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

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strength of any part in its place and proportion doth not make it usurp the place or execute the Office of any other nobler part 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist The measure of every part is the beauty and safety of the whole which cannot in naturall and ought not in Religious Bodies which are Churches be fitly disposed but only in such a way as God hath appointed for the daily forming building and well-ordering of his Church by such wisdom and Authority as Christ established in it Of which the Apostles and the Churches after them give us most evident testimony But to avoid destructive delusions But we must not be deluded either with the devils fulgurations and flashes or his transfigurations and disguises We must not forsake or stop up Gods fountains of living waters by digging the devils ditches Luke 10.18 I saw Satan fall like l●ghtning from Heaven 2 Cor. 11.14 Satan himself is transformed into an Angel o● l ght I a. 1.13 Eccl. 5.1 and wells which hold no water nay we may not wash our hands at the Devils Cistern to fit them for Gods service Nor may we take water from his troubled muddy and poysonous streams to water the plants of Christs Church We may not take strange fire from Satans Altar to kindle the sacrifices of God What need we cut off Dogs necks and offer swins bloud when we have so many clean beasts which are appointed for acceptable services that we shall not need any such vain oblations which are but the sacrifices of fools who consider not that they do evill nor look to their feet when they go to the house of God being as ready to stumble and fall and discover their nakedness and shame as they are forward to ascend to the altar of the Lord upon the steps of pride and presumption Exod. 20.26 which were forbidden to be made The humble heart being alwaies most welcom to God while others in vain arrogate to themselves power to perform those things which are not required at their hands Lev. 10.3 God hath said he will be sanctified of all these who come nigh to him in his publike service which is done not only by that inward sanctification of the heart by faith fear and reverence toward God but also by that exact observation of such rules of order power and Authority which he hath set who alone could do it in the publike way of his worship and service before the Sons of men We must not be such Children in understanding as to allow all to be gold which glisters when it will not endure the Touch-stone of Gods word Cai●itae Judae ●r●di●or● Evangelium o●●entabant Ophitae angelum in omni imunditie assistentem dicebant invocabant Hanc esse perfectionē aiebant sine tremore in tales abire operationes quas ne nominare fas est Iren. l. 1. c. 35. Nulla enoris secta jam contra Christi veritatē nisi nomine cooperta Christia●● ad pugnandum p●●silire audet Aust Ep. 56. or the probation of the Churches judgment We may not easily think that Gods Spirit in any private men runs counter to that holy order and clear Institution which the undoubted Spirit of God hath clearly set forth in the Scriptures and which the Church in all ages hath observed in the way of an ordeined authoritative Ministry All other or later inventions may well be suspected to be but Satans stratagems and devices There may be so many vermine crawling in a dead body as may make it seem to live and move when yet there is no true Spirit of life or Soul in it So it is no wonder if the various impulses wherewith mens secret and corrupt lusts stir them make some shew as if diviner gifts and endowments agitated them When indeed they have no other ayms or interests than such as Judas Iscariot or Symon Magus might have or those after Hereticks the Gnosticks Maniches and Montanists c. Who almost that had any shew of gifts or parts ever did mischief in the Church without great prefacings of holy and good intentions and pretensious of gifts and the Spirit of God There may be gifted Hypocrites devout devils angelized Satans Be mens gifts never so commendable if they want humility in themselves Miserrimis instabilibus fabulis tantam elationem assumpseruat ut meliores scipsos reliquis prasumpserunt Irenae l. 1. c. 35. de Caynitis Ophitis Judaeitis and charity to others which are the beauties of all endowments if they are puffed up seek themselves walk disorderly run unexamined unappointed unordained in scandalous and undue wayes they are nothing either as to private comfort in themselves or publick benefit to the Church The presumption and disorder of their example doth more hurt as the influence of some malignant stars in a Constellation than the light of their gifts can do they corrupt more than they either direct or correct If any of these