Selected quad for the lemma: truth_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
truth_n heart_n spirit_n worship_v 4,411 5 8.9748 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A91792 Fifty questions propounded to the Assembly, to answer by the Scriptures: whether corporall pnnishments [sic] may be inflicted upon such as hold different opinions in religion. By S.R. Richardson, Samuel, fl. 1643-1658. 1647 (1647) Wing R1407; Thomason E388_11; ESTC R201507 5,834 9

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

have a certainty of knowledge in all intricate cases and whether God calls such to that place whom he hath not furnished with abilities for that place And if a Magistrate be in darknesse and spiritually blind and dead be fit to judge of light of truth and errour and whether such be fit for the place of the Magistracy then whether it be not a scruple to a tender conscience to submit to such in civill causes because not appointed to that place by God whereas if the Magistrates power be onely civill the doubt is resolved because such as may be fit for Magistrates and men ought in conscience in civill things to submit unto them 28 Whether there be any Scripture that saith that any mans conscience is to be constrained and whether the Magistrate can reach mens consciences and whether he be fit to make a law to conscience who cannot know when conscience keeps it and that cannot reward conscience for keeping it nor punish the conscience for the breaking of it 29 Whether it be not in vain for us to have Bibles in English if against our souls perswasions from the Scriptures we must beleeve as the Church beleeves 30 Whether the Magistrate be not wronged to give him the title of Civill Magistrate onely if his power be spirituall 31 Whether laws made meerly concerning spirituall things be not spirituall also 32 Whether if no civill Law be broken the civill peace be hurt or no 33 Whether in compulsion for conscience not only the guilty but the innocent suffer also As if the husband be an heretick his sufferings may cause the innocent wife and children shall suffer as deeply also 34 Whether such as are spiritually dead be capable to be spiritually infected 35 Whether God will accept of a painted sepulcher a shadow a meere complement of obedience when the heart is dead and rotten and hates God and all that is good God hath no need of hypocrites much lesse of forced ones God will have those to worship him as can worship him in spirit and truth John 4. 36 Whether the Scriptures appoint any other punishment to be inflicted upon Hereticks then rejection and excommunication Tit. 3. 10. 37 Whether freedome of conscience would not joyn all sorts of persons to the Magistrate because each shared in the benefit 38 Whether those states as the Low Countries who grant such liberty doe not live quietly and flourish in great prosperity 39 Whether persecution for conscience doe not harden men in their way and make them cry out of oppression and tyranny 40 Whether some corporall punishments would not make thousands in England face about to Popery as it did in Queen Maries time 41 Whether laws made concerning religion have not always catched the most holy men witnesse Daniel and the three children the rest will be of what religion you will 42 Whether the Saints crave the help of the powers of this world to bring Christ to them or fear their powers to keep him from them 43 If no religion is to be practised but that which the Common-wealth shall approve on what if they will approve of no religion shall men have no religion at all 44 Whether the Saints ought not to continue their Assemblies of their worship of God without or against the consent of the Magistrates they being commanded to do so Mat. 28. 18 19 20. Heb. 10. 25. By an Angel from God Acts 5. 20. It was the Apostles practice who were not rebellious not seditious Acts 4. 18 19 20 23. and 5. 22. 28. 45 Whether Uniformity in Religion in the State doe not oppresse millions of souls and impoverish the Saints bodies 46 Whether Gods people have not disputed and taught a Religion new worship contrary to the State they lived in and spread it in travelling and open places as appears Acts 17. 2 17. and 18. 48. yet no origancy and impetuousnesse Yea contrary to publike authority in the Nations Uniformity in false worship Dan. 3. the three children so the Apostle Acts 4. 5. The Saints have openly witnessed that in matters spirituall Jesus was King Acts 17. 7. and for this Christ suffered as appears by his accusation Iohn 9. 19. Jesus of Nazareth King of the Jews Psal. 2. 6. Acts 2. 36. Gods People have seemed the disturbers of the civill State upon the Apostles preaching there followed uprores and tumults and uprores at Iconium at Ephesus at Ierusalem Acts 14. 4. Acts 19. 29 40. Acts 21. 30 31. 