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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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in and run in It is dangerous to have or to suffer any to stand at the head of that way to call in Passengers from that road which leadeth unto life since men of themselves are apt and prone enough to turn from it and go in the contrary path 5. Religion is the foundation of States and Kingdoms and diversity of foundations will never keep up long a building herein we find those States in Scripture to stand surest whose Kings feared God and they that feared put down all false worship 6. Religion is the band and cord by which the unity of the State is preserved if there be heard diversities of Doctrine and the unity of Faith broken either the people are divided in their affections or among themselves and against their Princes or their Governours Hence proceed burnings emulations strifes envy malice sedition faction Rebellion Innovation treachery and disobedience and infinite more mischiefs Let me add two more 7. Let all diligence be used to keep out or subdue false Religions Satan will keep them in we know by the Proverb Where God hath his Church the Devil will whatever man do to the contrary have his Chappel A toleration seems to bring stones and timber for the enlarging of it and making it a Synagogue 8. The Angels of the Churches of Pergamos and Thyatira Rev. 2. are blamed for tolerating false Religions taking it for granted that there is but one true ziz the Catholick one of them had them tolerated possibly not by Law but by connivance and indulgence who taught the Doctrine of Balaam to eat things sacrificed to Idols and to commit fornication whether natural or spiritual and the Doctrine of the Nicholaitans which God did hate then and yet in this Age it passes for true Divinity with many The other suffered Iez●bel who called her self a Prophetess first to teach and then as a proper consequence to seduce our Praedicantiffs do the same and yet plead for a toleration since Paul gave out a Law concerning womens teaching I Tim. 2.12 we finde none but this Iezabel undertaking such an Office It is observable that the Angels of the Church are reproved for bearing with or suffering them so to do and they were the Church Officers Ministers or Bishops by which it seems they had power and authority to restrain and controul them to pull them out of their pulpits and to stop their mouths Whether they were Lords or no let their power and authority speak to do this was Lord-like in my apprehension and not to do it was a ground of Gods accusation Rev. 2.19 20. This Authority was it from heaven or of men If from Heaven then Church Officers have power to controul and put down both Balaam and Iezabel and to stop their mouths and yet not to be accused for Factious If of men then Church-Officers ought to put their power in execution and resist and stop the proceedings of lawless persons command that none hear Iezabel and stop the mouths of all irregular and presumptuous Teachers and not to be accused as busie-bodies and though they be yet let rather men accuse them for performing then God should accuse them for not doing their duty Yet if the Religions be such as do not overthrow the fundamentals of Truth or such as disturb not the Government established in that State Church or Kingdom wherein they be and that the Professor of those Religions be not factious ambitious or pertinarious having no other end in holding their opinions but Gods glory and the satisfaction of their own consciences and willing to be taught and be convinced of their errors diversities of Religions may be tolerated but in private only time may produce a reno●ncing of them when violence might harden them God hath his own times of Calling men and let the humble good honest Christian have his time Wise States Kings and Princes for this cause have granted a private toleration The very Turk who is zealous in his Religion grants this it is especially to be granted in times of great infection then indeed a total suppression in private of different opinions might prove and end in a great disturbance both to Church and State but Philosophandum est sed paucis Quest. 8. Wherein consists the Individuality or singleness the Vnity or Oneness of the true Church That the Catholick Church is but one is both asserted in Scripture and believed in our Creed and though it be scattered up and down through the world in every Kingdom Nation People Province Common-wealth Countreys and Dominions that are known in the earth from La Mairs Straits to Greenland from Sancta Creek to S. Ians yet differs no more then one member of the body differs from another the question then is this what is it that like Arteries and Ligatures Sinews and Nerves holds such a vast body together that the Church of God in this place is not a distinct Church of it self from that that is in another but only a part of it differing as a bone in the neck from that in the foot of the self same body one may be preaching or hearing the word in the Country of the Great Mogul another in Iapan and another in Pauls at London and yet he in one and the self same body And as the Sea receives divers names according to the Countreys she runs through though all but one Sea so the members of the Church Triumphant above in heaven and those of the Church Militant beneath make but one body differing only as a mans upper from his lower parts this Unity consists 1. In a consenting of all of them to the truth and doctrine of the Gospel for we know no Church but the Christian what ever is written by the holy Ghost through the Ministery of the Apostles and Disciples the best expositors of the prophets Psalms and Moses whether made in it and to be done or said to be fulfilled in it and done the whole society of the Church whereever they be scattered believes it and readily consents to it as a Canon of faith and manners 2. It consists in the consenting and unity in reference to the Sacraments of the Gospel the same Sacraments for number for nature that one part holds to be profitable for the Souls of men the same doth the other it is true there are many Churches that differ from another in more externall and Ceremoniall points it is the current doctrine of all reformed Churches and of England Art 34. that it is not necessary that ceremonies be alike in all places but may be altered as the People or Officers may teach and think meet but as touching the essentiall and necessary truths as the ends the uses the Author the profit of them all Christians of the Catholick Church hold one and the same thing 3. I consists in the consenting to and unity in holding the util●●y and necessity of hearing and obeying a Gospell ministery where it is to be had it is a Catholick
are providing our selves to defendin points of grand concernment and as a preliminary discourse to the following truths we shall preface upon that Subject Every Heretick stands confident in his errour and each seducer pleads for a belief of his Doctrine by imposing the name Church upon those whom they have so seduced and made Proselytes to their Hereticall Tenets by which means the glorious Fabtick of the Catholick Church is like a lodge in a Garden of Cucumbers sleighted and disesteemed of many we shall stand therefore a short season upon this holy ground and take a true survey of her large dimensions Da Domine perficere qui dedist● velle For her height or Altitude by the Scripture I see that she is higher then the Heavens her Head who is above all principalities and pow●●s is Christ the Lord. Ephes. 5.23 He is at Gods Right hand and in her affections she is at the same place Col. 3.2 Behold see you her not going up to heaven like Pillars of smo●k leaving the Wildernesse of this World Can. 3.6 Her hasty departure occasion'd betwixt Love and fear longing to be with her beloved and fearing to be devoured by faithlesse and unreasonable men who like Foxes have encompassed her about purposing to tear her in pieces from whom that she may be delivered she assumes the wings of a great Eagle and maketh her nest above the stars For her breadth or Latitude by my Creed I see her of an infinite and inconceiveable extension I believe that the Church is catholick she is as broad as the World as old as the Creation her age you may suppose to be attended with weaknesse but it is not the last visit that Christ her Husband made her renewed her strength like an Eagle so that shee walks and is not weary she runs yet is not faint holds pace with eternity it self Perceive you not Christ the everlasting Son of the father to be the corner stone of this glorious building 1 Pet. 2.6 And untill he cease being it shall never know dilapidations By the same Perspective or Fiduciary Optick Nerve I see her of a comely and beautifull proportion and holy uniformity I believe that the Catholick Church is holy The Kings Daughter is glorious within Christ her Spouse is ravished with the beauty of her eyes Cant. 4 9. Therefore she shall ever be Reverenced in mine He whose eyes are Ten Thousand times brighter then the Sun hath shined upon her garments of wrought Gold and protests that there is no spot in her Cant. 4.7 Let me therefore never cast a blot upon her He that is her Husband hath made her so Ephes. 5.27 Therefore let me that am her son ever hold her so but for the clearer understanding of this matter we shall 1. See the Nature of the Church in Generall 2. Resolve some questions concerning her The nature of the Church of Christ by a due weighing of this description through faith and Scripture may be fully manifested and known It is First The Whole Society or Company of Beleevers 2. Elected and appointed by Gods Eternall decree 3. Called by the Word of the LORD 4. From amongst the rest of Mankind 5. For the bringing of glory to his own Name and giving unto them Eternal lfie In this Description take notice 1. Of the Members of the Church they are the whole Society or Company of Believers in what age soever they lived in what place soever they aboad in however dispersed where everscattered whether far or near old young male female High and Low Rich and Poor All that ever were and all that ever shal be all that ever lived upon the Earth with all that ever dyed in the Womb from Adam the first man that ever was known with and until the last man that shal ever be born makes up this Temple of God and all of them are but severall Members of that body whereof the Lord Jesus is the head 1 Cor. 1.2 Rom. 12.5 2. Of the Causes of the Church and they are either 1. The efficient cause Gods Eternal decree There are none made members of the Church by chance nor by their own care and industry who by taking thought can adde one Cubit to his Stature and he is high with a witnesse who hath his head above the clouds None shall sit in the Kingdome of God but they for whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 And it is prepared for them before the Foundation of the World God by his decree must separate Believers from among men or faith shall never purifie the hearts of men and Election must precede Vocation Gal. 1.15 The least blossome of true holinesse will never grow nor never was seen to bloom upon that stem whose root was not Predestination Ephes. 1.4 5. 2. The Instrumentall cause which is their Call by the Word of the Lord this is the means used for the bringing of many Sons and Daughters into glory It is the charge of Almighty God to the Apostles to hear his Son Iohn 17.5 It is the charge of the Son that the Apostles preach to the World Matthew 28.18 19. And by the benediction of the Spirit by that there is added to the Church dayly such as shal be saved Acts 2.47 None shall be glorified but such as are called with a holy calling we must hear the joyfull sound of his Word before we can see the glory of his countenance for whom he glorifieth he justifieth and whom he justifieth them he also calls Rom 8.30 This Call is so necessary to the Churches being that the Greek Word for Church comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their being called and indeed none shall be crowned with the Lamb but such as fight with him and none shall fight under him but such as are called chosen and faithfull Revel 17.14 We have those that pretend a call in this generation but we have cause to suspect it is not by the word of the Lord for if so they would be holy without blame before him in love Ephesians 1.4 They would be full of love were they full of the Spirit and of joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith Galathians 5.22 Bitternesse wrath anger clamor and evill speaking should be far from them with all malice Ephesians 1.31 The word of Christ we are to look after if we seek to obtain glory for that leads unto it Revelations 22.7 And we are to entertain it in our hearts if we would have that to shine upon our heads the same Doctrine is taught us by the Church of England Art 17. Yet we must understand this calling of or by the word to be onely necessary First when God is pleased to give the word Secondly to those persons who are of years wit or discretion to understand the word or Thirdly where God hath given the naturall meanes for the hearing or reading of his word 3. The formal cause remotely described Separated from amongst the rest of mankind by
of Church did the Apostle Paul write most of his Epistles to the Romans to the Corinthians to the Galathians and as in the text to the Thessalonians that is to the company of believers that lived in and about those Cities and Countries called to be Saints 1. Cor. 1.2 This National Church as the case now stands with us and for the better understanding of some things hereafter to be handled must be divided into the Romish Church and Reformed First The Romish Church by this we understand all those Christians that hold the new invented Doctrine of the Church of Rome that believe as that Church believes and in all points conform thereunto either in point of practice or in point of doctrine Secondly The reformed Church by this we understand those believers whether Nationall or Provinciall that have forsaken the Church of Rome so far as she hath forsaken the truth of the Gospel and cleave to the Ancient Doctrin taught in the Catholick Church whether by the Lord or by his Apostles or by Ministers sent from them whether taught at Jerusalem Antioch Athens or at Rome it selfe disowning the Doctrine of Purgatory praying for the dead worshiping of Saints or what ever as is contrary to true Doctrine such are the reformed Churches of France Helvetia Basil Bohemia Belgie Auspurge Wittemburge Saxony Scotland or England whose Doctrine in these and such other points opposing Rome as may be seen in their publick confessions Now know that all these together are but one and the same Church diversly considered for as the great Se● which is but one sends out her Branches and Rivers which receive names according to the Countries they pass through and become as it were distinst Seas as the British Sea the Germane Sea the Atlantick Sea Even so the Church sending her Doctrine through the Kingdome and Nations of the Earth receives a denomination from the place where she is received and from them whom she washes with water in the name of the Lord and so of old were the Churches of the Corinthians or Thessalonians and so now the Churches of France or England which yet made not severall Churches for as there is but one head one Lord one Faith one Baptisme one Bridegroom one God and one way to ●eaven so there can be but one Church but severall considerations of that one Church which we believe to be holy and Catholick and is the whole society and company of Believees Elected and appointed c. And now we have seen her whom the Lord loves This is the Spouse of Christ only and besides her we know no other this is she whom Men and Devils Hereticks and Infidels for the present labour to destroy and alwayes did desire to root out but all in vain Mathew 16.18 This is she whom Iohn saw as a Bride come down from Heaven adorned for her Husband Revelations 21.2 who is jealous over her and rejoyceth over her as a Bridegroome rejoyceth over his Bride Isa 62.5 He rejoyceth over her with singing Zepha 3.17 This is the body of Christ Ephesians 1.8 which from Christ as from the Head receiveth Life and Spirit by his Spirit she is governed in all things and of whom also she receiveth increase that she growes up Ephe. 4.16 This is she that for her justification by faith in Christ and her mystical union with him is in name and nature a Queen Christs Spouse for her Nobility the new Jerusalem the Brother Sister and Mother of our Lord the first born of God for her illumination perfection defence of Evangelical truth is called the light of the world a Golden Candlestick a Pillar of truth and for her Sanctification of life a peculiar People a vessel of Honour a Garden inclosed the Temple of the holy Ghost Sancta Dei Ecclesia est mater virgo Spousa This is she who from her fruitfulnesse in bringing forth many Children unto God is called a Mother and that is by keeping her Ch●stity pure from the embracements of the world and Sathan is known and esteemed a Virgin and from those engagements that she hath given to the Lord of constant fidelity to him she is honoured as the Lambs wife This is the Vineyard of the Lord which he hath planted in this world warred with his Blood fenced it about with holy Angels builded the winepress of his passion in the midst of her and is dayly gathering out the stones that do offend her This is she whose property it is to vanquish when she is hurt to understand when she is reproved to be in safety when she is forsaken to obtain victory when she is almost over-thrown to be strongest when she is weakest to grow highest when she is most crushed to be most glorious when she is most reproached to be honourably acquitted when she is scornfully condemned to be crowned when she is dishonoured to be rich when she is impoverished to be illustrous when she is despised then she is ne●rest life when death is nearest to her He that is a member of this Church ought not to be calle● a Lutheran nor a Calvinist nor a Protestant no more then to be called a Petrir or a Paulis or a Nicean for following the doctrin of Paul or Peter or for adhearing to the positions of the Councels of Nice or Paphnutians for approving the opposition of Paphnutius in reference to the coelibat life motioned in that Councell since it is the doctrine of no private Person he believes in but of that that hath taught by the Spirit of God to the Saints in all ages therefore he is to be called a Catholick laying the ground of his Salvation on the foundation already and long agoe laid by the Prophets Apostles or Evangelists the opinion and invention of men being no part of his Religion or Articles of his Creed It is true the members of the Church of Rome subscribe themselves Catholicks but falsely many points of the Doctrin of that Church which they have made necessary to Salvation were not known by the Fathers and Teachers of the old Churches Unknown to the Apostles and to their Successors for severall ages when the fire of Purgatory first kindled We know and what Spirit or whose Breath first blew as it hath been demonstrated by Catholick Champions of this Nation and other reformed Churches Their own Histories discover that it hath neither the Spirit nor the word of God for its entry but the Bishop of Romes pollicy the peoples simplicity the Emperours inadvertency and Phochas's treachery for unto these causes may we reduce his Holinesses Supromacy and infallibility the foundation and Basis of all their other errors the Doctrin of Purgatory of Pardons of Auricular confession of Venial sin of Merit of Transubstantiation of Adoration of Saints Communicating under one kind of private Masse of the Pax of the Agnus Dei of Hostly or Ghostly processions we know to be but yesterday so that whosoever takes hold of this Doctrin deserves