Prophets or gifted men be indeed so able for the work of the Ministry that religion may suffer no detriment by them and people may have just cause to esteem them highly for their work sake God forbid they should not have the right hand of fellowship all incouragement from my self and all that desire to walk as becomes the Gospell when they are found upon just tryall fit to be solemnly ordeined set apart and sent forth with due authority to that holy service in Gods name let them be sent forth with good speed If they disdain this method of Ministeriall office and power which hath been setled by Christ and continued to this day in his Church which no wise humble and truly able Christian can with reason modesty or with conscience justly do but they will needs obtrude themselves upon the Church and crowd in against the true Ministers they may indeed be as sounding Brass and tinckling Cimballs fit rattles for Children or for the labouring Moon or for a Country Morice-dance and May-pole Nec veritate seneri nec charitate frugi●eri Greg. but they will never be as Aarons Pomegranates and golden Bells usefull Ornaments to Gods Sanctuary in words or works or any way becomming the Church of Jesus Christ which is as the woman clothed with the Sun the light of Truth and the lustre of holy Order And hath the Moon under her feet Rev. 12. not only all wordly vanities and unjust interests but also all humane inventions and novelties which have their continuall variations wainings disorders darknesses and deformities whereas Divine Institutions are alwayes glorious by the clear beams of Scripture-precept and the constant course of the Churches example Both which have held their Truth and Authority in the blackest nights of persecution wherein no untried and unordeined intruder was ever owned for a true Minister of holy things in any setled and incorrupted Church of Christ No more than any man shall be accounted an Officer or Souldier in an Army who hath not
unworthily or unduly Ordeined are like sleight and ill built ships which endanger the loss of themselves and all those that are embarqued in them and put to Sea with them Miscarriages in the matter of ordination of Ministers are to the unspeakable detriment and dishonour of Religion as unskilfull cowardly or perfidious Officers are to Armies I shall never hope to see the Church flourish or truly reformed untill this Point of right Ordination of Ministers be seriously considered of and duly restored to its Pristine honour and excellency when to Ordein Ministers for the service of the Church O●ortet Ecclesiae Epis ministrum Christi esse formam justitiae sanctimoniae speculum pietalis exemplar veritatis doctorem fidei defensorem Christianorum ducem sponsi amicum cui ille irascitur Deum sibi iratum non hominem sentiat Bern. ad Eng. l. 4. was not to prefer men to a Benefice so much as to recruit Christs regiments to strengthen his forces to fortifie the Church and true Religion with most vigilant Watchmen and valiant Champions whose care was on every side to defend the Flocks of Christ against all enemies which were to be as the Cloud or Pillar of fire both lights and guards to Christians upon all occasions who made conscience to live with to suffer with yea and to dy for the sheep as good Shepheards Such men only are fit to be Ordeined Ministers such Ministers ought to be prayed for highly prised and perserved in the Church by all that desire to transmit any thing of true Religion to Posterity nor was the Church of England or yet is destitute of such Ministers both duly and worthily ordeined to the service of Christ and this Church To abolish this order or to usurp to undue hands or to contemn this Sacred and right Ordination which sends forth able Ministers in Christs way can be no other but a most cruell and detestable sacrilege far worse than that of robbing the Church of its maintenance for such Ministers Cyprian reproves Novatus a factious Presbyter Quod Felicissimum satellitem suum diaconum suum constituit ne● sciente nec permittente me sola sua factione ambitione Acts 8.18 All undue Ordination is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. profanum detestandumque ludibrium B●s both as preaching and ruling well wich yet is a sin of so deep a dy that no Niter can cleanse it being seldome ever pardoned because seldome repented of so as to make a ●ust restitution without which repentance is never true Yea for any Laymen in a brutish violence and meerly by Ppular insolency to arrogate this power where it is not or to abrogate it where truly it is is a sin of a more heynous nature than that of Simon Magus was who had so much of civility justice and good manners as to offer money for a part of the miraculous and Ministeriall power It is indeed no other than a Cyclopick fury and unwonted