Selected quad for the lemma: virtue_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
virtue_n power_n spiritual_a temporal_a 1,927 5 9.8031 5 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A53732 The true nature of a Gospel church and its government ... by the late pious and learned minister of the Gospel, John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1689 (1689) Wing O815; ESTC R13410 211,358 294

There are 20 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

21.17 1 Tim. 5.17 They are some of them on other accounts called Bishops Pastors Teachers Ministers Guides but what belongs unto any of them in point of Rule or what interest they have therein it belongs unto them as Elders and not otherwise Act. 20.17 18. SO under the Old Testament where the Word doth not signifie a difference in Age but is used in a moral sence Elders are the same with Rulers or Governours whether in Offices Civil or Ecclesiastical especially the Rulers of the Church were constantly called its Elders And the use of the Word with the abuse of the Power or Office intended by it is traduced to signifie Men in Authority Signeiores Eldermani in all places 2. CHURCH-Power acted in its Rule is called the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven by an expression derived from the Keys that were a sign of Office-Power in the Families of Kings Isa. 22.22 and used by our Saviour himself to denote the communication of Church-Power unto others which was absolutely and universally vested in himself under the Name of the Key of David Revel 3.7 Mat. 16.19 3. THESE Keys are usually referred unto Two Heads namely the one of Order the other of Jurisdiction 4. BY the Key of Order the Spiritual Right Power and Authority of Bishops or Pastors to Preach the Word to Administer the Sacraments Doctrinally to bind and loose the Consciences of Men are intended 5. BY Jurisdiction the Rule Government or Discipline of the Church is designed though it was never so called or esteemed in the Scripture or the Primitive Church until the whole nature of Church-Rule or Discipline was depraved and changed Therefore neither the Word nor any thing that is signified by it or which it is applied unto ought to be admitted unto any consideration in the things that belong unto the Church or its Rule it being expressive of and directing unto that corrupt Administration of things Ecclesiastical according unto the Canon Law by which all Church-Rule and Order is destroyed I do therefore at once dismiss all disputes about it as of things Foreign to the Gospel and Christian Religion I mean as unto the Institutions of Christ in his Church The Civil Jurisdiction of Supreme Magistrates about the externals of Religion is of another consideration But that these Keys do include the two-fold distinct Powers of Teaching and Rule of Doctrine and Discipline is freely granted 6. IN the Church of England as in that of Rome there is a peculiar distribution made of these Keys Unto some that is unto one special sort or order of Men they are both granted both the Key of Order and of Jurisdiction which is unto Diocesan Bishops with some others under various Canonical restrictions and limitations as Deans and Arch-Deacons Unto some is granted the Key of Order only without the least interest in Jurisdiction or Rule by virtue of their Office which are the Parochial Ministers or meer Presbyters without any additional Title or Power as of Commissary Surrogates or the like And unto a third sort there is granted the Key of Rule or Jurisdiction almost plenipotent who have no share in the Key of Order that is were never Ordained Separated Dedicated unto any Office in the Church such as are the Chancellors c. 7. THESE Chancellors are the only Lay-Elders that I know any where in any Church that is Persons entrusted with the Rule of the Church and the Disposition of its Censures who are not Ordained unto any Church-Office but in all other things continue in the Order of the Laity or the People All Church Rulers by institution are Elders To be an Elder of the Church and a Ruler in it is all one Wherefore these Persons being Rulers in the Church and yet thus continuing in the Order of the People are Lay-Elders whom I wonder how so many of the Church came so seriously to oppose seeing this Order of Men is owned by none but themselves The Truth is and it must be acknowledged that there is no known Church in the World I mean whose Order is known unto us and is of any publick consideration but they do dispose the Rule of the Church in part into the hands of Persons who have not the power of Authoritative Preaching of the Word and Administration of the Sacraments committed unto them For even those who place the whole external Rule of the Church in the Civil Magistrate do it as they judge him an Officer of the Church entrusted by Christ with Church-Power And those who deny any such Officers as are usually called Ruling Elders in the Reformed Churches to be of Divine Institution yet maintain that it is very necessary that there should be such Officers in the Church either appointed by the Magistrate or chosen by the people and that with cogent Arguments See Grot. de Jure Potestat Cap. 8. BUT this distribution mentioned of Church-Power is unscriptural nor is there any foot-steps of it in Antiquity It is so as unto the two latter Branches of it That any one should have the power of Order to Preach the Word to Administer the Seals to bind and loose the Conscience Doctrinally or Ministerially to bind and loose in the Court of Conscience and yet by the virtue of that Office which gives them this power not to have a Right and Power of Rule or Discipline to bind and loose in the Court of the Church is that which neither the Scripture nor any example of the Primitive Church doth give countenance unto And as by this means those are abridged and deprived of their power to whom it is granted by the Institution and Law of Christ as it is with all Elders duly called unto their Office so in the Third Branch there is a grant of Church-Power unto such as by the Law of Christ are excluded from any Interest therein The enormity of which constitution I shall not at present insist upon But Enquiry must be made what the Scripture directs unto herein And 1. THERE is a Work and Duty of Rule in the Church distinct from the Work and Duty of Pastoral Feeding by the Preaching of the Word and Administration of the Sacraments All agree herein unless it be Erastus and those that follow him who seem to oppose it But their Arguments lie not against Rule in general which were brutish but only a Rule by external Jurisdiction in the Elders of the Church So they grant the general Assertion of the necessity of Rule for who can deny it only they contend about the subject of power required thereunto A Spiritual Rule by virtue of mutual voluntary confederation for the preservation of Peace Purity and Order in the Church few of that opinion deny at least it is not that which they do oppose For to deny all Rule and Discipline in the Church with all Administration of Censures in the exercise of a Spiritual Power internally inherent in the Church is to deny the Church to be a Spiritual Political
Talents whether in things Spiritual or Temporal which they have received Some are Rich and some are Poor some are Old and some are Young some in Peace some in Trouble some have received more spiritual Gifts than others and have more opportunities for their Exercise It belongs unto the Rule of the Church that all be Admonished Instructed and Exhorted to attend unto their respective Duties not only publickly in the preaching of the Word but personally as occasion doth require according to the observation which those in Rule do make of their Forwardness or Remissness in them In particular and in the way of instance Men are to be warned that they contribute unto the Necessities of the Poor and other occasions of the Church according unto the Ability that God in his Providence hath intrusted them withal and to admonish them that are defective herein in order to their Recovery unto the discharge of this Duty in such a measure as there may be an Equality in the Church 2 Cor. 8.14 And all other Duties of an a-like nature are they to attend unto 4. THEY are to watch against the beginnings of any Church-Disorders such as those that infested the Church of Corinth or any of the like sort with remissness as unto the Assemblies of the Church and the Duties of them which some are subject unto as the Apostle intimates Heb. 10.25 On the Constancy and Diligence of the Elders in this part of their Work and Duty the very Being and Order of the Church do greatly depend The want hereof hath opened a door unto all the Troubles Divisions and Schisms that in all Ages have invaded and perplexed the Churches of Christ from within themselves And from thence also have Decays in Faith Love and Order insensibly prevailed in many to the dishonour of Christ and the danger of their own Souls First one grows remiss in attending unto the Assemblies of the Church and then another first to one degree then to another until the whole Lump be infected A diligent watch over these things as to the beginnings of them in all the members of the Church will either heal and recover them that offend or it will warn others and keep the Church from being either corrupted or defiled Heb. 3. Chap. 12. 5. IT belongs unto them also to visit the Sick especially such as whose inward or outward conditions do expose them unto more than ordinary trials in their Sickness that is the Poor the Afflicted the Tempted in any kind This in general is a moral Duty a Work of Mercy but it is moreover a peculiar Church-Duty by virtue of Institution And one end of the Institution of Churches is that the Disciples of Christ may have all that Spiritual and Temporal Relief which is needful for them and useful to them in their Troubles and Distresses And if this Duty were diligently attended unto by the Officers of the Church it would add much unto the Glory and Beauty of our Order and be an abiding reserve with Relief in the Minds of them whose outward condition exposeth them to straits and sorrows in such a season I ADD hereunto as a Duty of the same nature the visitation of those who suffer unto Restraint and Imprisonment upon the account of their Profession adherence unto Church-Assemblies or the Discharge of any Pastoral or Office-Duties in them This is a case wherewith we are not unacquainted nor are like so to be Some look on this as the Duty of all the Members of the Church who yet enjoy their Liberty and so it is as their Opportunities and Abilities will allow them provided their discharge of it be useful unto those whom they visit and inoffensive unto others But this Duty diligently attended unto by the Elders representing therein the care and love of the whole Church yea of Christ himself unto his Prisoners is a great Spring of Relief and Comfort unto them And by the Elders may the Church be acquainted what yet is required of them in a way of Duty on their account The care of the Primitive Churches herein was most eminent 6. IT belongs unto them and their Office to advise with and give direction unto the Deacons of the Church as unto the making Provision and Distribution of the Charity of the Church for the Relief of the Poor The Office of the Deacons is principally Executive as we shall see afterwards Inquisition into the state of the Poor with all their circumstances with the warning of all the Members of the Church unto Liberality for their Supply belongs unto the Elders 7. WHEN the State of the Church is such through Suffering Persecution and Affliction that the Poor be multiplied among them so as that the Church it self is not able to provide for their Relief in a due manner if any Supply be sent unto them from the love and bounty of other Churches it is to be deposited with these Elders and disposed according to their advice with that of the Teachers of the Church Act. 11.30 8. IT is also their Duty according to the advantage which they have by their peculiar inspection of all the Members of the Church their ways and their walking to acquaint the Pastors or Teaching-Elders of the Church with the State of the Flock which may be of singular use unto them for their Direction in the present Work of the Ministry He who makes it not his business to know the State of the Church which he ministers unto in the Word and Doctrine as to their Knowledge their Judgment and Understanding their Temptations and Occasions and applies not himself in his Ministry to search out what is necessary and useful unto their Edification he fights uncertainly in his whole Work as a Man beating the Air. But whereas their obligation to attend unto the Word and Prayer confines them much unto a retirement for the greatest part of their time they cannot by themselves obtain that Acquaintance with the whole Flock but that others may greatly assist therein from their daily Inspection Converse and Observation 9. AND it is their Duty to meet and consult with the Teaching-Elders about such things of importance as are to be proposed in and unto the Church for its consent and compliance Hence nothing crude or indigested nothing unsuited to the sence and Duty of the Church will at any time be proposed therein so to give occasion unto contests or janglings disputes contrary unto Order or Decency but all things may be preserved in a due regard unto the Gravity and Authority of the Rulers 10. TO take care of the due Liberties of the Church that they be not imposed on by any Diotrephes in Office or without it 11. IT is incumbent on them in times of Difficulties and Persecution to consult together with the other Elders concerning all those things which concern the present Duty of the Church from time to time and their preservation from violence according unto the will of Christ. 12. WHEREAS there
got a pretence of its Power administred by such ways and means as wherein the Consciences of Men neither of those by whom it is Administred nor of those unto whom it is Applied are any way concerned with respect unto the Authority or any Institution of Jesus Christ. FROM an observation hereof and a desire to vindicate as well Christian Religion from such a scandalous Abuse as Mankind from Bondage to such a monstrous fiction as is the present power and exercise of it some have fallen into another extream denying that there is any such thing as Excommunication appointed or approved by the Gospel But this neither is nor ever will be a way to reduce Religion nor any thing in it unto its Primitive Order and Purity To deny the Being of any thing because it hath been abused when there could have been no abuse of it but upon a supposition of its Being is not a rational way to reprove and convince that abuse And when those who have corrupted this Institution find the insufficiency of the Arguments produced to prove that there never was any such Institution it makes them secure in the practice of their own Abuses of it For they imagine that there is nothing incumbent on them to justify their present possession and exercise of the Power of Excommunication but that Excommunication it self is appointed in the Church by Christ whereas the true consideration of this Appointment is the only means to divest them of their power and practice For the most effectual course to discharge and disprove all corruptions in the Agenda or Practicals of Religion as the Sacraments publick Worship Rule and the like is to propose and declare the things themselves in their Original simplicity and purity as appointed by Christ and recorded in the Scriptures A real view of them in such a Proposal will divest the minds of Men not corrupted and hardened by Prejudice and Interest of those erroneous conceptions of them that from some kind of Tradition they have been prepossessed withal And this I shall now attempt in this particular of Excommunication THERE hath been great enquiry about the nature and exercise of this Ordinance under the Old Testament with the Account given of it by the latter Jews For the Right and Power of it in general belongs unto a Church as such every Church and not that which is purely Evangelical only This I shall not enquire into it hath been sifted to the bran already and intermixed with many Rabbinical conjectures and mistakes In general there is nothing more certain than that there was a doubl● Removal of Persons by Church-Authority from the communion of the whole Congregation in Divine Worship The one for a Season the other for Ever whereof I have given Instances elsewhere But I intend only the consideration of what belongs unto Churches under the New Testament And to this end we may observe 1. THAT all lawful Societies constituted such by voluntary confederation according unto peculiar Laws and Rules of their own choice unto especial Duties and Ends have a Right and Power by the Light of Nature to receive into their Society those that are willing and meet ingaging themselves to observe the Rules Laws and Ends of the Society and to Expel them out of it who wilfully