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A03409 The Churches authority asserted in a sermon preached at Chelmsford, at the metropoliticall visitation of the most Reverend Father in God, VVilliam, Lord Arch-bishop of Canterbury his Grace, &c. March 1. 1636. By Samuel Hoard B.D. and Parson of Morton in Essex. Hoard, Samuel, 1599-1658. 1637 (1637) STC 13533; ESTC S104116 44,865 76

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their mariage were most or all of them made by their owne discretion Had these Iews to whom God had given a perfit platforme this liberty and have not Christian Churches to whom no rule is in this case given the same power in such things and a far greater And this liberty have all the governours likewise of Christian congregations used in their severall Churches and ages as I shall have occasion to intimate by and by All which examples are an evident proofe of the Churches power in these externall ordinances because 1. there is no Precept against these examples for against an expresse command examples prove nothing 2. The Apostles were more faithfull servants to their Lord than to intrench upon his royall prerogative and more humble than to goe beyond the bounds of their commission 3. It cannot with reason bee imagined that Christ would suffer his Church throughout all ages to sleep to securely in so great an error The power of the Church proved by consent of writers And therefore leaving this I come to my second argument for the proofe of the Churches power the Consent of Writers which is an argument beyond exception and able of it selfe to put the point in hand out of all question Calvin whom all Sectaries make their Oracle in their plea against Ceremonies hath these words (a) Calv Opus● pag 344. Ne quis nos calumnietur nimis morosos c. Let no man thinke or say that we are so severe and harsh as to take away all liberty in externall rites I here give all readers to understand that I contend not about ceremonies respecting order and decency in the Church Our dispute is against those acts whereby some thinke that God is truly and properly worshipt I deny that these are under the power of men And in (b) Idem Instit l. 4. c. 10. Sect. 14 another place he saith Ergo inquies nihil ceremoniale rudioribus dabitur c Therefore thou wilt say shall nothing Ceremoniall be appointed for the instruction of the ruder sort I say not so for I know well enough that all such helps are profitable to them only I contend that in prescribing them such a manner and measure be used as may illustrate not obscure Christ And (c) Calv ●b Sect. 30. in the same Chapter hee layes it downe for a conclusion That Christ would not prescribe particularly concerning ceremonies what we ought to follow but referre us to the direction of generall rules We hold saith Perkins (d) Perk. ●es Cat●ol of Traditions con●l 3. that the Church hath power to prescribe ordinances rules or traditions touching the time and place of Gods worship and concerning order and comelinesse to be used in the same Peruse the Harmony of confessions and see whether this be not the judgement of all those Churches More particularly for instance take the Auspurge confession Melancthon the contriver of it directly for this power saith (e) Aug. confes Art ult Apol. ej●dem Licet Pastoribus Episcopis c. It is lawfull for Bishops and Pastors to make Canons that things be done in order in the Church and he proves it by S. Pauls example Sic Paulus ordinat c. So S Paul ordained that women should cover their heads and confine their tongues in the congregation c. Only some Cautions he gives to this effect 1. That these orders be not imposed as parts of Gods worship 2. That they be not urged as things necessary in themselves 3. That for their matter they be not contrary to any Evangelicall truths for if an Angell from heaven should preach unto us another Gospell wee are to hold him accursed In all which cautions he doth not deny or abridge the power of Church-governours in these matters but only remember them how to use their liberty therein to that end for which they received it the glory of God and the Churches edification according to that speech of S. Paul This authority is given us for edification and not for your destruction 2 Cor. 10.8 But what need I stand upon particular instances Do we not all grant in our controversie with Papists about traditions that there are 2. sorts of traditions Apostolicall and Ecclesiasticall and that both these are under the power of the Church 1. We yeeld that there are Apostolique traditions rituall and dogmaticall which are no where mentioned or not enjoyned in the Scriptures but delivered by word of mouth from the Apostles to their followers for some of which these are reputed viz. the number of Canonicall bookes the Apostles Creed the baptisme of infants the fast of Lent the Lords day and the great festivals of Easter and Whitsontide These we justly take for theirs grounding upon S. Austins rule (f) Quod universa tenet ecclesia nec concil●s institutū sed semper ●tentum est non nisi