Selected quad for the lemma: state_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
state_n church_n member_n visible_a 2,963 5 9.4470 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A75492 A consideration of certaine controversies at this time agitated in the kingdome of England, concerning the government of the church of God. / Written at the command and appointment of the Walachrian classis, by Guilielmus Apollonii, minister of the Word of God at Middleburgh. And sent from the Walachrian churches, to declare the sense and consent of their churches, to the Synod at London. Octob. 16. 1644. Stilo novo. Translated out of Latine accorning to the printed copy. Apollonius, Willem, 1602 or 3-1657. 1645 (1645) Wing A3535; Thomason E1155_2; ESTC R208676 76,829 175

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

sincere Word unite your hearts in the bands of brotherly love incline your minds to the Kingdomes and Churches Peace Middleburgh in Zeland Octob. 16. 1644. stilo novo Subscribed in the name of the Walachrian Churches by us Jacobus D'Herde President of the Walachrian Classis pro tempore Iodocus Larenus Assessor pro tempore Isaacus Hoornbekius Preacher at Middleburgh Cornelius Beuckelarius Preacher at Vere Melchior Burs Minister of West Souburch Errata PAg. 98. lin 16. And doubtlesse c. to the end of this Section change of letter p. 104. lin ult Luke relates unto p. 105 l. 9. Calvin these words must all be in the same letter as the former and the following p. 113. l. 19. And it appeares c. untill p. 114. l. 13. where he shewes exclusivè all these words must be in other letter p. 114. l. 5. and one dele p. 136. l. 11. Though therefore c. fifteen lines change of Letter p. 137. l. 2. For a Synod c. this whole page and the following unto lin 20. We hold exclusive change of letter p. 97. l. 1. dele being l. 18. read and not to be tedicus p. 98. l. 21. read see examples p. 114. l. 10. read 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 128. l. 27. dele so p. 137. l. 22. r. this is p. 135. l. 3. and 1● 5 Indices lin 16. 1. Index A Consideration of certain Controversies at this time agitated in the Kingdome of England concerning the Government of the Church of God sent from the Churches of Walachria to the Synod at London to declare the sense and consent of their Churches CHAP. I. Of the Qualification of Church-members Question WHether there be none to be admitted into the Communion of the externall visible Church but who is indued with the reall internall holinesse of Regeneration and with justifying faith in Christ or who upon strict examination doth manifest such evident signes of true faith and reall internall holinesse as may convince the consciences of the Church to which he joyneth himselfe of his sincere faith repentance and communion in Christ and that if any Congregation admit others in whom there is not evident proofe of these signes they admit impure and false Church-members Answer THe Reformed Churches distinguish between the Mysticall invisible Church of Christ which is the Company of Beleevers called who have communion with Christ to which are made all the Promises of heavenly good things in Christ to which no hypocrites can belong which hath the power of Christs Spirit inwardly working and the externall visible Church of Christ which is the company of those who professe the true faith for the exercise of Church-Communion and Fellowship amongst themselves to which hypocrites may belong For any one to be a true member of the invisible Church we require according to the Word of God true justifying faith repentance and spirituall Communion with Christ The admission of members into this Church is Gods work who by effectuall saving Vocation doth ingraft men into the mysticall body of Christ But the admission of members of the Church visible is committed to the care of the Overseers and Pastors of the Church who by the Word of God may admit none other to the compleat externall communion of the Church visible and ought to admit all such who by externall federall holinesse are separated from the world are instructed in the knowledge of God and of the true Religion professe the name of Christ and walking without offence in their outward conversation are accounted in the judgement of Charity as true Beleevers and upon examination of the Eldership concerning these things are received into brotherly and Ecclesiasticall Communion We grant therefore in this question 1. That any one be in foro Dei at Gods tribunall a true member of the Church invisible there is required in him that he be indued with reall internall holinesse of regeneration and justifying faith in Christ 2. That it is mans duty who will duly for Salvation joyne himselfe to the Church that he truly beleeve in Christ and being indued with reall holinesse worship God aright in all his wayes But we affirme that to the externall and visible Church the Pastors are to admit those who professe the true Religion and faith of Christ lead their lives without scandall or being fallen into scandals doe by repentance wash them away in foro Ecclesiae at the Churches Tribunall submit themselves to Discipline publikely frequent all exercises of divine worship and desire Church Communion with us although they doe not manifest such evident signes of Regeneration which may convince the Consciences of the Church of their true faith in Christ Our opinion is proved by these arguments 1. From the admission of members into the Primitive Church in the Apostles time when all who made profession of Faith according to the Word of God and desired Ecclesiasticall Communion living without manifest scandals or having given scandals did by repentance in foro Ecclesiae amend them were by them admitted into the Communion of the Church visible see for instance Act. 2. 41 42 45. Act. 8. 13. Act. 4. 34 37. in so much as even hypocrites had entrance into the Church notwithstanding that the Apostles were indued with an extraordinary spirit of discerning as appeareth in the Examples of Ananias Judas Simon Magus Hymeneus Philetus 2. From the admission of members into the Church of the old Testament where those were admitted into the externall Church and the visible communion thereof who being adorned with federall holinesse did professe the true God of Israel as appeares by the admission of the whole people into that Church Deut. 29. 4 c. Josh 24. 23 c. 3. From the description of the Church visible the nature whereof is described in the Word of God that it is as a Barne wherein the chaffe is gathered together with the Wheat the House of God in which are vessels both of gold and of wood a Net wherein are caught fishes good and bad Matth. 3. 12. and 13. 47. 2 Tim. 2. 20 21. so that to the admission of any to be a member of the Church visible the Pastors can require no more in foro ecclesiastico as a necessary requisite then what may also be found in hypocrites 4. Frō the state and condition of the Churches of God in the time of the Apostles who acknowledged for true Churches of Christ those visible societies amongst whom there were hypocrites carnall men schismaticks and others not indued with reall holinesse of Regeneration and justifying faith to whom notwithstanding the Apostles wrote their Epistles as members of the Church visible See to this purpose the condition of the seven Churches in Asia Rev. 2. 3. Chap. The condition of the Churches of Corinth and Galatia 1 Cor. 1. 11 12. and 3. 3. and 6. 1 2 3. and 11. 17 18. Gal. 1. 6. and 3. 1 2 3 4. and 5. 7 8 9 c. Thus have our Divines determined this controversie
