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A78217 Ichnographia. Or A model of the primitive congregational way: wherein satisfaction is offered, by unfolding (according to the Scriptures) what the right order of the Gospel, and way of the saints in the visible worshipping of God is, in the dayes of the New Testament. And how the saints in these dayes may walk up to it, notwithstanding their present hindrances. Together with the maine points in controversie, touching the right visible church-state Christ hath instituted under the Gospel, with the extent of church-officers, and power of particular visible churches, and continuance of divine ordinances and institutions under the defection and apostasie of Antichrist. By W. Bartlet, Minister of the Gospel, at Wapping. Bartlet, William, 1609 or 10-1682. 1647 (1647) Wing B986; Thomason E381_17; ESTC R201418 140,788 175

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grace and helps of faith and love and repentance and obedience to the truth of Church-fellowship is without controversie Eph. 4.12 13. but not of the former And the Apostle makes it cleere in Heb. 2.3 4. that the chief end of gifts of Miracles was to confirme the Gospel of Christ then sent forth to be preached which now needs not for as M. Thomas Goodwin lately in one of his Lectures on the Ephesians shewed common education serves so farre now as Miracles did of old which were not to begin a saving justifying faith for that was the office of the Word but to make men to attend the Word which now education doth and therefore there is no such need of a Ministery with Miracles 4. Doth not the Scripture abundantly shew us that working of Miracles may be in a false Ministery as Marke 13.22 2 Thes 2.9 10. Rev. 13.13 14 Rev. 16.14 and 19.20 and in such as Christ will not owne for his at the last day as Matth. 7.22 23. 5. Doth not such an opinion as this of requiring gifts of working Miracles in those that are called and sent to preach and administer ordinances bring a great disparagement on the truth it selfe for if it be not able to make it selfe evident without Miracles is it not a great Argument of its weaknes and insufficiency whereas it s farre otherwise with the truth as Ephes 5.13 6. Doth not this opinion directly crosse and contradict that of our Saviour Joh. 16.8 and derogate from the authority and power of the Spirit for there he tels us that its the office of the Spirit to convince the world of sinne of righteousnes and judgement now to say that this worke cannot be done unlesse there be Miracles wrought by men that are the Spirits instruments what is this but to derogate from the Spirit and to make the efficacy of the Ministery to depend more upon the externall working of Miracles then upon the internall working of the Spirit whereas the greatest Miracles that ever were wrought by the Apostles or others can never prevaile to gaine the hearts of wretched sinners to the embracing of the truth nor convince them of sin righteousnesse and judgement if the Spirits presence be wanting and therefore many times wee find amongst the Jewes that notwithstanding all the Miracles that Christ himselfe and his Apostles wrought before them they continued obstinate and hardned in their sinnes so that the efficacy of the meanes depends on the Spirit and if so then there is no such necessity for working of Miracles to convince men of the truth for be the externall meanes or instrument weake or strong it matters not so the Spirit employ it and commonly we find it to be true by experience that the weaker the secondary cause or meanes is the more glorious doth the power of the Spirit appeare according to 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28 29. 7. Lastly what greater miracles can there be wrought by men to evince the truth of their calling then by casting out of the Devill from men and womens soules and consciences and the opening of the eyes of their understanding Act. 26.1 John 5. ● the raising of them from the death of sin the healing and sanctifying of their corrupt natures c. by the power of the Spirit All which are far greater Miracles then corporall dispossession healing of mens bodies opening of their bodily eyes c. and the power of Christ appeares far greater in working of these Miracles then in all other miracles whatsoever and of these kind of miracles I conceive that Scripture is to be understood Joh. 14 12. where Christ promiseth that his Disciples after he was ascended to the Father should by the power of the Spirit doe greater works then those himselfe wrought which I suppose he understands of those spirituall works of wonder that I have formerly mentioned in the raising poore soules out of the grave of sinne opening the eyes of their blind and dark understandings c. The truth of the Proposition being thus cleared I now come to some inferences 1. In the first place it will cleerly follow that those men are mightily mistaken and out of the way that stick not to affirme that the Church-state and order of Government thereunto correspondent which Jesus Christ hath instituted is mutable and ought to be suited according