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A25460 Fides Catholica, or, The doctrine of the Catholick Church in eighteen grand ordinances referring to the Word, sacraments and prayer, in purity, number and nature, catholically maintained, and publickly taught against hereticks of all sorts : with the solutions of many proper and profitable questions sutable to to [sic] the nature of each ordinance treated of / by Wil. Annand ... Annand, William, 1633-1689. 1661 (1661) Wing A3218; ESTC R36639 391,570 601

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or her pleasure openly expound and preach the Gospel that it was no lawfull for a Minister to have humane learning or that it was unl●wf●ll to hear such that it was and would be unlawful for Ministers to prepare themselves to preach by study that it was unlawful for a Gospel-Minister not to have some handy Trade and work in a Mechanick way for his living Ought they not since it was known to have been long used by Gods people before the Law and by his people after the Law to have told that to receive Tythes now was to deny that Christ was come in the flesh why was it not told us that the whole ●●sterity of man whether of Heathens or Christians during their Infancy are pure and holy there being no Originall sin why did not that wise Master builder lay his foundation aright and show us that to enter any into th● Church by Baptism without declaration of Faith and Repentance though born of holy parents was a sin and also if any such thing were done in the name of the holy Trinity wherein consists the essence of Baptisme with the application of the spirit which is not hindred by Infancy yet that they ought to be baptized again Why did they not inform the Church that though God was pleased to receive the Children of the Jews so far into his favour as to give them the outward sign of his Covenant with the Fathers viz. by circumcision yet would not have the Children of Christians to receive the outward sign of his Covenant with their Fathers viz. by Baptism Why did they not inform us that there were none baptized nor none should account themselves baptized except they were plunged or dipped in a River And that any member of the Church might do that why did he not tell us that it was and would be a sin for one to teach his child to say the Lords Prayer or call God father since they had no faith in Christ Why do they not shew us that to be in a place hearing his word with those that were not all holy was a great sin before God and that there should be a parity in the Church of God That no civill Magistrate hath any power at all to be command any thing to be done in the Church of God and that no Christian ought to pray in a set form and therefore that the Lords prayer was not to be used yea was as abominable unto God as Swines flesh unto a Jew as I have read some of them do however we know it is disused by them all Why was it not told us that to receive the Sacrament of the Lords Supper was either a vain thing or an indifferent thing or to eat it with unholy persons a sinful thing and also that any one that had gifts might administer the same or that the profit of the Sacraments depended upon the goodness or holynesse of him that gave it or did administer them These with a thousand more are the Principles that our Hereticks walke and teach by and if they be true doctrine how long hath the Church been without truth and in matters of greatest concernment as Preaching the word and Sacraments Why did not the Apostles once at least encourage Christians to persevere in Holiness upon the account of Christs comming personally to Reign upon Earth and why would they not tell that it was a decent holy seemly thing to hear a woman Preach It seems strange that neither by word nor by Epistle this was made known that any man might assume the office of the Ministry unto himself though he were not outwardly called as was Aaron why would they not tell us that Ordination was but a toy and was not to continue longer then themselves But what am I doing If these be true Churches and this Doctrine true Gospel the Apostles have been faithlesse and unjust I speak it trembling for no such thing did they ever teach but the contrary we finde them often times in the Scripture handling those very points and laies down contrary conclusions particularly Heb. 5.4 speaking of Priest-hood in generall and of Christs in particular who is the high Priest of the Gospel saies no man taketh this honour to himself but he that is called as was Aaron And that Aaron had an outward call for that Office and was deputed and set apart for that function in a publick way is clear from Ex. 29. and Levit. 9. Rom. 5.12 where the Apostle handling the infectious nature of sin maintains That by one man sin entered into the World and death by sin and so death passed upon all men for that all had sinned viz. by the sin of that one man I can find here no exception of Infants which if true doctrine the wisedome of God would have discovered in such an apt and proper place And truly that Infants should dye having no sin since death is the wages of sin Rom. 6 23. is a Doctrine that either charges God with unjustice or St. Paul with a falshood or at least a grosse mistake Of Baptizing of Infants we shall speak in it's own place and touching receiving the Sacrament of the Lords Supper with a mixed Congregation in its propper season and of Dipping when we come to the Font. Touching the peoples Ordination let the Scripture be produced that gives the people power for to set apart a Lay or Mechanick or any person and to constitute him a Church-Officer in the least Let the Scripture be produced that gives a power to a multitude so to do or that approves of a mans assuming to himself the power ministerially to teach Baptize give the Sacrament of the Lords Supper show or produce me that Scripture that gives authority to a Lay-man such a one we count him that is not Ordained by an Ecclesiastick person according to Apostolicall Tradition to bind or lose to cast out of the Church by judicial Excommunication or ●o receive in by authoritative absolution I say again let any of our ●ereticks produce me that Scripture show that text and I here promise them to renounce my Ordination forsake my calling and deny my Baptisme For I am not ignorant that the whole stream of the Scripture goes smoothly in another Channel If these or any of these be Churches then the candle hath never been upon a candlestick the City hath never been upon a hil Kings have never been her Nursing Fathers nor Queens her nursing Mothers except Iohn Buckhold alias Iohn of Layden with his fifteen Wives which Iohn being a Botcherly Taylour was by a mad crew of Anabaptists despisers and otherwise opposers of all government appointed King at Munster in Germany An 1534. where wearing Royall Robes of Embroidered work Spurs of gold Scabbards of gold and two Crowns of gold he had his Chancellours Cup-beares Carvers one holding up the holy Bible and another a naked Sword the handle whereof glistered with gold and pretious stones went before his Botcherly Majesty
near as hot as hell he must believe the least point of Reliques with as strong a faith as the greatest mysteries of the God-head and if he deny any of the former he is no lesse an Heretick then if he had denied the latter and he that believes not the Churches tradition to be as necessary to be believed as the Epistles of Paul he cannot be saved Indeed there is not an Article of the Church of Rome that is Catholick wherein reformed Churches differ from her but in those Articles that are but of Yesterday such as those above mentioned they stand at a distance praying for her but loth to touch her she being not sick of a small Ague but hath running sores Ulcers Infections Pestilential humours within her which makes them write over her as if she were visited Lord have mercy upon her but dare not make themselves one body with her H. The Apologist of the Church of England declares That we have Renounced that Church wherein we could not have the Word of God sincerely taught being mixed with tradition nor the Sacraments rightly administred the one half of the Lords Supper being but given to the people and Baptisme being given to Bells c. Nor the Name of God duly called upon praying to the Saints and Angels and in a Latin tongue which the people understand not To conclude we have forsaken the Church viz. of Rome as it is now not as it was in old time past c. and come to that Church viz. of England wherein all things be governed purely and Reverendly This overthrowing of the foundation thou maist call Heresie in d●ctrine Yet by caution take not the manners of the people for doctrine let the people be what they will the man what he pleaseth it is neither the good lives of men nor the bad lives of men that makes or unmakes Churches but false and corrupted doctrine Much loosenesse was in the Church of Corinth and Prophanenesse partic●larly about the Sacrament of the Lords Supper yet the Apostle gives no ground at all for separation only exhorts to a more orderly peaceable walking and a more holy and prepared celebration Neither must we take things indifferent for doctrine nor every blemish for fundamentall Heresie It is an errour in our age to take Circumstances and outward Ceremonies for essentiall parts of worship There was much corruption in the Church of the Jews in our Saviours time and much false glosses put upon the Law yet in regard the fundamentals were not razed he commanded his disciples to hear even the Pharisees who yet were thieves and robbers being none of those appointed to expound the Law which justified not their manner of teaching but the truth of the doctrine taught who sate in Moses chair Matth. 23.1 2 3. but gives them a Caveat to beware of the practices and leven of the Pharisees that is hearken and obey to those truths and fundamental precepts that they give out teach to be in my Fathers Law first taught by Moses as cirumcision the way and manner of the Sacrifices which in the Jewish Church were necessary points but refuse those things they lay down as from tradition as Corban washing of cups for not these but the other are commanded you to do Moreover you must be sure not to separate your selves from those who possibly are ignorant of the depths of Sathan in that particular doctrine delivered for Christ pities such and speaks comfortably to them Revel 2.4 nor from others whom you can perceive in the least to disown that corrupted doctrine though privately being troubled at the razeing out of necessary principles How many poor souls are led away from the truth by those that creep into houses in our days that are ignorant possibly of the designes of their prime Teachers following them as much as the people followed Absolon viz. in the simplicity of their heart these giving great encouragement to those that so teach makes them bolder to go on against the unity of the faith showing the Number of their Disciples loving to hear those Doctrines that either add to or take from the infallible and unalterable rule of the Word in both which the Church of Rome is erroneous and therefore the separation from her justifiable 2. We may lawfully separate our selves from a Church when she enjoyns those acts of worship as necessary not enjoyned by Christ when a Church preacheth corrupted doctrine as from God we may separate from her so may we nay so ought we to do when she injoyns false worship to be performed to God whether it be in worshipping him after a false manner or giving another besides him true worship Deut. 10.20 This is another cause of the reformed Churches separation from Rome their Beads their Ave Maries their Fastings a great part of worship with them their praying to Saints as those that have the plague must pray to St. Rochus those that have the tooth-ache to Apollonia those that are poysoned to Saint Iohn those that are in Captivity to Saint Leonard those that have the Fistul● to Saint Quintin Women that are in labour must pray to Saint Margaret but especially to the Virgin Mary besides those common prayers that you must make in common to all the Saints and to the Angels also must prayer be made There is a little Book published by the Authority of Pope Pius the V. in which almost at the beginning that all might prosper the better you have this Prayer Precibus meriti● beatae Mariae semper Virginis omnium sanctorum perducat nos Dominus ad Regna Coelorum The Summe of which Prayer is this that God would be pleased to lead bring the Petitioner unto Heaven by the intercession praers and merits of the blessed Virgin and of all the Saints I do wonder that Christ should be left out by whose merits and intercession alone we are saved but I marvail most whether all these shall be a distinct Company by themselves for of the whole company of the Virgins they cannot be the foolish Virgins had no Oyle the wise had but enough to save themselves where is there any of their merits then left for me yet this is better then Tu per Thomae sanguinom c. These with many more of the like nature as praying for the Dead offering or burning up of incense praying in an unknown Tongue that common people know not what they pray their Ordination of the Hoast their holy water their penance their Pilgrimages their oyl or Chrisme sal● and spittle used in Baptism was the cause of that separation made from her by the reformed Churches these points and this kind of worship being not Catholick for as before they separate not from Rome in any point of worship that she holds in Common with the Ch●rch of Christ but these being brats of her own begetting they deny them entertainment or Countenance and separate themselves from her and their separation is justifiable
God touching those blessings that he will give his children and a full of Will God wherein are all the duties he requires of his people recorded and inserted 2. In respect it was confirmed by the death and sufferings of Christ he was the Lamb slain before the beginning of the World Revel 8.31 Matth. 26.28 For this is my blood of the new Testament c. For where a Testament is there must also be a Testator Heb. 9.17 Having therefore the blood of Christ sealing this his last will it is called a Testament 3. In respect there is no addition to nor no diminution o●ght to be made of it When the Testator is dead there is nothing o●ght to be took from his Will nor nothing put to his Will Now Christ having fulfilled both Law and Prophets with his blood h●th sealed them by his death and hath threatned them that adde to or take from it Rev. 22.18.19 it is called and that fitly a Testament Quest. 10. Why are there some things in Scripture hard ●o be understood and whether the Scripture can dwell richly in those that cannot read That there are in Scripture some things hard to be understood is both arrested by S. Peter 2 Pet. 2.3.16 and known by the experience of the Saints who dayly pray that their eyes may be opened to behold the wonderous things therein written Psal. 119.18 which yet sufficeth not to maintain as the Church of Rome the imperfection of the Scriptur●s For 1. It is but some things it is not all hard to be understood we easily understand the whole meaning of the Law and Prophets In loving the Lord our God with all our heart and with all our soul and our neighbour as our selves Matth. 22.37 2. Every thing that is necessary for salv●tion is most easie it is plain before us This commandement which I command thee this day it is not to hide from thee says God Deut. 30.11 And who dare say it is otherwise but observe when any thing is said to be hard in Scripture or obscure as the doctrine of the Trinity of the incarnation or the resurrection it is to be understood either in the m●st●ry it self or in the manner of its delivery now the mystery is in it self inscrutable cannot be understood nor fathomed by the wit of man we are not able throughly to apprehend the gr●at mystery of the three persons the glory of heaven the proceeding of the Holy Ghost the nature of Angel the eternal decrees but the manner of their handling that is that these things are so is clear and manifest and held out to us for to believe which last is necessary to salvation not the other we may be happy though we cannot comprehend the nature of the Trinity yet we must beli●ve it The resurrection is an Article of our Creed that is we believe it and the ground of our belief is clear in Scripture though the thing it self be above our ●●prehension 3. We ought to expect some hard things in Scripture it is no wonder to hear God speaking like himself he is delivering his own mind and sometimes he will speak according to his own conception yet that makes the Scripture no more imperfect then a man who knows not how the souls acts his bones grow nor how the watery humour of his eyes keeps a fixed place moves and how his soul by that humour discerns colours how the soul by the self same ea● j●dges of diversity of sounds is to be judged not a perfect man There are in nature many hidden mysteries and shall men wonder to find some in the book of God to come to the Question he purposely in his Scriptures conceals something from us and speaks so●e thing therein which is hard to be understood 1. To keep us humble knowledge is often times a cause of puffing up God foresees that men would be apt to be conceited and raised up should they comprehend his meaning therefore in divine things he wisely orders that all shall not be understood to keep down pride and bridle arrogance 2. To stir us up to diligence by this doing God intends to set us a working that by searching and praying for the spirit we might the better be brought to know what God would have us to do 3. To hold up the dignity of his word were it plain men would quickly contemn it Ministers would be slighted whose office is to open it to save his word therfore from being vilified he is pleased to wrap up some of it in the clouds of prophesies dark sentences visions that we may set the greater value upon it and men in their reading may have the more reverend thoughts of it which brings us to the second part of the Question whether it may dwell richly c. Which we shall answer briefly There are four wayes by which Christians may come to the knowledge of Scripture that is by reading by hearing by remembring by discourseing he that cannot read may have the Scriptures dwelling richly in him to salvation by the o●her three means Yet 1 Whose fault is it thou canst not read thy unwillingness or crosseness or thy parents neglect or carelesseness if thy self be in the fault the greater is thy sin be the more earnest unto God in acts of contrition and repentance 2. Hast thou not spent as much time in toys and in sin as thou mightest have learned to read in supposing thou wert brought up in ignorance if so redeem the time by a double diligence 3. Be more humble before God the less help thou hast of thy self call to God for more those that read must have Gods blessing before they profit and grace before they be righteous Thou shalt have grace if thou beest humble Iames 4.6 4 Be more diligent in other Ordinances if thou hast not skill to read yet hast thou ears to hear Faith comes by hearing Rom. 10 17. and by hearing of the word it may dwell richly in the salvation 1 Cor. 15.2 But this brings us to the second direction above proposed for the Words in dwelling viz. Of hearing the Scriptures that is to suffer our selves to receive the knowledge of the Scripture by its being opened taught or expounded this is done two wayes 1. Authoritatively and p●blickly proper to the Gospel Ministry which is commonly called preaching 2. Charitably and privately common to all believers called in the Text teaching we shall first speak of the publick proper to the ordained Ministers of the Gospel and in Order to it handle three Ordinances contemned in this age which are as adjuncts or circumstances to this Authoritative way of teaching these are 1. The time of preaching 2. The place of preaching 3. The party that preacheth The party that doth or should teach is the Minister of the Gospel appointed and separated thereunto by Apostolical Ordination the place of teaching is that which commonly and authoritatively is called the Church we shall speak of these in Order beginning with the