A CONSIDERATION OF Certaine Controversies at this time agitated IN THE KINGDOME of ENGLAND Concerning the Government of the CHURCH of GOD. Written at the Command and appointment of the Walachrian Classis BY Guilielmus Apollonii Minister of the Word of God at Middleburgh And sent from the Walachrian Churches to declare the sense and consent of their Churches to the SYNOD at LONDON Octob. 16. 1644. Stilo novo Translated out of Latine according to the printed Copy London Printed by G. M. for Tho. Vnderhill at the Bible in Woodstreet 1645. To the most Excellent and Noble Lords The Lord William Boreel Lord of Duynbeque c. Counsellour and chiefe Syndick of the City of Amsterdam The Lord John de Reede Lo. of Reinswoud c. Deputy in Ordinary in the Generall Assembly of the United Provinces in the name of the Province of Vtrecht The Lord Albert Joachimi LORD of Oedekenskerk in Oostende Secretary of the Republike of ter-Goes Ambassadours in the name of the High and Mighty Lords the States Generall of the United Provinces of the Netherlands Most Excellent most Noble Magnificent and most Illustrious Lords THe Pastors of the Churches of the Walachrian Classis being moved with the deplorable face and condition of the English Churches would gladly contribute some assistance for the quenching of that flame of controversies risen amongst them concerning the Discipline and spirituall Government of the Kingdome of Christ and afford not their prayers only but their counsell and assistance also meet for composing these contentions whereby the billows of dissentions might be asswaged and a happy peace restored to those troubled Churches By their authority therefore and command they have imployed me in this present worke and out of pure zeal and brotherly love to those Churches have lately injoyned me to exhibite to the Assembly of Divines at London our Ecclesiasticall Government proved by the word of God and confirmed by grounds of holy Scripture and the cōsent of Reformed Divines Which work being now finished and after a diligent Examination by those Pastors approved I offer to your most Noble and most Excellent Lordships for to you as is well known to us all the tenderest care of the true Religion and the sacred peace and unity together with Truth of the Churches of England is by the Command of the High and Mighty Lords the States Generall of the Netherlands principally cōmitted The promoting whereof with all your utmost endeavours would even by the event be manifest if so be the condition of the Kingdome and Church there would permit And surely if God shal by his providence sometime prosper your endeavours and make the earnest prayers of us all effectuall I do certainly trust that the wounds of the Church of Eng. may by your assistance and help be cured and the dissentions raised by your peaceable and prudent counsell be composed For God hath conferred on you large gifts of Wisdome Prudence Piety and Zeale whereby the disturbed condition of the Church of the Sonne of God may be reduced to the moderate counsels of Peace and the perplexed affaires of a shaken Kingdome to the straight bonds of renewed amity Which that the Great and Gracious God may more and more stir up and increase in you and blesse with prosperous successes in the businesse committed to your most excellent Lordships I beg with fervent prayers and from my soule desire that he will gratiously preserve your most Excellent most Noble Magnificent most Illustrious Lordships and inspire those counsels into his Royall Majestie and the High Court of Parliament which you affording your assisting indeavour may restore to the Churches of England peace and tranquillity together with edification in the faith and increase of love Middleburgh the first of November 1644. Your most Excellent and Noble Lordships most observant Guilielmus Apollonii Pastor of the Church of God at Middleburgh in Zeland TO THE SYNOD at LONDON Reverend and Beloved Brethren in Christ assembled in the Synod at London WE have received by your most courteous Letters written some Moneths since to the Churches of Zeland an expresse testimony not only of your entire friendship but also of your confidence and sincere affection towards us into whose bosome you were pleased to poure forth your fluctuating minds Our wishes and endeavours are that we may give you a reall experiment of our brotherly compassion for our very inmost bowels burn within us with the zeale and love of Christ and the Saints when we heare of the Churches of Christ in affliction when the moanes and lamentations of our holy Brethren pierce our eares and when we seriously consider the causes of your calamities O that our eyes were resolved into Fountaines of waters that we might lament day and night the desolations of the people Our mind trembles to heare the desperate counsels and wicked attempts of those whose endeavour hath been to blot out from amongst you the whole face of a Reformed Church and totally to hinder all better counsels and have brought it thus to passe that the band of the Kingdome being broken all things are now involved in a cruell warre all hope of peace and agreement taken away and the happinesse of Church and Kingdome overthrowne But as God doth by his favour prosper right counsels so for the most part he brings the wicked plots of men upon the heads of those who contrive them and by a divine wisdome doth over-rule the vices of the world whereby his Church is oppressed either to the safety of his own or a triall of their Piety For whoever they are that truly love God they doe not fasten the Anchor of all their hope on the barren sands of mutable things and humane strength but on the solid Rock which cannot be moved by any waves that is Jesus Christ the Churches