authoritate Apost●l● traditum rectissimè creditur Aug. de Pap. cont ●onat l 4 c. 24. Those observations which have beene of universall use in the Catholique Church and appeare not to have beene the Constitutions of generall Councils we are in reason to hold for Apostolique traditions 2. Besides these wee confesse that there are and have been many ancient Ecclesiastique traditions also from which as their foundations grew those noted practise of (g) Tert. C● ●il c. 3. not fasting on the Lords day of (h) ●t ib. saying their prayers not kneeling but standing during the whole festivity of Easter and Whitsontide which in those dayes continued though in a remisse degree full 50. dayes (i) Just● a●q ad O●thod Te●t Apol. c. 16. Bas●d ●p●tu sancto c. 27. of praying to God and adoring Christ with their faces toward the East (k) Naz in l● Go●●a● per. Leon● p. 423 Aug. con l. 9 c. 13 of prostration before the Altar of (l) Cyp● p. 56. ad T●t at id l. de laps su●●n●t signing the baptized person with the signe of the crosse (m) Tert Co● mil. c. 3. of renouncing the devill of tasting hony and milk before baptisme (n) Tert. de bapt c. 13. of using God-fathers in the baptismes even of children (o) I●d Hisp l. 2. de div o● 20. y● H● osolan pro● co of exorcising the parties to be baptized (p) A●al l. 1. de●ccla● 2● Aug. S●m 1●7 de domin● 〈◊〉 pas● of putting a white garment upon them which they were to weare for the space of 7. or 8. dayes from the putting off of which the Sunday after Easter was called (q) Vi● 〈◊〉 ●tiq ●t 〈◊〉 t● 5. c. 12. dominica in Albis (r) Te●t 〈…〉 of receiving the Eucharist fasting (ſ) Just mar q. ad orth Cypr. ep 56. 63. of mixing water with the wine for the Communion (t) Cypr. ibid. of sending it to such as were absent (u) Cypr. l. de laps num 89. Tert. l. de orat sub sin id l. 2. ad ux of
this Church to its primitive purity For the procuring of which hee takes a mixt course that they might neither detest his severity nor yet despise his lenity One while he sharply reprooveth another while he gently allureth in one place hee punisheth in another he prescribeth In this Chapter hee meeteth with two faults disorder and unprofitablenesse and because contraria contrariis curantur distempers are usually cured by remedies of a contrary nature for the healing of their unprofitablenesse in the use of their religious exercises he command that all things bee done to edification ver 26 and for the removall of their indecencies and disorders he requires that all things be done decently and in order And so I am come to my Text. In which by the judgement of expositors St. Paul investeth the Corinthians The scope and parts of the Text and the point insisted on and in them all Christian Churches with authority to ordaine Rites and Ceremonies appertaining to order and decency in the service of God (a) Hinc apparet liberum esse Ecclesus titus ordinare servientes ordini decoro Heming in hunc locum Hinc aparet saith Hemingius hence it appeareth that it is in the liberty of Churches to ordaine rites serving to order and comelinesse (b) Facit Ecclesiae p●testatem de decoro et ordine ecclesiastico liberò disponendi et leges ferendi Par in hunc loc Facit Ecclesiae potestatem c. He gives the Church saith Pareus power freely to dispose of things belonging to Ecclesiasticall order and decency (c) Non potest haberi quod Paulus hic exigit ut decenter omnia et ordine fiant nisi additis constitutionibus tanquam vinculis quibusdā ordo ipse et decorum servetur Cal. Instit l. 4. c. 10. Non potest haberi c. That which St. Paul requires saith Calvin cannot be had unlesse there bee Canons made by which as by certaine bands men and things may bee kept together in a comely order (d) Davenant de Iudic. Cont● fidei c. 16. p. 84. And the Reverend Bishop of Salisbury having delivered a position that the Prelates of the Church have power to appoint rites and ceremonies respecting the externall policy of the Church prooveth it by my text Let all things be done decently c. These words therefore in the opinion of these men and almost all writers on these words or point containe the Churches Investiture and may be cast into these two parts 1. The Churches liberty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 let all things be done 2. The Churches limits 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 decently and in order Or else into these two 1. Her Authority to make laws Let c. 2. The object about which her Authority is to move matters of order and decency decently c. From both these ariseth the point on which I purpose to build my present discourse and which I will deliver in the words of our twentieth Article That the Church hath power to decree Rites and Ceremonies In the handling of this conclusion 1. I will explaine the termes 2. Prove the point 3. Touch upon such consectartes as the point doth naturally derive it selfe into Of all these with what brevity I can The termes explained what is meant by Ceremonies and Rites The termes are two the Ceremonies and Church Ceremonies are externall acts and adjuncts annexed to