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A33970 A modest plea for the Lords Day or rather the summe of the plea made by divines for the Lords Day as the Christian Sabbath, against those who contend for the old Sabbath of the seventh day, in order from the creation / by J.C., D.D. Collinges, John, 1623-1690. 1669 (1669) Wing C5327; ESTC R43109 56,915 142

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Printed Papers it will be no small satisfaction to me if not y● my work is with the Lord an● my judgement is with my God I think scarce any of you think I have any prejudice against you many of you may believe I have a great kindness for you The good Lord bring us all in this point to think and speak the same thing and to walk in the same Way Your Friend and Servant in the Gospel of our Lord Iesus John Collenges CHAP. I. The occasion of the Discourse and what moved the Author to it IF in the following Discourse I had designed to have advantaged my Name in a printed Book I had certainly made choice of another Subject or handled this in another manner than I have I know nothing left for an Author on this subject it hath been so variously and learnedly handled by eminent Authors Nothing is to be added to what Mr. Ley hath said to justifie the application of the Name Sabbath to the Lords day Nor to what Dr. Twiss Mr. Sheppard Mr. Caudry and Mr. Warren have said for the Morality of it for the repeal or expiration of the Jewish Sabbath for the change of it to the first day of the Week Mr. Sheppard and Mr. Caudry have not lef● Oc●fo●d or Brabourn nor Mr. Warren left Mr. Tilham a rag to cover the nakedness of their faireyes nor is ought to be added to wha● Dr. Young hath said to the primitive observation of it For the practical sanctification of it all the Authors aforesaid have spoke● fully to which may be added Dr. Bound Mr. Bernard and lately Mr. Wells To say nothing of the controversial part handled by the aforesaid Authors against Heylin Primrose Ironside and all of that party who would make our Sabbath but an ordinary Church-holiday so that indeed there is not room left for a new Author to croud in bringing any thing new in this case Nor shall this discourse pretend to any thing of that nature I look upon it as our great disadvantage in reference to most of our brethren who contend for the Jewish Sabbath to be still in force that what is already said in the case which is abundantl● enough is either spoken so learnedly as they cannot understand it or else hidden in large volumes of considerable price which either ordinary people want money to buy or time to●●ad or judgement to finde out All therefore I shall pretend to is in a plain familiar Discourse to present our brethren with the summe of what hath been far more fully and learnedly discoursed by others To which that which hath been the next occasion is my present leisure and the Providence of God casting me in a place where I observe very many and those whose hearts I would charitably think God had touched with a sense of Religion and who I trust truely fear God and love the Lord Jesus have received impressions leading them to a great zeal for the old Sabbath The consequents of which opinion I look upon as very sad these Christians breaking communion with all Christian Churches in the World and depriving themselves of the advantage they might have from communion with us on the Lords day For though I have known some of that opinion who yet on the Lords day would come to hear the Word preached and joyn in Prayer with other Congregations yet I perceive another spirit in many of my present Neighbours And besides if being possessed of that opinion they did come it would not be with such preparation nor in such a Conscience of what they did as were requisite for such as expect a blessing from or in such dutyes God hath pleased at present to call me to sit down in silence as to my publick Ministry that I might in something serve my generation and be usefull to the Souls of others I have put my pen to Paper in this cause nor have I had any other motive whatsoever but if it might be to do good to some Soul or other or if I cannot cure yet at least through the strength of God to stop the spreading of this disease amongst Christians CHAP. II. The first Consideration That God hath no more glory nor the Souls of Christians any more reall advantage from the observation of the Seventh day from the Creation than from the observation of the Lords Day as the Christian Sabbath nor can be any pretence of this nature but that of stricter Obedience to the Commandment I Take it to be an excellent notion of that holy and eminent Servant of God Mr. Thomas Sheppard that the thing which makes a Law morall is a goodness in the thing commanded precedent to the command yet caused by the eternal will of God Ceremonial Laws were therefore good because commanded but the matter of every Moral Law must have some goodness that is some equity some suitableness in it to the nature and to the Concernment of men and women preceding the command especially if we rightly consider man as he stands related to God and to his Neighbour as he is made up of Body and Soul both ordained to an eternal existence The light of nature shewing us that there is a God and but one God he our Creator Preserver Governour an Essence of glorious Majesty purity and holiness c. If we had never heard of the first second or third Commandements Nature would have told us it was fit we should give the highest