Husband peculiar and present with every one In whose bosome who-ever do with full confidence repose themselves and cast all their care on him alone are quiet in the midst of troubles and injoy comfort and are as well thankfull in adversity as in prosperity Though to speake the truth what is adverse but that which hindereth us in our course to eternall happinesse what is prosperous but that which conduceth to it Christ is both the Husband the Lord and Physitian of the Church The Husband because being out of love to us drawn to die he hath knit us to himself and himselfe to us in an everlasting Covenant The Lord because by the price of his bloud he hath rescued us from the tyranny of Satan he governes us and beares rule in us and disposeth at his pleasure of his own propriety The Physitian because he is the Saviour he alone doth efficaciously heale the evils of men dispelling the diseases and distempers of the soules purging his Church and restoring it to health He is oft-times more mercifull when he sendeth bitter things then when he refresheth with sweet things He knowes what is expedient for his
Calvin Instit lib. 4. cap. 1. sect 7. But oft-times saith he by the name of the Church the Scriptures intend the whole multitude of men throughout the world who professe to worship one God and Christ are initiated by Baptisme into his faith testifie by their partaking the Lords Supper a unity in the true Religion and Charity consent to the Word of God and for the preaching thereof maintain a Ministery instituted by Christ But in this multitude are many mingled who are hypocrites and have nothing of Christ but the name and shew c. which in respect of men is called a Church and we commanded to maintaine the communion of it And sect 8. he shewes that it is the Prerogative of God alone to know who are unfeined Saints and true members of the Church Yet saith he because he fore saw that it was somewhat requisite that we should know who are to be accounted for his childr●n herein he applyeth himselfe to our capacity And because a certainty of faith is not herein requisite he hath in stead thereof appointed the judgement of Charity in which judgement we acknowledge for members of the Church those who in the confession of faith and example of their life and participation of the Sacraments professe the same God and Christ with us Hence Ames affirmes it to be false that the Reformed Churches require inward graces to the admitting of any into the Church as to the visible state thereof Antibellarm tom 2. iib. 2. cap. 1. not 5. And not 3. of the same chapter he affirmeth out of Augustine that there is in the Church the inward soule to wit the gifts of grace and the body or outward profession whence it comes to passe that some are both of the soule and the body of the Church others of the body only and not the soule Which saith he is expressed by Alexander Alensis in other words when he saith That evill men are of the unity of the Church but not of the unity of the body of the Church not of the body of the Church according to the true nature of a body or in reference to the union of the body mysticall Which distinction he proveth out of 1 Joh. 2. 19. Rom. 2. 28. a Jew openly and a Jew in secret So Trelcatius the elder in his common places loco 15. puts the differences between the members of the visible and of the invisible Church in a lively faith purity of life certainty of Election and Salvation and Perseverance in faith which are found in the members of the Church invisible in sincerity and truth but in the members of the Church visible only in the judgement of Charity oft-times not in truth because of a vocation and profession externall but oft hypocriticall So almost all the eminent Reformed Divines affirme the matter of the Church visible to be men outwardly called professing the faith of Christ for they define it to be a company of men who by an outward calling or the preaching of the Word and participation of the Sacraments are called to the exercise of the Worship of God and Ecclesiasticall Fellowship amongst themselves See both the Trelcatii in their common places loco de Ecclesia The Professours of Leyden disp 40. thes 33. Hence also have our Belgick Churches in our Nationall and Provinciall Synods ordeined that he be admitted to the Lords Supper who hath first made profession of his faith submitted himselfe to the Discipline of the Church and brought testimony of unblameable life See the Synods at Dort Anno 1574. art 70. and Anno 1578. art 64. at Middleburgh Anno 1581. art 43. at the Hage Anno 1586. art 54. at Middleburgh Anno 1591. art 51. at Dort Anno 1619. art 61. We reject therefore these ensuing opinions I. Of those who affirme the externall and particular visible Church to be the proper subject to which belongeth the Covenant of Grace all the Promises of God the Properties and Priviledges which Christ the Mediatour hath purchased for his Church The reasons of our deniall are 1. Because that Church for which these priviledges are purchased is perpetuall which never falleth away for this infallible Promise is made to it from God Jer. 31. 36. Matt. 16. 18. But now no particular visible Church is secured from falling away as our Orthodox Divines demonstrate against the Papists it is not for it therefore that these Priviledges are purchased by Christ the Mediatour 2. Those Churches for which all these promised Priviledges are procured are called out of the world by the word and Spirit of God to faith and holinesse and have sincere and inward Communion and fellowship with Christ and all true beleevers whence frequently in Scriptures they are called the Spouse and Beloved of Christ Cant. 4. 7. Eph. 5. 27. The Holy Sion and heavenly Jerusalem and the Israel of God Isai 52. 1. Gal. 4. 26. and 6. 16. so likewise The Church which Christ hath purified for himselfe to present her to himselfe glorious not having spot or wrinckle Eph. 5. 27. The Body of Christ fitly joyned together and compacted by that which every joynt supplyeth Eph. 4. 16. It 's called Christs people whom he saveth from their sins Joh. 10. 16. Matt. 1. 21. Gods house and a holy Priesthood 1 Pet. 2. 5. The Temple of God in which the Spirit of God doth dwell 1 Cor. 3. 16. The Lambs wife Apoc. 21. 4. All which and such like doe not agree to an externall visible particular Church as such Rom. 9. 6. but onely to the Church invisible which Christ had redeemed with his bloud Acts 20. 28. 3. The Priviledges promised and procured for the Church of God amongst many others are these That God puts his Law and his Feare into the minds of the members of it Jer. 31. 33. That they are all taught of God and know him Joh. 6. 