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A85854 Hieraspistes a defence by way of apology for the ministry and ministers of the Church of England : humbly presented to the consciences of all those that excell in virtue. / By John Gauden, D. D. and minister of that Church at Bocking in Essex. Gauden, John, 1605-1662. 1653 (1653) Wing G357; Thomason E214_1; ESTC R7254 690,773 630

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and enabled to effect those things which none other can presume to perform without vanity sin and presumption who hath not that gift power or authority consigned to him The right Ordination then of Ministers in the way of an holy succession in the Church of Christ hath in Religion and among true Christians these holy uses and clear advantages peculiar to it 1. 1. It confirms the truth of the Gospel 2 Cor. 8.23 First as to the main end the Glory of God and the saving of mens souls by their believing and obeying this testimony of all true Ministers that Jesus Christ is the only Saviour of the world Nothing gives a more clear and credible testimony to the glory and honour of Jesus Christ and to truth of the Gospel than this uniform and constant succession of Ministers Multi barbar●rum in Christū credunt sine charactere vel attramento scriptam babenter in cordibus sum per spiritum salutem et veterum traditionem diligentes custodientes quam Apostoli tradiderunt iis quibus committebant Ecclesias cui ordinationi assentiunt multa gentes c. Iren. l. 3. c. 4. by a peculiar Ordination and authority even from Christ himself in person who at first began this Ministry and sent some speciall men as his messengers to bear witness of him in all the world that so men might believe not only what is written in the word before it was or as it is now written but also as that glorious truth hath been thus testified every where and in every age by chosen and peculiar men as a cloud of most credible witnesses whom thousands at first did and to this day do hear preaching and see them Celebrating the holy mysteries of Christs Gospell who never had or used any written word nor ever read it and for the most part believed before ever they saw any part of the Bible which the constant Ministry of the Church hath under God hitherto preserved chiefly upon the testimony and tradition or record of those that were ever thought and alwayes ought to be most able and faithfull men specially appointed by Christ in his Church as a perpetuall order and succession of Witnesses to testifie of him and to minister in his Name to the end of the world This walking Gospel and visible Ministry consisting as it ought of wise and worthy men Minister est verbum visibile ambulans Evangelium who have good reputation for their piety learning and fidelity running on to all generations is as a continued stream from the blessed Apostles who were the first witnesses immediatly appointed by Christ to hold forth his name and Gospell to the world Acts 1.8 which though never so far off in the decurrence of time from the fountain yet still testifies and assures all wise men that there is certainly a divine fountain of this ministeriall power and so of Evangelicall mysteries and truth which rose first from Christ and which hath constantly run as may appear by the enumeration or induction of particular descents in all ages in this Channel of the Apostles and their successors the Bishops and Presbyters of the Church for the better planting confirming and propagating of the Gospell to all Nations and times As a duty charge or office injoyned by divine command to some men and lying ever as a calling on their consciences Hereby evidently declaring the divine wisdom and Fatherly care of Christ for the good instruction and order of his Church in his personall absence In that he hath not left the Ministry of the Gospell and his holy Institutions which he would have alwaies continued for the gathering edifying of his Church to a loose and arbitrary way among the rabbl● and promiscuous heards of men which would soon have made Evangelicall truths seem but as vagrant fables and generall uncertain rumors which run without any known and sure authority in the common chat and arbitrary report of the vulgar by which in a short time both the order beauty honour purity and credit of Truth is easily lost among men This holy and successionall ordination of the Evangelicall Ministry gives great proof and demonstration as of Christs personall presence as chief Bishop and Minister of his Church so of the fulfilling of Christs word and the veracity of his promise Mat. 28. after his departure to be with them that were sent and went in his name to the end of the world That the gates of hell neither yet have nor ever shall prevail against the Church While it carefully preserves a right succession holy order and authority of true Ministers the devill despairs of ever overthrowing Christian Religion in its reformed profession in any Country Down with the order Mat. 16.28 and sacred power and succession of the Ministry and all will in a short time be his own 2. 2. Evidenceth the Churches care Agnitio vera est Apostolorum doctrina antiquus Ecclesia status in universo mundo charactere corporis Christi secundum successiones Apostolorum quibus illi eam quae est in unoquoque loco Ecclesiam tradiderunt Scripturarum sine fictione custodita tractatio plenissima l●ctio sine salsatione secundum scripturas expositio legitima diligens sine periculo sine blasphemia Irenaeus l. 4. c. 43. In Ecclesia Catholica bacte nus inviolabili observatione tenetar qua potissimum Catholici ab Haereticis discriminantur nimirum ut cujusvis meriti atque praestantiae ●ir fuerit non sua sponte praedicationis munus suscipiat sed expectet donec ab Ecclesia mittatur ab eaque sacris functionibus initietur si●que initiatus praedicationi Evangelii mancipetur Baronius An. Anno Christi 44. It is also a notable evidence of the Churches care and fidelity in all ages not only in the preservation of the oracles of the word which it hath done but also of a constant holy Ministry to teach and explain them Also to celebrate those holy mysteries which are divinely annexed to the word as seals to confirm the faith of Christians And lastly to exercise that wholsome discipline for terror or comfort the power of which is chiefly in the Pastors and Rulers of the Church As it is then for the honour of the wisdom of Christ in the originall to have instituted such holy mysteries and such a Ministry so it is for the honour of the Church in the succession of all ages to have thus preserved them and it self in that order which becomes the family of Christ which had come far short of any well ordered family if the Father and Master of it Jesus Christ had left every servant to guess at his duty and all of them to scramble what part they list of employment aliment and enjoyment but the Lord Christ as every wise Master doth hath appointed and his Church hath preserved to this day constant Stewards and dispensers of holy things in his house-hold whose duty t is to
fallacious or pernicious novelties to which the breath of some politick or passionate spirits had raised them so much above the ordinary mark of true Christian religion as to drown or threaten to carry away all those many happy enjoyments of truth peace order government and Ministry which formerly they enjoyed Not wholly it may be without but yet with fewer and more tolerable grievances which humble Christians ought to look upon in any setled Church and State rather as exercises of their patience duty and charity than as oppressions of their spirits Knowing that impatience usually punisheth it self by applying remedies sharper than the sufferings easily and hastily running down the hill as from health to sicknesse from peace to war from good to bad from bad to worse but very slowly returning from evill to good or recovering up the hill from worse to better It is true the Ministers of the Church of England of all degrees seem now to have an harder part to act for their honor and wisdome than ever they had under any Rulers professing to be Christian and reformed But they may not therefore weakly disclaim or meanly desert their Ordination and holy function nor may they despair of Gods if they have not mans protection who can soon make their very enemies to be at peace with them and stir up many friends unexpectedly for them It may be through the Lords mercy this winters floud shall be for their mendment or fertility and not for their utter vastation and ruine This fire shall not consume them but refine them this winnowing will be their purging and this shaking their setling As oppositions of old gave the greatest confirmations and polishings to those Truths which were most exercised with the hammer or file of heriticall pravity or schismaticall fury If it be the mending and not the ending the reformation and not the extirpation of Ministers which their severe censurers and opposers seek for why should not time of triall be given and all honest industry used to improve these well grown and flourishing fig trees before they be hewed down and stubbed up which heretofore have not been either barren or unfruitfull to God and man If either Papall or Anabaptisticall and Levelling enemies must at length after severall windings and turnings be gratified with their utter ruine and destruction which God forbid yet while Ministers have leave and liberty to pray to preach to print to doe well and worthily God forbid they should so farre injure God good men and so good a cause as not Christianly to endeavour its defence which at worst is to be done by comely suffering And who knows but that when these witnesses both against superstition and confusion in the Church shall seem to be slain cast out and buryed they may live again to the astonishment both of friends and enemies But if the sins of this Nation and the decrees of divine Justice doe indeed hasten an utter overthrow here of the reformed Ministry and the reformed Religion If Ministers of the ancient Ordination lawfull heirs of the true Apostolick succession are therefore accounted as sheep for the slaughter because they are better fed and better bred than others of leaner soules and meaner spirits If they are therefore to the men of this world as a savour of death unto death because they hold forth the Word of Truth and Life to the just reproach of a lying dying and self-destroying generation If we must at last perish and fall with our whole function and fraternity after all our studies charges labours and sufferings Yet it is fit some of us and the more the better lest our silence may argue guilt give the world both at present and in after ages some account why and how in so learned valiant wise and religious a Nation as this of England hath been wee as Ministers have stood so long what pious frauds and holy arts we had whereby to impose so many hundreds of years upon so many wise Princes so many venerable Parliaments so many pious professors of Christian and reformed Religion And lastly upon so quick and high spirited a people as these of England generally are neither so grosse as to be easily deluded nor so base as patiently to suffer themselves in so high a nature to be abused That so at least if the world can lesse discern for what cause the Ministry and Ministers are now to be destroyed they may see upon what grounds of piety or policy they were so long preserved in peace plenty and honour And for what reasons they now seek as their pious predecessors did to maintain not their persons so much as their office and function in its due order and authority that so they might have transmitted it in an holy and unblameable succession to posterity as that which in their consciences they verily think to be a most divine and Christian Institution Beneficiall for the good of the Church and of all mankinde which in former ages was ever esteemed the glory and blessing of this or any other Nation The setter forth of the light wisdome power and love of the eternall God in his Son Jesus Christ for the salvation of sinners and which thousands of Christians in all ages and places have experienced and approved to be to their soules the Savour of life unto life the mighty power of God to salvation The Author easily observes the present face of our heavens which are much darkned by those black and lowring clouds which chiefly hang over constant true and faithfull Ministers heads menacing them above any rank or calling of men Nor is he ignorant of the touchinesse and roughnesse the jealousies and timorousnesse of many mens spirits in these times whose highest pretentions to piety are set forth either by fierce oppositions against the Ministry or by such a weak pleading for and wary owning of their succession and ordination their calling and persons as ra-rather invites opposition contempt and insolency than any way gives credit or countenance to them and their function whose remaining branches of Presbytery will hardly thrive by the watering of those hands which have been and are destroyers of its root the Primitive Apostolicall Episcopacy they are pitifull defenders of that who are passionate opposers of this who of all men have given the greatest advantages to those that seek to abrogate the whole function and calling or to arrogate it to vulgar ignorance and impudence The grim and sad aspect on all hands upon Ministers makes the Authour out of charity to himself and others as willing to give a fair account of his profession so loath to offend any sober and judicious Reader or to contract the enmity of any others of ruder tempers by any rash stroke or inconsiderate dash of his pen to which he may be subject and for which he begs pardon both of God and man if any have escaped which yet may be so far venial as its innocent sharpnesse aims at no mens person but onely
their judgements conceive or in their upright consciences laying aside all partialities and obliquings to worldly interest but meerly regarding the glory of God the good of soules and the honour of the reformed Religion if they shall conclude that there is indeed more evidence and power of Gods Spirit both in gifts Ministeriall and in holy successes in those men that stile themselves inspired men speciall Prophets and new modelled Preachers if they be found to have more of godly learning of sound wisdome in the mysteries of Christ of sincere piety zeal and charity to the glory of God and mens soules good if they are filled with divine endowments for praying preaching duly exhibiting the holy Mysteries for edifying the Church for maintaining the truth of the reformed Religion and the peace of this Church and Nation if they have greater courage constancy industry and conscience to carry on the great worke of saving soules if they have more authority from the word of Christ from the Apostles practise from the Catholick precedents of the Church of Christ in all ages and places by which to clear their call to the work of the Ministry beyond what is produced for the ancient and ordained Ministry of this Church Truly we do not desire to be further injurious or hinderances to any mens soules God forbid the Ministers of the Church of England should be so much lovers or valuers of themselves or envious to other mens excellencies or enemies to your and the Churches welfare as not to be willing to be laid aside that these new mens more immediate and greater sufficiencies higher inspirations and diviner authority may doe that work to which we are found so unsufficient defective and unworthy But if these pretenders to more spirituall prophecying preaching and living be by wise and godly men who love not to mock God or dally with matters of salvation and eternity which is the end of Religion weighed in the ballance of the sanctuary of the divine institution of Christs mission of the Apostles succession of the primitive custome and of the Catholick order in all ages and Churches if the grounds of right reason of good order policy and government be duely considered which require distinction in all societies sacred and civill and avoid confusion most in the things of God if the judgement of the most learned usefull and holy men in all ages be pondered if these new mens Spirits and gifts be throughly tryed by the touchstone of Gods Word if their secular aims and warpings to the world be narrowly looked into if the deformitie of their words and works be considered if their simple or scandalous writings be duly examined if the successes of their endeavours and essays hitherto in many places be seriously thought of which are evidently proved to be very sad and bad little promoting either truth or peace holinesse or comfort to any peoples souls nor any prosperity and advancement to this Church or any Christian reformed Religion if they be found in ignorance and weaknesse or in factiousnesse and insolencies or in pride and avarice or in erroneousnesse and licentiousnesse so farre too light that they are not so much as the dust of the ballance compared to the reall excellencies of those true Ministers of this Church which have been and still are and may be in this Church if men be not all given over to lusts and strong delusions God forbid any excellent Christians should be tempted by fear or flattery or any fallacy of novelty gain or liberty to desire or endeavour or approve a change which will be so shamefully and desperately pernicious both to themselves and to their posterity BUt these Antiministeriall adversaries 4. Calumny or Cavill Against humane and secular learning in Ministers who would fain impose upon the credulous world with the pretentions of some speciall gifts and Inspirations of Gods Spirit which are as yet no way discovered by them in word or deed as I have shewed being conscious to themselves that indeed they come short of those common endowments by which the mindes of men are oft much improved through study and good learning they seek to oppose and decry that in all Christians and especially in Ministers which they despair of themselves So that not a dumb spirit but a silly prating and illiterate one possesses them which cryes out against all humane learning and usefull Studies as the divels did against Christ What have we to doe with thee Matth. 8.29 Great calumnies and contempts are raised by these men and their Disciples against all liberall Arts and Sciences all skill in the tongues and histories against all Books but the Bible and some of them can hardly dispense with that too since they take all books to be of the same nature with those conjuring Books which were burnt Act. 19.19 against the Schooles of the Prophets and all Vniversities as heathenish Antichristian marks of the Beast as deformities darknings and impertinencies where we have Scripture light Also prejudiciall to that more immediate divine teaching or Institution to which they pretend and by which they say they learn and teach all true Religion which they tell us is so sufficiently furnished and fortified as the new Jerusalem with its own walls Revel 21. made of pretious stones the impregnable strength of truth and the splendour of the Spirits gifts that it needs none of these mudwalls and bulwarks of earth which men have cast up Beautified enough with its own native innocency and glory it desires not any of these raggs and additionall tatters of humane learning which they say hath so tossed and torn Religion with infinite and intricate disputes that the solidnesse and simplicity of true Divinity is almost quite lost and confounded Christ is almost oppressed by the crouds and throngs of such as are called Rabbies and learned men who may well spare their pains in the Church of Christ Isai 54.13 Ioh. 14.26 Ioh. 16.13 where the Lord hath promised that all shall be taught of God that his Spirit shall teach them all things and lead them into all truth Answ I see the Devill is never more knave Answ 1. The craft and folly of this cavill against humane learning than when hee would seem to turn fool How willing is he to have all men as ignorant weak and unlearned as these Objecters are that so none might discern his snares and gin● of which these Ignato's are to be his setters fain would he have all Christians yea and Preachers too such * Hos 7.11 silly birds without heart that they might easily be circumvented by his strategems and catched with his devices The better to act those Tragedies which he intends against the Reformed Churches 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. he would have the windows shut up and the light shut out These are the Fauxes with dark lanthorns to blow up all and the Judasses who are guides to them that
indifferency in the Angels of the Churches of Pergamus and Thyatira tolerating any thing and condemning nothing the one suffering those that held the doctrine of Balaam and the impure Nicolaitans who taught all libidinous impudicities to be free for Christians the other for tolerating Jezebel under the colour of a Prophetesse to seduce the servants of God The Apostle Paul commands some mens mouths should be stopped Tit. 1.11 Gal. 5.12 1 Tim. 2.20 who speak perverse things in the Church wisheth those cut off that troubled them He gives over to Satan Hymenaeus and Philetus that they might learn not to blaspheme Gal. 1.8 Denounceth a grievous curse or Anathema to any that should presume to teach any other Doctrine than the Gospell that form of sound words once delivered to the Church which is according to godlinesse 1 Tim. 6.3 1 Cor. 4.2 He tels us that there is not onely a word but a rod or power of coercion left to the Church and its lawfull Pastors or Ministers for the edification not for the destruction of the Church And however this power Ecclesiasticall which is from God Magistratick and Ministeriall power when united as that other Magistratick be wholly severed and divided in their courses while the Civill Magistrate is unchristian yet when he embraceth the profession of Christianity these two branches of power which flowed severall ways yet from the same fountaine God doe so farre meet again and unite their amicable streams 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Magistratick and Ministeriall Civill and Church power as not to * As those of old that thought Herod to be the M●ssias Ter●de pras ad Ha●c 5. confound each other nor yet to crosse and stop one the other but rather to increase strengthen and preserve mutually each other while the Minister of Christ directs the Magistrate and the Christian * As Eusebius tels in Constantine the Greats time who joined with the Bishops and Ministers of the Church in good government Magistrate protects the Minister both of them with a single eye regarding that great end for which God in his love to mankinde and to his Church hath established both these powers in Christian Churches and Societies That neither the bodies nor the soules of Christians should want that good which God hath offered them in Christ nor suffer those injuries in society for the prevention or remedy of which both Magistracy and Ministry are the Ordinances of God for enjoying the benefit of both which blessings as every Christian hath a sociall capacity so every lawfull Magistrate and Minister hath according to their places and proportions a publique duty and authority upon them to see justice and holinesse truth and peace civill sanctions and divine institutions purely and rightly dispensed to inferiours for whose good they a●e of God ordained 11. In what case onely toleration of any thing in Religion were lawfull If there were indeed no rule of the written Word of God which Christians owned as the setled foundation of Faith the sure measure of doctrine and guide of good manners in religion both publiquely and privately or if there were no credible Tradition delivered by word of mouth and parents examples which men might imitate for the way of Religion revealed to them by God which was the way before the flood but every one were to expect dayly either new inspirations or to follow the dictates of his own private fancy and reason Nothing then would be more irreligious then to deny all freedom publique as well as private nothing more just than to tolerate any thing of opinion and speculation which any one counted his religion yet even in that liberty of walking and wandering in the dark when no Sun of certain Revelation divine had shined on mankinde Rom. 1.32.2 14. the very light of Nature taught men as among Heathens that some things in point of practise are never tolerable in any humane society But since the wisdome and mercy of God hath given to mankinde which the Church alwayes injoyes the light of his holy Word and a constant order of Ministry to teach from it the wayes of God in truth peace and holinesse not onely every Christian is bound to use all religious means which God hath granted to settle his own judgement and live accordingly in his private sphear without any Scepticall itch or lust of disputing alwayes in Religion But both Magistrate and Minister whose severall duties are set forth and different powers ordained over others in Scripture for a sociall and publique good must take care to attain that good of a setled Religion and preserve it in always of verity equity and charity which may all well consist with the exercise of due authority Nor is it any stinting or restraining of the Spirit of God in any private Christian to keep his Spirit within the bounds of the Word of God Deut. 29.29 wherein the things revealed belong to us and our children Nor is it any restraint to the Spirit of God in the Scripture to keep our opinions and judgements and practises within the bounds of that holy faith and good order which is most clearly set forth in the c●ncurrent sense of the Scriptures and explained by the Confessions of Faith and practise of holy Discipline which the Creeds and Councels and customes of the Catholick Church hold forth to them Nor is it any limiting or binding up of the Spirit of God in private men for the Christian Magistrate and Minister to use all publique means both for the information conviction and conversion of those under their charge as to the inward man and also of due restraint and coercion as to the outward expressions in which they stand related to a publique and common good But if the negligence of Governours in Church and State 12. What a Christian must doe in dissolute times should at any time so connive and tolerate out of policy or fear or other base passion if through the brokennesse and difficulties of times the sons of Zeruiah be too hard for Magistrates and good Ministers so as the vulgar fury corrupted by factious and unruly spirits are impatient of just restraits but carry on all things against Laws and wiser mens desires to a licentious Anarchy and all confusions in the outward face and publique Ministrations of Religion yet must no good Christian think this any dispensation for any private errours in his judgment or practise In maxima rerum licentia minima esse debet veri Christiani libertas Gib Lex sibi severissima est pura conscientia dei amor Ber. he must be the more circumspect and exact in his station and duty as a Christian when the publique course runs most to confusion tolerating least in his own conscience when most is tolerated by others The love of God and Christ and of the truth of Religion and the respect and reverence borne the order of the Ministry and to the Churches