47 Whether Jesus Christ appointed any materiall Prisons for Blasphemers of him Whether notwithstanding the confidence of the truth they have to which they would force others whether the Bishops their Fathers c. have not been as deeply mistaken for now they are found to be Antichristian 48 Whether it be not a naturall Law for every man that liveth to worship that which he thinketh is God and as he thinketh he ought to worship and to force otherwise will be concluded an oppression of those persons so forced Whether it be best for us to put out our eyes and see by the eyes of others who are as dim-sighted In my judgment your judgement is a lye will ye compell me to believe a lye compell ye a man to be present at a worship which he loaths 49 Eyther the Civill or the Spirituall State must be supream which of these must judge the other in spirituall matters if the Magistrate then hee is above the Church and so the head of the Church and he hath his power from the people to govern the Church whether it will not follow that the people as a people have originally as men a power to govern the Church to see her do her duty to reform and correct her and so the Spouse of Christ wife of Christ must be corrected according to the pleasure of the World who lye in wickednesse 1 Iohn 5. What power a Church hath over a Magistrate if he● be a Member of the Church if Members they may be excommunicated if so discerning Reason 1 Because Magistrates must be subject to Christ but Christ censures all offendors 1 Cor. 5. 4 5. 2 Every brother must be subject to Christs censure Mat. 18. 15 16 17. but Magistrates are Brethren Deut. 17. 5. 3 They may censure all within the Church 1 Cor. 5. 1● 4 The Church hath a charge of all the soules of the Church and must give account of it Heb. 13. 17. 5 Christs censures are for the good of souls 1 Cor. 5. 6. but Magistrates must not be denied any privilege for their souls else they by being Magistrates should lose a priviledge of Christs 6 In which priviledges Christians are all one Gal. 2. 28. Col. 3. 11. Sins of Magistrates are hatefull and condemned Esay 10. 1. Mich. 3. 1. It s a Paradox that a Magistrate may be punished by the Church and yet that they are Judges of the Church 50 Whether every man upon that Religion which in his conscience he is perswaded is true whether hee doth not upon the truth thereof venter his soul If that Religion the Magistrate be perswaded be true he owes a three-fold duty First Approbation Esa. 49. Revel. 21. with a tender respect to the truth and the Professours of it Secondly Personall submission of his soul to the power of Jesus his government Matth. 18. 1 Cor. 5. Thirdly protection of them and their estates from violence and injury Rom. 13. to a false Religion he owes 1 Permission for approbation he owes not to what is evill as Matth. 13 30. for publike peace and quitenesse 2 Protection of the Persons of his subjects though a false worship that no injury be offered to the persons or goods of any Rom. 13. Object The Kings of Judah compelled men to serve the Lord Ergo Kings may now compell c. Answ They who lived under the Jewish worship only were compelled strangers were not Secondly they were not compelled to any thing but what they knew and confessed was their duty 2 Chron. 6. 12 13 14 15. Thirdly if they did compell their actions were not morall to obliege other Kings to do so May not the Prelates by the same reason alleage the order of the Priesthood for their Episcopacy as you for the Kingly Fourthly the Kings of Israel did not imprison Schismaticks Pharises Herodians c. Fifthly the Kings of Israel had extraordinary profits to direct them what to do infallibly these Kings have none such to direct them Sixthly if the Law be morall where is it set down in Christs Testament which is to be our Rule that the Magistrate shall compell all to his Religion for to another he will not Object Then every man may live as he list Answ Had not he as good live as he list as live as you list Object Then it seems errours may be suffered Answ If truth may be suffered also it will prevail against Errours It s no more in their power to hinder Errours then it was in the power of the Prelates to hinder mens preaching writing and speaking against them If you can hinder Satans suggestions and the vain imaginations of mens hearts and expell the darknesse in men and place light in stead thereof and hinder men from speaking each to other then you can suppresse errours else not the Lord only can surprise Errours by the mighty power of his Spirit with his Word and wee believe hee will certainly do it in his time to his glory and the comfort of his people Amen One thing more I desire to know why the Priests of England assume to themselves the title of a Divine is it because they are exercised in Divine Truth or because they pertake of the Divine Nature or both if so then many Tradesmen may as well have the title of Divine given them as well as they because they pertake of the Divine Nature and are as much exercised in matters Divine as the most of them but it is a question to mee whether the title Divine is to be given to any man but only to God alone whose being is onely Divine FINIS