carriage without and some their deportment within the Pulpit we shall see only the chief of them In a Minister there is required 1. Courage Tit. 2.15 2. Sobriety 1 Tim. 3.2 3. Liberality 4. Docibility or aptness to teach 5. Temperance 6. Patience 1 Tim. 3.2 7. A Lover of good things and of good men 8. Holiness 9. Justice 1 Tit. 7.8 We must note that some of these cannot be known by the quickest eye No Bishop is omniscient to know the heart and therefore may ordain a man that wants many of these and also we must observe that a person may come for ordination with many or all of these and yet may backslide which takes not away the force of ordination The Angel of the Church of Ephesus fell from his first purity and love yet was an Angel still Rev. 2.4 5. he may loose his patience his temperance his holiness yet a Minister still and the power of preaching and administring the Sacraments and exercising the keys abide with him these ordinances not depending upon the quality of him that doth administer them more then the force of the Broad Seal of England depends upon the merits of my Lord Chancellour as shall God willing be proved in its own place To all these qualifications above named must be joyned competency of knowledge It is not every man that is just holy or patient must be ordained he must be of understanding competent for the work which competency appears in these particulars from Tit. 1.9 viz. 1. His adhering to the truth known not opinionated 2. In his ability to teach and that soundly for the edification of the Church according to that truth 3. In his dexterity in maintaining of that truth stopping the mouth of Gainsayers he that is so qualified cannot be refused ordination We say competently qualified ' For who is sufficient for these things SECT III. Let us see who they are that must thus ordain whose hands they be that by their laying on the person is qualified in an external way for the publick preaching of the word 1. Not their own Heb. 5.4 It is against the practise of the whole Church of God in all ages for any man though never so well gifted to separate himself or ordain himself as is clear in the examples of Stephen Nicanor c. Nay if it were in a mans own power to separate himself for the work of the Gospel Paul needed not to have left Titus in Creet to ordain Elders in every City Tit. 1.5 It is a practice beyond a president in the Church of Christ for one to ordain himself We read indeed how Frederick the second upon Easter day through necessity crowned himself with his own hands King of Ierusalem in Ierusalem but that ever man made himself a Priest in Ierusalem save Saul Ieroboam and such prophane Wretches whom God did curse even for so doing we read not Neither in old or new Testament is there any instance of one who set himself apart for holy functions or that thought himself qualified in an authoritative way to reach the Gospel upon the sufficiency of gifts as Courage Holiness Knowledge and the like if so Stephen Philip Prochorus c. needed never have been ordained Deacons Acts 6.3 4 5. Nor Paul nor Barnabas Apostle or Evangelist Acts 13.2 nor Timothy a Bishop or E'der 1 Tim. 4.14 2. Not the multitude Never did God give the power of ordination to the people in general before nor after Christ if so where two or three would please to meet they might ordain which in few dayes would make the Church of Christ con●ist of Shepherds rather then of sheep yea would make all Apostles all Teachers c. We find the contrary practised For when the multitude had chosen and nominated persons of honest report full of the holy Ghost and Wisdom th●y set them before the Apostles who prayed and l●id their hands on them Acts 6.3 6. yea as was said before the inhabitants of the Cities of Creet might have ordained Elders Titus might have gone forward with Paul In summe God never giving the people the power of ordination since the creation they can never deliver that power to any untill the dissolution of the world Presumptuous are they therefore that will take ordination from them impudent before the Lord therefore they that will presume to give that authority in matters of so great concernment as the word and Sacraments to any of their own body 3. Only Church officers or the Apostles successors they are only to teach and to baptize unto the end of the world Paul and the Presbytery ordains Timothy he ordains others and they others and so by a moral succession from the Apostles is the Ministerial office upheld but of this we have spoken It were too great a task for me to offer to wade into that troublesome discourse touching Episcopal or Presbyterial ordination least I should drown my self being but of small standing in the Church of Christ yet by vertue of that Proverb It is good to be sure Episcopacy is much to be preferred that being the most ancient way since if not before the Apostles departure from the world and albeit it hath some ruptures or breaches in some of the reformed Churches yet the Acts and Lawes of England make no ordination valid but what originally is Episcopal SECT IV. We are to behold the man thus separated for the Lords use For the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministry for the edifying of the body of Christ Ephes. 4.12 We say we are to see what his duty is and what he is to perform amongst men The very naming of his ordination shewes you what he is to do and the distinction above named discovers his duty but to be more particular yet not large 1. He is to take all advantages and opportunities of preaching that word the preaching of which he is separ●ted for 2 Tim. 4.1 2. The more wicked the times be he lives in the more bold and confident he ought to be 2 Tim. 4.3 yet this excludes not but that he may flee persecution Acts 9.25 3. In preaching of the Word he is to observe the proportion of faith Rom. 1●2 6 4. He is to teach the word according to the capacity of his people 1 Cor. 14.9 the other parts of his duty are clear and obvious SECT V. Questions resolved● Quest. 1. Whether ordination may better a Ministers gifts Quest. 2. Whether a Minister may renounce his ordination Quest. 3. Whether the Ministerial office be to continue alway in the world Quest. 4. Whether it be lawfull to hear an unordained man preach Quest. 5. Whether an ordained person may bear an office in the Common-wealth Quest 1. Whether Ordination may better a Ministers gifts Though this sacred ordinance be of no account with some yet to the conscionable Receiver it may be very advantageous For 1. It is an odinance of God alwayes practised in his Church it may appear at
part of the substance of that Sacrament for when the Minister dipping the infant in water or laying of water upon the face of it hath pronounced these words I baptize thee in the name of the Father c. the infant is fully and perfectly baptized so as the sign of the Cross being afterwards used doth neither adde any thing to the vertue or perfection of baptisme nor being omitted doth detract any thing from the effect and substance of it 2. It is apparent in the Common Prayer book that the infant babtized is by vertue of baptisme before it be signed with the sign of the Cross received into the Congregation of Christs stock as a perfect member thereof and not by any power ascribed unto the sign of the Cross. So that for the very remembrance of the Cross which is very precious to all them that rightly believe in Jesus Christ and in the other respects mentioned the Church of England hath retained still the sign of it in baptisme following herein the primitive and Apostolical Churches and accounting it a lawful outward Ceremony and honourable badge whereby the infant is dedicated to the service of him who dyed upon the Cross as by words used in the book of Common Prayer it may appear Lastly The use of the sign of the Cross in baptisme being thus purged from all Popish superstition and errour and reduced in the Church of England to the primary institution of it upon those true rules of doctrine concerning things indifferent which are consonant to the word of God and the judgements of all the Ancient Fathers we hold it the part of every private man both Minister and others reverently to retain the true use of it prescribed by publick authority considering that things of themselves indifferent do in some sort alter their nature when they are either commanded or forbidden by a lawfull Magistrate and may not be omitted at every mans pleasure contrary to the Law when they be commanded nor used when they are prohibited The usual Objection against this harmless Ceremony is this Viz. what need is there of it but if Magistrates should not establish Lawes until every one of their Subjects were rationally convinced of their necessity when should there be Lawes made and many that makes this a sufficient Argument against the Crosse in Baptisme may remember that when they had power and fate at the Helm there were many things commanded of which we might have said What need they To conclude what ever is established by lawful Magistrates we are not to inquire the Reason of it Reason and Religion commanding us to obey without all Dispute for the Lords sake There being many things in the Church of Christ of themselves low and poor yet in regard of others so necessarie that she may say of them as our Saviour said of the Asse The Lord hath need of them Courteous Reader THis following Chapter was not so fully Preached as here handled in regard that the Iniquitie of the Times wherein these things were taught would from this chiefly have concluded the Preachers Malignancy whereby he should have been Crucified by an Ordinance By vertue of that Rule estote prudentes Matthew 10.16 it was passed over in a few words and they so clouded that it might have appeared the Preacher was not willing to be throughly understood CHAP. III. Of Confirmation THis is not here handled as a Sacrament but is placed as the space between the Font and the Table it being a most solemn Ordinance that the Baptized as in the ancient Churches was to be partaker of before he might be admitted to the Sacracrament of the Lords Supper Before we go any further it is necessary to speak something touching the rise of this word Confirmation in the Church which was briefly this In the Primitive Church when there were any persons wiling to imbrace the Christian Faith whether Iewes or Infidels they were not by and by admitted into the Priviledges of the Church but by certain ●teps or degrees set their foot therein 1. By hearing they were admitted to the hearing of the Word taught Catechized or Expounded which was common to them with men of all kinds whether Christians or not yet these were more particularly regarded by the Church and were called Audientes 2. By Catechizing having heard in common with others some grounds of the true faith and liked it they were after admitted in ● peculiar way and performing some Ceremony were admitted both to hear and see more in the Church then the Audientes were had the Principles of Religion taught them by eminent men purposely thereunto appointed who were called Catechista and their Disciples Catechum●ni Hence it is said that Theophilus is said to be instructed or as the word Originally is Catechized in the things of Christ 1 Luke 4. 3. By requesting that is having been Catechized and making good progress in the Christian principles and desireing to be owned as professors of the same they desired and required the Sacrament of baptisme which they did by giving in their names to the officers of the Church forty dayes before Easter that and Whitsunday being the publick dayes appointed by the Church for baptizing the Catechumeni and in regard of their number these two dayes being insufficient they set the two days following each of the former for that service apart from this giveing in their names they were called competentes quia nomina dederunt ad baptismum eum simul petebant 4. By baptizing after this upon the aforesaid dayes they were brought to the font or Baptistery and publickly and severally asked Credis in D●um Patrem Believest thou in God the Father c. the party said Credo c. So was baptized and called hence baptizati and looked upon as Members of the body of Christ yet incompleate and imperfect that is weak Christians being newly born 5. By confirming that is having been baptized and so owned as visible Members of the Church they were brought before the Bishop or chief Officer of the place and before him openly making a declaration of his faith and resolution to walk in the same was confirmed by a solemn calling upon God in prayer unto which was annexed the outward sign of imposition of hands by the Bishop that God would strengthen and confirm the baptized in that faith wherein he was baptized and whereof he had made profession after which prayer and imposition of hands he was declared a perfect Church Member that is fitted for the receiving of all Church priviledges particularly the Sacrament of the supper unto which the Church in this had a peculiar respect which is a great confirmer of the faith of the Saints Hence they were called Fideles and were of full age men in Christ Iesus and received Imposition of hands signifying that the Lord blessed them ut pleni Christiani inveniantur This is confirmation and laid down by the Apostle as a Christian Principle