at their supposed errors which are grown in some so rough and insolent both in words and deeds against poore Ministers that they had need to meet with something that hath good metall and usefull sharpnesse and not with that phlegmatick and sanguine softnesse which impudent men easily baffle and put both to the blush and silence yet hee meddles not save with great respect and tendernesse with any thing of Civill Power which no man may wisely dispute that is not able to resist it is foolish to shake the pen against the sword or oppose armed Legions with flocks of Geese No man may discreetly offend while as he must necessarily so he may honestly and safely be subject Prudence commands private men to leave the accounts of Ruling power to mens own consciences and to the Supream Over-ruler who best knowes as by what means they obtain it so to what ends and in what manner they use it It is enough for private persons at convenient distances to warm themselves by the light and heat of prevailing power neither scorching themselves by too neer approaches nor consuming themselves by indiscreet contestations with it Modesty also forbids such as are in subjection to dispute the actions or disparage the counsels of any that are above them who being many and so stronger are commonly by esteem supposed wiser than any one man and being successefull are usually esteemed blest and happy Although it is most certain That the many beginning from one and combined strength or counsell being but the twisting of single feeblenesse as so many hairs together the united many may be mistaken as wel as the divided unites Yea one sick man may infect many whole especially if his disease hath something catching and pleasing in it But if there happen by the Divine displeasure pestilent airs and noxious breaths in any countrey the strong the wise the great and the many are as liable to contagion and destruction as the weak the few and the foolish yea to Epidemicall and contagious diseases pestered cities and crowds of men are more subject than cels and solitudes No men are so wise but they may have errors And the sooner they see them to amendment the wiser they will be Nor is it the least part of wisdome in inferiours to shew to superiors their misapprehensions and failings rather by obliquely intimating than directly thwarting by great reflexions than rude affronts Especially in those things wherein a private man may be competently versed both by study and education yet no way trenching upon that tender point of civill power and dominion which is not a fit subject for a pen and inkhorn Therefore this Author presumes that the fair and free vindication of so publique an interest as this of the Ministry which is his proper sphear and calling can displease no men that have candor wit honesty honour good conscience or true Religion in them Nor will it anger sober men to be shewed what is amiss and how it may be mended which possibly they may be as unable as willing to doe Diseases may sometimes exceed the Art of Physitians violent Paroxysms are sometimes better left to spend themselves than provoked and encountred with medicines As for others of vain violent and foolish tempers it is better to offend than to flatter them and to suffer from them if God will have it so is more honorable than to be rewarded by them The greatest danger indeed is from those that are stolidè feroces full of those boisterous rude and brutish passions which grow as bristles upon hogs backs from ignorance pride rusticity and prejudice which make men either unable to read or impatient to bear or unwilling to understand the words of truth and sobernesse trusting more to bestiall than rationall or religious strength which most unmanly and unchristian disorders in mens soules how prevalent and epidemicall soever they may be yet they must not be here either flattered or fomented By calling their darknesse light or their evill good their presumptions inspirations their duller dreams high devotion their dissolute licentiousnesse Christian liberty their sillinesse sanctity their fiercenesse zeal their self-confidence and intrusion a divine call their disorderly activity speciall abilities their jejune novelties pretious rarities or their old errors and rotten opinions extraordinary and unheard of perfections When indeed their root is for the most part nothing but an illiterate and illiberall disposition neither learned to morality nor polished to civility neither softned nor setled by good education or true Religion being full of levity vulgarity unsatiate thirst and desire of novelties their fruit also is little else but malice cruelty avarice ambition worldly policy hypocrisie superstition loosenesse and profanenesse all conspiring as upon untrue and unjust pretentions so to evill ends namely to abase and destroy the true and ancient Ministry of the Gospell in this Nation and to bring into contempt all holy duties and d●vine Ministrations in this Church of Christ to cry down all good learning to corrupt the mindes of men with error and ignorance to debauch their manners by licentiousnesse or superstition to bring shame upon the reformed Religion here professed to wilder the judgements to wast the comforts to shipwrack the conscience and to damn the soules of poore people Where the Apologist meets with this black guard these factors for error and sin these agitators for the Prince of darknesse these enemies to God to Christ Jesus to all good Christians and to mankind God forbid he should give place to them or not charge them home and resist them to their face His duty and design is to detect their frauds and wickednesse to countermine their deep projects to frustrate their desperate counsels to fortifie the mindes of all good Christians against their strong delusions and oppositions to pull down their high imaginations to demolish their self-conceited strong holds to maintaine the honour of this Nation the glory of this reformed Church and the worth of its godly learned and industrious Ministry against their envious cavils and ungratefull calumnies If any men apart from fanatick presumptions secular interests popular applauses rusticall clamors and ignorant confidences shall upon rationall prudent and religious grounds propound any thing in a more excellent way either for kinde or degree whereby to advance the glory of God the honour of Jesus Christ the reall propagating of the Gospell the exercise of usefull gifts and graces of Gods Spirit in this Church r the encrease of charity or comforts among Christians for the encouragement of learning vertue and godlinesse for the welfare of this Nation or the serious reforming of Religion and the Ministry of it beyond what hath been still is and ever may be had from the gifts and graces the order and office the labours and lives of those that are the chief professors preachers and pillars of learning and religion in this Nation which are the able and faithfull Ministers of a due succession and right
ashamed to present to your view and patrociny in whom is a more Excellent Spirit this Apology For which as I have no encouragement so I expect no acceptance or thanks from any men who carry on other designs than those of Glory to God Peace to their own Consciences welfare to this Nation and Love to this and other Reformed Churches of Christ I know That Secular Projects and Ambitious Policies have for the most part such jealousies partialities and unevennesses in their Counsels and Motions as can hardly allow or bear that * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys Generous Integrity and Freedom which is most necessary as well as most comely for the Cause of Christ which I in my Conscience take to be this of his Faithful and true Ministers of this Church and of the Reformed Religion Of which in no case and at no time any true Christian least of all a Minister of that sacred Name and Mystery may without sin be * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 H. Steph. Mark 8.38 ashamed or afraid to own before men in the place where God hath set him and after that maner which becomes Heavenly Wisdom when she is justified by any of her Children It is your Honor and happiness to Excel not onely in that Wisdom which can discern but also in that Candor which cheerfully accepts in that courage which dares publikely own what shall appear to be the Cause of God the Institution of Christ and his Churches Concernments amidst the Contempts Calumnies and Depressions which they meet with from the Ignorance Errors Passions Prejudices Lusts Interests and Jealousies of the World 1 Cor. 4.5 The excellency of the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ which you have attained by the blessing of God upon his and for Christs sake your servants the able faithful and true Ministers of the Gospel in this Church of England hath taught you to esteem all things in comparison Phil. 3.8 Tutiora sunt Christi pericula quàm mundisecuritates Jer. but as loss and dung to chuse to be with Christ in his storms if the will of God be so rather than enjoy the worlds calms There was never I think any time or cause since the Name of Christ had place upon Earth wherein your real and commendable excellencies had more opportunities to shew or greater occasions to exercise themselves than now This being the first adventure of some mens impudent Impiety attempting at once to annul and abrogate the whole Function and Office the Institution and uninterrupted Succession of the Evangelical Ministry Which prodigious attempt no antient Hereticks no Schismaticks none that ever owned the name of Christians were so guilty of as some now seem to be So that now if ever you are expected both by God and good men to appear worthy of your selves and your holy Profession either in Piety to God and Zeal to the Name of your Saviour Jesus Christ or in justice and gratitude to those your true Ministers who have Preached to you the true way of eternal life or in Pity and Charity not so much to them as to your selves indeed and your posterity the means of whose Salvation is disputed and endangered or in any other Christian Affections 2. True Saints Characters and heroick Motions such as are comely for those that are filled with holy Humanity being therefore the best of men because they have in them the most of Saints Saints I say Not because great but good men not as applauded by men but approved of God not as Arbitrators of outward but enjoyers of inward Peace not because Conquerors of others by the arm of flesh but more than * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. de ●ig Dial. 1. Rom. 8. Conquerors of themselves by the Graces of Gods Spirit not as violent Rulers of others but voluntary subduers of themselves not because prospered and encreased in Houses Lands Honors and Vain Glories by the ruine of others but by being mortified in Desires crucified in Enjoyments cautions in Liberties modest in Successes impatient of Flatteries Acts 12.23 which turn proud Herods into noysom Worms full of Self-denyings where they most excel coveting nothing so much as to be nothing in their own eyes to enjoy Christ in and above all things to abound in every good word and work to be humble in heights poor in plenty just in prevalencies moderate in felicities compassionate to others in calamity Ever most jealous of themselves lest prosperity be their snare lest they grow blackest under the hottest Sun-shine lest they should have their portion and reward in this world lest they should not turn secular advantages to Spiritual Improvements to holy Examples Secundae res acrioribus stimulis animum explicant Tacit. hist 1. to the ornament of Religion to the good of others to the peace and welfare of the Church of Christ Such living and true Saints I may humbly and earnestly supplicate without any Superstition who affect least but merit most that title upon Earth who are Gods visible Jewels Mal. 3.17 the Darlings of Jesus Christ the Lights and Beauties of the World the regenerate Honor of degenerate Humane Nature the rivals and competitors with Angels yet their care and charge the candidates of Eternal Glory Heb. 1.14 and Heirs of an Heavenly Kingdom Phil. 4.1 the crown and rejoycing of every true Minister the Blessed Fruit of their Labors and happy Harvest of their Souls The high Esteemers the hearty Lovers the liberal Relievers the unfeigned Pitiers the faithful Advocates and the earnest Intercessors for the distressed Ministers the so much despighted and by many despised Ministry of this Church You Rom. 8.11 in whom is the Spirit of the most Holy God shining on your mindes with the setled wisdom of sound Knowledge and saving Truths captivating all wandring fancies and pulling down all high imaginations 2 Cor. 10.5 which exalt themselves beyond the written Rule of Christ and the Analogy of that Faith which was once delivered to the Saints Rom. 12.6 in the holy Oracles of the Scriptures and continued to this day Jude 3. by the Ministry and Fidelity of the Church which is the pillar and ground of Truth 1 Tim. 3.16 both propounding and establishing it against all unbelief and opposition You whose wills are redeemed from the servitude of sinful lusts slavish fears secular factions whose Consciences and Conversations are bound by the silver Cord of the Love of God and Christ to all Sacred Verity real Piety unfeigned Charity sincere Purity exact Equity comely Order holy Policy and Christian Unity 2 Tim. 2.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from all prophane novelties seditious Extravagancies licentious Liberties fanatick Enthusiasms pragmatick Factions and hellish Confusions You that are strengthned with all holy and humble Resolutions which become the sober courage and calm magnanimity of true Christians either to speak and do what honestly you may for
degree true That many of these Mushroom Ministers the most forward Teachers of this new race and mechanick extraction are such persons in disguises of vulgar plainness Nunquam periculosi es fallit t●neb●arum mendaciorum pater quàm cùm sub lucis veritatis specit delitescit Jeron and simplicity who have had both their learning and their errand from the vigilant Seminaries beyond Sea Out of which Galliles can come little good to our Reformed Church and Nation Satan is not less a Devil when he will seem a Doctor nor more a dangerous tempter than when he would appear a zealous teacher Whence soever they are sure we are That many of these who are so suddenly started up into Pulpits are not ashamed to vent by word and writings such transcendent blasphemies That they teach whatever they think or say of the Majesty of God of Christ of the holy Spirit of the Divine Nature though never so irreverent profane and ridiculous yet it is no blasphemy but sublimity So Irenaeus l. 1. Tertul. de prae ad Hae. Austin de haer de unitate Eccles c. 16. Tells us of the Partantil●quia Haeraticorum Vid. p. 204. no profaneness but getting above and out of all fornis Whatever they contradict of the clear literal sense and rational scope of the Scriptures though it seem and be never so gross a lie and error in the common significancy of the words yet it is a truth in the spirit Whatever they act never so disorderly brutish horrid obscene and abominable yet it is no sin but a liberty which God and Christ and the Spirit exercise in them who cannot sin Nor is this the least cause we have to suspect beware of and abhor these new Modellers and Levellers of the Ministry That how different soever their faces and factions are one from another though they go one East and the other West whether they separate or rank or seek or shake yet still they meet in this one point No Ordination no Function or peculiar Calling of the Ministry The Serpents tail meets with his head that he may surround truth with a circle of malice In hoc uniformes esse solent errantium deformitates quod rectè sentientes odi● habent August As Herod and Pilate they agree to crucifie Christ as Samsons Foxes though their wily-heads look several ways yet their filthy tails carry common fire-brands not onely to set on fire the sometime well-fill'd and fruitful Field of this Church but also to consume the very laborers and husbandmen Their eyes and hands are generally bent against the best and ablest Ministers and their spirits most bitterly inconsistent with that holy Ministry which Christ once delivered by the Apostles to the Church and which by the fidelity of his Church hath been derived to us of which we and all the true Churches of Christ have in all ages had so great and good experience which no malice of devils or personal infirmities of men have been hitherto able so to hinder as wholly to interrupt much less so to corrupt it that it should be either just or any way necessary to abolish it according to those tragical clamors and tyrannick purposes of some unworthy men whose malice and cruelty Esther 5.9 as our modern Hamans doth hope and daily with eagerness expect when the whole Function and Calling which is from God though by man of the ordained and authoritative Ministry which hath succeeded the Apostles to our days shall be trussed up that fifty footed Gallows which malicious and ungrateful envy or sacrilegious covetousness or vulgar ambition or Jesuitick policies hath erected for the whole Nation of the antient and true Ministers And all this because like Mordecai they will not nor in any Reason Law and Religion can bow down or pay any respect such as the pride and vanity of some men expect to those high and self-exalting gifts whereto their Antiministerial adversaries pretend and which they seek to cry up in their meetings and scriblings with which they say and onely say They are divinely called and more immediately inspired not onely above their fellows and brethren who are still modestly exercised in their first mechanick occupations but even above those that are much their betters every way and who merit to have been and possibly have been to many of them as Fathers in Religion by whose pains and care with Gods blessing the true Christian Religion in all ages hath been planted propagated and preserved or where need was reformed and restored to its essential lustre and primitive dignity So that the cruel contrivances and desperate agitations 25. Sober mans greatest sense Revel 12.4 carried on by some men against the true Ministers and Ministry in this Church like the looks of the great red Dragon upon the Woman of the Revelation have a most dire and dreadful aspect not onely upon all good learning and civility but also upon all true Religion both as Christian and as Reformed Threatning at once to devour the very life soul beauty honor ●oy and blessing of this Nation on which we may well write Ickabob 1 Sam. 4.21 the glory is departed from our Israel so soon as the fury of these men hath broke the hearts and necks of our Elies the Evangelical Priests of the Lord the true Ministers of Christ who are as the chariots and horsmen of our Israel Civil changes and secular oppressions have their limits confined within the bounds of things mortal and momentary with which awise and well setled Christian is neither much pleased nor displeased Quadratus cùm sit vir bonus ad omnem fortuna jactum aquabilis est sibi constans Sen. Tanto satius est esse Christianum quàm hominem quanto praestat non omnino esse hominem quàm non esse Christianum Bern. because not much concerned nor long For no wind from the four corners of the Earth can blow so cross to a good mans sails but he knows how to steer a steddy course to Heaven according to the compass of a good Conscience But what relates to our souls eternal welfare to the inestimable blessing of present times and posterity What more concerns us in point of being true Christians that is rightly instructed duly baptized and confirmed in an holy way than any thing of riches peace honor liberty or the very being men can do for without being true Christians it had been good for us we had never been men what evidently portends and loudly proclaims Darkness Error Atheism Barbarity Profaneness or all kinde of Antichristian tyrannies and superstitions to come upon us and our children instead of that saving truth sweet order and blessed peace instead of those unspeakable comforts and holy privileges which we formerly enjoyed from the excellency of the true knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ declared to us by the labors of our true and faithful Ministers We hope it can offend no good Christians to
see us more piously passionate Sancta laudabilis est in religionis nego●io impatientia Jeron Judges 18.24 and more commendably impatient against those who seek to deprive us of all those divine blessings than Micah was against those who stole away his gods and his Priests in as much as our true God and true Saviour and true Ministers infinitely exceed his Teraphins his Ephod his Vagrant and idolatrous Levite who yet was as a father to him Who can wonder if we or any other who have any bowels of true Christians or tenderness of Conscience for our Reformed Religion 1 Kings 3.26 Viscera genuinam matiem indicant Ex vero dolore verus amor dignoscitur Fictitius ●●er etricius animus facilè patitur infantem dividi Greg. Jude 1. 2 Cor. 4.7 do as the true Mother did passionately yern within themselves and earnestly cry to others lest by the seeming liberty of every ones exercising his gifts in Preaching and Prophecying their eyes should behold the true and living childe of Religion reformed cruelly murthered and destroyed under pretence of equable dividing it to gratifie thereby the cunning designs of an impudent and cruel Harlot It is the least that we as true Protestants in this Church of England can do earnestly by prayers to contend with God and man for the faith once delivered to the Saints that we may neither craftily be cheated nor violently robbed of that onely heavenly treasure of our souls nor of those earthen vessels which the Lord hath chosen and appointed both to preserve it and dispence it to us namely the truly ordained and authoritative Ministers the original of whose office and power as of all Evangelical Institutions is from our Lord Jesus Christ and not from the will of man in any wanton arbitrary and irreligious way 26. Who are the Antiministerial adversaries most and why Thus then may your Virtuous Excellencies easily perceive That it is not as mine or my Brethren the Ministers private sense alone but it is as the publick eccho of that united voice which with sad complaint and doleful sound is ready to come from all the holy hills of Zion from every corner of the City of God in our Land through the prayers and tears sighs and groans of those many thousands judicious and gracious Christians who are as the remnant that yet hath escaped the blaspemies extravagancies seductions pollutions and confusions of the present world occasioned by those who neither fearing God nor reverencing man seem to have set up the design and trade of mocking both ●uci nimi●um adversantur m●ritò qui teneb●arum opera operantur Aug. None bear the true Ministry with less patience than they whose deeds will least endure the touch-stone of Gods Word Whose violent projects against this Church and State being wholly inconsistent with any rules of righteousness and godliness makes them most impatient to be any way censured crossed or restrained by those precepts and paterns of justice and holiness which the true Ministers still hold forth out of Gods Word to their great reproach and regret no more able to bear that freedom of truth than the old world could bear Noahs or Sodom Lots preaching of righteousness To these mens assistance comes in by way of clamoring or petitioning or writing scandalously against the Ministers and Ministry of this Church all those sorts of men whose licentious indifferency profane ignorance and Atheistical malice hath yet never tasted and so never valued the blessings of the learned labors and holy lives of good Ministers both these sorts are further seconded by that sordid and self-deceiving covetousness which is in the earthy and illiberal hearts of many seeming Protestants who either ingratefully grudg to impart any of their temporal good things to those of whose spirituals they partake Rom. 15.27 1 Cor. 9.11 or else they are always sacrilegiously gaping to devour those remains of Bread and water which are yet left as a constant maintenance to sustain the Prophets of the Lord in the Land And lastly not the least evil influence falls upon the Ministers and Ministry of this Reformed Church by the cunning activity of those pragmatick Papists and Jesuitical Politicians for all of the Roman Profession are not such who make all possible advantages of our civil troubles and study to fit us for their sumation and a recovery to their party by helping thus to cast us into a Chaos and ruinous heaps as to any setled Order and Religion The most effectual way to which they know is To raise up rivals against to bring vulgar scorn and factious contempt upon to foment any scandalous petitions against Ministers and the whole support of the Ministry that so they may deprive that function of all the constant maintenance and those immunities which it hath so long and peaceably enjoyned by the Laws which are or ought to be as the results of free and publick consent so the great preservers of all estales in this Land Thus by starving they doubt not speedily to destroy the holy function divine authority and due succession of all true reformed Ministry in England Solicitously inducing all such deformities as are most destitute of all sober and true grounds either of Law Reason Scripture or Catholike practise in the Church of Christ Thus shortly hoping that from our Quails and Manna of the Learned and Reformed Ministry and true Christian Religion we may be brought back again to the Garlick and Onyons of Egypt to praying to Saints to worshipping of God in or by or through Images to such implicite Faith and Devotion to trust in Indulgences to the use of burthened or maimed Sacraments to those Papal Errors Superstitions and Vsurpations which neither we nor our Forefathers of later ages have tasted of which however somewhat better dressed and cooked now than they were in grosser times yet still they are thought and most justly both unsavory and unwholsome to those serious and sounder Christians who have more accurate palates and more reformed stomachs Si canonicarum Scripturarum autoritate quidquam firmatur sine ulla dubitatione credendum est Aliis verò testibus tibi credere vel non credere liceat August ep c. 12. Hoc prius credimus non esse ultra Scripturas quod credere debeamus Tertul. de prae ad Hae. l. 3. Sacris Scripturis non loquentibus quid loquetur Ambr. voc Gen. l. 2. With whose judgements and consciences nothing will relish or down as to doctrine and rule of Faith or Sacramental Administrations and duties in Religion which hath not Scripture for its ground to which no doubt the primitive and purest Antiquity did consent To whose holy rule and patern this Church of England in its restitution or reformation of Religion did most exactly and with greatest deliberation seek to conform both its Ministry and holy Ministrations using liberties or latitudes of prudence order and decency no further than it thought might best tend to the