whose riches were from pill●ging of the goods burning the houses and murthering the persons of those that were not of an Anabaptistical spirit This Kings Title was The King of Iustice the King of the new Ierusalem he erected a Throne of great cost and coyned Money with this Motto Verbum car● factum quod habitat in nobis By this Kings Regall Authority Divorces were frequently made as men grew weary of their Wives all books burned but the Bible all Churches rifled demolished and as from God performed blood sighs tears was only to be seen and heard in this Kings Reign At a feast he gave the Sacrament of the Lords Supper to the Number of 4000. but accusing one of Treason you must note he was a King between them cut off his head himself and with bloody hands consecrated the Elements administring the bread one of his Queens following him delivered the cup. I long to make an end of this Monarch he came in a few days to be tyed to a stake by two Executioners with two hot pincers was his flesh torn from his bones in Munster where his most Sacrilegious Majesty had acted and enacted unhe●rd of Villany This Sacrilegious King was not without Rebellious Subjects which the German Princes by burning drowning killing not for their consciences but for their ●reaso●●●tte● and hell●sh acts put an end to them At which time 〈…〉 of them into England for shelter A. 1535. 〈…〉 were burned and o●hers made to recant yet some 〈…〉 ●slily carrying them-themselves did live and became the 〈◊〉 Father of the Brownist Mr. Robert Brown of Northamptonshire venting their Doctrine in a Saw-pit first near Islington obtained Proselytes three years afterward he Recanted his errour and took Orders becoming a faithfull Teacher of the Doctrine of the Church of England though his Disciples remained as thorns in her sides they did somwhat refine the Doctrine of the German Anabaptists and continuing a separation did bring forth that Creature whom we call an Anabapist who must own the Quaker for his first born and all those by-opinions and fancies taught by the whole Rabble of Phanaticks must be acknowledge to grow out of his Roots and are sprigs of the Tame branch all of them being quickned with the same Sap or Spirit of their German Father who by a pretended humility and s●ow of Godlinesse got into the affections of the Vulgar which ceased not untill they had put them in the throne which deservedly brought them to the stake I have heard of a Welch-man that being condemned to be hanged by the neck called aloud O good my Lord hang her not by the neck her Father was hanged by the neck and her dyed Let our English Anabaptist remember that Her Father was burned at a stake and hanged by the neck for Treason Her Prince Prophet Her King and all Except I say this King they had never a Nursing Father So far hath it been from all Nations coming in unto it that if these be true Churches they have never had a village to boast of If these be true Churches there are more Churches then one and so the unity of the Church must be denied and consequently there must be more Christs then one Christ is the head of the Church Ep. 1.22 and the Church is his body Why because all the members move according to that life that is communicated unto them from the head Now this rabble hath not one Spirit nor one life neither do they preach all one kind of faith therefore there must be diversity of heads to give life to these several bodies consequently if they be Churches there must be divers Christs to quicken those severall Churches which destroy the unity of the Godhead in Trinity the consent Harmony and agreement of Prophets and Apostles and the unity of the Catholick Church on earth and before that be done let us condemn those segregated meetings for those that separate themselves sensual having not the spirit Iud. 19. Whence the Catholick faith came we know how old it is we know it hath Seniority over and above all other Doctrine as truth hath over error i● is of the same standing with the Creation And though heresie hath and must closely follow it yet it was before them the Wheat is first sowed and then the Tares Such is Sathans hast that he begun to lye at the beginning yet from the beginning lyes were not but truth Not to speak of those Heresies that were in the Church before the Time of our Saviour in his time there were those that denied the Resurrection and the being of Angels and Spirits Matth. 22.23 Acts 23.8 Most of those grand Heresies that troubled the Church by false Doctrine the time they came in the Authors that broached them are known by name and the occasion of their so doing is also known not so the Catholick faith We must know that all new lights that now shine are but the stinking snuffs of those old Heresies that were extinguished by the powerful breath of the Catholick Doctrine blown in again by the envious breath of him that fights against the Church and her seed and may be reduced to the same causes that before they of old were kindled by and may be reduced to these heads 1 Envy and discontentednesse when men could not get into those places that either their merit did not deserve or their ambition thought they were worthy of then to revenge themselves like Corah Dathan and Abiram Numb 16.1 they rose up against the Governours of the Church and rebelled against Catholick truth It was this that made Arius rise and swel like a great Sea to overthrow the faith of Christ. An. 310. for not being chosen Bishop of Alexandria of which he was a Deacon when Achillas the Bishop thereof dyed and Alexander a man he thought not so deserving as himself chosen in the place presently he set himself to oppose Episcopal dignity and such Doctrine as plagued the Church for almost three hundred years together purely because he could not be a Bishop whose Doctrine though condemned by 318 Bishops A. 325. gathered together at Nice at the command of the good Emperour Constantin the great is revived again in our Socinians Anabaptists c. for want of discipline in our Church And truly that hideous damp that came upon the Church of England in these last years had it's rise from the same ground viz. from the mouths of those men that were extended in a large measure for the receiving of a Mitre which not coming they vented their ill-favoured breath in the very faces of them that through desert wore it envying the glory that others had because they themselves had but Ordinary respect This made M. M. a principall Pres. break out into extravagancy he Petitioning the King for a Deanry and afterward for a Bishoprick getting neither strove as the King told to undo and overthrow all So D. T. an earnest Suitor for the Deanry of Salisbury or
This Errour in point of worship you may call Idolatry But beware that you take not decent or comely Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship The Apostle urging women in the Church of Corinth to be covered 1 Cor. 11.6 that which they might think was too much precisenesse in him for we may be apt to suppose he discontented them that did otherwise was decent in his eyes and commanded to be done but not making it a point of worship nor pressing it upon them as part of Gods service declares that ceremonies may be used in but ought ever to be differenced from the worship performed In brief whatever Ceremony of what nature or kind soever that is enjoined that is not contrary to the Word of God and by the Officers of the Church thought comely to be used as tending to make that worship then used to be the more Reverenced and esteemed by the performers is not to be opposed This age discovers what a dis-respect contempt undervaluinig thoughts most men have even good men in a great measure of the house of God table of God service of God and Servants of God since decent and comely ceremonies were banished from the Church of God and where such ceremonies are injoyned and thou separatest thou art guilty of renting the seamlesse coat there being no cause for making that separation justifiable For Here●●e then and Idolatry only then is there a cause of separation and what ever is more then these cometh of Satan Wherefore though our departure were a trouble to them sayth Reverend Bishop Iewel speaking of Rome yet they ought to consider how just cause we had of our departure And in another place he saith It is true we have departed from them and for so doing we give thanks to Almighty God but yet from Christ from the Apostles and from the Primitive Church we have not departed Romes Heresie and Idolatry gave a just ground for the Reformed Churches separation But In our days there is made such a separation as by no Scripture can be justified there being nothing in matter of doctrine taught nor in point of worship performed that in the least contradicts the Word written or the worship injoyned and therefore their sin is the greater tending to the destroying of that love charity concord union that ought to be in and amongst the members of the Church we must not cut off the arm for every scratch or smal hurt much lesse cut off our nose because it seems to stand awry through a false glasse neither ought we to separate from the body of the Church for every small errour in it as for every Ceremony that in our judgment is amisse and indeed those that are most separate from the Church now in the highest points of doctrine and fight against her did but at first dislike her Ceremonies so dangerous it is to yield in the least to the sin of Schisme for the hurt in that quickly turns to the Gangreen of Heresie Those that disliked her Su●plice now scorn her preaching those that disliked her prayers will not now pray at all those that disliked standing at the Creed now will fall down to no God those that disliked her Crosse in Baptism now scorn the Spiritual washing those that looked sowr upon my Lord the Bishop now casts stones at the Preacher Master G Those that dug down her Altars now would pull down her Churches they that saw her kneel at the Lords Supper and grumbled because she sate not are now so holy that they scorn it Which thing duly and seriously weighed might make men afraid to play about the hole of the asp or to put their hand in the Cokatrice den nay to touch it were it but with a stick least as it befals him that toucheth the Torpedo a spiritual numbnesse or Judiciall stupefaction befall them that they shall no● move one foot forward in a right way more Seldome can we see them returning to their mother Church and to that doctrine wherein they were baptized but like sheep out of the Fold as soon as out of the Church porch they wander further and further and so far they are gone that for the present I am not disposed to go after them but to such as are within hearing I give this short direction viz. to behold such as have gone before them that at first did but st●mble at straws were troubled at trifles thought to have gone no further yet whither are they now hurried look back to the Church you have left view her orders her Sacraments her points of worship study them try them by the Sciptures if you can find them contrary or repugnant to the written Word of God stand stil and save thy own soul but follow not them for they went in the way of Cain and run greedily after the errour of Balaam perished in the Gainsaying of Co●e Clouds without Water carried about of Winds raging waves of the Sea foaming out their own shame wandring stars Jude 11.12 13. By good Words and fair Speeches they deceive the hearts of the simple not for our Lord Iesus Christ but for their own belly Romans 16.18 Quest. 7. Whether more Religions then one may be Tollerated where the true Church is Established In the opening of this Question knowing the times wherein I live and the fewnesse of my years I will not shew you my opinion but you shall hear the Judgement of a Master in our Israel that was gathered with gray hairs to his Fathers and lately fell asleep One Religion is to be Tolerated and no more to be publickly taught then one 1. Because there is but one God who is the object of Religion his Essenc● being simple and indivisible his worship is also to be diversitie of Religion breeds and produceth only diversity of Opinion touching God which in time may in the conceits of men d●stroy his unity and Onenesse 2. As there is but one truth so there ought to be but one Religion for false Religions either teach to worship false Gods or else in a false way and manner to worship the true God which made God himself in constituting the Church of the Jews in a strict manner to give charge touching that and in his constituting the Church of the Christians to do the same by commanding them to stone that Prophet that taught otherwise and us to curse that Angel that should teach other Doctrine then he did then by Moses and now to us by his Son give teach command and appoint Deut. 13.1 Gal. 1.8 3. There is but one Church which is the ground and pillar of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 and one Spirit to lead that Church in the way of truth and therefore there ought to be but one Religion which is the Doctrine of that one Truth 4. There is but one way to heaven and eternal Life in which way few through ignorance and errour walk or find and ways to Hell and destruction which many through corrupted nature fall
Church of England is a true Church as it is now constituted her Doctrine being pure she holds nothing nor injoyns nothing upon her members in matters of salvation by way of precept neither doth she add to nor take any thing from the nature of the Sacraments that the Lord Christ hath left behinde him in the Church by way of practice she doth and may injoyn and she hath power to ordain several Ceremonies to be performed in the receiving of them which in themselves being not contrary to the Scriptures nor taught by her as necessary for salvation urged only as edifying for their meaning and decent for the service performing her Members may and they do give her all due obedience and their obedience is justifiable You need not here be put in minde of that caution formerly given viz. not to take manners for doctrine it is a high errour to conceit the vertue power efficacy of an Ordinance to consist in or depend upon the goodness of him that doth administer the same A prophane person a known Swearer may purely dispense the Sacraments for that lies not as God forbid it did in the purity of any mans conversation but in the pure adhering to our Lords Institution The pure preaching of the word hangeth not upon the purity of him that speaketh but in the purity of the word spoken of The purity of Doctrine lies in the agreement of it unto Scripture and not in the agreement of a mans life unto the word if so how many had Christ converted what multitudes of people had Paul brought to the knowledge of the truth more then he did The same Doctrine teacheth the Reformed Churches and the Church of England Art 26. To conclude this Chapter in all Instituted Ordinances it is neither Pauls goodness nor Apollo's graces nor Iudas's wickednesse that is the cause of the plants fruitfulness or barrenness from the grace of God must we look to receive the promised reward 1 Cor. 3.7 In natural as in prayer sometimes it may be otherwise Iames 5.16 CHAP. II. Of the Scriptures COL 3.16 Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another in Psalms and Hymns and Spiritual Songs singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord. HAving viewed this beautifull heavenly and holy building for it is Gods 1 Cor. 3.9 which is as Ierusalem a City compact together we shall now behold the foundation upon which it stands The Builder of it was skilfull in all kind of cunning Work and a Fabrick of this height or altitude required a foundation suitable deep strong and sure he therefore founded it upon a Rock Matth. 16.18 by which the several parts of it stand firm the carved and polished work thereof knows no shaking the least vessell therein though earthen yet being chosen for the Masters honour knoweth no falling down by tottering The foundation of this glorious Metropolis Royal Edifice or House of God is in truth and nature but one yet since Scripture speaks of it as two we shall speak in that Language and shew you that the Church hath 1. An increated essential foundation which is that holy thing whose name is Jesus Christ the Lord Matth. 16.18 begotten before the beginning of the world it is the Lamb of God the Rock of Ages it is he that is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners the only begotten Son of the Father who taking upon himself to deliver man did not abhor the Virgins womb it is he whose name is wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the Prince of Peace the everlasting Son of the Father the Man who is Gods Fellow Zach. 13.17 2. A Created Doctrinal foundation this is the Law and the Prophets Ephes. 2.20 It is the word written which is profitable for Doctrine and reproof for correction and instruction in righteousness that the man or Church of God might be perfect throughly furnished unto all good works In summ it is that word that was spoken by the Fathers by the Saints by the Prophets and Apostles who were the servants of God Phil. 1.1 Of these two we may say as Ioseph said of Phara●hs doubled dream Gen. 41.26 They are but one yet not one so but that the preheminence is given to the first under the notion of a Corner stone Isa. 28.16 that giving both strength to the building and directions to the Builder And indeed the Prophets and Apostles laid no new Foundation but added to that corner stone laid to their hands daily such firme Christians as they had fitted for this holy superstructure taking directions in their building from its pos●ture for unto it all the building fuly framed together groweth unto an holy Temple in the Lord Ephes. 2. ult No foundation being laid therefore but what is united to this strengthened by this supported by this and directed by this shews that properly there is none but this Saint Paul who was a wise and excellent Master builder himself 1 Cor. 3.10 understanding there was a Church builded at Colos. a City of Phrygia the greater in the continent of Asia the lesse so called from one Phryxus a King thereof had no desire it should stand empty left the evill spirit which hath been cast out should take possession again as at this time he was like to do whether by their falling back to Paganisme and Heathnish customes again or by being taught the necessity of imbracing the doctrine or Ceremonies of Jewisme would have the Word of Christ dwell richly in them This Country of Phrygia had once in it a King named Gordius who of a Plow-man being chosen King tyed or hampered his Plow-Tacklings in such a knot that he predicted that none should untye them but he that was to be Conquerour of the World it was called Nodus Gordianus this Prophesie was fulfilled in Alexander who because he could not untye it by Art cut it asunder with his Sword and for afterward conquering the World was sirnamed the Great At this time there was among these Phrygian Colossians some that hampered their understandings by a counterfeited humility who with their dark Axiomes would have intruded upon them worshipping of Angels which knots to untye that they might be great the Apostle sends them or recommends unto them the Sword of the Spirit Let the Word of Christ dwell in you richly In this Country also was the City of Midaium where Midas the son of this Gordius lived and dwelt he as the Poets fain asked of Bacchus who was his Guest that what ever he touched might become gold his great riches was the ground of the Fable his ●ute was granted by which he turned Mountains into gold but finding that he could neither eat nor drink but Goblets and Viands of Gold he recalled his wish and by washing himselfe in the River Pa●t●lus communicated that virtue to the River which afterward brought up golden sand The River that comes from the Mount Tmolus brings with it abundance of gold and
