainly it would be an extravagancy scarcely to be parallel'd for any one to affirme a breach of this union as such to be Schisme under that notion of it which we
Church not only a governing head to give it Rules and Lawes but as it were a Naturall head unto the body which is influenced by him with a new spirituall life which Bellarmine professeth against as any requisite condition to the members of the Catholick Church which he pleadeth for In that same which is behind of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his bodies sake which is the Church which assertion is exactly paralell to that of 2 Tim. 2. 10. Therefore I endure all things for the Elects sake that they may obtaine Salvation so that the Elect and the Church are the same persons under severall considerations and therefore even a particular Church on the account of its participation of the nature of the Catholick is called Elect 1 Pet. 5. 13. and so the Church Mat. 16. 18. is expounded by our Saviour himselfe Mat. 22. 24. But to prove at large by a multiplication of Arguments and testimonies that the Catholick Church or Mysticall body of Christ consists of the whole number of the Elect as Redeemed Justifyed Sanctifyed Called Believing and yeilding obedience to Christ throughout the world I speake of it as Militant in any one Age and of them only were as needlessly actum agere as a man can well devise It is done already and that to the purpose uncontroulably terque quaterque And the substance of the doctrine is delivered by Aquinas himselfe p. 3. Q. 8. A. 3. In briefe the summe of the inquiry upon this head is concerning the matter of that Church concerning which such glorious things are spoken in Scripture namely that it is the Spouse the Wife the Bride the Sister the only one of Christ his D●ve undefiled his Temple Elect Redeemed his Sione his Body his new Jerusalem concerning which inquiry the Reader knowes where he may abundanly find satisfaction That the asserting the Catholick Church in this sence is no new Apprehension is known to them who have at all looked backward to what was past before us Omnibus consideratis saith Austin puto me non temere dicere alios ita esse in domo dei ut ips● etiam sint eadem domus Dei quae dicitur aedificari supra petram quae unica columba appellatur quae sponsa pulchra sine macula ruga hortus conclusus fons signatus patens aquae vivae paradisus cum fructu pomorum alios autem ita constat esse in domo ut non pertineant ad compagem domus Sed sicut esse palea dicitur in frumentis de Bapt. lib. 1. cap. 51. who is herein followed by not a few of the Papists hence saith Biel. accipitur etiam Ecclesia pro tota multitudine praedestinatorum in Canon Miss Lec 22. In what sence this Church is invisible was before declared Men elected redeemed justifyed as such are not visible for that which makes them so is not But this hinders not but that they may be so upon other Consideration sometimes to more sometimes to fewer yea they are so alwayes to some Those that are may be seen and when we say they are visible we do not intend that they are actually seen by any that we know but that they may be so Bellarmine gives us a description of this Catholick Church as the name hath of late been used at the pleasure of men and wrested to serve every designe that was needfull to be carryed on to the interest which he was to contend for but in it self perfectly ridiculous He tells us out of Austine that the Church is a living Body wherein is a body and a soule thence saith he the soule is the internall graces of the spirit Faith Hope and Love the body is the externall profession of Faith some are of the soul and body perfectly united to Christ by faith and the profession of it some are of the soule that are not of the body as the Catechumeni which are not as yet admitted to be members of the visible Church but yet are true believers Some saith he are of the body that are not of the soul who having no true grace yet out of hope or temporall feare doe make profession of the faith and these are like the haire nailes and ill humours in an humane body Now saith Bellarmine our definition of a Church comprizeth only this last sort whilst they are under the head the Pope which is all one as if he had defined a man to be a dead creature composed of haire nailes and ill humours under an hat but of the Church in this sence so farre It remaineth then that we enquire what is the Vnion which the Church in this sense hath from the wisdome of its head Jesus Christ That it is one that hath an union with its head and in it selfe is not questioned It is one sheepfold one Body one spouse of Christ his only one as unto him and that it might have onenesse in it selfe with all the fruits of it our Saviour praies Joh. 17. 19 20 21 22 23. the whole of it is described Eph. 4. 15 16. may grow up into him in all things which is the head even Christ from whom the whole body fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every joynt supplieth according to the effectuall working in the measure of every part maketh increase of the body to the edifying it selfe in love And of the same importance is that of the same Apostle Col 2. 19. not holding the head from which all the body by joynts and bands having nourishment ministred and knit together increaseth with the increase of God Now in the union of the Church in every sense there is considerable both the formalis ratio of it whence it is what it is and the way and meanes whereby it exerts it selfe and is usefull and active in communion The first in the Church as now stated consists in its joynt holding the head and growing up into him by vertue of the communication of supplies unto it therefrom for that end purpose That which is the formall Reason and cause of the Union of the members with the Head is the formall Reason and Cause of the Union of the members with themselves The Originall Vnion of the members is in and with the Head and by the same have they union with themselves as one body Now the inhabitation of the same Spirit in him and them is that which makes Christ Personall and his Church to be one Christ mysticall 1 Cor. 12. 12. Peter tells us that we are by the promises made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have communion with it that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is no more but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I cannot easily consent Now it is in the person of the Spirit whereof we are by the promise made partakers he is the Spirit of promise Eph. 1. 13. promised by God to Christ Act. 2. 33. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