Word however we cannot by bare humane reason comprehend or demonstrate them oftentimes praying to God as all sufficient omniscient omnipresent and omnipotent supplicating for that from his grace power and bounty which we have not deserve not nor can attain otherways in this lapsed corrupted and cursed estate of our nature Eph. 2.5 By g ace ye are saved Which owes all its reparations onely to the free grace of God manifesting himself in his works and words also in those secret inward operations of the Spirit upon the conscience and whole soul by illuminations Blanda violentia victrix delectatio Aug. restraints terrors convictions conversions sweet yet powerful attractions victorious yet delectable prevailings agreeable to the nature of the soul and the liberty of the will which then recovers its true liberty Quò strictius ad Deum ligamur eo perfectius liberamur à peccatorum pondere pravitatum vinculis nec reatu nec terrore nec infirmitate amplius detinemur aut opprimimur August Non dii facti sumus sed divini non in Dei essentiam transmutamur sed in sanctam hoc est divinam naturam reparamur quantum satanae lapsi tantum Deo reparati confirmamur Prosp when by the cords of Gods love its unwillingness is bound up and its chains of violent lusts are taken off Whence such great impressions and real changes are made upon every rational faculty in the soul as those from darkness to light from captivity to freedom from death to life according to the several representations of Gods excellencies in nature in morals and in mysteries wherein the exceeding great riches of his free-grace and love to us in Christ Ephes 1.9 2.7 hath the most softning melting and transforming influence which fully received upon the soul the whole-man in minde and spirit in fancy understanding judgement memory will appetite affections passions and conscience becomes partaker through grace of a divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 compared to what he was and becomes a * 2 Cor. 5.17 new creature not as to its essence but as to all ends principles motions and actions which are begun and continued designed and ended in holiness that is in humble and unfeigned regards to the glory of God and exact purposes of conformity to the will of God in his written Word New creatures by a newness of grace in which we remain what we were Men but are made what we were not Saints 3. Scripture the only rule of true Religion 1 Tim. 3.15 Heb. 4.12 Acts 7.38 Rom. 3.2 To which Word of God in the Scriptures we being guided and directed by the constant and most credible testimony of the Church of Christ that pillar and ground of Truth so as to receive and regard them They at length by Gods grace on the heart demonstrate themselves by their native and divine light to be the very Word of God those lively oracles which set forth most divine precepts paterns prophecies histories and mysteries proffers also and promises of such good things as the soul would most desire most wants and onely can truly delight in living and dying and to eternity Religion consists in no fond fancies Beyond * Hoc prius credimus non esse ultra Scripturas quod credere debeamus nobis curiositate non opus est post Christum nec inquisitione post Evangelium Tertul. de praes ad Hae. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Niss 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. Nos tantum Scripturas sacras habemus plenas inviolatas integras eas vel in purissimo fonte vel in pura translatione bibimus Sal. de Gub. l. 5. Tantummodo sacris Scripturis canonicis hanc ingenuam debeo servitutem quà eas solas ita sequar ut conscriptores earum nihil omnino in eis e●rasse nihil fallaciter posuissè non dubitem August ep 19 ad Jeron Si canonicarum scripturarum authoritate quidquam firmatur sine ulla dubitatione credendum est Aliis verò testibus tibi credere vel non credere liceat August ep cap. 12. these Scriptures which we justly call The Word of God understood in their true sense and meaning we do not own any thing for a ground rule or duty in Religion N●r are we at all moved by those bold triflings and endless janglings about Religion Grace Spirit and Inspirations which weak and vain men looking to their own foolish fancies and not to the divine Oracles do scatter too and fro as chaff to blinde the eyes of simple and credulous people which would make Religion a matter of novelty and curiosity of cavilling meerly and contending of censuring and condemning others of self-confidence and intollerable boastings of sequaciousness and feminine softness of custom onely and paternal example or of ease and idleness where out of a lazy temper neglecting all ordinary means Ministry and duties some men expect by special inspirations and dictates to have their defect of pains and industry supplied Or else they place their Religion in the adhering to some party and faction in popular and specious insinuations and pretensions or in admiration of mens persons and gifts or in the prevailencies of power and worldly successes or in unjust gain and sacrilegious thrift or in great zealotries for some new form and way of constituting disciplining and governing Churches or in boldness to affirm to deny and to do any thing or in meer verbal assurances and loose confidences of being elected and predestinated to happiness of being called to be Saints and Preachers and Prophets in a new and extraordinary way to advance such opinions and practises as no holy men of old ever knew acted or owned for Religious or lastly in railing upon despising and seeking to destroy all those that approve not or follow not those self-conceited confidences and violent extravagancies which some men affect in their rude and unwarrantable undertakings Such were the fanatick mad and at last sad Religion of those Circumcellions of old and those Anabaptists and other later Sects in Germany * Sleidan Com. l. 10. ad an 1535. who wanted nothing but constant successes and continued power to have made all men as wilde and wicked as themselves or else to have destroyed them Alas who sees not how far different and much easier to sinful flesh and blood to vain ambition and proud hypocrisies these pretty soft fallacies these froths and fumes those great swelling words 2 Pet. 2.18 and titles of vanity That God is their Father that they are Saints and spiritual inspired Prophets sent of God to call the World to repentance to reign with Christ Those rotten sensualities of Religion as some blasphemously call it those libidinous excrescencies those lying prophecies c. How much easier I say these are than those humble sober exact and constant tyes of Conscience and duties of true Religion by which holy men and women in all ages have given all diligence to make their
calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 Non est vera aut firma certitud● gloriae sine diligenti industria gratiae Chrys Phil. 2.12 1 Cor. 15.32 I die daily Verè Christum sequi est omnia perpeti indies crucifigi jugiter ●i●ri Prosp 2 Pet. 1.6 1 Pet. 4.18 Non vult Deus ut delicato itinere ad caelum perveniamus Jeron Aut hoc non est Evangelium aut bi non sunt Evangelici Luth. Vana est religio quae sceliri locum facit Aen. Syl. Van● est religio quae vera non est nec vera esse potest nisi certa sit firt●a aequabilis sibi semper constans in omnibus una Tertul. Hoc primum invenimus quod perditissimi sumus nec nisi quaerendo Deum salvari possumus August to work out their salvation with fear and trembling by hearing reading searching and meditating on the Scriptures by repenting fasting praying watching and weeping by examining trying judging and condemning their sinful self even in the most specious and successful actions Thus by mortification and self-denial coming to the Cross of Christ taking it up bearing it and fastning themselves to it as to all just strictnesses holy severities and patient sufferings still endeavoring to abound in all exactness of justice charity meekness temperance and innocency before God and man Thus going with some holy agony through many difficulties the narrow way true Christians having done all enter in at the strait-gate which leads to life and are scarcely saved These were harder disciplines and rougher severities of piety than our delicate novelists our gentle Enthusiasts our smiling Seraphicks our triumphant Libertines our softer Saints can endure which makes them so impatient as Ahab to Eliah and Micaiah to hear and bear the words of faithful and true Ministers which seem as hard sayings when they recommend and urge these Scripturals and Morals of truth and holiness ●ustice mercy and humility Micah 6.8 to be the onely reals of Religion In which the duty rule end comfort and crown of true Religion do consist whose greatest and surest enjoyment is self-denial bringing the lost soul to finde it self lost and to seek after God and having found him to follow him with all obediential love with a pious impatient panting and thirsting after happiness in him by the ways of holiness as having none in Heaven or Earth comparable to him still earnestly pressing toward him as always and onely wanting him in the fullest enjoyments of all things here unsatiably satisfied with his unsurfetting-sweetness ever filled with him yet ever longing more to partake of him The soul in this its excessive thirst and spiritual feaver being confident it can drink up that Jordan that ocean of divine fulness which alone it sees can give it an happy satisfaction to eternity 4. The Souls search after and discoveries of God The devout and pious Soul thus intent to God and content with him is not always sceptically wandring in endless mazes and labyrinths of Religion either groping in obscurities or guessing at uncertainties or grapling with intricate disputes or perplexed with various opinions or shifting its parties or doubting its profession or confounding its morals or dazeling its intellectual eye by looking to prospects of immensity and objects of eternity which are so remote from it and far above it that it onely sees this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys Quod est omni creaturà melius id Deum dicimus Aug. Retract That it can see nothing of that transcendent Good which we call God Who is indeed that superexcellent excellency which we can least know as he is and can no way comprehend in his ineffable essence and most incomprehensible perfections But the Soul in its religious search after and devout applications to this supreme Good which it esteems as its God stayes and solaces it self as Miners do who still follow and chiefly intend the richest Vain with those lesser grains and sparks of divine goodness and beauty which it findes every where scattered in its passage among the Creatures which are as little essays pledges and tokens of that divine glory and excellency which must needs be infinitely more admirable and delectable in God himself The pious which is the onely wise and well advised Soul Habet Deus testimonia totum hoc quod sumus in quo sumus Tert. l. 1. adv Mar. Psal 111.2 Psal 8. Dei opera sunt quotidiana miracula consueta vilescunt Aug. Rom. 1.20 so soon as ever it seriously searcheth after God findes him in some kinde or other every where present and in every thing lovely yea admirable both within and without it self yet still it conceives him to be infinitely above it self and all things Something of God it discovers and accordingly admireth adoreth praiseth loveth and exalteth him in the order goodness greatness beauty variety and constancy of his works which are every day visible something it perceives of his sweetness and delectableness in the sober moderate and holy delectations which our senses afford us when they enjoy those objects which are convenient and fitted for them something it observes of divine wisdom power benignity and justice in the experiences of Gods providence bounty and patience which the histories of all times afford something it discerns of God in those common beams and principles of reason which shine in all mens mindes and are evidenced in the consent of all Nations Amplissin a mer● est bona conscientia Hic murus aheneus c. Prima est bac ultio quod se Judice nemo nocens absolvitur c. Juv. Matth. 1.6 8. If I be a father c. Offer it now to thy Prince c. Tam pater tam pius tam beneficus nemo Tert. de Deo Sometime also in the reflexions terrors or tranquilities of its own and other mens consciences which are as the first Heaven or Hell rewarding the good or punishing the bad intentions and actions of every man More fully it sees God in the manifestations of the divine Word in the exactness of the Moral Law in the rules of Justice given to all men of which their own reason and will is the measure and standard Being commanded to do to other men as we would have them do to us Matth. 7.12 yea and to do to God also in the relations whereby we stand obliged to him for duty love and gratitude as we would have others do to us when we are as fathers or masters or friends or benefactors or well-willers against which to offend is by all men thought most barbarous unjust and wicked how much more against God who hath the highest merit upon us Yet further the Soul searching after God findes his wisdom and prescience in all those prophetical predictions and many prefigurations of things to come Idoneum est divinitatis testimonium veritas divinationis Tert. Apol. c. 20. which from several hands and at several times derived have
banishment prison captivity sickness c. Yet that Christian belief love and charity which such an one bears to Christ and to the Catholike Church of Christ scattered in many places and different in many ceremonial rites and observations These I say do infallibly invest this solitary Christian in communion and holy fellowship with the whole Church of Christ in all the World as brethren and sisters are related as near kinred when they are never so far a sunder in place which owns the same God believes the same common salvation by the same Lord Jesus useth the same seals of the blessed Sacraments Ephes 4.5 Jude 2. professeth the same ground of faith and rule of holiness the written Word of God and bears the like gracious and charitable temper to others as sanctified by same Spirit of Christ which really unites every charitable and true believer to Christ and so to every M●mber of true Church however it may want opportunities to express this communion in actual and visible conversation either civil or sacred by enjoying that society as men or that ordinary ministry as Christians which is by Christ appointed in the Church as well for its outward profession distinction and mutual assistance as for its inward comfort and communion with himself The willing neglect of all such extern communion and the causeless separation from all Church-fellowship in Word Sacraments Prayer Order and charitable Offices must needs be inconsistent with any comfort because against charity and so far against true Religion and the hopes of salvation For those inward graces wherein the life and soul of Religion do consist are not ordinarily attained or maintained but by those outward means and ministrations which the wisdom of God in Christ hath appointed for the Churches social good and edification together In the right enjoyment of which consists that extern and joynt celebration or profession of Christian Religion which gives Being name and distinction to that society which we call The Church of Christ on Earth And this indeed is that Church properly which is called out of the World which as men we may discern and of which both in elder and later times so many disputes have been raised which we may describe to be An holy company or fraternity of Christians who being called by the Ministry of the Gospel to the knowledge of God in Christ do publickly profess in all holy ways and orderly institutions that inward sense of duty and devotion which they ow to God by believing and obeying his Word Also that charity which they ow to all men especially to those that profess to be Christs Disciples and hold communion with his Body the Catholike Church Herein I conceive That the social outward profession of Religion 7. Of the Church as a visible society of Professors believing in Christ. Ea est Catholica ecclesia quae unicam candem semper ubique fidem in Christo veram Scripturis sundatam profitetur V●n Lyrin Eph. 2.9 As Fellow-Citizens of the Saints and of the houshold of God Ye are built upon the Foundation of the Apostles and Prophets Jesus Christ being the chief corner stone c. as it is held forth in the Word of God in its Truths Seals Duties and Ministry makes a true Church among men And the true Church as Catholike yea any part or branch of this true Catholike Church whose Head Foundation Rites Seals Duties and Ministry are for the main of the same kinde in all times and places cannot but make a right profession of true Religion as to the main essence and fundamentals which consists in truth holiness and charity However there may be many variations differences and deformities in superstructures both of opinion and practise For however particular Churches which have their limits of time and place and persons circumstances which necessarily circumscribe all things in this world are still as distinct arms and branches of a great Tree issuing from one and the same root Jesus Christ and have the same sap of truth and life conveyed in some measure to them 1 Cor. 3.12 If any man build upon this foundation gold c. st●bble c. V. 15. If his work be burnt he shall suffer loss but he himself shall be saved Eph. 4.4 There is one Body and one Spirit one Lord one Faith one Baptism c. V. 16. The whole body is fitly joyned together according to the effectual working in the measure of every part c. U●us Deus unam sidem tradidit unam ecclesiam toto orbe diffudit hanc aspicit hanc diligit hanc d●fendit Quolibet se quisque nomine tegat si huic non societur alienus est si hanc impugnet inimicus est Oros 7. c. 35. Joh. 15.2 Every branch in me that beareth not fruit my Father taketh away 2 Pet. 2.1 2 Tim. 2.18 1 Cor. 12.25 That there should be no schism in the body 2 Joh. 9. Whosoever transgresseth and abideth not in the doctrine of Christ hath not God He that abideth in the doctrine of Christ hath the Father and the Son by the same way of the right Ministry of the Word Sacraments and Spirit so that in these respects they are all of one and the same Catholike Body communion descent and derivation yet as these have their external distinctions and severings in time place persons and maners or any outward rites of profession and worship so they usually have distinct denominations and are subject to different accidents as well as proportions Some branches of the same Tree may be withering mossy cancred peeled broken and barren yea almost dead yet old and great and true Others may be more flourishing fruitful clean and entire though of a latter shooting for time and of a lesser extension for number and place yet still of the same Tree so far as they have really or onely seemingly and in the judgement of charity communion with relation to and dependance on the Root and bulk being neither quite broken off and dead by Heretical Apostacies denying the Lord that bought them or damnable errors which overthrow the Faith nor yet slivered and rent by Schismatical uncharitableness proud or peevish rents and divisions Which last although they do not wholly kill and c●op off from all communion with the Church of Christ yet they so far weaken and wither Religion in the fruits and comforts of it as each Schism pares off from its sect and faction that Rinde and Bark as it were of Christian love and mutual charity through which chiefly the sap and juyce of true Religion with the graces and comforts of it are happily and most thrivingly conveyed to every living branch of the Catholike Church so as to make it live at least and bring forth some good fruit however it be not so strong fair and ample as others may be As the Church of Sardis which had a * Rev. 3.1 name to live and was dead in some part and proportion
yet is bid to watch and strengthen the things that remain which are ready to die c. 8. Of the Church as called Catholike See learned Dr. Field of the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In this point then Touching the true Church of Christ in regard of outward profession and visible communion to the touch of which part my design thus leads me I purpose not so far to gratifie the endless and needless janglings of any adversaries of this Church of England as to plunge my self or the Reader into the wide and troubled Sea of controversie concerning the Church Considering that many good Christians have been and still are in the true Catholike Church by profession of that true faith and holy obedience which unite to the Head Jesus Christ and by charity which combines the members of his Body together although they never heard the dispute or determination of this so driven a controversie As many are in health and sound who never were under Physicians hands or heard any Lecture of Anatomy Yea although they may be cut off and cast out of the particular communion of any Church by the Anathemaes and excommunicating sentences of some injurious and passionate Members of that Church yet may they continue still in communion with Christ and consequently with his Catholike Church that is with all those who either truly have or profess to have communion with Christ My purpose is onely to give an account as I have done of true Religion in the internal power of it so also of the true Church as to the external profession of Religion That thereby I may establish the faith and comforts of all sober and good Christians in this Church of England That they may not be shaken corrupted or rent off by their own instability and weakness or by the fraud and malice of those who glory more in the proselytes they gain to fanatick factions by uncharitable rendings from this Church than in any communion they might have in humble and charitable ways with the Catholike Church or any of the greater and nobler parts of it which they most impertinently deny to be any Churches or capable of any order power joynt authority larger government or ampler communion For the Catholike Church of Christ that is Ignat. ep ad Phil. Cypr. de unitate Eccl. Solis multi radii unum lumen August lib. de unitate ecclesiae Et omnes patres Eph. 1.22 Christ the Head over all things to the Church 1 Tim. 3.15 The Church of the living God the pillar and ground of truth Heb. 12.23 The Church of the first-born Tot ac tanta ecclesia una est illa ab Apostolis prima ex qua omnes Tertul. de prae ad Hae. c. 30. Eph. 3.10 21. 5.23 Christ the Head of the Church and the Saviour of the Body V. 32. Christ and the Church Col. 1.18 Christ the Head of the Body the Church 1 Cor. 12. The Body is not one Member but many c. vid● the universality of those who profess to believe in the name of Jesus Christ according to the Scriptures That this is primarily and properly called a Church often in Scripture there is no doubt As the whole is called a Body in its integrality or compleatness of parts and organs whose every limb and part is corporeal too and of the Body as to its nature kinde or essence This Church which is called The Spouse and Body of Christ is as its Head but one in its integrality or comprehensive latitude as the Ark containing all such as profess the true faith of Christ And to this are given as all powers and faculties of nature to the whole man primarily and eminently those powers privileges gifts and titles which are proper to the Church of Christ however they are orderly exercised by some particular parts or members for the good of the whole The essence integrality and unity of this Catholike Church consists not in any local convention or visible communion or publick representation of every part of it but in a mysterious and religious communion with the same God Ecclesia in universum mundi disseminata unam domum habitans unam animam cor os abet Iraen l. 1. c. 3. Eph. 4.4 5. Jude 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Just M. Dial. cum Tryphone by the same Mediator Jesus Christ and to this Mediator Jesus Christ by the same Word and Spirit as to the internal part of Religion also by profession of the same Truth and common Salvation joyned with obedience to the same Gospel and holy Ministry with charity and comly order as to the external In this so clear an Article of our Faith I need not bestow my pains since it is lately handled very fully learnedly and calmly by a godly Minister of this Church of England * Mr. Hudson of the Catholike Church Tot tantae ecclesiae una est illa ab Apostolis prima dum unam omnes praebent veritatem Tert. de prae to whose Book I refer the Christian Reader 9. Of a National Church or distinct and larger part of the Catholick This name of Church being evidently given to the universality of those who by the Ministry of the Gospel are called out of the way of the World and by professing of it and submitting externally to its holy Ministry Order Rules Duties and Institutes are distinguished from the rest of the World It cannot be hard for any sober understanding to conceive in what aptitude of sense any part of this Catholike Church is also called a Church with some additional distinctions and particular limitations visible and notable among men and Christians by which some are severed from others in time place persons or any other civil discriminations of policy and society Which give nearer and greater conveniences as to the enjoyment and exercise of humane and civil so of Christian communion and the offices or benefits of religious relations 1 Cor 1.2 To the Church of God which is at Corinth Acts 13.1 The Chu ch of Antioch 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 14.23 Tit. 1.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 2. 3. Ecclesiam apud unamquamque civitatem condiderunt Apostol● à quibus traducem fidei semina doctrinae caeterae ecclesiae mutuatae sunt Tertul. de Prae. c. 20. Consuetudo est certissima loquendi norma Quin●il The Spirit of God in the Scripture gives sufficient warrant to this stile and language calling that a Church as of Rome Ephesus Corinth Jerusalem Antioch c. which consisted of many Congregations and Presbyters in a City and its Territory or Province So the Apostle Paul in his Epistles to several Churches distinguisheth them by the civil and humane distinctions of place and Magistracy and the Spirit of Christ to the Asiatick Churches calleth each a Church distinctly which were in great associations of many faithful under many Presbyters And these under some chief Presidents Apostles Angels or Bishops residing
pro corum inter quos vivitur societate observandum est Aust Ep. 118. ad Jan. Salvà fidei regula de D sciplina contendentibus suprema lex est Ecclesiae pa● Blondel sent Jeron praef Furthermore The great Motor of some mens passion zeal and activity against this Reformed Church was that one Error against the judgement liberty and practice of all antiquity which is fundamentall as to the Churches polity and extern Peace namely That nothing may be used in the Church as to externals which is not expresly and precisely commanded in the word Which yet themselves observe not when they come to have power either to form and act some things they take in upon prudentiall account as their Church-Covenant of the form and words of which they are not yet agreed which they urge so their requiring each Member to give an account not of the historicall belief of the truth but of the work of grace and conversion which no Scripture requires or Church ever practis'd That of St. Austin hath been often inculcated by many learned quiet and godly men in this Church of England and elsewhere as a most certain truth That however the Faith Doctrine Sacraments and Ministry of the Church are precisely of divine Institution rising from a divine Spring and conveyed in a like sacred Current which ows nothing to the wisdom policy power or authority of man yet the extern dispensation of this Faith Sacraments and divine Ministrations together with the fence and hedge of them the necessary Government Order and Discipline of the Church in its parts and in the whole these doe fall much under the managing of right reason rules of good order and common prudence all which attends true Religion So that they neither have nor needed nor indeed were easily capable of such positive precise and particular precepts or commands as these men fancy and by this pertinacious fancy they have cast great snares on the consciences of many great scandals on the Churches both antient and modern and great restraints on that l berty which Jesus Christ left to his Churches in these things according as various occasions and times might require Sumus homines ci●es cum fimus Ch●istiani Salv. None but foolish and fanatick men can think that when men turned Christians they ceased to be men or being Christian men they needed not still to be governed both as Christians and as men by reason joyned to Religion which will very well agree carrying on Re igious ends by such prudent and proportionate means and in such good order as is agreeable to right reason and the generall directions of Religion which never abandoned or taught any Christian to start at and abhor Naturae l●●en rationis radios non extinguit sed excitat Religio quae non vera tantum sed decora postulat Aust Phil. 4.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Whatsoever things are true honest or comly just pure lovely of good report if any vertue any praise think on these things or meditate with reason and judgement 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what is taught by the very light of nature and those common principles of reason and order or polity which teach the way of all Government and subjection either of yonger to the elder whence is the very ground of all Presbytery or of weaker to the stronger or of the foolisher to the wiser or of the ignorant to the learned or of many to some few for the good of all None of which methods can cross Religion nor being observed in some due measure can be blamed nor ought factiously to be altered by the members of any setled Church in which there is neither Apostacy from the Faith nor recession from the Scriptures nor alteration of the substance of Christs holy Institution which this Church of England not-being guilty of but apparently professing and fully adhering to the Scriptures as the ground rule and limit of Faith and holy Mysteries We doubt not but however it used the wisdom of learned wise and holy men and followed the warrant of the Primitive Churches in the extern maner and methods of holy Administrations Government and Discipline yet it may and ought still as it doth lay claim to the right and honor of an eminent part of the true Catholike Church of Christ having a true Ministry and true Ministrations In which I believe all the Apostles and Primitive Martyrs and Confessors in all Ages would most willingly have owned and approved yea the Great God from Heaven hath attested it and still doth to the consciences of thousands of excellent Christians which have had their birth and growths to Religion in this Church of England So that the out-cryes abhorrencies and extirpations carried on so eagerly against the main constitution frame and Ministry of this Church by many who now appear to be men of little charity and strong passions and very weak reason as if we were all-over Popish Superstitious Antichristian altogether polluted intollerable c. Those calumnies and clamors wanted both that truth that caution and that charity which should be used in any thing tending to disturb or discourage any true Christian or Church of Christ whose differences in some small external things from us in judgment or practice we ought to bear upon the account of those many great things in which we agree with them as Christians Nor ought poor men of private parts and place in Church and State so to swell at any time with the thought of any Liberty and Power in common given them from Christ to reign with him or to reform c. as to drive like tipsy Mariners those rightful Pilots from the Helm or to break their card and compass of antient design draught and form by which they steered as they ought or as they could in the distress of times And this onely That these new undertakers may try how they can delineate new carts or maps and how soon they can over-whelm or over-set so fair rich and goodly a Vessel as this Church of England once was in the eye of all the World but our own This Iland was not more nobly eminent than the Church was great in Britany The leaks chinks and decayes which befal all things in time might easily have been stopped calked and trimmed by skilful and well-advised hands when once it was fairly and orderly brought upon the Publick stocks and into a Parliament Dock which good men hoped of all places would not prove either a quick-sand or a rock to the Reformed Church or the Learned Ministry of England But the Lord is just though we should be confounded in our confidences of men though neither mountains nor hills nor valleys can help yet will we trust in God who is our God in Christ who we doubt not but in mercy will own us with all our frailties and defects as his true Church and true Ministers And if in
