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A34538 The kingdom of God among men a tract of the sound state of religion, or that Christianity which is described in the holy Scriptures and of the things that make for the security and increase thereof in the world, designing its more ample diffusion among the professed Christians of all sorts and its surer propagation to future ages : with The point of church-unity and schism discuss'd / by John Corbet. Corbet, John, 1620-1680. 1679 (1679) Wing C6258; ESTC R23940 125,145 296

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spread forth in such fulness and plainess of speech as will not be unacceptable even to Scholars that are not wise in their own conceit But the careless and confused speaking of incoherent and undigested matter rudeness or baldness of expression is no part of this commended plainness which is orderly comely and weighty agreeable to the Majesty of Gods word A true Preacher of the Gospel rightly divides the word of truth and gives to all their portion He doth not make distinction where the rule of faith makes no difference nor doth he confound things that ought to be distinguished He is not partial towards parties for interest or affection And so he doth not promiscuously justifie or condemn the evil and the good together on any side but as he accounts it an odious thing to rail upon one party in the ambiguous terms of false Church false Worship false Ministry Idolatry Superstition Formality so he accounts it no less odious confusedly to inveigh against those of an other persuasion under the no less ambiguous terms as they are now commonly used of Hypocrites Pharisees Fanaticks Enthusiasts Separatists Humorists and such like He is constant in Preaching the word instant in season and out of season For in Preaching frequently he doth not do the work of the Lord negligently but duely feeds the flock and that with better prepared food than they use to bring that Preach but seldom upon pretence of greater preparation He watcheth over the flock with diligence and naturally cares for their estate for he knows the worth of precious souls He condescends to persons of low degree and is concerned for the souls of the poor and simple and illiterate as well as of the noble rich and learned for he knows their Redeemer paid alike dear for both And however the proud and covetous judge he doth not think it below him to intermeddle for the reducing of the simple that go astray and he seeks to recover them with gentleness and patience for he prefers the gaining of one Soul before all the preferments of this world He earnestly looks after that which some do little regard to wit the Seal of his Ministery in the saving efficacy thereof on the hearers and when he finds it he makes it the crown of his rejoycing And this Seal he takes not to be their meer owning of Sound doctrine or following an Orthodox party much less their abounding in notions their talking and outward Guarb of profession but their new birth or their Spiritual growth the promoting whereof is the scope of his labours and the dayly travell of his Soul CHAP. V. The due performance of Publick Prayer PRayer being a main part of Gods worship and chief act of devotion and such as doth accompany and Sanctifie every other Religious duty and the publick management thereof pertaining to the work of the Ministry its due performance must needs be of no small import to the increase of true Piety and no small part of the Ministerial excellency and sufficiency Among Spiritual gifts I doubt not to number the gift of Prayer also and I judge they speak too low of it that make it only a natural gift or acquired by practice and imitation Much indeed may lie in natural parts and observation and exercise but not all for over and above these things the Spirit of Christ presiding perpetually over his Church sets in and by a secret influence on men designed of God for this service indues them with a peculiar aptness of knowledge and utterance as well in Prayer as Preaching for the edifying of the Church And some unsanctified persons being thus gifted may preach and pray with a notable tendency to the saving of others when themselves prove cast-aways Private Christians also according to their measure are partakers of this gift in much diversity of degrees God giving to every man severally as he will Besides this there is a special and saving gift the Spirit of Prayer and Praying in the Holy Ghost or by his gracious assistance in a holy manner according to the will of God which is indeed lively and powerfull and apt to kindle a holy fervour in them that joyn in the service so performed And why that which is performed in such a manner and by such assistance may not be called a praying by the Spirit I see no reason They who thankfully acknowledge and bless God for so great a gift of his grace do not intend thereby a miraculous inspiration or an absolute infallible guidance of the Holy Ghost Much less do they think that their prayers are such dictates of the Spirit as would infer that the very matter and word● thereof being written would become Canonical Scripture to which is requisite not only an infallible Spirit but also an attestation thereof by the same Spirit sufficient to convince others But this they maintain that the Spirit helps them against their indisposedness of mind and deadness of heart and manifold infirmities and strengthens their faculties and quickens their graces and enlarges their desires and elevates their souls and brings things to their remembrace specially the divine promises yea and in some particulars may guide the heart and tongue by a present immediate suggestion For why must the Spirit of God be thought to do less in exciting to good then the Devill ordinarily doth in prompting to evil And yet they are not to depend on the Spirits immediate suggestion for matter words and method without taking care or thought before hand It is an ordinary and not miraculous assistance which they expect and which is usually given according to mens preparations