forbearance in the latitude of it as prescribed to us by Christ and it will evidently beare no proportion thereunto So that such differences though arising on reall miscarriages and faults of some because they might otherwise be handled and healed and ought to be so cannot be persisted in without the contempt of the immediate Authority of Jesus Christ If it were considered that he standeth in the Congregation of God Ps 82. 1. That he dwells in the Church in glory as in Sinai in the Holy place Ps 68. 17 18. walking in the mid'st of the Candlesticks Rev. 1. 13. with his eyes upon us as a flame of fire v. 14 his presence and Authority would perhaps be more prevalent with some then they seem to be Againe His wisdome whereby he hath ordered all things in his Church on set purpose that Schisme and divisions may be prevented is no lesse despised Christ who is the Wisdome of the Father 1 Cor. 1. 24. The stone on which are seaven eyes Zech 3. 9. upon whose shoulders the government is laid Is 9. 6 7. hath in his infinite wisdome so ordered all the Officers Orders Gifts Administrations of and in his Church as that this evill might take no place To manifest this is the designe of the Holy Ghost Rom. 12 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1. Cor. 12. Eph. 4. 8 9 10 11 12 13 14. The consideration in particular of this Wisdome of Christ suiting the Officers of his Church in respect of the places they hold of the Authority wherewith from him they are invested the way whereby they are entered into their Function distributing the Gifts of his Spirit in marveilous variety unto severall kinds of usefulnesse and such distance and dissimilitude in the particular members as in a due correspondencie and proportion give comelinesse and beauty to the whole disposing of the order of his worship and sundry ordinances in especiall to be expressive of the highest Love and Vnion pointing all of them against such causelesse divisions might be of use were that my present intendment The Grace and Goodnesse of Christ whence he hath promised to give us one heart and one way to leave us peace such as the World cannot give with innumerable others of the like importance are disregarded thereby So also is his prayer for us with what Affection and Zeale did he powre out his soule to his Father for our union in love That seems to be the thing his heart was chiefely fixed on when he was leaving this World Joh. 17. what weight he layes thereon how thereby we may be known to be his Disciples and the World be convinced that he was sent of God is there also manifested How farre the exercise of Love and Charity is obstructed by it hath been declared The consideration of the Nature Excellency Property Effects Usefulnesse of this Grace in all the Saints in all their ways its especiall designation by our Lord and Master to be the bond of union and perfection in the way and Order instituted for the comely celebration of the Ordinances of the Gospell will adde weight to this aggravation It s constant growing to farther evill in some to Apostacy it selfe its usuall and certaine ending in strife variance debate evill surmisings wrath confusion disturbances publick and private are also to be laid all at its doore What farther of this nature and kind may be added as much may be added to evince the heinousnesse● of this sinne of Schisme I shall willingly subscribe unto so that I shall not trouble the Reader in abounding in what on all hands is confessed It is incumbent upon him who would have me to goe farther in the description of this evill then as formerly stated to evince from Scripture another notion of the name or thing then that given which when he hath done he shall not find me refractory In the meane time I shall both consider what may be objected against that which hath been delivered and also discusse the present state of our divisions on the usuall principles and common acception of Schisme if first I may have leave to make some few inferences or deductions from what hath already been spoken and as I hope evinced On supposition that the Church of Rome is a Church of Christ it will appeare to be the most Schismaticall Church in the World I say or supposition that it is a Church and that there is such a thing as a Schismaticall Church as perhaps a Church may from its intestine differences be so not unfitly denominated that is the state and condition thereof The Pope is the head of their Church severall nations of Europe are members of it Have we not seen that head taking his flesh in his teeth tearing his body and his limbs to pieces Have some of them thought on any thing else but arise Peter kill and eate all their dayes Have we not seen this goodly head in disputes about Peters Patrimony and his own Jurisdiction wage warre fight and shed blood the blood of his own members Must we believe Armies raised and battailes fought Townes fired all in pure love and perfect Church order not to mention their old altare contra altare Anti-Popes