homage of our Souls to him alone worship him according to his will not blaspheme his Name nor use any thing related to him irreverently which is the substance of the three first Commandments The same will be yielded as to the 5 6 7 8 9 and 10. The very light of Nature would have shewed us a fitness and sutableness in the things there commanded to humane Society if we never had heard of the Commandment The same light of Nature also would have shewn us that some time must be spent in the service of God That it was reasonable some due proportion of time should be so sanctified Indeed that this should be a seventh part rather than a sixth Nature would not have shewn us that is morall positive but being directed Nature will presently allow it equal holy just and good This Original goodness in the observation of a seventh part of our time as holy to the Lord must lye either in this That from such a Religious Observation our Creator will reap some glory Or this That from it Man as to Soul or Body will reap some considerable advantage Both which are most undoubtedly true both as to some proportion of time and as to a seventh rather than a lesser part of our time The honour we bring to God by Acts of Worship being only in the publishing of his Name and Works The more frequently we do exalt his Name and publish his Works the more Glory we bring him Again Ordinances being the way through which our Lord Jesus useth to pass
to Hierusalem and find the eleven and others gathered together We in a time of persecution oft go as far to hear a sermon and yet do not break the sabbath 2. But they say the text saith Christs second appearing was after eight dayes Joh. 20.26 But so it is said that after three dayes the Son of Man must rise again Mar. 8.31 Yet we know he rose on the third day The Grecians had that liberty in their la●guage of expressing themselves as to expres● a thing as done when once began Afte● eight dayes is no more than after the eight day was begun as after three dayes was n● more than after the third day was began Our Saviour being now ascended int● Heaven we find the disciples returnin● from mount Olivet to Hierusalem Act. 1 ●● and read little of them but of their continuing in prayers and supplication and choosing an Apostle till the day of Pentecost What was done in the day of Pentecost we find Act. 2. Then the Holy Ghost descended and before that we read of tha● descending of the Holy Ghost the Evangelists observed They were all with one 〈◊〉 in one place A phrase fully expressing 〈◊〉 Christian Church-meeting I am not Ignorant what a stir Mr. Tilham keeps 〈◊〉 prove this was upon the Jewish sabbath We say with I think better evidence it was upon the Lords day 1. It was Gods express law that the Jews should rest on the seventh day both 〈◊〉 earing and in harvest Exod. 34.21 22. 2. The law for the feast of Pentecost yo● shall find Levit. 23.10 11 12 15 16. ●hen you be come into the land which I shall ●●e you and shall reap the harvest thereof then 〈◊〉 shall bring a sheaf of the first fruits of ●●r harvest unto the Priest and he shall wave 〈◊〉 together with the offering of a lamb with●● blemish on the morrow after the sabbath 〈◊〉 shall wave it And you shall count unto 〈◊〉 from the morrow after the sabbath from 〈◊〉 day you brought the sheafe seven sabbaths ●ill be compleat even until the morrow after ●he seventh sabbath you shall number 50 dayes Deut. 16.9 Seven weeks shalt thou number ●nto thee begin to number the seven weeks him such time as thou beginnest to put sickle ●●to thy corn I must first take notice of a base cheat Mr. Tilham puts upon his reader Tilham 7 day sabbath p. 82. ●●lling them that Moses from God appointed Israel to bring on the ●●orrow after their passover sabbath ●sheaf of their first fruits c. Good reader look into all the texts that mention it and see if God sayes a word of their Passover Sabbath but v. 11. The morrow after the sabbath Which was undoubtedly the weekly sabbath Besides their passover sabbath was tied to a day It is not to be imagined their corn should alwayes be ri● just that day to wit the 14 day of ● first moneth Now they were not to cou● till they had put their sickle into their cor● Deut. 16.9 1. I observe first it was impossible th● Pentecost should ever fall upon the Jewish sabath for on the sabbath day they were ● God 's law to rest Exod. 34.21 22. even earing and harvest So the soonest they cou● begin to put their sickle into their co● must be the first day of the week 2. They were then to expect till th● next sabbath and from the morrow afte● to count which makes it necessary th●● the feast of Pentecost should alwayes fall 〈◊〉 the first day of the week 3. Here was a Church-meeting of Christians met in one place on the first day of the wee● 4. Christ who when on the Earth 〈◊〉 we heard did honour those meetings wi●● his own company here he sends the comforter gives them on this day the promise of th● Father It is true Mr. Ainsworth and some other think the passover sabbath was meant b● let any one consider with reason how it w●● possible unless the corn in Palestina was alwayes ripe before the fifteenth day of the month Abib so as they had reaped some of it for till that there was no beginning to count for Pentecost but Mr. Ainsworth is far from fathering this as Mr. Tilham doth on Moses it was only a notion taken up by that holy man from some Rabbins But enough of this whoso will read this argument from our Saviours Apparitions and the descending of the