barbarity ill becomming any sober or civilized Christians thus to wrest the keys of Gods house out of the hands of those Stewards with whom the great Master Christ hath specially intrusted them for the right Oeconomy and dispensing of all holy Mysteries and Institutions And when such rude and unruly fellows have thus insolenced these Officers of the Church and bound their hands how comly will it be to see the keyes of the kingdome of heaven Ischyras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Self-ordeined or only by Rol●thus a Persbyter Hence Athanasius Apol 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Pro. 20.23 managed or committed as it were to Boyes to Pages and Laquies to weak mean mechanick ignorant dissolute and riotous wretches who not conscious to any true Ministeriall power or just authority in the Church can never make conscience of doing any holy Ministerial duty to which they are most unfit never caring how prodigall they are of the truth and honour of Religion of their own or other mens souls It being a sport to such proud and spitefull fools to do wickedly to speak prophanely and to live disorderly in the Church And not content to commit a rape upon true Religion and the holy orders of Christs Church as Absalom did on the house-top before the Sun and all Israel they will further in time justifie the flagitiousness of their villanies as if the zeal they had for true Religion provoked to such outrages these pestilent pandars for errors and all licentiousness with their followers who must presently all turn preachers though never duly Ordeined nor fit ever so to be yea their arrogancy makes them ordeiners too of whom they please to set up to minister to their extravagant lusts and follies which makes them many times much fitter for the flocks or cages than for the pulpits These will surely come at last as much short of the happy effects of true Ministers as they are far from that holy power of right Ordination which I have proved to be from Christ and the Blessed Apostles rightly derived to us by the constant Custome of this and all Churches and this not as a cypher or meer formality but as of sacred Institution so of reall and excellent efficacy and divine vertue in the Church where duly used and applyed Which was that I had to prove against the scurrillous objections of those that seek to despise and destroy the whole Function Ordination and divine authority of the Ministry of this Church Reader the Reason why the Folios of this Book do not follow is because the Copy for Expedition was divided to two Printers Of speciall Gifts of the Spirit pretended beyond Ordinary Ministers ANother great Calumny 3. Calumny or cavill That the Ministers of England have not the Spirit to which their Adversaries pretend highly urged by their Adversaries against the true Ministers of the Church of England whose due and right Ordination I have vindicated to be as Divine so both Necessary and Efficacious is as a forked arrow sharpned with Presumption and Prejudice On the one side an high esteem and confidence which they have of themselves and a very low despicienty of all Ordained Ministers on the other side even in that which is the highest honour of Man or Minister while these Anti-ministeriall Adversaries pretend That the Ordained Ministers have not the Spirit of Christ nor can or ever doe Pray Preach and administer holy things by the Spirit which these new Modellers challenge in such a plenary measure and power to themselves that they justifie their want of ordinary abilities and endowments by their needing none Excusing their not studying or preparing for what they utter by their being specially Inspired Colouring over their well known idlenesse ignorance illiteratenesse and emptinesse by the shews of speciall Illumination sudden Inspirations and spirituall Enablements Which they say they have far beyond any Ordained Ministers And this by the Spirit of Christ which is extraordinarily given to them which suddenly leads them into
constant spirited preacher of righteousnesse will as he should in Gods way and Word with all religious freedome yet with all civill respect tell even the greatest Princes and Potentates of their sins as resolute Eliah and honest Micajah did Ahab as Nathan did David as Jeremiah did the Princes and people too as John Baptist did Herod as St. Stephen did the Jews Non par est ut deceptus splendore purpurae ignores imbecillitatem corporis quod hac regitur Amb. ad Theodos Theod. l. 5. Eccles hist c. 1● and as St. Ambrose did Theodosius the Emperour who for that Christian courage loved him the better professing that no man was worthy the honour of a Christian Bishop or Minister but he that knew how to own and use such pious and resolute constancy as he had done Yea what will you think of