to the Lawes and Government of particular States and Kingdomes as if the Churches of Christ in the Primitive times had a mixt government and administration of the Ordinances according to the lawes and customes of the countryes As for example the Church of Christ in Asia had one way of government the Churches in Galatia another way of order and government and the Churches in Judea another Whereas the Scripture affirmes the cleane contrary scil that Jesus Christ hath left but one order of Church state and politie for all his Churches to observe and make use of which as I have shewed in the essentials of it is unchangeable and to be observed and kept to the appearing of Jesus Christ the author and instituter of it 1 Tim. 6.13 14. and therefore what the Apostle ordained in one Church he did in all as 1 Cor. 7.17 And this is the judgement of learned Whitaker against Duraeus and Cartwright against Whitgift who handles this point very largely in his second Reply his words are these Thus saith he to Whitgift where the Christian Magistrate is given of God to keep the order which God hath set in his Church you bring him in as a breaker and changer of the order which God hath appointed by his holy Apostles But the godly Christian Magistrates may understand that as neither our Saviour Christ nor any wise and well instructed Ministery under him will meddle with any order or forme of Common wealth lawfully instituted of them for the better government of their people but leave them as they find them So they ought to leave whole and untouched that order that Jesus Christ hath placed in his Church And as the Author saith truly in another place that Christ came not to overthrow civill governments even so he saith it is as true that God sendeth not Kings to overthrow Church Government planted by Christ and his Apostles Yea so much more absurd is this latter then the first by how much they ought to have more firmity which were set downe by the Lord himself then which were by men For what sonne of Adam shall presume to alter that order which the Lord himselfe from heaven hath set c. And therefore certainly Iesus Christ will give such men but little thanks another day for their endeavour to make his Institutions as a nose of waxe to be altered and changed to whatsoever forme and fashion men shall please in every Civill State and Kingdome on earth 2. But I shall passe from such Formalists and Time-servers to another sort of men who although they allow not of an alteration of Christs Institutions and Ordinances
As for that place of Jeremy 15.19 where the Lord saith they should returne to him but not he to them doubtlesse the Lord doth not speake it of the Ministry of the word for that he continued afterwards to those rebellious Jewes but in respect of more speciall ordinances wherein the Lord prohibits his Ministers and Saints to have communion with Idolaters but especially I take it to be understood of the Lords forbidding the Prophet to conforme himself in his life and conversation to their wicked wayes but that he should be such an example and pattern of holines and righteous walking before them that they might the better be convinced of the evill of their wayes and so returne to the Lord from whom they had departed not in the least that he should cease declaring the mind and will of God to them Now this objection being answered I come to the inferences Now the truth of the former Proposition being thus cleared and confirmed these things will then unavoidably follow Inference ●●om the for●er Propositi●● 1. That those particular instances which are produced by diverse reverend Divines of the Eunuch Centurions and Jailors baptisme though not belonging to any particular Church against what we have laid downe are of little force and validity in regard that what was done to those persons was by the hands of extraordinary officers that were not tyed to particular Churches as ordinary Pastors teachers were then still are of like insufficiency is that instance of circumcision which is brought by some of high accomplishment in learning and pyety to warrant their practise against what hath been delivered for it is well known that to the administration of circumcision there was not required a Church-Officer but God left it undetermined and as a thing indifferent in respect of the administrator whether the Priest or the Father or the Mother so the thing be done as we see in Moses child whereas t is otherwise in the administrations of the Church under the New Testament as wee have shewed before and though we cannot read of any baptismall administrations in gathered Churches in the dayes of the Apostles yet I suppose we are not to deny it unlesse we will deny that children which were members of Churches as appears Eph. 6.1 2 3. Col. 3.20 were not baptized at all either they must be baptized before the Churches were gathered or after not before for doubtlesse many of those children were not then born therefore after and then without all controversie there must of necessity be baptismall administrations when and where the Churches did meet though the holy Ghost for reasons best known to