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A94296 Of religious assemblies, and the publick service of God a discourse according to apostolicall rule and practice. / By Herbert Thorndike. Thorndike, Herbert, 1598-1672. 1642 (1642) Wing T1054; Thomason E1098_1; ESTC R22419 207,469 444

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〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is the spirituall Crown of their Presbytery because sitting in a half Round in the head place of the Church they very well resembled the fashion of a Crown and are therefore called in the Constitutions of the Apostles ii 28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Crown of the Church There order is taken that the Presbyters at the Feasts of Love then practiced shall receive a double share to that of the widows in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As for the Presbyters that they may take pains about the word of Doctrine let there be a double part set aside for them also for the Apostles of our Lords sake whose place they possesse as Counsellours to the Bishop and the Crown of the Church We are not to conceive that it must needs be a full Round that is called a Crown that Constellation of starres that is so called wanteth a great deal of a Circle I suppose because we must allow room to tye it behind the head to avoid Tertullians objection That the hinder parts of the head swell not If then the Bishop and Presbyters sate in that figure of a half Round which we saw practiced in the Jews Consistories and that in the head of the Congregation it is for no other reason that they are called the Crown of the Church Now this fashion of their sitting is thus described in the same book ii 58. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let the Bishops Chur stand in the midst and let the Presbytery sit on both sides of him and the Deacons stand by lightned of too much apparel for they are in the ship of the Church like Mariners and Rulers of sides by their direction let the people sit on the other side with all quietnesse and good order and let the women also sit apart keeping silence then let the Reader stand on high and reade It is plain that he setteth here the Bishops Chair in the midst of the upper end of the Church because he called them afore the Crown of the Church and because if the Deacons order the sides then is the Bishop Master at the stern In the mean time he sitting in the midst and the Presbyters on both hands the Deacons must needs be conceived to stand beside them behind the Compasse of that Round in which they sate And thus sitting they are said in the Constitutions as you had it even now To possesse the place of our Lords Apostles And in Ignatius Epist ad Magnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Bishop sitting highest in place of God that is of Christ and the Presbyters in place of the Bench of Apostles And Gregory Nazianzen setting down the dream wherein he saw himself sitting as he was wont to do in the Church describeth himself sitting in the midst and the Presbyters in Chairs on this hand and on that to shew in what posture there they sate This will be all still more clear if we compare it with the posture of the Clergie at celebrating the Eucharist described in the same Constitutions and in him that calleth himself Dionysius the Areopagite Eccles Hierarch c. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Bishop standeth at the midst of the Divine Altar and onely the chief of the Deacons stand about him with the Priests Constit Apost viii 12. more in particular 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Andlet the Presbyters stand on his right hand on his left like Scholars that stand beside their Master and let two Deacons on either side the Altar hold fans of thin skins or Peacocks feathers or linen to drive away the little creatures that flie about that they light not in the Cups The posture of the Presbyters on each hand the Bishop and of the two Deacons at the points of the Communion-Table describeth that Round whereof we speak in which the Bishop and Presbyters sate with their faces to the people ready to rise speak to them when time required ready to celebrate the Eucharist in the like posture behind the Communion-Table which therefore seemeth to have been the most ancient custome of the Church as out of Jewell against Harding is noted in the last Chapter of the Holy Table and is like to have been the Originall reason of all that is observed there of compassing the Altar in the Greek Liturgies This is that which Tertullian calleth Ordinem Consessum Ecclesiae Ignatius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Order or the Bench of the Church consiting of the Bishop and his Presbyters in allusion and correspondence to the Commonalties of the Romane Empire governed by their annuall Magistrates and a Bench of their Counsellours called Ordo Reipublicae The Order or the Bench of such Commonalties The consideration hereof is very forcible to convince common sense of the Succession of Bishops from the Apostles as the Heads of these Presbyteries granting that which men of learning cannot refuse for Historicall