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A41456 A sermon preached at Bishops-Stratford, August 29, MDCLXXVII, before the Right Reverend Father in God, Henry, Lord Bishop of London, &c at his Lordships primary visitation / by Jo. Goodman ... Goodman, John, 1625 or 6-1690.; Goodman, Godfrey, 1583-1656. 1678 (1678) Wing G1124; ESTC R48 18,196 42

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Society that there be Head and Members but there must be some Ligaments to the end that there may be Union that is that all those Members of this Society which lie otherwise scattered through so many Ages and Countreys may both become united together to make up one Body and also joyned to their common Head Christ Jesus Now as in the natural Body the Nerves which perform this office proceed from the Head so it is here Christ Jesus hath delivered an Institution of Religion the open profession of which is the Sinew of this Society the Church namely all those that hold and maintain the Doctrine of the Holy Scriptures and especially of the New Testament are united to the Church as Members and to Christ as their spiritual Head For this is the Charter of our Corporation and contains the Laws of our Society he that addes to this distracts and divides the Church and he that abates or diminishes it incroaches upon the Prerogative of Christ the Head The Church of Christ and the profession of the Religion of Christ are of equal extent and the Holy Scripture is the Standard of both But as a symbolical representation of this Union we are speaking of or rather as a standing federal Rite of this Society our Lord Christ hath also appointed the frequent participation of the holy Sacrament wherein we solemnly recognize him our Head and our Fellow-Christians as Members of the same Body which therefore is properly called the Synaxis or Communion To which purpose the Apostle allusively to the New Testament speaks of the Church of the Jews 1 Cor. 10. 2 c. they were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the Sea and did all eat the same spiritual meat and did all drink the same spiritual drink c. But more clearly and expresly of the Christian Church vers 17. For we being many are one Body for we are all partakers of that one bread The sence of which place and the summe of what I have been saying is this That as by holding and professing the Religion of Christ Jesus contained in the Holy Scripture we are united to him and Members of his Church materially so it is our duty that this be solemnly and formally executed by those holy Rites of his institution 4. But in the fourth and last place it is not sufficient that there be an Union of the Head and Members but there must be Order also amongst the Members themselves otherwise it would be a Multitude but not a Church Wherefore in this Society though as we have said all that profess and acknowledge the Doctrine of the Scriptures are Members yet some of those are of an higher quality and more publick use and influence than others namely such as bear Office in this Society So saith the Apostle Eph. 4. 11. He gave some Apostles some Prophets some Evangelists some Pastors and Teachers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. for the orderly knitting of the Saints together into a Body and for the edifying that Body of Christ These and their Successors are the Governours and Officers of the Church as a Church or as it is such a peculiar distinct and spiritual Society To these the Head of this Society hath promised his presence to the end of the world to these he hath given the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven saying Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in Heaven c. and He that receiveth you receiveth me and he that refuseth you refuseth him that sent me These as I said are the Governours of the Church as a Church But because as it was well observed by Optatus Milevitanus Respublica non est in Ecclesia sed Ecclesia in Republica and it was not the design of our Saviour in constituting this Society of a Church to revoke or abrogate the Powers and Authority of the Civil State therefore Kings and Princes though as such they are not properly Officers of the Church in its peculiar consideration yet have and retain their ancient right of Legislation and prescribing to the external management of this Society In which respect it was said by the great and famous Constantine that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is a Civil Bishop or as we commonly speak supreme Governour or Moderator of the Church And now having shewed what our Saviour meant when he said he would build him a Church it will neither be difficult nor unusefull to shew the Reasons of this Institution i. e. Why our Saviour would not leave every single Believer upon his own score but would have them associated and incorporated as aforesaid The great usefulness of this Institution might easily be made appear in very many Instances but I will mention but these three 1. It pleased our Saviour Christ to require such a conjunction and combination of Christians to the intent that by that means they might be the better able to hold up his Truth and Religion in the world For if this had been left to the care of particular Christians singly and separately such is the diversity of their Capacities and apprehensions so different have been their Educations are their Interests and would be their Expressions and so great would be the difficulty of holding intelligence and correspondence with each other that it is not imaginable how the mind of Christ should have been uniformly and intirely represented to all those that would have been concerned in it therefore in regard this summe was too great to be laid out upon private security it pleased him to deliver this great Depositum to the Society of the Church This is that which I take to be meant in that famous passage of the Apostle 1 Tim. 3. 15. where the Church is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the pillar and ground of Truth I know well what perverse use they of the Church of Rome make of this Text and what pitifull shifts some on the other side make to avoid that danger and therefore I thought it worth my labour in a former Discourse of this nature and at a like Solemnity to vindicate the Text from the hands of those that abuse it and the world by it But at present it is sufficient to intimate that though it be evidently true that the truth of Christianity neither depends upon the Authority nor needs the Warranty of men yet was the Society of the Church a wise Expedient of our Saviour for the holding forth and holding up his Religion in the world Nor let any one suspect that this will give any countenance to the unwritten Traditions of the Church of Rome or evacuate the just Dignity and Authority of the Holy Scriptures for it is and must be acknowledged that the written Word is the immediate Conservatory of the Truth of the Gospel yet the Society of the Church doth the same thing remotely and generally which the other doth particularly and immediately that is to say this holds up the Holy Scripture preserves and