and received as the word of Christ which other Scripture is as well as the Psalms But 3. Because of all Scripture the Psalms are of most generall use as having in them the greatest variety of doctrine the most fervent and working motives to godlinesse and piety and 4. Because of all the Scripture they were usually most if not only sung they were in a special way chanted by the Saints and sung by the holy men under the Law which besides the Spirit of God who by David did compose those Psalms suitable to be sung was occasioned from those holy raptures that by experience believers felt in themselves in the using of them arising upon the variety of Doctrine that was naturally perceived to be in them and flow from them but of these things more at large when vve come to handle that Ordinance of singing in particular CHAP. III. HAving opened the Text we shall now by the assistance of him whose word is to be spoken of come to the drawing out of such truths as shall and may serve for firm pillars whereby the true Christian and sober Saint may stand upright against and in despite of the storms and blasts of all contrary Doctrine Our purpose is to speak of the nature of and to defend the Churches practise in those effectual and grand Ordinances viz. the Word Sacraments and Prayer the Conduit Pipes to convey the water of life to the languishing and thirsty soul though some in this Age surfeiting through plenty account them but as puddle and to be shunned by men As a foundation and ground to the whole Discourse we shall therefore handle this point of Doctrine from the words in generall That it is a Duty incumbent upon all persons to have knowledge of and to be well acquainted with the holy Scriptures The word of Christ is the unum necessarium that one thing needfull for a Christian in this earth and in his passing or travelling toward heaven indispensably necessary as a guide to direct him as light to comfort him and as armour to defend him Ephes. 6.17 Psal. 119.105 Psal. 19.7 In the opening of this doctrine we shall observe this method 1. Show what knowledge it is that lies upon all Christians as a Duty 2. What it is to be well acquainted with the Scriptures 3. Give other Scriptures for the proof of the point 4. Demonstrate the truth of it by reasons drawn from Scripture 5. Discover some causes that hinder the knowledge of the word in our days 6. Draw some Corollaries 7. Resolve some Questions This shall be the Order that we will follow and the God of Order cause his blessing to go along with it that it may effectually teach us how to order our Lives aright towards God and towards man in these irregular days of ours SECTION I. VVHen Christ had ascended up on high and led captivity captive he gave gifts to men Ephes. 4.8 which gifts did vary and were more or less according to the good pleasure of him that ruleth all things Every man hath not knowledge alike and no man knoweth all things he that knoweth most knoweth but in part 1 Cor 13.12 According to the Order God puts men in he will give five two or but one talent and no more some things lie hid from the wisest and other things God will have the lowest of men find out he hath given his word universally to all that by it all may know their duty and he is a wise man which knoweth that There are three things that every Christian must indispensably know in Scripture 1. All necessary truths God will be offended if they know not how to be good Christians not if we be not good Disputants We are to know that God is a Spirit And they that worship him must worship him in Spirit and in truth John 4.24 that he is a hater and punisher of sin Rom. 1.18 that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and the Saviour of the world Acts 9.20 Acts 5.31 c. From the knowledge of these and the like things there are none excepted they are indeed the ground work of all Religion and God will be angry if men know them not 2. All profitable truths It is necessary for men in health strength and wealth to lay up some comfortable provision against the days come wherein they shall say I have no pleasure in them Texts that can mitigate sickness suppress doubts and keep off despair conduce much to a Christians being and his well being also The mysteries of Daniel will not afford so much comfort to a drooping soul as the great mysterie of godliness What time thou art afraid trust in God Psal. 56.3 Remember Happy is he what case soever befals him that hath the God of Iacob for his help whose hope is in the Lord his God Psal. 146.5 God may bring thee through the fire and refine thee as silver is refined and try thee as Gold is tryed Zach. 13.9 Meditate therefore upon the Faith and patience of the Saints Rev. 13.10 and upon the end of the Lord Jam. 5.11 3. All Relative truths i.e. to know those things that God hath given a man in charge in reference to that particular calling or relation that God hath given to him or put him in A Father must know his Duty for he shall answer for his failings in that particular the Magistrate his the Minister his the people theirs God will punish Eli for his failings as a Father 1 Sam. 3.13 Saul for his as a Magistrate 1 Sam. 15.26 Nadab and Abihu for theirs as Priests Lev. 10.2 The people for theirs Mal. 3.8 9 10. Eonus Civis sed malus homo it is one thing to be a good Christian and another to be a good Father be both or if thou be not thou mayst be saved yet so as by fire 1 Cor. 3.15 that is as a man that hath his house and his goods burned may yet escape with his life so thou mayst be brought to heaven but not in that comfortable and joyfull condition which thou mightest hadst thou filled up all thy Relations according to the duties enjoyned thee by the word But of these there may be and is a twofold knowledge 1. A speculative or a head knowledge a knowledge that goeth no further then the brain old Eli might know w●●t he ought to have done The word of Christ may be in a mans brain and there it will speed no better then the seed that was sown in stony ground Matth. 13.5 wanting depth of earth A head-knowledge will but encrease our guilt and that will increase our misery for he that knoweth his Masters will and doth it not shall be beaten with many stripes 2. An affective or heart-knowledge Theologia est scientia affectiva directiva which goes down to the affections and causes a man to walk and to do according to that which he knows Blessed is he that keepeth the sayings of the prophesie of this Book Rev. 22.7 This is to
be attributed to the Scripture This Question arises from the doctrine of the Church of Rome who teacheth her Members that the Scriptures are not perfect that is that the Word of God contained in the Scriptures is not of it self sufficient for salvation and therefore they help it out with their Traditions yet the Catholick Church in all Ages reputed the word in it self absolutely perfect For 1. The Scripture it self acknowledges perfection to be in it 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for Reproof for Correction for instruction in Righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all good workes Now what Spiritual occasion can there be devised or what Act of Religion can a soul intend but what in one of these ways the Scripture is profitable and able to make him perfect of it self without any addition to it It s profitable for Doctrine that is for all truths necessary for salvation For Reproof that is for confutations of all errors For Correction that is a reprehension of all Vice For Instruction that is for exhortation to all ver●ues And all this is that the Man of God may be perfect or that he might be a perfect man of God throughly furnished unto all good works This discovers the Scriptures largenesse The Scripture is written that the Soul may be full of joy The water of tradition need not be mixed with the Wine of the Scripture it can give fulnesse of joy without them 1 Ioh. 1.4 2. They are the Rules whereby the perfection of all other doctrine must be tryed we must bring all other to this Touch-stone we must weigh all weights in this ballance all Rules must be ruled by this and therefore it ought to be straight it self Acts 17.11 the truth of Pauls Doctrine appears by it's conformity to this Nay Christ himself in whom was no errour appeals to it Iohn 5.39 3. The whole and full will of God touching his Church to the end of the World is contained in it Ioh. 14.26 There is no new thing to be done nor no new truth now to be taught The Acts of the Spirit are but remembrancers of that Doctrine formerly taught by Christ. He shall bring to your remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you so that no new thing nor any other thing is to be expected but what he did speak unto them even all things that he had heard of his Father John 15.15 so that the will of God being by the Scriptures fully known they are to be acknowledged perfect Put nothing therefore unto his Words lest he reprove thee and thou be found a Lya● Prov. 30.6 4. There is no truth doctrine or Act which is necessary for salvation but is in the Scripture either by express Text or may be drawn from it by good rationall and holy consequence yea all necessary truths are plain open and manifest in Scripture 5. The Scriptures are called and owned by the Name of Gods Testament Heb. 9. the Old is the first Testament and the New is the last v. 15. c 18. Now the last Will and Testament of a man will not admit of any Addition nor suffer a diminution shal Gods Will and Testament not be sufficient to bring his Sons and Children to heaven without something put to it by man It is not therefore his but their Testament if they must perfect that which blasphemy let our souls abhor 6. The Arguments that the Church of Rome brings are in themselves frivilous and indeed prove the perfection of the Scriptures To this agree the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 1. Bohem. Art 1. of Fr. Art 5. of Belg. Art 7. of Wirtem Art 31. of S●ev Art 1. of England Art 6. The Article it selfe was mentioned before Quest. 5. Whether Salvation may be hold by single knowledge of the Scriptures By the single knowledge of the Scriptures we understand the bare knowledge of the History precepts counsels and promises of the Bible abstracted from the spirit of God which knowledge will never bring a man to Heaven nor happinesse For 1. Not by grace but by nature might many be saved contrary to Ephes. 2.8 much reading and a good memory or once a week to look upon the Bible might be sufficient to make a man holy and denominate one a Saint 2. Such a knowledge might and doth consist with all wickedness and uncleannesse there are some Matth. 7.22 that did prophesie in the Name of Christ which shews that they knew his Law and yet they knew not his glory for he never knew them being workers of iniquity v. 23. 3. It is not a knowing only but a doing also that God requires as a means to obtain Eternal life Iames 1.22 But be ye doers of the Word and not hearers only we are not altogether to know but likewise to walk by the same rule Phil. 3.16 4. A clear full and true knowledge of the Scriptures can never be had without the spirit ●f God Man is naturally blind and cannot see spirituall things because they are spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. 14. the plainest thing in the Scripture is a mystery to him he knows not wat sin is he knows no what Christ is he cannot see sin to be deadly poyson the vomit of a Dog Neither beholds he the Lord Jesus as the chiefest of ten thousand It is the unction of the Spirit by which the Believer knoweth all things 1 Iohn 2.20 that is savingly and as he ought to know 5. God threatens severely suth as barely know his Law Psalm 50.16 Hs says to the wicked What hast thou to do to declare my statutes or that thou shouldest take my Covenant in my mouth c. God puts no regard to a sinner that only knows his will on Earth and shall never Crown him that barely knew his Masters will in Heaven 6. If the bare knowledge of the Scriptures were sufficient for salvation I question whether the Devils should remain in everlasting chains under darknesse This is not spoken to put away the use of the Scripture but that abuse of trusting barely to it we ought to call for the Spirit and beg for the Holy ghost to open our eyes and sanctifie our hearts and renew our natures that the Word of God might be inwardly taught us as well as outwardly preached unto us Quest. 6. What may perswade one that doubts to believe the truth of the Scriptures By doubting of the Scriptures here is understood a calling in question out of pure ignorance the very truth of the History of the Bible he doubts if David King of Israel did compose Psalms and doubts that the Lord is not round about them that fear him as the Mountains are about Ierusalem He doubts that the Apostles being ignorant men and by Trade Fisher-men most could convert Nations not a few In a word he questions the Books of Moses of the Psalms Prophets Evangelists and Apostles not all out
all ages held this truth giving the same glory honour worship to all the three persons which they gave to each of them singly How often the Church of England sings glory be to the Father and to the Son c. is known It is the Catholick Doctrine taught by all Reformed Churches both of the late and the former Councell of Helv. Art 6. Art 3 of Bas. Art 1. of Bohem. Art 3 of Fr. Art 1 of Belg. Art 2 of Ausp Art 1 of Wirt Art 1 2 3 of Scot. Art 1. of England Art 1. The Article it self is this There is but one living and true God everlasting without body parts or passions of infinite power wisdome and goodness the maker and preserver of all things both visible and invisible And in Unity of this Godhead there be three Persons of one substance power and eternity The Father the Son and the holy Ghost Quest. 5. Why are Kings and Magistrates called Gods and rebellion said to be like witchcraft in Scripture 1. This Question ariseth from what hath been before spoken for if there be but one God how come the rulers of the Earth to be called Gods Ex. 7.1 Ex. 22.28 Psal. 82.1 Iohn 10.34 35. 1. Gods they are called to teach that such ought to excel others in Godliness and such only are to be chosen that for religion are like Gods among men 2. To encourage them that they ought no more to fear the faces or regard the person of men or to punish the wicked among men then God doth 3. To draw them to his honour he hath given them his own name they are Gods and therefore they ought not to serve the Devil or the world but execute true judegement as God doth 4. To teach their Subjects Obedience there ought to be no grumbling nor murmuring nor rising up against God In distress one may petition to him but further we ought not to go he hath in the hearing of their Subjects given them his own name and thefore they are to honour them accordingly beg petition of him but no further 5. Let us of these nation add one comparison not known to the ancients our British god whom the Heavenly God make in peace glorious and in warre victorious hath only as God one unpardonable sin but one sin which he will never forgive one sin which is unto death he doth not say that we shall pray for it There are some that are thought to sin against the holy Ghost yet possibly do not I am prone to think that Spira sinned not that sin though he charged it upon himself some poor souls through Sauls persecution did blaspheme Christ for whom God might have a pardon Saul might not be guilty of that sin of Regicide so high as to make it a sin unto death for them our King hath mercy Fear might make them to blaspheme majesty repentance may procure them a pardon the others like Witches though repent must die whence flowes the second part of the question Rebellon is either against God Num. 14.9 or his Word Psal. 108.28 of against a King 1 Kings 12.19 Yet when ever it is in nature it is as witchcraft 1 Sam. 15. ●3 We shall consider it in that part that is against Lawfull Kings and Governours the Similitude may stand thus viz. 1 Witchcraft is a direct opposing of the order laws and Statutes that have been enacted by him who is the God of Heaven Rebellion is of his who is a God on earth Witchraft throws off God and is not afraid of his Majesty Rebellion throws off a lawfull Prince and is not carefull of his honour 2 Wichcraft is usually entered upon by a League Compact or Covenant which according to Authors is sometimes privately and sometime visible made with the Devil So Rebellion seldome or never goes without one or both these 3 Witchcraft as we read draws the party to deny that oath that he made with God in Baptisme Rebels if not formally yet virtually renounce those obligations which they made to their King and Soveraign 4 Witchcraft arises often from Malice Envie Discontentedness if God anser nor their mindes or revenge their quarrell they will endevour to do it by Satans assistance if Royal bounty flow not upon the Subject as he would have it he growes angry and will take by Rebellion 5 Witchcraft sometime is followed by pride or curiosity to do some secret and hidden work and to receive some kind of reputation among men Some will turn Conjurers Negromancers and Witches by the same subjects will turn● Rebels and Traitors 6 Witchcraft is followed by some through poverty or covetousness to get a poor living and to help their necessity they will bargain with Sathan Subjects to better their estates purchase wealth will often break out into Rebellion 7 Witches what through Justice guilt fear as we read seldome or never repent some sorrow they may have when they are in the hand of Justice for the same reason Rebels seldom or never repent except or untill they fall in the hands of the Officer and as Witches seldom then 8 Witches first or last meet with judgement much trouble and evil may be made and done by them but at length here or hereafter they are brought to triall they that rebell first or last receive to themselves damnation Rom. 13.2 I will not judge of their eternall estate but fire on earth is usually prepared for them both In Scripture Satan is called a god 2 Cor. 4.4 because of that power given him over the wicked whom God hath not called out of the World The Belly is called a god Phil. 3.9 men spending their time strength parts for its service Idols are called gods not that they are so at all but because Jdolaters have such an opinion of them Quest. 6 What was that Image wherein God made man and why was man created naked God having made man according to his own Image and yet God not being a corporall substance as man how is man made in his Image The likeness of God wherein man was made is Internall or externall 1 Internall that is in his soul where he was like God 1 In knowledge he knew God himself the Creatures his own happiness distinctly clearly fully that is as a creature was capable of Gen. 2.20 23. 1 Rom. 19.20 2 In holiness In him was no sin as in God is no darkness In him there was an ability to have cleaved only to good and exactly to perform what by God was commanded his affections were holy and pure without disorder and without stain and subject perfectly to the rule of right reason 3 In righteousness God could behold nothing in him but what was very good Gen. 1.31 no crookedness but a totall and universall conformity to his own nature purpose and desire law and precept there needed no Mediator between God and man he being upright before him All these three to be inwardly the Image of God appears Ephes. 4.23 24. Col.