are providing our selves to defendin points of grand concernment and as a preliminary discourse to the following truths we shall preface upon that Subject Every Heretick stands confident in his errour and each seducer pleads for a belief of his Doctrine by imposing the name Church upon those whom they have so seduced and made Proselytes to their Hereticall Tenets by which means the glorious Fabtick of the Catholick Church is like a lodge in a Garden of Cucumbers sleighted and disesteemed of many we shall stand therefore a short season upon this holy ground and take a true survey of her large dimensions Da Domine perficere qui dedist● velle For her height or Altitude by the Scripture I see that she is higher then the Heavens her Head who is above all principalities and pow●●s is Christ the Lord. Ephes. 5.23 He is at Gods Right hand and in her affections she is at the same place Col. 3.2 Behold see you her not going up to heaven like Pillars of smo●k leaving the Wildernesse of this World Can. 3.6 Her hasty departure occasion'd betwixt Love and fear longing to be with her beloved and fearing to be devoured by faithlesse and unreasonable men who like Foxes have encompassed her about purposing to tear her in pieces from whom that she may be delivered she assumes the wings of a great Eagle and maketh her nest above the stars For her breadth or Latitude by my Creed I see her of an infinite and inconceiveable extension I believe that the Church is catholick she is as broad as the World as old as the Creation her age you may suppose to be attended with weaknesse but it is not the last visit that Christ her Husband made her renewed her strength like an Eagle so that shee walks and is not weary she runs yet is not faint holds pace with eternity it self Perceive you not Christ the everlasting Son of the father to be the corner stone of this glorious building 1 Pet. 2.6 And untill he cease being it shall never know dilapidations By the same Perspective or Fiduciary Optick Nerve I see her of a comely and beautifull proportion and holy uniformity I believe that the Catholick Church is holy The Kings Daughter is glorious within Christ her Spouse is ravished with the beauty of her eyes Cant. 4 9. Therefore she shall ever be Reverenced in mine He whose eyes are Ten Thousand times brighter then the Sun hath shined upon her garments of wrought Gold and protests that there is no spot in her Cant. 4.7 Let me therefore never cast a blot upon her He that is her Husband hath made her so Ephes. 5.27 Therefore let me that am her son ever hold her so but for the clearer understanding of this matter we shall 1. See the Nature of the Church in Generall 2. Resolve some questions concerning her The nature of the Church of Christ by a due weighing of this description through faith and Scripture may be fully manifested and known It is First The Whole Society or Company of Beleevers 2. Elected and appointed by Gods Eternall decree 3. Called by the Word of the LORD 4. From amongst the rest of Mankind 5. For the bringing of glory to his own Name and giving unto them Eternal lfie In this Description take notice 1. Of the Members of the Church they are the whole Society or Company of Believers in what age soever they lived in what place soever they aboad in however dispersed where everscattered whether far or near old young male female High and Low Rich and Poor All that ever were and all that ever shal be all that ever lived upon the Earth with all that ever dyed in the Womb from Adam the first man that ever was known with and until the last man that shal ever be born makes up this Temple of God and all of them are but severall Members of that body whereof the Lord Jesus is the head 1 Cor. 1.2 Rom. 12.5 2. Of the Causes of the Church and they are either 1. The efficient cause Gods Eternal decree There are none made members of the Church by chance nor by their own care and industry who by taking thought can adde one Cubit to his Stature and he is high with a witnesse who hath his head above the clouds None shall sit in the Kingdome of God but they for whom it is prepared of the Father Matth. 20.23 And it is prepared for them before the Foundation of the World God by his decree must separate Believers from among men or faith shall never purifie the hearts of men and Election must precede Vocation Gal. 1.15 The least blossome of true holinesse will never grow nor never was seen to bloom upon that stem whose root was not Predestination Ephes. 1.4 5. 2. The Instrumentall cause which is their Call by the Word of the Lord this is the means used for the bringing of many Sons and Daughters into glory It is the charge of Almighty God to the Apostles to hear his Son Iohn 17.5 It is the charge of the Son that the Apostles preach to the World Matthew 28.18 19. And by the benediction of the Spirit by that there is added to the Church dayly such as shal be saved Acts 2.47 None shall be glorified but such as are called with a holy calling we must hear the joyfull sound of his Word before we can see the glory of his countenance for whom he glorifieth he justifieth and whom he justifieth them he also calls Rom 8.30 This Call is so necessary to the Churches being that the Greek Word for Church comes from the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from their being called and indeed none shall be crowned with the Lamb but such as fight with him and none shall fight under him but such as are called chosen and faithfull Revel 17.14 We have those that pretend a call in this generation but we have cause to suspect it is not by the word of the Lord for if so they would be holy without blame before him in love Ephesians 1.4 They would be full of love were they full of the Spirit and of joy peace long-suffering gentlenesse goodnesse faith Galathians 5.22 Bitternesse wrath anger clamor and evill speaking should be far from them with all malice Ephesians 1.31 The word of Christ we are to look after if we seek to obtain glory for that leads unto it Revelations 22.7 And we are to entertain it in our hearts if we would have that to shine upon our heads the same Doctrine is taught us by the Church of England Art 17. Yet we must understand this calling of or by the word to be onely necessary First when God is pleased to give the word Secondly to those persons who are of years wit or discretion to understand the word or Thirdly where God hath given the naturall meanes for the hearing or reading of his word 3. The formal cause remotely described Separated from amongst the rest of mankind by
the practise of the Church was warrant enough for him to follow and obey that custome whatsoever it were and to think it good and that he would believe that the Apostles Creed was made by them such reverence I bear to the Churche tradition they are his Majesties own words untill other Authors should be certainly found out and 2. it is of all humane testimonies the greatest in respect of the Wisdome Gravity Learning Prudence Godliness of those men that lived about the first centuries and were Governours in the Church of Christ but no waies is their authority to be taken or ought to be taken as the ground of a mansfaith and assurance since it is but the testimony of men Quest. 2. Whether the Church hath power to ordain ceremonies upon her members that are not ordained by God For the cleering up of this Question wee shall premise 1. That the Church hath no power to impose any ceremonies that are in their nature impious Exe. 20.18 nor 2ly such as may cumber men and hinder them in the cheerefull execution of the essentiall parts of worship like the Jewish constitutions there is a rule against that Luke 11.46 But if the rulers of a Church impose Ceremonies which are not contradictory to the Canon of faith or rule of the Word they have a power that will defend them in their so doing and no private person in the least ought to speak against the execution of that power In generall what ever may tend or what ever in their judgements will tend 1. To the edification of the Church 1 Cor. 14.26 there is a power given to put that in Execution Let all things be done to edifying Or 2. whatever in their judgements may be comely in the Church they have a Power to put that in execution 1 Cor. 11.13 Iudge in your selves Is it comely that a Woman pray unto God uncovered By this Text whatever is by the Officers judged to be uncomely may be removed and whatever is comely in their judgements by this power may be enjoyned in to the Church Or 3. What may in their judgements be orderly or make for an uniformity they have a power to put that in execution 1 Cor. 14.40 Let all things be done decently and in order Now that ceremonies of this nature may be imposed by Church officers upon her members and that lawfully and religiously may be proved in particular by these following Arguments 1. From the Apostles practice in the Church who besides other things as the changing of times and places for their assembling together and touching the administration of the Lords Supper sometimes at midnight and then at daytime we find in particular that Paul injoyned that in the Church women should be covered 1 Cor. 11.6 Which one might think a ceremony that might have been forborn And indeed in imposing of it the Apostle is not authoritative but persua●ive He leaves it to the Officers themselves and to their own judgements A ceremony possibly that gave as great offence to some coy and fine Dames as c. And so be appointed a known Tongue in the Congregation if he had been in England he would have found some to have told him that he took away their Gospell liberty in the time when strange tongues were not an unusuall gift Now from this very action we may conclude the truth of that position now under defence for by the prohibition of the one it should seem to be practised and by enjoyning the other it should seem to be neglected The former might seem a needlesse ceremony what matter were it whether women are covered or no the other might be thought in some sence hurtfull that they might not speak with those tongues which God by his Spirit that bloweth where and when it listeth did furnish them withall in the Church but the Apostles had power and they give the Officers of the Church power to rectifie that errour or in any other that in their judgments should have a tendency to the robbing of the Church of that order that ought to be in it But further 2. From the Apostles Counsells and warnings to the Officers of the Church There are generall precepts given to the Officers of the Churches which are gravidated with this power and demonstrates that they have a commission to impose such ceremonies as they shall think fit for the good of that Church whereof they are Governours Saint Paul not knowing what should befall him at Ierusalem whether he was going from Miletus sent for the Elders of the Church of Ephesus and charges them when he was gone to take heed to the Flock over which the Holy Ghost had made them Overseers soreseeing that grievous Wolves should enter the flock Act. 20.28 From which precept or caution given by this holy Apostle I may truly argue without offence to any that whatever these Elders thought or in their judgments supposed might tend to the good of their Churches though not particularly commanded in the Word might be injoyned by them and the church of Ephesus was bound to obey them in that particular And a sin that was or would have been in any private person to have murmured grumbled against much lesse oppose the practice of and usage of them So from that precept to the Corinthians 1 Cor. 14.40 Let all things b● done in decency and in order we may truly draw the same argument that what time was thought fittest what gesture was thought fittest by them to preach in to pray in to receive Sacraments in or to administer Sacraments in what garments what gestures to give or to receive them in might be imposed on the people of that place by the Church governours through vertue of this generall precept Moreover Paul writing to the church of Philippi with it's Bishops and Deacons Phil. 1.1 Among other directions as Bewar● of dogs beware of evill-workers chap. 3.2 comes and desires them chap. 4.8 that whatsoever things are true whatsoever things are just whatsoever things are pure whatsoever things are lovely whatsoever things are of good report Think on these things Now here is such an Epitomy of all good works as none are comparable to it It may be called an abstract of the whole Bible and this written to the Bishops and Deacons let none be offended at the name Bishop I mean no body hurt Shall it be understood that this full pithy Exhortation reached only to their own private capacity as Christians and not to their publick as Deacons without question what in their judgements were lovely and of good report if used in the Church might be commanded by those Deacons to the Church by vertue of this precept as Church officers In that Epistle to Titus Paul shews him the end of his leaving him at Crete chap. 1.5 That he should set in order the things that are wanting c. Concerning the Ordination of Elders the Apostle had given him in charge at the first but let Churches be
Churches constituted for they have no Sacraments this follows upon the former and rises morally from it where there is no Minister or authoritative Officer there can be no Sacraments they being the Seals of the Covenant of grace which is made unto believers either when they are incorporated or confirmed in the body of Christ which is the Church Ephes. 1.23 Thy are also called broad seals of heaven that of the spirit being the private by which the receiver is assured of the pardon of his sins Now to the private Christian did Christ never give the keeping of or the power of delivering those seals The People were never Lord-chancellours of these things whether singly or collectively taken therefore they cannot give nor dispence them to another Iohn the Baptist was called from God immediately to baptize so were the Apostles by Christ who Ordained none nor Baptized none but them while the Church of Christ was constituting God was pleased so to do but after the Baptists death and the Apostles call no such extraordinary acts but all must receive now that power from the hands of the Apostles by Ordination The Church may say to those men when they come to dispence the Seals Peter I know Paul I know Stephen I know Nicanor I know Timothy I know Titus I know but who are you if you say you were or are Ordained by Christ he Ordained none but his Disciples if you were Ordained by his Disciples show it by your Commission wee shal know whether Baptisme be from Heaven that we may believe or from men that we may not be mistaken in it Possibly the peoples Election and deputation is produced for this authority which is to be equally regarded as he who should come with a Commission from a mans own son for the Father to execute the power or Office of Justice of the peace which is to be scorned his Son having no power to grant such Orders or give such Offices The power of Ordination search the Scriptures was never granted to the people neither in the Old nor New testament We find indeed Micha Iudg. 17. having a House of Gods and an Ephath and a Teraphim consecrating one of his sons for a Priest though of the tribe of Ephraim of which tribe Mos●s spoke nothing touching the Priesthood He afterwards Consecrated a Levite to be his Priest verse 12. which was an Office peculiar to the Sons of Aaron not to the Levites in common but who gave Micha the power of consecration how can he consecrate any Priest at all this moved him vers 6. In those days there was no King in Israel but every man did what was right in his own eyes there being no Magistrate or Governour to keep the people in awe An Ephraimite may consecrate and offer Sacrifice and the Worship of God being contemned through the disorder of the times a Levite is forced to wander for a place and assume the Priesthood The want of Government was the cause of this and other evils that followed upon it The self-same cause is the reason of the irregularity that hath lately been in England touching Micha's even Peoples ordination of Priests which power was never given to him nor them In one thing Micha is to have his due applause he would have none to offer Sacrifice in his House a priestly Office before he were consecrated i.e. before he were ordained Priest he had read in the Law what Sacrifices Duties were appointed in the designation of men into that Office his Son nor the Levites not being of that line unto whom by a natural succession the Office belonged he saw a necessity of making them Priests for he must worship God and if they be Priests they must be consecrated he knows nor how or where to procure another ●● therefore takes the Authority to himself of Consecration And truly such Priests as he made and himself that made them and the Worship they gave by him and the gods they worshipped too were suitable to each other Even such are they though in this particular worse who will offer to design or depute any to be their Priest or Minister who are not of that line to whom by a moral Succession that Office onely belongeth by their being deputed and set apart for that Office by the Sacrifice of Prayer and Supplication and with the ceremony of Imposition of Hands by those who have received that power by Apostolical Tradition Possibly he may produce his own Gifts of Holiness Utterance Aptness to teach Courage Zeal with all other Gifts that are possible to qualifie men inwardly for that Office and indeed may shew a Call from God which he supposes ought to be sufficient to testifie that his Baptism is not of men or to demonstrate that he is a man sent from God authoritatively to teach and administer the Sacraments to his Church But the Church values not those in this nature for so Paul was qualified also and Barnabas qualified and called of God for that Office yet God will have them to be constituted authoritative teachers in the sight of the Church by the Laws that were by him appointed for the Church viz. by Ordination or Imposition of hands Act. 13.3 So Stephen Nicanor Philip c. Acts 6. were men of honest report full of the Holy ghost and wisedome yet the lowest Office in the Church cannot they neither do they offer to perform in that Ordination from the Apostles Upon this ground the Church hath reason to deny their Authority and we deny that they have power to administer Sacraments the bread that they brake is not the body of Christ the cup they offer is not the Communion of the blood of Christ shed for the remission of sins they have not received this power of the Lord because not from his Apostles of causing Bread to be by faith beheld as the body of Christ nor Wine to represent the blood of Christ. In a word let us see how or when they received power from the Apostles otherwise they must passe for counterfeits and cheats and the offence so much the more hainous as it 's a counterfeiting the Great Seal of Heaven to bring Christs Spouse and her children in an errour in matters of so g●●at concernment as the Seal of the Remission of their sins but she knows his hand and though they should come with never so much show of humility nay confirm their calling by miracles she is not she will not believe it Christ her Husband hath forewarned her that such should come and charged her not to heed them not follow them but shun them and avoid them 3. Should we Church those segregated Congregations as now constituted we must and are to un-Church all the Churches that now are or that ever have been in the Christian World They taught and teached the contrary they maintained and dyed for the contrary they walk Autipodos to one another there is a great diversity in their walking thus constituted as