42. That they are redeemed by the bloud of Christ Act. 20. 28. Eph. 5. 27. But these agree not to an externall and visible particular Church Therefore that externall visible particular Church is not the proper subject of the Covenant of grace or of these Priviledges which by Christ our Mediatour are procured for the Church Whereunto the Reformed Divines assent See amongst others the Professours of Leyden in their Synopsis Theologiae disput 40. Thes 29 30 31. And Ames himselfe against Bellarm. tom 2. lib. 2. cap. 1. not 10. where he affirmes that those glorious things which are spoken in Scripture of the Church of Christ that it is redeemed by Christ the Body of Christ the Spouse of Christ quickned acted and guided by the Holy Spirit partaketh of all spirituall blessings so that the gates of hell shall never prevaile against it doth properly and fully agree not to the whole multitude of those that professe the Christian faith but to those only that are true beleevers or they agree to the Church militant according to i●s essentiall nature peculiar to true beleevers not according to
Christ are not required of all those Christians that are gifted as that there lyeth on them the Pastorall charge of soules of which they are to give an account to God Heb. 13. 17. that they ought to give themselves wholly to the reading and studying of the Scriptures 2 Tim. 4. 15 16. that they may not apply themselves to the things of this world 2 Tim. 2 4. that in the Name of Christ as his Embassadours they entreat men to be reconciled to God 2 Cor. 5. 20. that they are to distribute to all and every one in the house of God their portion of food in due season Matth. 24. 46. that they are authoritatively in the Name of Christ to remit and retaine sins Joh. 20. 21. Now all these things are not injoyned on all Christians who have received the gifts of the Spirit 4. Hence also the Priviledges and Promises which are made to Pastours who preach the Word in the Name of God are not given to all beleevers who are indued with the gifts of the Spirit as that they are worthy of double honour 1 Tim. 5. 17. that God will by a peculiar and singular assistance of his Spirit be present with them Matth. 28. 20. Luk. 21. 14 15. And so a Prophets recompence and reward is distinguished from the reward of a righteous man Matth. 10. 42. Therefore that labour duty and burden to which these Promises are made is not imposed on all the righteous that are endued with gifts of the holy Ghost We reject therefore the contrary assertion of those who affirme this to be an Ordinance perpetuall and ordinary in the Church that a private Christian indued with gifts either ordinarily or upon occasion being thought fit in the judgement of those to whom it belongs may by the Word of God preach publikely in the Church-Assembly with all authority though he beare no Church Office But to us it 's certain that even under the Old Testament in the Jewish Church every one was not admitted to speake publikely in the Synagogues but that it was the ordinary function of those that are called Scribes and Lawyers the Levites being also for this cause distributed into many places whereupon they are said to sit on Moses chaire If any were indued with extraordinary gifts of Prophecy as the Prophets in Israel this was permitted and injoyned him by the Word of God publikely to preach in Gods Name When the Prophet Amos was forbidden by the chiefe Priest to prophecy at Bethel he doth not challenge this liberty to the Israelites that they might publikely preach the Word of God in Gods Name in the holy Assemblies but pleads his extraordinary Mission whereby he was sent of God to preach this word Amos 7. 14 15. And so perhaps was it permitted to the sonnes of the Prophets who were fitted educated and set apart for the Ecclesiasticall Ministery 1 Sam. 19. 20. In the Synagogues after the reading of Moses and the Prophets was ended there were exhortations added which Exhortations if at any time occasion required and it so seemed good to the rulers of the Synagogue in corrupt times especially it was indeed permitted to some out of order to teach and exhort but they were alwayes such as had testimony of their gifts and of whom there was a generall opinion of their Mission extraordinary or ordinary by reason of the doctrine they preached and the workes they did Thus at Nazareth Christ was permitted in the Synagogue to read and explaine the writings of the Prophets Luk. 4. 16. As one who by reason of his Majestie and Miracles did every where obtain audience as reverend Beza here noteth by which right he taught both in the Temple and every where wherefore also the ordinary Doctors demanded of him by what authority he did it Matt. 21. 23. So we find that Paul and Barnabas were allowed Act. 13. 15. publikely to speake and exhort in the Synagogue at Antioch as being such whose fame was already knowne to those of Antioch for they had before this time for a whole yeare preached the Word of God to many there and brought many to the faith of Christ and Agabus who was joyned with them did by an extraordinary gift of Prophesie foretell to those of Antioch the famine approaching where were also many other Prophets and Doctors who preached the Word of God both to Jews and Greekes See Act. 11. 19 20 21 25 26 27 28. and 13. 1 2. c. But in the practise of the New Testament none but Prophets by gift and Office either extraordinary or ordinary were permitted publikely in the Assembly of beleevers to preach the Word of God in Christs Name as appeareth 1 Cor. 14. 29 30 31. c. The Apostle speakes not of any in the Congregation promiscuously but of Prophets lawfully called to instruct the Church of God saith Beza on this place and therefore they are not to be hearkned to who from hence gather that any of the Assembly may speake in the Church and who reprehend the custome of having only a Sermon preached by one So also in the practise of the Reformed Belgick Church according to their Synodicall Canons none is admitted to the Ministery of the Word but by a lawfull calling and due examination of his doctrine and conversation for the time past No man saith the Synod of Middleburgh Anno 1591. art 6. shall be promoted to the publike preaching of the Word unlesse he be an established Minister of the Church belonging to some certaine Church Yet this Canon excludeth not the exercises of Proposants which are performed the doores being shut nor the offices of those who are sent forth to Churches oppressed under persecution Question 4. WHether those Infants whose next parents doe not by a solemne Church-Covenant joyne themselves to some particular Church are not to be baptized in the Church but are to be accounted as incapable of Baptisme and to have no right to Church-priviledges Answer THe opinion of the Reformed Churches is that a certain Federall holinesse whereby those who are in this manner holy have right to the meanes of Salvation and the Sacrament of Baptisme and whereby they are distinguished from Heathens Turks and such other Infidels 1 Cor. 7. 