and suted to their several capacities The Spirit of Prayer is not confined to this or that exterior frame or order of Prayer but is ever found there where the heart hath a due sense of the matter A particular form whether stinted or not stinted is not of the essence of Prayer but only its outward shape and it pertains to it not as it is a Sacred thing but as an action in general and for that no action can possibly be performed but in some particular mode this holy action cannot otherwise be performed And whereas there are divers modes thereof they may be used as they are congruous to the substance of the duty according to mens choice and judgment unless they were as indeed they are not bound up to one by a divine determination The lawfulness of Set-Forms is further evinced from the Lords Prayer and other forms in Scripture and as much is owned by the general custom of singing Davids Psalms Wherefore to turn the back upon the publick Prayers of the Church meerly because performed in this manner is unwarrantable And there is a● little warrant to restrain all publick Prayer to a stinted Liturgy and leave no liberty at all to the Ministers godly zeal and prudence In this particular the interest of true godliness will be much better advanced by moderation than by contests and rigor on
the things here principally looked after are the receiving and propagating of holy Doctrine drawn out of the pure fountain of Sacred Scripture the right administration of true Gospel worship by which God is glorified as God and the worshippers are made more godly The due preaching of Gods word and dispensation of other divine ordinances by personslawfully called thereunto for the conversion of sinners and edification of converts Holy discipline truly and faithfully administred by the Pastors as the necessity of the Church requires and the State thereof will bear Religious family government Private mutual exhortations pious conferences and profitable conversation The predominant influence of religion in the civil government of a nation yet without usurpation or incroachment upon the civil rights of any especially of the higher Powers The unity of Christians and their mutual charity conspicuous and illustrious and lastly in order to all these intents a good frame of Ecclesiastical polity Holy Doctrine is the incorruptible seed of Regeneration by which the new creature is begotten It is not here intended to represent a perfect scheme thereof for it sufficeth to signifie that extracts thereof from holy Scripture are drawn out in the ancient Catholik Creeds and in the harmonious confessions of the present Reformed Churches Nevertheless our design requires the observation of some most important things about the Doctrine of Salvation As that there be first an earnest and hearty belief of the existence and providence of God and his government of mankind by laws congruous to their nature and of the immortallity of human souls and of a life of retribution in the world to come which is the foundation of all religion 2ly Right apprehensions of Gods nature and attributes more especially of his Holiness comprehending as well his purity and justice as his mercy and goodness that as he is ready to procure his creatures happiness and refuseth none that come unto him so that he cannot deny himself and that he receiveth note but upon terms agreeable to his Holiness 3ly An Idea of Godliness in themind not as shaped by any private conceptions but as expressed by the Holy Ghost whose workmanship it is that Christianity in the hearts and lives of men may be the same with Christianity in the Scriptures 4. The receiving of the great mystery of Godliness not as allegorized in the fancies of some Enthusiasts wherein it vanisheth to nothing but as verisied in the truth of the History wherein it becomes the power of God to Salvation and so not to sever the internal spirit of the Christian Religion from its external frame the basis whereof is the Doctrine of the Trinity in the Unity of the Godhead and of the incarnation of the eternal word Lastly Soundness of judgment in those great Gospel verities that are written for the exalting of Gods grace and the promoting of true godliness and the incouraging of the godly in opposition to ungracious ungodly and uncomfortable errours of which sort are these following truths That the study and knowledge of the Scriptures is the duty and priviledge of all Christians that according to their several capacities being skilfull in the word of righteousness they may discern between truth and falshood between good and evil and offer to God a reasonable service according to his revealed will That internal illumination is necessary to the saving knowledge of God the Holy spirit in that regard not inspiring new revelations but inabling to discern savingly what is already revealed in nature and Scripture That man was created after the image of God in righteousness and true holyness and that in this state he was indued with a self-determining principle called Freewill and thereby made capable of abiding holy and happy or of falling into sin and misery according to his own choice and that God left him to the freedom of his own choice having given him whatsoever power or assistance was necessary to his standing That the first man being set in this capacity fell from God and it pleased God not to annihilate him nor to prevent his propagating of an issue in the same fallen state which would follow upon his fall but left the condition of mankind to pass according to the course of nature being now fallen That by the sin of Adam all men are made sinners and corrupt in their whole nature and are under the curse of the Law and liable to eternal condemnation and being left to the wicked bent of their own wills are continually adding to their original sin a heap of actual transgressions and so are of themselves in a miserable and helpless condition That the Lord Jesus Christ according to his full intention and his Fathers commandment hath made propitiation for the sins of the whole world so far