the freedome used by Menis Bishop of Chalcedon to Julian the Emperour telling him that he was an Atheist and Apostate Being blinde and led to the place where they were sacrificing Julian with scorn asked him why the Galilean did not open his eyes Sozom. l 5. c. 4. The old man answered he thanked God he wanted eyes to see so wicked a person It is certain no men are better subjects in any time or under any State than such plain dealing Preachers although oft times none are lesse esteemed by such men who had rather enjoy the fruit of their sins with peace than hear of them to repentance But Ministers who are Gods Heralds must not consider what voice pleaseth those to whom they are sent but what he commands that sends them It were better that hundreds of them were sequestred plundered imprisoned banished or burnt at Stakes in Smithfield Vitámque impendere vero Nec propter vitam vivendi perdere causam Juv. Nihil turpius sanctis parasitīs after the example of many holy Martyrs than that their votes and suffrages as more sollemn parasites should ever flatter men either great or many in their sins or * Isai 5.20 call evill good and good evill or speak good of that and blesse those whom they think * Psal 10.3 God abhorreth who is as far from approving as from commanding any immorality or injustice in any agents whom he suffers to act and doe great things in the world when yet he so far approves strange events as he permits them in his unsearchable yet alwayes 〈◊〉 just wisdome which knows how to make good use of evill men a●d manners 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bas M. de Sp. 5. c. 21 God can make Bathsheba to be the mother of a Solomon whom he loved when yet he never allowed the sin of * 2 Sam. 12.14 David or Bathsheba in their first coming together the fruit of which the Lord destroyed It justifies as St. Austin saith Gods omnipotent goodnesse and wisdome but not mans impotent passion and folly when he brings his glory or his Churches good out of their evill Yet this just and necessary freedome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Demost which Ministers of the Church in all duty to God charity to men and fidelity to their own souls ought always as they have fit occasion to use must not amount to bitter rude importune and unseasonable reproofes not to publique raylings seditious reproaches and popular invectives against any mens persons or actions * Nobile plane ac generosum est vincendi genus alios humilitate praeoccupare ut vincamus Sal. Ep. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is Pel. l. 4. ep 139. There must be meekenesse with zeal humility with courage modesty with freedom gravity with constancy and prudence with innocency If those that are at any time in Power doe not like or will not protect and incourage such Ministers in all such religious freedom of speaking as becomes the Word of God if they presently make those offenders for a word and looke on them Isai 29.21 as enemies of their power who only tell them and all men of those sins which the Scripture reproves equally in all men and God will mightily punish in the mighty If they resolve to destroy all those Preachers which are loth they should be damned Impatientiam reperhensionis sequitur peccandi impudentia unde impoenitentia desperatio damnatio Ber. Truly such men deserve to have no Ministers but those that are not worth the having Teachers after their own hearts and not after Gods None are worthy the name of Christs Ministers who suffer Christians to sin securely others may heap up and feed on * Mellei sacharati doctores sweet Teachers for a while but they will finde them like * Rev. 10.10 St. Johns book in the belly bitter and miserable comforters in the end None are so worthy of Christian Magistrates protection as those that fear not to tell them of their sins yet in a fair way too Not in a Cynicall severity but in a Christian charity not so as to diminish their power which Temperanda est reprehensio ut non tam corrosores quam correctores videamur emendare studentes non mordere Ber. Ep. 78. Veritas dulcis est amara quando dulcis pascit quando amara curat medicamen animo pabulum Aust Ep. 210. is Gods more than mans but vindicate true piety What good Christian wil not be glad of sanative wounds rather than * Prov. 27.6 Quantum ●dit peccatum tantum diliget fratrem quem sentit peccati sui hostem Aust Ep. 87. Ioh. 18.37 For this end came I into the world that I should bear witnesse to the truth Sapienti grata sunt vulnere senantia Ieron poysonous kisses to hear of those faults in a fair way which he hath cause to be sorry that ever he committed and of which he must repent even to a restitution of injuries or at least an agnition if ever he have pardon True Ministers are to consider not what will please poore sinfull