semper valuit ut quae cunque ab hoc consensu confirmata videam mihi sacrosancta immutabilia videantur Bishop Carleton de Consen eccles cap. 11. cap. 277. and humble Christians do and ever did the constant clear and concurrent which is the truly Catholick testimony of the Church in which so much of the truth Spirit and grace of God hath alwaies appeared amidst the many cloudings of humane infirmities to be far beyond any meer humane record or authority in point of establishing a Christians judgement or conscience in any thing that is not contrary to the evident command of the written word of God However some mens ignorance and self conceited confidence like bogs and quagmires are so loose and false that no piles never so long well driven and strongly compacted by the consent and harmonious testimonies of the most learned writers in the Church can reach any bottom or firm ground in them whereon to lay a foundation of humane belief or erect a firm bank and defense against the invasion of daily novelties which blow up all and break in upon the antient and most venerable orders practises and constitutions of the Church where ever they are yet continued which being evidently set forth to me by witnesses of so great credit for their piety diligence fidelity harmony integrity constancy and charity I know not how with any face of humanity or Christianity to question disbelieve or contradict Under which cloud of unsuspected witnesses I confess I cannot but much acquiesce and rest satisfied in those things which others endlessly dispute because they have not so literal and preceptive a ground in Scripture Quod universa tenet ecclesia nec consiliis institutum sed semper retentum est non nisi autoritate Apostolica traditum rectissimè creditur August cont Donat. l. 4. In Concil Loodic Melito Episc Sard. missus ut autographa ubique decernat c. Constabit id ab Apostolis traditum quod apud ecclesias fuerit sacrosanctum Tert. ad Mar. l. 4. however they have a very rational exexemplary analogical and consequential authority from thence which is made most clear as to the minde of God by that sense which the Primitive Doctors and Christians who lived with or next to the Apostles had of them and by their practise accordingly in the ways of Religion Thus the Canonical Books of the Scripture especially those of the New Testament which no where are enumerated in any one Book nor as from divine oracle any where commanded to be believed or received as the writings of such holy authors guided by the dictates or directions of Gods Spirit we own and receive as they were after some time with judgment and discretion rejecting many other pretended Gospels and Epistles antiently received by the Catholike Church and to this day are continued So also in point of the Church Government How in right Reason Order and Religion the Churches of Christ either in single Congregations and Parishes or in larger Associations and Fraternities ought to be governed in which thing we see that sudden variations from the Churches constant patern in all ages and places hath lately cost the expence not onely of much Ink but of much blood and have both cast and left us in great scandals deformities and confusions unbeseeming Christian Religion The like confirmation I have for Christians observing the Lords day as their holy Rest or Sabbath to the Lord and their variating herein upon the occasion of Christs Resurrection from the Seventh day or Jewish Sabbath which is not so much commanded by Precept as confirmed by Practise in the Church so in the baptising of the Infants of Christian Parents who profe●s to believe in Jesus Christ onely for the means of salvation to them and their children which after Saint Cyprian Saint Jerom and Augustine affirm to have been the custom of the Catholike Church in and before their days so as no Bishop or Council or Synod began it Cypr. ep ad Fidum Aust ep 28. And no less in this of the peculiar distinct calling order 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Can. Afric in Con. Carth. 1. anno 419. Some things in the Church are setled by Canon others by custom 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Con. Nicoen office and succession of the Ministry Evangelical In all which if the Letter and Analogy of Scripture were less clear than ●t is so that the doctrines of those particulars which are among Christians counted divine were ●ike Vines and Honey-suckles less able to bear up themselves in full authority by that strength and vertue which they receive from the Scripture Precept where undoubtedly their root is and from whence they have grown shooted out so far and flourished in all Churches yet the constant judgment and practise of the Church of Christ which is called the pil●ar and ground of truth are stayes and firm supports to such sweet and usefull plants which have so long flourished in the Church of Christ whose custom may silence perverse disputes of corrupt and contentious minds And indeed doth fully satisfy and confirm both my believe and my religious observation of those particulars as sacred and unal●erable Nor hath any of those things Eucharistia sacramentum non de aliorum manu quā prasidentium sumimus Tertul de Coro Mil. Impositionem manuū qua Ecclesiae mininistri in suum manus initiantur ut non invitus patior vocari Sacramentum ita inter ordinaria Sacramenta non numero Calvin Inst l. 4. c. 14. sect 2. Amb. l. 5. ep 32. ad Valentin Commends that sentence which the Emperours Father had wrote touching judicatories and Judges in Church matters In causa fidei vel Ecclesiastici muneris eum judicare debere qui nec munere impar nec jure dissimilis constanter assero more clear evidence from Scripture or Catholick practice than this of the calling and succession of the Ministry of the Gospell hath wherein some men after due tryall and examination of their gifts and lives made by those who are of the same function and are in the Church indued with a derivable Commission and Authority to ordein an holy succession of men in the Ministry for the Churches use are by fasting prayer and solemn imposition of hands in the presence of the faithfull people publikely and peculiarly ordained consecrated set apart sent and authorised in the power and name of Christ to preach the Gospell to all men to administer the holy Sacraments and respectively to dispense all those holy duties and mysteries belonging to Christian Religion among Christian people that is such as profess to believe that Jesus Christ is the only Saviour of Sinners Which holy and most necessary custom of ordaining some fit men by others of the same function to be Ministers in the Church hath not only the unanimous consent and practise of the Orthodox Christians and purest Churches in all ages from the Apostles times But no Hereticks or Schismaticks who owned any
abilities and willingness would make a Minister of Christ which they will not Certainly no men are so good natured of themselves without hopes of gain or some benefit as of their own good will to undertake and constantly to persevere in so hard and hazardous besides so holy a service as this of holding forth to a vain proud carnal hypocritical Vera cruce digni qui crucifixum adorant Insana religio Cecil Exitiabilis supe●stitio Tacit. Annal. l. 15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Julius Imp. ep 7. 1 Cor. 2.14 Exitiabilis superstitio Author ejus Christus qui Tiberio imperant● per procuratorem Pontiu● Pilatum supplicio affectus Tac. l. 15. Annal. Miranda etiam pudenda credit Christianus cujus fides impudens esse debet Tert. de Bapt. Sacra sacrilegiis omnibus tetri●ra Cecil de Christian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Euseb hist l. 4. c. 14. Else Christian Religion would have failed Multi barbarorum in Christum credunt sine charactere vel atramento scriptum habentes per spiritum in cordibus suis salutem veterum traditionem diligenter custodientes quàm Apostoli tradiderunt iis quibus committebant ecclesias cui ordinationi assentiunt multae gentes Tren l. 4. c. 4. persecuting and devilish world so de picable and ridiculous a doctrine as this of a crucified Saviour at first was and still seems to the natural or onely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rational man unless there were by the wisdom and authority of Christ such ties of duty and calling laid upon some mens consciences as onely the mission and mandate of God can lay upon men who are not naturally more disposed to go on Gods errand than Moses or Jeremy or Jonah were And however now the peace warmth and serenity of times hath made the Ministry of the Gospel a matter of covetousness or popular ambition or curiosity or wantonness to many of these new Preachers who with rashness levity and a kinde of frolickness undertake that work which the best men and Angels themselves would not without much weeping as Saint Austine that day when he was ordained a Presbyter or with fear and trembling undertake yet the rigor and storms of primitive times it is very probable would have quenched the now so forward heats and flashes of these mens spirits When to Preach the Gospel and to preside as a Bishop or Presbyter in the Church was to expose a mans self to the front of persecution to stand in the gap against the violent incursions of malicious men and cruel devils To be a Minister of Jesus Christ was presently to forsake all and to take up the Cross and follow Christ to adopt with holy orders famine and nakedness banishment prisons beasts racks fires torments many deaths in one so that unless there had been divine authority enjoyning power enabling and special grace assisting the Ordainers in the Name of Christ sending and so in conscience binding together with gracious promises of a reward in Heaven incouraging the ordained doubtless the glorious Gospel of mans salvation had ere this been buried in oblivion none had believed that report nor heard of it if none had dared to preach it and none would of his own good will have been so hardy or prodigal of all worldly interests honor liberty safety estate and life as to adventure all needlessly and spontaneously on such a message to others so unwonted so unwelcome so offensive to the ears and hearts of men unless he had been conscious to a spe●ial d●ty laid upon him by divine authority which was always derived in that holy and solemn Ordination which was the inauguration of Ministers to that great and sacred Work This indeed gave so great confirmation and courage to the true and ord●ined Ministers of the Gospel that believing what they preached of a crucified Saviour and knowing whose work it was in whose Name they were ordained by whose power they were sent to how great ends their labors were designed even to save souls they willingly bare the Cross of Christ Acts 5.41 and counted it a crown and honorary addition to their Ministry to be thought worthy to suffer for the Name of Christ that what any of them wanted in the power of miracles was made up in the wonder of their patience when no Armies no State favored them and both opposed them when they had no temptations of getting a better living by preaching than any other way but rather losing of what they had when they expected few applauders of their boldness and forwardness many persecutors and opposers of their consciencious endeavors to do the duty which Christ by the Church had laid on them when they might not grow restive and lazy and knock off when they pleased but a wo and a necessity and an heavy account to be given to the great Pastor of the Church Christ Jesus always founded in their ears and beat upon their mindes These put them upon those Heroick resolutions to endure all things for Christs sake 2 Tim. 2.10 I endure all things for the elects sake c. 2 Cor. 11. 12. Phil. 1. Tit. 1.11 1 Tim. 6.5 Rom. 16.17 I beseech you Brethren mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the doctrine which ye have learned and avoid them Vers 18. For they that are such serve not the Lord Jesus Christ but their own belly and by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple 1 Cor. 4.1 2. John 10.1 2. and the Churches sake and the good of those souls committed to their charge Nor did they remit their care or slacken the conscience of their duty in preaching diligently the Gospel because of the forwardness and seeming zeal of those that were false Brethren and false Apostles who out of envy or spight or for filthy lucre or any vain-glory among Christians set up the trade of preaching upon their own stock of boldness without any mission from Christ or those to whom he had delegated that power to ordain fit and able men Their seeming good will and readiness to preach did not free them from the brand of false Apostles and deceitful workers Satans ministers and messengers sent to buffet not to build the Church Wolves in sheeps clothing serving their bellies and not the Lord Christ or the Churches good whose order and authority they despise Nor can they be faithful to Gods work unless they keep to his word both as to the truths delivered and the order prescribed and the duties enjoyned and the authority established Christ doth not onely provide food for his family but stewards also and dispensers of it who may and must see to give every one their portion in due season rightly dividing the Word of truth There is not onely plenty but order and government in Christs house nothing less becomes the servants of Christ than this sharking and scrambling way of these new men who will snatch and carve for themselves and dispence to others what when
to the glory of God whose infinite and inestimable mercy is hereby set forth to mankinde or more conducing to the honor of Christ in his wisdom love and care for his Church than it is every way most necessary for the common good of those whom the Lord is pleased to call to be his people at any time in any Nation 1 Cor. 1.21 whatsoever whose interest and benefit the Lord Jesus Christ far more considered and so should all good Ministers do in their work than any particular ends or advantages of their own Alas the divinest advancement of true Ministers in this World is their faithful labor their honor must be their cares and studies and fears 2 Cor. 1.23 c. Princeps in praedicando princeps in perpetiendo Bern. their crowns their sufferings and sorrows persecutions and perils contempts crosses and deaths for Christs sake and the Churches welfare But the peculiar benefit and advantage of the Christian flock the faithful people of all sorts is that which is most to be regarded over whom the Lord hath made Ministers overseers not onely at the first plantation of the Gospel as the Socinians say but also in a constant and clear succession of Publick Ministerial Authority for this very purpose That poor people may never be left as sheep without a shepherd Mark 6.24 that they may not either wander up and down in the wildernesses or mountains of their own fancies or be led away by others seductions or be beguiled by the devils wiles and temptations That they may hear and believe and persevere stedfast in the Faith that they may neither be ignorant nor erroneous nor scattered and divided that they may be preserved from rustical simplicity hypocritical formality heretical pravity and schismatical novelty in matters of Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Prov. 29.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies Perire denudare feriari dissipare rebellari retrocedere Buxtorf Isai 30.20 Thy Teachers shall not be removed into a corner any more but thine eyes shall see thy Teachers that they may not perish or be left naked separated scattered idle and rebellious for want of vision thereby sinning against God and their own souls The pregnant significancy of that one word which Solomons wisdom useth hath these swarms or spawnings of several senses All which variety shews That the state of common people is never more desperate than when their Seers fail when their Teachers are removed into corners when God sends them no Preachers or Prophets after his own heart when people are not onely without light but put it out quenching the Lamps of the Sanctuary and loving darkness more than light when they are given up to their own delusions and others seductions who blindly follow the visions of their own hearts and the Prophets of their own sending or the Ministers of their own ordaining whom they shall have no cause to credit esteem love or obey as finding no competent gifts Ministerial in them no Characters of divine Authority or holy Succession upon them Ezek. 3.17 Heb. 13.17 They watch for their souls c. People will easily be surprised when they have no watchmen to foresee give warning prevent and encounter any dangers of sins errors and temptations which easily surprise the generality even of Christians who are for the most part so busied and incumbred or so pleased and ensnared or so burthened and oppressed with the secular and sensible things of this world that they can hardly watch one hour with Christ no not in his agony if they had not some Ministers divinely appointed to put them in remembrance to stir up their affections to provoke them to piety to prepare them for eternity both instructing them in the Faith and praying for them that their Faith may not fail Nothing indeed is more deplorable and desperate than the condition of mankinde yea and of any part of the Church of Christ would be if the Lord had not commanded and by a special providence continued an holy constant succession of the Ministers of the Word and Sacraments who may be always either planting or watering or pruning and so according to the several proportions of Christians still preserving the truth life and power of Religion so as it may descend to after ages For there is no doubt 1 Cor. 1.21 It pleased God by the foolishness of Preaching to save them that believe but without this holy and happy Succession of Ministers either people would ever persist in their original ignorance and heathenish sottery or although once planted with piety yet they will soon relapse to barbarity Atheism and unbelief or at best content themselves with idle formalities spiritless superstitions empty notions mouldy traditions lying legends plausible fancies novel inventions vain imaginations or most desperate errors and damnable doctrines which is evident by the experience as of former so of these times where few of those that have cast off and despised the lawful and true Ministry of this Church but either give over all Religion or else think themselves capable every night to dream a new and better way of serving God and saving mens souls than ever yet was used This natural tendency to Apostatize from truth 18. As all Christians subject to Errors and Apostacies so none more than here in England Anglorum ingenia sunt aut varia mobilia superstitionibus vaticiniis dedita aut feroci quadam pertinacia aspera contumaciter superba Bodin Lansius Phil. Com. to relapse to profaneness to rest in hypocrisie to run out to extravagancies or to persist in errors no people under Heaven are more subject to than those of this Nation England whom as God hath blest with a land flowing with milk and honey so they have much of the iron sinew and stiffneckedness of the Jews for being full fed they are also full of high and quick spirits various and vehement fancies finding out and running after many fashions and inventions Don Gundamor who had much studied the English temper and knew how their pulse beat both in Church and State was wont to say He despaired not of those violent changes here in England which in no other Nation could be expected who are generally content with their customs and constant to their principles whereas the English are always given to change to admire novelties and with most inconsiderate violence to pursue them So that no Nation or Church under Heaven have more need then of constant learned able and honest Ministers who may shew them guide and keep them in the good right and safe way of true Religion From which none are more easily seduced than those that have either a sequacious softness and credulity toward other men as divers of us have or an high conceit and confidence of themselves which people much at ease rich and high fed as many in England are most subject to Insomuch that we see the greatest dis●ase as to Religion now
their pretended gifts Vasa quo ina●iora eo sonuntiora Vulgus hominum quae non in●elligunt impensius nio antur Jeron Males amorum Christianorum ut phreneticorum hominum delirantium illud proprium est Sibi semper adblandiri de se suisque magna polliceri jactabundi de Thesauris suis divitiis cum sint pauperimi se reges somniant ostentant cum vincti caess laceri sint vel uno hoc miserrimi quod sui ipsorum non miscreantur Erasmus Quartâ Lunâ nati plerunque moriones Lunatici Cardan shewing they are very full of themselves puffed up with their own leven applauded also by some others and blown up by people of their own size who are as prone to flatter confident talkers and undertakers as Children are to fill empty bladders with wind Pint-pots wi l cry up one anothers capacity and fulness till they are set neer or compared and emptyed into quart or gallon vessels 'T will then appear though they were soon full and ran over yet they held but little and are soon exhausted These Behemetick Preachers Spagyrick-Illuminates Familistick Prophets and Seraphick Teachers who pretend to such strange Prerogatives of gifts and new Lights above all other Christians yea and beyond the ablest Ministers like frantick men alwaies bosting of their riches strength treasure beauty c. amidst their sordid necessities If a wise man come neer them he shall find that as to any true light of good learning or sound Religion they are as dark and dusky as if they had been begotten in the Eclips of the Sun and born in the last quarter of the Moon In good earnest I wish I could find any just cause by their speech or Pamphlets to set my hand to those ample testimonials which these gifted men every where give of themselves and their party I have no envy at their parts nor ill will against any of their persons nor have I suffered or at least am not sensible of any particular injury from any of them So that I can without any passion or partiality profess that I never yet perceived any such sparks of eminent gifts either in reason or Religion as renders them either envyable or any way considerable in comparison of those Ministers whom they list to cry down 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isoc Magno conatu nugas nihil agunt Portentiloquia fanaticorum Iraen Et sana sanantia verba 2 Tim. 4.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and disparage Poor men they are indeed admirable but not Imitable for a kind of chimicall Divinity which after much pains and puffing vapours into smoke They are rare for odd expressions and phantastick phrases instead of the antient Scripture forms of wholesome words Nothing is more wonderfull as monsters are than their affected raptures wild speculations and strange expressions imagining that none sees their folly because they shut their own eyes and soar above the common mans capacity in specious nonsense and calling those glorious Truths which are sottish vanities or shamefull lyes What honest hearted Christian can bear the filthy and unsavory expressions of some of these Anti-ministeriall Ranters Shakers and Seekers their metaphysicall mincings of Blasphemy their ridlings of Religion their scurrilous confounding of the Incomprehensible excellencies of God of the Lord Jesus Christ and of the Blessed Spirit with the nature of any creature never so mean and sordid that to them it s no wonder if the Egyptian found so many Gods in his Garden as he had Leeks and Onyons or Frogs and Toads Thus amusing their poor and silly auditors with high blasphemies Felices gentes quibus haec nascantur in hortis Numina Juv. Non credentium sed credulorum non sanctorum sed insanorum non illuminatorum sed delirantium Theologia Iraen and most obscure extravagancies Such of old were the rare speculations inventions and expressions of the Valentinians Their Buthi Aeones Syzugiai Pseudevangelia Pleromata conceptio spiritualis umbra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And a thousand such blasphemous whimsyes which Irenaeus tels of in his times So that their Dungeon-like Divinity and Mid-night Doctrines instead of fair explications of Truth by Scripture reasonings and the demonstration of the Spirit therein are rather like Hedge-hogs when they are handled they wrap themselves up into such prickly intricacies as makes them not only useless ugly and untractable but hurtfull and scandalous to sober Christians and all true Religion which these fellows dress up with their foul fingers as Black-Smiths would do fine Ladys fullying all they touch while they would seem to adorn Certainly If spirituall gifts and prophecying of old had been such ordinary stuff such raw and rude conceptions such short thrums and broken ends of Divinity such ridiculous and incoherent dreams such senseless and sorry confusions as some of these Familisticall fancies usually bring forth either extempore or premeditated I do not believe the wisdom of the Apostle would have bid Christians either covet it 1 Cor. 14.1 39. 1 Thes 5.20 or not despise it Both which precepts import that such prophecyings as were of old and are only fit to be used in the Church Merito contemnendi sunt isti nugivenduli Prophetae qui-Ministerii Evangelici contemptores fastuosissimi nihil tamen ipsi prof●runt praeter nugas nugacissimas mera delmia Zanch. had and ought to have such tokens of excellency and worth in it for the edifying of Christians as may induce wise and good Christians both to esteem it and desire it of which sort I think these presumptuous Propheciers find but a few either to follow them or desire them which is not the least cause of their great envy and indignation against those excellent Ministers who so much stand in their light as far out-shining them in all reall abilities gifts and graces they still retain the best and wisest of the people in some fair degree of order and discretion which forbids them to choose the figs of these new Enthu●asts which are very bad before those of their antient Ministers which are very good between whom indeed nothing but extreme ignorance or ranting prophaness can make any comparison Nor will their lowd 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bostings of rare discoveries 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Profanas vocum novitates affectant qui antiquas doctrinarum veritates deserunt Aust In aliquibus splendor est de putredine Verulam 2 Tim. 3.7 admirable inventions and singular manifestations salve their credit or long serve their turn For what are their rarities and novelties but either old Truths in new tearms purposely translated by such brokers of religion out of the old forms of sound words or else some putrid errors long ago buried which these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 searchers of the graves of old heretiques newly light upon and take for some rare hidden treasures Their splendid fancies like chips of rotten wood may shine for a while and