himselfe is pleased to conceale them 2. That those are justly blame worthy that very frequently and ordinarily in these dayes of the Gospell in which we live goe from place to place to baptize such as are not of their own nor scarce of any other particular Church of Christ I shall crave leave to propose these few things to them 1. Whether they do not hereby introduce an universall or Nationall church visible with officers and ordinances sutable thereunto taking for granted ●hat their Parish member-ship being a branch of the other is sufficient to instate them in church priviledges the insufficiency of which I have already shewed 2. Whether they do not by this their practise not only confound those offices which Jesus Christ the King of his church hath distinguished Ephes 4.11 but also hereby hold forth to the world 1. That the extraordinary offices of Apostles and Evangelists are not to this day ceased whose commission did extend it selfe to all Churches 2. That they presume to have the same Call Warrant and Commission for what they do which the Apostles had at first from Jesus Christ 3. Whether they do not take that to them and upon them by this their practise which the Apostles themselves by all their authority did never give to the officers and Elders of particular churches for we never read that ever the Apostles did give in command that the Elders and Ministers of particular churches should extend the exercise of the office especially the administration of the Seals and censures which is the point we speake to beyond the bounds of their own congregation 4. Lastly whether hereby they do not only by this their example occasion from and by others the pollutions prophanation of the holy things of Gods House but also lay stumbling blocks in the way of many precious and godly soules that would come off from their old wayes of confusion did they not discerne such practises in those that take upon them to be guides and leaders of others for are we not ordinarily upbraided with these and the like words Do you not see how such and such godly men reverend Ministers and learned Divines make no scruple at all of administring the Seales especially that of Baptisme to those that are not of their own congregation and thus according to the old saying Plus prosunt exempla quam praecepta multitudes are kept from comming to the enjoyment of the pure ordinances of Christ in the right order of the Gospell 3. It will follow also from hence unavoidably that those many Christians the truth of whose grace and union with the head and foundation we question not which of late dayes calling into question the truth and lawfullnes of their first baptisme have fallen upon the practise of rebaptizing and taking up the Ordinance of baptisme De novo are utterly void and altogether to seeke of a true and a just ground from the Scripture for their practise herein and so this latter baptisme of theirs will be found as unlawfull upon the same ground they held their first unlawfull because unlawfully administred For if the administration of the Seales be now tyed to ordinary officers and these to a particular Church since the Apostles times that give them their lawfull and right call to administer the ordinances then it will follow that there is no lawfull baptisme but by him that is an officer of some particular Church and he that is an officer of some particular church must have a lawfull calling from the Church to which he is an officer for all extraordinary officers that had their call and commission immediately from heaven are ceased now those which rebaptize cannot prove the taking up of that ordinance again after this manner but are enforced to hold that a Disciple in common that by the exercise of his gifts doth convert a sinner from the evill of his wayes may also baptize him which if true then first of all what need of Christs ordaining officers in a Church for these purposes Secondly then why may not a godly woman by her good exhortations and chaste conversation converting her husband baptize him also which I suppose they are farre from maintaining and yet it necessarily followes the ground they build their practise upon wherefore three things I shall here propose in the
Ι'ΧΝΟΓΡΑΦΙ'Α OR A MODEL OF The Primitive Congregational way Wherein satisfaction is offered by unfolding according to the Scriptures what the right order of the Gospel and way of the Saints in the visible worshipping of God is in the dayes of the New Testament And how the Saints in these dayes may walk up to it notwithstanding their present hindrances Together with the maine points in controversie touching the right visible Church-state Christ hath instituted under the Gospel with the extent of Church-Officers and power of particular visible Churches and continuance of Divine Ordinances and Institutions under the defection and Apostasie of Antichrist By W BARTLET Minister of the Gospel at Wapping Esay 30.21 And thine eares shall heare a word behind thee saying This is the way walke in it Ezek. 43.11 And if they are ashamed of all they have done shew them the form of the house and the fashion thereof c. Rev. 18 4 