14. is communicated to a whole Nation or people to whom God so affordeth the tables of his Covenant as that they receive and professe them whom he cals and leades to the state of his visible Church Rom. 11. 16 17 18 19 20. This Federall holinesse is transferred to posterity not by the next parents inherent holinesse by whose faith or unbeliefe their immediate posterity should be deprived of it or confirmed in it but by the mercifull will of God whereby he extendeth the outward priviledges of his Covenant promised to parents even more remote and doth constantly afford it to their posterity professing the faith for many generations even to those whose next parents were ungodly and unfaithfull in the Covenant of God Thus God
prejudice other Churches they are in the Vocation of Pastours to proceed with the common consent of all the Churches of that Synod 3. In the acts and exercise of power Ecclesiasticall in the Ordination of Pastours we conceive there is this difference between a Classis or Synod and a Particular Church 1. That as it is the act of Classes and Synods it is actus imperatus as it is the act of the Particular Church is actus elicitus that is that Synods and Classes are to take care and authoritatively to enjoyne Particular Churches that they excite their power and exercise it for the ordaining their Pastours But the particular Churches are to doe those Ecclesiasticall acts whereby the Ordination it self is performed 2. That there belongs to Synods and Classes an authoritative judgement of the sufficiencie and sutable sitnesse of the person to be ordained to the Ministery and of the due and orderly manner of proceeding in the whole Election dispatched and the Ordination to be performed 3. That it belongs to Synods and Classes to decree Canons and prescribe decrces for the common edification of all those Churches according to which the particular Church ought to doe those acts whereby the Ordination of Pastors is performed 4. That the Synod and Classis doe authoritatively concurre with the particular Church in the power of sending Pastours and in the exercise thereof by which an Ecclesiasticall Right is derived on the Minister For the Ecclesiasticall Power which is conferred on a Minister by Ordination is derived ministerially secondarily and subordinately under God not only from the Eldership of that Particular Church but from that whole ministring or governing Ecclesiasticall Society into which the Pastour ordained is admitted by Ordination to performe the exercises of the Ecclesiasticall Ministry Thus we conceive these acts are to be distinguished in the legitimate Ordination of Pastours in a constituted and setled Church 4. In a case extraordinary when a Nationall Church is corrupted and depraved the due power of Classes and Synods overturned and destroyed and when the polity of the Church so utterly ruined as that there is no more any face of it to be seen no where any to be found that labour in sound doctrine no markes of a visible Church discernable by the eyes of men In such a case the Ordination of Pastours is in the power of the particular Church who have received from God right to ordaine in this necessity by their own Eldership and therefore where there is no such Eldership they first goe about the constitution of it and then being thus constituted they performe their Ordinations by it For that is sure which Melancton doth oft inculcate When the ordinary Bishops saith he become enemies to the Church or refuse to afford Ordination the Churches retain their owne right For where ever there is a Church there is power of dispensing the Gospell so that of necessity the Church must retain a right of their owne to call elect and ordaine Ministers And this right is a gift granted to the Church which no humane authority can take from it Argum. Respons part 7. de potest Epise argum 2. That this power should be wholly abrogated and brought to nothing for want of Pastours is not to be thought but common sense teacheth that it 's better in such a case to inlarge it then that the Church should be destitute of the large fruites of the Gospels preaching for that the Church should be then deprived of this power when the exercise of it is most chiefly required is absurd And on the other hand when there is no particular Church nor Eldership in some place where there is a Church to be planted and erected and the dispensation of the Gospel to be first introduced here the neighbouring Ecclesiasticall Assemblies who are by the opportunity of occasions invited by God to afford their mutuall help and assistance in this spirituall matter have power of sending Ministers and Pastours with Ecclesiasticall power for the gathering erecting and promoting a Church in that place for that manner of Mission is warranted by the holy Scriptures Acts 13. 1 2 3. where Paul and Barnabas are sent by the Church of Antioch to the neighbour Churches Hence therefore concerning the power of Classes and Synods in the Ordination of Pastors and a particular Church we maintaine these assertions 1. That a particular Church wanting a Presbytery may not in the ordinary and setled state of Churches performe the Ordination of Pastors But the Mission of Pastors and Elders into a sacted function is to be performed by the Governours of the Churches which is proved 1. From expresse places of Scripture wherein this Ecclesiasticall act is injoyned the Pastours and Elders 1 Tim. 5. 22. Lay hands suddenly on no man and 1 Tim. 4. 14. Neglect not the gift which is in thee which was given thee by Prophecy with the laying on of the hands of the Presbytery And that by Presbytery there is signified a Colledge of Presbyters is proved by most certaine arguments against the Hierarchie Our reverend Bucerus discourseth excellently of this place Dissert de gubern Ecclesiae pag. 339 340. I know saith he that the word Presbytery may be expounded either of the Colledge of Presbyters or of the Office of Presbyters but three reasons chiefly perswade me to think that we ought to rest in the former signification The first is that we find it no where used by the Holy Ghost so farre as I remember for the Presbyters Office But that on the contrary it 's used to signifie their Meeting is evident For what Luke relates Chap. 22. 