deviate from those Rules This is the life and form of every lawful Society or Community of Men in the World without which they can neither coalesce nor subsist But it is required hereunto 1. THAT those who so enter into such a Society have Right or Power so to do And many things are required unto this end As 1. That those who enter into such a Society be sui Juris have a lawful Right to dispose of themselves as unto all the Duties and Ends of such a Society Hence Children Servants Subjects have no power in themselves to enter into such Societies without the interposition of and obligation from a power Superior unto that of Parents Masters or Princes namely that of God himself 2. That the Rules Laws and ends of the Society be lawful good and useful unto themselves and others For there may be a confederation in and for evil which is a combination that gives no Right nor Power over one another or towards others that enter into it 3. That it contains nothing that is prejudicial unto others in things Divine or Humane 4. Nor oblige unto the omission or neglect of any Duty that Men by virtue of any Relations Natural Moral or Political do owe unto others Nor 5. Is hurtful unto themselves in their Lives Liberties Names Reputation usefulness in the World or any thing else unto whose preservation they are obliged by the Law of Nature Nor 6. Can be or are such Persons obliged to forsake the conduct of themselves in things Divine and Humane by the Light of their own Consciences by an Ingagement of blind obedience unto others which would render every Society unlawful by the Law of God and Light of Nature 7. Least of all have any Persons Right or Power to oblige themselves in such Societies unto things Evil Sinful Superstitious or Idolatrous THESE things are plain and evident in themselves and every way sufficient to divest all the Religious Societies and Fraternities that are erected in the Church of Rome of all that Right and Power which belongs unto lawful Societies constituted by voluntary confederation And if any thing inconsistent with these principles of Natural Light be pretended in Churches it divests them of all Power as to the exercise of it by virtue of any compact or confederation whatever 2. IT is required that a Society by voluntary consent vested with the Right and Power mentioned do neither give nor take away any Right Privilege or Advantage to or from any Members of the Society which belong unto them Naturally or Politically but their Power is confined unto those things alone wherein Men may be benefited and advantaged by the Society And this is the foundation of all political Societies Men for the sake and benefit of them may and ought to forego many particular Advantages which without them they might make unto themselves But they cannot forego any of those Rights which in their several Relations are inseparably annexed unto them by the Law of Nature nor give power over themselves in such things unto the Society So is it with Churches the power of expulsion out of their Society extends only unto the Benefits and Advantages which the Society as such doth afford and communicate Now these are only things Spiritual if Churches be an institution of him whose Kingdom is not of this World. The power then that is in Churches by virtue of their being what they are extends not it self unto any outward concernments of Men as unto their Lives Liberties Natural or Political Privileges Estates or Possessions unless we shall say that Men hold and possess these things by virtue of their Relation unto the Church which is to overthrow
Commission that Christ gave a Pastoral Relation or Presbytership which was included in their Apostleship and Exercised toward the Church of Jerusalem Such Presbyter-ship John and Peter both had Hence there remains no other Successors jure to the Apostles but ordinary Pastors and Teachers These are relative Officers and are always in and to some particular Congregations we know of no Catholick visible Church that any Pastors are ordained to 1. The Scripture speaks of no Church as Catholick visible 2. The thing it self is but a Chimaera of some Men's Brains it 's not in rerum naturâ for if a Catholick visible Church be all the Churches that I see at a time I am not capable of seeing much more than what can Assemble in one place And if it be meant of all the Churches actually in being how are they visible to me where can they be seen in one place I may as well call all the Cities and Corporations in the World the Catholick visible City or Corporation which all rational Men would call Nonsence Besides if all Organized Churches could be got together it 's not Catholick in respect of Saints Militant much less of Triumphant for many are no Church Members that are Christs Members and many visible Members are no true Members of Christ Jesus Where is any such Church capable of Communion in all Ordinances in one place and the Scripture speaks of no other Organized visible Church Again to a Catholick visible Church constituted should be a Catholick visible Pastor or Pastors for as the Church is such is the Pastor and Officers to the Mystical Church Christ is the mystical Head and Pastor he is called the chief Bishop and Shepherd of our Souls 1 Pet. 2.25 hence the uncalled are his Sheep as John 10.16 but to all visible Churches Christ hath appointed a visible Pastor or Pastors and where is the Pastor of the Catholick visible Church he is not to be found unless it please us to take him from Rome To say that all individual Pastors are Pastors to the Catholick Church is either to say that they are invested with as much Pastoral Power and Charge in one Church as in another and then they are indefinite Pastors and therefore all Pastors have mutual Power in each others Churches and so John may come into Thomas his Church and exercise all parts of Jurisdiction there and Thomas into John's or a Minister to the Catholick Church hath an universal Catholick Power over the Catholick Church if so the Power and Charge which every ordinary Pastor hath is Apostolick Or lastly he is invested with an Arbitrary Power at least as to the taking up a particular Charge where he pleaseth with a non obstante to the Suffrages of the People for if he hath an Office whereby he is equally and indisputably related to all Churches it 's at his liberty by virtue of this Office to take where he pleaseth But every Church-Officer under Christ is a visible relate and the correlate must be such whence the Church must be visible to which he is an Officer It 's absurd to say a Man is a visible Husband to an invisible Wife the relate and correlate must be ejusdem naturae It 's true Christ is related to the Church as mystical Head but it 's in respect of the Church in its mystical Nature for Christ hath substituted no mystical Officers in his Church There is a great deal of difference between the mystical and external visible Church though the latter is founded upon it and for the sake of it It 's founded upon it as taking its true spiritual Original from it deriving vital Spirits from it by a mystical Vnion to and Communion with Christ and his Members and it 's for the Sake of it all external visible Assemblies Ministers Ordinances are for the sake of the mystical Body of Christ for calling in the Elect and the Edifying of them to that full measure of Stature they are designed unto But the different consideration lies in these Things 1. That the mystical Church doth never fail neither is diminished by any Shocks of Temptation or Suffering that in their visible Profession any of them undergo whereas visible Churches are often broken scattered yea unchurched and many Members fail of the Grace of God by final Apostasy Likewise Christ's mystical Church is many times preserved in that State only or mostly when Christ hath not a visible organized Church according to Institution to be found on the Face of the Earth so it was with his Church often under the Old Testament-Dispensation as in Aegypt in the Days of the Judges when the Ark was carried away by the Philistins in the Days of Manasseh and other wicked Kings and especially in Babylon In such times the Faithful Ones were preserved without the true Sacrifices the teaching Priest and the Law. So hath it been in the days of the New Testament in divers places under the Draconick Heathen Persecutions and afterward in the Wilderness-state of the Church under the Anti-Christian Vsurpations and false Worship Which mystical State is the place prepared of God to hide the Seed of the Woman in from the Dragons Rage for the space of One thousand two hundred and sixty Days Again Vnto this Mystical Church is only essentially necessary a mystical Vnion unto the Lord Jesus Christ by the Gift of the Father Acceptation and Covenant-undertaking of the Son the powerful and efficacious Work of the Spirit of the Father and the Son working true saving Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and sincere Love to him and all his True Members Whereby as they have a firm and unshaken Vnion so they have a spiritual Communion though without those desirable Enjoyments of external Church Privileges and means of Grace which they are providentially often hindred from Visible Churches being but Christ's Tents and Tabernacles which he sometimes setteth up and sometimes takes down and removes at his Pleasure as he sees best for his Glory in the World. But of these he hath a special regard as to their Foundadation Matter Constitution and Order he gives forth an exact pattern from Mount Zion as of that Typical Tabernacle from Mount Sinai of Old. The Foundation part of a visible Church is the credible Profession of Faith and Holiness wherein the Lord Jesus Christ is the Corner Stone Eph. ij 20 Matth. xvi 18 This Profession is the Foundation but not the Church it self It 's not Articles of Faith or Profession of them in particular individual Persons that make an organized visible Church We are the Houshold of Faith built upon the Foundation c. 2. It 's Men and Women not Doctrine that are the Matter of a Church and these professing the Faith and practising Holiness The Members of Churches are always called in the New Testament Saints Faithful Believers They was such that were added to the Churches neither is every Believer so as such but as a professing Believer for a Man must appear
season these things are so full an indication of sincerity as that in the judgment of Charity they render Men meet to be Members of the visible Church And if any of this sort of persons through the severity of the Church in their non Admission of them should be cast on a conjunction in Superstitious and Idolatrous Worship or be otherwise exposed unto Temptations and Discouragements prejudicial unto their Souls I know not how such a Church can answer the refusal of them unto the great and universal Pastor of the whole Flock CHAP. II. Of the Formal Cause of a Particular Church THE way or means whereby such persons as are described in the foregoing Chapter may become a Church or enter into a Church-State is by mutual confederation or solemn Agreement for the performance of all the Duties which the Lord Christ hath prescribed unto his Disciples in such Churches and in order to the exercise of the power wherewith they are intrusted according unto the Rule of the Word FOR the most part the Churches that are in the World at present know not how they came so to be continuing only in that state which they have received by Tradition from their Fathers Few there are who think that any Act or Duty of their own is required to enstate them in Church Order and Relation And it is acknowledged that there is a difference between the continuation of a Church and its first Erection Yet that that continuation may be regular it is required that its first Congregating for the Church is a Congregation was so as also that the force and efficacy of it be still continued Wherefore the causes of that first gathering must be enquired into THE Churches mentioned in the New Testament planted or gathered by the Apostles were Particular Churches as hath been proved These Churches did consist each of them of many Members who were so Members of one of them as that they were not Members of another The Saints of the Church of Corinth were not Members of the Church at Philippi And the Enquiry is How those Believers in one place and the other became to be a Church and that distinct from all others The Scripture affirms in general that they gave up themselves unto the Lord and unto the Apostles who guided them in these Affairs by the will of God 2 Cor. 8.5 and that other Believers were added unto the Church Act. 2. THAT it is the Will and Command of our Lord Jesus Christ that all his Disciples should be joined in such Societies for the Duties and Ends of them prescribed and limited by himself hath been proved sufficiently before All that are Discipled by the Word are to be taught to do and observe all his Commands Matth. 28.20 THIS could originally be no otherwise done but by their own actual express voluntary consent There are sundry things which concurr as remote causes or prerequisite conditions unto this conjunction of Believers in a Particular Church and without which it cannot be Such are Baptism Profession of the Christian Faith convenient Cohabitation resorting to the Preaching of the Word in the same place But neither any of these distinctly or separately nor all of them in Conjunction are or can be the constitutive Form of a Particular Church For it is evident that they may all be and yet no such Church State ensue They cannot altogether engage unto those Duties nor communicate those Powers which appertain unto this State. WERE there no other Order in Particular Churches no other Discipline to be exercised in them nor Rule over them no other Duties no other Ends assigned unto them but what are generally owned and practised in Parochial Assemblies the Preaching of the Word within such a precinct of Cohabitation determined by Civil Authority might constitute a Church But if a Church be such a Society as is intrusted in it self with sundry Powers and Privileges depending on sundry Duties prescribed unto it if it constitute new Relations between Persons that neither naturally nor morally were before so related as Marriage doth between Husband and Wife if it require new mutual Duties and give new mutual Rights among themselves not required of them either as unto their matter or as unto their manner before it is vain to imagine that this State can arise from or have any other Formal Cause but the joint consent and virtual confederation of those concerned unto these ends For there is none of them can have any other Foundation they are all of them resolved into the Wills of Men bringing themselves under an obligation unto them by their voluntary consent I say unto the Wills of Men as their Formal Cause the supreme efficient cause of them all being the Will Law and Constitution of our Lord Jesus Christ. THUS it is in all Societies in all Relations that are not meerly natural such as between Parents and Children wherein the necessity of Powers and mutual Duties is predetermined by a Superiour Law even that of Nature wherein Powers Privileges and mutual Duties are established as belonging unto that Society Nor after its first institution can any one be incorporated into it but by his own consent and engagement to observe the Laws of it Nor if the Nature and Duties of Churches were acknowledged could there be any contest in this matter for the things ensuing are clear and evident 1. THE Lord Christ by his Authority hath appointed and instituted this Church State as that there should be such Churches as we have proved before 2. THAT by his Word or Law he hath granted Powers and Privileges unto this Church and prescribed Duties unto all belonging unto it wherein they can have no concernment who are not incorporated into such a Church 3. THAT therefore he doth Require and Command all his Disciples to join themselves in such Church Relations as we have proved warranting them so to do by his Word and Command Wherefore 4. THIS joining of themselves whereon depends all their interest in Church Powers and Privileges all their obligation unto Church Duties is a voluntary Act of the obedience of Faith unto the Authority of Christ nor can it be any thing else 5. HEREIN do they give themselves unto the Lord and to one another by their Officers in a peculiar manner according to the Will of God 2 Cor. 8.5 6. TO give our selves unto the Lord that is unto the Lord Jesus Christ is expresly to engage to do and observe all that he hath appointed and commanded in the Church as that Phrase every where signifieth in the Scripture as also joining our selves unto God which is the same 7. THIS Resignation of our selves unto the Will Power and Authority of Christ with an express ingagement made unto him of doing and observing all his Commands hath the nature of a Covenant on our part and it hath so on his by virtue of the promise of his especial presence annexed unto this engagement on our part Matth. 28.18 19 20. 8.