strength of any part in its place and proportion doth not make it usurp the place or execute the Office of any other nobler part 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist The measure of every part is the beauty and safety of the whole which cannot in naturall and ought not in Religious Bodies which are Churches be fitly disposed but only in such a way as God hath appointed for the daily forming building and well-ordering of his Church by such wisdom and Authority as Christ established in it Of which the Apostles and the Churches after them give us most evident testimony But to avoid destructive delusions But we must not be deluded either with the devils fulgurations and flashes or his transfigurations and disguises We must not forsake or stop up Gods fountains of living waters by digging the devils ditches Luke 10.18 I saw Satan fall like l●ghtning from Heaven 2 Cor. 11.14 Satan himself is transformed into an Angel o● l ght I a. 1.13 Eccl. 5.1 and wells which hold no water nay we may not wash our hands at the Devils Cistern to fit them for Gods service Nor may we take water from his troubled muddy and poysonous streams to water the plants of Christs Church We may not take strange fire from Satans Altar to kindle the sacrifices of God What need we cut off Dogs necks and offer swins bloud when we have so many clean beasts which are appointed for acceptable services that we shall not need any such vain oblations which are but the sacrifices of fools who consider not that they do evill nor look to their feet when they go to the house of God being as ready to stumble and fall and discover their nakedness and shame as they are forward to ascend to the altar of the Lord upon the steps of pride and presumption Exod. 20.26 which were forbidden to be made The humble heart being alwaies most welcom to God while others in vain arrogate to themselves power to perform those things which are not required at their hands Lev. 10.3 God hath said he will be sanctified of all these who come nigh to him in his publike service which is done not only by that inward sanctification of the heart by faith fear and reverence toward God but also by that exact observation of such rules of order power and Authority which he hath set who alone could do it in the publike way of his worship and service before the Sons of men We must not be such Children in understanding as to allow all to be gold which glisters when it will not endure the Touch-stone of Gods word Cai●itae Judae ●r●di●or● Evangelium o●●entabant Ophitae angelum in omni imunditie assistentem dicebant invocabant Hanc esse perfectionē aiebant sine tremore in tales abire operationes quas ne nominare fas est Iren. l. 1. c. 35. Nulla enoris secta jam contra Christi veritatē nisi nomine cooperta Christia●● ad pugnandum p●●silire audet Aust Ep. 56. or the probation of the Churches judgment We may not easily think that Gods Spirit in any private men runs counter to that holy order and clear Institution which the undoubted Spirit of God hath clearly set forth in the Scriptures and which the Church in all ages hath observed in the way of an ordeined authoritative Ministry All other or later inventions may well be suspected to be but Satans stratagems and devices There may be so many vermine crawling in a dead body as may make it seem to live and move when yet there is no true Spirit of life or Soul in it So it is no wonder if the various impulses wherewith mens secret and corrupt lusts stir them make some shew as if diviner gifts and endowments agitated them When indeed they have no other ayms or interests than such as Judas Iscariot or Symon Magus might have or those after Hereticks the Gnosticks Maniches and Montanists c. Who almost that had any shew of gifts or parts ever did mischief in the Church without great prefacings of holy and good intentions and pretensious of gifts and the Spirit of God There may be gifted Hypocrites devout devils angelized Satans Be mens gifts never so commendable if they want humility in themselves Miserrimis instabilibus fabulis tantam elationem assumpseruat ut meliores scipsos reliquis prasumpserunt Irenae l. 1. c. 35. de Caynitis Ophitis Judaeitis and charity to others which are the beauties of all endowments if they are puffed up seek themselves walk disorderly run unexamined unappointed unordained in scandalous and undue wayes they are nothing either as to private comfort in themselves or publick benefit to the Church The presumption and disorder of their example doth more hurt as the influence of some malignant stars in a Constellation than the light of their gifts can do they corrupt more than they either direct or correct If any of these Prophets or gifted men be indeed so able for the work of the Ministry that religion may suffer no detriment by them and people may have just cause to esteem them highly for their work sake God forbid they should not have the right hand of fellowship all incouragement from my self and all that desire to walk as becomes the Gospell when they are found upon just tryall fit to be solemnly ordeined set apart and sent forth with due authority to that holy service in Gods name let them be sent forth with good speed If they disdain this method of Ministeriall office and power which hath been setled by Christ and continued to this day in his Church which no wise humble and truly able Christian can with reason modesty or with conscience justly do but they will needs obtrude themselves upon the Church and crowd in against the true Ministers they may indeed be as sounding Brass and tinckling Cimballs fit rattles for Children or for the labouring Moon or for a Country Morice-dance and May-pole Nec veritate seneri nec charitate frugi●eri Greg. but they will never be as Aarons Pomegranates and golden Bells usefull Ornaments to Gods Sanctuary in words or works or any way becomming the Church of Jesus Christ which is as the woman clothed with the Sun the light of Truth and the lustre of holy Order And hath the Moon under her feet Rev. 12. not only all wordly vanities and unjust interests but also all humane inventions and novelties which have their continuall variations wainings disorders darknesses and deformities whereas Divine Institutions are alwayes glorious by the clear beams of Scripture-precept and the constant course of the Churches example Both which have held their Truth and Authority in the blackest nights of persecution wherein no untried and unordeined intruder was ever owned for a true Minister of holy things in any setled and incorrupted Church of Christ No more than any man shall be accounted an Officer or Souldier in an Army who hath not
Institutions upon Scripture grounds although we find them to have been led Captive and a long time deteined Prisoners by any unrighteousness policy superstition tyranny covetousness or ambition in the Walls and Suburbs of Babylon Though tares were sown among the good Seed in the Field of the Church while men slept yet we must not be such wasters as to destroy the Corn with the weeds or to refuse both because we like not one Though our Fathers ate sour grapes and our teeth were an edge we must not therefore pull all our teeth out of our heads Divine institutions are incorruptible nor can any corruption of mens minds or matters cease on them any more than * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vt Aurum ●t ge●●a it● res Divi●● non corrump●nt●● quamvis opprimuntur non vitiantur natura quum polluntur consuetudine Non rei ipsae ut nec veritas erroribus sed nos malè utendo pucrescimus Eras putrefaction on the Sun beams when it shines on a Carkass or Dunghil We may be corrupted but holy Ordinances are like God alwaies the same when restored to their Primitive Institution which is their State of Integrity Riches and honour are not unwelcom though they descend to men from unworthy Ancestors Nor should Religion so far as its title is good by the word of God either in strickt precept and institution or in prudence joyned with piety and decency Good pictures will recover the beauty when the soyl is washed off In a word we retain the truth faith holy mysteries Catholick orders constant Ministry and commendable manners which the later Romanists have derived and continued from the first famous Church in that place nor do we think it either conscience or prudence to deprive our selves of any thing Divine though delivered to us by the less pure hands of men or to cast away the provision which God sends us though it be by Ravens or to Anathematise all the Romish Church ho●ds of saving Truths because it hath in the Councill of Trent Anathematised some Truths The Bishops of Rome were alwaies more cunning than to abrogate or cast away those essentials the main foundations and pillars of true Christian Religion as the word the Sacraments the Ministry and Government of the Church on which they knew the vast moles and over grown superstructure of the Pontifician pomp profit pride reputation policy and power through the credulity Vt in reficiendis domibus sic i● moribus non destruenda omnia sed repu●ganda non diruenda sed res●cienda Ber. Ep. ad Abb. of peop●e and blind devotion of most men in these Western Churches was built and sustained Nor can any thing more contribute to the Popes depraved content or repair his particular interest in this Western world than to see any so heady rash and mad Reformers as shall resolve to quarrell with and to cast quite away all those things of Christian Religion which ever passed through the hands of the Romish Church or any other never so erronious and superstitious He well knows how meager a Sceleton how miserable a shadow Christian Religion must needs remain to those furious and fanatick Reformers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. Ep. Eudox● Being as much reduced to poverty and meer nothing in the very essentials of Christianity both for Doctrine Duties Sacraments Scriptures order and manners as it would be in the matter of maintenance and Church Revenews where some mens covetous and cruell Reformation is resolved if they may have their will to leave nothing to maintain Religion or its Ministry but the meer scraps of arbitrary and grudging contributions Such will our Religion be if we reject all that was used by those who abused many things and we must af●er only adhere to the beggery of Seekers attending new Instructions from Heaven instead of following antient Christian and Catholick Institutions Certainly Church Reformations 3. Of Church Reformations with moderation and charity 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato de leg 3. Nothing is just but what was wisely moderated in things Religious should be carried on with all acurate strictness and rigor in clear points of saving truths and in things of divine Institution so confessed by all yet also with much charity candor moderation and discretion toward any Christians in other things wherein we must differ from them Yet no further than they seem to us to derogate from the truth and word of God and so become detrimentall to mens souls It is a commendable Schism which separates the Corn from the chaff and the Gold from the Dross neither retaining both in a confusion nor casting away both in a passion In thus doing all things with meekness of wisdom Christians may not only be able upon sober and judicious grounds from Scripture and the Catholick consent of the Fathers to maintain what they do as wise Reformers of abuses but also the better invite others to embrace and to approve our ●ust and well-tempered Reformation in the unpassionate purity whereof others will the easier see as in a smooth and true Glass their yet remaining spots and deformities Reformation of Churches is best done not by cutting off the head of Religion but by taking off those masks and visards which hide its face and beauty Men will best see their errors not by force pulling their eyes out of their heads but by fairly taking away the motes or beams of prejudice error and pertinacy which are in their eyes which hinder them not from seeing at all but from seeing so we l as we in truth think they may and in charity wish they would 1 Thes 5.21 Plato 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moderation is the medium between the excess and defect Neither taking nor refusing all but trying all and hold●ng the good True Reformation free from Schism By this shield of moderation and charity proving all things and retaining what is good in all with our pitty and prayers for any Christians wherein we think they erre as differing therefore from us because from the rule which God hath set for his Church in things pertaining to Divine worship we justly defend our selves in this and other reformed Churches that are of the same temper and charity in their Reformations from the sin and scandall of Schism when we fairly and freely declare that we separate no further from the Church of Rome or any other particular Church or Christian man than we are by the word of God perswaded that they separate from Christs holy rule and from the custom and Doctrine of the Catholick Church whose bounds and marks are the samenes of divine truths and the unity of the Spirit in Charity which we retain to all Christians as far as such with whom while we desire such communion of true faith holy order and obedience together with love as they do with Christ and all true Christians we cannot in our own consciences nor other mens censures be esteemed Schismaticks as the Novatians and
the Lord to the Church and set apart or Consecrated by the Church to the Lords speciall service 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 13. to serve the Lord and the Church in holy publick ministrations as the Apostles first did into whose order Mathias was by Lot chosen to supply the place of Judas Iscariot Acts 1. To which end Ministers in an holy Succession have ever been placed over the people in the name of Christ by the power of his Holy Spirit yet Good Ministers disdain not to be reckoned among Gods People as children of the same Spirituall Father and brethren in the same Family or houshold of Faith nor will any humble Christians being not in holy orders affect to be called Clergy men by a confusion of language or disdain to be called Gods commons or Lay-men which hath a sober Christian and charitable sense in the dialect of those Christians who know how to call and account their true Bishops and Ministers as Fathers Instructers Overseers and Guides of the Church c. These names then or distinctive titles do but fairly follow according to the use and nature of words and decently express those things which the mind of Christ in the Scripture and all Custom or use of the Church have distinguished for order sake De verbis contendere non est curare quomodo error veritate vincatur sed quomodo tua dictio alterius dictioni praeferatur Aust de doct Christ l. 4. c. 28. Quid est conte●tiosius quam ubi const●t d●re certare de nomine ●ust cp 1. 74. De verbis syllabis intemperantius litigare solent qui res ipsas Ecclesia p●cem negligunt Sub 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 umbra 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suam occult●re dissimulare student quod et Arrianorum pertina● astuti● olim fecit Amb. lib. de fide Jeron de Arrian Hyp. Insignis est indolis in verbis verum amare non verba Aust Sic vigeat humilitas ut non minuatur Autoritas Aust 1 Cor. 12.23 Error est bonestu● magnos in loquendo duces sequi Quintil. Orat. Inst l. 1. c. 6. The same supercriticall men will boggle at the words Trinity Three Persons and Sacraments which are not in the letter but in the sense and truth of the Scripture And certainly no religion forbids us to adopt convenient and compendious words to the Churches use since we do safely translate the whole originall Scriptures to any ordinary languages in which most Christians may best use them not in the literall words but in the Intellectuall sense or mind of God A strife about words and syllabicall scruples fits only women or children or peevish passionate men As the Arrians of old who caviled much at the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whose syllables were new but their sense old orthodox and sound expressing the same divine Nature in Christ the Son with the Father and that our Emanuel who was born of the virgin Mary was both God and Man But this quarrel about names and words is a very tedious impertinency to those Christians whose serious piety studies only this by apt and usuall words to comprehend and express the truths and orders of Religion who are ready alwayes so to give to each other the right hand of Charity and Unity as members of the same body whose head is Christ as yet to preserve that order and authority in the Church which is divinely Instituted and is as necessary for the Church as it is for the body to have head eyes and mouth distinct from other parts of less honour yet not less usefull in their place As for this pretended grievance then of these words Clergy and Laity We desire not to quarrell farther with our Adversaries and we shall not need to dispute with others that are wise and humble only we pitty the simplicity of people who are thus easily cheated and scared by some sophistry when they are told by their great scrupulosity and censorian gravity that words are as bad as Spels that what ever tearms or Names are not in the Scriptures as they have them translated are not the speech of Canaan but the language of the beast Thus these severe Momusses Thus the Antiministeriall factors for error ignorance and confusion These are among the other small artifices used by those miserable Rabbyes who to ingratiate with the vulgar and lead d●sciples after them are content to take away the antient marks of bounds and known distinction of names between Minister and People that so people may take the greater confidence to cast quite away both the name and thing the holy Ordination with all distinction of Office and Function Ministeriall in the Church which if I can solidly maintain against these underminers of Religion despisers of Ordination and vastators of all true ministry I doubt not but I and others may still use these Names of Clergy and Laity without sin or scandall to any sober and good Christians To the main therefore of the Objection which is made against the vertue and efficacy of Ordination 16 Prophane minds prone to cavil at all holy mysteries aswel as the Ordination of Ministers 2 Pet. 3.4 by the Catholick and Antient way of Bishops and Presbyters which they so slight I answer That at the same rate of prophane and Atheisticall reasonings they may as well dispute as Julian would have done and those Scoffers daily do which are foretold should be in the later dayes What vertue is there in the water of Baptism more than any other by which to regenerate a sinner to wash away sins to seal comforts to confer grace to represent the blood of Christ of which a man may meditate every time he sees any water or washeth his hands Hence the mean esteem and contempt indeed with proud and presumptuous Catabaptists have against that holy Mysterie of Baptism which all Churches in all ages have used with reverence and comfort according to Christs Institution and the Apostolicall custome So also the spirituall pride of those prophane Cavillers will argue what efficacy can there be in the Bread and Wine at the Lords Supper more than in other of the same Elements at our ordinary Tables and in every Tavern What doth the form of Consecration by the words of Christ and prayers add to them or alter them Nay since the blasphemous boldness of proud and wicked men will count nothing of outward form sacred no wonder if by the same contradictive spirit they quarrel at not only the Humanity or flesh but also the Majesty and divinity of our Saviour Jesus Christ and seeing the outward meanness poverty and ingloriousness of his life and death many of them scarce own him for a Saviour or for the true Messias And no further than is agreeable to their Seraphick fancies Against whom Irenaus d sputes by which they labour after the like fondness of some in antient times to
of those strange speculations those unwonted notions those pretty legerdemaines in Religion which some men a● Juglers study more than any solid trade of Piety they are hardly able to know a long time where they are as to true Religion or to find and owne any faire path of holy Truth and Order which might lead them out of that Fooles paradise wherein some men take delight to lose themselves and others 2. False and proud pretentions of the Spirit The ordinary Sophistry and craft when men want solid ground and true Principles of right Reason Order Law and Justice of Scripture Precept and holy examples from Christ or any truly gracious Christians whereby to justifie their opinions or practises their * Transgressor p●aecepti Dominici spurios sibi sociat Spiritus ad aerendo eis unus efficitur Daemon Bern. Ser. Ben. Ab. retreat is as Foxes when eagerly hunted to hide and earth themselves in this The spirit hath taught and dictated these things to them or impulsed and driven them upon such and such ways which are in congruous uncomely unwonted to and inconsistent with either the Catholick Ten t s or Examples generally held forth in the Church of Christ according to the plain sense and tenor of the Scriptures * The Fryers Mendicant p etended they had a fifth Gospell which they called the Aeternum Evangelium this they preached and defended saying the old Gospels must be abolished and theirs received Mat. Paris an 1154. Nauclerus an 1●54 This is done with the same falsity yet gravity and confidence as Mahomet perswaded the credulous Vulgar by the help of Sergius a Monk that his fits of Falling-sickness and the device of his Pigeon coming to his Ear where he had accustomed to feed it were Monitions and Inspirations which he had from God by his Blessed Spirit * Whose hypocriticall sanctity G●ilielmus De Sancto Amore vir doctrina pietate illustris opposed Pope Alex. 4. caused their blasphemous book to be burnt Platina Vit Al. 4. Just as weak and confused Writers of Romances having not well laid the plot and design of their Fancifull story are wont to relieve their over venturous Knights with unexpected enchantments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which salve all inconveniences superate all hyperbolies and transcend all difficulties as well as all rules of Reason or Providence So many men defective in their Intellectuall Morall and gracious Principles of true and sound Religion which all sober Christians own to be derived from and directed only by the holy Scriptures both in Faith and Manners they presently pretend the Spirit to be Patron of their most extravagant fancies and deeds the Deviser of their most incredible opinions the Dictator of their most indemonstrable dreams which no Jew or credulous Greek or Gypsy would ever beleive nor any man who were not willing to depose his reason and to suffer a rash and fancifull credulity to usurp the Throne and Soveraignty of his Soul This in generall I may reply to all those that forsake ordinary Precepts and follow New Revelations or pretend the speciall motions of the Spirit against the constant Rules and Institutions of Christ in the Word and I may tell it upon grounds of far greater certainty both of Reason and Religion than any of them can assure me or any man that they have these speciall impulses and graces of the Spirit beyond others who walk in the ordinary way of means and received methods of Christian Religion 1 Joh. 4.1 First discovery by the Word of God V. 3. First We are forbidden to beleive every Spirit because the Spirit of Antichrist may pretend to the Spirit of Christ we are commanded to try the Spirits whether they be of God or no we are told that every spirit which confesseth not that Christ is come in the flesh is not of God but is of that Spirit of Antichrist which is to come into the world as Christ foretold many should come in his Name and say loe here is Christ and there is Christ But beleive them not Mat. 24.23 What I pray doth more deny the coming of Christ in the flesh that is by a visible way of the Ministry to his Church in his person and in his succession then to say he is gone away again without taking any Order or leaving any Command or Institution for his Worship and Service to be continued in the Church by which his first coming might be made known in Preaching the Gospell and confirmed by the Seals of the Sacraments to his Church To say that Christ is so come now in the Spirit here and there by speciall Inspirations that he never came in that other old way of the outward and Ordained Ministry of Word and Sacraments hath so much of the spirit of Antichrist as it is against the evident testimony of the Word of Christ against the practice and the command of the Apostles and against the Catholick custome of the Church of Christ which hath always thus set forth and witnessed the first coming of Christ and must ever doe so till his coming again Which second coming onely shall put a period to the Word Sacraments and that true Evangelicall Ministry which now is by Christ Ordained in the Church As the first coming of Christ did to the Leviticall Priesthood and Ministry by Sacrifices c. We know That as the Illuminating Spirit of God guideth the humble 2. Joh. 16 13. Ioh. 17.17 Sanctifie them through thy truth thy Word is truth meek and industrious souls into all saving necessary Truths so these Truths are confined to and contained in the compasse of those which are already once revealed to the Church by the Spirit in the Word of God and which are by the Ministry of the Church dayly manifested and in this way are sufficient to make the man of God perfect to salvation 2 Tim. 3.17 Which is that one anointing from Christ and the Father which hath lead the Church into all truth by the sure Word which the Apostles taught and wrote so that no Christians have need that any man by any other spirit or as from this Spirit should teach them more or other as to salvation 1 Joh. 2.27 They that gape to heaven for the Manna of speciall Revelations when they are not in the Wildernesse but in the Canaan of Christs true Church may easily starve themselves or feed on the wind and ashes of fancifull presumptions while they neglect and despise the ordinary provisions God hath made in his Church It is clear that whatsoever is said or done beyond or against this written Word of Christ and surest rule of the Church is to be accounted no other then apocryphal lying vanities and damnable hypocrisies * Hoc prius c●edimus non esse ultra Scripturas quod credere debeamus Nobis curiositate non op●● est post Christum nec inquisitione post Evangelium Tertul. de prae ad Hae. c. 3. No