Holy Ghost improved to the height may have it admirably done by Mr. Warren late Minister of the Gospel in Colchester in his excellent Book called The Jewish Sabbath antiquated and the Lords day instituted from p. 169 to 187. where so much is indeed said upon this whole Subject as I think very little is to be added to it But there is yet behind one Text more insisted on almost by all Divines in this case it is that Rev. 1.10 I was in the Spirit on the Lords day and heard behind me a great voice as of a Trumpet saying c. V. 11. and I turned to see the voice that spake with me and being turned I saw seven golden Candlesticks and in the midst of the seven Candlesticks one like unto the Son of man c. who is described further v. 13 14 15 16. where he is said to have the Stars in hi● right hand and out of his mouth went for● a two-edged sword Christ himself opens the Vision v. 20. The seven starrs are the Angels of the seven Churches and the seven Candlesticks which thou sawest are the seven Churches St. John at this time was by the Roman Emperour banished into the Isle of Pathmos for the Gospel sake Here he seeth a Vision Two things as to the present Controversie are considerable in it 1. What he saw 2. When he saw it 1. What he saw He saw the Lord Jesus Christ in the middest of his Gospel Churches walking before him in the purity of Gospel Administrations and reaching forth godly Ministers to them and furnishing them with his Word which is as a sharp two-edged sword This plainly was the Vision interpreted by the Lord himself Revel 1.20 2. When saw he this On the Lords day he was in the Spirit on the Lords day then he heard this voice then he saw this Vision 3. I am aware that this Text hath so disturbed the leaders in this Controversie opposite to us that they have exercised their wits to find out a Lords day not the first day of the week Mr. Brabourn Mr. Tilham and one of more learning and worth than both of them think it might be the day of Judgement which indeed is called the day of the Lord Phil. 1.16 but never the Lords day Again the Apostle speaks of a known day and of a day in being then but neither of these is true of the day of Judgement not yet come nor to be known when it shall come Matth. 24.36 Of that day and hour knoweth no man Others think it might be the day of
than formerly This would be but an ill requitall of the God of their mercies Men in other little things have a zeal to keep up the credit and repute of their Countrey certainly it should not in this grow cold None certainly can think this is rather an argument on the other side as intimating that my plea is for an unnecessary strictness If the opinion of duty in such severe observation of Sabbaths should be a mistake yet unquestionably in the practice there can be no considerable mistake on this hand If a man upon any other day of the week in order to the putting his heart into and keeping his heart in the better frame for Religious Worship to be in that day performed should resolve to meddle with no labour to allow himself no diversions by Sports nor to ingage in any worldly or more idle discourse certainly every one would say he did well and can any be condemned either by another or by his own Conscience for doing this on the Sabbath-day when by the confession of all they are obliged either by the fourth Commandment as we say or by the custom or command of the Church as others say to more and more solemn acts of Worship than upon the week-dayes Surely if we had not particular Precepts in the cause yet the consideration of the great and solemn services we are that day to perform to God which reason will tell us should be performed with the best attention of minde and intention of spirit and improved when done to the best advantage would oblige us to this rest from worldly actions worldly discourses vain and useless pleasures which must necessarily divert our minds from our spiritual employments and take up that time which might be better improved in the concocting the Word we have heard and due digesting of it by meditation and applying it to our hearts Now considering over and above this that this hath been the honour of the Professours of Religion in England it certainly ought to prevail with ingenuous children of so good Parents especially when it is impossible that they should find any errour in the practice if any will fancy that there is a mistake as to the opinion of a necessity of such strictness If any of them can say which I much doubt yea I firmly believe the contrary he that reads and prayes in his family and prayes with the Congregation and hears a Sermon or two in the Sabbath though he also in the vacation of these exercises doth some worldly business and discourseth of it or recreates himself with some sports not sinfull doth well yet they must say he who forbears these sports labours discourses on that day doth better if not with respect to the command strictly yet with reference to the dutyes he is to perform that he may the better perform them and make the better improvement and advantage of them and with reference to scandall and the destroying the Souls of others yea and in reference to his own Soul Reason obliging us in such cases of doubt to take the safest part 2. Secondly Consider I beseech you the influence that it hath upon an holy life and conversation Compare the lives of those that are strict in the observation of the Sabbath with the lives of those that are more remiss in it and where you see an abatement