FOR whereas there are three things required unto a Covenant between God and Man. 1. That it be of Gods appointment and institution 2. That upon a prescription of Duties there be a solemn engagement unto their performance on the part of Men. 3. That there be especial promises of God annexed thereunto in which consists the matter of Confederation whereof mutual express Restipulation is the form they all concurr herein 9. THIS Covenant which we intend is not the Covenant of Grace absolutely considered nor are all the Duties belonging unto that Covenant prescribed in it but the principal of them as Faith Repentance and the like are presupposed unto it nor hath annexed unto it all the promises and privileges of the New Covenant absolutely considered but it is that which is prescribed as a Gospel Duty in the Covenant of Grace whereunto do belong all the Duties of Evangelical Worship all the powers and privileges of the Church by virtue of the especial promise of the peculiar presence of Christ in such a Church 10. WHEREAS therefore in the constitution of a Church Believers do give up themselves unto the Lord and are bound solemnly to engage themselves to do and observe all the things which Christ hath commanded to be done and observed in that state whereon he hath promised to be present with them and among them in an especial manner which presence of his doth interest them in all the Rights Powers and Privileges of the Church their so doing hath the nature of a Divine Covenant included in it which is the Formal Cause of their Church Sate and Being 11. BESIDES as we have proved before there are many mutual Duties required of all which join in Church Societies and Powers to be exercised and submitted unto whereunto none can be obliged without their own consent They must give up themselves unto one another by the will of God. That is they must agree consent and engage among themselves to observe all those mutual Duties to use all those Privileges and to exercise all those Powers which the Lord Christ hath prescribed and granted unto his Church See Jerem. 50.4 5. 12. THIS compleats the confederation intended which is the Formal Cause of the Church and without which either expresly or virtually performed there can be no Church State. 13. INDEED herein most Men deceive themselves and think they do not that nor that it ought to be done and dispute against it as unlawful or unnecessary which for the substance of it they do themselves and would condemn themselves in their own Consciences if they did it not For unto what end do they join themselves unto Parochial Churches and Assemblies To what end do they require all Professors of the Protestant Religion so to do declaring it to be their Duty by penalties annexed unto its neglect Is it not that they might yield obedience unto Christ in their so doing Is it not to profess that they will do and observe all whatsoever he commands them Is it not to do it in that Society in those Assemblies whereunto they do belong Is there not therein virtually a mutual Agreement and Engagement among them unto all those ends It must be so with them who do not in all things in Religion fight uncertainly as Men beating the Air. 14. NOW whereas these things are in themselves and for the substance of them known Gospel Duties which all Believers are indispensably obliged unto the more express our engagement is concerning them the more do we glorify Christ in our Profession and the greater sense of our Duty will abide on our Consciences and greater encouragement be given unto the performance of mutual Duties as also the more evident will the warranty be for the exercise of Church Power Yet do I not deny the Being of Churches unto those Societies wherein these things are virtually only observed especially in Churches of some continuance wherein there is at least an implicit consent unto the first Covenant-Constitution 15. THE Lord Christ having instituted and appointed Officers Rulers or Leaders in his Church as we shall see in the next place to look unto the discharge of all Church Duties among the Members of it to administer and dispense all its Privileges and to exercise all its Authority the consent and engagement insisted on is expresly required unto the constitution of this Order and the preservation of it For without this no Believer can be brought into that Relation unto another as his Pastor Guide Over-seer Ruler unto the ends mentioned wherein he must be subject unto him partake of all Ordinances of Divine Worship administred by him with Authority in obedience unto the will of Christ They gave their own selves to us saith the Apostle by the will of God. 16. WHEREFORE the Formal Cause of a Church consisteth in an Obediential Act of Believers in such numbers as may be useful unto the ends of Church Edification jointly giving up themselves unto the Lord Jesus Christ to do and observe all his Commands resting on the promise of his especial presence thereon giving and communicating by his Law all the Rights Powers and Privileges of his Church unto them and in a mutual Agreement among themselves jointly to perform all the Duties required of them in that State with an especial subjection unto the Spiritual Authority of Rules and Rulers appointed by Christ in that State. 17. THERE is nothing herein which any Man who hath a conscientious sense of his Duty in a professed subjection unto the Gospel can question for the substance of it whether it be according to the mind of Christ or no. And whereas the nature and essential properties of a Divine Covenant are contained in them as such it is a Foundation of any Church State. 18. THUS under the Old Testament when God would take the post●rity of Abraham into a new peculiar Church State he did it by a Solemn Covenant Herein as he prescribed all the Duties of his Worship to them and made them many blessed promises of his presence with powers and privileges innumerable so the people solemnly Covenanted and engaged with him that they would do and observe all that he had Commanded them whereby they coalesced into that Church State which abode unto the time of Reformation This Covenant is at large declared Exod. 24. For the Covenant which God made there with the people and they with him was not the Covénant of Grace under a legal dispensation for that was established unto the Seed of Abraham Four Hundred years before in the Promise with the Seal of Circumcision nor was it the Covenant of Works under a Gospel dispensation for God never renewed that Covenant under any consideration whatever But it was a peculiar Covenant which God then made with them and had not made it with their Fathers Deut. 5.2 3. whereby they were raised and erected into a Church State wherein they were intrusted with all the Privileges and enjoined all the Duties which God had
annexed thereunto This Covenant was the sole Formal Cause of their Church State which they are charged so often to have broken and which they so often solemnly renewed unto God. 19. THIS was that Covenant which was to be abolished whereon the Church State that was built thereon was utterly taken away For hereon the Hebrews ceased to be the peculiar Church of God because the Covenant whereby they were made so was abolished and taken away as the Apostle disputes at large Heb. 7 8 9. The Covenant of Grace in the promise will still continue unto the true Seed of Abraham Act. 2.38 39. But the Church Covenant was utterly taken away 20. UPON the removal therefore of this Covenant and the Church State founded thereon all Duties of Worship and Church Privileges were also taken away the things substituted in their room being totally of another kind But the Covenant of Grace as made with Abraham being continued and transferred unto the Gospel Worshippers the sign or token of it given unto him is changed but another substituted in the room thereof But whereas the Privileges of this Church Covenant were in themselves carnal only and no way spiritual but as they were Typical and the Duties prescribed in it were burdensome yea a yoke intolerable the Apostle declares in the same place that the New Church State whereinto we are called by the Gospel hath no Duties belonging unto it but such as are spiritual and easie but withal hath such holy and eminent Privileges as the Church could no way enjoy by virtue of the first Church Covenant nor could be Believers made partakers of them before that Covenant was abolished Wherefore 21. THE same way for the Erection of a Church State for the participation of the more excellent Privileges of the Gospel and performance of the Duties of it for the substance of it must still be continued For the constitution of such a Society as a Church is entrusted with Powers and Privileges by a Covenant or mutual consent with an ingagement unto the performance of the Duties belonging unto it hath its foundation in the Light of Nature so far as it hath any thing in common with other voluntary Relations and Societies was instituted by God himself as the way and means of erecting the Church State of the Old Testament and consisteth in the performance of such Duties as are expresly required of all Believers CHAP. III. Of the Polity Rule or Discipline of the Church in General 1. THE things last treated of concern the Essence of the Church or the Essential Constituent Parts of it according unto the appointment of Christ. It remains in the next place that we should treat of it as it is Organical or a Body Corporate a spiritually Political Society for the exercise of the Powers wherewith it is intrusted by Christ and the due performance of the Duties which he requires Now whereas it is brought into this estate by the setting fixing or placing Officers in it Method would require that we should first treat of them their Nature Names Power and the ways of coming unto their Offices But whereas all things concerning them are founded in the grant of Power unto the Church it self and the Institution of Polity and Rule therein by Jesus Christ I shall first treat somewhat thereof in general THAT which we intend on various considerations and in divers respects is called the Power or Authority the Polity the Rule the Government and the Discipline of the Church The Formal Nature of it is its Authority or Power It s Polity is skill and wisdom to act that Power unto its proper ends It s Rule is the actual exercise of that Power according unto that skill and wisdom It s Government is the Exercise and Application of that Authority according unto that skill towards those that are its proper Objects And it is called its Discipline principally with respect unto its end Yet is it not material whether these things are thus accurately distinguished the same thing is intended in them all which I shall call the Rule of the Church 2. THE Rule of the Church is in general The exercise of the Power or Authority of Jesus Christ given unto it according unto the Laws and Directions prescribed by himself unto its Edification This Power in Actu Primo or fundamentally is in the Church it self in Actu Secundo or its exercise in them that are especially called thereunto Whether that which is now called the Rule of the Church by some being a plain Secular Dominion have any Affinity hereunto is justly doubted That it is in it self the acting of the Authority of Christ wherein the power of Men is Ministerial only is evident For 1. All this Authority in and over the Church is vested in him alone 2. It is over the Souls and Consciences of Men only which no Authority can reach but his and that as it is his whereof we shall treat more afterwards THE sole end of the Ministerial Exercise of this Power and Rule by virtue thereof unto the Church is the Edification of it self Rom. 15.1 2 3. 2 Cor. 10.8 Chap. 13.10 Ephes. 4.14 15. 3. THIS is the especial nature and especial end of all Power granted by Jesus Christ unto the Church namely a Ministry unto Edification in opposition unto all the ends whereunto it hath been abused For it hath been so unto the Usurpation of a Dominion over the Persons and Consciences of the Disciples of Christ accompanied with Secular Grandeur Wealth and Power The Lord Christ never made a grant of any Authority for any such ends yea they are expresly forbidden by him Luk. 22.25 Matth. 20.26 27 28. Jesus called his Disciples unto him and said Ye know that the Princes of the Gentiles exercise Dominion over them and they that are Great exercise Authority upon them But it shall not be so among you but whosoever will be great among you let him be your Minister and whosoever will be chief among you let him be your Servant even as the Son of Man came not to be ministred unto but to minister ALL the Pleas of the Romanists are utterly insufficient to secure their Papal Domination from this Sword of the Mouth of the Lord Jesus For whereas their utmost pretence and defence consists in this That it is not Dominion and Power absolutely that is forbidden but the Vnlawful Tyrannical Oppressive Exercise of Power such as was in use among the Princes of the Gentiles never was there any Dominion in the World no not among the Gentiles more Cruel Oppressive and Bloody than that of the Pope's hath been But it is evident that our Lord Jesus Christ doth not in the least reflect on the Rule or Government of the Kings and Princes of the Gentiles which was Good and Righteous yea he speaks of them in an especial manner whom their Subjects for their moderate and equal Rule with their usefulness unto their Countries called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
Churches being called and gathered by their Ministry they were given unto the Church and placed in the Church for the exercise of all Office with Power unto their Edification according to the Rules and Laws of their constitution Act. 1.14 15. Chap. 6.1 2 3 4. 1 Cor. 3.22 Chap. 12.28 Ephes. 4.11 12 13 14. 2. THIS Power is ceased in the Church It is so not by virtue of any Law or constitution of Christ but by a cessation of those actings whence it did flow and whereon it did depend For unto this Apostolical Office and Power there was required 1. An immediate personal call from Christ himself 2. A Commission equally extensive unto all Nations for their Conversion and unto all Churches equally for their Edification 3. An Authority in all Churches comprehensive of all that power which is in the ordinary constitution of them distributed among many 4. A Collation of extraordinary Gifts as of infallibility in Teaching of working Miracles speaking with Tongues and the like Whereas therefore all these things do cease and the Lord Christ doth not act in the same manner towards any this Office and Power doth absolutely cease For any to pretend themselves to be Successors unto these Apostles as some with a strange confidence and impertinency have done is to plead that they are personally and immediately called by Christ unto their Office that they have Authority with respect unto all Nations and all Churches and are indued with a spirit of Infallibility and a power of working Miracles whereof outward pomp and ostentation are no sufficient evidences And certainly when some of them consider one another and talk of being the Apostles Successors it is but Aruspex Aruspicens 3. LEAST of all in the ordinary state of the Church and the continuation thereof hath the Lord Christ appointed a Vicar or rather as is pretended a Successor with a plenitude of all Church Power to be by him parcelled out unto others This is that which hath overthrown all Church Rule and Order introducing Luciferian Pride and Antichristian Tyranny in their room And whereas the only way of Christs acting his Authority over the Churches and of communicating Authority unto them to be acted by them in his Name is by his Word and Spirit which he hath given to continue in his Church unto that end unto the consummation of all things the Pope of Rome placing himself in his stead for these ends doth thereby sit in the Temple of God and shew himself to be God. But this is sufficiently confuted among all sober Christians and those who embrace it may be left to contend with the Mahometans who affirm that Jesus left John the Baptist to be his Successor as Haly succeeded unto Mahomet 5. ALL these by whom the ordinary Rule of the Church is to be exercised unto its Edification are as unto their Office and Power given unto the Church set or placed in it not as Lords of their Faith but as helpers of their joy 1 Cor. 2.2 Chap. 3.21 22 23. 2 Cor. 1.24 Ephes. 4.11 12 13 14. 