Spirit of Christ abstracts any mans faith from the Word or carries his practise against the Truth Order and holy Institution which Christ hath setled in his Church For it is most sure by all experience that the holy Spirit teacheth those Scripture saving-Truths by the ordinary methods and orderly means which the Wisdom of the same Spirit in Christ hath appointed to be used in the Ministry of the Church Ephes 3.10 Ephes 4.12 which who so proudly neglects and so despiseth Christ in them he may tempt grieve and resist the Spirit of God but he will never find the comfort of the Spirit in his unwarranted extravagancies which are but silly delusions and baby-like novelties having nothing in them of Truth Holinesse or religious Excellency beyond what was better known believed and expressed before in words and deeds by a far better way Christians ought never to turn such children and fools as to think Religion is never well unless it be in some new dresse and fashion of unwanted expressions and strange administrations we think that the Spirit of God teacheth all humble constant and exact obedience to the Word of God without any dispensation to any men at any time in things of Morall duty and Divine Constitution or Order according to the severall relations and religious capacities of Christians no reall sufficiency of gifts or graces doth justifie any Christian in any disorderly and unruly course of acting or exercising his supposed Inspirations in the Church no more then they doe in the Civill Offices of State Nor are these motions any thing of Gods speciall call in regard of the outward Order and Policy of the Church where the ordinary way of Calling Admitting Ordaining and sending forth right Ministers may be had in the Church 3. The vanity of of their wayes compared to the Word Be these impulses of the Spirit never so great yet they put no good Christian upon idlenesse or presumption so as not to use the ordinary means of study hearing reading meditating conferring praying and preparing c. Nor shall he either preserve or increase or profitably exercise any such gifts without study industry and preparatory pains which are the means by which God blesseth men with that Wisdome Truth Order and Utterance which are necessary for the Churches good The liberall effusions of some mens tongues their warm and tragicall expressions where there is something of Wit Invention Reading Method Memory Elocution c. in the way of Naturall and acquired Endowments alas these are no such rare gifts and speciall manifestations of Gods Spirit which these Anti-ministeriall men have so much cause to boast of There may be high mountains of such gifts ordinary and extraordinary as in Judas the Traitor which have no dews of grace falling on their barrennesse Nor are these boasters of Inspirations manifested yet either as equall or any way comparable to most true Ministers in any sort by any shewes of such gifts for the most of which they are beholding to Ministers labours and studies with whose heifer these men make some shift to plough the crooked and unequall furrows of their Sermons and Pamphlets A little goes a great way with these men in their supposed Inspirations and where they cannot goe far on they goe round in circling Tautologies snarled repetitions intricate confusions which are still but the same skains of thread which other men have handsomely spun and wound up in better method and order which these men have neither skill nor patience fairly to unfold but pull out here a thread and there an end which they break off abruptly to the confounding of all true Methods of Divinity and Order of found Knowledge The composednesse and gravity of true Religion in Publique especially admits least of extravagancies and uncomelinesse Haeretico conversatio quam futilis terrena humana sine grauitate sine autoritate sine disciplina Tertul. adv Haer. which dissolve the bonds or exceed those bounds by which Christ hath fitly compacted the Church together in a sociall way giving every part by a certain order and allowance established as the Standard in his Church that * Eph. 4 16. measure and proportion which is best for the whole This place and calling every Christian ought to own and to attend keeping within due bounds till God enabling and the Church so judging and approving of his abilities he be placed and imployed in some way of Publique service into which to crowd and obtrude a mans selfe uncalled and unordained regularly by the Church doth not argue such great motions of the Spirit which like strong liquor cannot be kept in any vessell but only evidenceth the corrupt spirits the violent lusts and the proud conceits which are in mens Hearts Certainly all Gifts Graces and Influences of Gods Spirit in truly gracious and humble hearts are in all Motions Habits and Operations as conform to the Scripture which are the Canon of Truth Peace and Order in the Church as any right line is to that rule by which it is drawn or as figures cast in the same stamp and mould are exactly fitted to one another The Truth of the Word and Graces of Gods Spirit cannot be separated or opposed any more than heat can be parted in the Sun from its light or its beams crosse one another in crooked and oblique angles It is no better Austin de Unit. Ecclesiae c. 16. Non dicant ideo verum esse quia illa vel illa miribilia fecit Donatus vel Pontine vel quilibet alius aut quia ille frater n●ster vel illa soror nostra tale visum v●gilans vidit vel dormiens somniavit Removeantur ista vel figmenta mendocium hominum vel po●tenta fallacium spiritum Remotis istis Eccclesiam suam demonstrent in canonicis sanctorum librorum autoritatibus than a proud and Satanicall delusion to fancy or boast that the Holy Spirit of Christ dwels there in speciall Influences and Revelations where the Word of Christ doth not dwell richly in all wisdome Col. 3.16 The lodgings of the Spirit are alwayes and onely furnished with the Tapistry of the Scriptures Else all imaginary furniture of any private spirits leaves the heart but swept and garnished with the new brooms of odd fancies and fond opinions to entertain with somewhat more trim and composed dresse the unclean spirit who loves to dwell thus in the high places of mens souls and hereby seems to make the later end of those filthy or silly dreamers in pride Iud. 8. vain-glory hypocrisie and lying against the Truth blaspheming the true Spirit of Christ contemning his holy and onely true Ministery and Ordinances and in all other licentious Apostasies worse than their beginning was in ignorance errors and terrors or in plain dealing sensualities and downright profanenesse For it is more tolerable to be without the Spirit of God Pope Hildebrand Cum haereticus malesicus sacrilegus esset pro sacratissimo se
ostentabat miranda quaedam Magicis arti●us patrabat prunas subinde è manica excutiebat co●am populo Car. Sigon ad an 1057. Avent pag. 455. 470. 2 Pet. 2.21 than to lye against it and blaspheme it or oppose and resist it after some knowledge of the Truth It had been better for such men not to have known the way of Christs Spirit in the Scriptures and the Church It is far more veniall to erre for want of the Spirits guidance and light than to shut our eyes against it and to impute our Errors Dreams and Darknesses to it 'T is better to have the heart wholly barren than to lay our adulterous bastards to the Spirits charge when they indeed are issues of nothing but Pride joined to Ignorance 4. Like pretentions of old confuted by mens practises Nothing indeed is easier and cheaper at the World now goes than for * Portentiloquium haereticorum vain and proud men to pretend to speciall Inspirations and Motions of Gods Spirit on them as many in the old times did who yet were sensuall not having the Spirit * Se spiritales esse asserebant Valentiniani Demiurgum animalem virginales Gnostico●um spiritus gloriabantur Iren. l. 1. 3. So the Gnosticks called themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 spiritual men as well as knowing men So the Marcionites and Montanists pretended that their Master Montanus knew more than the Apostles had more of the Comforter was the Com●orter it self and told him what Christ said his Disciples could not then bear Joh. 16.12 The like lying fancies had the Valentinians Austin de Haeret. Epiphan l. 4. de Haer. c. 40. and Circumcelliones and Manichees who being idle-handed grew idle-headed too not caring what they said nor what they did for they fathered all on the Spirit So the Cathari and Encratitae calling themselves Chast and Pure and Apostolici Apostolicall and above the Gospels both of old and in * Sermo 66. in C●ntica Cerdom Apelles Marciontae privatas lecturas habuerunt quas 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 apellant cujusdam Phihamenae puellae prophetissa libium syllogismorum quibus p●obare vult quod omnia quae Moses scripserit● de Deo falsa sunt Tertul. prae ad Hae. ● 44. St. Bernards time time and in later times too both in Germany and other places rising to ostentation of Prophesying speciall Inspirations strange Revelations shews of Miracles and lying Wonders fulfilling and interpreting of Prophecies enthronings of Christ c. by which strong delusions they sought to deceive the very Elect if it had been possible but they could never perswade truly excellent and choise Christians to any belief of their forgegeries and follies since neither the temper of their spirits nor their works nor their words were like the rules marks or fruits Sleid an Com. l. 4. Cainit● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fingebant Epiph. Hae. 38. The Cainites pretended they had a book containing the Raptures of Saint Paul what he then heard c. of that holy and unchangeable Spirit of Jesus Christ set forth in his Word and owned in the Church But rather the effects of that depraved spirit which is most contrary to God and most inconstant in it self which after all its fair glozings and praefacings of Purity Gifts and Inspirations is still but * Borboritae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Coenoli Tertul. and Austin call those hereticks the Gnosticks Cathatists and others who called themselves Apostolici Pneumatici Angelici purgatores electi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Longinus Manes the Father of the Maniches called himself an Apostle of Christ the Comforter and Spirit chose twelve Disciples despised water Baptism said the Body was none of Gods work but of some evill Genius and his followers full of impure lusts and errours yet said they were called Maniches from flowing with Manna 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They said the soul was the substance of God to be purified to that end they mixed the Eucharisticall bread with their seed in obscene pollutions and ●apes● ut isto mod● Dei substantia in homine purgetur Aust de Hae. Borborites a swinish and unclean spirit and differs as much from the Purity Truth Beauty and Order of the true Spirit of Christ which shines in the Word as the most noisome Jakes and filthy sink doth from the most sweet and Crystall fountain of everflowing waters True Ministers find it hard having done all 5. True fruits of the Spirit to obtain those competent Ministeriall gifts and graces of the Spirit which are necessary to carry on that great work of their own and others Salvation to any decorum and comfort which these Gloriosoes pretend as if they were bred and born to * Venit vadit prout vult nemo facile scit unde venit aut quo vadat Ber. Brevis mora rata hora mira subtilitate sua vitate divinae suae artis ircessanter actitat in intimo nostri Idem or were suddenly and at once endowed withall few of these ever think they want the Spirit if they have but confidence to undertake any Ministeriall work and publique Office Yea and the best Christians no lesse than the ablest Ministers find it hard in truth to obtain the sanctifying gracious influen●es of Gods Spirit by which with much diligence and prayer they are enabled to private duties nor doe they find it so easie to flesh and bloud to obey those holy directions of the Spirit or in conflicts to take its part against the flesh and to rejoice in the victories and prevalencies of the Spirit Whose publique donations for the common good of Christians edifying them in truth and charity are chiefly manifested not onely by his servants the true Ministers but in the blessing of that very Order Office appointment and function of the Ministry Eph. 4.8 11. both as instituted and a● continued so long time by the wisdome and power of this Spirit of Christ And by this great Gift of gifts as by the Sunne in the Firmament all others are ordinarily conveyed to private Christians which chiefly consist and are manifested in true beleevers not in quick strokes of fancy passionate raptures strange allusions and allegoricall interpretations confused obscurings of Scriptures which some men with Origen make so much of In veritate qua illuminaris in virtute qua immutaris in charitate qua inflammaris serenata conscientia subita insolita mentis latitudin● praesentem spiritum intellige Ber. but in bringing men from this childish futility of Religion to a manly seriousnesse which sets the heart soberly to attend read hear study and meditate on the Word of God to prefer that Jewell before all the hidden treasure of their own or others Fairy fancies to assent to the saving Truths both of Law and Gospell zealously to love them strictly to obey them by hearty repentance for sins against God or man ingnuous confessions of them honest compensations for them
with all judicious and sober Christians leave Potius vetera tuta quam periculosa nova sectemur Tac. to passe by the Idoll of their new dressed Spiritually and Sanctity without any admiration devotion or the least salutation Nor can we at all consider private spirits warped from and bent against the publique Spirit of Christ in the Scripture in the practise of the Catholick Church and in the most eminent Christians both ancient and modern We shall content our selves with that plain and pristine holynesse and manifestations of the Spirit True holinesse and true Saints Sanctitas est scientia colendorum deorun Tul. de Nat. D. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato in Eutyp which are expressed in the Word deposited in the Church preserved in an holy Ministry exemplified in all true Christians and most eminently in Jesus Christ and his Apostles the great and famous Founders Teachers and Establishers of holy Truths holy Duties holy Sacraments holy Orders and holy Ministry in the Church And this with divine Power and Authority not onely personall but successionall without which the instituted Service and Worship of Christ had ere this failed These being ever since Christs time in all the world imployed in Teaching Gathering Baptizing Governing Feeding Preserving and Perfecting the Body of Christ which is his Church We know not and so we cannot desire other holinesse than that by which we beleived the Truths obeyed the Commands feared the Threatnings observed the Duties preserved the Institutions continued the Orders reverenced the Embassadors joyed in the Graces hoped in the Promises and were led conformably to Christ by that Spirit which Jesus Christ had given to his Church long before these new coyners had graven the stamps or set up their Mint● We are glad and blesse God when we attain unfaignedly to that Spirit of Holynesse which hears the Word of God with fear and trembling from the mouth of those able and godly Ministers which are the Messengers or Angels sent from Christ by the Churches Ordination Which teacheth us to pray with understanding constancy fervently and comelinesse to receive the pledges of Gods love in Christ from their hands duly consecrating the holy mysteries with reverence preparednesse and thankfulnesse That holinesse which loves with sincerity gives with cheerfulnesse rejoyceth in well doing suffers with patience lives by Faith acts by Charity is holy with order contentednesse and humility without any fury faction or confusion That holinesse which hath nothing in it novell or praeterscripturall nothing fancifull verball tumultuary violent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plat. Eu●yph S●nctum est quod deo gratum schismaticall disorderly partiall pernicious or injurious to any which chuseth to be a Martyr for Charity and Unity as well as Verity in the Church rather suffering much than giving scandall or making a schism according to the pious and excellent cou●s●ll of Dionysius to Novatus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dionys Ep●st Au●ea apud Eusch l. 6. hist c. 38. That holinesse which is old as the Ancient of dayes reall rationall demonstrative from the Word of God and exemplified in the lives of former Saints Which is meek courteous charitable humble just to all men abounding with all righteousnesse and the fruits of righteousnesse peace and establishment both to private consciences and publique Churches That holinesse which hath nothing in it supercilious calumniating defamatory insolent bitter or burthensome to any true Christians true Churches and true Ministers which know how to reprove what is amisse without rejecting all that is well to reform the crooked without ruining what is right That holinesse which as the Sun-beams is always like it self like the Father of spirituall light uniform and constant in all true Saints in all ages and in all administrations Divine either immediate or mediate as to its rule the Will and Word of God as to its end the glory of God in Gods way as to its Epitome or sum the love of God and its neighbour as to its happy fruits and effects the good of mankinde chiefly of the Church of Christ These have ever been the same for kind however differing in degrees according to the measure which God hath given to his true Saints and servants who never differed from God or the Word or one another as they were holy and spirituall however as men and carnall in part they had their crookednesse unevennesses and dissentings These are the fruits of Gods Spirit this that true Holinesse for which we pray of which we dare not boast These are the Saints whose shadows we count Soveraign whose presence a blessing whose wayes unblameable whose joyes unspeakable whose works most imitable whose conversation most amiable heavenly and divine who chuse rather to suffer than any way to act in cases dubious as to secular dissensions which have much of the Beast somewhat of the Man and little of the true Christian The worth of these Pearls is infinitely beyond some mens counterfeit forgeries whose lustre is chiefly from worldly glory and secular advantages who out of ashes are melted up to the shining and bricklenesse of glasse by the fervour of some spirits who think it enough to glister with novelties and to boast of Inspirations fancying all is reformed which is but changed though much to the worse who are forced to set off themselves by the soil of severe censuring of others Fearing nothing so much as a true light and those discoveries which are made of them by serious and judicious Christians who judge not by mens lips and appearances but by their lives and practises compared to the Word of God For which true Ministers most eminently and impartially holding forth to the discovery of all mens deformities are of all men most abhorred by these pretenders who at a true and full view will not onely not appear to other such gifted men and spirituall as they pretend but they will be ashamed of their arrogance and despite against those good Christians and those true Minisers whom they have so much vilified and contemned The common mistake of proud weak or fancifull men 8. Vulgar mistakes of spirituall influences Luk. 9.55 Impudentiam p●o pietate jactitant quasi eo sanctiores essent quo verbosiores Bern. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Thucid. hist l. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bas de Sp. s. whose tongues are onely tipt with Sanctity and the name of the Spirit is this That they know not indeed of what Spirit they are as to Profession Nor consider of what Spirit they ought to be as to temper if they will be truly Christs Disciples Contenting themselves with light and airy presumptions in stead of serious and searching examinations of truth comparing themselves with themselves they fancy they grow holyer as they grow bolder in their opinions or actions Hence they are easily flattered into high Imaginations and cheated with strong Presumptions as if some common gifts of knowledge some Scepticall quicknesse some volubility of utterance
nor raising any building of piety or sound knowledge in others for the same small stock always serves their turn in their severall gests and quarters By this meanes they hope the Church and State in a short time will be spoiled of all those fair flowers of good Scholars and able constant Ministers which were well rooted in learning and plentifully watered with the dew of heaven the gifts and graces of Gods Spirit that so there may be room enough for those rank and ill weeds to spread all over this English garden and field under whose specious covert of spiritualty all sort of venemous Serpents and hurtfull beasts may be hidden till they are so multiplied 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. that through mutuall jealousies and dissensions they fall to tearing and devouring one another for however like Serpents wicked men may for a while twine together yet their different heads will soon find wherewith to exercise their stings and teeth against each other Impious mens confederacies are not friendship but faction and conspiracy Nothing being more in consistent than ignorance error and impiety which having no principles of union or order in them can have nothing of firmnesse or stability among them I doubt not but there are 12. The blessings which good Christians owe to good Ministers under God notwithstanding so many bitter spirits and rebellious children have become ungratefull Apostates against this Church and ●its worthy Ministery thousands of excellent Christians who have not bowed the knee to these Baali●s who have both cause and hearts to confesse that the feet of these messengers the true Ministers of England have brought light and peace to their soules That their pious and constant labors have not been either so weak or unfruitfull as might in any sor● deserve or justifie such hard recompenses as these now are with which a foolish and unthankefull generation seeks to requite the Lord Deut. 32.6 and his faithfull servants the true Ministers whose names shall yet live among good Christians with durable honour Eccles 7.1 and their memories shall be pretious as sweet Ointments when these dead yet busie flies who seek to corrupt them Eccles 10.1 shall rot as dung on the face of the earth Their unsavory stench is already come up and hath greatly defiled many parts of this Church being justly offensive to all wise and good men in the present age and for the future they will be memorable for nothing but illiterate impudence ungratefull malice and confused madnesse who like beasts were able to waste a fair field and desolate a well reformed Church but never to cultivate or plant any thing like it The field of this Church in many places by the blessed labours of true and able husbandmen was heretofore full of good corn the valleys and hils did laugh and sing poore and rich were happy in the great increases with which the Lord of the harvest crowned the labours of his faithfull Ministers before the enemy had such liberty to sow his tares even at noon day yea in many places to rout the true labourers to leave many places desolate and only to scatter that self-sowing corn which is like to that which springs on the house top whereof the Mower shall never fill his hand Psal 129.7 nor he that bindeth up the sheaves his bosome Who sees not that one handfull of that crop which was formerly wont to be tilled by the skilfull and diligent hand of true and able Ministers was for its weighty soundnesse in knowledge and modest fulnesse in humility far more worth than many sheaves and cartloads of these burnt and blasted ears whose pride pretends in one night to grow to such eminent gifts of the Spirit for preaching as shall exceed all the parts and studies of Ministers when it 's evident to all that will but rub them in their hands that these wild oats and smutty ears by lifting up their heads so high doe but proclaim their emptinesse and lightnesse And 't were well if they were onely such cockle such trash and light gear they now grow to sharp thistles thornes mixed with true weed which seeks to starve choak and pull down to the earth all the hopes and joy of the true labourers that rich crop of truth order piety charity and sincerity which was formerly in great plenty and still is in good measure on the ground Yea thousands of Christians in many places of this Nation doe already grievously complain of the sad and desolate estate to which they are reduced for want of able and true Ministers Amos 8.11 Psal 106.15 residing among them crying out that a famine of the Word is come upon them and leannesse is entred into their soules having none to sow the immortall seed of the Word or to dispense the bread of life to them but a few straglers now and then of whose calling and authority to minister holy things no wise man hath any confidence and of whose insufficiency every way all men have too much experience where ever they obtrude themselves That most Christians had rather yea and better want the Word and Sacraments than receive them so defiled so nullified by such unwashen and unwarranted hands For it is hardly to be beleeved that those who are so much enemies to the spirit of Christ in true Ministers of which there hath been so great and good demonstrations in gifts lives and successes should either have or come in the power of the same Spirit which they so much despise and blaspheme Sure the Kingdome of Christ is not divided against it self but is uniform and constant not depending on the various impulses of mens humours fancies and worldly interests but established and governed by the most sure Word and those holy rules both for truth and order therein contained It is little sign of Christs Spirit in men to sow those seeds of errors and divisions which holy men have been alwayes plucking up or to build again that Babell which so many godly Ministers have pulled down But it becomes us Ministers not so much to dispute with these men about the Spirit to which they so highly pretend as to continue to outdoe them in the fruits of the Spirit as our famous and blessed forefathers have done and to leave the decision to the Consciences of true and wise Christians and to the great Searcher of mens hearts and tryer of mens spirits and workes who hath the Spirit of burning and refining Isa 4.4 and who if he hath not determined for the superfluity of wickednesse and ungratefull wontannesse of this Nation to lay us quite wast and desolate will in his due time after these days of triall throughly purge his floore and weed his field even this Mal. 3.12 so sadly havocked and neglected Church In which there are still some fruit that have a blessing in them Isa 65.8 and which we hope he will not destroy who knows how to separate between the