66. that when Christ was apprehended 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Presbytery of the people was gathered together certainly cannot be understood of the Presbyteriall Office So Paul at Jerusalem rendering an account of his faith for testimony of what he said citeth the high Priest and the Presbytery 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 22. 5. Where every one understands the word Presbytery to be taken for the Company of Elders not the Office A second Reason is that there will appeare a kind of Tautologie in Paul's speech if by the word presbytery we understand the Presbyteriall Office for the Gift 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Paul bids Timothy not to neglect in the exposition of most signifies that Office it selfe joyned with a sufficiency of Gifts The Apostles words therefore would sound to this purpose Neglect not the Presbyteriall Office which was given thee by Prophecy with the imposition of hands of the Presbyteriall Office In good earnest I like it not I know that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is understood by some only of the faculty of teaching but when Paul addeth that it was given Timothy by Prophecy whether or no will you not judge this expression to suite better to the Office of teaching for any one will easily discerne with me that it is a harsh speech to say that the Faculty of teaching was
conferred on Timothy by Prophecy that is by a singular Revelation of the Spirit at the Prophets Command But on the contrary it 's a very apt expression to say The Presbyters Office was conferred on Timothy by his Vocation both extraordinary declared by the testimony of Prophets and ordinary performed by the judgement of the Church in obedience to the Revelation of the Spirit c. Two things doth Reverend Bucerus here evince that by Presbytery is understood the Company of Presbyters and that by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is signified the Office of the Ministery together with sufficiency of gifts This place therefore doth assert that the Ministeriall Office by the Ordination of the Colledge of Presbyters is committed to Pastours by Gods Law and Apostolicall Institution 2. It appeares from the Apostles practise wherein Ordinations of Pastours were performed by Pastours and Ministers that had the Government of Churches see Acts. 6. 2 3. Act. 13. 1 2 3. 14. 23. Tit. 1. 5. c. Nor is there any example to be found wherein the Ordination of Pastours was performed by the multitude of the Church without Presbyters And because the practise of the Apostolicall Church is our safest rule of Church-Government we judge that by Gods Ordinance it cannot be that a Pastor in setled state of Churches should be ordained and put in possession of his Ecclesiasticall function by the multitude of the Church See also what was said Chap. 4. concerning Ecclesiasticall Power II. We therefore affirme that Classes and Synods have power of sending and ordaining Pastours in particular Churches which want Presbyteries This assertion appeares also by the practise of the Apostolicall Church which by Ordination did set apart and send forth Pastours for the Ministry of neighbour Churches Acts 8. 14. Acts 13. 1 2 3. And surely that in the Reformed Churches the right of Mission for the planting of Churches or for the raising them up out of a defect was alwayes practised by Classes and Synods as is knowne to all who have but so much as heard any report of Churches labouring under persecution As also the Apostolicall Synod for supply of the Churches defect chose and sent men for the performance of Ecclesiasticall duties necessary to that end Acts 15. 22. It seemed good to the Apostles and Elders with the whole Church to choose men of their owne company and send them to Antioch and ver 25. It seemed good to us being assembled with one accord to choose and send men unto you c. Neither did the Apostolicall Churches do this by an extraordinary Apostolicall but by an ordinary Ecclesiasticall power for they did this joyntly together with ordinary Elders and the whole Church in an ordinary Synod These Examples therefore declare the ordinary right of Mission to those Churches who are destitute of a Presbytery or Ministery or labour and grone under persecution and defect But that Mission doth inferre Vocation and Ordination and doth conferre power of preaching and of ruling the people Reverend Voetius proveth by many arguments in Desperatâ causâ Papatus lib. 2. sect 2. cap. 17. And it appeares from the word it self to send 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from whence comes sent and sending or Mission which is nothing else but a Commission whereby a man hath some Function or Charge fully committed to him which is nothing else but to call and constitute for as Mission or sending is taken either actively or passively as it implies either a relation of him that sendeth to him that is sent or of him that is sent to him that sendeth so also Vocation or Ordination For all those Metaphors to send into the Vineyard to send into the Field to the Lords work to the Ministery and Charge of the Flock c. signifie nothing else but to call one to the Feeding of the Flock dressing the Vineyard or to constitute one a Pastour and one that takes charge of soules Hence those that are called and constituted Pastors of soules are commonly called Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sent In Hebrew the Priest and Pastour of the Church is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is sent a Messenger or Embassador Malach. 2. 7. of the originall and signification whereof Ludovicus de Dieu speakes Append ad Matth. 