5. And I heard another voice from heaven saying Come out of her my people that ye be not partakers of her sins and that ye receive not of her plagues for her sins have reached to heaven and God hath remembred her iniquities Jer. 50.5 They shall aske the way to Sion with their faces thitherward c. Calv. in Epist ad Sado et In illa Ecclesiae forma quam Apostoli constituerunt unicum habemus verae Ecclesiae exemplar à qu● si quis vel minimum deflectit aberrat Echo Nobiliss viri Pet. Beauvis Benlosi Papismus pompatica quaedam est Monarchia quam genuit ambitio fovit superstitio roboravit Tyrannis propagavit tam ignorantia seculi quam fallacia pseudo-Cleri Ergo ab execrandu Antichristi faecibus redeatis ad Christi sacra LONDON Printed by W.E. for H. Overton at the entrance into Popes-head Alley out of Lumbard-street 1647. To all the Saints and Servants of Jesus Christ scattered up and down in the Kingdome of England and throughout the world that hitherto have beene strangers to the paths of Sion and have not worshipped God according to the right order of the Gospell Dearely beloved in the Lord TIll better provision come In all humility I here present you as from Jesus Christ the Head and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 15.3 King of Saints with this plain Treatise for whose sakes it is composed and sent abroad into the world The subject matter of it looking directly to the glory of Christ and the welfare of your soules is so excellent that I ingenuously professe it cals for the richest annointings from ●n high to declare and hold forth the beauty and lustre thereof And had I not proved by experience that the glorious God ordaineth strength out of the mouthes of Babes Psal 8.2 and as the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 1.27 28. chooseth the foolish the meale the base things of the world and things that are despised yea things that are not to be instrumentall for his praise I should have been altogether discouraged from setting about it But in regard the * Josh 6.20 Jericho's wall fall downe at the blowing o● Rams hornes 1 Sam. 17. David conquere● Goliah with ● Sling and a stone Esay 41 14 15 16. the Church a poore worme thretneth the mountaines to dust The Disciples of Christ take● out of Fisher-boates by no other meanes then preachin● subdue Kingdomes nations to Christ weaknes of the instrument exceedingly advanceth the glory both of the wisdome and power of God I was the more encouraged to undertake it ●ow because of my intending the generall good of believers and profiting the meanest in publishing this Treatise I have propounded to my selfe 3. things in the carrying of it on 1 The manner and way of ordering and disposing it 2. The grounds and arguments that divinely moved me to it and were as a fire in my bosome not suffering me to rest 3. The end and scope that I had before me and at which I aimed of all which I shall briefly give you an account As for the first of these I have endeavoured three things 1. That the method be plain and easie by way of Proposition and Deductions or inferences from them according to the most usual and ordinary way of preaching observed in the Kingdome to which people have been accustomed whereby the truth is not only cleared and defended but that which is contrary thereunto and unsound is discovered and weakened 2. That the style be not lofty with an affected straine soaring above the capacity and reach of the ignorant a distemper that sticks too close the tongues and Pennes of many men forgetting that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 14.19 That in the Church he had rather speake five words with understanding that he might teach others then ten thousand words in an unknown tongue but low and familiar avoiding to the uttermost according to the same Apostle 1 Cor. 2.4 the entising words of mans wisdome in handling the sacred mysteries of the Gospell neither can this be any prejudice I suppose to such as are learned considering that they especially if they have learned Christ do judge of Books rather by the matter then the style That great Oratour Demostenes himselfe could say that the riches of Greece did not consist in words 3. That the matter it selfe propounded and discussed in this Treatise be not so much an argumentative as positive way held forth from the authority of the Scripture chiefly and sound reason consonant thereunto which are those spirituall weapons that are mighty through God to the casting down those strong holds in the hearts of men that exalt themselves against the knowledge of God 2 Cor. 10.4 5. As for the judgements of the most eminent learned and godly men which I have here and there throughout the Treatise produced I have not done it in the least to disparage the authority of the Scriptures for without controversie the word of God is greater * To build upon any Doctor● saying withou● Scripture or reason agreeing to Scripture were to follow Pythagoras rather then Christ vid. Cranmers confutation of unwritten Verities Be a man never so learned after the Apostles yet his words without Gods word ar● of none authority id ibid. And this he abundantly proveth from ancient Fathers and Schoolmen as Chrysostome Jerome Ambrose Augustine Cyril Fulgent Greg Theophil Damasc Bruno Beda Ansel Tho. Aquin. and others in the Treatise then all the testimonies of men but only to satisfy such as are weake and conceive that those of the Congregationall way are singular and contrary to all men both in their judgment and practise 2. Touching the grounds and reasons that prevailed with me to the setting upon this worke they were such as these following 1. The ardent and burning desire of my soule after the lifting up of Jesus Christs honour and furthering Sions welfare both which at this present time do not a little suffer from the tongues and Pennes of multitudes in this Kingdome and other parts of