truth to hear the word of God preached and to obey those that have the rule over them is a Catholicks practice even in their reproofs Suspentious Excommunications c. they know their preaching is the power of God unto Salvation I Rom 16. and the ●other is necessary for the saving of the Spirit in the day of the Lord Jesus I Corinthians 5.5 There are some among us that imagine themselves distinct Ch●rches from us in this particular viz for the separating themselves from the ministery as now constituted upbraiding their Minister perhaps his receiving his dues which he is no more to lose upon that account then a man is to lose the milk or the wooll of his beast at night upon the account that it wandered at Noon Untill they be cast out of the Church by Church censures and by those to whom that power is design'd their separation hi●der no more their union with us in the body of the Church then a Boyl scab or a sore hinders the continuity of the parts of a man or no more then a Malignant Fever takes away the being of a person so that in some sence we look upon them as Members of our Church but itchy ones scabby ones as members in our Israel but as troublesome ones untill they be cast out and then for me they sh●ll be looked upon as Publicans and Heathens and so by all the members of the Catholick Church for being cast out of her who is the only Church they must so be and so long as they are in her they are of her their own separation availing us no more then a mans willing confinement of himselfe to his house makes him a Prisoner in Law when he is commanded forth to action 4. It consists in that Communion that they have each member and each part with another they have the benefit of each others prayers they are all walking in one way by one Rule working all one work expecting all one reward acted by the same spirit carried forth upon the same Motive and armed with the same weapons fighting against the same Enemies building each other in their most holy Faith Iude 20. 5. It consists in that union and communion that they have with Christ he is their head and whereever they are as members of him they have life sence and strength from him in him they all live move and have their being The Church hath also communion with Christ and that both in his Person and in his Offices and Sufferings 1. In his person every part of her is a Member of his body they are bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh Ep. 5.30 and he that is joyned to the Lord is but one As the Holy Ghost did unite in the Blessed Virgins Womb the Divine and humane nature of Christ and made them one person by reason of his formation of the body whereby C●ist is of our flesh and of our bones so the spirit unites us to the person of Christ by the gift of faith that we are of his flesh and of his bones and members of his body For suppose a man to be so many Cubits high that his head should reach the stars and his hands stretch to either side of heaven and one foot stood upon the Sea and another upon the Land yet these members being knit together by natural Arteries informed by the same specifick soul they might truly be said to have comunion each with other even so though Christ be in Heaven and part of the Church with him and we on earth and so should seem to be a great distance from each other yet the distance is not so great as to make a distinction of the parts or separation of the head from the body by that fore-mentioned supposition we may be said to be united to him and therefore are hereby to have union each with another 2. In his Offices What Offices Christ executes as Redeemer of the World in order to the great end of bringing his Church together the same Offices doth he make his people to receive through the unction of his spirit untill and at their coming home he hath made them Kings Revel 1.6 makes them reign over all lusts and have dominion over all the powers of Hell and Earth and hath both Thrones and Crowns for them in Heaven and he hath made them Priests Rev● 1.6 in as much as they are dayly offering up the Sacrifice of burnt Offerings whole burnt Offerings of Praise prayer and thanksgiving he hath made them Prophets Io. 15.15 in as much as they know the Will of God and the mind of God is made known to them for what ever he had received of the Father he made known unto her 3. In his sufferings She must drink of that Cup that he drunk of and the Church must be baptized with the Baptism he was baptized withall Matth. 20.23 He drank of the Brook by the way and they must taste after him it 's their priviledge that are his Members to suffer for him Phil. 1.29 He drank of the Cup of affliction in the Garden and all his followers must pledge him Christ ought to suffer Luke 24.26 nay did it not become him to suffer Heb. 2.10 And it is decreed that all must suffer before they enter into glory for this suffering with Christ is a dying with him which must precede rising with him which must go before being glorified with him in all these do the Members of Christ which is the Church hold Communion and have Union with him Quest. 9. Why is the true Church called holy We believe the Catholick Church to be holy yet not that we hold all to be holy that are in it In a great mans House there be Vessels of honour and of dishonour some in the Church have a form of holinesse but denie the power of it there are Tares in the field as wel as Wheat there are bad as well as good fishes took with the Net of the Gospel Mat. 13.28 Would all the people were holy yet we believe that the Church is holy 1. For holinesse she aims at for this she prays fasts reads receives the Sacraments all the acts that she and her children do is upon the acco●nt of holinesse the Scripture cals upon her to be holy as God is holy and she calls upon God to sanctifie her thorowly by the washing of water and the Word to be presented as holy before him Eph. 5.26 2. It 's a holy Rule she walks by It is a holy pure and undefiled Law as silver purified seven times it hath no Impurity in it Psal. 19.8 3. It is a holy profession she maintains she hath places to worship in she hath holy Ordinances to live by she hath a holy calling for she is called to be holy all other Congregations live by sence but she by faith 4. It is a holy Lord whom she serves she serves the Lord Christ she worships through him that God that is so holy
Church for though every one that are members of the visible are not of the body of the invisible Church yet he is not of the invisible that acknowledgeth not himself a member of the visible he that hath God for his Father hath the visible Catholick Church for his only mother and must have her if he would be saved She is like the Ark of Noah as all without that was drowned so all without this is damned In the judgement of Charity we must indeed suppose that God hath his own among the heathen and by working upon them by his Spirit in an extraordinary secret and hidden way brings them unto the knowledge of his Son by which they are ingrafted into his body and so made members of the Catholick Church for as before out of it there is no salvation the reason is out of it is to be out of Christ for that is his body and to be out of Christ is to be without God and to be without him is to be without eternal life For this is eternal life to know thee to be the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent Quest. 12. What are the marks of a true Church General notes and marks are set down by the Church of Rome whereby it is pretended that the true Catholick and Holy Church may be distinctly and perfectly known from all false Congregations or Churches as 1. Visibility 2. Antiquity 3. Durability 4. Prosperity 5. The name of a Catholick Church 6. Agreement with the ancient Church 7. It s union with the head viz. the Pope 8. Holiness of Doctrine 9. Efficacy of Doctrine 10. Holiness of life 11. The glory and power of miracles 12. The gift of Prophesie 13. The acknowledgement or confession of her enemies 14. The unhappy and unfortunate success of her enemies 15. A succession of Bishops With several others which in their own nature are either separable from the true Church or may agree to a false and may constitute a Synagogue of Satan as well as a Church of Christ for which with many other reasons they are rejected of the Reformed Churches as proper Characters of that body whereof Christ is the head that being able to consist pure holy and visible without some of them though in some points they agree to her also in that but not as essential or Characteristical and knowing also that many of them are forged by and in Rome that she may appear the better and stand the firmer in her Pontificalibus The proper and essential Characters of a true Church whereby she is differenced from all false also from the Church of Rome and which gives her her esse vivere sentire are these viz. 1. The pure dispensation of the Word Act. 2.4 Where the Word is taught in a pure manner according to the institution of it without detraction from or addition to it wherever that is taught what Christ commanded and the Gospel holds out so farre there is a pure Church and where that is mixed and mingled with mens Inventions as points of doctrine so far the Church is impure 2. The pure Administration of the Sacraments Matth. 28.19 30.1 Cor. 11.23 That Church that keeps to the institution of those Ordinances appointed as Seals of the Covenant by Christ putting nothing to them nor taking nothing from them as necessary for the making of them Seals so far that is a pure Church and where that is not done it is so far impure Some adde Church discipline but that holds out rather her well being then her being in times of persecution she hath wanted that and may want it and yet a true Church by the keeping pure of the Word and Sacraments which a visible Church cannot consist without hence we behold and look upon Ierusalem Galatia Thessalonica Corinth Colos. and once those famous Churchs of Asia though the gospel was taught in them in a glorious and a pure dispensatory way yet for the present wanting those two we eye them not nor number them among the Churches of Christ. The same teacheth the Reformed Churches of Helv. Art 14. Behem Art 8. France Art 27. Belg. 29. Ausp Art 7. Sax. Art 11. Wirtem Art 32. Swed or the 4. Cities Art 15. S●ot Art 15. and of England Art 19. That Article it self is this Art 19. of the Church of England The visible Church of Christ is a Congregation of faithfull men in which the pure word is preached and the Sacraments be duly administred according to Christs Ordinance in all those things that of necessity are requisite for the same c. All which considered it follows 1. That the Church of Rome is no true Church or pure Church making the Scriptures to be imperfect for salvation without their own Tradition They will not suffer the Church to be clean through the word that Christ hath spoken The Church is only tyed to the Gospel For if an Angel from heaven teach any other Doctrine he is to be accursed by her 1 Gal. 9. With her Baptismal water she adds oyl salt and spittle as essential parts of Baptism and useth this holy Ordinance upon Bells Stocks and wood With the Sacramental wine she must mingle water of which the Lairy must not taste With her Sacramental bread she visits the sick salutes Emperors makes Procession it must be also a wafer C●ke and it must not be broken with both these Elements she maketh a Sacrifice for the dead and she teacheth that a Priest may give it to himself alone that the vertue or efficacy both of that and Baptism depends upon the intention of him that doth administer and yet the efficacy must not be questioned but believed and forasmuch as they are administered in Latine which the common sort may not understand they must act implicite faith 2. That those segregated Congregations in England are not true Churches The word preached by many that are not men in Sex nor Ministers in Office prayer being preached down and preaching only to be heard from men of their own principles teaching for Doctrine not Traditions but fancies blasphemies affirming the nullity of Apostolical Ordination c. The Sacraments are either abused as re-baptizing those that were baptized before making dipping necessary to that Ordinance and the Sacrament performed by a Laick person The Sacrament of the Lords Supper being either preached down altogether or grosly abused in nature It s vertue depends upon his goodness that gives it a sin to receive it with any that we conceit not to be holy or know him to be prophane though he be never admonished by them and if he were yet he is not to be eaten withal least I eat and drink damnation to my self through his sin the Elements not consecrated through which that only is an Ordinance and the body or blood of the Lord they are not consecrated for he that often attempts to do it hath no power so to do wanting Apostolical Authority viz. Ordination 3. That the
silver which might give the Occasion of the Fable These Colossians our Apostle would have them turn as it were by faith even dung into gold Moses esteemed the reproaches of Christ great Treasure Heb. 11.26 and would have them desire to do so nay wishes them and commands them to do so when they have tryed all they will never have cause to repent of their choice If the Word of Christ dwell richly in them Psamneticus a King of Egypt gave Verdict that the people of this Country was of greatest antiquity for heshutting up 2 children forbidding that any humane company should come nigh them that he might understand what Language was most ancient and most natural to men the Babes were all that time suckled by Goats at the expiration of the which two years the Infants pronounced only the Word Bee which in the Phrygian Language signifies Bread which they had learned of the goats cry Our Apostle would have the Colossians to shut up their Infants ears from the doctrine whether of Heathenish Idolatry or Jewish Ceremony and by embracing of the truth become of the oldest and truest Religion which was unknown to the Gentile and shadowed out to the Jew and learn the Language of Can●an the Word that shall be as bread that the King of Saints might give this good report that they pleased him which he shall do if they let the Word of Christ dwel richly in them This Chapter is filled with divers Christian duties which the Colossians during Pauls imprisonment at Rome are exhorted to perform and walk by and they are either such as concerned believers in general of what sort or condition soever qua believers or such as concerned their particular Relations to and with each other as qua Fathers or qua Wives c. His generall Instructions extend themselves to the 18. ver and may be reduced unto these heads 1. For the right ordering and placing of their affections though naturally they be as Sisera nailed to the things of this world he would have them rinched off and set upon things that are above v. 1. Nempe per serium studium pretatis 2. For the mortifying of their Members that are on earth Metonymia subjects understanding those Earthy sensual natural brutish lusts desires inclinations actions that war against the soul As Fornication Uncleanensse v. 5. which they must put off now together with wrath anger malice v. 8. q.d. hoc ●empus alios mores postulat Now you are become Christians you must not live as you did you must now walk worthy of the Gospel 3. For the exercising of holy and sacred virtues as Mercy kindnesse humblenesse meeknesse as the Elect of God v. 12. q.d. Deus vos dilexit in Christo ex misericordia elegit ad vitam aeternam ergo vos diligite alii alios c. God having shown all these graces eminently to be in himself for their good he would have to be in them for they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Intrals or bowels of mercy towards each other for their own good yet more they are to put these on that as they would notbe seen without their cloaths they should never come abroad without their graces some indeed use Religion for a cloak to put off and on at their convenience but Religion should be worn as a garment as an inward garment bowels of mercy such garments as we cannot live without without starving and truly where there are not bowels of mercy to keep our affections warm Love wherein consists the very life of Religion soon waxeth cold 2. His particular directions such as concerned their particular relations to and with each other whose measure reacheth almost to the bowels of the 4. ch and may be reduced to these principles 1. Of Husbands and Wives v. 18 19. 2. Of Fathers and Children v. 10 11. 3. Of Masters and Servants v. 22. Vt Sol inter Planetas medium locum occupans c. As the Sun among the Planets so is my Text placed in the midst of these directions giving light to those above and communicating splendor to those below that these Colossians might know both the one and the other that they might be performed with as great a zeal by them as they were by the Apostle proposed to them he will have the Word of Christ to dwell in them We might be mistaken touching the nature of bowels of mercy and teach others to neglect great points of duty were it not for this Worship of Christ this wil raise up their affections to the things that are eternall and cause a holy and a decent respect to be given to each other so long as they behold the things that are temporal In the body of the words we may behold two general parts one tending to the perswading of those Christians to the study and practice of the whole word of Christ Let the Word of Christ c. The other inducing to the speciall practice of a part of it viz. Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs In the first part you have these particulars 1. The Author of that Word he would have so studied that is Christ the Word of Christ. 2. The manner how we must study it follow it or enjoy it that is expressed by the Word Dwelling 3. The persons whom he would have it so dwell withall or in that is in you 4. The manner how he would have it to dwell in them that is 1. Richly 2. Wisely 5. The ends why he would have it so to dwell in them 1. That they might teach 2. That they might Admonish one another In the Latter take notice distinctly 1. Of the form and manner how he would have those Psalmes Hymns and spiritual Songs used that is with grace 2. with affection in their hearts Non vox sed votum this is the best Tune to any Psalm 2. The Object of their singing or the end they propose to themselves that is the Lord. Cantemus 〈…〉 He that sings more for the praise of the Lord then for carnal pleasure or worldly delight may be called the chief Musician Dum gratiae ti aguntur pro acceptis beneficiis In their returning thanks unto the Lord for his favours their hearts must be lifted up through grace unto his glory which is ars bene cantandi the highest note of all Before we come to any doctrinal Observation we shall enquire after these particulars which may give us light more fully into the Text in an extraordinary manner viz. 1. What it is that here is called the Word of Christ. 2. What is the Importance of the Word Dwelling 3. The parties he would have the World to dwel in 4. What is held out in general by the words richly and in all wisedome 5. The Discrepancy or Identity let the Phrase be pardoned between Psalms Hymns and Spiritual Songs which shall be done in these following Sections SECTION I. LE● the Word of Christ The Word of Christ may be taken two ways