1 Pet. 5.1 2. For the Church is the Spouse of Christ the Lambs Wife and by virtue of that Relation the enfeoffment into this power is her Due and Dowry all particular Persons are but her Servants for Christs sake For though some of them be Stewards and set over all their fellow Servants yet he hath not given them the trust of power to rule his Spouse at their own will and to grant what they please unto her 6. BUT as this whole Church Power is committed unto the whole Church by Christ so all that are called unto the peculiar exercise of any part of it by virtue of Office-Authority do receive that Authority from him by the only way of the communication of it namely by his Word and Spirit through the Ministry of the Church whereof we shall treat afterwards V. THESE things being thus premised in general concerning Church Power we must treat yet particularly of the communication of it from Christ and of its distribution as unto its Residence in the Church 1. EVERY Individual Believer hath Power or Right given unto him upon his believing to become the Son of God Joh. 1.12 Hereby as such he hath a Right and Title radically and originally unto with an interest in all Church Privileges to be actually possessed and used according to the Rules by him prescribed For he that is a Son of God hath a right unto all the privileges and advantages of the Family of God as well as he is obliged unto all the Duties of it Herein lies the foundation of all right unto Church Power for both it and all that belongs unto it is a part of the purchased Inheritance whereunto right is granted by Adoption wherefore the first original grant of all Church Power and Privileges is made unto Believers as such Theirs it is with these Two Limitations 1. That as such only they cannot exercise any Church Power but upon their due observation of all Rules and Duties given unto this end such are Joint Confession and Confederation 2. That each individual do actually participate therein according to the especial Rules of the Church which peculiarly respects Women that do believe 2. WHERE-ever there are two or three of these Believers the smallest number Right and Power is granted unto them actually to meet together in the name of Christ for their mutual Edification whereunto he hath promised his presence among them Matth. 18.19 20. To meet and to do any thing in the name of Christ as to exhort instruct and admonish one another or to pray together as v. 19. there is an especial Right or Power required thereunto This is granted by Jesus Christ unto the least number of consenting Believers And this is a second preparation unto the communication of Church Power Unto the former Faith only is required unto this Profession with mutual consent unto and agreement in the Evangelical Duties mentioned are to be added 3. WHERE the number of Believers is encreased so as that they are sufficient as unto their number to observe and perform all Church Duties in the way and manner prescribed for their performance they have Right and Power granted unto them to make a joint solemn Confession of their Faith especially as unto the Person of Christ and his Mediation Matth. 16.16 18. as also to give up themselves unto him and to one another in an holy Agreement or Confederation to do and observe all things whatever that he hath Commanded Hereon by virtue of his Laws in his Institutions and Commands he gives them power to do all things in their Order which he grants unto his Church and enstates them in all the Rights and Privileges thereof These Believers I say thus congregated into a Church State have immediately by virtue thereof power to take care that all things be done among them as by the Lord Christ they are Commanded to be done in and by his
Church THIS therefore is the Church Essential and Homogeneal unto which the Lord Christ hath granted all that Church Power which we enquire after made it the Seat of all Ordinances of his Worship and the Tabernacle wherein he will dwell Nor since the ceasing of extraordinary Officers is there any other way possible for the congregating of any Church than what doth virtually include the things we have mentioned 4. BUT yet this Church State is not compleat nor are the ends of its institution attainable in this State. For the Lord Christ hath appointed such things in and unto it which in this State it cannot observe For he hath given Authority unto his Church to be exercised both in its Rule and in the Administration of his solemn Ordinances of Worship The things before mentioned are all of them acts of Right and Power but not of Authority 5. WHEREFORE the Lord Christ hath ordained Offices and appointed Officers to be established in the Church Ephes. 4.13 14. Unto these is all Church Authority granted For all Authority is an act of Office-Power which is that which gives unto what is performed by the Officers of the Church the formal nature of Authority 6. THEREFORE unto the Church in the State before described Right and Power is granted by Christ to call chuse appoint and set apart persons made meet for the work of the Offices appointed by him in the ways and by the means appointed by him Nor is there any other way whereby ordinary Officers may be fixed in the Church as we have proved before and shall farther confirm afterwards THAT which hereon we must enquire into is How or by what means or by what acts of his Sovereign Power the Lord Christ doth communicate Office-Power and therewith the Office it self unto any persons whereon their Authority is directly from him and what are the Acts or Duties of the Church in the collation of this Authority THE Acts of Christ herein may be reduced unto these Heads 1. HE hath instituted and appointed the Offices themselves and made a grant of them unto the Church for its Edification As also he hath determined and limited the Powers and Duties of the Officers It is not in the power of any or of all the Churches in the World to appoint any Office or Officer in the Church that Christ hath not appointed And where there are any such they can have no Church Authority properly so called for that entirely riseth from and is resolved into the institution of the Office by Christ himself And hence in the first place all the Authority of Officers in the Church proceeds from the Authority of Christ in the institution of the Office it self for that which gives being unto any thing gives it also its essential properties 2. BY virtue of his Relation unto the Church as its Head of his Kingly Power over it and care of it whereon the continuation and edification of the Church in this World do depend where ever he hath a Church called he furnisheth some persons with such Gifts Abilities and Endowments as are necessary to the discharge of such Offices in the Powers Works and Duties of them For it is most unquestionably evident both in the nature of the thing it self and in his institution that there are some especial Abilities and Qualifications required to the discharge of every Church Office. Wherefore where the Lord Christ doth not communicate of these Abilities in such a measure as by virtue of them Church Order may be observed Church Power exercised and all Church Ordinances administred according to his mind unto the Edification of the Church it is no more in the power of Men to constitute Officers than to erect or create an Office in the Church Ephes. 4.11 12 13. 1 Cor. 12.4 5 6 7 8 c. Rom. 12.6 THIS collation of spiritual Gifts and Abilities for Office by Jesus Christ unto any doth not immediately constitute all those or any of them Officers in the Church on whom they are collated without the observation of that Method and Order which he hath appointed in the Church for the communication of office-Office-Power yet is it so prerequisite thereunto that no person not made partaker of them in the measure before mentioned can by virtue of any outward Rites Order or Power be really vested in the Ministry 3. THIS communication of Office-Power on the part of Christ consists in his institution and appointment of the way and means whereby persons gifted and qualified by himself ought to be actually admitted into their Offices so as to administer the Powers and perform the Duties of them For the way of their Call and Ordination whereof we shall speak afterwards is efficacious unto this end of communicating Office-Power meerly from his institution and appointment of it And what is not so can have no causal influence into the communication of this Power For although sundry things belonging hereunto are directed by the light of Nature as it is that where one Man is set over others in Power and Authority which before he had no natural right unto it should be by their own consent and choice And some things are of a moral nature as that especial prayer be used in and about affairs that need especial divine assistance and favour and there may be some circumstances of outward actions herein not to be determined but by the Rule of Reason on the present posture of occasions yet nothing hath any causal influence into the communication of office-Office-Power but what is of the institution and appointment of Christ. By virtue hereof all that are called unto this Office do derive all their Power and Authority from him alone 4. HE hath hereon given Commands unto the whole Church to submit themselves unto the Authority of these Officers in the discharge of their Office who are so appointed so prepared or qualified so called by himself and to obey them in all things according unto the limitations which himself also hath given unto the Power and Authority of such Officers For they who are called unto Rule and Authority in the Church by virtue of their Office are not thereon admitted unto an unlimited Power to be exercised at their pleasure in a Lordly or Despotical manner but their Power is stated bounded limited and confined as to the objects of it its Acts its manner of Administration its Ends and as unto all things wherein it is concerned The swelling over these Banks by Ambition the breaking up of these bounds by Pride and love of Domination by the introduction of a Power over the persons of Men in their outward concerns exercised in a Legal Coercive Lordly manner are sufficient to make a forfeiture of all Church Power in them who are guilty of them But after that some Men saw it fit to transgress the bounds of Power and Authority prescribed and limited unto them by the Lord Christ which was really exclusive of Lordship Dominion and all Elation above their
Brethren leaving them Servants to the Church for Christs sake they began to prescribe bounds unto themselves such as were suited unto their Interest which they called Rules or Canons and never left enlarging them at their pleasure untill they enstated the most absolute Tyranny in and over the Church that ever was in the World. BY these ways and means doth the Lord Christ communicate Office Power unto them that are called thereunto whereon they become not the Officers or Ministers of Men no not of the Church as unto the actings and exercise of their Authority but only as the good and edification of the Church is the end of it but the Officers and Ministers of Christ himself 2. IT is hence evident that in the communication of Church Power in Office unto any persons called thereunto the work and duty of the Church consists formally in Acts of Obedience unto the Commands of Christ. Hence it doth not give unto such Officers a Power or Authority that was formally and actually in the Body of the Community by virtue of any Grant or Law of Christ so as that they should receive and act the Power of the Church by virtue of a Delegation from them but only they design chuse set apart the individual persons who thereon are intrusted with Office-Power by Christ himself according as was before declared This is the Power and Right given unto the Church essentially considered with respect unto their Officers namely to design call chuse and set apart the persons by the ways of Christs appointment unto those Offices whereunto by his Laws he hath annexed Church Power and Authority WE need not therefore trouble our selves with the disputes about the first subject of Church Power or any part of it For it is a certain Rule That in the performance of all Duties which the Lord Christ requires either of the whole Church or of any in the Church especially of the Officers they are the first subject of the Power needful unto such Duties who are immediately called unto them Hereby all things become to be done in the Name and Authority of Christ. For the Power of the Church is nothing but a right to perform Church Duties in obedience unto the Commands of Christ and according unto his mind Wherefore all Church Power is originally given unto the Church essentially considered which hath a double exercise First in the call or choosing of Officers Secondly in their voluntary acting with them and under them in all Duties of Rule 1. All Authority in the Church is committed by Christ unto the Officers or Rulers of it as unto all Acts and Duties whereunto Office-Power is required and 2. Every individual person hath the liberty of his own judgment as unto his own consent or dissent in what he is himself concerned THAT this Power under the name of the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven was originally granted unto the whole professing Church of Believers and that it is utterly impossible it should reside in any other who is subject unto Death or if to be renewed upon any occasional intermission is so fully proved by all Protestant Writers against the Papists that it needs not on this occasion be again insisted on VI. THESE things have been spoken concerning the Polity of the Church in General as it is taken objectively for the constitution of its State and the laws of its Rule we are in the next place to consider it subjectively as it is a power or faculty of the minds of Men unto whom the Rule of the Church is committed And in this sence it is the wisdom or understanding of the Officers of the Church to exercise the Government in it appointed by Jesus Christ or to rule it according to his Laws and Constitutions Or THIS Wisdom is a Spiritual Gift 1 Cor. 12.9 whereby the Officers of the Church are enabled to make a due application of all the Rules and Laws of Christ unto the Edification of the Church and all the Members of it UNTO the attaining of this Wisdom are required 1. Fervent Prayer for it Jam. 1.5 2. Diligent study of the Scripture to find out and understand the Rules given by Christ unto this purpose Ezra 7.6 7 9. 1 Tim. 2.14 15. 3. Humble waiting on God for the Revelation of all that it is to be exercised about Ezek. 43.11 4. A conscientious exercise of the skill which they have received Talents traded with duly will encrease 5. A continual sense of the account which is to be given of the discharge of this great trust being called to rule in the House of God Heb. 13.17 HOW much this Wisdom hath been neglected in Church Government yea how much it is despised in the World is evident unto all It is skill in the Canon Law in the proceedings of vexatious Courts with the Learning Subtilty and Arts which are required thereunto that is looked on as the only skill to be exercised in the Government of the Church Without this a Man is esteemed no way meet to be employed in any part of the Church Government And according as any do arrive unto a dexterity in this Polity they are esteemed eminently useful But these things belong not at all unto the Government of the Church appointed by Christ nor can any sober Man think in his Conscience that so they do What is the use of this Art and Trade as unto political ends we enquired Nor is the true wisdom required unto this end with the means of attaining of it more despised more neglected by any sort of Men in the World than by those whose pretences unto Ecclesiastical Rule and Authority would make it most necessary unto them TWO things follow on the supposition laid down 1. THAT the Wisdom intended is not promised unto all the Members of the Church in General nor are they required to seek for it by the ways and means of attaining it before laid down but respect is had herein only unto the Officers of the Church Hereon dependeth the equity of the obedience of the people unto their Rulers For Wisdom for Rule is peculiarly granted unto them and their Duty it is to seek after it in a peculiar manner Wherefore those who on every occasion are ready to advance their own Wisdom and Understanding in the affairs and proceedings of the Church against the Wisdom of the Officers of it are proud and disorderly I speak not this to give any countenance unto the out-cries of some that all sorts of Men will suppose themselves Wiser than their Rulers and to know what belongs unto the Government of the Church better than they whereas the Government which they exercise belongs not at all unto the Rule of the Church determined and limited in the Scripture as the meanest Christian can easily discern nor is it pretended by themselves so to do For they say that the Lord Christ hath prescribed nothing herein but left it unto the Will and Wisdom of the Church to order