Ephes 4.13 have been carried away from their former stedfastnes in the use of those pure Gospell ordinances and institutions and now live and walke up and downe the world as if Jesus Christ were Church-lesse the Saints Christ-lesse yea as if the barrel of Christs Meale and Cruse of his Oyle lockt up in his spirituall ordinances and administrations were altogether drawn dry and exhausted but that I might be a poore instrument in the hands of Christ to deliver such from their false wayes that are yet in Egyptian darknes reduce those to the Tents of the Shepherds that are gone from them where they may again as formerly enjoy their beloved Cant. 1.7.8 and be built up to a further enjoyment of his glory And thus beloved in the Lord you have a briefe discovery of what I have propounded to my selfe touching the method grounds and ends of this Treatise I have only a few things to request at your hands and then I shall dismisse you to the Treatise it selfe and commend both it and you to the blessing of Christ Now that which I have to request of you is this 1. That you would not receive with the left hand what is offered to you with the right but endeavour to put a candid and faire construction as in charity you are bound on the weak endeavours of him that had nothing in his eye but Christs honour and your and the whole Kingdomes welfare 2. In the reading of the following Treatise to take with you the helpe of the Spirit of truth who alone searcheth the deepe things of God 1 Cor. 2.10 and can enable us to judge of spirituall things spiritually If we plough with Christs heifer we shall understand his Riddles whereas if wee consult with flesh and blood in the things of God and measure divine mysteries by the wisdome of this world we shall be so farre from having our expectation answered as that we shall stumble and be offended at them 1 Cor. 1.18 to 26. and 2.14 3. When you meet with an any Scriptures and Arguments that are brought to cleare and confirme any point that you would vouchsafe to take in the whole and consider them together and not apart be cause what may be wanting in some may be made up in the rest For if there be but one or two a-amongst six or ten Texts of Scriptures or Arguments that are produced to prove the truth of any one point that are substantiall and to the purpose its sufficient though the rest are not so strong as if ten men were to lift a burthen together though the one halfe of them were but weake in comparison of the other yet if the worke be done t is sufficient we looke after no more 4. Where Scriptures alleadged do not expresly and in so many words speake out the truth of that they are produced for yet to remember if they do it by a sound and good consequence then that is sufficient as we may see in the practise of our Saviour when he would prove the truth of the resurrection to the Sadduces he doth it not by a Scripture that speakes expresly but only by sound consequence as Mat. 22 31 32. Mark 12.26 27. 5. Not to take offence at the short brief passing through particulars because I undertooke at first to give a draught or platforme only according to the Title of the Booke of the visible Church state which Jesus Christ hath instituted for the SAINTS to observe in the dayes of the New Testament Now in a busines of this nature understanding men will confesse that ●are pointing at truths is sufficient and therefore I purposely avoided the transcribing of most of the Scripture proofes that are cited in this Treatise 6. That wheresover I have been necessita●ed to speake in any of the inferences drawn from the Propositions against those wayes and practises which do vary from what is laid down as the truth whether it be the way of absolute and h●gh classicall Presbyterie over the particular Churches and Congregations of believers or the way of re-baptizing or the way which is only for distinction sake styled The rigid Separation or way of living altogether without visible Ordinances and worship because of the defectivenes is in the administrators or above them in the Spirit as those that look upon the divine institutions of Christ but as shadowes or things indifferent or the way of fashioning the sacred orders and ordinances of Christs Church to the government of civill States and Common-wealths or any other mentioned in the following Treatise it hath not been in the least out of a spirit of contention against