that had spoken it in the Psalm the truth had not performed it so exactly in the Gosple 4 According to his pleasure were they spoken and at his good wil were they uttered by them The spirit of prophesie did not always abide upon the most holy Prophet hence Advenit Verbum Iehova The Word of the Lord came is a usual phrase among the Prophets Elisha was a man of God and yet the Lord had hid the Shanamites grief from him 2 Ki. 4.2 When he put it in their mouths then they spoke and not before they were his words for untill he spoke to their hearts their mouthswere shut up end they remained silent till the Word of the Lord came there was neither voice nor hearing in truth what he spoke they uttered and when he was pleased to be silent they were forced to be mute 5. The prophesies did but open a passage for him and the whole of them had a tendency to him the Law in all its Ceremonies and in all its precepts doth but lead us conduct us point out Christ unto us it hath no Language in it but Christ in it's Condemning power it is a harsh School-master to drive us to Christ Gal. 3.24 The Gospel hath the self same end viz. To bring us to Christ he stands as it were between both Testaments the Prophets behinde him Call but to touch the hem of his garment and come under the skirt of his apparel the Apostles before him call upon men to imbrace him in their arms by faith joyfully and he himself in their mouth utters but what he delivered in person Come unto me all ye that labour Mhtth. 11.28 6. They are his words in respect of that power and that Commission he gave to holy men to write and teach them he gave the Apostles power to preach and a Commission to teach all Nations Matth. 28.19 It was he that took the Apostles from their other Callings and gave them authority to teach what ever he had commanded They did nothing untill he gave that power and assoon as they received their authority from him they began that heavy though holy Imployment 7. In regard of the publication and promulgation of them whatever was spoken was spoken in the name of the Lord all was preached in the name of Christ they desired to know nothing more then Christ they called upon men to believe in Christ they baptized in the name of Christ not by their own power or holiness but in the name of Iesus Christ of Nazareth did they work their miracles Acts 3.6 It follows then that the whole Scriptures in what way soever delivered whether by vision inspiration dreams by signs by voice by writing by Urim and Thummim by men or by Angels by Prophets or Apostles for God spoke divers ways to our Fathers Heb. 1.1 All of it and every part of that All is the word of Christ which we must have to dwell in us for the words are Imperative Imperativo praceptionis a duty that we are to avoid then and shun him that would seek to turn us from the Faith of that word here enjoyned The Apostle is pleased to call the Scriptures the word of Christ rather then the word of God for this probable reason At this time these Coloss●ans were infected and in danger to be drawn to the old Rites and Ceremonies of the Jewish Church by self-seeking men who desired them to look back to the word wherein indeed these things were written Col. 2.16 but now since he exhorts them to the studie of the word of Christ he foresees and knows that by the word of Christ they shall learn that all those Ceremonies were but as shadows and since Christ is come not binding for which cause he chooseth rather to call it the word of Christ that those Hereticks might not take any advantage to corrupt them which they might have done if he had said the word of God From this we might draw many inferences we shall at this time collect two one concerning the Ministers of Christ the other to all the Professors of Christ. 1. Concerning the Ministers of Christ. Let them not hereafter be afraid of man nor of the son of man let them be bold to say to any offender Non licet tibi with Iohn the Baptist It is not lawfull for thee Mat. 14.4 Let their faces be strong against the faces of men their foreheads strong against their foreheads that they be not dismayed at their looks Ezekiel 3.8 9. the word is not theirs but the Lords Let the word of God be spoken with boldness Acts 4.31 Christ speaks as one that had authority Matth. 7.29 and he hath given authority and power to his servants to charge men to their duty 1 Tim. 6.17 where God threatens sin they must not be afraid to pronounce punishment The Lord God hath spoken who can but prophesie Amos 2.8 As they are to preach it with Authority so let them study it constantly where shall the Ambassadors of the most High know the will of their great Master but here Till Christ come let them give attendance to reading A Minister must be a man apt to teach 2 Tim. 2.24 And it s this alone that can fit him for that function In these lyeth the substance and matter of their Commission therefore they must be looked into studied upon 2. To all the Professors of Christ to all that name the name of Jesus let them freely hear me touching these two particulars 1. Let none of them trust believe or depend upon any new or immediate Revelation for his happiness there are in this Age many that trust to those raptures of the Spirit as they call them and will have no other word dwell in them then that word that the Spirit within suggests within casting aside and refusing the Scriptures as useless and unnecessary because a word without But I hope you have not so learned Christ. We shall carry a small time upon the search of that Spirit pretended to trying it by the Scriptures the touchstone of truth and we shall see if those breathings of the Spirit be different from the blasts of the Prince of the power of the Ayr that rules in the children of disobedience 1. It doth not those things that the Spirit of God should do not to insist upon particulars there were three general Acts that Christ promised his Spirit at his coming should perform unto Believers and this Spirit that goes abroad in this Age performs none of them as may appear by a rehearsal of the severall acts themselves 1. Was to bring to remembrance what ever Christ had spoken Ioh. 14.26 This was to be his work then and his work with all believers is the same now what Christ hath taught what Christ hath spoken is the Spirit to bring to remembrance which he will send That Spirit therefore that teacheth and puts that in the minds of men which Christ never spoke cannot be that spirit sent of
him but such doth the spirit that in this Age is pretended It calls down prayer it will not be guided by Scripture not live of the Gospel nor according to Law they will have no ordained Ministers they will not own Magistrates thrust Sacraments out of the Church make Ordinances in their power depend upon the merits of men take singing out of our Christian Temples preaching up new revelations and that they only are the Saints that heed least the Scriptures that it is only formal or Antichristian to crave a blessing before meat that none are baptized but such as are dipped to curse revile slander those that are set apart by Apostolical Tradition for the preaching of the Gospel c. This is that that Christ never taught and therefore it is not his Spirit that brings them to our remembrance 2. The Holy Spirit of God was to glorifie Christ Iohn 16.14 that Christ that was then with his Discsples that was born of the Virgin Mary that Christ that was to suffer at Ierusalem was he to make glorious that Spirit now amongst us casts contumelies and scornfully speaks of that Christ under the notion of a Christ without us Its seeks its own glory and bears witness of it self its whole aym is to invert the Divine dispensations by slighting that Christ crucified upon the account of being without 3. He was to shed abroad the love of God in the hearts of Believers Rom. 5.5 that is the apprehension of the love of God a sense of it a feeling of it from whence comes love joy and peace Now the spirit that some pretenders have is a contradistinct spirit from this for by their trembling quaking foaming it appears that the sense of the love of God is not shed abroad in their hearts but of his wrath those strange and monstrous actings proceed rather from wrath indignation and anguish and indeed if gnashing of teeth be a picture or fruit of Hell we may know whence that spirit comes that carries men forth into those distempers 2. The Spirit of God is a Spirit of Union and of Agreement that ever speaks and agrees with it self In no place doth it really oppose or contradict it self it leads all men into one kind and way of truth how distant soever they be from one another but this spirit that goes abroad in our Age never appears in one shape it speaks this in this mans mouth and contradicts is again next day In this mans mouth it threatens hell in that mans mouth it says there is no hell it says that it is a decent thing for a woman to preach the same spirit calls down all preaching in another here it throws aside the Law there it throws away the Gospel there it throws away both here it is for a Christ within there it affirms there is no Christ at all by its cloven foot you may discern whence it came 3. The Spirit of God teacheth honourable and glorious Doctrine such Doctrine as made the highest in the earth bow their necks to receive the same the whole Army of the Philist●ms even of those Heathens that persecuted the Doctrine of the Spirit of God was overcome by the noble Army of the Martyrs the more it was afflicted the more it grew and went over the world like a Sea overflowing the banks of all Penal Laws Kings became its nursing Fathers and Queens its nursing mothers The Doctrine that this Spirit teacheth is a Doctrine of Reprobation Reprobated silver hath God called it his providence and power hath crushed it always suppressed it and hath only given Satan a little power for the Tryall of his Church but never gave him all his chain to destroy Their Doctrine was never on a Candlestick their house was never on a mountain to bring all Nations in into it God kept it under that it never yet said So would I have it How hath the same Gospel we teach run over the world and that without garments rolled in blood and hath been beautifull and glorious But this spirit hath attempted indeed but stopped tryed condemned cast out Never was there a Kingdom Country Parish nay scarce a house that this spirits Doctrine or Doctrines rather was ever received in These things considered let not the Professors of Christ depend upon those seducing revelations but to the Scriptures the foundation of the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles But 2. If the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament be the word of Christ let none of the people sleight it it is that which Christ hath spoken to be the Rule of their lives tryers of their thoughts and measure of their actions if thou be of the houshold of faith thou art upon that foundation whereof Jesus Christ is the chief Corner-stone Eph. 2.20 All you that build must be squared fitted and proportionated to this Corner stone which can only be done by this Word of Christ and therefore it is not to be slighted Now the Scripture may be slighted divers ways 1. When it is regardlessely heard when Gods message is delivering for the good of a mans soul by Gods servant thereunto appointed to have an irreverend or unseemly carriage shows they put no high valuation upon it to be drowzy or sleepy when God is holding forth our duty or his own greatnesse our sins and his Justice is a great sign of irreverence and may provoke him to thrust us out of his presence for it is not a slighting or contemning of man who reads it or speaks it but of God who made it and enjoyned it 2. When it is scoffingly used when men make Scripture to be the bottome of Jests and Jears the Subject of their profanenesse or Object of their mirth When the Prophet called the Burthen of the Lord the people answered him in scorn the Burthen of the Lord the Burthen of the Lord. Ier. 23.33 34 35. or as Iulian that would smite a Christian on the one cheek und then bid him turn the other as his Lord and Master directed The Scriptures were not written to make men laugh but to make men wise unto salvation 2 Tim. 3.15 they were sent into the word by God to instruct men how to demean themselvs without offence towards God man Act. 24.16 it ought only to be imployed to that end It is not safe jesting with edged Tools so neither is it safe to sport with the two edged sword of the word of God This is holy ground let us be afraid to sin upon it least the owner of it Mock when eur fear cometh and laught at our calamity Prov. 1.26 It is in it self a high provocation of his Majesty contempt of his honour and a diminishing of his greatnesse in the sight of men 3. When it is heedlessely forgot if a mans servant should not do the thing commanded und excuse himself from his forgetfulness it would not reprieve him from his masters anger How shall God be patient when his precepts and word are
our undertaking this subject at this time wherein so many are shaken to and ●ro by every wind of Doctrine desiring to establish you in that Faith once given to the Saints and to confirm you in the do●●rine of the holy Catholick Church to which I presume you were baptized we shall from this Text maintain several grand truths in reference to the Word Sacraments and Prayer which may serve you as Antidotes against that poyson that hath already slain thousands at our right hand and ten thousand at our left but we must first come to the last Section and see some questions resolved SECTION VII Questions Resolved Quest. 1. Whither the Scripture be the word of God Quest. 2. Whither the Scripture ought to be mens onely rule Quest. 3. Whither men may come to a saving knowledg of God without the Scripture Quest. 4. Whither persestion may be attributed to the Scripture Quest. 5. Whither Salvation may be had by the single knowledg of the Scripture Quest. 6. What may perswade one that doubts to beleeve the truth of the Scripture Quest. 7. How far the Saints may be our rule besides the Scripture Quest. 8. Whither the books called Apocrypha be not Scripture Quest. 9. Why would God writ the Scripture Quest. 10. Whether men be bound to beleeve all that is in the Scripture Quest. 