as thereby to procure pardon of sin and Salvation of soul to all that do unfeignedly believe and repent That man being dead in sin cannot be quickned to the divine life but by the power of Gods grace raising him above the impotency of lapsed nature That the culpable impotency of lapsed nature to saving good lies in the fixed full aversation of the will by a deplorable obstinacy nilling that good to which the natural faculties can reach and ought to incline as to their due object That the root of godliness lies in regeneration and inward Sanctification That God calleth some by the help of that special grace which infallibly effecteth their conversion and adhesion to him without any impeachment of the natural liberty of the will That whatsoever God doth in time and in whatsoever order he doth it he decreed from eternity to do the same and in the same order and so he decreed from eternity to give that special grace to some and by it to bring them to glory which decree is eternal election to which is opposite the pure negative of Non-election As for preordination to everlasting punishment it passeth not upon any but on the foresight and consideration of their final abode in the state of sin That the more common convictions inclinations and endeavours towards God in persons unregenerate are good in their degree and the ordinary preparative to a saving change and they are the effects of that divine grace which is called common That deligent seeking after God by the help of common grace is not in vain it being the means to some further attainment towards the souls recovery and it is regarded of God in its degree and God doth not deny men further degrees of help till they refuse to follow after him by not using the help already given them and by resisting his further aid That God hath made all men savable and though he doth not simply and absolutely will the conversion and Salvation of all yet he willeth it so far and in such manner as is sufficient to encourage the diligent in their endeavours and to convict the careless of being inexcusable despisers of his grace towards them That there is an
Spiritual strain which is most agreeable to the things of the Spirit of God and which as coming from life and Spirit is better discerned than described There is a speaking not in words which mans wisdom teacheth but which the Holy Ghost teacheth And though this more eminently took place in the Apostles and such other extraordinary persons yet there is no sufficient reason to restrain it to them alone St. Paul may well be understood to speak of this as a gift received by them that had received not the Spirit of the world but that which is of God and as something suted to the perception and taste of all Spiritual men It doth not exclude the use of human wisdom though the wisdom of the Spirit sway in chief For no doubt even Paul's human learning and prudence was herein serviceable though in subserviency to the influence and conduct of the Spirit This Spirituality of expression is conformable to that of the Spirit of God in Scripture though not confined to the words thereof Surely the mysteries of Salvation cannot be better handled than in those terms in which they were first delivered to wit in Scripture expressions or others consonant thereto solidly and pertinently used and to call this canting savours to much of that Spirit to which holy language is unsavory Without controversie the strongest reason is of greatest force to gain the wills of men to imbrace true Religion For that which crosseth sensuality selfishness and all the depraved appetite of our lapsed nature as Religion doth must needs have its greatest strength next under the power of divine grace in the force of right reason But care and skill is requisite that it be so prepared offered and set home that it may be sutable to them that should receive it and that the cogency thereof may so reach unto and fasten upon their judgments as to gain their wills Philosophical ratiocinations are too remote not only from low and dull capacities but also from the greater part of them that are competently apprehensive and intelligent and so being too much estranged from them they do not touch them to the quick A familiar natural plain and obvious way of reasoning comes home to all men and is most felt at the heart and that by Scholars themselves though their intellect may be more delighted in more accurate or reserved Speculations Scriptural preaching is indeed the most rational as coming with such reason as is of greatest force with men in matters of Salvation For Gods written word is a treasure of divine wisdom that throughly furnisheth the man of God Besides the infallible testimony thereof hath more authority than Philosophical reason though sound and true can have upon Christian hearers and it peirceth deeper and sticks closer And arguments taken and words spoken from Scripture wherewith the people converse dayly are more easily apprehended and retained and so are more instructive and every way more usefull than other reasonings Though numerous citations of sentences out of human Authors be an unprofitable kind of ostentation yet the Sentences of Holy Writ which is the evidence of our Christian hope and the testimony of him who is truth it self are most effectual to edification And whosoever is able to speak reason in divine matters is to make a rational use of Scripture and if any quote it impertinently and absurdly it is through defect of reason and they would be as injudicious in their Sermons without those quotations But nice and haughty wits mostly cavil without cause and charge profitable Preachers with injudiciousness meerly through their own vain curiosity and inconsiderateness Scripture quotations are sometimes used by way of allusion or for illustration not for strict proof and that which is brought for proof if it be not full and cogent yet it may add some weight and then it is not abused Besides if a passage be used in a sound and pious though not in its proper sense it is pardonable It is fit indeed that in citing