those that walk in those different wayes nor to disparage or undervalue their gifts graces with which they are endowed or to infringe their christian liberty by bringing their persons into trouble but in the discharge of my duty towards Christ and the giving occasion for a more cleare discovery of the truth professing my selfe as in the sight of God alwayes ready to performe any christian duty or office of love towards any of them whensoever I shall by providence be called thereunto 7. Lastly if any shall attempt the answering of it I shall in the Spirit of love request him that he would first of all sit downe and consider with himself seriously that whiles he thinks to strike at an errour he may do what in him lyes to wound the truth and so make worke for repentance T is not for me to boast in the least of what is published by so weake an instrument as my selfe but so much I have seen and observed from the first day of the Lords putting me upon it to the time of its publishing besides what I have found in the practise of it that I cannot but expect the truth therein held forth for the substance of it shal stand and take place notwithstanding all the Batteryes and blasts of opposers that shall come against it I know the age I am cast upon to beare witnes to those truths of Christ I have published cannot easily digest what is set before them and so I shall be exposed to the deepest censures that men of evil and perverse spirits who have only a forme of Godlines but deny the power of it in their walking can lay upon me but through infinite riches of mercy I have learnt in some measure to looke above them all and to cast my selfe and the worke I have published on him who is that Alsufficient God and faithfull Creator that is every way able to keepe that is committed to his charge in weldoing and to bring about his glorious ends 1 Pet. 4.19 by weake and contemptible meanes Thus having premised these few things I forbeare troubling you any further in this place having reserved a word of exhortation to you in the end of the Treatise only desiring the Father of mercies and God of all consolation to make the following Treatise effectuall for the bringing over of your
study the preservation of purity and holines amongst them this in a speciall manner is to be looked after what Paul spake to Timothy in particular we may say to them in church-fellowship keepe your selves pure and the reasons are these two 1. Because that purity is the beauty of a church Psal 93. ult as nothing doth more darken and obscrue a church then sin so nothing doth more adorn and beautifie a church then holines and purity 2. Because that purity is the strength of a church We never read of any churches that have miscarried but first it came from suffering themselves to be polluted and defiled either in opinion or practise The Vestall Virgins we read could not be overcome before they were defloured and therefore the Emperour first caused them to be defiled then destroyes them So here therefore let the churches that are as Virgins espoused to Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 11.2 labour to preserve their purity and then they need not feare their safety and to this purpose let them be carefull to observe and practise these following directions 1. Let every particular member labour to keepe their own vessels pure looke narrowly to his own heart and wayes and keepe himselfe from his own iniquity as David did Psal 18.23 2. Let them study faithfullnes one towards another in their relations watching over one another for the good of the whole Col. 1.1 3. Let those whom it concernes looke narrowly to the admission of members not looking to nor labouring after multitude so much as cleannes and purity a little church with great godlines is farre to be preferred before a great church I meane for number and smal purity 4. Let there be care taken that no root of bitternes be suffered to spring up to the defiling of any or if it appeare let it be in a spirit of love and meekenes suppressed timely t was the church of Corinths fault that they did not mourne for the incestuous persons fact and put him from amongst them 1 Cor. 5.1 2 6 13. 5. Let them have a watchfull eye to all church administrations that they be done according to the rule of the word and not after the wisdome of the flesh 4. They are to study the preservation of their liberty which Jesus Christ hath bestow●d upon them and purchased for them with his own bloud Gal. 5.1 that they may not be servants to men 1 Cor. 7.23 Now this liberty consists in these following particulars 1. In choosing their own officers Acts 1.15 and 6.2 3 4. 2. In adm●ssion of members Acts 9 26.1●.47 Rom. 14.1 3. In trying and examining their own members that are questioned within themselves as the church of Ephesus Revel 2.2 and debating matters controverted 4. In case of difference to crave the helpe of other churches towards the composing it as the church of Antioch did in Acts 15.2 3. which practise was not by way of appeale but only by craving advice and counsell 5. In case of an offending members refusall to heare the church to admonish or cut him off by excommunication from the body 1 Cor. 5.4 5 13. 