1. Whether the Scripture be the word of God By Scripture here is meant the whole word of God contained wholly and onely in the Canonicall bookes of the old and new Testament for though the word Scripture signifies only a writting or a book and may be attributed to any book scrole or writing in the world yet use and custome which is the rule of speaking hath wrought this word Scripture to signifie that writing of the Holy Ghost contained in the Book of God and not any other book 1. From the excellency that it hath above all other it is called the Scripture that is the Book as if there were none deserved that name but it hence the book of Canticles is called the Song of Songs that is the most excellent of Songs so this the Book that is the book of books 2. From that necessity that lies upon men to have this book above all other If all the learning of all the most famous Libraries could be contracted into one book and that one book digested into one mans Head yet he would call for thee Book that book that his life his comforts his salvation stood upon this book was made to mend all other books and the light that all other Learning could afford without this would but make Hell so much the darker when all Books are shown him yet as David said of Goliahs sword there is no Book like that 1 Sam. 21.9 or as Rachel said to Iacob Give me that or else I die Gen. 30.1 The like might be said of the word Bible that signifying also a Book and properly any Book of the world might be called a Bible but customarily it s given only to that Book that contains the word or that Book written by the Spirit of God Now that the Scripture or the Books of the old and new Testament are the words of God and written by none but God that they are from heaven and not of men may appear by these following reasons 1. None but God can be found out to make them let heaven and earth be searched as with a Candle and among all the Inhabitan●s therein the Author of this Book is not to be found For 1. If he was not the writer of them either Angels Beasts or men must for Plants and Trees are not to be once suspected for their original But 1. Angels made it not for then it was either made by them altogether or by some part of them But 1. Not by them altogether for then in some place or other this had been discovered the Angels would have told the world before this time that it was composed by them They would have discovered to the so●s of men by some means or other that they were beholding to them for these comfortable words 2. Neither can the Scripture be supposed to be made by one part of them for then either they m●st be made by the fallen Angels or the confirmed Angels But 1. Not by the fallen Angels the devils are more subtle then to destroy their own Kingdom to give weapons to overcome themselves Satan hath more policy then to reveal how men shall avoid his snares escape his traps overcome his temptations prevent his ambushments frustrate his watchings and disappoint all his purposes every line of the Bible tends to the r●ine of his Kingdom every verse in it is his neck verse Would he have had himself known by no other name then a lyar a Serpent a Dragon a roaring and devouring Lyon a Deceiver an Accuser an unclean Spirit if he had gone to set himself out into the world it will follow therefore it was not them 2. Neither was it made by the confirmed Angels for they acknowledge themselves our fellow Servants Rev. 19.10 22.9 being therefore professedly our fellow servants they could not make Laws to restrain us of our desires nor enjoyn us from performing any thing that our own hearts lusted after neither would men acknowledge the Angels in this case to be their superiors 2. Beasts did not write it It is to be hoped that the Reader is so much a man as to understand Beasts or Fouls composed not that work their irrationality shews sufficiently their impossibility 3. Men did not do it There is but man to be thought on as the Author of this Book since Angels are known not to do it And yet apparent it is that men had no hand in it for then either it must be done by men altogether or by some men But 1. Not by men altogether where was that meeting and in what Country is that place that mankinde gathered themselves together to make L●ws against themselves to bind their own hands to their own feet nay to crush their own heart yea which is more to doom themselves to the everlasting flames for doing that that above all things is most pleasing to themselves What time of the world was this meeting in What Histories mentions of it What Generation was then living and who called this Assembly together What makes this Age to tye themselves to those Laws made by their Fathers since they are dead and fallen asleep 2. Neither was it done by men apart for then those men that composed it must be either good or bad But 1. Good men would not do it for then they ought to have been speakers of the truth they have kept the world in falshood for they say that the Scripture is of God made by his finger spoken by his Spirit if made by themselves it s nothing so yea the best of men find in themselves disobedience to the Laws therein contained which costs them much sorrow many tears
3.10 2 External that is in body where he was like God 1 In Immortality Death was to have no dominion over him dissolution he was not to know God is Immortall and man in Immortality was like him 2 In Dominion over the creatures God gave man half his Empire to rule over Gen. 1.28 The furious Lyon the Kingly Eagle and the great Leviathan man stood in no awe of they all submitted to his Scepter The whole Creation of Beasts and Fowl was brought before him and though he was naked he feared them not and they disobeyed not him Gen. 2.20 This ushers in the second part of the question why man was created Naked For answer to which we make this brief reply 1 That but for sin this would be no more a question then it is now why men cover not their faces that was a piece or part of that perfection wherein God created him cloathing is but a cumber a toyl a labour a trouble and God made him perfectly happy 2 To admonish him of his sociable and peaceable life with his kinde God created other creatures with weapons strength to defend themselues against each other to some he gives swiftness to others craftiness to others strong and hard hides to others hard hoofes to some prickels to some sharp claws to others stings and poyson but only man is naked exposed open and free so that we see when men go to make war one upon another they deform themselves and look liker monsters then men God therefore would teach him by his being naked to live peaceably and sociably in the world 3 To Admonish him of his diligence and industry He hath given man little without him besides his skin yet Inriched the World for his use and that he might Imploy himself in some refreshing labour without trouble and do those things in the World most pleasing to himself what ever they were with the greater facility God created him naked 4 To discover the excellency of Adams perfection God did not make so beautifull a Creature to hide it in the cloud of a Woolen Silken or Linen garment he was the most beautifull of all creatures and God would have his beauty discovered As Eva was the Mother of all living I am prone to suppose she was the fairest of all her Daughters that lived and God would have her favour seen What needed cloathes to either since both were perfectly holy It was their holiness that made them not ashamod of their being naked Gen. 2.25 Quest. 7. Whether the reading of the Ceremonial Law be profitable to a Beleever Or whether any part of that Law be established under the Gospel The Law Ceremonial which consists of Types and Shadowes as Washings Shavings and Offerings of Sacrifices Shedding of blood Sprinkling c. some may think to be needlesse under the Gospel but they erre a Beleever may reap much profit by them 1 They may serve to confirm his faith in the truth of the Word by his seeing the Types fulfilled by Christ he is the Lamb of the Male kinde that must be Offered for the sins of the World He is the scape-goat that taketh the sins of men into the Wildernesse of Oblivion 2. By them we may take notice of Gods offence at sin he wil have the blood of man or of beasts to satisfie his Justice in respect of sin willing to spare men untill the Son of man come the blood of Buls and goats shall serve to the purifying of the flesh 3. By them believers may be excited to love Christ the more for freeing them from the burthen of that Law It was a yoke that the Jews were not able to bear Acts 15.10 By Christ the Believer is freed from it he is not now tyed to Ierusalem he needs not go there to worship neither need he kill his beast for Sacrifice but offering pure hands without wrath and doubring makes him accepted in the beloved 4. By that Law we see that there is but one Saviour for Jew and Gentile which may be the ground of many a fervent prayer for the Jews Conversion that they might effectually have the blood upon their hearts for the pardon of their sins whose blood typically they shed for the remmitting of their offences Poor souls whose Fathers saw his blood in the killing of their beasts yet their seed to be killed through their not believing in his blood now that it is poured forth Return O Lord to thee many thousands of Israel 5. Believers by that may see how carefull God is of his Worship in his making such strict Laws Statues and Judgements and the least of them to be fulfilled under the pain of being cut off 6. They may fear to sin the more against the gospel if it was dangerous under so dark a Ministration what now if it was death to break the Law delivered by Moses what then to sin against the Law given by Christ if these escaped not that broke the Law because they were delivered from Egypts thraldome How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation Heb. 10.2 3. Let us not sin the more because the yoak is took from us but rejoyce always in God that made us free in Christ which calls upon us to see if by Christ we are free'd from any part of that Law or from all of it which is the second part of the Question The ground of it is the determination of that first and famous Counsell of the Church Acts 15. In which it was appointed v. 29 that the converted Gentiles should abstain from meats offered to Idols and from blood c. By reason of which precept some conclude this part of the Law to be confirmed under the gospell and by Christians to be observed But these men erre not knowing the Scriptures For the detecting of which errour we shall promise a few things touching the institution of the Law and the reason of the Law 1. Of the Institution When God had preserved himself a very small remnant in the Earth by Noahs Ark he gave to Noah and to his Sons every moving thing that liveth for meat Gen. 9.3 But flesh with the blood thereof which is the life thereof these they must not eat that is flesh with the blood in it or raw or not thorowly boyld or not throughly blooded or not throughly dressed as for haste the Israelites did 1 Sam. 14.32 33. Afterwards in the time of Moses this Law was enlarged Levit. 17.1 Prohibiting not only the eating of flesh with the blood but the blood of any manner of flesh v. 10. v. 14. so that untill Moses the not eating of blood divided from the flesh is not expressly forbidden though it might not by holy men be eaten for a reason hereafter to be shown 2. Of the reason of this Law and that is three fold Either 1. Physicall 2. Morall Or 3. Mystical 1. Physical The blood of beasts divided from the flesh eaten alone or the blood of beasts eaten
onely in respect of giving cause of offence to others is things sacrificed to idols not to be eaten and by consequence eating of blood is no more necessary the cause therefore of that forbearance being removed viz. the reading of Moses Law and the tenderness or ignorance of new converted Iews through the establishment of the gospel being also taken away that the consciences of few or none that are Christians are wounded for useing our liberty in that particular we may without sinning against our own souls eat blood as safely as ever the Corinthians might eat things sacrificed to idols or in an idols Temple since both these by the Canon of the Council were esteemed necessary not in themselves but in respect of weak consciences peace of the Church which now in these two particulars is in no danger for had things sacrificed to idols been in it self necessary to prevent sinning against a mans own soul then meat had commended us unto God which it doth not 1 Cor. 8.8 Nay our Apostle would have urged it and pressed the not doing of it upon that account but contrary he yields and would have them to abstain for the consciences of their weak brethren onely witho●t once mentioning any other cause 2. From the holy Apostles attestation speaking of things indifferent and of meats Rom. 14.2 3. Commands that be that eateth meats forbidden in the Law despise not him that eateth not viz. for conscience of the Law Every man living not to himself only ought to have a care of his Brother or not judge him Or put no stumbling block in his Brothers way v. 13. But why must not one judge another in eating or not eating meats forbidden in the Law the Reason he gives v. 14. I know and am perswaded by the Lord Iesus that there is nothing unclean of it self but to him that estesmeth any thing to be unclean to him it is unclean the Apostle is speaking of meats of which not by Moses but by the Lord Iesus he knows none unclean in it self therefore not blood but if a man be conceited through ignorance or conscience to that man any thing were it bread it is unclean He perswades therefore that though men by Christ may eat any thing yet if any Brother be grieved for his eating any meat forbidden by the Law he would not have him cause his Brother to sin For the kingdom of God is not in meat and drink but righteousness peace and joy in the Holy Ghost For he that in these things serveth Christ is acceptable to God and approved by him Now if it were so that that Law touching eating of blood were necessary then a part of the kingdom of God should consist in meat and though we followed after peace righteousness yet could we not neither should we be acceptable to God without abstaining from meats or something that were in it self edible for what is such is meat What ever therefore is forbidden as eating of blood is not to be forborn upon any account but onely upon the weak consciences of our brethren and in eating or forbearing none ought to judge the other for God hath received both him that eats and him that eateth not vers 3. Which God would not do if abstaining from or eating things edible had in it self been either a grace or duty 3 From the Apostles unlimited proposition 1 Tim. 4. where warning Timothy of some that in the latter days should fall from the faith and teach the doctrine of Devils Forbidding to mary and commanding to abstain from meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them which beleeve and know th● truth v. 3. Blood is a creature that God hath created for the use and service of man is in it self edible and therefore meat God was pleased for a time to forbid the eating of blood having appointed it for his own Altar to make an atonement for the sin of the soul but now Christ being come and his blood shed which was Typified by that No man is now to judge us in respect of meat Col. 2.16 The time is expired and he that under the Gospel preacheth up the use of forbearing meat as a point of Doctrine binding the consciences of men under what seeming purity soever is but a messenger of Sathan and his doctrine the doctrine of Devils c. To prevent an Objection which might have been raisd against that which the Apostle is asserting suppose blood eating he affirmes that every creature of God is good and nothing to be refused if it be received with thanksgiving v. 14. But are there not some creatures that are in themselves good yet for us to eat them it is a sin and a part of unholiness No says the Apostle Every creaturo is good none is to be refused for it is sanctified by the Word of God and Prayer v. 5. Suppose S. Paul to have blood before him he is not afraid to eat he hath craved a blessing by which it is Sanctified and he wil eat for no creature is to be refused and these things if Timothy teach he shall be a good Minister of Iesus Christ v. 6. He is not a Minister of the Law and therefore he is not to look to that but of Christ and what the Word of God and Prayer hath sanctified and they sanctifie every creature let no man call it impure unlawfull and if they do as what will not some men do we are to avoid them they are seducing Spirits and teachers of lyes not apprehending the Law of the Counsel and the reason of that Law nor comparing it also with other Scriptures makes the ignorant and unlearned wrest this as wel as other Scriptures to their own hurt and the Churches disturbance making this not eating blood to be a standing law in the Gospel upon the account of sin when by the Apostles themselves it is made no more necessary then that of not eating what was Sacrificed to Idols a thing by that faithfull Labourer in the Gospel Saint Paul in it self lawful enough to be done but to be forhorn for the sake of the consciences of others and yet that very forbearance but for a time till ignorance did turn to perverseness and the Iiws weakness became stubornness then other doctrine was taught but still having a regard to the peace of the Church the ground of Iames his determination which otherwise in point of Doctrine did agree to Paul and Peter in opposing every part of the Ceremonial Law yet it seemed good in regard the Iewes in a great measure were not yet unchurched nor wholy cast off for their sakes to forbear meats in themselves lawful enough as blood was since Christs was shed But to teach now as a matter of faith the forbearance of any thing edible particularly blood the Iews being wholly unchurched and the Gospel confirmed is not of God but of Satan For every creature and therefore this is Sanctified by the Word of