carriage without and some their deportment within the Pulpit we shall see only the chief of them In a Minister there is required 1. Courage Tit. 2.15 2. Sobriety 1 Tim. 3.2 3. Liberality 4. Docibility or aptness to teach 5. Temperance 6. Patience 1 Tim. 3.2 7. A Lover of good things and of good men 8. Holiness 9. Justice 1 Tit. 7.8 We must note that some of these cannot be known by the quickest eye No Bishop is omniscient to know the heart and therefore may ordain a man that wants many of these and also we must observe that a person may come for ordination with many or all of these and yet may backslide which takes not away the force of ordination The Angel of the Church of Ephesus fell from his first purity and love yet was an Angel still Rev. 2.4 5. he may loose his patience his temperance his holiness yet a Minister still and the power of preaching and administring the Sacraments and exercising the keys abide with him these ordinances not depending upon the quality of him that doth administer them more then the force of the Broad Seal of England depends upon the merits of my Lord Chancellour as shall God willing be proved in its own place To all these qualifications above named must be joyned competency of knowledge It is not every man that is just holy or patient must be ordained he must be of understanding competent for the work which competency appears in these particulars from Tit. 1.9 viz. 1. His adhering to the truth known not opinionated 2. In his ability to teach and that soundly for the edification of the Church according to that truth 3. In his dexterity in maintaining of that truth stopping the mouth of Gainsayers he that is so qualified cannot be refused ordination We say competently qualified ' For who is sufficient for these things SECT III. Let us see who they are that must thus ordain whose hands they be that by their laying on the person is qualified in an external way for the publick preaching of the word 1. Not their own Heb. 5.4 It is against the practise of the whole Church of God in all ages for any man though never so well gifted to separate himself or ordain himself as is clear in the examples of Stephen Nicanor c. Nay if it were in a mans own power to separate himself for the work of the Gospel Paul needed not to have left Titus in Creet to ordain Elders in every City Tit. 1.5 It is a practice beyond a president in the Church of Christ for one to ordain himself We read indeed how Frederick the second upon Easter day through necessity crowned himself with his own hands King of Ierusalem in Ierusalem but that ever man made himself a Priest in Ierusalem save Saul Ieroboam and such prophane Wretches whom God did curse even for so doing we read not Neither in old or new Testament is there any instance of one who set himself apart for holy functions or that thought himself qualified in an authoritative way to reach the Gospel upon the sufficiency of gifts as Courage Holiness Knowledge and the like if so Stephen Philip Prochorus c. needed never have been ordained Deacons Acts 6.3 4 5. Nor Paul nor Barnabas Apostle or Evangelist Acts 13.2 nor Timothy a Bishop or E'der 1 Tim. 4.14 2. Not the multitude Never did God give the power of ordination to the people in general before nor after Christ if so where two or three would please to meet they might ordain which in few dayes would make the Church of Christ con●ist of Shepherds rather then of sheep yea would make all Apostles all Teachers c. We find the contrary practised For when the multitude had chosen and nominated persons of honest report full of the holy Ghost and Wisdom th●y set them before the Apostles who prayed and l●id their hands on them Acts 6.3 6. yea as was said before the inhabitants of the Cities of Creet might have ordained Elders Titus might have gone forward with Paul In summe God never giving the people the power of ordination since the creation they can never deliver that power to any untill the dissolution of the world Presumptuous are they therefore that will take ordination from them impudent before the Lord therefore they that will presume to give that authority in matters of so great concernment as the word and Sacraments to any of their own body 3. Only Church officers or the Apostles successors they are only to teach and to baptize unto the end of the world Paul and the Presbytery ordains Timothy he ordains others and they others and so by a moral succession from the Apostles is the Ministerial office upheld but of this we have spoken It were too great a task for me to offer to wade into that troublesome discourse touching Episcopal or Presbyterial ordination least I should drown my self being but of small standing in the Church of Christ yet by vertue of that Proverb It is good to be sure Episcopacy is much to be preferred that being the most ancient way since if not before the Apostles departure from the world and albeit it hath some ruptures or breaches in some of the reformed Churches yet the Acts and Lawes of England make no ordination valid but what originally is Episcopal SECT IV. We are to behold the man thus separated for the Lords use For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the body of Christ Ephes. 4.12 We say we are to see what his duty is and what he is to perform amongst men The very naming of his ordination shewes you what he is to do and the distinction above named discovers his duty but to be more particular yet not large 1. He is to take all advantages and opportunities of preaching that word the preaching of which he is separ●ted for 2 Tim. 4.1 2. The more wicked the times be he lives in the more bold and confident he ought to be 2 Tim. 4.3 yet this excludes not but that he may flee persecution Acts 9.25 3. In preaching of the Word he is to observe the proportion of faith Rom. 1●2 6 4. He is to teach the word according to the capacity of his people 1 Cor. 14.9 the other parts of his duty are clear and obvious SECT V. Questions resolved● Quest. 1. Whether ordination may better a Ministers gifts Quest. 2. Whether a Minister may renounce his ordination Quest. 3. Whether the Ministerial office be to continue alway in the world Quest. 4. Whether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man preach Quest. 5. Whether an ordained person may bear an office in the Common-wealth Quest 1. Whether Ordination may better a Ministers gifts Though this sacred ordinance be of no account with some yet to the conscionable Receiver it may be very advantageous For 1. It is an odinance of God alwayes practised in his Church it may appear at
Fides Catholica OR THE DOCTRINE OF THE Catholick Church In Eighteen Grand Ordinances Referring to the Word Sacraments and Prayer In Purity Number and Nature Catholically maintained and publickly taught against HERETICKS of all Sorts With the Solutions of many proper and profitable Questions sutable to to the Nature of each Ordinance treated of By WIL. ANNAND M. A. late of University Col. Oxon. Now Minister of the Gospel in Leighton Beaudezart in the County of Bedford Thus saith the Lord stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths where is the good old way and walke therein Jer. 6.16 State cum eo stabitis Requiescite in eo quieti eritis Aug. Con. l. 4. c. 12. LONDON Printed by T. R. for Edward Brewster at the sign of the Crane in St. Paul's Church-yard Anno Dom. 1661. TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE Sir Francis Norreys Knight c of Weston upon the Green in the Coun. of Oxon. Right Honourable WHen first the wise Disposer of all States and Persons called me into his Vineyard he apointed me my splace and task during my residence in the university by your honours Patronage and meanes There were two noysome weeds with which the Garden of the Lord which is his Church was then overspread men being as if the last times had been come lovers of themselves and having to colour that a form of Godlinesse which to pluck up so far as I was able was my purpose and resolution at my entry What was done in order to the form●r is yet in the closet but what was done in reference to the latter is now brought to the house ●op my affections leading me still for the good of that people whose teacher in those days of errour and darknesse ● by Gods designment was and whose attention to the truth of what was then taught did generally appear unto my comfort and I hope their own good by their conforming thereunto though contrary to the practise of that age wherein these following Doctrines were delivered men generally giving up themselves to be shaken to and fro by every wind of doctrine speaking evil of devising devises against those that either stood to or taught the truth of the good old way Which last made your honor once merrily shew me that if I continued so preaching I should get the whole country about my eares but Sir you know I did and still do continue so preaching that is preaching down the sins of the times and my eares though sometimes they have glowed are yet untouched for I never feared nor valued the tongues of men and against their violence the Kings laws protected me Sir My design was to maintain the power dignity and purity of these three grand ordinances the Word Sacraments and Prayer which were trod underfoot by the unreasonable men of that age who like swine rooted up all things though establish'd of God that were but tending to order decency or uniformity that their own opinions though contrary to all Scripture and their own practises though contrary to all Saints might alone be nourished and followed so highly did they love themselves The doctrine of the word was throughly handled and also that of the Sacraments though here it be impres'd with some addition Prayer was not at all touched upon God casting me providentially upon subjects of another nature untill I gave a farewell to your honour and that people Knowing with what the inhabitants of that place was most affected I was zealous after three years divertisment to fall upon that ordinance of prayer and more largely in some particulars go through the nature of the Sacraments and to publish all unto the world And since Epistles Dedicatory in this kind are usual unto whose patronage can I better come then unto your Worships being assured already of your good will both to the Doctrine taught and to the Teacher of it as appeared by those many noble favours which your bounty was pleased to throw upon him Accept then Right Honourable into your hand what for the most part you heard by the ear for should I say all I am perswaded your Honor would not believe me here are only the main pillars upon which the doctrine stood with some small addition in the questions the rest are enlargments as they dropped from my pen in my Christmas and Lent meditations Hoping for your Honours acceptance I close this Epistle assuring your Honor that he is not unmindful when he is before God of your self and family who once was and still desires to be From my study at Leighton July 23. 1661. Right Hourable Yours to serve you in the Lord Iesus WIL. ANNAND TO THE READER IT being my lot to be called and separated unto the work of the Gospel when Hereticks had covered the Land as once the Frogs did Egypt no greater service could be done to the Church then to hold up the old truth in its splendour purity that men might not be drawn from it in the darknesse of heresie and novelty and comparing the old with the new lights they might straightway say that the old was better At that time I stood with these following truths to keep my people from defection and Apostacy delivering tha● doctrin that was anciently given to the Saints that upon knowing principles they might the more earnestly contend for the same and now the same is published amongst other cogent reasons for Buttresses confirming them in that faith wherein they were taught in those days of error especially in regard that they may live to see the ordinances advanced according to what is here asserted since our late reformation from Atheisme If we say that we have no sin we deceive ourselves and by consequence we are subject to f●ailty If I had for my own particular no error I were not a man and if I did not confesse them I were no Christian yet I trust thou shalt find in this book no errour so great for which I should deserve stoneing and if there be let him that is without errour cast the first stone and the Author shall have time to rectifie his mistakes particularly for trusting too much to his memory in the matter of the Emperor Charles his motto pag. 37. which should have been decem praeceptorum decalogi custos est Carolus the Printer to repent of his over sights and omitting some marginal citations necessary to have been inserted However it be if thou read these lines with approbation thou shalt be respected if otherwise no less honoured but if thou raile a● them or their composer thy words shall be slighted William Annand IN DIGNISSIMUM elaborati hujusce operis Authorem summum suum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ITe ite erroris Tenebrae Ad Stygias merito umbras descendite Ubi nox aeterna habitat Jam satis umbrarum diraeque caliginis Vester ●b Orco terris emisit Pater Christi laborat Sponsa Eclipsin patitur Ecclesia Ite malum Solitis incumbite
is himself and his Cardinals saies it a poor bolster God knows for a man to place his rest his confidence his assurance the unchangable estate of his eternal soul upon And why must I believe it because they say it Because they cannot erre and why must I believe they cannot erre because they say so thus may they impose upon mens consciences the very doctrine of Devils as they do 1 Tim. 4.12 3 4. and the poor people are taught that they must believe that o● herwise they are no members of the Church out of which indeed there is no Salvation or of Christ though no Scripture be brought in the least to confirm it 2. We were not baptized in the name of the Church this argument Paul brings against the divisions of the Corinthians 1 Cor. 11.3 there were some that would stick to the Doctrine of Paul some hold to that of Cephas what sayes he was Paul Crucified for you or were you baptized in the name of Paul that you should suppose to be saved by me we were baptized in the name of the Triun God and we expect only and we believe throughly to be saved by him alone without the aid of men or Angels for if an Angel should come down and perswade us or teach to us a necessity of believing in him without or against the Scripture as frequently Rome doth he were to be accursed I say again he were to be accursed 1 Gal. 9. 3. The Catholick Church calls upon her members not to do that and good reason too the Son of God would not though he might urge his own authority plead for a beliefe but upon a Scripture account Iohn 5.39 and Paul desires to be followed no further than he follows Christ 1 Cor. 11.1 and those Bereans are made noble for searching the Scriptures whether the things that were spoken by Paul were true or no Acts 17 11. And we have a charge given us to hear the Son the same teacheth the reformed Churches as of France Art 2. Belg. Art 7. Art 20. of the Church of England Art 1. of the Church of Bohem In which Article there are two reasons given for this truth 1. because the Scriptures were inspired and taught by the holy Ghost confirmed by heavenly testimonies which spirit discovers to men how it ought to be understood for Prophecie came not in old time by the will of man but holy men spake as they were moved by the holy Ghost 2 Pet. 1. ult Besides the Lord himself saieth Search the Scriptures And again Ye are deceived not knowing the Scriptures c. 2 Because that is a true and sure testimony and a clear proof of Gods favourable good-will which he hath revealed concerning himself such things as are necessary to doctrine to discipline and government of the holy Church are all fully and absolutely so comprehended then which no Angel can bring any thing more certain and if he should he ought not to be believed For which cause saies that confession in our Churches the Scriptures are rehearsed to the hearers in the vulgar tongue and especially according to the ancient custome of the Church those portions of the Gospel in Scripture which are wont to be read on solemn daies out of the Evangelists and Apostles writings and are usually called the Epistles and Gospels The whole stream of the confessions of reformed Churches runs against Rome in this 4. Our Creed which is the rule of things to be believed as the ten Commandements are of things to be done and the Lords Prayer of things to be asked calls upon him that reads it or hears it to believe only in God the Father and in God the Son and in God the holy Ghost and not to believe in but to believe the Catholick Church i e to be perswaded that there ever was is and shall to the end of the world be a company of men Elected and called unto life by which confession we acknowledge our selves one of them Now to believe in the Church were to set her in as high dignity to rule over the consciences of men as Christ himself or any other person in the Trinity which were a giving his glory to another 5. Men should by this never be assured of their Salvation nor of their good estare it might be necessary for thy Salvation to do that this day which might not be done if I would be saved the next for as the Rulers of the Church uttered their judgments upon the light of reason I must judge my self in a happy or in a forlorn condition which is contrary to that Catholick doctrine Make your calling and Election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 which could never be done did it lye upon the fine flourishes of an Oratour or distinction of a Canonist sitting in counsell And indeed this may be one cause why the Church of Rome denies the possibility of a firm assurance of future glory contrary to the text above named 5. There are but four false religions in the world Heathnism Turcism Judaisme and Papism the Heathen possibly may reason the case for his religion against an Opponent though perhaps as soundly as Cyrus reasoned with Daniel concerning the dignity of Bel Thinkest thou not ●hat Bel is a living God said the King seest thou not how much he eateth and drinketh every day The Jew he will direct thee to the Scriptures see and try if his religion be not according to that most sure word of Prophesie The Turk is stubborn and it is death to dispute or search the truth for the confirming of the faith in the matters of the Alchoran The same it is with the Papist the bell will ring and candle will be put out and the book opened if the authority of the Bishop of Rome be once questioned though in matters of faith Let the Turk and Romanist therefore go together give me that religion that may be tryed and hold out in tryal yet let the Romanist remember that as Mahomet said he found the hand of God seven times colder than ice he may find it seventy times hotter than Purgatory for either adding or taking from the word of God and imposing any thing upon the people as necessary to be done in point of Salvation Illi ergo potius parendum monenti ut omnia exploremus quod bonum est retineamus quoe certe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instituti non potest nisi ad manum sit Lydius ille Scripiucarum lapis cujus ope aurea ab aereis humana á Divines internoscantur Notwithstanding that the restimony of the Church is not to be taken singly in matters of faith yet the testimony of the Church is of great weight and concernmnst in matters of fact For 1 it may prepare our hearts and move them to believe the thing the surer that the Church hath affirmed This made King Charles the first of glorious memory strongly to assert that what could not be proved by the word of God to be unlawfull