Texts we know their true import and go more by weight than number shunning impertinency and superfluity yet it is not unfit to note that all sound and good Preachers are not alike judicious and those that are very solid may be guilty of some oversights and 't is a bad matter that their Ministery which God hath owned and honoured with good success in his Service should be set at nought for a few mistakes perhaps more pretended than real about the sense of some Scripture when it is not applyed otherwise than the Analogy of faith will bear and nothing is defended but known truth I have known a pious but strangely mistaken sense of a Scripture sentence cast into the mind and there fixed to have been the first occasion of seriousness in Religion to one that afterward lived and dyed a godly Christian. Now that which was causal in this conversion was the godly truth it self which was written in Gods word and the mistaking it to lie in such a sentence where it did not being but accidental was no hinderance I do in no wise countenance the irrational use of Scripture but am sensible of the importance of good judgment and due care about the sense thereof yet I cannot approve the scornful haughtiness of some men who deride godly persons well instructed in the Scripture as having nothing but words and Phrases and senseless notions either because they come short of Scholar-like exactness or because they speak of the things of God in a more Evangelicall and Spiritual strain than these can well bear In speaking the best use of art is to speak to best purpose and for that end in divine matters to speak with greatest Majesty and authority And this is done not by ostentation of wit by puerile and effeminate rhetorications by a rapsody of flanting words by starched speech by cadency of sounds or any too elaborate politeness that please the shallow fancy but by the evidence of reason set forth in a masculine and unaffected Eloquence that hath power over the wills of men which are tough and knotty peices Perspicuity is a great vertue and felicity in discourse for hereby what is offered gains attention and enters the mind and abides therein but intricacy and obscurity is a bar to its entrance and entertainment Hereunto an easie and obvious method evident coherence and plainness of expression conduceth mainly Wherefore he that minds what he hath to do is not careful by a more curious artifice to please the fancies of some itching hearers but hath most regard to that composure that makes most for a general benefit and edification And for this cause as he would not multiply words without need and become tedious so he would not be too succinct and close and by that means either too dark or too quick to inform or effect the people In vulgar auditories a dilating of the matter is most necessary so that idle tautologies and prolixity be avoided and it may be
hath hurried some under pretence of erecting the fift Monarchy to rend and tear Kingdoms and Nations to attempt the dissolving of all Government in Church and State which is indeed the most ready way to subvert Gods Kingdom by the subversion of Christian Magistracy and Ministery and to dispossess the Gospel of the Territories it hath gained Some have proceeded so far in the pretended Reign of the Spirit as to abrogate the external Frame of the Christian Religion and to turn the Gospel History into mystical Allegories yet such as might be conceived and shaped in a vulgar fancy and are low and despicable things in comparison of the great mystery of Godliness according to the Historical sense of Scripture And which is yet worse some have been so gross as to turn into an Allegory the great hope of our Christian calling even the Resurrection of the dead and the life of the World to come and so pervert the mysteries of the Gospel into a mysterious Infidelity and Apostacy from Jesus Christ. Yea some perverting the high expressions of fellowship with God and dwelling in God and being made partakers of the Divine nature and the like have impiously talked of their begodded condition and blasphemously intituled the most High and Holy One to their abominable extravagancies and impurities And besides all these some are perpetual Seekers having no fixed belief in the most important points Persons so far inlightened as not to see the necessity of a higher way than the common dead formality and having some tast of Spiritual things and thereby raised above the general indifferency and Luke-warmness unto a kind of strictness seriousness and fervour of Spirit in Religion yet falling short of true Conversion and especially if they be well conceited of their own gifts and parts and seeming graces are apt to be carried away with a full gale of fancy into the gulf of these delusions And a tincture of this contagion though in a lower degree may sease on some who stand in the true grace of God being deceived by a shew of purity and Spirituality and peradventure lying under the disadvantage of some insnaring occasions which work upon the remainder of pride levity curiosity and other corruptions which the present imperfect State leaves in the hearts of real Christians And some of these may sooner fall into absurd opinions than many that receive not the truth in love who may easily abide among the Orthodox either because they do not concern themselves in Religious inquiries or because they are held by worldly advantages which stand on truths side The fancy is sooner filled with notions and the affections thereby raised than the judgment is well informed and the heart established in grace Hence proceed a sickliness in the Souls appetite a satiety of plain Saving truths and of sound wholsom Preaching a desire of novelty Self-conceitedness pragmatical confidence rash censures partiality in hearing the Word a lessening of the Pastoral Authority incroachments upon the Pastors Office dividing principles and practices and innumerable inconveniences Moreover well meaning People associated in a stricter profession are apt to be sequacious of some leading persons among them