Cyprian speaks See Matth. 7.17 Joh. ●5 39 Gal. 11.9 1 Thess. 5.19 20 21. 1 Joh. 4.1 2 Joh. 10.11 WHAT is objected hereunto from the unfitness and disability of the people to make a right judgment concerning them who are to be their Pastors and Rulers labours with a three-fold weakness For 1. It reflects dishonour upon the Wisdom of Christ in Commanding them the observance and discharge of such Duties as they are no way meet for 2. It proceeds upon a supposition of that degenerate state of Churches in their Members as to Light Knowledge Wisdom and Holiness which they are for the most part fallen into which must not be allowed to have the force of Argument in it when it is to be lamented and ought to be reformed 3. It supposeth that there is no supply of Assistance provided for the people in the discharge of their Duty to guide and direct them therein which is otherwise seeing the Elders of the Church wherein any such Election is made and those of other Churches in Communion with that Church are by the common advice and declaration of their judgment to be Assistant unto them THIRDLY The Church is a voluntary Society Persons otherwise absolutely free as unto all the Rules Laws and Ends of such a Society do of their own Wills and free Choice coalesce into it This is the Original of all Churches as hath been declared They gave their own selves to the Lord and unto us by the Will of God 2 Cor. 8.5 Herein neither by Prescription nor Tradition nor Succession hath any one more Power or Authority than another but they are all equal It is gathered into this Society meerly by the Authority of Christ and where it is so Collected it hath neither Right Power Privilege Rules nor Bonds as such but what are given prescribed and limited by the Institution and Laws of Christ. Moreover it abides and continues on the same Grounds and Principles as whereon it was Collected namely the Wills of the Members of it subjected unto the Commands of Christ. This is as necessary unto its present continuance in all its Members as it was in its first Plantation It is not like the Political Societies of the World which being first established by force or consent bring a necessity on all that are born in them and under them to comply with their Rule and Laws For Men may and in many cases ought to submit unto the disposal of temporal things in a way it may be not convenient for them which they judge not well off and which in many things is not unto their advantage And this may be just and equal because the special good which every one would aim at being not absolutely so may be out-balanced by a general good nor alterable but by the prejudice of that which is good in particular But with reference unto things Spiritual and Eternal it is not so No Man can by any previous Law be concluded as unto his interest in such things nor is there any General Good to be attained by the loss of any of them None therefore can coalesce in such a Society or adhere unto it or be any way belonging unto it but by his own free choice and consent And it is enquired how it is possible that any Rule Authority Power or Office should arise or be erected in such a Society We speak of that which is ordinary for he by whom this Church-State is erected and appointed may and did appoint in it and over it extraordinary Officers for a season And we do suppose that as he hath by his Divine Authority instituted and appointed that such Societies shall be that he hath made grant of Privileges and Powers to them proper and sufficient for this end as also that he hath given Laws and Rules by the observance whereof they may be made partakers of those Privileges and Powers with a Right unto their Exercise ON these suppositions in a Society absolutely voluntary among those who in their conjunction into it by their own consent are every way equal There can but three things be required unto the actual constitution of Rule and Office among them And the First is That there be some among them that are fitted and qualified for the Discharge of such an Office in a peculiar manner above others This is previous unto all Government beyond that which is purely natural and necessary Principio rerum gentium nationumque imperium penes Reges erat quos ad fastigium hujus Majestatis non popularis Ambitio sed spectata inter bonos moderatio provehebat Just. So it was in the World so it was in the Church Praesident probati quique seniores honorem istum non pretio sed testimonio adepti Tertull. This preparation and furniture of some Persons with Abilities and meet Qualifications for Office and Work in the Church the Lord Christ hath taken on himself and doth and will effect it in all Generations Without this there can be neither Office nor Rule nor Order in the Church 2. WHEREAS there is a new Relation to be made or created between a Pastor Bishop or Elder and the Church which was not before between them a Bishop and a Church a Pastor and a Flock are Relata's it must be introduced at the same time by the mutual voluntary acts of one another or of each party For one of the Relata can as such have no being or existence without the other Now this can no otherwise be but by the consent and voluntary subjection of the Church unto persons so antecedently qualified for Office according to the Law and Will of Christ. For it cannot be done by the Delegation of Power and Authority from any other Superiour or Equal unto them that do receive it Neither the nature of this Power which is uncapable of such a Delegation nor the Relation unto Christ of all those who are Pastors of the Church will admit of an Interposition of Authority by way of Delegation of Power from themselves in other Men which would make them their Ministers and not Christs nor is it consistent with the nature of such a voluntary Society This therefore can no way be done but by free Choice Election Consent or Approbation It cannot I say be so regularly How far an Irregularity herein may vitiate the whole Call of a Minister we do not now enquire NOW this Choice or Election doth not communicate a Power from them that choose unto them that are chosen as though such a Power as that whereunto they are called should be formally inherent in the choosers antecedent unto such choice For this would make those that are chosen to be their Minister only and to act all things in their Name and by virtue of Authority derived from them It is only an Instrumental Ministerial means to enstate them in that Power and Authority which is given unto such Officers by the Constitution and Laws of Christ whose Ministers thereon they
Right unto its Exercise It is required moreover that he be solemnly set apart unto his Office in and by the Church with Fasting and Prayer That there should be some kind of peculiar Prayer in the dedication of any unto the Office of the Ministry is a notion that could never be obliterated in the minds of Men concerned in these things nor cast out of their Practice Of what sort they have been amongst many we do not now enquire But there hath been less regard unto the other Duty namely that these Prayers should be accompanied with Fasting But this also is necessary by Virtue of Apostolical Example Act. 14.23 THE Conduct of this Work belongs unto the Elders or Officers of the Church wherein any one is to be so Ordained It did belong unto extraordinary Officers whilst they were continued in the Church And upon the Cessation of their Office it is devolved on the ordinary stated Officers of the Church It is so I say in case there be any such Officer before fixed in the Church whereunto any one is to be only Ordained And in case there be none the Assistance of Pastors or Elders of other Churches may and ought to be desired unto the Conduct and Regulation of the Duty IT is needless to enquire what is the Authoritative influence of this Ordination into the Communication of Office or office-Office-Power whilst it is acknowledged to be indispensably necessary and to belong essentially unto the Call unto Office. For when sundry Duties as these of Election and Ordination are required unto the same End by Virtue of Divine Institution it is not for me to determine what is the peculiar efficacy of the one or the other seeing neither of them without the other hath any at all HEREUNTO is added as an External Adjunct imposition of hands significant of the persons so called to Office in and unto the Church For although it will be difficultly proved that the use of this Ceremony was designed unto continuance after a Cessation of the Communication of the extraordinary Gifts of the Holy Ghost whereof it was the sign and outward means in extraordinary Officers yet we do freely grant it unto the ordinary Officers of the Church provided that there be no apprehension of its being the sole Authoritative Conveyance of a successive flux of Office-Power which is destructive of the whole nature of the institution AND this may at present suffice as unto the Call of meet persons unto the Pastoral Office and consequently any other Office in the Church The things following are essentially necessary unto it so as that Authority and Right to Feed and Rule in the Church in the Name of Christ as an Officer of his House that may be given unto any one thereby by virtue of his Law and the Charter granted by him unto the Church it self The First is That antecedently unto any actings of the Church towards such a person with respect unto Office he be furnished by the Lord Christ himself with Graces and Gifts and Abilities for the discharge of the Office whereunto he is to be called This Divine Designation of the person to be called rests on the Kingly Office and care of Christ towards his Church Where this is wholly wanting it is not in the power of any Church under Heaven by virtue of any outward Order or Act to communicate Pastoral or Ministerial Power unto any person whatever Secondly There is to be an Exploration or Trial of those Gifts and Abilities as unto their Accommodation unto the Edification of that Church whereunto any person is to be Ordained a Pastor or Minister But although the Right of judging herein belong unto and reside in the Church it self for who else is able to judge for them or is entrusted so to do yet is it their Wisdom and Duty to desire the Assistance and Guidance of those who are approved in the discharge of their Office in other Churches Thirdly The first act of Power committed unto the Church by Jesus Christ for the constitution of Ordinary Officers in it is that Election of a person qualified and tried unto his Office which we have now vindicated Fourthly There is required hereunto the Solemn Ordination Inauguration Dedication or setting apart of the persons so chosen by the Presbytery of the Church with Fasting and Prayer and the outward sign of the Imposition of Hands THIS is that Order which the Rule of the Scripture the Example of the First Churches and the nature of the things themselves direct unto And although I will not say that a defect in any of these especially if it be from unavoidable hindrances doth disanull the Call of a person to the Pastoral Office yet I must say that where they are not all duly attended unto the Institution of Christ is neglected and the Order of the Church infringed Wherefore THE Plea of the communication of all Authority for Office and of Office it self solely by a flux of Power from the first Ordainers through the hands of their pretended Successors in all Ages under all the innumerable Miscarriages whereunto they are subject and have actually fallen into without any respect unto the consent or call of the Churches by Rule Laws and Orders foreign to the Scripture is contrary to the whole nature of Evangelical Churches and all the ends of their Institution as shall be manifested if it be needful CHAP. V. The Especial Duty of Pastors of Churches WE have declared the way whereby Pastors are given unto and instated in the Church That which should ensue is an account of their Work and Duty in the Discharge of their Office. But this hath been the subject of many large Discourses both among the Ancient Writers of the Church and of late I shall therefore only touch on some things that are of most necessary consideration 1. THE First and Principal Duty of a Pastor is to feed the flock by diligent Preaching of the Word It is a promise relating to the New Testament that God would give unto his Church Pastors according to his own heart which should feed them with Knowledge and Vnderstanding Jer. 3.15 This is by Teaching or Preaching the Word and no otherwise This Feeding is of the Essence of the Office of a Pastor as unto the exercise of it so that he who doth not or cannot or will not feed the Flock is no Pastor whatever outward call or work he may have in the Church The care of Preaching the Gospel was committed to Peter and in him unto all true Pastors of the Church under the name of Feeding Joh. 21.15 16. According to the example of the Apostles they are to free themselves from all encumbrances that they may give themselves wholly unto the Word and Prayer Act. 6. Their work is to labour in the Word and Doctrine 1 Tim. 5.17 and thereby to feed the Flock over which the Holy Ghost hath made them Overseers Act. 20. And it is that which is every where given them
some Instances of the things wherein the Office-Duty of Pastors of the Church doth consist They are but some of them and those only proposed not pursued and pressed with the consideration of all those particular Duties with the manner of their performance way of management motives and enforcements defects and causes of them which would require a large Discourse These may suffice unto our present purpose and we may derive from them the ensuing brief considerations 1. A DUE meditation and view of these things as proposed in the Scripture is enough to make the wisest the best of Men and the most diligent in the discharge of the Pastoral Office to cry out with the Apostle and who is sufficient for these things This will make them look well to their Call and Entrance into this Office as that alone which will bear them out and justify them in the susception of it For no sense of insufficiency can utterly discourage any in the undertaking of a Work which he is assured that the Lord Christ calls him unto For where he calls to a Duty he gives competent strength for the performance of it And when we say Under a deep sense of our own weakness who is sufficient for these things he doth say My Grace is sufficient for you 2. ALTHOUGH all the things mentioned do plainly evidently and undeniably belong unto the discharge of the Pastoral Office yet in point of Fact we find by the Success that they are very little considered by the most that seek after it And the present Ruine of Religion as unto its Power Beauty and Glory in all places ariseth principally from this cause that Multitudes of those who undertake this Office are neither in any measure fit for it nor do either conscientiously attend unto or diligently perform the Duties that belong unto it It ever was and every will be true in general like Priest like People 3. WHEREAS the account which is to be given of this Office and the discharge of it at the last day unto Jesus Christ the consideration whereof had a mighty influence upon the Apostles themselves and all the Primitive Pastors of the Churches is frequently proposed unto us and many warnings given us thereon in the Scripture yet it is apparent they are but few who take it into due consideration In the great day of Christs Visitation he will proceed on such Articles as those here laid down and others expressed in the Scripture and not at all on those which are now enquired upon in our Episcopal Visitations And if they may be minded of their true interest and concern whilst they possess the places they hold in the Church without offence I would advise them to conform their Enquiries in their Visitations unto those which they cannot but know the Lord Christ will make in the great day of his Visitation which doth approach This I think but reasonable In the mean time for those who desire to give up their account with joy and confidence and not with grief and confusion it is their Wisdom and Duty continually to bear in Mind what it is that the Lord Christ requires of them in the discharge of their Office. To take Benefices to perform legal Duties by themselves or others is not fully compliant with what Pastors of Churches are called unto 4. IT is manifest also from hence how inconsistent it is with this Office and