sedition or division to requit it will foster Heresie Hereticks do corrumpere sidem and Schisma●●cks or Separatists do disrumpere charitatem the one corrupts the Doctrine of the Church the other falls from her Communion both are fruits of the flesh and they that do such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Verse ult The sin of Separation is so infectious that in Scripture we are to separate from them that so do Rom. 16.17 There is a Rule in Divinity that wil make the sin of separation to be great it is this Those sins are the greatest which are most contrary to and do most oppose the greatest of Christian vertues or graces Now they are recorded 1 Cor. 13.13 Now abideth Faith Hope and Charity but the greatest of these three is Charity Now by the Rule distrust in Gods promises or in his power is a great sin it being a sin against hope Heresie or a stout persisting in an errour is a far greater sin for it is a sin against faith and seeks to cover conceal if not to destroy the truth Now Charity is greater then either of these that follows therefore that that sin that destroys the peace of the Church untyes the Ligatures by which the whole body is compact together is the greatest but this doth the sin of Separation a thing by this age of no account yet they wil find it of great moment in the day of their Account It is a sin generally accompanied with the other lusts of the flesh viz. Hatred Varience Emulations Strife Wrath which seldome lurks long in a Corner but in time appears in the field in the habit and acts of Murtherers Ravishers Traytors and all with the voyce of Iacob pretending Godlinesse and conscience as Histories do abundantly show But to answer the Question So long as a Church makes no separation from Christ no separation is to be made from it but to keep in it is the duty and safety honour and happinesse of him that would enjoy the Communion of Saints the forgivenesse of sins the Resurrection of the body unto life Everlasting A Church separates from Christ two ways 1. When she overthrows the foundation of that Doctrine that is laid by Christ the foundation of all truth is already laid and he that goes to overthrow that may be said to turn from it Do we see a society of men whether Nationally or Domestically whether openly or secretly going in that road that thwarteth the foundation or fundamental points of Religion there must be a separation Rev. 18.4 whether it be in the adding to these fundamentals as if they were not sufficient or taking from them as if they were redundant or superfluous This made the Reformed Churches beyond Sea and the Church of England to separate from the Church of Rome which hath both taken from and added to those fundamental Truths whereupon the Church was by the Lord and his Apostles erected and builded Having to the Scriptures added some Books as the Apocrypha makes the Scriptures to be an imperfect Rule and must have Traditions to compleat it That the sense and meaning of the Scripture depends upon the Churches authority That in all matters of Controversie not the Scriptures but the Church must be the Judge They have made five Sacraments more then Christ made They have clearly blotted out the whole body of the second Commandment out of the first Table of the Law in several Books That Infants that die without Baptism are eternally separate from God except they be as it were martyred by which martyrdom they are baptized Baptismo sanguinis with their own blood They teach that men are not justified by Faith alone before God They make Saints and holy men departed assistant in the work of reconciling us to God and therefore maintain they must be prayed unto That the Doctrine of Purgatory must be believed if we would be saved That the efficacy of the Sacraments depends upon the worthiness or intention of the giver That Baptism totally abolisheth Original sin That the real fleshly body of Christ is in the Bread at the Sacrament of the Lords Supper as soon as the Priest pronounceth the words Hoc est corpus meum this is my body if he should say Corpus mea it were no Sacrament They take the Wine or keep the Cup from the Laity in that Sacrament That the wine in that Ordinance must be mingled with water that that Sacrament is profitable not only for the living but for the dead The Priest is not to bless a second marriage They baptize Bells with the very words of Baptism and by that they teach Devils are drove from the Church O Romanists great is your Faith and give them proper names That God-Fathers and God-mothers at the Font by reason of the nearness of their Spiritual Kindred are not to nor must no● marry for the seventh generation That the Pope or Bishop of Rome is the universal Head of the Church and Christs Vicar All which ●enets as they were utterly unknown to the former Bishops of Rome nor heard of in the Church of Christ for many Ages so they are for the present opposed by all the Reformed Churches abroad who have upon that account forsaken her and England hath thrown her off and separated from her and by the Champions of the several Churches hath their separation been defended By vertue of that Catholick truth 1 Tim. 6.3 If any man teach otherwise that is then the Scriptures do and consent not to wholsom words of our Lord Iesus and to the Doctrine which is accord●ng to godliness c. from such separate turn away or withdraw thy self their separation is justifiable What Paul would have Timothy in this place to do he practiseth himself in another Acts 19.9 yet probably in one and the same City was it both done by Paul and to be done by Timothy Saint Paul being in Ephesus some there were that believed his word others not but hardened their heart speaking evil of him and of the Gospel After he had preached three moneths and perswading to the things concerning the Kingdom of God he separated the Disciples he would not have those Believers that had received the Truth to be in any Church-fellowship with those that spoke against it Luther who began to rise up and take his farewell of the Church of Rome Anno 1517. being an Augustian Frier was called an Apostate answered Consitetur se esse Apostatam sed beatum Sanctum qui sidem Diabolo datam non servavit that he had only fallen back from that Covenant and Engagement he had made with Satan Not that there is a separation to be made from all the Doctrine of Rome for she holds many great mysteries of Divinity purely and soundly wherein we must and do all agree with her as Christians but he that is a true member of the Church of Rome as it now stands he must believe that the least coal in Purgatory is very
near as hot as hell he must believe the least point of Reliques with as strong a faith as the greatest mysteries of the God-head and if he deny any of the former he is no lesse an Heretick then if he had denied the latter and he that believes not the Churches tradition to be as necessary to be believed as the Epistles of Paul he cannot be saved Indeed there is not an Article of the Church of Rome that is Catholick wherein reformed Churches differ from her but in those Articles that are but of Yesterday such as those above mentioned they stand at a distance praying for her but loth to touch her she being not sick of a small Ague but hath running sores Ulcers Infections Pestilential humours within her which makes them write over her as if she were visited Lord have mercy upon her but dare not make themselves one body with her H. The Apologist of the Church of England declares That we have Renounced that Church wherein we could not have the Word of God sincerely taught being mixed with tradition nor the Sacraments rightly administred the one half of the Lords Supper being but given to the people and Baptisme being given to Bells c. Nor the Name of God duly called upon praying to the Saints and Angels and in a Latin tongue which the people understand not To conclude we have forsaken the Church viz. of Rome as it is now not as it was in old time past c. and come to that Church viz. of England wherein all things be governed purely and Reverendly This overthrowing of the foundation thou maist call Heresie in d●ctrine Yet by caution take not the manners of the people for doctrine let the people be what they will the man what he pleaseth it is neither the good lives of men nor the bad lives of men that makes or unmakes Churches but false and corrupted doctrine Much loosenesse was in the Church of Corinth and Prophanenesse partic●larly about the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet the Apostle gives no ground at all for separation only exhorts to a more orderly peaceable walking and a more holy and prepared celebration Neither must we take things indifferent for doctrine nor every blemish for fundamentall Heresie It is an errour in our age to take Circumstances and outward Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship There was much corruption in the Church of the Jews in our Saviours time and much false glosses put upon the Law yet in regard the fundamentals were not razed he commanded his disciples to hear even the Pharisees who yet were thieves and robbers being none of those appointed to expound the Law which justified not their manner of teaching but the truth of the doctrine taught who sate in Moses chair Matth. 23.1 2 3. but gives them a Caveat to beware of the practices and leven of the Pharisees that is hearken and obey to those truths and fundamental precepts that they give out teach to be in my Fathers Law first taught by Moses as cirumcision the way and manner of the Sacrifices which in the Jewish Church were necessary points but refuse those things they lay down as from tradition as Corban washing of cups for not these but the other are commanded you to do Moreover you must be sure not to separate your selves from those who possibly are ignorant of the depths of Sathan in that particular doctrine delivered for Christ pities such and speaks comfortably to them Revel 2.4 nor from others whom you can perceive in the least to disown that corrupted doctrine though privately being troubled at the razeing out of necessary principles How many poor souls are led away from the truth by those that creep into houses in our days that are ignorant possibly of the designes of their prime Teachers following them as much as the people followed Absolon viz. in the simplicity of their heart these giving great encouragement to those that so teach makes them bolder to go on against the unity of the faith showing the Number of their Disciples loving to hear those Doctrines that either add to or take from the infallible and unalterable rule of the Word in both which the Church of Rome is erroneous and therefore the separation from her justifiable 2. We may lawfully separate our selves from a Church when she enjoyns those acts of worship as necessary not enjoyned by Christ when a Church preacheth corrupted doctrine as from God we may separate from her so may we nay so ought we to do when she injoyns false worship to be performed to God whether it be in worshipping him after a false manner or giving another besides him true worship Deut. 10.20 This is another cause of the reformed Churches separation from Rome their Beads their Ave Maries their Fastings a great part of worship with them their praying to Saints as those that have the plague must pray to St. Rochus those that have the tooth-ache to Apollonia those that are poysoned to Saint Iohn those that are in Captivity to Saint Leonard those that have the Fistul● to Saint Quintin Women that are in labour must pray to Saint Margaret but especially to the Virgin Mary besides those common prayers that you must make in common to all the Saints and to the Angels also must prayer be made There is a little Book published by the Authority of Pope Pius the V. in which almost at the beginning that all might prosper the better you have this Prayer Precibus meriti● beatae Mariae semper Virginis omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad Regna Coelorum The Summe of which Prayer is this that God would be pleased to lead bring the Petitioner unto Heaven by the intercession praers and merits of the blessed Virgin and of all the Saints I do wonder that Christ should be left out by whose merits and intercession alone we are saved but I marvail most whether all these shall be a distinct Company by themselves for of the whole company of the Virgins they cannot be the foolish Virgins had no Oyle the wise had but enough to save themselves where is there any of their merits then left for me yet this is better then Tu per Thomae sanguinom c. These with many more of the like nature as praying for the Dead offering or burning up of incense praying in an unknown Tongue that common people know not what they pray their Ordination of the Hoast their holy water their penance their Pilgrimages their oyl or Chrisme sal● and spittle used in Baptism was the cause of that separation made from her by the reformed Churches these points and this kind of worship being not Catholick for as before they separate not from Rome in any point of worship that she holds in Common with the Ch●rch of Christ but these being brats of her own begetting they deny them entertainment or Countenance and separate themselves from her and their separation is justifiable
closely suffered to go out of our minds nay how shall they be saved if they keep not in memory which it preached unto them I Cor. 15.2 or what is read by them not that all is read can be remembred but to sufferit to go from our hearts for want of meditation application communication and esteem it no losse to find our selves ignorant or forgetful of those grand truths upon which hangeth all the Law and Prophets viz. to love God and our Neighbour as our selves Matth. 22.40 Every Chapter Men read or Sermon men hear makes them fitter for heaven or fuell for hell Take heed to this all you that forget God lest be tear you in pieces and there be none to deliver How many are there that after hearing or reading remember no more the thing read and heard no more then Nebuchadnezar did his dream Dan. 2.3 his spirit was troubled their perhaps are affected yet for what neither can discover Caduca est memoria fragilis Let us ask this gift of rememberance with earnestnesse that the spirit may help this infirmity but let not carelessenesse be our bane lest damnation be our portion 4. When it is partially received some there are that will part stakes with God receive and embrace some part of his word and reject another they will fear an Oath yet love a lye They will seem in all their actions to intend to do nothing more then the advancement of Gods glory yet calumniate and back-bite their Brother and privally slander their own Mothers Son Psal. 50.20 They will reprove as the Scripture exhorts but forget to do it in meeknesse and love as it commands They will abhor an Idol yet commit Sacriledge Aut muta ●omen aut animum said Alexander to a Souldier of that name and a Coward either deny thou art a Christian or live like one How many in these days do cut and mince the Scripture to make it speak what they have sophistically thought upon though contrary to that Idiom that naturally God hath given it à principto It is all the word of Christ and therefore none of it to be refused to walk according to half the Scripture will never altogether bring thee to heaven dimidium in this sense nihil est that half which thou conceitest thou keepest shall condemn thee at the latter day for thy injustice in robbing it of its holy companion and associate Iam. 2.9 Truth himself hath told us that whosoever shall break one of those least Commandments and shall teach men so he shall be called least in the kingdom of Heaven Matth. 5.19 There is no minutila legie all are magnalia untill men find out a little God and a little Hell there is no little sin Let the word of Christ all the words of Christ therefore be entertained in your hearts and suffered to dwell SECTION II. Let the word of Christ dwell c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 cohabitare inhabitare let it dwell frequenter habitare let it constantly abide in you and have its abode with you this word dwell Imports 1. A willing entertainment of the word of Christ A man will not suffer that person to dwell in his house whom he will not entertain or bid welcom dwel● supposes entertainment Many will not bid the word of 〈◊〉 speed there was in our Saviours time some that hated the light Iohn 3.20 It was as unwelcom to them as a Candle is to a Sluggard wken he is newly awaked nay when he is awakened and a candle held to him they strugle against it would have it puffed out and turne from it but those Colossians must give it entertainment in their hearts and consciences in their souls and their affections when the light comes they must rejoyce at it rise and work by the light of it Nay every Christian must be that wise woman whose candle goeth not forth by night Prov. 31.18 this light of the Word must always be entertained that by it we may see the state of our soul and how to work the work of God Christ stands at the door of mens hearts and knocks Revel 3.20 he knocks one way by his Word if you will let him come in that way he will sup with you and you shall sup with him he will give you better and choicer cares then you have to present to him give him but hearing he wil give you good councel give him your love you shall enter into his joy give him your service he will give you his Sonship give him what you can though it be little and you shall have of his abundance give him your heart he will give you of his glory nay have you nothing to present this heavenly guest withal then ask him for the Kingdome of Heaven you shall have it of him 2 Familiarity and acquaintance dwelling in ones house or with him supposes acquaintance and knowledge of him The Word of Christ ought not to be a stranger in a Christians breast he should Commune with it as a friend with a friend in his own heart whatever man be doing let the Scriptures be at his right hand Amicus est alter ego Let the Word of Christ be ever with him as a faithfull Companion it is the most reall friend that a Christian soul can keep company withall it is a sound and unfeigned Councellor an upright and impartial reprover it wil neither flatter nor dissemble but declare it self to all persons at all times in all companies fairly plainly and savingly It will approve of every thing that is just and no more reprove whatever is amisse and no lesse 3. Abiding or residence He that comes to lodge in an Inne for a night or that comes to a place for a Week is not said to dwel but where his home is The W●●● of Christ must not be lodged as a stranger or entertained as a fr●●● on the Sabbath day How many are affected with it and for a time with joy receive it but fall back to their old sins again and remember it no more then a tale that is told yea possibly not so much It is to such as a stranger with whom they make merry for a night and rejoyce in its company afterwards shake hands and fall to their work again Men must resolve never to let the Word go if they purpose to be happy when this departs love grace strength Counsell joy peace comfort light food health happinesse nay our God and Saviour take their leaves of us and follow it When some comfortable holy resolutions are wrought in the soul by the application of some precious promises or strong convictions by the means of some terrible threatning they are not to be suffered to depart till by the one or by the other the heart be brought to a holy and through reforma●ion 4. Consent or agreement Dwelling supposes usually Identity of affection as wel as of place and situation we cannot well dwell with that man with whom there is contention or