and some will follow the rest for company And the high pretensions and heightened confidence of Enthusiasts is a kind of Enchantment to bewitch those that unwarrantably approach to near them especially such as are predisposed by temper or complexion towards Enthusiasm In these things men forsake the Law and the Testimony to walk by false Lights and to follow blind Guides The Holy Ghost bids us trie the Spirits and hath given us an infallible rule of Tryal and leaves us not to any unaccountable impulse or impression The whole Tenor of Evangelical Doctrine shews that the Christian Spirit is both pure and peaceable that it doth not divide break and scatter a Christian people but unites heals and settles them that it doth not overturn Churches and civil States nor inflame Rulers against subjects nor subjects against Rulers nor dissolve Magistracy and Ministery but that it turns the hearts of the Fathers to the Children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the Just and conciliates the minds of Magistrates and Ministers and People of all degrees in righteousness and peace which is the right and sure way of erecting Gods Kingdom It doth not cancel reason but maintain its interest in Religion as being under the power of God and the great prop and proof of the Christian Faith It is a Spirit of judgment and soberness and suppresseth the wild Dominion of the unruly imagination It doth not turn men from humanity and civil behaviour unto a surly and cynical pride and Fanatick melancholy and austerity but it disposeth them to all the duties of human life and civil Converse But there must be Heresies and it is impossible but that offences should come Where the light of the Gospel is broken forth Sectarianism and Fanaticism is the Devils After-Game So it sprung up in Germany upon the birth of Protestantism so it sprung up in the Primitive Church upon the birth of Christianity in the Gnosticks and such like Sectaries and so it continues in our times These irregularities and extravagancies are a great dammage and reproach to a serious zealous and strict profession and it is a stone of stumbling before many Nevertheless the greatest and most dangerous Degeneration from the Sound state of Religion lies not this way The conceptions and motions of Fanaticism having a kind of Spiritual strain though in a delusion take not with the greater number whether of high or low degree the learned or unlearned sort And in case it seases on a greater multitude it may trouble and unsettle a State but it can never settle it self and if it domineer a while its Tyranny cannot hold because it hath no foundation and it can never obtain to be a national Religion because it is inconsistent with the stability of civil Government It s greatest mischief to a State is that it may serve the designs of others to work out a more lasting misery For which cause the Romish Emissaries under a vizor have overacted this wild Spirit that by its confusion and Anarchy they might make way to introduce their own Tyranny But the more extensive dangerous and lasting depravation of Christianity lies on the same side with Popery which is formidable indeed being founded in power and policy and suted to worldly interests and to which mens innate propensions do generally more incline them For that their fancies and affections are inveagled with its outward wealth and glory and their consciences laid a sleep by its loose principles and lifeless forme of devotion CHAP. XIV The way of preserving Religion uncorrupt THe truth and purity of Religion lies in its conformity to its rule which is Gods revealed will or law and its deviation from it is its depravation From this rule men are easily drawn aside being inticed by their own vain imaginations perverse inclinations
as well as the sense of any rational discourse whatsoever And the evidence of Gods Testimony is much more effectual than the arguments of human reason to command assent and quiet mens minds and appease their contests And if we yield not our controversies to be finally decided by this sacred Rule whither shall we go or wherein shall we all be bound up The truth is when men seek out vain inventions to please their own fancies or to serve their own ends and find their devised ways condemned by Gods word then they fall to derogate from its authority and sufficiciency and talk much of the impertinency and folly of those that insist upon it and cry up tradition and reason and that wisdom of Man that is but foolishness with God When things will not be as well as they should they must be as they may There be some usefull truths and practices that may be too dearly bought if purchased with the breach of the Churches Peace and Unity and the hazard of its whole Estate Howbeit then is the best state of things when the Apostolick Doctrine and Discipline is the standardmeasure of all and nothing is retained but what is plainly agreeable thereunto And the safety of pure Religion lies in as through a reformation according to this rule as the times will bear Let the severest reason that is impartial weigh the following words written by one of a Catholick Spirit and true to the Interest of Reformed Christianity touching our departure from Rome We should leave upon us no string or tassel of our ancient Captivity such as whereby they may take hold of us to pull us back again into our former bondage but look upon our selves as absolutely free from any tye to them more than in indeavouring their Conversion and Salvation which we knowing so experimentally not to be compassed by needless Symbolizings with them in any thing I conceive it our best Policy studiously to imitate them in nothing but for all indifferent things to think rather the worse of them for their using them as no Person of Honour would willingly go in the known Garb of any Lewd and Infamous Persons Whatsoever we Court them in they do but turn to our scorn and contempt and are more hardened in their own wickedness Wherefore seeing that needless Symbolizings with them doth them no good but hurt we should account