are more easily and fully instructed more speedily improved in all the riches of wisdome and knowledge which are part of the glory and Image of God on mans nature By this which we call good learning all Truths both humane and divine naturall politick morall and Theologicall usefull either for speculation or practise are more clearly extricated and unfolded out of the depths darknesse and ambiguity of words which are but the shadows of things by the * Languages unlock and open Truth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Phal Ep. skill in Languages which are the scabbards and shels wherein wisdome is shut up The inscription on Christs crosse is in three languages Hebrew Greek Latin Luk. 23.38 Intimating as the divulging of the Gospel to many tongues and Nations so that the mysterie of Christ crucified is not to be fully and exquisitely understood without the keys of these three learned and principall languages with which the Church hath flourished Certainly it is not easie for unlearned men to consider how great use there is even of Grammar which is the first and roughest file that good learning applyes to polish the minde with all for much of the true sense even of the holy Scriptures as well as of other Records depends upon the true writing or Orthography the exact derivation or etymology and the regular Syntaxis or conjoining of words yea that Criticall part of literature which is the finest file or searse of Truth wherein some mens wit and curiosity onely vapour and soar high like birds of large feathers and small bodies yet it is of excellent use when by men of sober learning it is applyed to the service of religion Many times much Divinity depends on small particles rightly understood upon one letter upon such a mood or tense or case and the like many errors are engendred and nourished by false translations and mistakes of words or letters many truths are restored and established by the true meaning of them asserted upon good grounds and just observations which hath been done with great accuratenesse by * Erasmus Drusius Hensius Grotius Salmasius Fullerus Lud. de Dieu and others men of incomparable excellency in this kinde these last hundred years equall to if not for the most part beyond the exactnesse of the ancient Fathers or writers Herein infinite observations of humane writers are happily made and usefully applyed as to the propriety of words and phrases used in the sacred originalls of the Word of God so as thereby to attain their genuine and emphatick sense also for the clearing of many passages and allusions which are in the Scriptures referring to things naturall and historicall in the manners and customes of the nations This once done Logick disposeth Qui logica carent materias lacerant ut catuli panes Melan. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. all Truths are by the methods and reasoning of Logick easily disintangled and fairly vindicated from the snarlings sophisms and fallacies with which error ignorance or calumniating malice seek to obscure or disguise them or therein to wrap up and cover themselves darkening wisdome by words without understanding After this they are by the same art handsomely distributed and methodically wound up in severall clews and bottomes according to those various Truths which that excellent art hath spun out That thus digested they may again be brought forth unfolded and presented to others in that order and beauty of eloquence which * Rhetorick communicates to others 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Naz. or 23. Rhetorick teacheth By which truths have both an edge and lustre set on them doe most adorn them and enforce to the quickest prevalencies on mens mindes and the firmest impressions on their passions and affections that so their rationall vigour may hold out to mens actions and extend to the ethicks or morality of civill conversation which is the politure of mens hearts and hands The softner and sweetner of violent passions and rougher manners to the candor and equity of polity and society This civility was and is the preface and forerunner of Religion the great preparative to piety the confines of Christianity which never thrives untill barbarity be rooted up and some learning with morality be sown and planted among men Nor did Christian Religion ever extend its pavilion much further than the tents of Learning and Civility had been pitched by the conquests and colonies of the Greeks and Romans Thus by this golden circle and crystall medium of true learning the short dim and weaker sight of our reason Matth. 6.23 whose very light is become dark by sin bleared with its own fancies and almost put out by its grosser lusts and passions may as by the help of perspective or optick glasses be mightily strengthened and extended while it sees History 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cl. Al. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Id. as with the united vigor of the many thousand visuall rayes and eyes of those who saw before us That so those few conjectures those dark and ambiguous experiences which any mans short sight and single life can afford him may be ampliated cleared and confirmed by those many testimonies and historicall monuments which others have left in their learned writings which draw as it were the lesser rivulets of various observations from severall times pens and places to meet in one great and noble current of true Religion which is the wisest observer and devoutest admirer of what true learning most sets forth the providence justice power goodnesse patience and mercy of the wise great and holy God the Creator ruler and preserver of all things Psal 8. but chiefly the regarder of the sons of men God hath therefore blest his Church with good learning that those small stocks and portions of wisdome which any mans private patrimony affords him either by innate parts or acquired experiments which for the most part would amount to no more than the furnishing of a portable pedlers pack with small wares toyes and trinckets fit to please children ideots and countrey people may be improved by a joint stock Humanus s nsus cum sarcitur alieno invento c●to attenuatur de prop●io Cassiod and united commerce of prudent observations that so men might drive a great and publique trade of wisdome to the infinite inriching and adorning both of Church and State both of Polity and Religion These two being the great luminaries and excellencies of humane Nature the one to rule the day wherein wee stand related to God in piety the other to rule the night wherein we are related to each other by humanity equity charity and bonds of civill society Which innate vertues and properties of mans nature Reason and Religion once neglected and until'd for want of that culture which good learning and that sof ening Barbarity succeeds the want of learning as darknesse the Suns absence which ingenuous education brings to
such small stuffe as th●se Antiministeriall Teachers intend to brew whereby to keep all Christians as they pretend in a sober simplicity which project is among their other weak and silly conceptions For the fames and ●ent●sities arising from ignorance emptinesse and want of good sustenance may more trouble the brain with giddy whimseyes and dizinesse than can ever be feared from competent repletions unlesse men have very foul stomachs or hot Livers Wise men know to keep the mean between the riot and the want of learning There are faith Plato two diseases of the Soul of man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 madnesse and ignorance Plato in Timaeo Madnesse is from the abounding with pride and passion Ignorance from the want of knowledge and instruction Ignorance is but a tamer madnesse mad men have lost their wits and ignorant men never had them Learning and Religion cure both The highest and most incurable madnesse is an ungracious hatred of learning and an irreligious love of ignorance We see by sad experience That true Religion is as subject to be drowned by inundations of barbarity and deluges of unlettered people fit to be followers of Goths and Vandales or listed with Jeek Cade and Wat Tylar or subjects to the titular King of Sion John of Leyden as it is to be scorched by the hotter beams of those Phaethons who unskilfully manage the chariot of the Sun that is make an ill use of good learning Which is as the light of the world wherein Christian Religion is most honourably and most usefully enthroned when it is guided aright neither depressing reason too low by fanatick novelties nor exalting it too high by intricate subtilties Medio tulissmus ibis Ovid. but keeping the middle way of the necessary plain and most demonstrable verities of Religion which the Compasse of right Reason measures exactly by the scale of Scriptures 9. Object Many unlearned have been holy c. But these Objectors tell us That many holy and excellent Christians of the common and unlettered sort of men have been Worthies in grace and godlinesse who never found any want of S●●ls armour those * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 great incumqrances great volumes nor those perplexed studies in pestred libraries That the * Nulla aconita bibuntur Fictilibus tunc illa time cum pocula sumas Gemmatas c. Iuv. poysons of opinions are seldomer drunk or pledged in these earthen vessels than in those of gold or silver That their simplicity was contented to enjoy that one book necessary The Scriptures All other bookes they would have been contented as these men now to have them sacrificed to Vul●an an heathen god and meriting such heathenish oblations Answ No doubt but many very good Christians have been happily instructed Answ setled and preserved in saith and holinesse who never were learned in any book but that of the Scripture * L. 1. de Doctr. Christian S. Scripturas memo ia tenuit intelle●it sine scientia litera●●n S. Austin tels that Anthony the Hermite who could not read had all the Scriptures by heart and understood them well yea many who never ●ead any word in the Bible yet have been blest by the Ministry of the Gospell to beleive and obey the truth of it which is indeed the life of religion and the quintessence of all learning Yet it was the happinesse of those honest Christians that they never met with such pragmatick depravers of all good order piety and learning and Ministry as these now are for certainly they had never learned from such as these despisers of learning and Ministers are either the letter or the true sense of the Scriptures which they attained by the learned labours of their Ministers chiefly both reading translating and interpreting and preaching the Scriptures to them They were happily freed from such praters whose pride and folly is heavier than any lead or the sand of the Sea Pro. 27.3 whose ungratefull humour would have taught them first to have cast off all their true Ministers and Teachers next to despise them and lastly to destroy them by a most pious madnesse and spirituall ingratitude They are not only blind but mad men who wanting eyes themselves would have all their guides see no more than they do that so both might fall into the ditch Whereas the humility of all sober Christians was ever such as equalled their piety exceeded their knowledge and compensated their illiteratenesse so as to be farre enough from thinking themselves equall to or above the first three their lawfull Pastors and learned Ministers by whose faithfull endeavours and studies those saving truths and holy mysteries were prepared for them and set before them So that however they did indeed eat clean food the finest of the bread of life yet they could not but consider whose plowing and sowing and gathering whose thrashing and winnowing and grinding whose kneading baking had provided and prepared those savory and wholesome victuals for them which their own blindnesse and feeblenesse like Isaacks could never have provided or catered for themselves That they did alwayes blesse those Ministers and that God who sent such Josephs to provide and distribute the food of heaven to his otherwayes destitute and famished Church which alwayes consisted for the most part of that plebs or community of faithfull and poor Christians who were alwayes happy in this that although they had not provision of learning in their own storehouses and cisternes yet still they might have recourse to and make use of their Ministers fulnesse and store whose lips ought to preserve knowledge and to dispense it without envy or grudging who rejoyced most when their fountaines were most flowing forth to the refreshing of poor soules The abilities of learned Ministers have alwayes been like Jacobs and Moses his strength Gen. 29.10 a means to rowl away the great stones Exod. 2.17 which lie on the wels mouth the Scriptures which are too heavy for ordinary shoulders and to protect feebler Christians from insolent opposers So that as the Eunuch●●●ked how he should understand Act. 8.31 without an Interpreter to guide him Ministers are therefore set by Christ in his Church for lights that each might enjoy them as much as if each had their sufficicencies As the meanest part of the body hath as much use of the eye Exod. 16.18 as if it were an eye it selfe That as it was in the Israelites gathering Manna so it is in the Church of Christ when setled and flourishing He that gathered much had no overplus and hee that gathered little had no lack So those honest Ideots and Lay-Christians who have little or no learning beyond that faith and plain knowledge of the mysteries of Christ and the holy duties belonging to a Christian yet have no want of learning And learned Ministers who have attained most eminent skill in all sorts of good learning by Gods blessing on their studies have no
and shews by the examples in holy Scripture and other holy writers what holy use is to be made of the learning of heathens by Christians See Tom. 2. pag. 331. St. Paul cites three testimonies out of heathen Poets Epimenides 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Menander 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Arat●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. So Jannes and Jambres out of Jewish Records and Talmuds Plures sine dubio legerat B. Paulus poetas quam quos recitavit recitando aliques laudavit omnes in quantum divinoris veritatis scintillias saepius produnt Erasm Tarsis a famous University and after at the feet of Gamaliel or Attick Luke or eloquent Apollos ever despised or decryed or disused those acquired gifts of humane learning wherewith they were endued in the ordinary wayes of education no not when they were ex●raordinarily inspired Their common gifts served them still in their ordinary Ministry as to understanding memory utterance or writing by which they endevoured to set forth that Jesus was the Christ the promised Messias So that in their arguments disputes reasonings and allegations out of humane Authours also in the style phrase and manner of their speaking and writing it might and may easily bee that the difference of Prophets Evangelists and Apostles naturall acquired or studied gifts did still remain when their extraordinary and infused might be equall yet these did not equall them in their either more strict and Logicall reasonings or their more Oratorious expressions or more elegant phrase and proper language which appear very different in those holy Writers and Penmen of the Scriptures which had the same Spirit directing or dictating as to the matter revealed to them but they used their own ordinary abilities to expresse them by word or pen to others And certainly when the Apostle Paul bids Timothy as a grand and lasting pattern for all Bishops and Ministers of the Church to study to meditate to give himselfe wholly to those things 1 Tim. 4.13 14.15 that his profiting may appear to stir up the gift that is in him still more fitting himselfe to the work of the Ministry notwithstanding he had some speciall and extraordinary gifts Sure the same Apostle gave Timothy no example of idlenesse in himself but both studied and prayed Ephes 6.18 yea desires the prayers of others for him that he might as an able Minister and as a Master builder finish the course of his Ministry with joy This blessed Apostle needed not have been so solicitous for the parchments 2 Tim. 4.13 which he left at Troas if his memory had been alwayes supplyed with miraculous assistance he needed not to have committed any thing to writing for his owne use It is very probable that those parchments were no deeds for conveying any land or temporall estate but rather some Scheme or draught of divine Truths and mysteries methodically digested which he had fitted for his own 1 Cor. 4.6 and transferred to the use of others as Apollos or Timothy or Titus So little doth the speciall gifts of the Spirit in the Apostles or other holy men justifie or plead for those odde and mishapen figures of those mens Divinity whether discovered by their tongues or hands of whose deformity and unpolitenesse compared to the fashion of all learned mens judicious methodicall and comely writings and discourses these crafty men being conscious would have no Sun or light of arts and learning shining among Christians by which their ridiculous monstrosity might appear 2 Col. 1.8 1 Tim 6.20 In tantum vana est quantum perversae felicitatis est doctrina gentium Philosophia Tertul. l. de Anima The same Apostle who bids us beware of vain Philosophy and wisdom falsly so called while it opposed the divine or was preferred before the word and truth of God in Christ which onely can attaine the end of all true wisdome to make a man happy to eternity yet he could be no enemy to any part of true and usefull Philosophy which is but the knowledge of God in the creature of which he gives severall touches in his most divine writings He commands us no lesse to beware of * Rom. 1.21 2 Tim. 4.3 Imperitissima est setentia scire quid senserint Philosophi nescire quid Ch●istus docuit Aust Ep. 56. Cum Philosophiae nidore purum veritatis aerem infuscant Tertul. false Teachers of heaps of Teachers of deceitfull workers of unruly walkers of unstable and unlearned spirits who by vaine bablings endlesse janglings high presumptions and private interpretations wrest the Scriptures corrupt both religious Doctrine sound speech and Christian communication Such who are * Col. 2.18 vainly puffed up in their fleshly minde whose glory is to lead Disciples after them desirous to be * 1 Tim. 1.7 Teachers when they know not what they say nor whereof they affirme Comparing themselves with themselves and abhorring all higher patterns they can * 1 Cor. 10.12 never be wise but in their own conceits and there is * Prov. 16.9 little hope of them But O you that excell in learning or humility or both 16. Monument of learning how excellent and usefull I should fear to write too much for good learning if I did not consider that I write to those chiefly who can never think too much said or wrote for it because they know the many beauties and excellencies of it both in reference to the glory of God and the good of mankind both for souls and bodies their religious and secular concernments their temporall and eternall interest Indeed no minde is able to conceive but such as enjoy them Aegrescit ingenium nisi fugiactione reparetur Cito expenduntur horrea quae assidua non fuerint adjectione fulcita Thesaurus ipse facile profunditur si nullis iterum pecuniis compleatur Cassiod nor can any tongue expresse them since they exceed the greatest eloquence of those that most enjoy them those bright heavenly and divine beams of Reason and Religion which with severall preparatory glories shine from the daily reading of those excellent writings and durable monuments of learned men in former ages as rayes of light falling from the Sun on this inferiour world breaking in upon all the regions of the soul dissipating its darknesse discovering its disorders supplying its defects filling it with the sweet and silent * Jucundissima est vita indies sentire se fieri doctiorem pleasure of daily knowing something more excellent in the creature or the Creator which before it knew not This secret and unspeakable contentment is more welcome to the now improving soul than the beauty of a fair morning which shows a safe haven to one that hath suffered the horrour of blind and midnight tempests more rejoicing the heart of a true man than liberty and light doe him that is redeemed from a dungeon I should but profane if I should too much unfold the sacred and sweet
this self-condemned and without excuse Nor are any of a different beleif to what is established to be tolerated in giving any factious and seditious scandals against that Religion which is by the wisdome and piety of any Nation and Church there setled as sacred being always presumed that it is judged the truest and best for no men can be supposed to binde themselves and their posterity to any religion which they think false Two wayes of just restraints in the Church There are two wayes of coercive power established by God over men in matters of religion either of the Word by Ecclesiasticall admonitions reproofes and censures which onely reach those in matters of error 1 Tim. 5.20 Tit. 2.15 Tit. 3.10 1 Cor. 5.12 or scandall that are under the same form beleif and profession of Religion for these onely doe consider them And where this discipline is as in primitive times it was rightly dispensed with gravity wisdome charity and due solemnity by wise and worthy men it carries a great weight with it being in the name and authority of Jesus Christ 1. By Church discipline and is of excellent use to the well being of the Church of Christ to preserve the honour of Religion and credit of Christianity Nor is any thing of extern order and policy more worthy to be seriously considered and restored by Christians which can never be done till the right government of the Church be first setled nor can this now be easily done without the favour and concurrent authority of the Christian Magistrate so far hath licentious contempt and insolency prevailed against all ancient order government and discipline in the Church even by the Libertinism of such as would most be counted Christians And 2. Magist●atick power 2. A second way of animadversion or restraint of publique disorders in Religion is by the power of the sword in the hand of the Christian Magistrate who is to regard not onely the civill peace of subjects but also that trust which lies on him to take care for their religious interests and their souls welfare Qu●●to plus potes interrena republica tanto plus imperdeas ●●lesti civitati Aust Ep. c. 24. that they may be taught and preserved in the right way of knowing and serving God The happye ●ondition of any Christians is when both these powers are wisely and sweetly twisted together so as the Ministry directs the Magistracy by the Word and the Magistracy assists the Ministry by the sword where the censures of the Church act by charity and the censures of the Magistrate by a just severity yet so as neither love to the offender nor dislike of the offence be wanting That all be done to the edification not to the destruction of the Church or of any member of it so farre as its welfare is consistent with the publique Neither civill nor Church power among Christians should be as a sharp and hard rock dashing presently all in pieces that touch or strike at it in the least kinde though never so modestly differing from the received Religion nor yet ought they to be as pillowes and sponges yeelding so soft a reception to every new opinion and practise as to invite all errours and novelties to a recumbency or rest in their bosome A Church or Christian State will soon be full of all noisome vermine if they allow as a work of charity and liberty every sordid errour and beggerly opinion publiquely to lodge and nestle under their roof yea and to contend for place and crowd out that Religion which is established Moderation differs from grosse toleration Christian Magistrates should neither use the sharp rasor or two edged sword of the Spanish Inquisition which forceth with terror either to deny what men hold for truth or to professe which that they hold not nor yet should they content themselves with the wooden daggers of Amsterdam where civill authority excuses its lukewarmnesse and gilds over its tolerancy of any Religion with the benefit of trade and commerce I doe not think it Christian to extirpate Jews or Turkes much lesse any of Christian profession but I think it both wisdome and charity first to endeavour by all fair means to convince all And secondly 2 Tim. 2.24 to restrain by just penalties all those under civill subjection however of a different religion from saying or doing any thing publiquely scandalous to and derogating from the honor peace and order of that Religion which is esteemed and therefore setled as the best and truest As civill seditions and treasons are intolerable so are religions nor are such endeavours veniall which by printing blasphemous bookes and divellish Libels seek to revive old rotten errors and heresies or to bring publique reproach and scorn upon the reformed Christian Religion in this Church no not although those infamous pamphlets were attended with learned confutations since it 's safer to forbid the use of poysons to the incautious people than to permit them to drink them up upon confidence of the virtue which may be in the antidotes applyed The nature of man is proner to imbibe noxious things then to egest them It is a tempting of God to tolerate evils and errours which we may prevent onely upon confidence of the remedies we can apply This is more like Mountebanks than like good Magistrates or Ministers Since then neither in right reason and true policy of State it is either becoming or safe for Christian Magistrates to have no acknowledgment of any face of Religion Christians must not be Scepticks in Religion Ephes 4.14 so farre among their people and subjects as to establish own and command it nor is it any piety for Christians to be alwayes scepticks in Religion ever unsatisfied and unresolved and unestablished in matters of Gods worship and mans salvation still ravelling the very grounds of Religion with endlesse cavils and needlesse disputes Since the Word of God is neer and open to direct all men in the wayes of God and since what is necessary to be beleived and obeyed in truth and holinesse is of all parts in Scripture most plaine and easie No doubt but Christian Magistrates are highly bound in Conscience to God and in charity to the good of their subjects to whom they must doe more good then they are desired to doe by the Vulgar to establish those things as to the extern order Ministry form and profession of Religion both in doctrine and duties which they shall in their conscience judge and conclude upon the best advice of learned and godly men to be most agreeable to the will of God as most clearly grounded on the Word in the generall tenor and analogy of it and as most fundamentally necessary to be beleived and obeyed by all Christians whereto the Catholick beleef and practise of all Churches more or lesse agreeing gives a great light and direction Christians must not be alwayes tossing to and fro in religion but come to an Anchor
be thus stripped and starved to gratifie the lusts of some men yet we hope for this mercy from God and favour from man that we shall not be forced to desert our calling or to contract a woe of not preaching the Gospell 1 Cor. 9.16 while we have abilities though we preach 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though we have no publique incouragement For why should all our studies and time be made unprofitable It may be we shall by Gods help redeem our former defects by after diligence in the work of Christ we may happily work and war the better Verba vertas inopera nudam crucem nudus sequeres expeditior levior scandis scalam Jacobi Ieron Pauperesse non potest qui apud Deum dives est Lact. Inst l. 6. c. 12. when we are more expedite lighter armed and lesse incumbred with envy and worldly impediments We may I hope without presumption enjoy that liberty to preach the Gospel which others now take to prate against it and us and it may be people will hear and profit better when they see they have the Gospell at a cheaper rate and will be more in love with the reformed Religion when they shall see how much better penny-worth they have of that than of the Romish superstition which is more costly by farre yet lesse comfortable to a serious Christian Though we be made poore yet we may still make many rich though we have nothing yet we may enjoy all things though we are are troubled on every side 2 Cor. 6.10 yet we may not be distressed though perplexed yet not in despaire though persecuted by men yet not forsaken of God though cast down and cast out yet not destroyed through the grace of God which is sufficient for us Many worthy Ministers may justly plead for their liberties lives and livings as those did with Ishmael Ier. 41.8 Destroy us not for there are treasures of learning and saving knowledge with us But it is better for them to be Christs Lazarusses and beggars than the worlds rich gluttons and favorites Yet it must needs be so Revel 12 7. and so it will be unlesse some Michael and his Angels overcome this greedy Apollyon this sacrilegious Abaddon this penurious Divell and his Angels who prodigally offers Kingdomes to damne one soule but grudgeth one groat to redeem many thousands 18. Ministers just plea for their own neither covetous nor uncomely Nor will your noblenesse O excellent Christians interpret this which I have wrote in behalf of the maintenance of Ministers in this Church and Nation to be any pleading for Baal or clamouring like Demetrius and his complices in his panick feares for his silver shrines and his Diana where he considered more his gain than his Goddesse These are unjust and malicious glosses which the enemies both of the Ministry and of humanity * Act. 19.25 are prone to put upon any that plead nev●r so righteous a cause with words of the greatest truth justice sobernesse and moderation those having a stinking breath themselves think every mans unsavoury But by the leave of such latrant Orators and back-biters I must tell them what the wiser and more Christian world well knows that there is no cause why Ministers more than any other order of men should neglect in fair and just wayes to obtain for or preserve to themselves and their successours those worldly comforts and supports which the providence of God and the Christian munificence of this Nation hath in the most free way of gift and by Law granted to them in Gods name and for the service of Christ and the honour of Religion Other men are commended for their good husbandry and honest care to preserve their just estates which tend not so much to the publique good as the labours of Ministers doe who may not in prudence or conscience neglect those great and publique concernments of Christ and his Church with which they are intrusted Yea if they should have an eye to the reward to their own just right and particular interests which all other we see still have yet it were no more than Law and Reason all humanity and Christianity allow 1 Tim. 5 8. unlesse they would be worse than those Infidels that provide not for their own families or be as bad as those men who to provide for themselves and their families care not to rob and desolate even the Church and family of Christ Ministers may be wise yet innocent provident yet not sordid diligent in things honest yet not injurious to others Nor is it any whit uncomely for them to crave this justice or favour from any in power That they may quietly injoy those publique rewards of their learning and labours which are injurious to no man merited in the esteem of all honest men and therefore offensive to none but envious eyes and evill mindes Being the fruit of the publique bounty wisdome gratitude and devotion of this Christian Nation to God to Christ and his Ministers what they have a long time by law injoyed what they are rightly possessed of and what they have no way forfeited unlesse other mens calumnies and cavils their covetous projects and desires of novelty be the crime and fault of Ministers And lastly they doe intend with all peaceablenesse thankefulnesse and usefulnesse to use and enjoy if God and man permit so that no man shall have cause to repine at their enjoyments who knowes how to make use of their gifts and labours The shame of pleading this cause of Ministers maintenance lies at their dore who meditate speak and act so vile and dishonest things against them as force them thus to vindicate their just rights against unjust projects which seek by falshood and violence to take away not only the childrens but the fathers bread too and to give it to dogs who alwayes have sought to bring this reproach and scandall on this and other reformed Churches that they still carry on and serve some covetous and sacrilegious design with their reformations When God knowes it is not the design nor desire of any that are truly reformed Christians to robb the Church and Churchmen of one shoelatchet but rather to have added necessary augmentations to them if they had not alwayes been hindered by the covetousnesse and envy of some crosse faction who have longed to see the day when with Rabshakehs unclean spirit and foul language Isai 36.12 they might see all the reformed Clergy reduced to those sordid necessities which I have as much shame to write as these Antiministeriall sticklers have pleasure to wish it and glory to speak it Our comfort in the worst of times and things is 19. True Ministers comfort Multa quidem mala sed varia sclatia Sal. l. 9. That we know in whom we have trusted not in these Egyptian reeds which may faile us and pierce us but in the living God whom we have served though with many frailties yet with