truth It is found in Tertullians words De Praescript Haeret. C. xxxvi Age jam qui voles curiositatem meliùs exercere in negotio Salutis tuae percurre Ecclesias Apostolicas apud quas ipsae adhuc cathedrae Apostolorum suis locis praesident apud quas ipsae authenticae eorum literae recitantur sonantes vocem repraesentantes faciem uniuscujusque Thou that shalt have a mind to exercise thy curiosity better in the businesse of thy salvation go to now runne over the Apostolick Churches in which the very Chairs of the Apostles govern in their places in which their authentick writings are read sounding the voice and representing the visage of each He that should have denied the Books kept and used by those Churches to have been the Authenticks of the Apostles would have been thought to disadvantage the Faith What shall we imagine of him that denieth the very Chairs wherein the Apostles sate in the Head of those Churches to be possessed by their Successours as was pretended there from whence Tertullian argueth For when he saith that they sounded their voice and represented their visage doth he not affirm that their Epistles written to those Churches preached in their absence as themselves did out of those Chairs in presence I have shewed out of the Scriptures that the Apostles exercised the Government in chief of those Churches which they had planted Presbyteries to govern as occasion required The Chairs whereof Tertullian speaketh were the seats of that Government as well as Doctrine when they were there The Apostles had divers companions which were both their Disciples in the Doctrine and their Coadjutours in the work of the Gospel Of these S. Paul speaketh Phil. iv 3. With Clement also and the rest of my work-fellows These or some of these which sometimes gave personall attendance upon the Apostles not moving in their office but at their disposing became afterwards settled by them upon particular Churches which they found they could not attend so well themselves for the government of those
which were converted and the conversion of those which were not Thus were Timotheus and Titus placed over the Churches of Asia and Crete just upon the time when he made account to see them no more Thus was Mark attendant on Peter at writing his first Epistle v. 13. who was afterward as all agree seated by him at Alexandria and did the office of an Evangelist there Clemens and Linus companions of the Apostles All Antiquity agreeth were placed by them over the Church at Rome though in what rank and condition it agreeth not The words of Theodoret are remarkable where he answereth the question Why S. Paul writ Epistles to Timotheus and Titus none to Silas or the rest of his fellows 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And we say saith he that he had already p●● Churches in the hands of these the rest he had with him What meaneth the Apostles instructions concerning the perpetuall government of those Churches if they had nothing to do but to plant Presbyteries there and away S. Paul sendeth for Timotheus to Rome 2. Tim. iiii 9. as for Titus to Nicopolis iii. 12. who was also with him at Rome and went thence to Dalmatia 2. Tim. iiii 10. But did he mean that his instructions should be void thenceforth or be practiced at Ephesus and in Crete afterwards We cannot discredit Antiquity that maketh them Bishops there without offering violence to the tenour of the Scriptures that inforceth it But how is Titus counted Bishop of a Church that is instructed to plant Presbyteries through the cities of Crete i. 3. all under his own government and oversight or how is Timotheus Bishop of one Church of Ephesus that is instructed to govern as well as to plant all the Presbyteries whereof the Apostle writeth for all those Presbyteries import Episcopall Churches No otherwise then the Apostle had his Chair in all the Churches of his planting according to Tertullian The Apostles could not settle all things in the intended form at the beginning So farre there is no fault in Epiphanius his words Not because they knew not what to do but for reasons best known to themselves because perhaps they might find it more to the purpose to put into the hands of their own Disciples those Churches on which depended the planting and government of many more then to set men untried over the Presbyteries of particular Churches Is S. Mark Bishop of Alexandria the lesse because he preached the Gospel through the Countrey under it because he planted the government of Churches perhaps under his own oversight for the time Or what inconvenience is it that S. James an Apostle should be deputed by consent of the Apostles to exercise that office in the parts of Palestine and Arabia alwayes with resort to his residence at the Mother Church of Jerusalem or that he should therefore be counted Bishop of it In due time even during the age of the Apostles severall Churches had their severall Bishops as appeareth by the Angels of the seven Churches of Asia which from the beginning were in the compasse of Timothies charge At first all Presbyters were Angels of Churches according to the Apostle 1. Cor. xi For this cause ought a woman to have power upon her