prayer and therefore prayer is a proper act for the place and no time more sitting then at the first entry 2 Prayer obtains a blessing in other dutyes he is possibly to hear the word read preached or sung to crave a blessing that all these may do the soul good cannot be a branch of superstition 3. It gives a good example unto others when thou seest one performing any act of worship in that sort whether out of formality or otherwise yet by that thou mayst learn that in the Church thou oughtest to worship God heed him not therefore so much as thy self if he give hypocritical service the judge shall judge him fear thou God 4. It is but spoken to draw a contempt upon the house of the Lord those actions with many others are inveighed at that the house of the living God may be had in no more reverence then Barnes Stables not to say Halls or Parlours every thing is Popery in this age wich either tends to decency or comeliness in outwards worship as if we must be papists except we be slovens 5. The reasons brought against this justifiable practise are poor and weak they are these chiefly That they by this would hold forth the Church to be more holy then other places It may be answered it is that they will perhaps not pray at other times It may be aniwered Blame them and reprove them for that by themselves blame them not at all for this to any other Quest. 5. Whether is it lawfull to have Musick in our Churches This is of it self nothing yet since the rulers of the Church are pleased to introduce such a ceremony and others take occasion to barke against them for it it may be seasonable to speake a few things as to the lawfullnesse of its use it appears therefore to be lawfull and that in our days for 1 From the practise of the Saints in the Iewish Church what variety of musicall instruments were introduced by David and Solomon is clear in sacred writ When the ends that these holy Saints proposed to themselves are found out they shall make it appear that it is as Lawfull to have musick now as it was then 2 From the helps men may naturally receive from musick in the time of worship God loves a chearful giver and this may make a drooping soule to give him acceptable service 3 It was never a part of the Ceremoniall law and therefore not abolished by Christ that Law that Christ put an end to was that that belonged to the tabernacle musick being no part of that is no more abolished by Christ then standing Churches or Temples 4 From that vision that was seen in heaven Rev. 5.8 Four beasts and four and twenty Elders worshipped the Lord with harps these are generally taken for Ministers and the congregation and again Rev. 14.2 there is heard the voice of harpers harping and singing from heaven though in the mystery that signifies there joy yet in the Church it is not absurdity to expresse or help their Spiritual joy by the naturall use of musick 5 They who are against this are generally against matters of greater concernment and their opposing of this is the lesse to be admired or noted CHAP. IX Of Ministeriall ordination THe party or person that teacheth which is the priest or Minister comes now to be considered unto whom in the title we have given ordination both are ordinances appoint-by God to go together and both of them for that very thing cryed down in this generation for this time we shall put them together and distinctly handle 1 The nature of ordination 2 The person to be ordained 3 The parties who are to ordaine 4 The duty of them that are ordained 5 Resolve some questions SECT I. The nature of ordination may be expressed in these words viz. It is a solemn setting of one apart and ordaining of a person 2. By Fasting and prayer 3. For the preaching of the Word 4. Dispencing of the Sacraments And 5. Exercising the power of the Keyes 6. With laying on of hands 1. It is a solemn setting of one apart and ordaining of a person It is not to be rashly or inconsiderably done 1 Tim. 5.22 but in most solemn decent manner ought to be performed Acts 5.6 2. It must be done by prayer and fasting these two at this ordinance go usually together Acts 13.3 For by prayer much may be obtained and by fasting a strong Devil may be cast out 3. For the preaching of the word Acts 13.5 for the opening of the word by way of Doctrine Reason and Use is the proper work for which one is separate to the work of the Ministry 4. Dispencing of the Sacraments 1 Cor. 4.1 as that of Baptism Mat. 28.19 and of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.23 these are the seals and evidencies of our reconciliation with God 5. Exercising the power of the keyes whom they bind on earth they are bound in heaven Mat. 18.18 Now they bind by excommunication which is a delivery over unto Sathan a casting them out of the Church making them to have no interest in the ordinances of the Church more then heathens or Publicans 1 Cor. 5.5 1 Tim. 1.20 Whom they loose on earth shall be loosed in heav●n Mat. 18.18 Now they loose by Absolution opening as it were the gate of the Church to him that for his offences was thrust out and receiveing him again upon his repentance to the communion and fellowship of the faithfull 2 Cor. 6.10 6. With laying on of hands this is a grave and ancient ceremony in the Church of God Iacob used it in blessing his grand children Gen. 48.14 By it the Levites were given by the Is●aelites ' o the Lord instead of their first-born Numb 8.10 By it the beasts under the Law were to be set apart by sacrifice Num. 8 12. By it Ioshua was set apart to be Governour of Israel ●ter Moses Numb 27.23 By it did our Saviour bless those children that were brought unto him Mark 10.16 By it was St●phen and his brethren made Deacons Act ● 6. By it Paul and Barnabas Apostles Acts 13.3 And Timot●● made a Priest Minister or Elder 1 Tim. 4.14 for which cause in holy imitation of so ancient and divine a practise the Bishop and his Presbyters lay their hands upon the head of them ●hom they separate for the work of the Ministry 2 Tim. 1.6 being asign of celestial grace which God with an open hand will give to all those who conscionably serve him in that holy imployment SECT II. Let us now see unto whom this ordination is to be given and who it is that ought to be thus separated in a solemn way for the service of God what persons they be that Timothy and Titus the Bishops of Ephesus and Creet must ordain is told us in their Epistles some notes of them are essential and some of them are accidental some are for their being some for their well-being some shew their
hath reason to suspect that fury not zeale makes thee a teacher and upon that flight the doctrine taught Love like a small and thick shour can open the ground of the heart and soften it whilest passion like great shoury drops hardens it and causes it only to become the more hard whereby the thing taught slides off and is not received into the bosome of him that is reached and so becomes ineffectual to his edification 2 Humility and meeknesse Let not him that is taught perceive that thy end is to shew thy own excellency above his that may marre thee in thy purpose let him rather behold that thou desires he should see his own ignorance which may make his soul to blesse thee and his soul to be saved through thee 3 Zeale and earnestnesse speake of God of Christ of the scripture of judgment and of eternal glory as to affect the hearts of them thou wouldest instruct so as to burne again if thou do it in a cold or carelesse way it will be heard after the some forme and manner 4 Order and patience we are not to suppose that what we teach must be Immediatly got by heart our teaching may but open a door to let in those instruction of another which are to perswade to Godlinesse we are therefore to have patience Paul may plant grace but not live to see it grow a minister may plant or water what another hath planted and yet the fruits of that plant may be reaped by another have patience then build thou orderly and lay a good foundation God perhaps hath ordained another to lay the roofe and to furnish the building 5 Truth and simplenesse What men teacheth in points of faith ought to be the word of Christ not their own inventions and the word of Christ ought not be mixed with carnal ordinances but given purely and sincerly to the weak Christian that he may grow thereby if otherwise we teach not but pervert we instruct not but deceive This is done 1 By discovering his errour from the word of Christ we ought in this case to let men see the scriptures rather then our selves against his judgment to undertake to reprove a man for his errour when it is not reproved by the word of Christ is but to procure to our selves a staine or a blot 2 To demonstrate the necessity of believing the thing taught from scripture what we reach in matters of faith is to be mantained from scripture only that being the meanes to be get faith and to nourish it there is nothing to be taught as necessa●y for salvation but what can be proved a duty f●om thence and therefore presume not if thou be wise to do the contrary SECT III. Questions resolved Quest. 1 Whether private or night meetings might lawfully be upheld Quest. 2 Whether it be lawfull for Christians when they meet to make mery one with another Quest. 3 Whether the conference or private meetings lately used in● England were agreeable to the power of Godlynesse Quest. 1 Whether private or night meetings might lawfully be upheld To affirme that Christians ought not to meet at all times or at any time to instrust and edifie each other were to affirme that a sin which is both practised and taught by the saints both of the old and new testament Mala. 3.16 But yet those meetings that were formerly in England seems not to be approved For 1 Their meeting was not so much out of zeale as for other causes When the practise and conversation was seen in the world they nothing out-stripped other men They were singular only in this that when others had come from the publick temples they were then going to prepare for private meetings if religion had made them set about this over night it is to be supposed that it would have singularly remained with them next day but that not appearing some other cause might be inquired after which shall not at this time be insisted on 2 They seemed to be unthankfull to God for that liberty he had given his Church blessed be God if it be good that they teach it might be done at noon if evill the night hideth not from him that seeth all things Intimes of persecution the Saints worshiped wandering in deserts and in mountains and in dens and caves of the earth Heb. 11.38 but now to do it were a peece of unthankfullnesse and ingratitude 3 Their actions seemed to speak evil of dignities they said in their harts that our Soveraign Lord the King was not the defender of the Faith In as much as they durst own their doctrine in the face of Authority by which tacitly they rather behold and declare him for a persecutor 4 The doctrine therein taught was generalty in opposition to the doctrine established in the Church of England by relation it was usuall with those meetings to in veigh against that which by good and sound advice was established and in the generations following used whereby many were drawn from their obedience and allegiance given and plighted to their mother Church unto the factious humours of some zealous pretenders who in most points did appear to stumble at ●nats and swallow camels Their generall doctrine was erroneous in one particular before mentioned viz. Their taking things of Indifferency to be necessary points of faith which the unlearned not being able to difference were led a way by those meetings to the disturbance of the Church unto whose doctrine they were baptized 5 They gave too much cause to suspect their actions there finding them in the day time to be no better then others their meetings in the night when law had forbid it had something of ●●everence● of under earne●se and of refractorine●●e in them the●eby their b●st a●tions might justly be suspected to have some ●incture of pride of discontent and ●edicion 6 The Spawn or seed of the late troubles in all probability had its being fro● them and its rise of them but c. Quest. 2. Whether it be lawfull for Christians when they meet to make merry one with another There are them who are eminent in godlinesse that considering the multitudes of dutys that●lye upon Christians can find no time nor leasure to make mirth There are others who out of a Stoicall sullennesse think it a sin even to laugh and he is often causelesly condemned who offends them in that particular Not to censure the former sort their own practise may be a ground upon which they build so general a proposition as no Mirth is to be used but withall we may truly say they lay a yoak upon the neck of the disciples which all are not able to beare and the spi●it may be willing but the flesh is weak Touching the latter laughing being the immediate effect of a rational soul and a gift that God hath given to be in man with man as he is man without question it may therefore be used by the sons of men Notwithstanding that it is the
form of the institution of the Sacraments is not conditional that is the word to baptize in the name of the Father c. according to the institution is effectual to be a declarative sign of the baptizeds interest in the Father though the parties life be not exemplary Holy in regard it is not annexed to that precept which it should have been had the ordinance depended upon it So in the Sacrament of the Lords supper he that is a receiver of the bread and wine conscecrated sanctified and set a part as in the Gospel receives the body and the blood of Christ in as effectual a manner when the Minister is prophane as when he is Holy holiness in the Officer being not a condition required for the consecration And therefore as some said Now see to thine own house David we say Look to thine own faith O Christian. 5. It is against the judgement of all reformed Churches In those Articles above mentioned and of the Church of England Art 26. the Art it self is this Art 26. of the Church of England Although in the visible Church the evil be ever be mingled with the good and sometime the evil have chief authority in the Ministration of the word and Sacraments yet for as much as they do not the same in their own name but in Christs and Minister by his commission and authority we may use their Ministry both in hearing of the word of God and in receiving of the Sacraments neither is the effect of Christs Ordinance taken away by their wickedness nor the grace of Gods gifts diminished from such as by faith and rightly do receive the Sacraments Ministred unto them which be effectual because of Christs institution and promise although they be Ministred by evil men Nevertheless it appertaineth to the discipline of the Church that enquiry be made of evil Ministers c. Quest. 3. Whether the Sacraments differ from the Scriptures This is not positively determined since in some things there is a difference and in other things no difference we shall therefore in a few words discover both these beginning with their difference which consists 1. In that the word is preached delivered opened unto all the Sacraments given onely to the faithful 2. The word hath the priority of order that ever going before the Sacraments they alwayes coming after it 3. The word begets and creates faith the Sacraments nourish faith and make it to grow 4 The word is received by the ear the Sacraments by other senses 5. The word is simply and ordinarily necessary for salvation and sufficient without the Sacraments to sanctifie the soul the Sacraments are not simply necessary for life and their efficacy depends upon the word the want of the Sacraments is not damning but the contempt or neglect of them Again The word and the Sacraments differ not but agree and are one 1. In their Author God is the Author of them both he spoke the word and instituted the Sacraments 2. In their instrument by which they are both effectual that is the Holy Ghost he makes both the one and the other to be effectual unto salvation 3. In their Object both of them are for men onely and for their glory 4. In their subjects both of them hold out Christ with all his merits purchasing and proffering pardon 5. In their end both of them are designed for the glory of Christ and salvation of the elect Quest. 4. Whether the Sacraments of the Old differ from those of the New Testament As before this is not directly to be Answered they differing and not differing in some points they differ 1. In the matter and quality of their signs theirs was a cutting off the foreskin and in eating of a Lamb ours are bread and wine 2. In some external rites and ceremonies they were to circumcise precisely the eight day and eat their Lamb at such a time of the year ours are tyed to no time to no place 3. In the easiness of the duties compare our baptisme to their bloody Circumcision and we shall be brought to bless God for our freedom 4. In their duration the Sacraments of the Old were but to endure for a season but those of the New Testament are not to be altered while the world endures They agree and are one 1. In their give Christ the only Law-giver to the Church instituted both the one and the other 2. In their signification what baptisme signifieth now Circumcision signified regeneration or a being born again and was by both held forth Christ was signified by their Lamb so he is by our bread 3. In their application they received theirs by faith and our Sacraments are applied by the same grace 4. In their end or effect the invisible grace goodness and mercy of God were represented both to them and us in the external and visible signs Quest. 5. Whether two Sacraments be sufficient under the Gospel The Church of Rome maintains the necessity of seven not to stand upon the mystery and perfection of the number she teaches their necessity upon this ground viz. There are seven things she accounts necessary for preserving the natural life of man and therefore there must be seven things to preserve the spiritual life of a Christian. 1. It is necessary that there be a birth that 's baptisme 2. That there be a grouth that 's Confirmation 3. That he receive food that is the Lords supper 4. That he receive Physick that is pennance 5. That he receive Cordials that is exteame Unction 6. That he be governed by Laws that is Order 7. That he multiply in a lawful way that is Marriage Unto which they might have added a thousand more some of these being necessary for mans well being only and so are shoos and stockings hat fire houses c. but passing these over we defend that two Sacraments are sufficient under the Gospel 1. The Scripture that contains all thing necessary for salvation binds us to no more mentions of no more if more had been necessary would not Christ have told us given us the Element and the form and promise of it all which are necessary unto Sacraments but not a syllable of any of these more then unto two therefore there are no more necessary 2. Two Sacraments were sufficient for the Iews to uphold them in the faith of the promises viz Circumcision and the Paschal Lamb. Unto which now answers baptisme and the supper therefore they are sufficient for us For 1. God shewed as great a care over them as us 2. They were as dear to him as we are 3. They were as subject to frailty as we are 3. Two Sacraments are sufficient to all spiritual mercies a believer can ask for and hope for They seal testifie assure and represent Adoption Justification Regeneration Consolation and Eternal Salvation and what more would a Christian require CHAP. II. Of Baptisme HAving spoken briefly of the Sacraments in general we come