27 2. where he shewes elegantly from the footsteps of the Arabick and Aethiopick root that this name is derived from sending Whence also Presbyters whether the greater and extraordinary or the lesser and ordinary lawfully ordained and called are sent to preach and to feed and on the other side those who are lawfully sent are ordained to preach For to the actuall giving an Apostleship or calling to the Ministery that is to an Active Mission of him that sendeth there is answerable a Passive Mission of him that is sent which is an actuall Receiving an Apostleship or Ministery for or Relatives the affirming one inferreth the other The Ordination of Pastors therefore for a Church that wants an Eldership or is labouring under defects which hinder the ordinary exercise of the Eldership is lawfully performed by Synods and Classes under whose Ecclesiasticall communion they lived So in the Belgick Churches the Mission or Ordination of Pastors which are sent to Churches groaning under the Crosse of persecution is performed in the Classicall Assembly See the Synod at the Hagh Anno. 1586. art 4. And so of those who are sent to the Churches of the East and West-Indies III. We allow also this power to Classes and Synods in the right of Ordination That even in a setled and constituted state of the Church a particular Church which holds Ecclesiasticall communion with other Churches in a Classis or Synod may not performe the vocation or Ordination of their Pastors without the authoritative judgement and potestative mission of the Classis This assertion is proved by these arguements Because he that is to be ordained is admitted into the holy society of the Classis or Synod and into the Ecclesiasticall body as a member belonging to the Consistory of the Classis or Synod in the right of that particular Church and is therefore with their judgement and consent to be admitted by Ordination into that society Because also by Ordination a Pastor is put into the possession of his Ecclesiasticall function by vertue of which function he may performe ministeriall acts of his pastorall office in other particular Churches and exercise a ministeriall authority in many cases towards other Churches and reason plainly sheweth that it cannot duly be performed without the judgement of those Churches over whom the person to be Ordained receives ministeriall power A particular Church may not lawfully Remove or Put-out a Pastor from his Office without the assent and authoritative judgement of the Classis or Synod wherein he is duly admitted a member therefore without that judgement they cannot lawfully admit into an Ecclesiasticall office by Ordination for it is of the same power to take in and to put out in
what manner ought is contracted in the same is it dissolved Hence in a Synod of the Churches was performed the Ordination of the Deacons elected Act. 6. 3. with the common consent of those Churches So 1 Tim. 4. 14. the Presbytery to whome the power of Ordaining is attributed doth not only denote a Parochiall Presbytery of which sort both in townes and in more eminent villages there were anciently one in each but it signifies a colledge of Apostles or Apostolicall men in whose number Paul was one 2 Tim. 1. 6. as the Apostles are sometimes called Elders 1 Pet. 5. 1 2. 2 Joh. ver 1 3. for this was done in the Church of Lystra as the Dutch Translators observe from Acts 16. 1 2. In which the Brethren of Derbe and Iconium were also actors as is evident from the place under whom are included also the Churches of the Region round about as may be gathered from Acts 14. 6. And if those most excellent servants of God whom God had rendred eminent by induing them with most ample gifts and setting them in a degree of an extraordinary and more sublime Ministery would not yet at their own pleasure without the counsels of others admit Timothy though named by the Spirits designation into the order of Presbyters by publike Ordination but thought fit for the observation of order first to acquaint sundry Pastors and Churches with it shall we who are no wayes to be compared with them be yet in doubt what we ought to do for not their sayings only but their doings also should be to us a rule what we ought to say and doe And so in our Belgick Churches according to the order established Ordinations of Pastors are performed with the consent and judgement of the Classis As appeares by the Synod at the Hagh Anno 1586. art 4. at Middleburgh Anno 1591. artic 3 4. at Dort Anno 1619. art 4. We reject therefore the contrary assertion of those who ascribe to particular Churches in a setled state of the Church the absolute power of ordaining their Pastours without the inspection or authoritative jurisdiction of any Classis or Synod Question 3. WHether Synod and Classes have power of Excommunication Answer In this controversy we hold 1. THat a Classis or Synod of Pastors hath power to admonish and rebuke authoritatively and with power Ecclesiasticall such as offend subvert soules by error and commit scandalls Acts 15. 10 24. This admonition reproof and condemnation in this Synod was performed by the Apostles and Elders in order to Ecclesiasticall censure And this power not a power of Order but of Jurisdiction performed not by the concionall key only but the key of Ecclesiasticall discipline For it 's done not by one but by many by the whole Synod ver 6 22. In the society of an Ecclesiasticall body which had power by common advise to decree this rebuke and what ever is determined in this cause about that question for which they came together See ver 2 6 23 24 25. chap. 16. 5. 21. 25. The cause in which it was done was not only a case of conscience but of scandall and publike offence given in Ecclesiasticall communion ver 19 28 29. with 1 Cor. 10. 24 25 26 27. Rom. 14. 14 15. Whereupon it is determined for the peace and edification of the Churches that all troubles and unprofitable burdens should be removed out of the Church ver 2 19 23 24. chap. 16. 4 5. and that in an Ecclesiasticall assembly ver 6 15 22 25. So that this rebuke performed by the Apostles in order to spirituall censure was an act of Ecclesiasticall discipline 2. There belongs also to Synods and Classes this power and exercise of Ecclesiasticall discipline to make Ecclesiasticall laws which are determinations necessary for the observation of morall precepts especially those of the first table and for the ordering the externall Government of the Church that all things be done decently and in order to the common edification of all By this power they establish outward ceremonies sutable to the due administration of the worship of God outward formes of behaviour and things indifferent such as tend to the outward order decency and edification of particular Churches and make rules for directing the discipline of the Churches The Apostles and Elders in the Synod decreed that the Gentiles who had imbraced Christ should abstain from things offered to Idolls and from bloud and things strangled Act. 15. 