sacred Services For in Religion there are two things considerable Substantialls and Circumstantialls Substantialls are of two sorts 1. Matters of faith and manners to be beleeved and done of necessity to salvation conteined in the Creed and ten Commandements 2. Sacraments ordained for the bringing of men and women into the Church and their conduct therein to everlasting happinesse About these the power which the Church hath is to preserve them as the Ark did the tables of the Law to give an honorable testimony to them to consecrate to dispense them to her children and to transmit them to posterity in which respects she is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Pillar and ground of truth 1 Tim. 3.15 Power to make adde alter or diminish these she never had Never durst any Prelates in the Church but the Pope take liberty to stamp new Articles of faith or to joyne Traditions to the writtē word of God for supply of its imperfection which are of the same authority Sess 4. decre● 1 and to be received pari pietatis affectu with the like religious respect as the Trent Councill hath determined never did any presume but he to curt all the Lords Supper by taking away the cup from the people or to transforme the Sacrament into a Sacrifice propitiatory for quick and dead to the great injury of that alsufficient Sacrifice once offered upon the Crosse by our Lord himselfe In all these manum de tabula hands off for they are all above the Churches power But Secondly there are besides these some ceremonialls and circumstantialls necessary for the right ordering and cariage of Gods service the trayning up of people in piety and the preservation of religion for without ceremonies saith Zanchy (a) Sine Ceremon●s nec sideles in unum convenne co●lescere possunt nec Deo publice se●vire Zanch de Re● l 1. p 420. neither could the faithfull grow up together into one body nor give God any publique worship That God is to be worshipped by his owne rule and with his owne prescribed acts and dutyes of religion is Substance but that this may bee well done some circumstances of time and place persons gestures habites c. must bee determined What therefore shall be the times wherein Gods people must come together to worship him and how farre they are to be sanctified what are to be the places wherein wee are to meet and how to be adorned in what order divine Service shall be celebrated with what habit the Priest when he commeth to minister before the Lord should be clothed what gestures of body both Priest and people shall use in their publique devotions and the times when this or that particular gesture of kneeling standing sitting or bowing may be used with most comelinesse and profit what kinde of places are fittest for Service and Sermon what tables what chalices what other ornaments doe best beseem that sacred mystery of the Lords Supper c These and such like circumstances are the things permitted to the Churches liberty to determine What we are to understād by Church By Church which is my second terme I meane not private and inferior members of the Church whose place is obedience not government for we should have a mad Church and a miserable divine service if every private spirit might have authority to order these things as hee thinkes good It would be I feare me like that mis-shapen Picture which the Painter Polycletes made by the peoples direction a very deformed one a Church and Service that could not be knowne or
acknowledged for such except a man should write upon it as under some rude draughts men use to doe this is a church or set a cryer when people are worshipping God in his House to proclaime and say this is divine Service But by Church I meane the Churches Pilots who sit at the sterne and are by their office to guide the Ship of the church through the Sea of this world to the haven of eternall happinesse those whom the Apostle calleth Act. 20.28 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bishops and Heb. 13.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Rulers and watchmen of the Lords army For as head and members divide the body naturall and the members with all things belonging to their comelinesse and welfare are ordered by the head and could not bee disposed of by the members without a schisme in the body 1 Cor. 12 so heads and members divide all bodyes civill and ecclesiasticall and whatsoever is to bee done for matter of direction and government hath alwaies beene and must bee the sole prerogative of the heads of these bodyes unlesse wee will have all common wealths and churches broken all to peeces And so I come from the termes to the point The power of the Magistrate is dignified with the name of Sword Rom. 13. Hee heareth not the sword in vaine the authority of the Church with the name of keyes Mat. 16. To thee will I give the keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven These keyes are twofold 1. A Key of order which is the priviledge of the whole Priesthood and it is an Authority of administring the word and Sacraments of remitting and retaining sinnes