our selves in all things indifferent perfectly free to please and satisfie in the most universal manner we can those of our own Party not caring what Opinions or Customs or outward Formalities the Romanists and others have and may have had from the first Degeneracy of the Church As for the word Popery it is not more odious than ambiguous among Protestants On the one hand some that will speak hard words against it have drawn it into so extreamly narrow a compass as to place it in little more than a secular interest of Power controverted between the Pope and the Princes and Prelates of Christendom and others that make it broader are yet very tender if not fond of many gross Corruptions of the Roman Church On the other hand some have extended it so far as to disparage things good and laudable and requisite and ignorantly call by that name whatsoever they fancy not Nevertheless those useless and offensive things taken up by the Papal Church since the time of their known Apostacy both Doctrines and Customs and that are theirs more peculiarly may justly be called Popish though they were not imposed as Apostolick commands or means of obtaining Pardon of Sin or of working Grace Why should we be tenacious of their Forms to the scandal of those of our own Belief How are we obliged or concerned to conform to their usages more than they are to ours Have they any Authority over us or are they any way a Rule unto us Are not the holy Scriptures of right both their Rule and ours Or can they upbraid us for departing from them in these at least unnecessary Opinions and Customs unless they upbraid us upon those grounds which we have rejected together with their Usurpation and and which if we receive again we must quit Protestancy it self This striving to come so near them whether tends it but to reduce us again into that Church For by all approaches to them they are not drawn one step towards us but are the more hardened and still they rest unmoveable on the rock of their pretended Supremacy and Infallibility The impurity of the Romish Church lies chiefly in its Superstition and Sensuality In the grosser part of its Superstition is manifold gross Idolatry and any way of symbolizing with Idolatry which is spiritual Whoredom should be dreaded by the chast Spouse of Chirst as the retaining of such Images as have been and are apt to be made objects of Religious Adoration and the making choice of the peculiar garbs and fashions of Idolaters in their worship Moreover where the gross Pollutions are avoided if their pomp and train of Ceremonies be retained they will be apt to take up the heart of such as are busied in them and to corrupt the Worship of God and make it a dead work and carnal Service and so the spirit and power of Godliness will decay and die among the People by this means Sensuality the concomitant of Idolatry and all gross Superstition is likewise manifested in their Devotions Of the Israelites Idolatry it is written The people sat down to eat and drink and rose up to play Sensual sports and pastimes are mingled with the Devotions of carnal Worshippers as is notably seen in the Popish Festivals And this makes the sensual part of Men addicted to such a way To pray a while and then to play is the business of their Sacred Solemnities But this course alienates the mind from true Holiness and tends to much Profaness and not only the Piety but the civility of a Nation will hereby much abate A Church that would maintain the purity of Religion the power of Godliness had need have its solemn days of divine Service distinct from the appointed times of carnal sport mirth and jollity CHAP. XV. The enmity of the World against Godliness and the Calumnies and Reproaches cast upon it considered THe security and increase of true Religion is a matter of no small difficulty The enmity against it is general and perpetual in the first race of Mankind it brake forth even to Bloud and throughout all Ages it hath been propagated that with great rage as well within as without the Pale of the visible Church The adverse World knows not the new Nature what it is for it knows not God whose Image it is The World is not only alienated from the Life of God but opposite to it by the antipathy of the carnal Life and so not only wants the true relish but hath a strong disrelish of the divine and heavenly Nature Moreover true Christianity is a light by which all things
state as a Jewel that hath its greatest lustre by the brightest light is maintain'd by the clearest knowledge In bright times the impostures and carnal designs of devised Doctrines and superstitious vanities will be made manifest and the hypocrisie being detected the Merchandize thereof will be quite marr'd In such times even the vulgar sort will expect from those in sacred Functions at least the appearance of a sober righteous and godly conversation with diligence in holy administrations Then the enemies of real Sanctity are put to hard shifts and forc'd to appear either in some colours of Truth or in the shame of their own nakedness For this cause the Followers of Truth make it their special interest as throughly to promote the most ample diffusion and universal increase of Knowledge among all ranks and sorts of Men as the Adverse partly seek to oppose and debase it We do not hereby mean an intermedling in difficult matters a smattering in controversies and certain curiosities of Opinions a store of unnecessary notions and of meer words and phrases which things are commonly erroneous and at the best but injudicious and puff up the half-witted and self-conceited and make them troublesom to themselves and others But that which is here commended for an universal increase and propagation is to understand the Principles of the Essential Truths of Christianity to see their evidence to judge rightly of their weight and worth and to view their coherence and besides these to know so much of other Truths as the different Capacities of Men will inable them for the bettering of their Knowledge in the Essentials The means of diffusing this Light are well