6. In sending forth in the publique service of the church such as they shall judge most fit as Phil. 2.25 2 Cor. 8.19 7. In partaking with other churches in those priviledges and comforts that Christ hath bestowed upon them upon due knowledge recommendation as 2 Cor. 3.1 Rom. 16.1 2. If any desire further light in this particular they may read M. Cotton in his Treatise of the Keyes p. 13. to 20. and his Treatise of the way of the churches in New England p. 102. to 110. 5. Lastly They are to looke to the diligent performance of those duties mutually which their relations call them unto I shall only mention those duties that concern chuch members in generall 1. There must be a high esteem one of another Rom. 12.10 Phil. 2.3 2. Unfeigned love one to another 1 Thes 4.9 and this love must be pure 1 Tim. 1.5 Fervent 1 Pet. 1 22 4.8 Impartiall to one as well as another differing in judgement as well as agreeing Phil. 2.3 weake as well as strong Jam. 2.8 9. Rom. 14. encreasing Phil. 1.9 faithfull 1 Joh. 3.17 constant 1 Cor. 13. 3. A care to pray one for another as well as one with another Jam. 5.16 4. Watching over one another 1 Cor. 12.25 Phil. 2.4 Rom. 15.14 5. Stirring up one anothers graces Heb. 3.13 and 10.24 6. Imparting and communicating each to other of what God hath vouchsafed to us in temporals and spirituals without grudging 1 Pet. 4.10 Acts 2.44 45. and 18.26 7. Delighting in one anothers society and fellowship as Psal 133.1 Acts 2.42 8. Sympathising with one anothers condition Rom. 12.15 Heb. 13.2 thereby helping to beare each others burthen as Gal. 6.2 9. Bearing with each others unavoidable infirmities and weakenesses as R●m 14.3.13 Ephes 4.2 Col. 3.12 13. 10. An endeavour to recover such as are fallen and overtaken with sinne and that in the Spirit of meekenes Gal. 6.1 11. A care to preserve the credit and reputation of each other as Jam. 4 11. 12. A striving after unity in mind and judgement as well as affection Rom. 15.5 6 7. 1 Pet. 3.8 that so if it be possible there may be no divisions 1 Cor. 1.10 13. A giving to each other a liberty in the use of such things as are indifferent and not restrained by the word of Christ Rom. 14.2 3. not tying up the consciences of one another where Christ hath left us free 14. A maintaining of brotherly affection where we cannot be of one mind not grudging against and censuring one another Phil 2.2 3. Col. 3.13 15. Lastly in being patternes and examples in word and conversation in faith in charity in Spirit and purity as the Apostle speaks to Timothy 1 Tim. 4.12 and Phil. 3.17 c. CHAP. VII This chapter holds forth the severall hindrances and impediments that doe stand in the way of the godly whereby they are kept from this Gospel Church-state All which hindrances are removed in answering all the principall objections that are made against it ●mpediment THe first impediment that stands in their way is this That there are many learned and godly Ministers as well as private christians that both write and speak against this way Now to remove this impediment I shall desire the godly to consider these few things 1. Whether all those are truly godly that make a profession of godlinesse even amongst them that goe for Ministers and guides to others Is not the contrary too true have not too too many the forme of godlinesse denying the power of it according to that of 2 Tim. 3.5 walking up and down in sheeps clothing but inwardly are ravening wolves as Jesus Christ spake of the proud and lofty Pharisees and other false Prophets Mat. 7.15 and doe not their actions both abroad and at home speak out aloud the truth hereof So that the tongues and pens of
sometimes did to write Books of Recantation and have as little credit as comfort in what they have done this way 6. If the truth were knowne and men would speak out all is in their hearts it is not to be doubted but a chiefe ground of many mens crying downe this way of the Lord and those that walke in it is no other but their envy at those especially young ones to whom the Lord hath in these last dayes imparted and communicated greater measures of his Spirit and larger discoveries of the mysterie of the Gospel according to the promise Joel 2.28 Act. 2.17 wherein young men shall have the priority of old Because the Lord is good therefore their eye is evill as Christ said to them Mat. 20.15 that took offence at his kindnesse to those that came into the vineyard after them and wrought but an houre But this is an evill frame of heart and cleane contrary to that of Moses that wisht that all the Lords people were Prophets Num. 11.29 7. But lastly doth not this generality of opposition against this way alledged conclude and evidence the truth and goodnes of it especially when such opposition tends to the increase and furtherance of it and that also amongst the most pious and spirituallest Beleevers What though the Authors in the * D. Bastwick the Captain of the Presbyterian Army as he styles himselfe M. Prinne M. Edwards M. Baily M. Vicars Marg. as men not having yet learned or else not regarding what Christ in the Scriptures requires of them Rom. 12.16 17 18 19 20 21. James 1.19 20 21. 