in interiori foro in the Court of Conscience 2. A Key of Iurisdiction which is a power of binding and loosing men in Foro exteriori in the courts of justice and of making lawes and orders for the government of Gods house And this is peculiar to the Heads and Bishops of the Church as will appeare 1. by examples 2. by consent of writers 3. by reason Proved by examples of the Apostles 1. It appeares by Examples both of the Apostles and Churches of God who have in their severall generations put this Authority into execution It seemeth good to the Holy Ghost and to us to lay upon you no greater burthen than these necessary things that ye abstaine from meats offered to Idolls and from blood and from things strangled and from fornication say the Apostles in their letter to the Gentiles Acts 15.28 In which words we see 1. That they make a Canon 2. That this Canon was concerning abstinence from some things that were indifferent for such were those Idolothytes things strangled blood 3. That they usurped not this authority but had it from the Holy Ghost whom therefore they joyne with themselves in their letter as President of their Commission It seemeth good to the Holy Ghost and to us Nor did they exercise this power onely when they sate in the Councill together but when they were asunder also for St. Paul doth often mention constitutions that hee made for divers Churches For the Churches of Galatia hee made an order That collections should bee made for the poore on every first day of the weeke and meant to bring in the same custome into the Corinthian Church 1 Cor. 16.1 2. He framed ordinances for Corinth 1 Cor. 11.2 viz that women should cover their heads men uncover theirs in the Church v. 6 7. that men should not use long haire but women should ver 14 15. that they should tarry one for another when they come to receive the holy Cōmunion v. 33. c. And hee commends that people for keeping those his traditions ver 2. and promiseth when he came againe to dispose of other things which were not as yet well setled and ordered ver 34. Some also hee made for the government of Thessalonica 2 Thess 2.15 where hee exhorts them to hold fast the traditions which he had taught them both by word of mouth and by letters and 2 Thess 3.14 where hee commandeth opposers against his determinations to be excommunicated But perhaps it will be said Object that their Traditions were of divine authority because they were Pen-men of the Holy Ghost and did but convey those constitutions to the Churches which the Holy Ghost did make and indite for their use It is true Answ that the Apostles spake by inspiration and were imployed in writing downe Gods word for the good of the Church but yet many things they spake and did not as Secretaryes to the Holy Ghost but as ordinary Pastors of the Church (a) Q●atenus erant ordinatii ecclesiae Rectores de hasce titibus externis pro sua sapientia statuebant quod ad aedificationem ecclesia● facere videbatur Dav●t l. de Jud. Cont. c. 16. rat 2. As appeareth most plainly by some speeches which St. Paul le ts fall in 1 Cor. 7. I speake this by permission and not of commandement ver 6. To the marryed I command yet not I but the Lord ver 10. To the rest speake I not the Lord v. 12. Concerning Virgins I have no commandement of the Lord I give my judgement as one that hath obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithfull ver 25. In all these passages 1. He distinguisheth betweene authority divine and humane 2. He affirmeth that he did advise and command many things by his own power as a prudent pastor of the Church for which he had no expresse and particular command from the Lord. Now if he did by his owne authority prescribe some things to be done for the guiding of people in point of manners and morality much more did he take that liberty in point of order and ceremonies And of the Iewish and Christian Churches To these examples of the blessed Apostles I may joine the practice of the Iewish Church who though they had an externall forme of discipline prescribed them and all things belonging thereto even to the pinnes and barres of the Tabernacle the broomes ashpans and snuffers of the Sanctuary yet they tooke liberty to adde some things which were not expressely commanded They annointed their dead with odours and our Saviour was content to be buryed after that manner The Rubenits built an Altar on the bankes of Iordan Iosh 22. which Ioshua and the heads of the people permitted to stand Solomon built an Altar of himselfe by the brazen Altar 1 Kings 8.64 And which comes nearer to our purpose the Iewes did institute two great Festivalls to be solemnized every yeare the Feast of Purim in memory of their deliverance from the bloody conspiracy of Haman and the feast of Dedication for a memoriall of the Temples purification after it had been polluted by King Antiochus And this holy day set up by their own authority our Saviour was so farre from disliking or reproving that he was pleased to honour it with his gracious presence Iohn 10.22 The order also of their burials and the rites of