as to strictness in keeping Sabbaths whether you do not find also a proportionable abatement of holiness almost in all their other converse Observe and see if they be as conscientious according to Davids resolution Psal 101.2 to walk in their house in a perfect way To instruct their Families according to Abrahams copy Gen. 18.19 commanding them to keep the way of the Lord. Teaching the Law of God unto their children diligently and whetting it upon them as it is in the Hebrew and talking of it when they sit in their houses and when they walk in the way when they lye down and when they rise up according to Gods command Deut. 6.7 whether they be so diligent and constant in praying with their families so offering up their morning and evening sacrifices to the Lord. Indeed it is not reasonable to presume that those who will not spend the Sabbath thus should spend any considerable time of their working-dayes thus when they have a free liberty to work by the Laws of God and men considering especially that on the Sabbath-day they are restrained from labour not only by the Law of God but by the Laws of the Nation and general usage and custom of the place where they are But I fear upon observation we shall finde that those who are loose in the observation of the Sabbath are not very strict in any other piece of their conversation I remember the learned Junius in his Analytick Explication of Numbers upon the story before mentioned concerning him that gathered sticks starts a question whether then it was such a crime to gather sticks on the Sabbath day He answers it thus That the Precept of the Sabbath was the clausula the conclusion of all the Precepts that concerned the Worship of God in which God would have all exercises of piety imbibed whence it was that he who was in the least guilty of the profanation of that was guilty of a profanation of the whole Worship of God Again that Christian who is possessed with a dread of the Lord as to the Sabbath and walks in that dread all that day will find it influential upon him the whole week so that the strict observation of the Sabbath is both influential upon us as to holiness and is also an indication of holiness which should oblige Christians to the strict observation of it Buxtorf tells us of one of the Jewish Rabbies that wished His portion might be with those that began the Sabbath with those of Tiberias and ended it with those of Tseppore That is who sanctified the Sabbath in the longest proportion of time for Tsephore being a City placed on the top of a Mountain the Sun shined longer upon that than upon others and Tiberias being situated in a valley the Sun appeared to them not so soon as to others I think it may be a good wish for a Christian That his portion might be with them that begin the Sabbath soonest and end it latest and keep it most strictly Thirdly Methinks the typical notion of the Sabbath should something oblige us The Sabbath is not only a consequent and commemorative sign to us of Christs resurrection but it is also a predictional and antecedent sign of that glorious rest which remaineth for the people of God which way soever we look upon it it certainly calleth to us for a strict observation of it 1. Let us look upon it as a consequent sign as a memorial of the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ We are said to be risen with Christ whence the Apostle argues our duty to seek those things which are above To set our
affections on things above Certainly as our interest in the resurrection of Christ and the influence it hath upon us should ingage us to seek the things above in the whole course of our lives and at all times to set our affections upon things above so not to do it upon that day which God hath sanctified for our special commemoration of it will speak souls both little sensible of the great mercy of redemption and little influenced from that resurrection not risen with Christ as we ought to be Again let us consider the Christian Sabbath as a sign antecedent and prefigurative The Apostle seemeth thus to argue Heb. 4.8 9. There remains therefore a rest to the people of God For he who is entred into his rest he also hath ceased from his own work as God did from his Let us labour therefore to enter into that rest And a little before v. 4 5 6 7. of the same Chapter For he spake in a certain place of the seventh day on this wise And God did rest the seventh day from all his works And in this place again if they shall enter into my rest Seeing therefore it remaineth that some must enter therein and they to whom it was first preached entered not in because of unbelief Again he limiteth a certain day in David saying To day after so long a time as it is said To day if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts for if Jesus had given them rest he would not have spoken of another day There remains therefore c. The Apostles great business there as is evident is to exhort the believing Hebrews to a perseverance in the profession of the Gospel and to perswade those that yet believed not to imbrace it The argument which he useth is Lest they should fail of an entrance into Gods rest by which rest he undoubtedly means the souls rest in Heaven To this end he tells them 1. That there is such a rest v. 9. 