1 Pet. 2.1 have cryed it downe as the most pernicious way yet all the dirt they have throwne in the face of it cannot make the Saints out of love with it In the dayes of the Apostles those that embraced the doctrine of the Gospel and right way of worshipping God were generally condemned and spoken against as Sectaries and Heretiques Act. 14.5 14. Act. 28 22. yet that could not hinder the prevailing of it being it was of God So neither shall the worst that men can doe hinder it now but maugre all the powers of hell and the world that oppose it it shall take place for Christ must reigne Impediment 2 2. The second impediment that lies in the way of divers godly persons is this That salvation may be had in that present church-state they for the present are and therefore judge it a nee lesse thing to come into any other Church-state To such I shall commend these few considerations 1. That though it be granted as a truth which cannot be denyed that its possible for men to be saved though they never come into a right visible Church-state and order because faith and salvation is not so tyed to the visible church as that there is no partaking thereof out of it And though it be true also that conversion may be obtained and is in many of the Parish Assemblies as we know by experience yet how unkindly do such Christians deale with Jesus Christ that shall as the Head and King of his church appoint ordaine a holy order for his Saints to observe in their serving and worshipping of God and yet they shall refuse to submit thereunto is it not a disparagement to the wisdome of the Lord Jesus that hath thus ordained a church order for his Saints to walke in and yet they shall count it a needlesse thing 2. Such should consider whether the truth of grace doth not teach them to have respect to the whole revealed will of God and not to dispense with themselves in the neglect of obedience to any the least part of it and if so then how dangerous is it for them to sit downe and content themselves in their present disordered station without comming out of it to Sion as Christ commandeth Esay 52.11 with Rev. 18.4 3. Is not this an argument of a low Spirit exceeding earthly c●rnall like those Potters that remained of the children of Israel in Babylon when the rest were returned to Jerusalem 1 Chron. 4 23. that preferred their carnall ease in Babylon before the enjoyment of the true and pure worship of God in Sion do not such men exceedingly degenerate from the servants of God of old spoken of in the Scriptures ●hat have greatly longed after and mourned with much bitternes when they have been deprived of the enjoyment of God in his ordinances as David and others Esay 56.3 4. Psal 84. 4. Doth not this plainly discover to the world that such men are to this day marvellous ignorant of this great mystery of the Gospel they see not the lustre and beauty that shines forth in the visible Churches of the Saints a right and true communion of Saints having fellowship with Christ in his own ordinances is a meere riddle a paradox to them the comly order and sweet harmony of Jacobs Tents and Israels Tabernacles is not discerned by them though a Balaam himselfe was greatly affected therewith Oh when shall this darkenes be removed 5. I would faine know whether such poore soules are not great enemies to their own happines and hinderers of their own welfare For first have they not many precious Talents Gifts and Graces bestowed upon them for which they shall be accountable to Christ one day which now are as it were put under a Bushel lye asleep and of no use or benefit to themselves or others all which if they were once come into a society of faithfull and zealous Saints would be occasioned frequently to be brought forth and improved to the glory of God the benefit of others and their own great encrease and advantage Secondly are they not subject to many wanderings and out-goings from God and so have need of some to watch over their precious soules to prevent as it is possible such swervings from Christ by their wholsome and gentle admonitions exhortations and reproofes which priviledge they might enjoy if they were in this order of the Gospell but now are deprived of Thirdly are they not many times so overtaken through the subtilty of Sathan deceitfullnes of sin that they not only fall into sinne but there lye and continue in their back-sliding and have none to looke after them to restore them againe to set their broken bones in joynt again whereas if they were in this way of the Lord the Gospell requires how sweetly might they be recovered according to the injunction of the Apostle to the Church of the Galatians Gal. 6.1 And therefore doubtlesse those men that thus reason as before that it s no great matter to come into any other church-state then they are are no small enemies to their own good 6. Lastly may it not be just with God to leave men to themselves in this thing and for their slighting of his wayes sweare in his wrath that they shall never enter into this rest of his that he gives his Saints that he brings to Sion Let us feare