Censores morum up starts Erastus and provoked by this Extreme runs a risk and falls into another as bad for not content to disprove that new form of Discipline and especially to degrade that novel Office he proceeds to the denial of all Church-Censure and Ecclesiastical Government As if from such time as the Civil State became Christian the Rights of the Church were escheated to the Prince or State And thus as that Judicious person modestly expresses it the Truth was divided between the contending parties but overseen and outran by both But the last Instance I will now make use of comes more home to my present business When the Church of Rome arrogating to it self an Infallibility and asserting to the Pope an universal Pastorship had under these pretences notoriously usurped upon all Christendome there were not wanting those who seeing through this cheat and desirous to reform all bent things so far towards the other Extreme that they endangered the breaking of all in pieces For whereas the Roman Church had claimed and exercised an exorbitant power of making and imposing what Articles of Faith she pleased These were so far from that as that they would scarcely allow the Church authority to define matters of Order and Decorum Because the Governours in the Roman Communion were arrived at too great a height the Bishops becoming like the Ephori among the Spartans able to check and controll Sovereign Princes therefore to avoid this danger all shall be levelled to a Plebeian Parity Before the interest of the Church was so great as that it drew under one pretence or other almost all Causes from the Civil Tribunals to Ecclesiastical cognisance but now to prevent this for the future all Jurisdiction shall be taken from it In short the Church was thought to be too rich before Religio peperer at Divitias filia devoraverat matrem now therefore the onely way to revive the Primitive Purity is to reduce the Primitive Poverty And so upon the whole matter from an abhorrence of the Incroachments and Exorbitancies of the Roman Church there arose a danger whether there should be any Church at all Now considering with my self how to obviate these and several other mischiefs of like nature and to doe the best service I can to this Solemnity I have made choice of these words of our Saviour for my subject Thou art Peter and upon c. Wherein I observe these three things 1. A Resolution or Decree of our Saviour he will build him a Church 2. The Foundation of this Structure Upon this Rock will I c. 3. His Prediction of the Success and Duration of this Building The Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it I design to open these three things with the greatest plainness and perspicuity I can because of the importance and usefulness of the matter and yet with as much brevity as is possible for I consider I speak to wise men PART I. Touching the First to avoid all impertinence that which I conceive our Saviour means when he saith he will build him a Church is no more nor less than this that he will incorporate all those that profess his Name and Religion into a Society And that he will not content himself to have Disciples and Followers dividedly straggling after him how numerous soever they may be but he will have them united into a Body formed into a regular Society make up a Divine Polity having Unity Order and Government amongst themselves That as there are several forms of Civil Society of Humane Institution so our Saviour would by his Divine Authority institute a Religious Society by the name of a Church whereof He himself would be the Head and which should be ruled and governed by Laws and Officers peculiar to it self Or as in the Old Testament the whole Nation of the Jews though distinguished otherwise by their respective Tribes and Families made up one People and Church of Israel so should all Nations upon Earth and every individual person that was a Christian conspire and make up together one Christian Church For the more distinct and satisfactory apprehension whereof let us consider that every regular Society requires these four things namely 1. A Body 2. An Head 3. Union 4. Order and Government and all these conspicuously concurre to the making up the Church or such a Society as we have described 1. For the Body of the Christian Church that consists of all those who from time to time in all Ages and Countreys are inrolled in Albo Christianorum and have given up their names to Christ or are Christians by profession So the Apostle 1 Cor. 12. 27. Now are ye the Body of Christ and Members in particular that is the whole number of Christians Vid. Theophyl in loc makes up the mystical Body of Christ every individual person being a particular Member thereof And then he addes vers 28. God hath set some in the Church first Apostles secondly Prophets c. By which it is evident that he speaks of the whole Church as one for he supposes the Apostles to be Officers of the whole Christian Church which could not be if every little parcel of Christians convened together made up a Church in the notion the Apostle intends and consequently therefore the whole number of Christians as I said must make up the one Church or Body of Christ To this purpose those that are curious observers of the propriety of phrase in the Greek tongue do note that at Athens from whose Assemblies this name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was first taken when onely the Heads or chief Magistrates were assembled they called this distinctly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when the Colluvies ex agris or whole Rabble of People was called together this they termed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was onely used when the whole Body of Citizens within the Pale or Liberties of the City were assembled 2. Christ Jesus is undoubtedly the Head and Supreme of this Body He is the Founder of this Order he gave command for the forming this Society prescribes Laws and affords protection to it Eph. 5. 23. He is the Head of the Church and the Saviour of the Body And herein that which Divines call the Mediatorian Kingdom of our Saviour properly consists namely that not onely in respect of his Divine Nature he hath a Sovereignty over the world but especially that as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or God incarnate he is Sovereign of the Church and hath power of Legislation authority to constitute Officers under him jus vitae necis hath all Judgment committed to him can sentence to life or to utter destruction Whether de facto he hath appointed any Lieutenant or Vicar-general under him over the whole Church as some pretend will not be necessary now to inquire and besides will be sufficiently clear in the Negative by what I shall say by and by 3. It is not sufficient to an orderly