the due discharge of it for any one Man to undertake the relation of a Pastor unto more Churches than one especially if far distant from one another An evil this is like that of Mathematical Prognostications at Rome always condemned and always retained But one view of the Duties incumbent on each Pastor and of whose diligent performance he is to give an account at the last day will discard this practice from all approbation in the Minds of them that are sober However it is as good to have Ten Churches at once as having but one never to discharge the Duty of a Pastor towards it 5. ALL Churches may do well to consider the weight and burden that lies upon their Pastors and Teachers in the discharge of their Office that they may be constant in fervent Prayers and Supplications for them as also to provide what lies in them that they may be without trouble and cares about the things of this Life 6. THERE being so many Duties necessary unto the discharge of their Office and those of such various sorts and kinds as to require various Gifts and Abilities unto their due performance it seems very difficult to find a concurrence of them in any own person in any considerable degree so as that it is hard to conceive how the Office it self should be duly discharged I answer 1. The end both of the Office and of the discharge of it is the due Edification of the Church This therefore gives them their measure Where that is attained the Office is duly discharged though the Gifts whereby Men are enabled thereunto be not eminent 2. Where a Man is called unto this Office and applieth himself sincerely unto the due discharge of it if he be evidently defective with respect to any especial Duty or Duties of it that defect is to be supplied by calling any other unto his Assistance in Office who is qualified to make that supply unto the Edification of the Church And the like must be said concerning such Pastors as through Age or Bodily weakness are disabled from attendance unto any part of their Duty for still the Edification of the Church is that which in all these things is in the first place to be provided for 7. IT may be enquired what is the State of those Churches and what Relation with respect unto Communion we ought to have unto them whose Pastors are evidently defective in or neglective of these things so as that they are not in any competent measure attended unto And we may in particular instance in the first and the last of the Pastoral Duties before insisted on Suppose a Man be no way able to Preach the Word unto the Edification of them that are pleaded to be his Flock or having any ability yet doth not will not give himself unto the Word and Prayer or not labour in the Word and Doctrine unto the great prejudice of Edification And suppose the same Person be openly defective as unto an exemplary Conversation and on the contrary layeth the stumbling block of his own Sins and Follies before the eyes of others what shall we judge of his Ministry and of the state of that Church whereof he is a constituent part as its Ruler I Answer 1. I DO not believe it is in the power of any Church really to conferr the Pastoral Office by virtue of any Ordination whatever unto any who are openly and evidently destitute of all those previous Qualifications which the Scripture requireth in them who are to be called unto this Office. There is indeed a Latitude to be allowed
helpful to each other in the common Work which they are called unto But such as are utterly destitute of these Gifts are not called unto this Work nor any part of it 3. THE Power that is exercised herein is the Power and Authority of Christ committed unto the Elders Our Authority which the Lord Christ hath given us for Edification and not for Destruction 2 Cor. 10.8 It is granted unto the Rulers of the Church not formally to reside in them as the Power of a King is in his own person but ministerially and instrumentally only For it must be the Authority of Christ himself whereby the Consciences of Men are spiritually affected with reference unto spiritual Ends whereby they are bound or losed in Heaven and Earth have their Sins remitted or retained And the consideration hereof is that alone which gives a due regard unto the Ministry of the Church in the discharge of their Office among them that desire to commend their Consciences unto the Lord Christ in what they do 4. THE especial Design of the Rule of the Church in its Government is to represent the Holiness Love Compassion Care and Authority of Christ towards his Church This is the great end of Rule in the Church and of all the Discipline which is to be exercised by virtue thereof Whilst this is not attended unto when the Officers and Rulers of the Church do not endeavour in all the actings of their Power and Office to set forth these Vertues of Christ to exemplifie that impression of them which he hath left in his Laws and Rule with the Divine Testimonies which he gives of them in his own person they utterly deviate from the principal end of all Rule in the Church For Men to act herein in a way of Domination with a visible Elation of Mind and Spirit above their Brethren with Anger Wrath and Passion by Rules Order and Laws of their own devising without the least consideration of what the Lord Christ requires and what is the frame of his Heart towards all his Disciples is to reflect the highest Dishonour imaginable upon Christ himself He who comes into the Courts of the King in Westminster Hall when filled with Judges Grave Learned and Righteous most ordinarily be allowed to judge of the King himself his Wisdom Justice Moderation and Clemency by the Law which they proceed upon and their manner of the Administration of it But God forbid that Christians should make a Judgment concerning the Holiness Wisdom Love and Compassion of Christ by the Representation which as is pretended is made of him and them in some Courts wherein Church-Rule and Discipline is Admistred When any had offended of old their Censure by the Church was called the Bewailing of them 2 Cor. 12.24 and that because of the Sorrow Pity and Compassion whereby in that Censure they evidenced the compassion of the Lord Christ towards the Souls of Sinners This is scarce answered by those pecuniary mulcts and other penalties which with indignation and contempt are inflicted on such as are made Offenders whether they will or no. Certainly those who love the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity and have a due honour for the Gospel will at one time or another begin to think meet that this stain of our Religion should be washed away 2 dly THE Rule and Law of the exercise of Power in the Elders of the Church is the Holy Scripture only The Lord Christ is the only Law-giver of the Church all his Laws unto this end are recorded in the Scripture no other Law is effectual can oblige or operate upon the object or unto the ends of Church-Rule If the Church make a Thousand Rules or Canons or Laws for Government neither any of them nor all of them in general have any the least power to oblige Men unto obedience or compliance with them but only so far as virtually and materially they contain what is of the Law of Christ and derives force from thence As the Judges in our Courts of Justice are bound to judge and determine in all cases out of and according to the Law of the Land and when they do not their Sentence is of no validity but may and ought to be reversed But if wilfully or of choice they should introduce Laws or Rules not legally established in this Nation judging according unto them it would render them highly criminal and punishable It is no otherwise in the Kingdom of Christ and the Rule thereof It is by his Law alone that Rule is to be exercised in it There is nothing left unto the Elders of the Church but the Application of his Laws and the General Rules of them unto particular cases and occasions To make to bring to execute any other Rules Laws or Canons in the Government of his Church is to usurp on his Kingly Dominion whereunto all Legislative Power in the Church is appropriate Nor is it possible that any thing can fall out in the Church that any thing can be required in the Rule of it nor can any instance be given of any such thing wherein for the ends of Church-Rule there is or can be any more left unto the Rulers of it but only the Application and Execution of the Laws of Christ. Unto this Application to be made in a due manner the Wisdom and Skill before described is requisite and that alone Where there are other Laws Rules or Canons of the Government of the Church and where the Administration of them is directed by Laws Civil or Political there is a skill in them required unto that Administration as all will confess So is the Wisdom we before described and that alone necessary unto that Rule of the Church which the Lord Christ hath ordained the Instrument and means whereof is his Word and Law alone 3 dly THE matter of this Rule about which it is conversant and so the Acts and Duties of it may be reduced unto Three Heads 1. THE Admission and Exclusion of Members Both these are Acts of Church-Power and Authority which are to be exercised by the Elders only in a Church that is Organical and compleat in its Officers There is that in them both which is founded in and warranted from the Light and Law of Nature and Rules of Equity Every Righteous voluntary Society coalescing therein rightfully upon known Laws and Rules for the Regulation of it unto certain ends hath naturally a power inherent in it and inseparable from it to receive into its incorporation such as being meet for it do voluntarily offer themselves thereunto as also to reject or withhold the Privileges of the Society from such as refuse to be Regulated by the Laws of the Society This power is inherent in the Church essentially considered antecedently unto the enstating of Officers in it By virtue of their mutual confederation they may receive into the privileges of the Society those that are meet and withdraw the same privileges from those that are unworthy But in
all Natural and Humane Right in the World. De facto Men are now compelled whether they will or no to be esteemed to be of this or that Church and to be dealt withal accordingly But if they had not been divested of their natural Liberty they know not how without their own consent and should be taught that by entering into a Church they must come under a new Tenure of their Lives Liberties and Estates at the Will of the Lords of the Society according to the Customs of their Courts there would not be so many Wise Men in Churches as now there are thought to be BUT this is the true State of things in the Church of Rome and among others also Christians are esteemed to be of them and belong unto them whether they will or no. Immediately hereon all the Rights Liberties Privileges Possessions which they enjoy by the Law of God and Nature and by the just Laws and Constitutions of Men in Civil Governments under which they live come to depend upon and be subject unto the especial Laws and Rules of the Society which they are adjudged to belong unto For upon expulsion out of that Society by Excommunication according unto the Laws and Rules which it hath framed unto it self all their Rights and Titles and Liberties and Enjoyments are forfeited and exposed to Ruine Some indeed do earnestly and learnedly contend that the Pope of Rome hath not Power to Excommunicate Sovereign Kings and Princes and that if he do they make no forfeiture of Life or Dignity thereby And there are good Reasons why they do so But in the mean time they deal with other poor Men after the same manner For if a poor Man be Excommunicated immediately he loseth the free Tenure of his Life Liberty and Goods by the Law of the Church and the Land and is Committed to the Gaol without Bail or Mainprize So that by this Artifice all Men hold their Natural and Civil Rights by the Rules of the Church Society whereto they are supposed to belong And as this utterly overthrows the foundation of all that Property according to the Laws of the Land which is so much talked of and valued so indeed it would be destructive of all Order and Liberty but that the Church is wise enough not to employ this Engine unto Great Men and Men in Power who may yet deserve Excommunication as well as some of their poor Neighbours if the Gospel be thought to give the Rule of it But those that are poor helpless and friendless shall in the pursuit of this Excommunication be driven from their Houses cast into Prisons and kept there until they and their Families starve and perish And it is apparent that we are beholding unto the Greatness Authority and Wealth of many whom the Ecclesiastical Courts care not to conflict withal that the whole Nation is not actually brought under this new Tenure of their Lives Liberties and Estates which on this presumption they are obnoxious unto AND all this evil ariseth from the neglect and contempt of this fundamental Rule of all Societies apparent unto all in the Light of Nature it self namely that they have no Power in or over any Thing Right Privilege or Advantage but what Men are made Partakers of by virtue of such Societies their Rule and Laws whereunto they are obliged But of this sort are not the Lives the Liberties the Houses and Possessions of Men with respect unto the Church They receive them not from the Church and a Man would certainly think that the Church could not take them away YEA we live and subsist in Order upon the good Nature and Wisdom of Men who judge it best neither to exert their Power nor act their Principles in this matter For whereas they esteem all the Inhabitants of the Land to belong unto their Church if they should in the first place Excommunicate all that ought to be Excommunicated by the Rule and Law of the Gospel and then all that ought to be so according to their own Laws and Canons both which a Man would think they were obliged in point of Conscience unto and in pursuit of their Sentence send out the Capias for them all I very much question whether any of them would go to Prison or no and then in what a fine case would this Government be and if they should all go to Gaol I am perswaded the King would be in an ill State to defend his Realms against his Enemies 3. EVERY Society hath this Power towards those who are incorporated in it by their own consent and not towards others For whence should they have such a Power or who should commit it unto them Nor can any be cast out from those Privileges which they never had an Interest in nor a Right unto The Apostles Rule holds in this case especially with respect unto Churches What have we to do to judge them that are without And as unto the exercise of this Power they are all to be esteemed to be without who are not rightly incorporated into that particular Church by which they may be ejected out of it A Power of Excommunication at Random towards all that those who exercise it can extend force unto hath no foundation either in the Light of Nature or Authority of the Scripture And it would be ridiculous in any Corporation to disfranchise such as never belonged unto it who were never Members of it 4. THE only Reason or Cause for the expulsion of any Person out of such a Society is a wilful deviation from the Rules and Laws of the Society whose observance he had engaged unto upon his entrance into it Nothing else can be required unto the Preservation of a Mans Interest in any Right or Privilege but what he took upon himself to perform in his Admittance into it And if the great Rule of every Church-Society be That Men observe and do whatsoever the Lord Christ hath commanded none can be justly ejected out of that Society but upon a wilful disobedience unto his Commands And therefore the casting of Men out of Church Communion on light and trivial occasions or for any Reasons or Causes whatever but such as essentially belong unto the Rules and Laws whereon the Church doth originally coalesce into a Society is contrary unto Natural Light and the Reason of the Things themselves THUS far I say is every lawful confederate Society enabled and warranted by the Light of Nature to remove from its Communion and from a participation in its Rights and Privileges any of its number who will not walk according to the Rules and Principles of its Coalescency and Constitution Whereas therefore the Rule of the Constitution of the Church is That Men walk together in holy Obedience unto the Commands of Christ and the observance of all his Institutions without giving Offence unto one another or those that are without by any sinful miscarriage and do abide in the Profession of the Truth if any one