known as the constant Preaching of the Word and the opening of the Principles of Religion in a due form of Cathechism the strict observation of the Lords Day repetition of Sermons ●…ious Conferences reading the Word and Prayer in Families profitable Communication among neighbour-Christians in their daily converse the spreading of practical Books written by Men of sound judgment and Ministers private applications to those of their own Charges with prudence and meekness For the same end that main Principle of Protestanism the judgment of Discretion as ●elonging to all Christians is to be asserted and ●…indicated against that Popish and brutish Do●…trine of implicit Faith in the Church's de●…rminations This is not to subject matters of ●aith to a private Spirit but to refer them to ●…e divine Authority of the holy Scriptures to ●…e apprehended in the due and right use of ●eason which is a publick and evident thing ●…d lies open to the tryal and judgment of all Men. And to Men of sober minds serious for the saving of their own Souls the Analogy of Faith in the current of Scripture is easily discernable Moreover the general increase of Knowledge lies much in the ingenuous Education and condition of the common People in opposition to sordidness slavery and brutish rudeness Though some look upon the vulgar sort with contempt and seem to value them no more than brute Animals and think it enough that their Governors understand and consider for them and not they for themselves yet Christ hath shed his Blood as much for the redemption of that Sort as of the Noble and Mighty and Prudent and he hath made no difference between the one and the other in the conditions of Salvation and in the priviledges and ordinances of his Kingdom As for the receiving of the Grace of God the Scripture casts the advantage on the poorer and meaner side Not many wise Men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called was the observation of St. Paul and St. James witnesseth that God hath chosen the Poor of this world rich in Faith and Heirs of his Kingdom And those whom God hath chosen must needs be instructed in his Will That reasonable service that he requires none can perform without Knowledge Ignorance is opposite to the nature and being of true Christian Piety which is not at all where it is not received with understanding This general increase of Knowledge hath fallen under a great suspicion of evil and it may be under the jealousie of Rulers as disposing Men to Sedition Rebellion Herisie and Schism But how great a reproach is hereby cast upon human Nature or political Government or both that the more rationally apprehensive the Body of a People are they are so much the more ungovernable as if Government could not stand with the proper dignity and felicity of human Nature What manner of civil State is that which degrades the Subjects from Men to Beasts for a more absolute Dominion over them What manner of Christian Church is that which to prevent Heresie and Schism takes order that its Members be no Christians It is an unchristian inhuman policy in Church or State the foundation whereof is laid in the Peoples ignorance As for the true interest of Rulers it is not weakened but strengthened by their Peoples knowledge which in its right and proper tendency makes them more conscientious and however more circumspect and considerate and consequently more easily manageable by a just and prudent Government But gross ignorance tends to make them barbarous and belluine and in their mutinies and discontents uncounsellable and untameable and therefore very incongruous to a State governed by the Principles of Christianity or Humanity CHAP. XX. The advantage of Human Learning to the same end THough Religion rests not on human Learning as its main support yet it seeks and claims the necessary help thereof Those whom God designs for eminent service he indues with eminent gifts either by means or miracle and he gives every intrusted Servant a measure answerable to his degree The Apostles who laid the foundation were wise Master-builders and surely it was not the mind of Christ that Wisdom should die with them when he settled his Church to indure throughout all Ages and promised to be with it to the end of the World It is said indeed that the foolishness of God is wiser than Men and the weakness of God is stronger than Men. But that which is so called is not foolishness and weakness indeed but only so accounted by the pride of carnal Wisdom In this Learned age the Antichristian State in Christendom is forced to advance Learning in its own defence And now without Learning either divinely inspired or acquired by means we cannot defend our selves against it Wherefore to destroy the supports of Learning is the way to subvert Religion Yea though we were not ingaged by such strength of the Adversary to provide for our own defence yet solid human Learning doth of it self notably advance Divine Truth The Learning that was spread over the World in the primitive times of Christianity apparently made way for that sudden and ample spreading of the Gospel And the Reviving thereof after an universal decay no less apparently made way for the breaking forth of this clearer Light of the Gospel