Anti-Councells look all over their Church on their Potentates Bishops Friars there is no end of their variances What do the Chiefest choisest pillars eldest sonnes and I know not what of their Church at this day doe they not kill destroy and ruine each other as they are able let them not say these are the divisions of the Nations that are in their Church not of the Church for all these Nations on their hypothesis are members of that one Church And that Church which hath no meanes to prevent its members from designed resolved on and continued murthering one of another nor can remove them from its society shall never have me in its communion as being bloudily Schismaticall No● is there any necessity that men should forgoe the respective civill interests by being members of one Church Prejudicate apprehensions of the nature of a Church and its Authority lye at the bottome of that difficulty Christ hath ordained no Church that enwraps such interests as on the account whereof the members of it may murther one another Whatever then they pretend of Vnity and however they make it a note of the true Church as it is a property of it that which is like it amongst them is made up of these two ingredients subjection to the Pope either for feare of their lives or advantage to their livelyhood and a conspiracy for the destruction and suppression of them that oppose their interests wherein they agree like those who maintained Hierusalem in its last Siege by Titus they all consented to oppose the Romans and yet fought out all other things among themselves That they are not so openly clamorous about the differences at present as in former Ages is meerely from the pressure of Protestants round about them
are enquiring after But because there is very little security to be enjoyed in an expectation of the sobriety of men in things wherein they are or suppose they may be concerned that they may know before hand what is farther incumbent on them if in reference to us they would prevaile themselves of any such notion I here informe them that our perswasion is that this union was never utterly broken by any man taken into it or ever shall be to the end of the World and I suppose they esteeme it vaine to dispute about the Ad●uncts of that which is denyed to be But yet this perswasion being not common to us with them with whom we have to doe in this matter I shall not farther make use of it as to our present defence That any other union of the Catholick Church as such can possibly be fancyed or imagined by any as to the substance of what hath been pleaded leaving him a plea for the ordinary so●ndnes of his Intellectualls is denyed Let us see now then what is our concernment in this discourse unlesse men can prove that we have not the spirit of God that we do not savingly believe in Jesus Christ that we doe not sincerely love all the Saints his whole body and every member of it they cannot disprove our interest in the Catholick Church It is true indeed men that have so great a confidence of their own Abilities and such a contempt of the World as to undertake to dispute them out of conclusions from their naturall sences about their proper Objects in what they see feele and handle and will not be satisfied that they have not proved there is no motion whilst a man walks for a conviction under their eye may probably venture to disprove us in our spirituall sense and experience also and to give us Arguments to perswade us that we have not that communion with Christ which we know we have every day Although I have a very meane perswasion of my own Abilities yet I must needs say I cannot think that any man in the world can convince me that I doe not love Jesus Christ in sincerity because I doe not love the Pope as he is so Spirituall Experience is a security against a more cunning Sophister then any Jesu●●te in the world with whom the Saint● of God have to deale all their lives Eph. 6. 12. And doubtlesse through the rich grace of our God helpe will arise to us that we shall never make a Covenant with these men for peace upon conditions for worse then those that Nahash would have exacted on the men of Jabesh Gilead● which were but the losse of one eye with an abiding reproach they requiring of us the deprivation of whatsoever we have to see by whether as men or Christians and that with a reproach never to be blotted out But as we daily put our Consciences upon triall as to this thing 1 Cor. 13. 5. and are put unto it by Sathan so are we readie at all times to give an account to our Adversaries of the hope that us in us Let them sift us to the utmost it will be to our advantage Only let them not bring frivolous objections and such as they know are of no weight with us speaking as is their constant manner about the Pope and their Church things utterly forraigne to what we are presently about miserably begging the thing in Question Let them weigh if they are able the true nature of Vnion with Christ of faith in him of Love to the Saints consider them in their proper Causes Adjuncts and Effects with a sprituall eye laying aside their prejudices and intolerable impositions if we are found wanting as to the truth and sincerity of these things if we cannot give some account of our translation from death to life of our implantation into Christ and our participation of the Spirit we must beare our own burthen if otherwise we stand fast on the most noble and best account of Church Vnion what ever and whilest this shield is safe we are lesse ●mxious about the issue of the ensuing contest Whatever may be the apprehensions of other men I am not in this thing sollicitous I speake not of my selfe but assuming for the present the person of one concerning whom these things may be spoken whilest the efficacy of the Gospell accomplisheth in my heart all those