mortals but what will profit mens soules not what may seeme good to them but what will doe them good and however they may not transgresse the laws of honour and civility by a rudenesse of Religion yet they must take that * Ezek. 2.5 liberty of speaking which the word of God allowes and conscience requires whether men will hear or forbear 6. Ministers quiet subjection merits protection If then Christian Religion be not in England grown a meere fable as the Ministers of it are too many become a reproach and a by-word a burden and a song If modern-policies hath not quite eat up all that piety which was sometime professed in privater and obscurer stations If Mammon hath not justled God out of the throne of great and strong mens hearts If Belial have not deposed Christ If the enjoyment or catching at the shadowes of temporall power and possessions have not made men foolishly let goe the care to get and to hold fast eternall life If Arms have
tenderness and indulgence of a Mother the caution and courage of a Commander the vigilancy of a Watchman the patience of a Shepheard the zeal of a lover the diligence of a woer the gallantry and honour of an Embassador who as he gives no cause so knows not how with patience to see his Master or Message affronted or neglected The wisdom and discretion of a Counsellor The constancy and resolution of a Pilot whom no storm must drive from the Steerage whom it becomes to be drowned with his hand on the helm For a true Minister who is enabled by God approved by man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocat Socrat in Pl. Apol. Pat●rnum est docendi munus Heb. 2.12 I will declare thy name among my brethren c. 2 Cor. 6.1 We therefore as workers together with God and Christ c. 2 Cor. 5.10 All things are of God i. e. ordered by him who hath reconciled us to himself by Christ Jesus and hath given to us the Ministry of reconciliation V. 20. As though God did beseech you by us and so duly sent and ordeined by both to the service of Christ in the Church hath upon him not only something of the honour and authority but of the duty and care of Parents and that right of primogeniture which from Christ is derived to them as from the elder among many brethren which is to teach instruct provide for direct and govern in the things of God the younger succession of the family of Christ Yea more every true Minister hath part of the work of God assigned to him having a Deputation or Lieutenancy from Christ to fulfill what he hath graciously undertaken not as to meritorious satisfaction which Christ alone hath perfected but as to Ministeriall instruction and pastorall government teaching mankind to know the will of God how he is to be served and how they may be saved yea and ruling them that are Christs with his Scepter Furnished as the Ark with the Law with Manna and with Aarons rod to convince men of sin to comfort them with promises and to keep them in holy bounds by just authority and Christian Discipline So that true Ministers stand as in Parents so in Gods and Christs stead as to the visible means and outward work of divine institution 1 Cor. 4.7 which the Lord hath chosen to dispense by such earthen vessels that as they have some reflexions and marks of divine authority and honour more than humane upon them in their work and Commission so they may have as they had need more than ordinary divine assistance to carry them through the discharge of this work as it ought to be done In reference to which great and sacred imployment the Lord Christ fasted Luke 6.12 and prayed a whole night in a mountain the day before he chose ordeined and sent his twelve Apostles to the work of publike Ministry among the Jews yea and after they had enjoyed his holy society and instruction for some years yet before they were to go forth to the Gentiles conversion knowing what difficulties they should encounter what beasts and men and devils they were to contend withall besides how strange and incredible a message they went withall to convert a proud vain luxuriant covetous and crue● word he would not have them go from Jerusalem Acts 1.8 till they were endued with power from on high by the holy Spirit their teacher and comforter 〈…〉 the ●ntients had of the Ministry of the Gospel and with what spirit they undertook it 8. And according to this so emn both institution and preparation of the first Ministers of the Go●pell which Christ sent in whose power and after whose patern as neer as may be all others ought to succeed in ●he Church all holy wise able and humble Christians have alwaies looked not without horror trembling and amazement upon the Office and work of the Ministry untill the pride and presumption of these times Antiently the worthy Bishops and Ministers were both before and after their Ordination to this Office