shall wilfully and obstinately transgress in any of these things it is the Right and Duty and in the Power of the Church to remove him from its Society BUT this is not the entire nor the next immediate Ground Reason or Warranty of Ecclesiastical Excommunication For this natural Equity will not extend it self unto cases that are in things Spiritual and Supernatural nor will the actings of the Church thereon reach unto the Consciences of Men for the proper ends of Excommunication Wherefore it was necessary that it should have a peculiar Institution in the Church by the Authority of Jesus Christ. For 1. THE Church is such a Society as no Men have Right or Power either to enter into themselves or to exclude others from but by virtue of the Authority of Christ. No warranty from the Light of nature or from the Laws of Men or their own voluntary confederation can enable any to constitute a Church-Society unless they do all things expresly in obedience unto the Authority of Christ. For his Church is his Kingdom his House which none can constitute or build but himself Wherefore it is necessary that the power of Admission into and Exclusion from the Church do arise from his Grant and Institution Nor is it in the power of any Men in the World to admit into or exclude from this Society but by virtue thereof 2. EXCOMMVNICATION is an act of Authority as we shall see afterwards But no Authority can be exercised in the Church towards any person whatever but by virtue of the Institution of Christ. For the Authority it self however ministerially exercised by others is his alone and he exerts it not but in the ways of his own appointment So in particular the Apostle directs that Excommunication be exerted in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ that is in and by his Authority 1 Cor. 5.4 3. THE Privileges from which Men are excluded by Excommunication are not such as they have any Natural or Civil Right unto as hath been proved but meerly such as are granted unto the Church by Jesus Christ and Men cannot by virtue of any Agreement among themselves without a Warranty from him by his Institution Expel others from the Privileges which are meerly of his Grant and Donation He alone therefore hath given and granted this Power unto the Church namely of Excluding any by the Rules and Ways of his Appointment from the Privileges of his Grant which is the peculiar Power of Excommunication inquired after 4. THERE is such an Efficacy assigned unto Excommunication in binding the Consciences of Men in retaining their Sins in the Destruction or Mortification of the Flesh in the Healing and Recovery of Sinners as nothing but the Authority of a Divine Institution can give unto it By virtue of natural Light and mutual Consent Men may free themselves from the Company and Society of those who will not walk with them according to Rules of Communion agreed upon among them but they cannot reach the Minds and Consciences of others with any of these Effects 5. THAT Excommunication is an express Ordinance of our Lord Jesus Christ in his Churches is fully declared in the Scripture For 1. The power of it is contained in the Authority given by Christ unto the Church under the Name of the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven For the Power expressed therein is not meerly Doctrinal and Declarative as is the preaching of the Gospel the consequent whereof upon the Faith or Unbelief of them that hear it is the Remitting or Retaining of their Sin in Heaven and Earth but it is Disciplinary also as it is appropriated unto the House whose Keys are committed unto the Stewards of it And seeing the design of Christ was to have his Church Holy Vnblamable and without offence in the World that therein he might make a Representation of his own Holiness and the Holiness of his Rule and whereas those of whom it is constituted are liable and subject unto Sins scandalous and offensive reflecting dishonour on himself and the Church in being the occasion of sinning unto others that design would not have been accomplished had he not given this Authority unto his Church to cast out and separate from it self all that do by their Sins so give offence And the neglect of the exercise of this Authority in a due manner was the principal means whereby the Glory Honour and usefulness of the Churches in the World were at length utterly lost 2. It hath a direct Institution Matth. 18.15 16 17 18 19 20. If thy Brother shall Trespass c. tell it unto the Church but if he neglect to hear the Church let him be unto thee as an Heathen Man and a Publican Verily I say unto you whatsoever ye shall bind on Earth shall be bound in Heaven and whatsoever ye shall loose on Earth shall be loosed in Heaven c. After all the Learned and Unlearned Contests that have been about this place the sence of it is plain and obvious unto such as whose Minds are not clouded with prejudices about such Churches and such Excommunications as are utterly foreign unto the Scripture But that by Trespasses in this place Sins against God giving scandal or offence are intended hath been proved before as also that by a Church a particular Christian Congregation is intended This Church hath the cognizance of the scandalous offences of its Members committed unto it when brought before it in the due Order described Hereon it makes a Determination designing in the first place the Recovery of the Person offending from his Sin by his hearing of its Counsel and Advice But in case of Obstinacy it is to remove him from its Communion leaving him in the outward condition of an Heathen and a Publican So is he to be esteemed by them that were offended with his Sin and that because of the Authority of the Church binding him in Heaven and Earth unto the punishment due unto his Sin unless he doth Repent The Rejection of an offending Brother out of the Society of the Church leaving him as unto all the Privileges of the Church in the State of an Heathen declaring him liable unto the Displeasure of Christ and Everlasting Punishment without Repentance is the Excommunication we plead for and the Power of it with its Exercise is plainly here granted by Christ and Ordained in the Church 3. According unto this Institution was the practice of the Apostles whereof we have several Instances I might insist upon the Excommunication of Simon the Magician a baptized professor by Peter who declared him to have neither part or lot in the Church upon the discovery of his wickedness Act. 8.13 20 21 22 23. Yet because it was the single Act of one Apostle and so may be esteemed extraordinary I shall omit it However that fact of the Apostle is sufficiently declarative of what is to be done in the Church in like cases and which if it be not done it cannot be
one to forbear for a season from the use of their Privilege in the participation of the Supper of the Lord in case of scandal and offence which would be taken at it and ensue thereon And if any Person shall refuse a Submission unto them in this Act of Rule the Church hath no way for its Relief but to proceed unto the total Removal of such a Person from their whole Communion For the Edification of the whole Church must not be obstructed by the Refractoriness of any one among them THIS Excommunication as we have proved before is an act of Church-Authority exerted in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ. And if so then it is an act of the Officers of the Church namely so far as it is Authoritative for there is no Authority in the Church properly so called but what resides in the Officers of it There is an Office in the Church which is meerly Ministerial without any formal Authority that is of the Deacons But there is no Authority in exercise but what is in the Elders and Rulers of the Church And there are two Reasons which prove that the power of Excommunication as to the Authoritative Exercise of it is in the Elders of the Church 1. Because the Apostles by virtue of their Office-Power in every Church did join in the Authoritative Excommunication as is plain in the case insisted on 1 Cor. 5. And there is no Office-Power now remaining but what is in the Elders of the Church 2. It is an Act of Rule But all Rule properly so called is in the hands of Rulers only We may add hereunto that the care of the preservation of the Edification of all its Members of the Correction and Salvation of Offenders is principally incumbent on them or committed unto them as we have declared as also that they are best able to judge when and for what this Sentence ought to be denounced against any which requires their best skill in the Wisdom of Spiritual Rule And therefore the omission of the exercise of it when it was necessary is charged as a neglect on the Angels or Rulers of the Churches as the due execution of it is commended in them And therefore unto them it doth belong with respect unto their Office and is thereon an Office-Act or an Act of Authority HOWBEIT it cannot be denied but that the Interest yea the power of the whole Church in the Fraternity of it is greatly to be considered herein For indeed where-ever the Apostle Treats of it he doth not any where recommend it unto the Officers of the Church in a peculiar manner but unto the whole Church and the Brethren therein This is evident in the places before quoted Wherefore the whole Church is concerned herein both in point of Duty Interest and Power 1. In point of Duty for by virtue of the mutual watch of all the Members of the Church over each other and of the care incumbent on every one of them for the Good the Honour the Reputation and Edification of the whole it is their Duty jointly and severally to endeavour the purging out from among them of every thing that is contrary unto those ends And they who are not concerned in these things are dead and useless Members of the Church 2. In Interest they have also a concernment therein They are to look that no root of bitterness spring up amongst them lest themselves are at length defiled thereby It is usually said that the good are not defiled by holding Communion with them that are wicked in a participation of holy Ordinances And there is some Truth in what is said with reference unto wicked undiscovered Hypocrites or such as are not scandalously flagitious But to promote this Perswasion so as to beget an opinion in Church-Members that they are no way concerned in the scandalous Sins and Lives of those with whom they walk in all Duties of Spiritual Communion openly avowing themselves Members of the same Body with them is a Diabolical Engine invented to countenance Churches in horrible security unto their ruine But yet besides that defilement which may be contracted in a joint participation of the same Ordinances with such Persons there are other ways almost innumerable whereby their Example if passed by without Animadversion may be pernicious unto their Faith Love and Obedience Wherefore they are obliged in point of Spiritual Interest as they take care of their own Souls to concurr in the ejection out of the Church of obstinate Offenders 3. In point of Power For the Execution of this Sentence is committed unto and rests in the Body of the Church According as they concurr and practise so it is put in Execution or Suspended for it is they who must withdraw Communion from them or the Sentence is of no use or validity this punishment must be inflicted by the many who also are to restore him who is so rebuked Wherefore Excommunication without the consent of the Church is a meer nullity BUT if any one shall say that Excommunication is not an Act of Authority nor of Office but of Power residing in the community resulting from their common suffrage guided and directed by the Officers or Elders of the Church I shall again take up this Enquiry immediately and speak unto it more distinctly lest what is here spoken should not be sufficient unto the satisfaction of any OUR next Enquiry is concerning the object of this Church Censure or who they are that ought to be Excommunicated And 1. THEY must be Members of that Church by which the Sentence is to be denounced against them And this as we have proved before they cannot be without their own consent One Church cannot Excommunicate the Members of another They are unto them as unto this matter without and they have no power to judge them The foundation of the Right to proceed against any herein is in their own voluntary engagement to observe and keep the Rules and Laws of the Society whereunto they are admitted The offence is given unto that Church in the first place if not only And it is an Act of the Church for its own Edification And there is a nullity in the Sentence which is ordained decreed or denounced by any who are not Officers of that Church in particular wherein the Sin is committed 2. THESE Church-Members that may be justly Excommunicated are of Two sorts 1. SUCH as continue obstinate in the practice of any scandalous Sin after private and publick admonition The process from the first Offence in Admonition is so stated in ordinary cases Matth. 18. that there is no need farther to declare it The Time that is to be allotted unto the several Degrees of it shall be spoken unto afterwards And unto a right judgment of obstinacy in any scandalous Sin it is required 1. That the Sin considered in it self be such as is owned to be such by all without doubting dispute or haesitation It must be some Sin that is
Edification of the Church Catholick whereunto it is designed WHEREFORE our Lord Jesus Christ in his infinite Wisdom hath constituted his Churches in such a State and Order as wherein none of them are able of themselves always and in all instances to attain all the ends for which they are appointed with respect unto the Edification of the Church Catholick And he did it for this end that whereas the whole Catholick Church is animated by one spirit which is the bond of Union between all particular Churches as we shall see every one of them may Act the Gifts and Graces of it unto the Preservation and Edification of the whole HEREIN then we acknowledge lieth the great difference which we have with others about the state of the Church of Christ in this World we do believe that the mutual Communion of particular Churches amongst themselves in an equality of Power and Order though not of Gifts and Usefulness is the only way appointed by our Lord Jesus Christ after the Death of the Apostles for the attaining the general end of all particular Churches which is the Edification of the Church Catholick in Faith Love and Peace Other ways and means have been found out in the World for this end which we must speak unto immediately Wherefore it behoveth us to use some Diligence in the consideration of the Causes Nature and Vse of this Communion of Churches BUT it must be moreover premised that whereas this Communion of Churches is Radically and Essentially the same among all Churches in the World yet as unto the ordinary actual exercise of the Duties of it it is confined and limited by Divine Providence unto such Churches as the natural means of the discharge of such Duties may extend unto That is unto those which are planted within such Lines of Communication such precincts or boundaries of Places and Countries as may not render the mutual performance of such Duties insuperably difficult Yet is not the World it self so wide but that all places being made pervious by Navigation this Communion of Churches may be visibly professed and in some instances practised among all Churches from the rising of the Sun even unto the going-down of the same where the Name of Christ is known among the Gentiles wherein the true nature of the Catholick Church and its Union doth consist which is utterly overthrown by the most vehement pretences that are made unto it as those in the Church of Rome WHEREFORE such a Communion of Churches is to be enquired after as from which no true Church of Christ is or can be excluded in whose actual exercise they may and ought all to live and whereby the general end of all Churches in the Edification of the Catholick Church may be attained This is the true and only Catholicism of the Church which whoever departs from or substitutes any thing else in the room of it under that Name destroys its whole nature and disturbs the whole Ecclesiastical Harmony that is of Christs Institution HOWEVER therefore we plead for the Rights of particular Churches yet our real Controversy with most in the World is for the Being Union and Communion of the Church Catholick which are variously perverted by many and separating it into Parties and confining it to Rules Measures and Canons of their own finding out and Establishment For such things as these belong neither to the internal nor external Form of that Catholick Church whose Being in the World we believe and whose