to you young men because you are strong and the Word of God abideth in you 1 Ioh. 2 14. 4. It was the end of the Scriptures miraculous preservation what pains did the Heathens take to have the Bible out of the world what wonders did God work to preserve it it was that men might know them and keep them that they might live by them SECTION IV. THe next thing in Order before us is to demonstrate the truth of the Doctrine by reason and strength of Argument that having both reason and Scripture for it we may without delay addresse our selves to obedience It is necessary for all persons to know the Scriptures For 1. All persons are bound to know God and worship or serve God There is a knowledge must be had which all the Creation cannot give the Creatures in heaven and in the Earth may show that there is a God but how to know God they are silent one of them could say Deum colit qui novit but understood he what he said The wisest of men did worship an unknown God Act. 17.23 The Scriptures only teach us and do only show us what God is that he is a spirit Ioh. 4.24 Infinite Eternal Immutable Creator Preserver of all things mercifull gracious long-suffering a God that heareth prayer a hater of all sin one in nature three in persons This no book in the World holds out but this and he that knew most of the nature and best knew in the secrets of art had read far and much in the large volume of the Creatures yet could not know that which is Eternal life to know him to be the only true God and Iesus Christ he had sent Which the Scripture doth truly fully and clearly Having known God by the Scriptures we by that know how to worship Deum colit qui novit God will be worshipped in spirit and in truth Joh. 4.23 By no book can this Question be answered Wherewith shal I come before the Lord that is to be accepted Mi●● 6.6 but by the Scriptures The whole society of men and Angells cannot answer this one Question How shal I do to be saved but by the Scriptures Act. 16.30 The effectual walking after holinesse was never to be seen and read in the starry heaven but in the Heaven of the Scriptures Many excellent things and indeed holy truths may appear and do occurre in the reading of Heathens Seol verbum caro factum est habitavit in nobis ibi non legi but not a syllable of the great mystery of godlynesse Christ manifested in the flesh 2. All persons have need of cleansing against their approaches to God Man is naturally filthy being wholly defiled by sin he is cast out ●n his blood to the loathing of his person Ez. 16.5 Could he apprehend his own filthiness he would be more loathsome in his own eyes then the most infectious Creature could possibly appear All persons may say with the Leaper Unclean Unclean Levit. 13.45 Old and and young rich and poor Male and Female want cleansing therefore had need learn the Word of God which is clean it self Psal. 19.9 and cleaneth others Psal. 119.9 It is of a purifying nature and therefore compared to rain that washeth away filth Deut. 32.2 to Rivers of Waters which denotes the purifying nature of this Word of truth since all persons are impure they are to entertain this Word of Christ which will make them beautifull God is said to wash the soul with water Eze. 16.9 to heal them that are sick Psal. 107.20 and clean them that are filthy by his Word Psalm 119.9 3. All persons may be drawn to believe some great errors against and some to damnable opinions of God Paul assures the Elders of Ephesus Acts 20.29 that after his departure grievous Wolves should enter among them commends them to God and to the Word of his grace which was able to build them up v. 32. whereby they might stand against the blasts of contrary doctrine The worshipping of Angels was going to be intruded upon those Colossians Chap. 2. v. 19. the Word of Christ is recommended to them that by the force and light of that such doctrine might be excluded from Congregations Through ignorance of the Scripture by mens persons by enticing words we may be drawn to believe the doctrine of Devils We must therefore if we would steer our course right for the Haven of happinesse sail by the light given us in the body of the Scriptures Things that have but a show of Scripture mee●ing with ignorance doth o●●en passe as having divine Authority while ●hose that know the Scripture know that it is Sathan transformed into an Angel of light Not a fixed but a wandring star Iud. 13. and therefore not to be walked after lest as he that follows that Meteor ignis fatuus we fall in a ditch and perish in the mid way of our errour and backsliding The ignorance of many in Scripture and the mistakes of many touching some places in it are apparent causes or the Apostacy of many from it in these days of liberty c. 4. No person can perform that duty required commanded and enjoyned them of God Without the knowledge of and acquaintance with the Scriptures the Magistrate will be to seek the Minister will be at a losse and the people like sheep without a Shepherd The Magistrate is to punish sin which cannot be known but by the Scriptures Rom. 7.7 The Minister is to preach the Word and how shall he preach it but by the spirit and how shall he have the spirit except he ask it and how shall he ask except the Scripture direct him How can the people know to give obedience to the one and double honour to the other without acquaintance of this Word of Christ It is that alone that discovers the duties of all relations and by all therefore to be consulted with lest being found faulty in the least Commandement we become breakers of all Iames 2.10 and be called for so doing Least in the Kingdome of Heaven Therefore all Scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in Righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished ●●to all good Works 2 Tim. 3.16 17. 5. All Persons will be judged acquitted or condemned by the Scriptures at the dreadful appearance of God we mean by this All those to whom the Scriptures are given according to conformity of mens lives with this Word shall God passe that sentence of Come ye Blessed or Go ye cursed If thou cast thy bread upon the waters give a portion to seven and also to eight Eccl. 11.22 if thou hast dealt thy bread to the hungry Isai. 58.6 or hast neglected and saw thy Brother have need and shut up thy bowels against him 1 Iohn 3.17 and hast stopped thy ears at the cry of thy poor brother Prov. ult 13. thou shalt have thy self condemned and
they dye like men Psal. 82.7 and after death commeth judgement Heb. 9.27 2. Ministers must read the Word St. Paul seriously pressingly exhorts his Son Timothy to give attendance to Reading 1 Tim 4.13 It is the Scriptures that he professeth he is come to open therefore his heart and breast above all mens should not be shut against it He cannot execute the Office of an Ambassadour that is ignorant of the Nature of his Commission nor he of a Divine that is not wel read in the Word of truth God in some sence never gave his Ple●● potentiaries to a Minister but the Scripture always is proposed for this Rule he must be therefore an A●ollos mighty in the Scriptures Acts 18.24 His calling is to draw men from darknesse into light from the power of Sathan to the power of God Act. 26.18 The light therefore of the Scripture ought to be in his hand constantly and the Gospell which is the power of God ought to be in himself powerfully 1. That he might Preach the Word boldly 2 Tim. 4.2 Prudently Eccles. 12.10 11. Aptly 1 Tim. 3.2 Savingly 1 Tim. 4.16 2. That he may pray servently Iames 5.14 15 16 17. 3. Administer the Sacraments purely 1 Cor. 11.23 4. Visit the sick comfortably Iam. 5.14 5. Convince the gain-sayer strongly 1 Tit. 9. 6. Reprove and admonish the Offender meekly 2 Tim. 24 25. 7. That he may save himself and all that hear him Eternally 1 Tim. 4.16 3. All people must read the Word No person is exempted of what degree quality or condition soever high or low rich or poor Male and Female ought to perform this duty Every one must let the Word of Christ dwell richly in them that would dwel with Christ enjoying those Riches that shall never fly from them the truth of this appears from what hath been spoken in the proof of the Doctrine yet by way of supplement let us adde 1. The rich and high ones of this earth must read the Scriptu●e 1. That they may not set their hearts on riches Psal. 62.10 2. That they do good to the poor 1 Tim. 6.18 especially toward the poor Christian Gal. 6.10 and that he might do both bountifully not grudgingly 2 Cor. 9.6 7. 3. That they be not high-minded 2 Tim. 6.18 4. That as God hath blessed them above others they might go in holynesse and devotion before others Matth. 5.16 5. That their works of charity might be suitable to their plenty 1 Pet. 4.9 10. 6. That they might not oppresse the poor Isaiah 1.17 7. That they may render to all their dues Rom. 13.7 8. That they might be rich toward God Luke 12.21 Laying up for themselves A good Foundation against the time to come that they may lay hold on Eternall life 1 Tim. 6.19 2 The poor and low ones of this Earth must read 1. that they may never distrust Gods goodnesse to themselves and their posterity Gen. 48.15 16.2 that in patience they may possesse their souls neither grumbling against God Iames 5.10 11 nor grudging or envying any man Psal. 37.1 3. That they might with the stronger faith pour out their desire before God for things they stand in need of Psal. 42.8 4 That a Momentary affliction may work for them a more Eternall weight of glory 2 Cor 4.17 5 That they be not false accusers Incontinent fierce despisers of those that are good Traytors 2 Tim. 3.3 4. Again 1 All the male-kind must read it 1. For they were made according to Gods image which consisteth in knowledge righteousness and true holinesse which the Scripture worketh in men Ephes. 5.26 27. 2. That they may admire Gods wisdome goodnesse and greatnesse in making all creatures for his use Psal. 8.6 3. That they may use all those gifts to his glory which he gives to them 1 Corinthians 12.8 4. That they might not be drawn aside by the flattering tongue of a strange woman Prov. 6.24 5. That they might be temperate and sober in the use of all Gods creatures Ephe. 5.18 6. because the Scriptures were written to them It s written to Fathers 1. Iohn 2.13 to young men to little Children v. 14. It s written to old men and young men therefore they must read it as an Epistle sent to them from God for the ordering of others and cleansing and purifying themselves 2. All the Female kind must read it the weaknesse of woman should be a spur to excite them to the knowledg of the word of truth I have read of one Catharina Alexandria who during the persecution of Christian Religion An. 309. did so rationally refuse the practises of Heathens and Infidels against the faith of Christ that she caused severall of the wisest of them to subscribe to its doctrine and turn Christian their most accute reasons being blunted with that divine wisdome which appeared in that virgins tongue But to proceed that sex is to study the Scriptures 1 That they may continue in Faith and Charity and holiness with sobriety and be saved by Child-bearing 1 Tim. 2.15 2. That they may so demean themselves as may give no occasion to any to be enticed or drawn after them Gen. 14.1 2.3 That they provoke not the Lord to anger through pride haughtinesse and disdaine Isa. 3.16 4. That they may keep within those bounds God hath set them and not exercise authority over the man as to preach c. 1 Cor. 14.34 1 Tim. 2.11 12. SECT 2. WE are now to give some directions touching and about Reading and they shall be 1. Before Reading 2. In Reading 3. After Reading By these as by three doors the Word of Christ enters in and dwels 1. Before Reading 1. Pray that God would give knowledge to understand his Word It was Davids Petition Open thou mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy Law Psal. 119.18 the naturall man cannot see the things of God 1 Cor. 2.14 The Spirit of God must make us to understand the things of God In his Word there are many things hard to be understood and in them we may easily miscarry there are also many things plain and they have a further reach then man can at the first perceive Let God be called upon therefore that he would open thine eyes and cause thee to understand the meaning of the Holy Ghost The Saduces did read and yet erred in that great doctrine of the Resurrection not knowing the Scriptures 2. Pray that thou mayst profit by the Word Read not Scriptures to put off time but to prepare for Eternity it is best for thee to desire this if thou profit not by Reading thou shalt be on the losing hand if it do thee not a great deal of good it will do thee much hurt if it dot subdue thy sin it will increase thy punishment Study not therefore the Scriptures to fetch thence curious and sinfull questions the forerunner of Heresie Tit. 3.9 10. but to increase thy spiritual wisdom Even to know God and his
met something must and ought to be done for the peace of the Church yet nothing contrary to the meaning of the Holy ghost It is a sin and a high one to think that either Peter or Paul or Barnabas in this taught false Doctrine which must be granted if any part of the ceremonial Law be obliging Iames therefore who was Bishop of Ierusalem demands attention maintains that to be true which Peter Paul and Barnabas had said confirms it from the Words of the Prophet Amos Am. 9.11 12. So that by Iames also This is a fourth witnesse guided by the Spirit of God the Ceremonial Law it not now obliging Iames by Peters Argument seems to apply that the teaching of it might hinder the gospell v. 19. and gives it as his sentence so that still even by these eating of blood is not forbidden under the gospel being a part of that Law which they all consent not to be binding Iames also declares that the Church ought to be satisfied in matters of salvation when God is satisfied and since he requires not that Law none is to introduce it However Authoritatively appoints that the Gentiles be written to that they may abstain from pollutions of Idols from Fornication from things strangled and from Blood his reason is and let his reason be noted for the not observing of that is the ground of the errour for Moses of old time hath in every City them that Preach him being read in the Synagogues every Sabbath day vers 19.20 21. Which determination pleased all parties the controversie ceaseth the councell writes these Letters to the Churches of Syria Cilicia and of Antioch Before the breaking up of this councell that Creed called the Apostles Creed is supposed to be made as a Standart of Doctrine now we come to 2. The parties written to the direction of the Decrees or Cannons of this Councell runs thus The Apostles Elders and Brethren send greeting unto the Brethren which are of the Gentiles in Antioch Syria and Cilicia c. Now we must note that in all these Countries the Jews were mingled among the Gentiles and had their Synagogues in many places at this day and the Law read therein and in them such as preached Moses God yet permitting in some sort the Jewish ceremonies to live in the World the Temple of Ierusalem yet standing this gave great occasion of quarrelling and caused conte●●● the Jews were angry that the Gentiles were not circumcised that they eat blood that they eat in Idol Temples or any part of that that had been sacrificed to Idols a thing in it self indifferent 1 Cor. 8. they wonder that the Gentils wil not abstain from fornication an act much practised among the Gentils held by many indifferent and consistent with Religion 1 Cor. 5.8 and Chap. 9. The Gentiles again wonder and proved that they were not obliged to circumcision nor tyed to worship at Jerus●lem nor to observe the distinction of clean and uncle in Beasts Foul or fish wondred they would abstain from blood since Christs was shed and proves and disputes that it is no sin to abstain from things strangled There is no discourse in Antioch but his every Meeting every Sabbath may every House is divided in the truth of these Doctrines some for one some for another Paul and Barnabas are for the Gentiles some of the Sects of the Pharises are for the Iews there is meeting after meeting ●bout it no smal division Moses being read and taught in the Synagogue every Sabboth day confirms the Jews in his opinions Paul and Barnabas's teaching confirms the Gentile in his judgement Paul indeed brings good arguments from Christs death but the other brings stronger from Moses writings shall Moses that was but a servant in the house have his Laws kept now the Son is come cals one and shall the Laws and customes that God himself commanded be s●●gh●d says another In th is garhoil the Gospel is hindered the new plants of the Christian Religion are discouraged Paul thereto ●●akes great care for them Barnabas and he maintain that the Law is not to be urged so sayes Peter so says Iames in the Counsel yet that this rock of offence might be removed the Holy Ghost puts it in the minde of Iames to decree that the Gentiles should abstain from Fornication and from Blood at which the Iews were offended And that the Iews should not teach circumcision washings c. at which the Gentiles were offended and discouraged the reason of both is Moses is read every Sabbath day and by this decree some part of the Law is kept by which the Jews might be pleased and yet not all the Law by which the Gentiles might be encouraged and that which is commanded is one of the easiest parts of the Law that the Jews might not boast and yet what is commanded is in the Law that the Gentiles might not brag for Moses is read c. and happily this determination did agree them Yet still remember that Paul Peter and Iames maintained that the Ceremonial Law was not to be taught as obliging and that yoake ought not to be put upon the disciples for the peace of the Church therefore rather then for any necessity of Salvation is that part of the Law Ceremoniall here enjoyned But this leads us to the 3. Thing written of or determination of the Councel it self with the grounds of it the Canon or decree it self is this with its preface For it seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us to lay upon you no greater burthen then these necessary things that ye abstain from meats offered to Idols and from blood and from things strangled and from Fornication It is observable that in this Epistle the Council gives the Gentiles information that they had heard that some preached to them Circumcision and the keeping of the Law unto whom says the Councel we gave no such Commandement v. 24 Where know if it had been sin for the Gentiles to have eaten blood then without question they had been commanded to have preacht it down This decree of the Councill hath 3 parts 1. Something Ceremoniall as to abstain from things strangled and from blood Here call to mind the Reasons given above for the prohibiting of blood things strangled may have some relation to them the blood not being out of them and therefore that sort of meat might be unhealthy and if this were a sin viz. to eat blood it behoved every man to assure himself of a good Cook Nay we question whether ever he would eat meat We are sure the Mysticall use of blood is gone viz. to make an Atonement for the soul what vse it is prohibited now for hath not yet been discovered 2. Something there is indifferent viz. to abstain from meats sacrificed to Idolls now we know that is not in it self unlawful for an Idol is nothing 1 Cor. 8. The Apostle there speaking of it condemns it not as a sin but only