still asking this question in their souls who is sufficient for these things and what shall I do being a Minister to be saved still jealous lest while they Preach to others themselves prove castaways 2 Cor. 2.16 1 Cor. 9.27 De propriâ anima negligens in alienâ esse non potest solicitus Jeron However now youthfull confidences or rusticall boldness or vain-glorious wantonness or ambitious ostentations or covetous projects or secular interests or friends importunities or fortunes necessities and stimulating despairs to live any other way these God knows are too often the main motives which put many men upon the work of the Ministry Yet Those grand and eminent men of old whose gifts and graces far exceeded our modern tenuities came not to this holy Ordination nor undertook this service of God to the Church either as Bishops or Presbyters without infinite reluct●nce Naz. Or. 29. Reproves that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Importune aking t●ngues that know neither h●w to speak nor to be silent Such Preachers he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A●ter he shews how much ca●e is to be used before and after the undertaking that holy Office P. 48. 7. c. Eph. 6.12 1 Cor. 9.22 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Is Pel. grief dread and astonishment They had a constant horror of the worth and danger of mens souls which only Christ could redeem with a valuable price the losse of which a whole world cannot countervail also of the terrors of the Lord to slothfull and unfaithfull servants in that work also of the strictness of accounts to be given at Christs tribunall They had before their eyes that boundless Ocean of business into which a Minister once ordeined lancheth forth and is engaged to study to preach to pray to fast to weep to compassionate to watch-over to visit to rep oove to exhort to comfort to contend with evill and unreasonable men devi●s and powers of darkness to take care of young and old to temper himself to novices cathecumens to confirmed to lapsed to obstinate to penitent to ignorant and erronious to hereticall surlyness to schismaticall peevishness to become all things to all men to gain some The work indeed requires saith St. Chrysostom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Crysost in Act. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Synes ep 105. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●d 2 Cor. 11.29 Who is weak and I am not weak who is offended and I burn not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a most ample and en●●rged soul lest any under our charge be ignorant by our negl●ct be misled by our errors justly scanda●ized by us and hardned against us lest any saving truth be wasted or concealed any soul wound●d any conscience or faith shipwracked lest any weaker faith faint any stronger fall lest any be tempted and seduced by Satan or his Factors In fine lest any poor soul should be dam●ed by our default which is
by Christ committed to our charge as Ministers of and for Jesus Christ whose work is to see that the sufferings of Christ be not in vain that the soveraign salves and balms of his blood may be duly applied to the benummed to the tender to the wounded consciences to the broken and bleeding to the stony and hardned to the fleshy and flinty hearts This so prodigious a work and more than humane undertaking to be a Minister of the Gospel either as a Bishop or Presbyter for neither the difference nor the distance was great in point of the main work either of teaching or governing onely the higher place had the greater care and the more honor drew with it the greater burden of duty made those holy men of old so loth and unwilling to yield themselves to the desires importunities and even violencies of those Christians who looked upon them Ambr. off l. 1. c. 1. Ego invitus de tr bunalibus atque administrationis infulis ad sacerdotium Vita B. Ambrosii as fit for so great a work in the Church they said Nolo Episcopari in good earnest Saint Ambrose was for his learning integrity piety and eloquence so esteemed in his secular employment as a Judge that the faithful people of Millan otherways divided by the Arrian faction thought none more fit to be their Bishop and chief Pastor to guide by teaching and governing them in matters of Religion They in a maner forced him from the Tribunal to the Throne or Cathedral with pious compulsions which to avoid he fled by night and after a nights wandring found himself next morn at Millan He put on the face of cruelty and bloodiness invited loose and leud people to haunt his house that he might seem unworthy of that dignity and deter them from the choice Which he tel s us he suffered not without an holy impatience complaining of the injury done him and he would not have yielded if