head because of the Angels That seemeth the most naturall meaning of his words for Tertullian in divers places of his book De Velandis Virginibus intimateth one reason of vailing womens faces in the Church from the scandall of their countenances when Bishops came over them no marvel if they alone were called the Angels of those Churches For it is acknowledged that all Presbyters are called Bishops under the Apostles But when severall Heads were set over severall Churches then Heads of Presbyteries were onely Bishops thenceforth Those that would have us take those Angels of Churches for the Churches of those Angels rather then believe that Epistles concerning those Churches were fit to be addressed to their Bishops might have corrected their mistake out of the Scripture that saith Revel i. 20. The seven Starres are the Angels of the seven Churches and the seven Candlesticks are the seven Churches S. Ambrose or whosoever writ those Commentaries upon 1. Cor. xii 28. saith two things First the Apostles spoken of there are Bishops to wit in the then state of the Church Then having compared the Apostles with Prophets he concludeth Et quia ab uno Deo Patre sunt omnia idcirco singulos Episcopos singulis Ecclesiis praeesse decrevit And because all things are from one Father God therefore he decreed that severall Bishops should be over severall Churches In these two particulars he speaketh my whole meaning The Apostles were Bishops but not severall ones of severall Churches But as there is one God over all so he decreed saith he that afterwards severall Bishops should be over severall Churches In the mean time the rights reserved to great Churches over the lesse which now we see derived with so much learning from the times of the Apostles is the print which remaineth of that Government and oversight of them which at the first rested in those great Churches from which they were propagated by the Apostles or by their companions Walo Messalinus standeth stiff upon S. Hieromes opinion that there were no Bishops till they were appointed by the Church to extinguish the schismes of Presbyteries But Tertullians words inforce more That the Bishops of his time sate in those Chairs which the Apostles possessed for theirs And afore C. xxxii Sicut Smyrnaeorum Ecclesia Polycarpum ab Joanne CONLOCATUM refert As the Church at Smyrna relateth that John PLACED Polycarpus or Installed him to wit in the Bishops Chair there He thinketh that all this importeth that Polycarpus took place of the rest of the Presbyters and no more But indifferent reason will require him to grant no more superiority of Bishops then the Chair of the Apostles importeth However S. Hierome reconcile his opinion with his own words concerning the Presbyters of Alexandria that from S. Marks time were wont to take one of their number and place him on a higher step and call him Bishop of Alexandria common sense will inforce the high rank in which he sate to import the superiority and eminence of his office even during the Apostles time The consideration of this Order or this Bench of the Church shall give me further occasion to resume and averre two particulars of good consequence in this businesse The first the Extent of the Office common to the Bishop and Presbyters as for preaching and celebrating the Sacraments so for the oversight and government of the Church in those Spirituall matters wherein as members of the Church men communicate expressed in all places of the Scripture wherein there is any remembrance of their Charge Survaying those passages of the Acts and Epistles of the Apostles in which the office of Presbyters is remembred we find it every where described as well by the oversight or
to be otherwise but to take notice what impression of this truth they received from the places alledged And you shall find the same Authours to let passe others expounding the Apostles words Rom. xii 3 6. no otherwise According as God hath dealt to every man the measure of Faith and whether Prophesying according to the proportion of Faith S. Ambrose Haec ergò datur pro modo accipientis hoc est quantum causa exigit propter quam datur This therefore that is Prophesie is given according to the measure of him that receiveth that is as much as the cause requireth in respect whereof it is bestowed And S. Chrysostome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For though it be a Grace it is not indifferently poured forth But taking the measure from them which receive it floweth upon them in measure as it findeth the vessel of faith offered understanding that faith which moveth men to sue to God for such Graces as he saith pray that he may Interpret And this is it which the Apostle writeth to Timothy 1. Tim. iv 13 14. Till I come give attendance to reading to exhortation to doctrine neglect not the Gift that is in thee which was given thee by Prophesie with the laying on of the hands of the Presbytery And 2. Tim. 1. 