not lasting but by usual and easie changes their weakness is discovered To tie a People to certain little rules and methods in Church Discipline that are ge●erally displeasing as the necessary terms of ●hurch Priviledges when the ends of Discipline may be as well obtained without them is at the best but the vanity of a needless trouble in doing that with much ado which might be done with less and it may occasion an incurable breach and the rejection of the whole Form of Government Narrow and uncertain boundaries of Church Communion and arbitrary and rigid rules of admission are contrary to that ample and fixed Church state which is necessary to uphold and propagate true Religion The Faith of Christ hath been propagated and perpetuated in large Kingdoms and Nations by incompassing under its external Rule and Order the multitude that made profession though they might fa●… short of the New Birth and those things tha● accompany Salvation And it doth not roo● or spread in any sort considerable in a Region where the order of admission is set by the rigid and narrow principles of a small Party and the general multitude lies open as wa●… ground for any to invade or occupy The strength and security of the Protestant Reformation came by the taking in of Kingdom● and whole Dominions within its compas● The external Kingdom of God must needs be much wider than the internal It is like the draw Net that gathered Fishes good and bad and like a Corn Field wherein Whea●… and Tares grow together till the Harvest Moreover the increase of professed Christian makes way for the increase of regenerate Christians and Converts to the power of Godliness are generally made out of the mass of People of an Orthodox profession and few of them are turned immediately from Infidelity Popery or any Heresie CHAP. XXIV The Care and Wisdom of the Church in preventing and curing the evil of Fanatical and Sectarian Error AMong the Wiles of Satan whereby he depraveth the Spiritual excellency of pure Religion and mightily hinders its advance in the Kingdoms of this World Fanatical and Sectarian aberrations are not the least If these follies were but heeded by those that are most in danger before they are ingaged and drunken with errour it were in great part an antidote against this mischief For the well minded that are but weak and of easie impression are lead aside chiefly for lack of attention and observation Many are Children in understanding and many are passionate and inconsiderate and an innate levity and inconstancy of mind is very common It behoves the Guides of the Flock to possess the minds of the People with sober principles and to have a watchfull eye upon the first rising of any Pragmatick Fancies that feed on notions and novelties under a shew of a more discerning Spirit in Gospel Mysteries than others have Such being vanity puff'd up will be starting questions and multiplying slight exceptions against the received Truth and will please the itching ears and slight Spirits of some pretenders to Godliness who will become their hasty proselytes and join with them to unravel one thing after another in the texture of holy Doctrine And by the repute of their good parts and seeming Piety may stagger others of good intentions but weaker judgments And of this sort none are more dangerous than vain-glorious Teachers ambitious of leading Parties and by plausible indowments furnished for such designs These to raise their own fame and make to themselves a devoted People will become absolute Sect-Masters and those that close with them they hold with pleasing devices and serve their humours that they may serve themselves of them There is also in some Persons a right Sectarian leaven which is evermore to follow peculiar Opinions and some separated Party in Religion and they speak security to their own Souls by being of such an Opinion or of such a Party Against the Sectarian and Fanatick Spirit it concerns the Church to keep a continual watch and ward but not so as to imprison the truth to lock up the key of knowledge to stifle Godly zeal to detain a People in dead and dull principles that will not reach to the New Birth and Divine Life For this were all one as to prevent or cure a frenzy by causing a Lethargy or some other such like stupidity Moreover a Superstitious formal love and sensual way of Religion will in no wise be able to prevent or suppress this evil but will give occasion to its rise and growth except in times of profound ignorance and silence as in the depth of Popish darkness But whensoever the light breaks forth and the People see with their own eyes and the Ecclesiastical Governours will not admit a true reformation but persecute those that seek it then are many in danger of falling into this opposite extream For they are cast upon it both by the hatred of the present corruptions and by the weakness of their own judgment being not throughly instructed in the solid truth And so they ●un hastily from superstition and externalness into delusion and wild fancies from the common dissoluteness and remisness of those that call themselves Orthodox into a vain boasting of perfection from the usurpations of proud men incroaching upon Christs Prerogative and their false constrained Unity into Anarchy and confusion and from a wrathfull zeal and persecuting cruelty into a disorderly promiscuous and familistical love or indulgence towards all On the contrary a Church state that is agreeable to the Spiritual Ministration of the Gospel and truly Apostolical is the surest remedy against Sectarianism and Phanaticism truly so called When the Church abandons Romish Tyranny and Superstition and yet is settled in a regular and stable Polity when the publick Order throughly promotes the means of sound knowledge and incourageth real Godliness it satisfie the minds of them who justly expect in a Gospel Church and Ministry more than an outward Form even the manifestation of Truth and Spiritual Light and Life and Power an● it prevents their wandring to seek after it i● the devious paths of Sectaries It is of great moment that of the mo●… learned able and judicious Persons of Orthodox profession there be many eminently Pious whose authority and reputation may b●… able to hold in those whose affection an●… fancy is apt to outrun their judgment likewise that the Pastors of the Church who a●… called the Light of the World do so walk i●… the Light as that there be no occasion o●… stumbling in them through notorious Prid●… Covetousness Self-Seeking inordinate sensuality or the vehement appearance of any gross evil For the weaker sort is commonly undone by offences And because seducers are very active and spare no cost nor travel but as they have done of old do compass Sea and Land to gain Proselites it behoves the Pastors carefully to keep their People and the People carefully to keep themselves out of the hands of these Hucksters The