divine and mighty effects which are ascribed unto it as peculiarly it workes towards them that believe whilest I know this one thing that whereas I was blind now I see whereas I was a servant of sinne I am now free to righteousnesse at liberty from bondage unto death instead of the fruits of the flesh I find all the fruits of the Spirit brought forth in me to the praise of Gods glorious grace whilest I have an experience of that powerfull work of conversion and being borne againe which I am able to mannage against all the accusations of Satan having peace with God upon justification by faith with the love of God shed abroad in my heart by the Holy Ghost investing me in the priviledges of Adoption I shall not certainly be moved with the disputes of men that would perswade me I doe not belong to the Catholick Church because I doe not follow this or that or any part of men in the world But you will say this you will allow to them also with whom you have to doe that they may be members of the Catholick Church I leave other men to stand or fall to their own Master only as to the Papall multitude on the account of severall inconsistencies between them and the members of this Church I shall place some swords in the way which will reduce their number to an invisible scantling I might content my selfe by affirming at once that upon what hath been spoken I must exclude from the Catholick Church all and every one whom Bellarmine intends to include in it as such namely those who belong to the Church as hairs and ill humours to the body of a man But I adde in particular 1. All wicked and prophane persons of whom the Scripture speakes expressly that they shall not enter into the Kingdome of God are indisputably cut off Whatever they pretend in shew at any time in the outward duties of Devotion they have neither faith in Christ nor love to the Saints and so have part and fellowship neither in the union nor communion of the Catholick Church How great a proportion of that Synogogue whereof we are speaking will be taken off by this sword of their Popes Princes Prelates Clergie Votaries and people and that not by a rule of private surmises but upon the visible issue of their being servants to sin ●aters of God and good men is obvious to all Persons of really so much as reformed lives amongst them are like the berries after the shaking of an Olive tree 1 Cor 6. 7 8
at large insisted on In briefe put the whole Church of God into that condition of libertie and soundnesse of Doctrine which it was in when the great uproare was made by the Donatists and we shall be concerned to give in our judgements concerning them To presse an example of former dayes as binding unto duty or convincing of evill in respect of any now without stating the whole substratum of the businesse and compleat cause as it was in the dayes and seasons wherein the example was given we judge it not equall Yet although none can with ingenuity presse me with the crime they were guilty of unlesse they can prove themselves to be instated in the very same condition as they were against whom that crime was committed which I am fully assured none in the world can the communion of the Catholick Church then pleaded for being in the judgement of all an effect of mens free liberty and choice now pressed as an issue of the Tyranny of some few yet I shall freely deliver my thoughts concerning the Donatists which will be comprehensive also of those other that suffer with them in former and after ages under the same imputation 1. Then I am perswaded that in the matter of fact the Donatists were some of them deceived and others of them did deceive in charging Caecilianus to be ordained by Traditores which they made the maine ground of their separation however they took in other things as is usuall into their defence afterward Whether any of themselves were ordained by such persons as they are recharged I know not 2. On supposition that he was so and they that ordained him were known to him to have been so yet he being not guilty of the crime renouncing Communion with them therein and themselves repenting of their sinne as did Peter whose sinne exceeded theirs this was no just cause of casting him out of Communion he walking acting in all other things suitable to principles by themselves acknowledged 3. That on supposition they had just cause hereupon to renounce the Communion of Caecilianus which according to the principles of those days retained by themselves was most false yet they had no ground of separating from the Church of Carthage where were many Elders not obnoxious to that charge Indeed to raise a jealousy of a fault in any man which is denyed by him which we are not able to prove which if it were proved were of little or no importance and on pretence thereof to separate from all who will not believe what we surmise is a wild and unchristian course of proceeding 4. Yet grant farther that men of tender consciences regulated by the principle then generally received might be startled at the cōmunion of that Church wherein Caecilianus did preside yet nothing but the height of madnesse pride and corrupt fleshly interest could make men declare hostility against all the Churches of Christ in the world who would communicate with or did not condemne that Church which was to regulate all the Churches in the world by their own fancy and imagination 5. Though men out of such pride and folly might judge all the residue of Christians to be faulty and guilty in this particular of not condemning and separating from the Church of Carthage yet to proceed to cast them out from the very name of Christians and so disanull their priviledges and ordinances that they had been made partakers of as manifestly they did by rebaptizing all that entered into their communion was such unparalleld