made the beauty of his works to consist and to be evident in those distinctions which he hath set upon every thing both in the species and individuall God I say cannot be displeased to see mankinde on whom is the beauty of Reason or Christians on whom is the beauty of Religion to use such order distinction and decency in all things which becomes them both as men and Christians after the examples of the Apostles and Christ himself Matth. 9 35. who went about all the Cities and Villages teaching in their Synagogues and preaching the Gospell of the Kingdome which also befits and adorns Christians as to extern profession which is all that appears of any mens devotion or Religion to the eye of man setting forth in comely sort that duty relation and service which we publiquely professe to owe and pay to God who abhors sordidnesse and confusion as much as profane vastators love it Necessity indeed admits no curiosity of place nor affects any elegancy Aegrotantium amicorum sordes toleramus non item valentium Sidon but excuseth that which in plenty and freedome is esteemed sordidnesse and sluttishnesse Religion requires externally no more than God hath given of extern power and opportunity where these are wanting and by providence denyed a sick bed a Barn a Lyons den a Dungeon a Whales belly is as a Temple or Church consecrated by the holy duties which any devout soul there performs to God But as the Church of Christ considered in its extern communion or profession is visible and Christians are exemplary to each other and to the world it is warrant enough for Christians to build and to set apart to those publique holy duties some peculiar places upon Gods and the Churches account which grant we have in that great Charter and principle of Church policy which like a common rule 1 Cor. 14.40 measures all things of extern sociall Religion Let all things be done decently and in order Both which fall not properly under the judgement of Religion but of Reason not of Scripture but of Nature not of piety but policy or society nor need we other command to doe them than the judgement and consent or custome of wise and holy men which we have for this use of locall Churches thus peculiarly applyed to holy services ever since Christians had either ability to build them or liberty to use them which is at least 1400 years agoe If humane or Romish superstition used or affected or opined any thing in consecrating Churches which is beyond true reason and sound Religion yet we do not think that to be a Leprosie sticking so to the wals of the buildings that they must be scraped all over or pulled down else they can't be cleansed No But as places are not any more than times capable of any essentiall gratious or inherent holynesse which is onely in God Angels or Men so neither are they capable of inherent unholinesse The superstition is weak on either side weighs little but the worst is on this side to which these men so incline which tends more to profanenesse supinenesse and slovenlinesse in the outward garb of Religion which is not either so Cynical Sacerdoti maxime convenit ornare Dei templum decore congruo Amb. off l. 1. c. 21. or so tetricall as these men would make it What ever there is reall or imaginary of Superstition in the places or rather in mens fancies of them who possibly ascribe too much to them it will as easily recede and quit them when they come to be consecrated by the Churches reall performing of holy services or publique religious duties in them as dreams doe vanish when one awakes or as the dark shadowes of the night depart from bodies when the Sun comes to shine on them or into them if these poore objectors mindes and spirits could as soone be freed from those profane superstitious and uncharitable tinctures with which they are as with a jaundise deeply infected against those places and against those that use them with the decency becoming duties done to the Majesty of God and in the presence of the Church of Christ as those places justly called Churches may be freed from all misapprehensions of their name of their dedication If the former were as easie as the latter both locall and rationall materiall and mentall Churches both places and persons might long stand and flourish Psal 74.6 Both which some furies of our times seek utterly to break down and demolish that there may be neither Christian Congregations nor decent Communion in any publique place beyond the beauty of a Barn or Stable But these men have so much tinder and Gunpowder in them against Ministers 22. Answer to other quarrels against Ministers publique duties that whatever they enjoy say use or doe in their function be it never so innocent and decent yet they kindle to some offensive sparkes or coales and flames against them As if all the Ministers of this Church knew not what to doe as they should till these new masters undertook to School and Catechise them If any Minister prayes publiquely with that gravity understanding and constancy either for matter words or method which best becomes a poore sinfull mortall on earth when he speaks to the God of heaven It is they say but a form and a stinting of the Spirit If they preach with judgement weight exactnesse and demonstration of truth it is not by the Spirit but of study and learning If they read the Scripture 't is but a dead letter and meer lip-labour If they celebrate the Sacraments with that wisdome reverence and decency which becomes those holy mysteries they quarrell at the place or time or gesture or company or ceremonies used Not considering that Ceremonies in Religion are like hair ornaments though not essentials and ought to be neither too long lest they hide and obscure it nor too short lest they leave it naked and deformed Since the end and use of them is no more but to set forth piety with the greater comelinesse and auguster majesty to men If they name any Apostle Evangelist or other Christian of undoubted sanctity with the Epithet of Saint they are so scared with the thought of the Popes canonizing Saints that they start at the very name so used as if it were an unsanctified title and not to be applyed to the memory of the just which is blessed but onely arrogated to some persons living who frequently and ambitiously call themselves and their party 2 Tim. 1.13 The Saints If they use the ancient Doxology giving glory to the Father Son and holy Ghost which all Churches Greek and Latin did the Socinian and Arian Ears of some men are highly offended at it as if Christians must ask them leave to own the holy Trinity and to give solemne publique glory to the Creator Saviour and sanctifying Comforter of the Church If Ministers use those wholesome forms of sound words which are
mens fight may easily discover folly in the purest Angels of his Church many spots in the brightest Moones and much nebulousnesse in the fairest Stars Yet God forbid that any men of justice honour or conscience should charge upon all Ministers and the whole function the disorders of some when as there are many hundreds of grave learned wise humble meek and quiet spirited men whose excellent vertues graces endowments and publique merits may more than enough countervaile and expiate the weaknesse or extravagancies of their brethren Ministers as well as other men except those whose opinions and fancies are so died in graine that their follies will never depart from them have learned many experiences both in England and Scotland that an over-charged or an ill-discharged zeal usually breaks it self in sunder with infinite danger not only to its authours but to its abettors assistants and spectators And however at first it might seem levelled against enemies yet it makes the neerest friends and standers by ever after wary and afraid both of such Guns and their Gunners of such dangerous designes and their designers Nothing is more touchy and intractable than matters of civill power and dominion in which we have neither precept nor practise from Christ or his Apostles for Ministers to engage themselves in any way of offense which their wisedome avoided They were thought of old things fitter for the hands of Cyclops who forged Jupiters thunderbolts than for the Priests of the Gods Great and sad experiences shewing how rough and violent with bloud and ruine all secular changes are how unsutable and unsafe to the softer hands of Ministers these have added wisdome to the wise and taught them very sober and wholesome lessons of all peaceable and due subjection both to God who may govern us by whom he pleaseth and to man Psal 75.7 who cannot have power but by Gods permission Dan. 4.17 which at the best and justest posture is not to be envied so much as pitied by prudent and holy men who see it attended with so many cares Habet aliquid ex iniquo omne magnum exemplum quod contra singulos utilitate publica rependitur Tacit l. 14. An. Liceat inter abruptam contumaciam deforme obsequium pergere iter ambitione periculis vacuum Tac. An. l. 4. feares and horrours infinite dangers and temptations befides a kinde of necessity sometime in reason of State to doe things unjust and uncomfortable at least to tolerate wayes that are neither pious nor charitable So that the humble peaceable and discreet carriage of all wife and worthy Ministers which only becomes them may justly plead for favour and protection against this calumny of pronenesse to sedition faction or any illegall disturbance in civill affaires even in all the unhappy troubles of the late yeares the wisest and best Ministers have generally so behaved themselves as shewed they had no other design than to live a quiet life in all godlinesse and honesty to serve the Lord Christ and his Church peaceably if they might in that station where they were lawfully set if they could not help in fair wayes to steer the ship as they desired yet they did not seek to set it on fire or split and overwhelm it If in any thing relating to publique variations and violent tossings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pind. they were not able to act with a satisfied and good conscience yet they ever knew their duty was humbly to bear with silence and suffer with patience from the hands of men the will of God Rom. 11.33 whose judgements they humbly adore though dark deep and past finding out If some mens dubiousnesse and unsatisfiednesse in any things as they are the works of men who may sin and erre be to be blamed as it is not in any righteous judgement yet it is withall so far to be pitied and pardoned by all that are true Christians or civill men as they see it accompanied with commendable integrity meeknesse and harmlesse simplicity which onely becomes these doves and serpents Mat. 10.16 which Christ hath sent to teach his Church both wisdome and innocency to walk exactly and circumspectly in the slippery pathes of this world not onely by sound doctrine but also by setled examples Which excellent temper would prevent many troubles among Christians and much evill suspicion against Ministers who could not be justly offensive or suspected to any in power if they saw them chiefly intentive to serve and fearfull to offend God always tender of good consciences and of the honor of true Christian Religion which was not wont to see Ministers with swords and pistols in their hands but with their Bibles and Liturgies not rough and targetted as the Rhinoceroes but soft and gently clothed as the sheep and Shepherds of Christ There is not indeed a more portentous sight than to see Galeatos Clericos Ministers armed with any other helmet than that of Salvation or sword than that of the Spirit or shield than that of Faith by which they will easily overcome the world if once they have overcome themselves whose courage will be as great in praying preaching and suffering with patience meeknesse and constancy as in busting and fighting which becomes Butchers better than Ministers to whom Christ long ago commanded in the person of S. Peter to put up their swords Mat. 26.52 nor was he ever heard to repeal that word or to bid them draw their swords no not in Christs cause that is meerly for matters of Religion who hath Legions of Angels Armies of truths gifts and graces of the Spirit to defend himself and his true interests in Religion withall which are far better and fitter weapons in Ministers warfare 2 Cor. 10.4 The weapons of our warfare are not carnall than such swords and staves as they brought who intended to betray to take and to destroy Christ Let secular powers forcibly act as becomes them in the matters of Religion so farre as they are asserted and established by Law whose proper attendant is armed power It is enough for Ministers zeal to be with Moses Exod. 17. Aaron and Hur in the Mount praying when Joshua in the justest quarrell i● fighting with Amalek that is the unprovoked and causelesse enemies of the Church If at any time they counsel or act matters of life and death they must be so clearly and indisputably just and within the compasse of their duty and relation as may every way become valiant men humble Christians and prudent Ministers Object 4. Of the Engagement But to confute all that can be said for the Ministers of England their adversaries are ready to object that many of them scruple the taking of the Engagement This they think is a pill which will either choak their consciences if they swallow it or purge them out of their livings if they doe not For contrary to all other Physick this operates most strongly on those that never take it
the substance of them nor any lessening of Christs right to them And for this I have produced not weak opinions not light conjectures not partiall customes not bare prepossession 3. A summary of what makes for the function of the Ministry not uncertain tradition not blind antiquity not meer crowds or numbers of men much lesse do I solemnly alledge my own specious fancies devout dreams uncertain guessings Seraphick dictates and magisteriall Enthusiasms But 1. evident grounds out of the Word of God for a divine Ordination and institution at first 2. Scripture history for succession to four generations actually 3. Promises and precepts for perpetuity of power Ministeriall and assistance which was derived by the solemn ceremony of the imposition of hands by such only as had been ordained and so enabled with successionall power till the coming of Christ 4. This primitive root and divine plantation of the Ministeriall office and power we finde oft confirmed by miraculous gifts besides the innocency humility simplicity piety and charity of those Apostles primitive Bishops and Presbyters set forth in the holinesse of their lives and the glorious successes of their Ministeriall labours converting thousands by preaching the Gospell and by their Ministeriall power and authority planting Churches in all the then known and reputed world oft crowning their doctrines and Ministry with Martyrdome 5. After this I produce what is undenyably alleadged from authours of the best credit learned and godly men famous in the Church through all the first ages shewing the Catholick and uncontradicted consent the constant and uninterrupted succession by Bishops and Presbyters in every City and Countrey which all Christians in every true Church owned received and reverenced as men indued with such order and power Ministeriall as was divine supernaturall and sacred as from Christ and in his Name though by man as the means and conduit of it This is made good to our dayes in the persons and office of those Ministers who were and are duely ordained in this Church 6. Next I plead with the like evident and undenyable demonstrations the great abilities in all sorts of ministeriall gifts the use and advancement of all good learning the vindicating of true Christian and reformed religion the manifold discoveries of sound judgement discreet zeal holy industry blamelesse constancy and all other graces wherein the Ministers of England have not been inferiour to the best and most famous in any reformed Christian Church and incomparably beyond any of their defamatory adversaries 7. I add to these as credentiall Letters the testimonies and seales which God hath given of his grace and holy Spirit accompanying the Ministry in England upon the hearts of many thousands both before and eminently since the Reformation by which men have been converted to and confirmed in Faith Repentance Charity and holy life the tryall of which is most evident in that patience and constancy which many Ministers as other Christians in this Church have oft shewen in the sufferings which they have chosen rather then they would sin agaist their Conscience and that duty which they owed to God and man 8. Last of all if any humane consideration may hope for place in the neglect of so many divine the civill rights and priviledges which the piety of this Nation and the Laws of this Land have alwayes given to Ministers of the Gospell by the fullest and freest consent of all Estates in Parliament that they might never want able Ministers nor these all fitting support and incouragements These I say ought so far to be regarded by men of justice honour and conscience as not suddenly to break all those sacred sanctions and laws asunder by which their forefathers have bound them to God to his Church and Ministers for the perpetuall preservation of the true Christian Religion among them and their posterity Furthermore 4. The fruits of Ministers labours in England if the godly Ministers of this Church of England whom some men destine to as certain destruction and extirpation as ever the Agagite did the Jews if they be the messengers of the most high God the Prophets of the Lord the Evangelicall Priests those by whom Salvation hath been brought and continued to this part of the world If they have like the good Vine and Figtree been serviceable to God and man to Church and State If they have laboured more aboundantly and been blessed more remarkably than any other under heaven If they have preached sound doctrine in season and out of season if they have given full proof of their Ministry not handling the Word of God deceitfully nor defrauding the Church of any Truth of God or divine Ordinance If many of them have fought a good fight and finished their course with joy and great successe against sin errour superstition and profanenesse If they have snatched many firebrands out of hell pulled many souls out of the snares of the divell If they have fasted and mourned and watched and prayed and studyed and taught and lived to the honour of the Gospell and the good of many soules If they have like Davids Worthies stood in the gap against those Anakims and Zanzummins who by lying wonders learned sophistries and accurate policies have to this day from the first reformation and coming out of Egypt sought to bring us thither again or else to destroy the very name of Protestants and reformed Religion from under heaven If almost all good Christians and not a few of these renegadoes their ungratefull enemies doe owe in respect of knowledge or grace to the Ministers of England as Philemon to St. Paul even their very selves If they have oft in secret wept over this sinfull Nation and wantonly wicked people as Christ did over Jerusalem and as Noah Daniel and Job oft stood in the gap to turne away the wrath of God from this self-destroying Nation If now they have no other thoughts or practises but such as become the truth and peace of that Gospell which they preach and that blessed example which Christ hath set them whom in all things they desire to imitate in serving God edifying the Church doing good to all men praying for their enemies and paying all civill respects which they owe to any men If all true and faithfull Ministers have done and designe onely to doe many great and good works in this Church and Nation for which of these is it that some men seek and others with silence suffer them to be stoned as the Jews threatned Christ and the inconstant Lystrians acted on St. Paul who after miracles wrought by him among them and high applauses of him from them was after dragged as a dead dog out of their City by them Act. 14.19 supposing him to be dead If all true and worthy Ministers being conscious to their own Integrity a midst their common infirmities after their escaping the late stormes in which many perished are easily able without any disorder to them to shake off those
Vipers Act. 28.5 which out of the fire of some mens spirits now seise upon them with poysonous calumnies of factious covetous seditious c. If there be still upon the true and able Ministers of England those Characters of divine Authority those gifts of the holy Ghost in all good understanding knowledge utterance zeal courage industry and constancy which fits them with power for that holy function and carries them through it with all fidelity and patience not only to serve but to suffer for the Lord Jesus and his Church If they have been just Stewards and faithfull dispensers of the Mysteries of Christ to his houshold this Church how can they without infinite rudenesse and unchristian insolence be shamefully used and driven out of their places and Offices If they have been spirituall fathers to many soules and as tender mothers to them not disdaining to bear with the manners of childish Christians in many places who turned their respect into peevishnesse and their love into scorn how unnaturall will it be for Christians to become patricides murtherers of their spirituall fathers to whom in some sense they owe more Legatis vim aut ●ontum●liam inferre nefas Reg. Iur. Jus Legatorum cum hominum praesidio munitum tum etiam divino ju●e est vallatum Cic. de Arus resp than to their naturall If Ministers be Embassadors they ought not to be violated by the Law of Nations behaving themselves as becomes the honour of their Embassy and sender how much more if from God sent by Christ in his and his Fathers Name and that with a message of Peace and reconciliation from heaven to poore sinners The greatest and proudest of them being but wormes meat may not safely despise injure or turn away the least of the servants and Messengers of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ which speak in his Name that is both his Truth and by his Authority which can be no where else in any ordinary Ministry but in those who are dayly ordained in this holy descent and succession If they have been watchfull Shepheards over their severall flocks for good and not for evill how barbarous must it be for Sheep to turn Wolves and devoure those Pastors who have fed them as Jacob did Labans flocks Gen. 31.40 with all care and diligence day and night leading them by the purest waters and in the safest pastures Nor is there now any more cause to change the wages of these Shepheards of soules which is alwayes like to be to their losse than covetous Laban had against honest Jacob. If none other can authoritatively and as of Office and duty in the name and by the mission of Christ bring the message of peace and reconciliation to sinners which hath besides the Word sacred and mysterious seales and other holy actions of power and authority to be performed by peculiar fit and appointed Ministers how beautifull ought their feet to be and their steps welcome Rom. 10.15 which flow with truth and peace grace and mercy How farre should they be from being trodden under the feet of proud covetous and envious men who first casting dirt in their faces after with much dust and clamour seek to stir up not onely the people Act. 21.36 but the powers against them as if they were burthens of the earth not fit to live But wisdome is justified of her children Matth. 11.19 I cannot be so injurious to my countrey and countreymen 5. Ministers expect better things from good Christians as to think that to persons of such worth standing in such relations between God and man invested with so holy authority managing it with such divine power and efficacy crowned with so great successes recommended to all worthy Christians with so many publique merits both to Church and State as the true and duely ordained Ministers of the Church of England are either men of purity or of power can be so wanting to or so shrink from their duty to God their love to Christ their zeal for the reformed Religion their care of their countrey of their posterity and of their owne soules as not to dare to speak or appear for them or not to endeavour in all fair wayes to improve the interest they have in the publique by which to preserve so many good and righteous persons as to mans tribunall from poverty contempt and ruine yea to preserve themselves and their dearest relations from most irreligious infamy of ingratefull deserting and oppressing so deserving men Men cannot but be unholy that can be so unthankefull 2 Tim. 3.2 And if Ingratitude be in all other relations and merits among men justly esteemed as the most detestable disease and inhumane deformity in the soul shall it onely seem beauty health and a commendable quality when it is offered by Christians to their Ministers Such as may with equall modesty and truth plead their own innocency and protest against the immanity of their enemies malice For setting aside the idlenesse and pragmatick vanity of some Ministers in later and more licentious times whose either insufficiency or lazynesse or inordinate activity or abject popularity hath made them the staine and shame of their holy function and whose burthen is too heavy for my pen to discharge them of if we looke upon those learned laborious sober and venerable Ministers who have been and still are the glory and crown of their function of this Church and Nation in their severall degrees and stations * Godly Ministers not injurious but meritorious to the publique I may lowdly proclaim with Samuel this protestation in their behalf Behold the * 1 Sam. 12.3 Ministers of the Lord and of this Church O you unthankefull Christians and causlesse enemies witnesse against them before the Lord and before his people whose Oxe or Asse have they taken whom have they defrauded or oppressed whose hurt or damage have they procured whose good have not they studyed and endeavoured whose evill of sin or misery have they not pitied and sought to relieve what is the injury for which so desolating a vengeance must passe upon them and their whole function What is the blasphemy against God or man for which these Naboths must lose their lives 1 King 21. and livelyhoods wherein have they deserved so ill of former or later ages that they should be so used as Ahab commanded of Micaiah and the Jews did to Jeremiah to be cast into prisons into sordid and obscure restraints or to be exposed to Mendicant liberty for to be fed onely with the bread and water of affliction if they can obtain so much What necessary truth of God have they detained in unrighteousnesse what error have they broached revived or maintained what superstition have they nourished what licentiousnesse in sin have they incouraged what true Christian liberty which alwayes containes it selfe in bounds of Gods and mans laws have they denyed to or defrauded the people of unlesse all things of publique