25 28. Lambertus Daneus discourses soundly and accurately in his Poliria Christiana lib. 6. cap. 3. Moreover saith he as for the rites and ceremonies and the outward order which is necessary in ordering the Church let an Ecclesiasticall Synod be assembled with the command and presence of the godly surpeme Magistrate and this Ecclesiasticall Synod duly gathered shall determine what that order and externall government of the Church ought to bee c. See what was said before of the Doctrinall power of Synods This power of making lawes is a power of Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction and Government for it doth direct and dispose authoritatively those meanes by which the government of the Churches is put in execution For these lawes are made with the sanction of a spirituall and Ecclesiasticall penalty against delinquents and consequently proceed from that spirituall jurisdiction from whence proceedeth this threatning and inflicting of spirituall power Againe the publike judgement of direction passed with Ministeriall authority of a scandall given or taken of cases of conscience in the exercise of charity about things indifferent of the spirituall edification of the Church belongs to the externall tribunall and Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction But he that appointeth rites of order and decency in the publike worship of God and in the exercise of Ecclesiasticall discipline must of necessity give a publike judgement passed by ministeriall authority concerning scandall given or taken concerning cases of conscience in the exercise of charity about things indifferent concerning the spirituall edification of the Church for to this end are Ecclesiasticall lawes made for the avoiding of scandall for the spirituall edification of the Church for the due exercising of brotherly love in Church communion It is therfore an act of spirituall jurisdiction 3. Classes and Synods have an authoritative inspection and judgement not of discretion only but of Iurisdiction and approbation in the exercise of excommunications from particular Churches so that no particular Church which holdeth Ecclesiasticall communion with other Churches in Classes and Synods may lawfully excommunicate deliver to Sathan any member of their communion without the authoritative judgement and approbation of the Classis or Synod Which appeares by these arguments That which concernes all ought in their own way and manner to be handled by all now the excommunication of any in a consociate Church concerneth all the Churches of that society for they all receive scandall they are all liable to the danger of infection by reason of the communion which they hold
Pastors from that function CHAP. V. Of the Ecclesiasticall Ministery and the Exercise thereof p. 66 Q. 1. WHether the end and effect of the work of the Ecclesiasticall Ministery be only the Confirmation and Edification of those Church-members who are already converted and truly godly so as that Pastours are not more obliged by vertue of their Ecclesiasticall function to convert the straying soules of such as live in the world and in sinnes out of Church-communion then all beleevers indued with the gifts of the holy Ghost are by the common duty of Charity bound to doe Question 2. p. 70. Whether the Minister of a particular Church may not only by vertue of his gifts and from the common duty of Charity but also by vertue of his Ecclesiasticall Function lawfully performe ministeriall acts of his office in the Ecclesiasticall Communion of another particular Church to whose ordinary ministery he is not called Question 3. p. 75 Whether the exercise of Prophesie be a perpetuall institution in the Church of God whereby private men who beare no Church-Office may for the exercise of the gifts of the Spirit publikely before the whole body of the Church preach the Word of God with all authority in the Name of God and explaine and apply it for instruction confutation reprehension and consolation of the hearers Question 4. p. 84 Whether those Infants whose next parents doe not by a solemne Church-Covenant joyne themselves to some particular Church are not to be baptized in the Church but are to be accounted as incapable of Baptisme and to have no right to Church-priviledges CHAP. VI. Of Classes and Synods and their authority p. 89 Q. 1. VVHether Classes and Synods have an authoritative power whereby they may authoritatively judge causes Ecclesiasticall with Ecclesiasticall jurisdiction so as that particular Churches ought to submit themselves to their decrees under the penalty of Ecclesiasticall censure Question 2. p. 103 VVhether Classes and Synods have power of sending or ordaining Pastors in a particular Church Question 3. p. 118 Whether Synods and Classes have power of Excommunication CHAP. VII Of set Formes p. 130 Q. 1. VVHether it be lawfull for Churches to prescribe to themselves constituted lawes and formes and certaine Canons by Ecclesiasticall authoritie wherein Articles of Faith and things necessarily required by God for the Government and Discipline of the Churches are out of the holy Scriptures expounded and determined and things not necessarily required are by Ecclesiasticall power prescribed according to the generall rules of Scripture from the precepts of the law of Nature and holy Prudence for the edification of the Church and the order and decency of Gods Worship and imposed on particular Churches and Church-Governours as bonds of Peace and Vnity Question 2. p. 143 Whether it be lawfull to use in the Church prescript Formes of Prayer Administration of the Sacraments c. or whether those Churches who use them be guilty of superstition and will-worship and whether it be lawfull to hold Ecclesiasticall Communion with those Churches where such Formes in the publike worship are in use FINIS VVE whose names are subscribed Delegates of the Walacrian Classis doe testifie that our Reverend Colleague Mr William Apollonius was injoyned by the said Classis that in these sad troubles of England he should by writing set downe what is the Government practised in the Churches of the United Provinces which we also judge agreeable to the Word of God and what are the Controversies at this time agitated in England concerning the Government of the Church of God and state that controversie by way of Theses and Antitheses shewing the Grounds of them And that we have diligently perused and approved that writing of his We desire from our soule that there were a way of Government as much as may be Uniforme observed in all Reformed Churches for the greater edification of the Church of Christ and the destruction of the kingdome of Satan We pray that the learned and worthy our Brethren and Fellow-labourers in the Kingdome of England would be pleased fairly to interpret this our affection Iacobus D'Herde President of the Wallacrian Classis pro tempore Iodocus Larenus Assessor pro tempore Isaacus Hoornbekius Preacher at Middleburgh Cornelius Beuckelarius Preacher at Vere Melchior Burs Minister of the word at West-Souburch Maximilianus Teellinck Preacher at Middleburgh This writing is set forth by prescript of the 46. Article of Ecclesiasticall Policy established by the most Renowned and Noble the States of Zealand Melchior Burs Minister of the Word at West-Souburch