2. That there is a Promise left of entring into this rest 3. That some and those to whom it wa● first preached entred not in because of unbelief 4. That there is a day limited in which those must hear the Lords voice that will enter into this rest That there is such a Rest he proveth by two types The one that of Canaan the Jews after their laborious travailing in the Wilderness entring into Canaan v. 3. The second is that of the Sabbath for what sense else can those words have in this place He spoke in a certain place of the seventh day on this wise And God did rest the seventh day from all his work And v. 10. of Christ he saith he that is entred into his rest he also ceased from his own works as God did from his God the Fathers proper work was Creation the Sons proper work was Redemption When God had finished his work he rested and in commemoration of it he appointed his people to keep a day of Rest When Christ had finished his work of redemption he also rested and appointed us a day to rest in in commemoration of it both the one and the other are by the Apostle made prefigurative of that Rest which God hath prepared in Heaven for us which also it self is called vers 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a keeping of a Sabbath Now certainly the type should bear a proportion to what is signified by it Our rest on Earth should bear some proportion to our rest in Heaven Our rest in Heaven shall not only be a cessation from labour but from all sensual vain pleasure from all worldly discourse a continual pleasure in beholding and injoying God If we would keep a Sabbath perfectly certainly abating what is necessary for our selves or others for the sustentation of our bodyes and the preservation both of our selves and other creatures we should allow our selves no more labour than we shall have in Heaven no other pleasure than the Angels and Saints of God have there all whose pleasure is in the contemplation and injoyment of God Oh that we could thus sanctifie Sabbaths But this is my third argument to press my Brethren to a more strict observation of the Lords holy Day 4. A fourth argument by which I shall pre● this strict sanctification of the Sabbath shall be the influence which it must necessarily hav● upon us as to the duties of worship which we perform on that day There is hardly any person unless those given up to riot and wickedness but hath upon him some little awe and dread of the Sabbath Some duties they think should be done in it more than upon another day either out of Obedience to God in the fourth commandment or to the Church or to the state so commanding Indeed some will shuffle off with very little Some think hearing one is enough for their consciences In the afternoon they may labour or sport c. Others think it is no matter whether there be a Sermon or no but they think they should be longer at morning and evening prayer that day than upon other dayes Those who have any degree of sobriety in them judge that the greater part of the day should be spent in the publick or private exercise of Gods worship but we are not so strictly tied up as to abstinence from pleasure worldly labour vain or secular discourse I will for the present give them what I cannot grant them viz. that the precept is not so strictly to be expounded yet me thinks reason is enough in the case to enforce what we plead for It may be Christian thou art one of the latter sort a sober p●rson who doest think that the greatest part of that day should be spent in the solemn stated acts of worship but thinkest the intermediate time may be more loosly spent Do but consider what an influence thy strict or looser spending of the intermediate time must necessarily have upon thee 1. In reference to thy acts of worship 2. In reference to the effect and fruit of that worship First I say in reference to thy acts of worship If thou hast any thing of the seriousness of a Christian in thee thou wilt and must acknowledge that God must be served with thy spirit and with the utmost ferventy of thy spirit without distractions without any coldness and deadness of spirit with life love delight in thy approach to God c. Dost thou think that all thy time before thy acts of worship had not need be spent in reading in holy meditations in reading the word c. That when thou comest to serve the Lord in solemn acts of worship thy thoughts may not be scattered thy heart may not be dull and dead certainly a conscientious Christian finds all his time too little before he falls upon his duty to get his heart into such a frame and as he spends his previous or intermediate time less or more spiritually so he will find his heart less or more what
the Earth and deprive their souls of the great advantage which they might have by it and certainly this is no light thing to those who know their Saviours walks in the midest of the golden candlesticks and surely they should be near him where he is To evidence this I perceive many of them wholy absenting themselves from all religious meetings on the Lords day the only solemn time observed by all Christians near them it may be in prudence and to avoid scandal they do not openly labour but neither are they will that day worshiping God If any of them will that day go hear a Sermon I appeal to them whether they go as to a Sabbath duty with that preparation with that faith in the promises to them who keep the Lords Sabbath as they should go who expect a blessing from the Lord of the Sabbath Ah! my brethren is it nothing to you Is it nothing to you to have your places empty at the Lords solemn assemblies to be out when the joint-fighs prayers and tears of Gods people are poured out before the Lord if indeed you could judge none fearing