6. Wherefore I put thee in remembrance that thou stirre up the Gift of God that is in thee by the putting on of my hands For in calling it a Gift he signifieth an extraordinary Grace of that time but in willing him to stirre it up and not to neglect it he sheweth that it was in him to procure it at Gods hands by reading and teaching and praying and the like means which he nameth or nameth not The true meaning then of the Apostle when he saith vers 14 15 16 17. For if I pray in an unknown tongue my spirit prayeth but my understanding is unfruitfull What is it then I will pray with the spirit but I will pray with the understanding also I will sing with the spirit but I will sing with the understanding also Else when thou shalt blesse with the spirit how shall he that possesseth the room of the unlearned say Amen at thy giving of thanks seeing he understandeth not what thou sayest For thou verily givest thanks well but the other is not edified I say the meaning of this whole passage supposeth that which we began to prove of the Prophets under the Old Testament that it was part of their Office to compose the praises of God and the prayers of their Congregations For if we take not our marks amisse we shall see that the strength of our advantage upon these words against the Church of Rome lieth in this because the Apostle argueth expressely against them that to shew their Gift of Languages took vpon them not onely to utter the mysteries of God in strange Tongues but also in them to conceive Prayers and Psalmes of Gods praises in the name and behalf of the Church This they are desirous to decline if the Apostle would give leave For that which he saith vers 17. ANOTHER is not edified is as much as we find vers v. and vers xii that the CHURCH may be edified and vers xix In the Church I had rather speak five words to teach OTHERS and the Apostle afterwards vers 16. What is it then my brethren when you come TOGETHER every one of you hath a Psalme And to this purpose it will be very effectuall to observe That as in the Old Testament Saul and his servant are said to meet a whole Quire of Prophets Prophesying and the sonnes of Asaph Heman and Jeduthun are said to Prophesie in singing the praises of God which the spirits of Prophets had indited so in the New Testament for the same cause it seemeth that singing the praises of God is called Prophesying by the Apostle For let me ask what the Apostle meaneth when he saith 1. Cor. xi 5. Every woman praying or PROPHESYING with her head uncovered his speech concerning Christian Assemblies wherein he forbiddeth a woman to speak 1. Cor. xiiii 34 Is it that which the Italian Glosse of Diodati after Beza hath expounded It seemeth saith he this word is to be taken here not onely for handling or expounding the Mysteries of the word of God as Rom. xii 6. but also for hearing them marking them meditating upon them while they are proposed of those that have the Charge This cannot be allowed Praying is the parties own act why not PROPHESYING that standeth in rank with it The Commentaries under S. Ambrose his name Prophetari autem est adventum fore Domini voce Symboli post Orationem effari To Prophesie is to pronounce in the words of the Creed that the Lord shall come The Creed was pronounced by the whole Congregation this he thinketh was called Prophesying because it speaketh of the coming of Christ which shall be I bring not this because I allow it for it is somewhat strange to make all people Prophets that say their Creed because one Article of it speaketh of things to come besides I do not find that the Creed was from the beginning any part of the Church-Service But because he saw the true point of the difficulty that hearing Prophesies was no Prophesying but it must be something that the Congregation uttereth as well as in Praying which the Apostle calleth Prophesying And what doth the whole Congregation send forth but Prayers and Psalmes In both these as near as can be the people bear their part the whole pack of Prophets Prophesied together when Saul and his servant and his messengers came because they all joyned in the Praises of God Samuel guiding the Quire when the Spirit of God came on them they uttered the Praises of God which the Spirit of God suggested the rest bearing part in their sense Isidore Pelusiota lib. ii Epist 90. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Apostles of our Lord and Teachers of our Orders desirous to suppresse idle talking in Churches understandingly permitted women to sing in them I know there are other Texts of the Apostle where he speaketh in generall to all persons to sing Psalmes Ephes v. 18 19. Be filled with the spirit speaking to your selves in Psalmes Hymnes spirituall songs singing making melody in your hearts unto God And Coloss iii. 6. Teaching and admonishing one another in Psalmes Hymnes and spirituall songs singing with grace in pure hearts unto God yet with good right are these words referred to no place but this because expresse mention of women singing in Assemblies we find none but here If any man thinketh that Isidore in those words reflecteth not upon any thing delivered in writing by the Apostles but of the custome which the Church received at their hands It must needs neverthelesse seem the most probable sense of S. Pauls words which maketh them agree with that custome which he saith the Church received from the Apostles Tertullian de Virg.