upon a market day Quest. 3. Why are bonefires made in England upon the feast of the fith of November It is not only the Practise of England to make bonefires upon dayes of thanksgiving or great deliverance but almost every where yet we shall chiefly consider it upon that account 1 That the fire might be a memoriall of our deliverance from the Popish fire there was a secret pile to devour the blood of nobles and burn to ashes the bones of Princes and powder to blow up the Majesty of Kings to remember which to all posterity fire and powder is then in an harmless way used by us and layd before us 2 To show what death traitors ought to dye a rebel is as a witch and therefore ought not to have the Eearth which is Gods to be buried in but to be dissolved to ashes and blown to and fro in the ayr the region or principality of him with whom they covenant against them that are called Gods on earth 3 To prevent darknesse least it should hinder men in manifesting their joy they will have light to rejoyce in though the Sun go down the longest day may be too short for a loyall subject to make known the Love he beares to his Prince in his rejoycing through that deliverance which God is pleased to give unto him this makes him that in spight of might he will have day and for all that others eyes are closed up in darknesse he will have light roud about him 4 To expresse that heat and fire of affection that is in the bosomes of all true subjects the fire of wood burns in the streets and the flame goeth toward heaven this is a visible sign of that fire of zeale and holy affection which goeth up in praise and thanksgiving for that deliverance 5 That the memoriall of it might be kept up to all generations we know that Children delight to look in the fire let them this day play about the fire It is such circumstances as those that will make the deliverance even be observed of Children that as soon as they learn to speak they can prattle of the powder treason which but for this would be scarce known of them 6. That it might mind traytors of the fire of hell fire is dreadfull but who can dwell with everlasting burnings and though this fire burn them not through the Kings mercy yet fear that everlasting fire through Gods justice Quest. 4. Whether the time of Martyrs death be a proper time for feasting It is certain that the days in which the Saints were crowned with Martyrdome or baptized with their own blood is not feasted in purely for their dying shall the Church of God make great mirth An. c. 37. for the death of Stephen when the Church of Christ made great lamentation over him A. c. 36. The Church keeps feasts not purely for that but 1 For the preservation of the Gospell notwithstanding their death Stephen was stoned to death that the light of the Gopell might be extinguished Herod Ascalonite surnamed the great slew the infants or innocents of Bethlel●m that Christ might have been killed for his preservation more then for the poor childrens deaths doth the Church rejoyce When Andrew the Apostle was crucified when Iames had his braines dashed out when Thaddeus was slain when Matthias was stoned when Philip and Peter was crucified when Matthias Iames Paul and Matthew were beheaded Bartho slayed alive c. It was done for to hinder the Gospell which not doing the Church makes great mirth 2 For that confirmation the Gospel received by their deaths those men put to their hand and by their blood gave testimony touching the truth as it was in Jesus In this they set to their seales that God was true for by their blood and their constancy in death did religion it self receive a rigorous life The Churches foundation was with blood so was its propagation this makes the Christian to rejoyce 3 For that glory that was given to the Saints at that time the day of the Saints Martyrdome was the day of their coronation they were crowned with glory and immortality hence it is said that devout men made great lamentation over Stephen Act. 8.2 not for him it was a losse to the Church not to Stephen to be stoned from life especially in that time of her none-age when she was but weak and feeble to resist that power wherewith she was dayly assaulted The Church being now established devout men rejoyce for that consolation that God that day gave Stephen in reference to him selfe and also for stirring up such a man to evince the truth of that doctrin which they professe that all its enemyes were not able to resist 4 That it might be as motives to perswade others to constancy if God should call them forth to suffer were it not for the celebration of those days the storys might passe without much observance but in the return of the year people hearing the nature of the Apostles deaths their patience in them the advantage that it gave to the growing of Christianity they might receive profit and advantage even in point of suffering Quest. 5. Whether the Feasts of Phillip and Jacob be not profaned That the Church might not be overflowed with publick solemnities and being willing to commemorate Gospel Saints bring sometimes two Apostles in together perswading her members by their examples to sutable holinesse as upon the first of May Philip and Iacob Unto which the Satanicall and Hethenish practise of erecting May-poles is an unsutable prophane preface as may appear 1 From the lawlesse practise of them neither Church nor State as now constituted gives strength to such customes The Church setting apart this day for holy uses and the state owns it by obedience but of this custome taking no notice some other originall would then be inquired after for this annuall custome then law for no statute was ever made in the least to countenance that irregularity 2 From the sinfull originall of them Let this practise be traced up to the times wherein these May-games were first instituted and a nationall Christian will grant the question without much dispute They sprung out of this ground viz. There was one Flora or Maia who being a notorious strumpet of the City of Rome when heathen gathered great riches leaving the common-wealth her heir upon condition they should yearly celebrate her birth-day The Senate being ashamed to own such open prophannesse coloured the businesse by giving out that she was a goddesse of the fields meadows flowres c. and except she were pleased and appeased nothing that year would prosper Upon this her feast is instituted the Devil being alwayes Gods ape and observed the four last days of Aprill and the first of May at which times all sorts of wickednesse was acted and women appeared upon the streets of Rome in those dayes naked the young sort with flowres garlands c. and dancing of Elephants
ordained Elders and left them in Churches which they had planted And sure to the end there shall be as much need of o●dained Priests or Elders for they are one as then men will be perverse wicked sinfull Impenitent unruly ignorant despisers of dignityes ununregenerate unholy and still there will be some ignorant of the Misteries of God therefore care must be taken to plant and leave Elders in every City and in every country for the cure of those evills It is easie to behold how soon a parish or a village will grow loose disorderly and indeed loose the very face of religion if they want a setled Minister but a few moneths the like we may judge what would befall the world should it want Church officers Though people were wicked yet an orderly keeping of the Sabbath c. conscience in some sort will bring them to it but in unsetlement they have arguments to stop consciences mouth which by degrees brings them quickly to be Heathens the Principles of religion not taught them that are young makes them regardlesse of God or his word either when they come to years of maturity and so their profession comes to be prophane and their conversation to be Ungodly which in a great measure is prevented by a setled Minister though but of weak parts or abilities Quest. 4. Whether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man Preach We must stand at the doore of this question avoid errour and distinguish of Unordained Preachers before we go forward 1. There is a preaching by way of tryall to ordination their gifts their knowledge their uprightnesse their utterance cannot be known but by preaching the Church generally will have a tryall of their parts before she separate any for that worke thus Paul preached before his ordination 2 There is a preaching by way of opposition to ordination so there are some that will presumptuously execute all the offices of a minister and slight ordination desiring possibly not to be bound nor tyed to that calling that though their errours might be detected yet their irregularity might passe unpunished of these latter sort the Question is to be understood and that it is unlawful appeares 1 Because to hear such is to goe out of Gods way and practise the Pharises that taught sound doctrin in some points yet were but theeves and robbers coming not in at the door but climbing up some other way these the sheep hear not Never did God give a power to any to ordain themselves Stewards in his house and therefore we are not to go to them for bread left we be thought strivers against him he never intrusted them with his broad seale and therefore we are not to receive the seales from them Christs knows Paul and Stephen and Timothy but these he knows not therefore his people are bound to esteem them not as Ministers of God 2 It encourages them in their irregular proceedings when they behold giddy heads ignorant persons curious spirits flocking after them imboldens them and hardens them in their errour whereas to withdraw from them might in time make them ashamed of their doings 3 It gives an evill example when the weake Christian seeth one that is strong going to those upstart teachers the weak may follow him he may go out of wantonnesse or curiosity and the other may go out of conscience and frailty 4 Errour is ever sooner believed then truth It is experimentally known that an Heretick may broach that doctrine in a day which truth cannot overcome in a year there is a certain connaturality between the nature of man and falsehood It is best therefore to withdraw from them the very foundation of whose teaching is erroneous in as a much as the authority they pretend to have goes contrary to that authority that ever God invested his Church withall 5 Experience shews that God is offended with mans hearing or following of them for we shall seldome see men giving eares to their doctrines but what through ignorance of justice they are brought to believe a lye which mkes them hop from one opinion to another untill faith and religion be lost and conscience it self be baffled or stifled that they sit down in the seat of the scornful and mock at laws established by either God or man Quest. 5. Whether an ordained person may have an office in the Common wealth There are that maintaine this Popish tenet and yet would be thought no Papists that the Church hath nothing to do with the state or that the government of the Church is a distinct thing from that of the state a distinction framed upon his holinesse anvil at Rome and received here by them that are no good willers to the Catholick clergy to be short an ordained person that is a man separate for spirituall offices may exercise judiciall offices in the Common-wealth and state 1 From the practises of those that were of old separate for the Lord Melchizedek was both a Priest and a King Gen. 14.18 a great part of the government of Israel was in the hands of the Levits we find them judges In all the businesse of the Lord and in the service of the King 1 Chron. 26.29 and ver 19. Zecharia is a wise counsellour They are also appointed together with the Princes For judgement of the Lord and for controversies in Jerusalem between blood and blood c. 2 Chron. 18.8 9. so also Samuel a Levit was both judge and priest in Israel 1 Sam 7.15 and if ignorance make any boast of Samuels being a prophet It may be answered that his sonnes were Levits set a part by God for the service of the Tabernacle Yet their Father made them judges in Israel 1 Sam 8.1 his own circuit was yearly while he had strength and failing he allotted circuits to his three sonnes throughout Israel Who by reason of perverting judgement through bribes are complained of by the people ver 5. by the same rule it will follow that those that are separate now for the work of the gospel may be in businesse of the Lord and also of the King 2 From the abilityes of some persons that are ordained It may be known that in all matters of controvesie in both kindes of the Law the Clergy may have more understanding then many Gentlemen that are justices in the Country and the presence of the Clergy may be helpful in that respect to the most judicious judge 3 From that apparent necessity that there seems to be of it the ordained person is not free from trouble from Law-suits from warrants taxations in which he may receive much wrong if there be none but Lay-persons there who usually may look over the inferiour sort of the Clergy with an unregardfull aspect nay possibly the gentleman may be both judge and harry of himselfe A minister may have stronger presumptions to be redressed of his wrongs which are seldome of the smallest magnitude when he hath some of his own function upon the bench 4.
onely dipping but sprinkling or any other kind of washing as hath been before discovered To limit therefore the Ordinance of Dipping is to diminish the very sence and meaning of that Word 〈◊〉 by God to express that Ordinance which is a wrong both to him and the sence of the word 2. The word Baptize is used in Scripture where the word Dipping cannot nor ought not to be understood 1 Cor. 10.2 And were all baptized unto Moses in the Cloud and in the Sea Now let the History of the Iewes passing though the red Sea be observed and it will be found that not a man of Israel was dipped in either Some drops out of the Clouds might and questionless did fall upon the Tribes in going through the red Sea but that they were dipped in the cloud is non-sence to affirm in reason or that they were dipped in the Sea is false to affirm in History 3. The word baptize is used in Scripture where it were inconvenient to understand the word Dipped Acts 16.33 Acts 8.38 At this time this Sacrament was performed in haste and with all possible speed and the Eunuch as soon as baptized goes on his way rejoycing Now Dipping requires deliberation and provision both before and after to put off clothes to put on fresh cloths both for the baptizer and the baptized requires that which for this time cannot with conveniency be granted either for the one or the other 4. The word Baptize joyned with the word River doth not necessary imply dipping in Scripture and we find the word Baptize spoken of and no River mentioned in the Gospel Matth. 3.6 Iohn 3. ●3 Act. 16.33 Acts. 10.48 Act. 8.36 That place Matth. 3.6 And Iesus when he was baptized went up straight way out of the water holds not forth Dipping necessarily but rather that our Saviour was not baptized in Harvest For in Harvest Jordan overfloweth all his banks Ios 3.15 at that time being much dried up Iohn and Christ both might be truly said to go down to the water and to come from or out of the water without lying dipped over head and ears in it and without carrying either for dry cloaths or dry shirt we find him immediately driven to the wilderness Mark 1.12 and I am prone to suppose that it had not been very healthy for Iohn to have stood up to the middle in water so long a time and so much together as the multitude of the baptized would require if dipping must be necessarily understood in his Baptisme And what though Iohn also was baptizing in Enon because there was much water Iohn 3.23 In the Original it is many waters being a convenient place in respect water was not every where to be had where he and his Disciples might in several places baptize those multitudes that came to be baptized which possibly in other places particularly at Iordan could not so easily be done Besides there is a great difference between many waters or much water and deep water or a river of water none of which in Scripture is spoken of concerning AEnon so that dipping is not necessary to be seen or heard felt or understood about Salim and therefore cannot stand without something else to hold it up which is that grand errour that baptisme signifies onely dipping 5. If dipping had been essential to to the Sacrament that is that none ought to have been held as baptized without being plunged in a river without Question the Holy Ghost would in some place or other have told us of it and not to have left us a word of a large signification the spirit of God that leads us into all truth would have informed us in so necessary a point of doctrine in no place is there so much as a breathing for dipping yet we have sweet breathings of the spirit for that of sprinckling both in the Old and New Testament For 1. It is the usual sign of signification under the Law when things are hallowed or persons to be set apart for Gods service it was done with blood sprinkling Levit. 16.14 Levit. 4.6 Heb. 9.13 14. 2. It is a Gospel promise I will sprinckle clean water upon you and ye shall be clean which is the outward sign and I will put my spirit within you which is the thing signified Ezek. 36.25.26 and again I will pour water upon him that is thirsty the outward visible seal I will pour my spirit upon thy seed the thing inward invisible grace sealed Isa. 44.3 both those Texts in Leviticus and these in the Prophets have a shadow of good things to come Heb. 10.1 c. 3. The Apostle makes inward graces to be strengthened and given by outward signs Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience the inward grace and our bodies washed with pure water the outward sign he outward sprinkling or washing with water is an evidence of our hearts being sprinkled with blood with what blood with the blood of Christ which for that reason is called the blood of sprinkling 1 Peter 1.2 Heb. 12.24 could but one such Text be produced for dipping how might our adversaries boast and since we have such sure footing for our sprinckling besides the signification of the word baptize let us never be ashamed As it is not necessary for men to swill themselves with reverence it is spoken or drink large draughts of wine at the Sacrament of the supper a morsel being a sufficient sign of inward grace to remission of sin so it is not essential for men to plunge or dip themselves in large rivers at the Sacrament of baptisme sprinkling or any other decent application of water being a sufficient sign of our justification if adult of our regeneration being infant Further admit that dipping were essential to baptisme which it is not yet we may Question whether they be baptized that are dipped among them the water of baptisme being not applied to the flesh signifying the application of the blood of Christ to the soul. It is to be doubted whether it be applied to theirs whose bodys are not washed with water for they usually do it in rivers wells or horse-ponds as it is known for certain they have done in their shirts shifts and drawers and that ever the outward sign of baptisme was to be applied to such gear I suppose they will not affirm the baptismal water ought immediately to be applied to the body and the flesh washed with it as it is Sacrimental To say that Christ was so baptized is hard to affirm and the improbability of it hath already been handled And to say that he and all that came to Iohn were stripped naked is easie to be denied baptized he was we are sure and many others but that they were all dipped we have no certainty To conclude this Question dipping is not thought unlawful in the Catholick Church not that ridiculous kinde of dipping used