Pharisaisme and Tyranny as was wholy to be condemned and untollerable 6. The Divisions Outrages and Enthusiasticall furies and Riots that befell them or they fell into in their way werein my judgement tokens of the hand of God against them so that upon the whole matter their undertaking and enterprise was utterly undue and unlawfull I shall farther adde as to the mannagement of the cause by their Adversaries that there is in these writings especially those of Austin for the most part as sweet and gratious spirit breathing full of zeale for the glory of God Peace Love Union among Christians and as to the issue of the cause under debate it is evident that they did sufficiently foyle their Adversaries on principles then generally confessed and acknowledged on all hands though some of them seem to have been considering Learned and dexterous men How little we are at this day in any contests that are mannaged amongst us about the things of God concerned in those differences of theirs these few Considerations will evince yet notwithstanding all this I must take liberty to professe that although the Fathers justly charged the Donatists with disclaiming of all the Churches of Christ as a thing wicked and unjust yet many of the principles whereon they did it were such as I cannot assent unto Yea I shall say that though Austin was sufficiently cleare in the nature of the invisible Church Catholick yet his frequent confounding it with a mistaken notion of the visible generall Church hath given no small occasion of stumbling and sundry unhappy intanglements to diverse in after Ages His own book De unitats Ecclesiae which contains the summe and Substance of what he had written elsewhere or disputed against the Donatists would afford me instances enough to make good my assertion were it now under consideration or proofe Being then thus come off from this part of our Charge and accusation of Schisme for the relinquishment of the Catholick visible Church which as we have not done so to doe is not Schisme but a sin of another nature and importance according to the method proposed a recharge on the Romanists in reference to their present Condition and its unsuitablenesse to the Vnity of the Church evinced must briefly ensue Their claime is known to be no lesse then that they are this Catholick Church out of whose Communion there is no salvation as the Donatists was of old that also the union of this Church consists in its subjection to its head the Pope and worshipping of God according to his appointment in and with his severall qualifications and attendencies Now this claime of theirs to our apprehension and Consciences is 1. Cruell and sanguinary condemning Millions to hell that invocate and call on the name of the Lord Jesus Christ believing all things that are written in the Old and New Testaments for no other cause in the World but because they are not convinced that it is their duty to give up Reason Faith Soule and all to him and his disposall whom they have not only unconquerable presumptions against as an evill and wicked Person but are also resolved and fully perswaded in their Consciences that he is an enemy to their deare Lord Jesus Christ out of Love to whom they cannot beare him Especially will this appeare to be so if we consider their farther improvement of this principle to the killing hanging torturing to death
one another hath been the greatest ball of strife and most effectu-all engine of difference and distance between us may be a meanes to reconcile in Love them that truely feare God though engaged in severall wayes as to some particulars I confesse I have not any great hope of much successe on this account for let principles and ways be made as evident as if he that wrote them carryed the Sunne in his hand yet whilst men are forestalled by prejudices and have their affections and spirits engaged suitably thereunto no great alteration in their minde and wayes on the clearest conviction whatever is to be expected All our hearts are in the hand of God and our expectations of what he hath promised are to be proportioned to what he can effect not to what of outward meanes we see to be used 4. To conclude what vaine janglings men are endlesly engaged in who will lay their own false hypotheses and preconceptions as a ground of farther procedure is also in part evident by what hath been delivered Hence for instance is that doubty dispute in the world whether a Schismatick doth belong to the Church or noe which for the most part is determined in the Negative when it is impossible a man should be so but by vertue of his being a Church Member A Church is that alienum solum wherein that evill dwelleth The most of the enquiries that are made and disputed on whether this or that sort of men belongs to the Church or no are of the same value and import He belongs to the Church Catholick who is united to Christ by the spirit and none other And he belongs to the Church Generall visible who makes profession of the faith of the Gospell and destroyes it not by any thing of a just inconsistency with the beliefe of it And he belongs to a Particular Church who having been in a due order joyned thereunto hath neither voluntarily deserted it nor been judicially ejected out of it Thus one may be a member of the Church Catholick who is no member of the generall visible Church nor of a particular Church as an elect infant sanctifyed from the womb dying before baptisme and one may be a member of the Church generall visible who is no member of the Church Catholick nor of a particular Church as a man making profession of the true faith yet not united to Christ by the Spirit nor joyned to any particular visible Church or he may be also of the Catholick Church and not of a particular as also of a particular Church and not of the Catholick