him no more and all this no more inconvenience in the Apostle then this that upon his Revelation he conceived God had appointed that which afterwards upon the successe of his affairs he was in hope would come to passe otherwise Nor more inconvenience that this should be related in Scripture then that the speeches of Jobs friends should have a place in it of whom it is said They have not spoken aright of me as my servant Job hath done Thus then when the Apostle willeth the others to judge of that which two or three Prophets shall say as he appointeth at their meetings his meaning is not onely of that which by the way of common reason and ordinary skill shall be said in Exposition of the Scripture but even those things which are spoken by inspiration which he calleth the Spirits of the Prophets he will have subject to the Judgement of the Prophets so farre as concerneth the meaning and consequence of them to be measured by the rest of the Scriptures And to this purpose it seemeth he ordereth the use of those spirituall Graces which are poured upon this Church of Corinth in such abundance that it was hard to find a course for all of them to imploy their Gifts so that all might have opportunity by turns if not at the same meeting to use their Grace in Prophesying that the Church might be edified by it and that others might by the Gift of discerning spirits judge the meaning of those things that were spoken by the Spirit so that the Church might receive no such offense as that which the Thessalonians did in conceiving from things that were spoken by the Spirit that the day of the Lord was at hand at that time Though it is neverthelesse to be thought that this course of speaking by many at the same Assembly was practised in the Synagogue especially when divers Scribes and Doctours were present as also some traces of the same custome have continued in the practice of the Church Beza expounding the words of the Apostle 1. Cor. xi 8. Therefore ought a woman to have power over her head because of the Angels to be meant of the Ministers of Churches Vtitur autem plurali numero quòd in maxima donorum Dei abundantia non tantùm apud Corinthios ut apparet infrà xiv 39. sed etiam olim aliis in Ecclesiis non unus solus sed etiam bini terni in coetibus sacris sermonem haberent ut de praeclaris aliis donis taceam de quibus noster Apostolus infrà xiv 26. Quod etiam liquet ex Tertulliani Apologetico quibusdam in Antiochena Ecclesia Chrysostomi Homiliis Now he speaketh in the plurall number because for the abundance of Gods Graces not onely amongst the Corinthians as appeareth beneath xiv 39. but also in other Churches of old time not one alone but two or three spake at religious Assemblies Which also appeareth by Tertullians Apologetick and some Homilies of Chrysostome in the Church of Antiochia Tertull. Apolog. c. 39. Certè fidem sanctis vocibus pascimus spem erigimus fiduciam figimus disciplinam praeceptorum nihilominus inculcationibus densamus Ibidem etiam exhortationes castigationes censura divina Certainly with these holy words we nourish faith we erect our hope we fasten our confidence as much we compact our discipline repeating the rules of it There also exhortations reproofs and the censure of God speaking of reading and expounding the Scriptures in their Assemblies Whether or no these be the words which he meaneth I know not I find nothing else in that book to the purpose But it is clear which he saith of S. Chrysostome In Ferrarius De ritu Concionum ii 40. you shall find the passages of his Homilies marked in which he signifieth that the Bishop was to preach when he had done And in one passage related out of him in Baronius Ann. lvii n. 160. he testifieth in expresse terms that this custome of the Church was but a figure and monument of those Graces which had flourished in the Primitive Adding further that when the Preacher blessed or as they call it saluted the people at his beginning with these or the like words The Lord be with you the people answering as the fashion was which yet remaineth in one place of our Service And with thy Spirit the meaning of this answer had reference to the Spirituall inspired Grace out of which they were known to speak at the beginning Gregory Nissene 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nè igitur longiùs vobis fratres sermonis exordium protrahamus cum mirific is eorum qui ante nos dixerunt orationibus operam dederitis Therefore brethren not to draw you out the beginning of my speech too much in length having taken pains to heare the admirable Sermons of those that have spoken before me But of all the rest the book called the Constitutions of the Apostles most in particular ii 51. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Then saith he when the Gospel is read let the Presbyters exhort the people one by one not all at once and after all the Bishop as it is fitting for the Master to do For here you see how the Order of the Apostle was sometimes practised in the Church when the Bishop preached in the last place after one or more of the Presbyters CHAP. VI. The parts of that work of Gods Service for which Christians assemble Psalmes of Gods praises part of the substance of it The ground and efficacie of Common Prayers Reading the Scriptures a substantiall part of Publick Service The necessity and excellence of Preaching for expounding the Scriptures The Eucharist the chief part of Publick Service The Apostles Rule of Order and Comelinesse The force of Custome in preserving Order and of Reason in judging of Gomelinesse All practice of the Primitive Church prescribeth not to us Correspondence with it necessary The Practice of it in the point in hand of what advantage Order of Publick Service a Law of Christian Kingdomes Direction of Ministers of the Church requisite The Obligation of it Agreement of the chief Reformers THus farre then have we travelled in the first part of our businesse propounded inquiring the Apostles meaning in this whole discourse intended to regulate the use of spirituall Graces proper to that time in their Assemblies by comparing the particulars of it with that which is found remembred in the Scriptures to the like purpose How wide soever these things may be thought from my intent as having nothing to do with the particulars which the Apostle here ordereth to me it shall seem a great gain for the pains bestowed here that from hence we may collect the substance of those things which are to be done at the Religious Assemblies of Christians the particulars of that work for which we Assemble our selves which are no other according to the Apostle then our Common Service expresseth in the entrance to it To set forth his most worthy Praise to
heare his most holy Word which must be understood according to the purpose and opportunities of severall Assemblies either read or expounded as the meaning of it hath alwayes been declared by practice and to ask those things which be requisite and necessary as well for the body as the soul The same hath Tertullian expressed to have been the businesse of the Primitive Christians at their Assemblies De Anim. c. ix Jam verò prout Scripturae leguntur aut Psalmi canuntur aut Adlocutiones proferuntur aut Petitiones delegātur ità indè materiae visionibus subministrantur Now as the Scriptures are read or Psalmes sung or Exhortations produced or Prayers preferred so is matter ministred to her visions In his Apologetick c. 39. and in Justine Martyr his second Apologie where they describe to the Powers of the Empire what the Christians did at their Assemblies of singing Psalmes there is no remembrance the rest are the same particulars There can be no question made that their practice was derived from the Apostles when we consider how much this Discourse of the Apostle inferreth in which we have seen the Psalmes and the Prayers which those that were indued with spirituall Graces composed and conceived on the behalf of the Church as hath been shewed where neverthelesse he hath expressed the part that particular persons bear when he saith Every man or woman Praying or Prophesying that is singing of Psalmes as hath been declared afore In like sort whatsoever Rules he giveth to order the course of Prophesying among them proceed from supposition of reading the Scriptures afore to the Exposition whereof he willeth them to contribute the fruit of their Graces And this in the first place I make account to be gained without contradiction from this Discourse of the Apostle That all these are substantiall parts of that work for which we go to Church all of them Principals none of them accessories in it The setting forth of Gods praises in Psalmes of Thanksgiving you shall see to be that part of morall and perpetuall Service the Order whereof is most particularly remembred in the Old Testament in Solomons Temple As the Sacrifice was burning upon the Altar and the Wine-offering pouring out on it and the Priests blowing with the Trumpets in the Court of the Sanctuary which was their Ceremoniall and Figurative Service in the mean time the Levites stood upon their Pulpits in the outer Courts where the men or women of Israel were licenced to come singing the Psalmes of Gods praises Times of their Assemblies were prescribed by the Law of Moses as you have seen but no Order for any particular work of spirituall Service to be performed at them is there remembred Not to make a doubt that other Offices were frequented together with the Exposition of the Law as the custome and opportunitie served but to shew that the Psalmes of Gods praises for the ordinary daily practice whereof such expresse Order was taken and remembred must by no means be reckoned of the by but of the main of Gods Publick Service And if we should go further to shew that this was no personall service of the Levites alone but of the whole congregation of Gods people assembled there and that it is so acceptable with God in this regard because his praise appeareth more glorious when his people joyn together in setting it forth we