he had not been perswaded that the impulse and motion of the people so resolute so zealous and so unanimous was from God whose pleasure was thereby signified to him That leaving secular affairs he had work for him to do in his Church which he discharged with great diligence courage and fidelity after he was baptized duly ordained a Presbyter and consecrated to be a Bishop To whose learned and holy eloquence the Church oweth besides other excellent fruits the happy conversion of Saint Austine In like sort Saint Jerome tells us of Nepotian That when his holy learning and life had so recommended him that he was generally desired to be made a Minister of the Church Nepotianus eo dignio● erat quo se clamabat indignum populus quaerebat c. Humilitate superabat invidiam Jer. ad Holiodorum Ammonius fugiens aurem dextram praecidit cùm ad Episcopatum quae thatur ut deformitate impediretur electio Zozom l. 6. c. 30. Soc●at l. 4. c. 18. Nihil in hae vita difficilius laboriosius periculosius Episcopi aut Presbyteri aut Diaconi officio sed apud deum nihil beatius si eo modo militetur quo imperator noster jubet Hinc lacrymae illae quas ordinationis meae tempore effundebam August epist 148. Greg. Nis in vi●● Thaumat tells how Greg. Thaum omni cura fugiebat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Orat. 25. Tells how unwillingly he was brought to be a Bishop which others hastned to so ambitiously he first hid himself When he was found they brought him to Ordination as it were to execution weeping deprecating and deploring with unfeigned earnestness protesting how unfit how unworthy he was for that great work whom nothing could have made more fit and worthy than so great humility with so great holiness and ability Some as Ammonius did maim and deform themselves to avoid this great undertaking Saint Austine a man of incomparable abilities professeth That he esteems nothing more difficult laborious and dangerous in this world than the office of a Bishop or Presbyter though nothing be more glorious and accepted before God if the work be discharged so as we have in charge from our chief commander and Bishop the Lord Jesus Christ. Hence saith he were those tears which he could not forbear to shed plentifully on the day of his Ordination which others wondred at then and he after gives the world an account of them O humble holy happy well-placed tears which watered on that occasion one of the most devout diligent and fruitful souls that ever the Church of Christ enjoyed Saint Chrysostome also a great and glorious star of the first magnitude in the Firmament of the Church who filled the Orb in which he was placed and equalled by his eloquent worth the eminency of the City Constantinople where he sate as Bishop passionately bemoans his condition and all of his order as Bishops and Ministers of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost In act 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. in 1. c. act 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Synes ep 11. Thuanus Anno 1555. tells of Marcellus a wise and sober man When the Sc●ipture was read before him of the office of a Bishop he with earnestness protested He could hardly see how any man in the eminency of his place could be intent to the salvation of his own soul professing That he thinks the work the danger and the difficulties so great that a Bishop and Minister had need have an hundred hands and as many eyes to avoid scandals and to dispatch the employment So that he protesteth That he cannot see how many Bishops or Ministers can be saved yea and believes far more are damned than saved Synesius also professeth Had he been aware of the vastness of the work and charge of souls he would have chosen many deaths rather than have been a Bishop or Presbyter in the Church as he was and a ve y worthy one too from an eloquent and learned Philosopher Thus and to this tune generally all those antient Bishops and most eminent Ministers of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. Nis vita Thaum Quanto in praecipitio stant illi qui tot mortibus sunt obnoxii quot habent in tutela animas Cleman Spel. and this not out of restiveness cowardise or want of zeal piety and charity but meerly out of unfeigned humility as Moses Jeremiah Isaiah Ezekiel and others abasing themselves out of the high esteem they had of the glory of Christ the honor of his Religion the dignity of his Ministry and the pretiousness of souls for which he had shed his sacred blood 9. Nor is the work God knows less or easier now 14. The Work not now easier than it was requires as able Ministers on our hands nor the burden lighter nor are our arms and shoulders stronger in these days than in former times that any mens confidence in undertaking or forwardness in obtruding on that calling should