And a man may every true believer walking orderly ordinarily is a member of the Church of Christ in every sence insisted on of the Catholick Church by a Union with Christ the head of the visible Generall Church by his profession of the Faith and of a particular Congregation by his voluntary assotiating himselfe therewith according to the will and appointment of our Lord Jesus Christ FINIS Reader In the Authors absence many errors and mistakes obscuring or perverting the sence of the places where they are have escaped the presse which thou art desired to correct according as here directed PAg. 2. l. 20. r. and p. 3. l. 14. man p. 5. l. 22. clamorous p. 7. l. 6. vobis p. 9. l. 19. Lutherans Sacramentarian p. 11. l. 21 establish it p. 13. l. 8. conducingnesse p. 15. l. 2. the present p. 16. l. 12. Yea I p. 22. l. 18. His word p. 24. l. 8. Scissure p. 29. l. 18. extended is of p. 31. l. 17. unity of the p. 36. l. 5. dele among l. 13. Metropolitans p. 39. l. 22. dele if p. 42. l. 1. instructed by Authority from their p. 43. l. 2. is not p. 50. l. 26. that shall be pleased to consider p. 54. l. 18. other promises p. 60. l. 24. in the civil state to p. 64. l. 22. our fore-fathers p. 73. l. 13. dele of l. 25. scriptures p. 75. l. 7. nor are they not at all l. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 38. l. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 88. l. 1. dele sence v. 24. saith the Apostle I fill up that l. 12. repartees l. 21. Church there is no promise made to the Church p. 90. l. 1. sence v. 24. saith the Apostle I fill up that p. 91 l. 4. Sion p. 93. l. 10. that it hath an p. 101. l. 13. dispute men p. 102. l. 19. is in p. 110. l. 28. moats p. 124. l. 28. Juvenalis p. 126. l. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 131. l. 20. hath been p. 133. l. 18. summed up p. 134. l. 15. men p. 146. l. 15. ad Judaeos p. 155. l. ult Scripture p. 160. l. 13. Catholick Church p. 166. l. 20. their writing l. 21. a sweet p. 168. l. 28. have not only p. 169. l. 24. begun p. 172. l. 6. sport l. 8. institutions l. 9. language p. 173. l. 18. Gentlemen p. 176. l. 15. do that p. 180. l. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 185. l. 19. another p. 186. l. 10. to its p. 189. l. 2. Athenaeus l. 3. Thrasilaus p. 192. l. 13. Patriarchs or Metropolitans l. 29. Conscience p. 194. l. 13 14. are there p. 198. l. 15. Scriptures p. 199. l. 24 25. the gifts of his spirit p. 200. l. 14. due to Elders p. 202. l. 7. those many Churches p. 204. l. 1. it seemes 205. l. 17. dele his p. 215. l. 18. is the union enquired after p. 216. l. 17. their sence l. 21. dele the p. 218. l. 2. a Title p. 229. l. 24. your severall p. 234. l. 13. if I have p. 236. l. 16. the unity consists l. 25. visible Church p. 240. l. 21. nor conc p. 242. l. 1. any man may p. 244. l. 24. dele as p. 245. l. 1. Dio Cassius l. 15. there be a p. 247. l. 23. one civile p. 256. l. 20. commit p. 264. l. 2. drive l. 10. or on any l. 17. their administrations §. 1. § 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 14. §. 15. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chronic. Antioch Joh. Male p. 98. A. MS. Bib. Bod. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 14. §. 15. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 20. §. 21. §. 22. §. 23. §. 24. §. 25. §. 26. §. 27. §. 28. §. 29. §. 30. §. 31. §. 32 §. 33. §. 34. §. 35. §. 36. §. 37. §. 38. §. 39. §. 40. §. 41. §. 42. §. 43. §. 44. §. 45. §. 46. §. 47. §. 48. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 14. §. 15. §. 16. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 20. §. 21. §. 22. §. 23. §. 24. Ille Coetus Christianorum qui solus in orbe clare● regeneratis est ecclesia solus Coetus Christianorum papae subditorum Claret regeneratis ergo prob apud illas solos sunt qui miracula faciunt ergo Val Mag. Deut. 13. 1 2. Mat. 7. 22 23. Exod. 3. 7. §. 25. §. 26. §. 27. §. 28. §. 29. §. 30. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 14 §. 15. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 20. §. 21. §. 22. §. 23. §. 24. §. 25. §. 26. §. 27. §. 28. §. 29. §. 30. §. 31. §. 32. §. 33. §. 34. §. 35. §. 36. §. 3● §. 38. §. 39. §. 40. §. 41 §. 42. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 14. §. 15. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 20. §. 21. §. 22. §. 23. §. 24. §. 25. §. 26. §. 27. §. 28. §. 29. §. 30. § 31. §. 32. §. 33. §. 34. §. 35. §. 36. * Si quis aut privatus aut populus eorum decret●● non stetit sacrificiis interdicunt Haec paena apud eos est gravissima quibus ita est interdictum ii numero impiorum sceleratorum habentur ab iis omnes decedunt aditum eorum sermonemque defugiunt ne quid ex contagione incommodi accipiant neque iis petentibus jus redditur neque honos ullus communicatur His autem omnibus Dr●dibus praeest unus qui summam inter eos habet Authoritatem hoc mortus si quis ex reliquis excellit dignitate succedit at si sunt plures suffragio Druidum adlegitur Nonnunquam etiam de principatu armis contendunt Caes lib. 6. de Bell. Gal. §. 37. §. 38. §. 39. §. 40. §. 41. §. 42. §. 43. §. 44. §. 45. §. 46. §. 47. §. 48. §. 49. §. 50. §. 51. §. 52. §. 53. §. 54. §. 55. §. 56. §. 57. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 14. §. 15. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 20. §. 21. §. 22. §. 23. §. 24. §. 25. §. 26. §. 27. §. 1. §. 2. §. 3. §. 4. §. 5. §. 6. §. 7. §. 8. §. 9. §. 10. §. 11. §. 12. §. 13. §. 13. §. 14. §. 16. §. 17. §. 18. §. 19. §. 20 §. 21 §. 22. §. 23. §. 24. §. 25. §. 26. §. 27. §. 28. §. 29. §. 30. §. 31. §. 32. §. 33. §. 34. §. 35. §. 36. §. 37. §. 38. §. 39. §. 40. §. 41. §. 42. §. 43. §. 44. §. 45. §. 46. §. 47. §. 48. §. 49. §. 50. §. 51. §. 52. §. 53. §. 54. §. 55. §. 56. §. 57. §. 58. §. 59. §. 60. §. 62. §. 63. §. 64. §. 65 §. 66. §. 67. §. 68.