might produce a great part of the book of Psalmes wherein David and other persons inspired by the Holy Ghost have either expressed or stirred up the affections of the whole congregation to that work and recommended the Service of God which it yieldeth Psalm xxxiv 3. O magnifie the Lord with me and let us exalt his name TOGETHER cxlix 1. O sing unto the Lord a new song and his praise in the CONGREGATION of the Saints lxxxiv 4. Blessed are they that dwell in thine house they will be still praising thee He commendeth the condition of Priests and Levites but he desireth as farre as he can to make it his own cxvii when he singeth O praise God all ye People praise him all ye Nations The Apostle sheweth us that this is accomplished when the Gentiles submit themselves to the Church Rom. xv 11. and so is all the rest of like nature Psalm c. 4. O go your way into his gates with Thanksgiving and into his courts with Praise be thankfull unto him and blesse his Name But shall we believe that these things are accomplished in merely believing the Gospel or in serving him according to it as they are required to do in the Scriptures that foresaw it In fine S. Augustine hath instructed us that the Psalmes are to be understood in the person of David or him that composed them by the Holy Ghost in the first place but afterwards they belong to the person of Christ first and then to his mysticall body the Church So whatsoever is there read in the singular number hath the last resort of the meaning in the congregation of Gods people But those things that are couched in the plurall number there cannot properly be understood to proceed from particular persons every Praise ye every Hallelujah is owned of none but Assemblies Besides it expresseth to us the interesse which the honour of God hath in every thing of this nature that is publick Could it be supposed that the same thing were done the same praises yielded to God by each man in private which all men yield him in common there is no Christian that is sensible of the body of Christ and the fellowship of all members of it could think these to be both one to Gods Service because the Spirit that maketh this body one requireth of each member of it a particular influence in the common Office Hearts indued with severall Graces to God are like severall voices to the eare But we are farre from supposing this Many men may think that they need not go to Church for those Offices which they do at home But they ought to think what the common sort of Christians might do if Assemblies were not held As the matter is the Service which the best are able to yield unto God is much improved by joyning with the rest of his members but should we not Assemble for that purpose the hearts of plain simple members which now are most acceptable to God would be able to move little in this work the Order of the Congregation not guiding them in it Last of all be it considered that this is the imployment of the other world when mens desires are all satisfied and all the subject of prayers possessed the Angels the Elders about the Throne of God and all the people of Jews and Gentiles which encompasse it Revel vii 9. cease not to joyn in the praises of God when the Church is become perfectly one As for the Prayers of Christian Assemblies we know upon what Patent they stand Matth. xviii 19 20. Again I say unto you that if two of
practising the Service of God in an orderly and reverent form make in the minds of men that cannot receive it from their reason but from their senses This effect in things of slight consequence in particular which neverthelesse altogether amount to a considerable summe is better seen by the grosse in practice then convinced by retail in dispute yet since the importunities of men have caused false reasons to prevail with weak people it is requisite the true reasons be pleaded lest it be thought there are none such because not so fit to be pleaded The Circumstances and Ceremonies of Publick Service is indeed a kind of Discipline and Paedagogie whereby men subject to sense are guided in the exercise of godlinesse It is as it were the apparell of Religion at the heart which some think like the Sunne most beautifull when it is most naked and so it were indeed did men consist of minds alone without bodies but as long as our bodily senses are manageable to our souls advantage the heat within will starve without this apparell without And therefore under better judgement I hold it requisite that the observance of Rites and Ceremonies in the Publick Service of God should increase and become more solemn after the world was come into the Church then under the persecuting times of it Persecution was like Antiperistasis in nature in preserving Order and reverence in the Publick Offices of the Church with the respect of those Guides that ruled it But since the Net of the Gospel hath been cast in the Ocean and caught good and bad it is more requisite that all should passe as under rule and observance so in the most reverent form