God but your selves it were some plea but I know you have more charity why are you then divided from them why will you then lose the advantage of their prayers and deny them the advantage of your prayers I must profess were there nothing else to keep me off this very one thing would keep me off from that opinion Eccl. 3.10 Woe to him that is alone when he falleth for he hath not another to help him up Of the gifts and graces of how many precious ministers and the advantage you might have from them do you deprive your selves Have your souls no need of their interpretations of Scriptures their opening Gospel mysteries their powerful exhortations and arguments for holiness their directions for your Christian conversation I beseech you reflect upon your own souls since the time that in zeal to this opinion you divided your selves from the generality of Christians Have your souls prospered as formerly Have you so increased in the knowledge of God Have you had such love and zeal for God have you so grown in any exercise of grace Indeed it is not reasonable for any to think that you should you have not had the means This is not an age in which the Lord worketh in a way of miracles but produceth his great works by means fitted to them Our brethren must be very partiall to themselves and their present teachers if they think them for gifts and graces comparable to those godly and able ministers under who● ministry they formerly sate The Historian sayes of Mr. Thrask that besides a voice he had nothing we know how little judgement Brabourn had in any thing but this one point And how little Mr. Tilham had there needs no further witness then his own book where is vanity and wickedness enough Souls cannot feed upon a meer aiery empty roaring voice it is the word of God they live upon the word of God truly judiciously and faithfully opened and powerfully applied I appeal to our brethrens consciences whether they judge their present teachers so able and fit for this work as the Godly able ministe● of Christ who have wholly given up themselves to the study of the Scriptures and to the search of the mind of God in them I do not speak for every one that hath the confidence to wear a gown But I am sure our brethren know and will acknowledg● that all parts of England are filled with some number or others of able faithful preachers Now certainly it is no small disadvantage to our brethren to deprive themselves of all the gifts and labours of these servants of God while they walk alone erecting teachers to themselves CHAP. VIII That for any to deprive themselves of the liberty God hath indulged us to labour six dayes in each week is not without guilt IT is the Apostles Precept that we should stand fast in the liberty with which Christ hath made us free and doubtless we are no more to deprive our selves of that liberty which our great Creator hath indulged us than to throw away the life health or estate with which he hath blessed us It is one thing for us as our free-will offering to set apart one of the dayes which God hath given us for our own occasions for the service of God another thing for us to think our selves obliged to do this and to do it in a pretended Conscience to a command when we have no such command Since it hath pleased God to cast my lot in the Countrey I must profess I have most heartily pitied some of my Brethren baptized into this perswasion to see them in the time of Harvest by their perswasion hindred of a third part of their time from making use of those seasons which the gracious God hath indulged them for gathering in the fruits of the Earth The seventh day of the week they rest being perswaded it is the Lords Sabbath and the next day again either out of conscience to a command or to avoid scandall and danger of the Laws and I have sometimes thus said with my self Alas for my Brethren they are zealously affected they would not else for a private opinion indanger the loss of their Crops which God hath given them how good were this zeal if it were in a good cause but hath God required such things at their hands hath not the Lord said Six dayes thou shalt labour and do all thou hast to do Suppose these men by this devotion to lose their crop or a great part of it or at least to lose much in it c. what satisfaction could they have other than from their own fancy will it in the great day of account appear any ot●er than a self-robbery for a Will-worship either it will prove so or the whole Christian World is mistaken and hath been so from the very time Christ ascended up into Heaven Can my Brethren think That the Spirit that dwells in all Believers and leadeth them into all truth should leave all the Churches of the Lord Jesus Christ and come and reveal himself in this singular notion unto them Can our brethren think it is not possible that in this thing they should be mistaken Surely they cannot think but if whole Churches may err and if they can think that all the Churches of God in this thing have for 1600 years been mistaken they may be mistaken Further yet is it not ●robable that our Brethren should be mistaken Our Brethren must confess that the far greater number of Christians are of another mind yea and not only of those who are Christians at large baptized and owning Christ as the Saviour of the World but ●f those who are Christians indeed I mean who have not only imbraced the Doctrine ●f Faith but in whom is the work of Faith ●ith power purifying their hearts and who 〈◊〉 all their conversations