9 10. Rev. 22. 15. I find some persons of late appropriating holinesse and Regeneration to the Romane partie on this account that among them only miracles are wrought which is say they the only proofe of true Holinesse But these men erre as their Predecessors not knowing the Scriptures nor the power of God Amongst all the evidences that are given in Scripture of Regeneration I suppose they will scarcely find this to be one and they who have no other assurance that they are themselves borne of God but that some of their Church worke miracles had need maintaine also that no man can be assured thereof in this life They will find that a broken reed if they leane upon it Will it evince all the members of their Church to be Regenerate or only some if they say all I aske then what becomes of Bellarmin's Church which is made up of them who are not Regenerate If some only I desire to know on what account the miracles of one man may be an evidence to some in his society that they are Regenerate and not to others Or whether the foundation of that distinction must not lye in themselves but the truth is the miracles now pretended are an evidence of a contrary condition to what these men are willing to own 2 Thess 2. 11 12. 2. All Ignorant persons into whose hearts God hath not shined to give them the knowledg of his Glory in the face of Jesus Christ are to be added to the former account There is a measure of knowledg of absolute indispensable necessity to Salvation whereof how short the most of them are is evident Among the open Abominations of the Papall combination for which they ought to be an abhorrencie to mankind their professed designe of keeping the people in ignorance is not the least Hos 4. 6. That it was devotion to themselves and not to God which they aymed to advance thereby is by experience sufficiently evinced But that whose Reverence is to be preserved by its being hid is in it selfe contemptible What other thoughts wise men could have of Christian Religion in their mannagement of it I know not Woe to you Romish Clergie for you have taken away the key of knowledge yee enter'd not in your selves and them that were entering in you hindred The people hath perished under your hands for want of knowledge Zech 11. 15 16 17. The sigment of an implicite faith as mannaged by these men to charme the spirits and Consciences of poor perishing creatures with securitie in this life will be found as pernitious to them in the issue as their Purgatorie invented on the same account will be uselesse 3. Adde to these all Hypocriticall selfe-justiciaries who seek for a Righteousnesse as it were by the workes of the Law which they never attained to Rom. 9. 31 32. though they take paines about it Chap. 10. 15. Eph. 2. 8 9 10 11. by this sword will fall the fattest cattell of their Herd How the hand of the Lord on this account sweeps away their Devo●ionists and therein takes down the pride of their glory the day will discover yet besides these there are two other things that will cut them down as the grasse falls before the sith of the Mower 1. The first of these is Idolatry be not deceived no Idolaters shall inherit the Kingdome of God 1 Cor. 6. 9. Without are Idolaters Rev. 22. 15. this added to their lives hath made Christian Religion where known only as by them professed to be an abomination to Jewes and Gentiles Some will one day besides himselfe answer for Averroes determining of the case as to his soule Quoniam Christiani adorant quod comedunt anima mea sit cum Philosophis Whether they are Idolaters or no whether they yeild the worship due to the Creator to the Creature hath been sisted to the utmost and the charge of its evill which the jealous God doth of all things most abhore so fastened on them beyond all possibility of escape that one of the wisest of them hath at length fixed on that most desperate and profligate refuge that some kind of Idolatry is lawfull because Peter mentions abominable Idolatries 1 Pet. 4. 5. who is therein so farre from distinguishing of severall sorts kinds of it to any such purpose as that he aggravates all sort kinds of it with the Epithet of Nefarious or abominable A man may say what is there almost that they have not committed lewdnesse in this kind withall on every hill and under every green tree is the filth of their abomination found Saints Angells in Heaven Images of some that never were of others that had been better they never had been bread and wine Crosse and nailes Altars wood and iron and the Pope on earth are by them adored The truth is if we have any assurance left us of any thing in the world that we either see or heare feel or tast and so consequently that we are alive and not other men the poor Indians who worship a piece of red cloth are not more grosse Idolaters then they are 2. All that worship the Best set up by the Dragon all that receive his marke in their hands or forehead are said not to have their names written in the booke of life of the Lambe Rev. 13 8. which what aspect it bears towards the visible Roman Church time will manifest All these sorts of persons we except against as those that have no interest in the union of the Catholick-Church All prophane ignorant selfe-justiciaries all Idolaters worshippers or adorers of the Papall power if any remaine among them not one way or other visibly separated from them who fall not under some one or more of these Exceptions as we grant they may be members of the Catholick-Church so we deny that they are of that which is called the Roman And I must needs informe others by the way that whilest the course of their conversation ignorance of the mystery of the Gospell hatred of Good men contempt of the spirit of God his gifts and graces do testify to the Consciences of them that feare the Lord that they belong not to the Church Catholick it renders their rebuking of others for separating from any instituted Church Nationall as is pretended or more restrained very weake and contemptible All discourses about meats have a worme at the root whilest there is a beame lies in the Eye Doe men suppose that a man who hath tasted how gratious the Lord is and hath by grace obtained communion with the Father and his Sonne Jesus Christ walking at peace with God and in a sense of his love all his daies filled with the Holy Ghost and by him with joy unspeakable and glorious in believing is not strengthened against the rebukes and disputes of men whom he sees and knows by their fruits to be destitute of the spirit of God uninterested in the fellowship of