initiatory Ordinance of Baptisme to extend to the Infants of Believers under the Gospel though he did to those under the Law but leaves them and hath no more to do with them then he hath to the seed of Infidels and Heathens God would not without question have left his Church in so great and necessary a point as Baptisme without instruction if it had not been his Will that the seal of the Covenant should be as large now and extend as far as it did then Let the Scriptures be searched and the Bible exactly veiwed with the most piercing eye and it shall never be able to find that Text that abridgeth or straightneth the Covenant made under the Gospel but every way shall be found at large as that under the Law which reacheth not to Abrahams person onely but also all his seed To say that the Covenant made with Abraham was onely temporal or carnal that is that Canaan should be his and Circumcision sealed that brings dishonour to the faith of Abraham and tends not to Gods honour or glory that he should onely regard his people so far as to give them a Land flowing with milke and honey and assure them of that by Circumcision but that he was their God to save them any more then he was the Aegyptians never to give them a sign seal or assurance takes away abundance of that comfort which the Heavenly-minded soul might enjoy besides it is most false for both before and after Moses we know Circumcision was given to many that never did nor never were to inherit the land of Canaan so that Circumcision was a mystical seal of Abrahams faith in God for spiritual mercies unto which ex a●n●dante by way of Augmentation the promise of the pleasant land was made he eyeing and seeking first the Kingdom of God had that kingdom of this world over and above given to him 10. Infants were typically baptized under the Law 1 Cor. 10. 2. All of Israel both small and great were baptized with the sprinkling drops or shours that fell from the cloud in their passage through the sea this denotes that all the faithful both old and young may lawfully be baptized unto Christ since the type holds forth the Antitype and the one is fulfilled by the other 1 Cor. 10.2 If it be here said that by the same Text we may give to infants the Sacrament of the supper for all of Israel did eat of the same spiritual meat and drank of the same drink it it is Answered infants shall have the Sacrament of the supper given unto them if they can finde no Text that requires any other duty to be performed by the receivers of the one then there is for the receiving of the other 11. The Apostles in their going through the world did baptize whole housholds Acts 16.15 Acts 16.33 1 Cor. 11.16 Now in Scripture the word House implies all within the family even children Gen. 30.30 As soon as Ioseph was born Iacob began to provide for his own house If children in these houses had not been baptized without doubt they had been excepted And it is most incredible in all those families there should be no woman fit to bear children but all prove barren and unfruitful which to prove were some thing a hard taske and until it be proved I may truly conclude that the children in those houses were baptized If it here be said that there is no express mention made of children in those houses we may say again and as truly that there is no express mention made of servants and in some of them not of wives it may be Answered these are included in the word houshold it may be replied children are included also the word house holding forth even them 12. The evil fruits and consequences that follow the denial of this with wise men might be an argument to maintain it As 1. The denying of Original sin the Hereticks acknowledgs that if Infants had Original sin this Sacrament were not to be denied them it being a seal of the remission of sin to hold up the one they must of necessity deny the other and so all infants born of Heathen parents are not holy just and righteous contrary to the doctrine of the Catholick faith which teacheth that by the offence of one viz of Adam judgement came upon all men to condemnation and by the disobedience of one many were sinners Rom. 5.18 19. and also to their own experience who see death fall even upon the young as well as upon the old which is the wages of sin Rom. 6.23 2. The denying of Scripture consequence the Anabaptists because they can finde no express Text for infant baptisme therefore they deny it the Bedalists upon the same reason deny the Godhead of the Holy Ghost there being no direct place in Scripture pronouncing that yea by this reason we may charge the Holy Ghost with a notorious untruth Iames 4 5. and by the same ground may deny great and glorious truths as the souls eternal condition as soon as out of the body c. there are many things darkly revealed in Scripture and not to be found but by comparing Text with Text and we finde as good consequence and grounds this way for baptizing infants and better and more sure then ever they shall be able to finde for dipping of men and women as by the argument above given may be discovered 3. It is the usual trap-dore unto all error when men begin to Apostate from truths of grand concernment they usually begin to quarrel with this denie first their own infant baptisme and then how or rather whether are they not hurried with every wind of doctrine This is a Catholick principle a foundation stone a fundamental truth Heb. 6.2 he that falls from it it will fall upon him and break him to pieces how many thousands have perished upon this in our dayes and how many souls are run into perdition by falling from all truth that at first but quarrelled at this The very final obduration and hardening of the hearts of many that but fell first from this in our dayes is an evident token that God hath branded this sin that it might appear a Capital offence against his Majesty 13. The reasons that the seducers give for their denial of this are false and insufficient and maybe reduced to three chiefly 1. Because it is said teach and baptize all nations Math. 28.19 therefore none are to be baptized say they but such as are taught which infants cannot be to which as before hath been spoken we may Answer that not teaching but make Disciples is our Saviours word baptizing and teaching them c. And it is to be wondered at that they will leave his words Why our Translators Englished that word Teach as I have no sure knowledge of it so for the present I have no purpose to han dle it Of this I am sure that our Saviour with his own mouth
enemys of the Churches peace get more ground then since their hands have been weakned and their faces blurred by the violence and malice of wicked proud and ambitions men 7 Men cannot profit under them as they might without praying for them It is certain that non can justly expect that blessing from God which they never asked of him if some would but spend as much time in praying for Magistrates and Ministers as they do in barking against them they might in mercy receive more good by them then ever they are otherwise like to have they may in anger be crossed perplexed by them when in mercy they might live quietly peaceably and holily under them yea in a great measure they bring upon themselves the guilt of their magistrates and Ministers failings and miscarriages for who knows but the power or fervency of thy prayer may stirre up God to hold him by the hand in his stumbling that he might engage the soule the more unto him as people will give the nurse good things for love of the Child so God may give those nursing Fathers gifts and graces if not for their own yet for thy sake c. 3 We are to pray for apostates and backsliders When we see any turne from the Lord we are to turn for them to the Lord. When any leaves the paths of uprightnesse to walke in the wayes of darknesse as those wicked ones Prov. 2. 13. least the Lord suddenly shoot them and they fall into the pit we should 〈◊〉 with the Prophet Lord forgive Amos. 7.2 1 Because of the great and unavoidable perdition that they are likely to fall in who are guilty of that sin in the least the shortest step men can make in it carries them a great way towards that sin unto death that sin against the holy ghost Heb. 6.4 5 6 7. we ought therefore to strive in prayer for him 2 The truth of Christ is the more confirmed by their recovery trees shaken and totterring by the winds opens the earth and in calm gets a faster hold then before being bettered rooted by that blast these soules that are shaken by the wind of false doctrine may be afterward if they returne which yet we seldome hear of better established and rooted in the faith then before 3 Our own glory shall be the greater in heaven Dan. 12.3 It is a glo●ious and happy thing to have a hand in the conversion of a soul a multitude of sins is hid by converting a sinner from the errour of his way Iam. 5.20 and if God should harden his soul to proceed in his back-sliding yet the prayers made for him return seven fold into the bosome of him that made them 4 We must pray for Heathens Infidels or Idolaters there is a generation that have gone a whoring from God and cast off the thing that is good that have altogether broken the yoak and burst the bands and others there are that have not the knowledge of his law these must be thought on and for them God must be intreated by those that call upon his name For 1 Certaine damnation will be their portion they that depart from God whether in point or in point of worship of practise God will depart from them Neither is there any name given under heaven by which men can be saved but the name of Iesus Christ whom men killed and God raised from the dead that he might be the justifier of them that believe but now how can men believe on him of whom they have not so much as heard Let us pray therfore that the Lord of the harvest would send forth laborers into his harvest And that God would open a doore of faith unto the Gentiles Act. 14.27 And return to the many thousands of Israel That Jacob may tak● root and Isra●l bud and blossom● and fill the face of the world with fruit Isa. 27.6 2. They are of the same common nature with us they have the same kind of souls we have and for ever must lye in flames or shine in thrones when the earth and the Sea Death and Hell gives up the dead that are in them they must also appear before the judgment seat of Christ and if we know these things what ought we to do but be jealous over them with a godly jealousy that they may be builded together with us for an habitation of God through the spirit Eph. 2.22 And so all Israel shall be saved as it is written Rom. 11.26 And all Flesh see as well as we the salvation of God Luk. 3.6 3 It will much rejoyce the soul of Christ to see this accomplished if the Angels rejoyce at a sinners conversion how shall Christ abundantly be satisfied since he poured out his soul as an offering for their sin verily verily there is joy in the heir of heaven over one sinner that repenteth let us therefore fulfill his joy and pray that his other sheep may be brought home Which in time ●ast were not a people but now may be made the people of God which had not obtained mercy but now may obtain mercy 1 Pet. 2.10 and that he may see of the travell of his soule and be satisfied Isa. 53.11 4 The Certainty of Christs aboad in heaven untill this be accomplished might of it self presse home the duty pleaded for The heavens must containe him until● the restitution of all things untill all things spoken of him in the Scriptures be fulfilled the end shall not be he that waits therefore for the coming of the Lord and longs to be cloathed upon must wait at the throne of God u●til the fulnesse of the Gentiles become in then shall come out of Zion the deliver●r and shall turne away ungodlinesse from Iacob Rom. 11●25 That there may be but one sheep-fold as there is but one sheepheard Iohn 10.16 and when we see these things then know that summer is nigh 5 God hath promised to bring in all the elect even in our dayes viz. In the lattar dayes which in the old Testament signifies the beginning of the Gospell Isa. 2.1 And in the new the end of the world 2 Tim. 3.1 if God hath promised that in our time he will do this great work O let us Pray and Importune God to build up his Church by the home-bringing of the Iews and in calling of the Gentiles and amongst other arguments let this be one That the time to favour Sion yea the set time is com● that th● Children of Israel may returne and seek the Lord their God and David their King and fear the Lord and his goodnesse in the latter dayes Hos. 3.5 To open th●ir eyes and to turn them from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God that they may receive forgivenesse of sinnes and inheritance among them that are sanctified Act. 26.18 5 We must pray for the Saints pious or religious such as worship God in the beauty of holinesse are to be beautifull in our eyes and
be taken Quest. 1. Whether swearing be an ordinance of or under the Gospel There are them that live about us and among us who denies that swearing is any part of Gospel worship and therefore though called thereunto refuse least they should sin but erroneously For 1. Swearing was no part of the Ceremonial law but used long before Moses and the ends of it are morall and therefore it is not abolished by the death of Christ. 2. It is prophesyed that the Church of the Gentils shall swear by the Lord and by the God of truth Isa. 65.16 Ier. 4.16 Implying that whereas they did swear by Baal and other false gods they should by knowledge be brought from that Idolatry and give that point of worship to the God of Heaven who alone is the true God 3. By a holy Apostle it is frequently done even by him who was an eminent preacher of the Gospel viz. St. Paul an oath is nothing but a calling of God to witnesse of the truth of that which is done or spoken that it may be received with the greater belief now how often doth that eminent servant of the Lord Jesus deliver himself in the very substance of an oath as God is my witn●sse Rom. 1.9 God is my record P●il 1.8 God is my witnesse 1 Thes. 2.5 10. God knoweth 2 Cor. 11 11 31. Before ●od I lie not Gal. 1.20 I say the truth in Ch●isti●n Christ I lie not Rom. 9.1 As the truth of Christ is in me 2 Cor. 11.10 I speak the truth in Christ and lye not 1 Tim. 2.7 All which are as substantial oaths as any we read of in the o●d ●●●pensation 4. Even in the close of the Gospel we find a holy Angell to swear Rev. 10.6 we pray that the will of God may be done by u● as it is done by the ho●y Angels and hear we have an An●ell for greater certainty sealing his threatning by an oath From these reasons we may without errour conclude that the o●dinance of swearing is in full force and power under the Gospell to all intents and purposes any thing that our adversaries can b●ing to the Contrary notwithstanding Those texts Math. 5.34 and Iames 5.12 speaks of swearing in our common communication and of such oathes as are sworn by the creatures as may appear by the contexts not of Judicial swearin● o● any other kind of oathes when necessity and authority draws men to it for clearing of the truth and ending of controversie against which the Gospel speakes not one word but confirms it by severall passages yea St. Paul writing to the Hebrews says Heb. 6.16 That an oath for confirmation is to men an end of all strife not that it was but it is q.d. while I am writing and preaching now when the found of the Gospell is gone over all the world is an oath the end of strife and that not to some only but to men i.e. to all sorts of men whether Jew or Gentile now had it been a sin to have used an oath under the Gospell for that end we should have heard of it in this most proper place or in some other And if any will be contentious let them consider that Pauls before God I lye not 1 Gal. 20. and the Angells by him that lives for ever is more then yea yea and yet who dare reprove either of them of sin To this doctrine consents the reformed Churches of Helva Art 30. of Ausp Art 16. of England Art 39. the Art itself is this Art 39. of the Church of England As we confesse that vain and rash swearing is forbidden Christian men by our Lord Iesus Christ and James his Apostle so we judge that Christian religion doth not prohibit but that a man may swear when the Magistrate requireth in a cause of faith and Charity so it be done according to the Prophets teaching in Iustice Iudgement and truth Quest. 2 Whether the Oaths of Allegiance and Supremacy required by the Kings of England c. of their Subjects may lawfully be taken That Covenants or oaths in cases of necessity or suspition may be made by the subjects of a land to their lawful Prince appears by that Act of Iehoiadah at the Coronation of King Iehoash 2 King 11.17 where we have the footsteps of a Coronation and allegiance oath but to come to the matter in hand either of these oaths may lawfully be taken For 1 Swearing is a Gospell Ordinance and therefore under the Gospell may be performed being ratified taken and used by a holy Apostle and blessed Angell 2 There is nothing in them oaths that is contrary to the word of God God who made the heavens is only called to testifie the reallity of the intentions 3 The taking of them gives assurance to his Majesty of his Subjects faithfulnesse and loyalty and indeed as the case now stands he may be suspected of disloyalty that will not satisfie the law in that particular 4. It is but equall that subjects swear to defend his Majesties honours and prerogatives since he hath sworn to maintain his subjects rights and properties Next swear not at all the grand objection is his Majesties supremacy But 1 It is under Christ none acknowledgeth him as absolute head of the Church that being his sole prerogative who is King of Kings and it would be considered whether God hath not made as good and as many Laws touching the government of the State as he hath for that of the Church yet who will thence conclude that the Magistrate is not supreame in civill affairs that is next immediately under God For no otherwise is he head that is governour of the Church 2 It is only to exclude the Popes Authority His holinesse at Rome looks upon all Kings and Emperours as his Vassals and servants and did he not exalt him above all that are called Gods he would want one mark of the Antichrist 1 Thes. 2.4 by the way they being called Gods we are to know that none on earth no no Presbytery their superior nor contain the Pope therfore pretending a power over the Church making himself or giving out himself as head of all civil Ecclesiastical officers and withall making the Church to be so absolute a distinst body from the state that no state officer whether the King though he only be supream ought in the least to meddle with it or if he do to be excommunicated or deposed for his presumption this power is by this Oath taken from the Pope and given to him that is the true as the Pope makes the Church to be so absolute a distinct body from the state as that the state hath nothing to do with it or in it there are them in our dayes to be quit with the Pope that would have no Church officer in the least to meddle with the state supposing such an absolutnesse in the one that it hath no coherence with or dependance upon the other in this absolute sence the