Vnion we are obliged to preserve And whoever gives any Description of or Limitation to the Catholick Church besides what consist in the Communion of particular Churches intended doth utterly overthrow it and therein an Article of our Faith. BUT this Communion of Churches cannot be duly apprehended unless we enquire and determine wherein their Vnion doth consist For Communion is an Act of Vnion that receives both its Nature and Power from it or by virtue of it For of what Nature soever the Vnion of things distinct in themselves be of the same is the Communion that they have among themselves IN the Church of Rome the Person of the Pope as he is Pope is the Head and Center of all Church Union Nor is there allowed any Vnion of particular Churches with Christ or among themselves but in and through him An Universal subjection unto him and his Authority is the original spring of all Church Vnion among them And if any one Soul fail herein if as unto things of Faith and Divine Worship he do not depend on the Pope and live in subjection unto him he is reputed a Stranger and For●●●ner unto the Catholick Church Yea they affirm that be a Man never so willing for and desirous of an Interest in Christ he cannot have it but by the Pope THE Communion of Churches congenial and suited unto this Union proceeding from it and exercised by virtue of it ariseth from a various contignation of Order or the erection of one story of Church Interest upon another until we come to the Idol placed on the top of this Babel So is this Communion carried on from the obedience and subjection of the lowest rubbish of Ecclesiastical Order unto Diocesans of them to Metropolitans of them to Patriarchs or Cardinals of them to the Pope or an ascent is made from Diocesan Synods by Provincial and National to those that are called Oecumenical whose Head is the Pope YET Two things must be farther observed to clear this Communion of the Roman Catholick Church as 1. That there is no ascent of Church-Order or Power by a vital Act of Communion from the lower Degrees Orders or Consociations and by them to the Pope as though he should receive any thing of Church-Power from them but all the plenitude of it being originally vested in him by these several Orders and Degrees he communicates of it unto all Churches as the Life of their Conjunction and Communion 2. That no Man is so jointed in this Order so compacted in this Body but that he is also personally and immediately subject to the Pope and depends on him as unto his whole profession of Religion AND this is that which constitutes him formally to be what he is that is Antichrist and the Church-State arising from its Union unto him holding him as its Head subsisting in a Communion by virtue of power received through various Orders and Constitutions from him to be Anti-christian For he and it are set up in the room of and in direct opposition unto the Lord Christ as the Head of the Catholick Church and the Church state thereon depending This we have described Ephes. 4.15 16. Speaking the Truth in Love may grow up c. As also Col. 2.19 Where there is a Rejection of them who belong not unto the Church Catholick taken from its Relation unto Christ and the nature of its dependance on him not holding the Head c. WHEN Men shall cease to be wilfully blind or when the powers of
the whole Church as unto Faith in general but only the Belief before described 2. THIS Communion in Faith respects the Church it self as its material Object For it is required hereunto that we believe that the Lord Christ hath had in all Ages and especially hath in that wherein we live a Church on the Earth confined unto no Places nor Parties of Men no Empires nor Dominions or capable of any confinement as also that this Church is Redeemed Called Sanctified by him that it is his Kingdom his Interest his concernment in the World that thereunto and all the Members of it all the Promises of God do belong and are confined that this Church he will save preserve and deliver from all oppositions so as that the Gates of Hell shall not prevail against it and after Death will raise it up and glorify it at the last day This is the Faith of the Catholick Church concerning it self which is an Ancient fundamental Article of our Religion And if any one deny that there is such a Church called out of the World separated from it unto which alone and all the Members of it all the Promises of God do appertain in contradistinction unto all others or confines it unto a Party unto whom these things are not appropriate he cuts himself off from the Communion of the Church of Christ. IN the Faith hereof all the true Churches of Christ throughout the World have a comforting refreshing Communion which is the spring of many Duties in them continually 3. THIS Communion of Churches in Faith consists much in the principal Fruit of it namely Prayer So is it stated Ephes. 2.18 For through Christ we have an Access by one Spirit unto the Father And that therein the Communion of the Catholick Church doth consist the Apostle declares in the following Verses 19 20 21 22. Now therefore c. For Prayer in all Churches having one object which is God even the Father God as the Father proceeding in all from one and the same Spirit given unto them as a Spirit of Grace and Supplications to make Intercession for them and all of them continually offered unto God by the same High-Priest who adds unto it the Incense of his own Intercession and by whom they have all an access unto the same Throne of Grace they have all a blessed Communion herein continually And this Communion is the more express in that the Prayers of all are for all so as that there is no particular Church of Christ in the World not any one Member of any of them but they have the Prayers of all the Churches in the World and of all the Members of them every day And however this Communion be invisible unto the eyes of Flesh yet is it glorious and conspicuous unto the eye of Faith and is a part of the glory of Christ the Mediatour in Heaven This Prayer proceeding from or wrought by one and the same Spirit in them all equally bestowed on them all by virtue of the Promise of Christ having the same object even God as a Father and offered unto him by the same High-Priest together with his own Intercession gives unto all Churches a Communion far more glorious than what consists in some outward Rites and Orders of Mens devising BUT now if there be any other Persons or Churches who have any other Object of their Prayers but God even the Father and as our Father in Christ or have any other Mediators or Intercessors by whom to convey or present their Prayers unto God but Christ alone the only High-Priest of the Church or do renounce the Aid and Assistance of the Holy Spirit as a Spirit of Grace and Supplications they cut themselves off from all Communion with the Catholick Church herein 4. THE Vnity of Faith in all Churches affecteth Communion among them in the Administration of the same Sacraments of Baptism and the Supper of the Lord. These are the same in unto and amongst them all Neither do some variations in the outward manner of their Administration interrupt that Communion But where-ever the continuation of these Ordinances is denied or their nature or use is perverted or Idolatrous Worship is annexed unto their Administration there Communion with the Catholick Church is renounced 5. THEY have also by Faith Communion herein in that all Churches do profess a subjection unto the Authority of Christ in all things and an obligation upon them to do and observe all whatsoever he hath Commanded OTHER instances of the like nature might be given but these are sufficient to manifest how unscriptural the Notion is That there is no proper Communion with or among Churches but what consists in a compliance with certain Powers Orders and Rites the pressing whereof under the Name of Vniformity hath cast all thoughts of real Evangelical Church Communion into Oblivion SECONDLY Churches Ordained and Constituted in the way and manner and for the Ends declared in our former Discourse on this Subject and by virtue of their Union unto Christ and among themselves living constantly in all places of the World in the actual exercise of that Communion which consists in the performance of the same Church-Duties towards God in Christ unto their own Continuation Encrease and Edification have also an especial Vnion among themselves and a mutual Communion thence arising THE Bond of this Vnion is Love not the common regulated Affection of Humane nature so called not meerly that Power and Duty which is engraven on the Hearts of Men by the Law of Creation towards all of the same kind and blood with themselves but an especial Grace of the Holy Spirit acting in the Church as the Principle and Bond of its Union unto its self whence the command of it is called a New Commandment because in it self as unto the only Example of it in the Person of Christ the Causes and Motives unto it with its peculiar Ends and proper Exercise it was absolutely New and Evangelical An Explanation of the Nature of it belongs not unto this place although it be a Grace and a Duty of so much importance wherein so much of the Life Power and peculiar Glory of Christian Religion doth consist and is either so utterly lost or hath such vile Images of it set up in the World that it deserves a full Consideration which it may receive in another place I SAY the Holy Spirit of Grace and Love being given from Christ the Fountain and Center of all Church-Union to dwell in and abide with his Church thereby uniting it unto himself doth work in it and all the Members of it that mutual Love which may and doth animate them unto all those mutual Acts which are proper unto the Relation wherein they stand by virtue of their Union unto Christ their Head as Members of the same Body one with another HEREIN consists the Union of every Church in it self of all Churches among themselves and so of the whole Catholick Church their Communion consisting
arrived unto those which they called general under the conduct of the Pope whose Senate they were BUT these things have no countenance given them by any Divine Institution Apostolical Example or practice of the First Churches but are a meer product of Secular Interest working it self in a Mystery of Iniquity SINCE the Dissolution of the Roman Empire Nations have been cast into distinct Civil Governments of their own whose Sovereignty is in themselves by the event of War and Counsels thereon emergent Unto each of these it is supposed there is a Church-State accommodated as the Church of England the Church of Scotland the Church of France and the like whose Original and Being depends on the First event of War in that Dissolution Unto these new Church-States whose Being Bounds and Limits are given unto them absolutely by those of the Civil Government which they belong unto it is thought meet that Ecclesiastical Synods should be accommodated But in what way this is to be done there is not yet an agreement but it is not my present business to consider the differences that are about it which are known unto this Nation on a dear account Yet this I shall say that whereas it is eminently useful unto the Edification of the Church Catholick that all the Churches professing the same Doctrine of Faith within the Limits of the same Supream Civil Government should hold constant actual Communion among themselves unto the ends of it before mentioned I see not how it can be any abridgment of the Liberty of particular Churches or interfere with any of their Rights which they hold by Divine Institution if through more constant lesser Synods for Advice there be a communication of their mutual concerns unto those that are greater until if occasion require and it be expedient there be a general Assembly of them all to advise about any thing wherein they are all concerned But this is granted only with these Limitations 1. That the Rights of particular Churches be preserved in the free Election of such as are to be Members of all these Synods 2. That they assume no Authority or Jurisdiction over Churches or Persons in things Civil or Ecclesiastical 3. That none are immediately concerned in this proper Synodal Power or Authority which what it is we shall enquire who are not present in them by their own Delegates FOR that kind of Synods which some call a Classis which is a convention of the Elders or Officers of sundry Parochial Churches distinguished for Presential Communion ordinarily in some acts of it by virtue of their Office and for the exercise of Office-Power it is the constitution of a new kind of particular Churches by a combination of them into one whose Original distinction is only in the Civil Limits of their Cohabitation which probably may be done sometimes and in some places unto Edification 4. THE Persons of whom all sorts of Ecclesiastical Synods are to consist must be enquired into And there is nothing of meer humane prudential constitution that hath longer obtained in the Church than that those should be Officers of the Churches only And whereas after the days of the Apostles we have no Record of any Synods of more Churches than one until after the distinction was made between Bishops and Presbyters they were made up of both sorts of them But afterwards those who were peculiarly called Bishops enclosed this Right unto themselves on what grounds God knows there being no one Tittle in the Scripture or the Light of Reason to give them countenance therein IT must therefore be affirmed that no Persons by virtue of any Office meerly have Right to be Members of Ecclesiastical Synods as such Neither is there either Example or Reason to give colour unto any such pretence Farther is no Office-Power to be exerted in such Synods as such neither conjunctly by all the Members of them nor singly by any of them Officers of the Church Bishops Pastors Elders may be present in them ought to be present in them are meetest for the most part so to be but meerly as such it belongs not unto them The Care Oversight and Rule of the Churches whereunto they do belong the Flock among them distinctly is committed unto them and for that they are instructed with Power and Authority by virtue of their Office. But as unto their conjunction in Synods which is a meer act and effect of the Communion of Churches among themselves it is not committed unto them in a way of peculiar Right by virtue of their Office. If it be so without respect unto the power of the Magistrate in calling them or of the Churches in choosing them then it belongs unto them all for that which belongs unto any of them as such by virtue of Office belongs equally unto all and if it belongs unto all then it belongs unto all of one sort only as for instance Bishops or unto all of all sorts as for instance Presbyters also If it be stated in the latter way then every Presbyter as such by virtue of his Office hath Right and Power to be present in all Ecclesiastical Synods equal with that of the Bishops For although it be supposed that his Office is not equal unto theirs yet it is so also that this Right doth equally belong unto his Office. If the former be avowed namely that this Right belongs unto Bishops only such as are pleaded for by virtue of their Office as such then 1. I desire that any tolerable proof of the confinement of this Right unto such an Office be produced either from the Scripture or Reason or the Example of the First Churches which as yet I have never seen 2. I fear not to say that a false presumption hereof was one principal cause and means of introducing Tyranny into the Churches and the utter ruine of their Liberty CONCERNING the composition that is made herein that some should convene in Ecclesiastical Synods by their own personal Right and in virtue of their Office and others by a kind of Delegation from some of their own Order it being a meer political constitution which I shall immediately speak unto it is not here to be taken notice of THERE is nothing therefore in Scripture Example or the Light of Natural Reason with the principles of all Societies in Union or Communion that will lead us any farther than this that such Synods are to be composed and consist of such Persons as are chosen and delegated by those Churches respectively who do act and exert their Communion in such Assemblies So was it in the First Example of them Act. 15. The Church of Antioch chose and sent Messengers of their own number to advise with the Apostles and Elders of the Church at Jerusalem at which Consultation the Members of that Church also were present And this is the whole of the nature and use of Ecclesiastical Synods It is on other accounts that they make up so great a part of the History