the Gospell and communion thereof CHAP. V. Of the Catholick Church visible Of the Nature thereof In what sense the Vniversality of Professors is called a Church Amiraldus his Judgement in this businesse The Vnion of the Church in this sense wherein it consists Not the same with the Vnion of the Church Catholick Nor that of a particular instituted Church Not in relation to any one officer or more in subordination to one another Such a subordination not proveable 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Nicene Synod Of generall Councells Vnion of the Church visible not in a generall Councell The true Vnity of the Vniversality of professors asserted Things necessary to this union Story of a Martyr at Bagdat The Apostacy of Churches from the unity of the Faith Testimony of Hegesippus Vindicated Papall Apostacy Protestants not guilty of the breach of this Vnity The Catholick Church in the sence insisted on granted by the Ancients Not a Politicall body THe Second generall notion of the Church as it is usually taken signifies the Vniversality of men professing the Doctrine of the Gospell and obedience to God in Christ according to it throughout the World This is that which is commonly called the visible Catholick Church which now together with the union which it hath in its selfe and how that Unity is broken falls under consideration That all Professors of the Gospell throughout the World called to the knowledge of Christ by the Word doe make up and constitute his visible Kingdome by their professed subjection to him and so may be called his Church I grant That they are precisely so called in Scripture is not unquestionable What relation it stands in to all particular Churches whether as a Genus to its Species or as a Totum to its parts hath lately by many been discussed I must crave leave to deny that it is capable of filling up or of being included in any of these denominations and Relations The Vniversall Church we are speaking of is not a thing that hath as such a specificative forme from which it should be called an Vniversall Church as a particular hath for its ground of being so called It s but a collection of all that are duely called Christians in respect of their profession nor are the severall particular Churches of Christ in the world so parts and members of any Catholick Church as that it should be constituted or made up by them and of them for the order and purpose of an instituted Church that is the cellebration of the worship of God and Institutions of Jesus Christ according to the Gospell which to assert were to overthow a remarkable difference between the oeconomy of the Old Testament the New Nor do I think that particular Congregations doe stand unto it in the Relation of Species unto a Genus in which the whole nature of it should be preserved and comprized which would deprive every one of membership in this Vniversall Church which is not joyned actually to some particular Church or Congregation then which nothing can be more devoid of truth To debate the thing in particular is not my present intention nor is needfull to the purpose in hand The summe is the Vniversall Church is not so called upon the same account that a particular Church is so called The formal Reason constituting a particular Church to be a particular Church is that those of whom it doth consist doe joyne together according to the minde of Christ in the excercise of the same numericall Ordinances for his worship And in this sence the Vniversal Church cannot be said to be a Church as though it had such a particular forme of its own which that it hath or should have is not only false but impossible But it is so called because all Christians throughout the world excepting some individuall persons providentially excluded do upon the enjoyment of the same preaching of the word the same Sacraments administred in specie profes one common faith and hope but to the joynt performance of any exercise of Religion that they should hea●e one Sermon together or partake of one Sacrament or have one Officer for their Rule and Government is ridiculous to imagine nor doe any professe to think so as to any of the particulars mentioned but those only who have profit by the fable As to the description of this Church I shall acquiesce in that lately given of it by a very learned Man Saith he Ecclesia Vniversalis est communio seu societas omnium coetuum I had rather he had said and he had done it more agreeable to principles by himselfe laid down omnium Fidem Christianam profitentium sive illi ad Ecclesias aliquas particulares pertineant sive non pertineant qui Religionem Christianam profitentur consistens in eo quod tamet●● neque exercitia pietatis uno numero frequentent neque Sacramenta eadem numero participent neque uno eodemque omnino ordine regantur gubernentur unum tamen corpus in eo constituunt quôd eundem Christum Servatorem habere se profitentur uno in Evangelio propositum iisdem promissionibus comprehensum quas obsignant confirmant Sacramenta ex eadem institutione pendentia Amyrald Thes de Eccles nom defin The. 29. There being then in the World a great multitude which no man can number of all Nations Kindreds people and languages professing the doctrine of the Gospell not tied to mountaines or hills Joh. 4. but worshipping 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Cor. 1. 2. 1 Tim. 2. 8. Let us consider what union there is amongst them as such wrapping them all in the bond thereof by the will and appointment of Jesus Christ and wherein the breach of that union doth consist and how any man is or may be guilty thereof I suppose this will be granted That only Elect believers belong to the Church in this sense considered is a Chimaera feigned in the braines of the Romanists and fastened on the Reformed Divines I wholly assent to Austins dispute on this head against the Donatists and the whole entanglement that hath been about this matter hath arisen from obstinacy in the Papists in not receiving the Catholick Church in the sense mentioned before which to doe they know would be injurious to their interest This Church being visible and professing and being now considered under that constituting difference that the union of it cannot be the same with that of the Catholick Church before mentioned it is cleare from hence that multitudes of men belong unto it who have not the Relation mentioned before to Christ and his body which is required in all comprehended in that union seeing many are called but few are chosen Nor can it consist in a joynt Assembly either ordinary or extraordinary for the celebration of the Ordinances of the Gospell or any one of them as was the case of the Church of the Jewes which met at set times in one place