that the coldnesse and indifference of the worser part appear not to debauch the good disposition of others Though from the beginning as early as the records of the Church are able to inform us we are sure it was never without such outward observances as according to the state of the time tended to maintain to witnesse the disposition of the heart answerable The Apostles ordinance of Praying and Singing Psalmes men with heads bare women with heads covered the Salutation of Peace so long practised in the Primitive Church from the time of the Apostles Imposition of hands in divers Acts of Publick Service signifying the overshadowing of the Holy Ghost and Gods hand stretched out to give the blessing for which Prayer was made and without question derived from the times of the Apostles are of this nature And it is thought that when the Apostles speak of putting off the old man and putting on the new Col. iii. 9 10. ii 11. of burying in Baptisme Col. ii 12. Rom. vi 4. of the unction of grace 1. John ii 20 27. 1. Cor. ii 21. allusion is made to some Rites of Ecclesiasticall Offices used even at that time As for Ecclesiasticall Writers it will be hard to name any of them so Ancient in whom are not to be found divers particulars of this nature But the generall reason hitherto declared hath been better sifted by the chief Reformers Philip. loco de Caerem in Eccl. p. 651. Paulus gravissimè dicit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Non ordinem tantùm sed etiam singularem curam ornandi ordinis requirit quare addit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ut videamus quid personas loca tempora deceat Paul saith with much gravity LET ALL THINGS BE DONE VVITH DECENCIE AND IN ORDER He requireth not Order alone but a singular care of setting that Order forth therefore he addeth DECENTLY that we consider what becometh persons times and places This is it that I am now about That the Order of things done at Publick Service be such as may set forth and insinuate the respect which those times those places those persons require Which Calvine still setteth down in fuller terms 4. Instit x. 28. Vt in sacro fidelium caetu decor è peragantur omnia quâ convenit dignitate That in the holy Assembly of the faithfull all things be done decently and in that worth and respect as befitteth Afterwards he setteth down as much as I have done when he saith Ac decori quidem finis est partim ut dum adhibentur ritus qui venerationem rebus sacris conciliant talibus adminiculis ad pietatem excitemur partim etiam ut modestia gravitas quae in omnibus honestis actionibus spectari debet illic maximè eluceat And indeed the end of comelinesse is partly that using such rites as procure reverence to sacred things we may be by such helps excited to godlinesse partly that the modesty and gravity which in all actions of respect ought to be attended may there especially appear Again n. 29. Sed illud nobis decorum erit quod ità sit ad sacrorum Mysteriorum reverentiam aptum ut sit idoneum ad pietatem exercitium vel saltem quod ad ornatum faciat actioni congruentem neque idipsum sine fructu sed ut fideles admoneat quantâ modestiâ religione observantiâ sacra tractare debeant But that shall be counted decent with us that shall so fit the reverence of holy Mysteries as may be a competent exercise unto godlinesse or which at least may conduce to ornament suitable to the action and that not without benefit but to put the faithfull in mind with how much modesty and religious observance they ought to be conversant in sacred actions What this in generall importeth is that which I desire in the particular heads Times and Places are no way sanctified otherwise then as they are deputed to the Service of God The words of our Lord in the Gospel Matth. xxiii 18. Which is the greater the Sacrifice or the Altar that sanctifieth it point out to us a difference betwixt the Law and the Gospel in this particular For as S. Hierome said afore That the Service of God in Spirit and Truth proper to the DISPENSATION of the Gospel is acceptable to God at all times that all dayes are equall of themselves no difference between them but in respect to the Assemblies of Christians upon them and the work of those Assemblies so is it to be said with truth concerning Places to make it a generall observation and a true one That under the Law the Time and the Place sanctified the Service confined to it but under the Gospel the Service required sanctifieth the Time and Place of it For example The Passeover on the due time was holy on another time had been abominable Dwelling in Tabernacles commanded on such a day of such a moneth used otherwise no part of Gods Service but sacriledge in usurping it The Sacrifices whereof our Lord speaketh holy upon the Altar otherwhere abominable On the other side the Service of Christians being good by nature and acceptable to God at all Times and in all Places hath a speciall promise of God from the unity of the Church and the Assemblies in it Which because they cannot