now to the several Sacraments in particular which are baptism and the Lords supper Two Ordinances that above all others meet with most opposition we shall therefore through the light and guidance of the good word of God discover unto you their several natures beginning first with baptisme that being the first Ordinance the Church gives to her Members and the first that by her Officers they are invited unto Matth. 3.6 Iohn 3.5 Acts 2.38 Acts 9.18 Acts 10.47 Acts 17.15.33 In it we shall unfold 1. The Nature of it 2. The Elements of it 3. The End of it 4. The manner of doing it 5. The parties who ought to do it 6. Resolve some Questions SECT I. BEfore we come to describe what baptisme is it is requisite to know that there is a twofold baptisme 1. Inward which is the invisible application of the blood of Christ to the soul of the sinner for its justification which is called a Baptizing with the Holy Ghost and with fire Matth. 3.11 2. Outward which is the visible application of the Element of water in the name of the Holy Trinity to the bodies of them that are fitted for or desirous of baptisme which is called a baptizing with water Luke 3.16 Of this last we are at this time to speak of and it may be thus defined It is a Holy Ordinance instituted by God whereby a man by being dipped or sprinkled with water in the name of the Trinity is declared to be admitted into Communion with him and entered into the body of his Church 1. We call it a Holy Ordinance It appears to be so in many respects 1. In regard of him in whose name we are baptized which is in the name of the Holy and undefiled Trinity Matth. 28.19 Holy is the Father Holy is the Son Holy is the Spirit Holy Holy Holy is the Lord God of hosts Isa. 6 3. 2. It is a Holy profession which the party is baptized into he is baptized into the Holy Gospel into the most Holy faith he is brought at this time before the Father of spirits that he may stand before him in Holiness and Righteousness all the days of his life Luke 1.75 3. There are promises at this to oppose what ever is unholy we engage either by our selves or by our sureties to oppose all the enemies of the Cross of Christ and when we are of age we are bound to perform what was promised for us in infancy by our sureties if ever we expect to receive any benefit by the death or blood of Christ Sacramentally applied unto us in baptisme but of this afterward 4. In regard of that holy body into which by this we are entered we are by this Ordinance entered in an open and professed manner into the body of Christ which is the Holy and Catholick Church not to speak of the invisible which is secret and hid Baptisme takes them as Barnabas took Saul Acts 9 ● and declares that they have seen the Lords Christ and the Church beholds him as one of them and he goeth in and cometh out with them of Ierusalem i.e. the Lords people 2. It is instituted by God Baptisme is no humane Invention but hath for its being a divine sanction For 1. God first appointed the Person that did baptize Iohn 1.33 2. The Element wherewith that Person should baptize Iohn 1.33 3. Gives directions how it must be done Matth. 28.19 3. Whereby a man by being dipped in or sprinkled with water in the name of the Trinity Women from baptisme are not to be withheld since Christ is necessary for them Acts 8.12 Man is here only expressed as being of the more noble sex and first created of God The word baptize signifies not alwaies dipping 1 Cor. 10. but any kinde of washing sprinkling with dipping as shall be demonstrated in due time 4. Is declared to be admitted into Communion with him c. baptisme makes not a Christian nor makes one to have Communion with God but declares him so to be for as Circumcision was a sign only of that faith which the believer had before he was Circumcised and as every Son of Abraham was of the Church before his foreskin was cut even so all are Members of the Church by faith either actual or habitual before they be washed by the word with water that onely testifying or divulging that right which either by their own or their Parents faith they have to and in the Church SECT II. THe Element or visible sign with which this Sacrament is to be Administred according to the institution is water signifying the blood of Christ washing or sprinkling the soul for it is the blood of sprinkling 1 Pet. 1 2. and this spiritually poured forth upon the off-spring of the faithful Isa. 44.3 and promised to the seed of the true believer Now between the sign and the thing signified is a sweet and holy harmony in these following circumstances 1. Water is a necessary Element to preserve the life of man next unto aire water must be accounted of absolute necessity ye● unto all creatures is not the New birth the spiritual washing of the soul the blood of Christ applied necessary for such as would enter the Kingdom of God Iohn 3.5 2. Water is a cheap Element in most places water is almost free as the air and if it be bought the carriage is rather paid for then the water It is self generally easie to come by Christs Blood Kingdom Merits Glory is had for asking Is. 55.1 3. Water is a comfortable Element it refreshes and cherishes the spirits of every living thing It makes the birds to sing the fields to laugh revives the heart of the strongest Iudges 15.18 Nothing makes the soul look more lovely or beautiful then to be reconciled unto and adopted by God thro●gh the application of the blood of the Covenant unto it by the spirit of God Tit. 3.5.6 4. Water is a cleansing Ilement things that are soul water makes them clean Among other miseries that that New born infant typically the natural or unregenerate man Eze. 16.4 groaned under this was one that it was not washed yet God washed it with water vers 9. and made it clean the blood of Christ applied to the most polluted soul makes it become white like snow Psal. 51.7 5. Water is a Copious Element the Ocean is an inexhaustible Fountain there is enough in that to furnish all the world with water of water there is great plenty so Christ blood is an inexhaustible Fountain the Saints since the beginning of the world have been drinking of it yet it is not diminished they have been bathing in it yet not straitened Zacha. 13.1 6. It is a Common Element the Sea the Rivers are as Common to the poor as to the rich and as sweetly glide by the fields of the whistling plowman as by the furrows of the great Prince and being drunk refresh the one as well as the other So is Christ and his merits he
by some Hereticks of this generation who dips sometimes the adult by setting them upon their knees and dipping their heads in the baptist●ry pronounceth the words of the institution and infants after the same manner where without danger it may be done witness the reformed Churches of Helvet Art 21. of Sax. Art 13. The Assemblies direct Chap. 28 and the Church of England in her Rubrick or book of Common Prayer Quest. 2. Whether Infants ought not to be baptized By infants we understand such as are born of Christian parents unto whom the promise of salvation is only made and given Acts 2.39 The infants of others viz. of Heathens of Infidels being without God are also without Christ and so without hope of Eternal life Ephes. 2 12. That such infants as are born within the pale of the visible Church may be baptized that is dipped sprinkled or any other way decently washed in the name of the Lord appears from these following reasons 1. From the end of that Ordinance there are marks or distinctions that the Church of God ought to be known by and never was without one of which is baptisme as circumcision was to differ the Iew from all that were without God unto which baptisme succeeds as shall anon be proved Now to difference therefore the children of believing parents from the children of such as believe not baptisme may be Administred to them and ought 2. To them the Covenant of grace or promise of remission of sins belongs Act 2.39 the promise is unto you and to your children and to all that are af●r off that is the promise of the remission of sin of which baptisme is an outward sign and if our Adversaries were not wilfully blinde they would know what it were to be afar off Eph●s 2.13 Now the promise of the forgiveness of sins belonging to infants through the largeness of grace what should hinder but the sign of that ought to be given by the Churches charity And when shall the Adversaries of this truth finde out one place that the Covenant of grace made to believers under the Gospel is not so large as that to believers under the Law which included not themselves only but all their seed Gen. 17.10.11.12 Never Never Never 3. Unto them belongs the Kingdom of Christ Luke 18.15 All the graces that lead to Heaven and all the glory that is in Heaven belongs and is appointed for them and such as them This testimony of him who is Truth it self hath sufficient proof to discover the lawfulness even of Baptisme to such since that is a sign or earnest of their inheritance 4. Infants are Disciples of Christ He that receives one of them receiveth him and it is dangerous to offend one of those little ones that believe in him c. Matth. 18.4 5 6. Of whom doth our Saviour speak this Of that little child before him or of them that are little in the account of the world We say or then we say falsely that he speaks of both and whereas our adversaries then concludes it were dangerous to offend or anger children We conclude with them and truly it is dangerous to offend one of those little ones if it be purely upon the account that they belong to Christ as we know hath been done by Turks Jewes and Papists not otherwise for in some cases that may be a sin even against the Gospel not to offend them 5. Infants under the Law were circumcised therefore under the Gospel they are to be baptized Hence it is that Baptisme is called Circumcision 2 Col. 12. where the Apostle throws off circumcision of the flesh and placeth baptizing in the room of it And as all Iewish Proselytes were circumcised before they were owned as Gods people and therefore called upon to be circumcised so all converted to the Christian Faith were baptized before they were owned or declared Christians though both the one and the other belonged to God by faith before and were therefore called to be baptized In a word let the use and end of Circumcision be inquired after and Baptisme exactly answers it in all points It is true Circumcision was given onely to the Male because the Female was uncapable of it but both Sexes are capable sufficiently of this Sacrament and therefore to be denied to neither Acts 8.12 6. Christ gave commandment that all Disciples should be baptized Matth. 28.9 Disciple all Nations for so it is in the Greek reading Baptizing them teaching them so that all that are Disciples in all Nations are to be baptized And that even Children are Disciples appears Matth. 18.4.5 6. For whosoever receiveth even one of them in his Name receiveth him and he who offends one of them offendeth him of whom can this be said but of Disciples 7. Infants are holy and have the promise of the holy Ghost 1 Cor. 7.14 If the Parent be holy and within the Covenant then the child is holy also to say that by Holyness here is meant not bastards is to say nothing to the sence and scope of the place and to say fondly to preserve their own Diana except Holy in the Language of the Holy Ghost in another place be taken in that sence which they shall never be able to find It is also promised the Beleiver that his child shall have clean water poured upon him which is the Sign and the Spirit powred upon his seed the thing signified by that water Isa. 44.3 Can any man therefore forbid water that these children should not be baptized which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we Acts 10.47 8. From that Opposition made against Christian liberty by some Jewish Zelots may we draw an Argument of weight There were some that were alwayes pressing the point of Circumcision according to the law to have the Christians not altogether to eye Baptisme but with it Circumcision Acts 15.1 Now that Circumcision was administred upon Infants is clear and as clear it is again that the Iewes seeing that liberty that Christians assumed under the Gospel would have had them lay a great part of it aside particularly baptisme which they might have seen believers to administer upon all their seed and this makes them press Circumcision the more eagerly an Argument more then probable that the Christians baptized their Infants in those dayes when that opposition was made 9. There is nothing in the Scripture that makes against it God had but two Churches that of the Iewes in which children and Infants were marked with that Initiatory ordinance of Circumcision and by that were within the Covenant and Members of his house whereby the Parent had this comfort that God was not onely his God but the God of his seed the other Church was that of the Gentiles every member of which is a son of faithful Abraham Now when God made Lawes for the Gospel would he not have in some place or other shew● that he intended not the seal of the Covenant which is the
is a necessary qualification in prayer and must not be wanting 1 Iohn 5.17 If it be thy will must be the bridle of our desires as it was of Christs Mat. 26.39 But here we must distinguish Prayer is of two sorts 1 for things temporall for such things as concern this life as our health our wealth which must ever have this limitation If it be thy will 2 For things spirituall for such things as concern the life to come as pardon of sin grace faith to subdue lust these things we are assured God wills already both by his word and oath and therefore without this condition must be asked and God must be importuned yea heaven must be taken by violence For the obtaining of any blessing c. whether to our soules or bodies whether temporal spiritual or eternal inward or outward at home or abroad of what nature soever the blessing desired be must be asked of God for from him comes every perfect gift 7 Or diverting of any judgment That is either feared or felt whether it be upon our selves or others magistrates Ministers private persons male or female whether bond or free for all Saints Eph. 6.18 8. For whom there is hope God will be intreated there are creatures for whom no prayer must be put up God resolving to accept no sacrifice nor burned offering Such are 1. The Devils 2. The Damned 3. The Dead 4. The Sinners against the holy Ghost 1 Iohn 5.17 though the Church of Rome affirm that sin only is not easily pardoned SECT II. This calling upon God or this lifting up of the heart hath for its bottom or grounds chiefely these following particulars 1. Mans necessity Man is a creature whose frail and weak nature shews that he wants something without himself to preserve him from perishing in those troubles that continualy annoy him Ingens telum necessitas even Children will call out upon God to help them Three things there are that cheifly lifts up the heart to pray 1. Outward trouble A storme made Jonas Mariners to pray Jona 1.5 The Disciples to cry to their master Math. 8.25 The want of Children made Hannah pray 1 Sam. 1.12 Iacobs fear of death made him struggle with God Gen. 32.26 When Davids ene●ys came about him like bees then he lifted up his voyce Psal. 3.4 How many prayers take their rise from feavers pains aches sores gouts pestilence or famine 2. Inward fear When the soul is startled or touched with horrour by reason of sin then prayer takes to her self wings and flies aloft both from good men as from David Psalm 51.11 or from bad as Simon Magus Acts. 8.24 3. Future punishment men feeling a present judgment through guilt looke upon it often as the forerunner of a greater and prognosticate a heavier sentence yet to come which makes them pray with all earnestnesse as experience shews and is apparent by these two men above named 2. A second ground of prayer is Gods mercy there are severall acts and properties observed to be done and to be in God which excite a knowing Christian to this duty of prayer as 1. His promise to hear prayer Ier. 29.12 2. His compassion in the act of prayer Iob. 42.10 3. His observance in the time of prayer Act. 9 11. The properties that are in God do in a wonderfull manner enflame the affections of the devout to a chearfull praying As 1. His power to help Isa. 44.27 he hath power which can do much he hath omnipotency that can do all Gen. 17.1 2. His wisdome to Invent. 2 King 7.2 he can take the wise and the proud in their own cross foolishnesse and turn Achitophels wisdom into foolishnesse 3. His grace to pity Exod. 3 7. he takes no delight in the death of sinners nor in the teares of his people This poor man cryed and the Lord delivered him 3. A third ground is Christs intreaty He is dayly makeing Intercession For the ●ransgressours Isa. 51.12 The Christian believes that Christ is at the right hand o● God that he is an Advocate for them with the Father which confidence puts them often to their devotions being strengthned by three acts that are in the prayers of the son of God 1. Soundnesse and perfection Rom. 8.27 2. Fervency and affection Rom. 8 34 35. 3. Delight and acceptation the one on his part the other on Gods Ioh. 11.42 4. A fourth ground is prayer it selfe pressed as a duty God will be enquired after for all those mercys that his omniscience knows his people want and his omnipotence can supply yea his hearts desire that they may receive Yet he will be called upon in the day of Trouble Psal. 50.15 this puts his Saints to the practise of prayer being thereunto strenghtened by three considerable considerations 1. Christ would receive nothing but by way of prayer Matth. 26.53 2. Christ never gave another way to procure mercy Matth. 24.20 3. The Saints in former generations used no other way to receive mercy Dan. 9.3 4. SECT III. We are now to see the parts of this petitionary kind of prayer and they are cheifly three 1. Supplication 2. Postulation 3. Intercession 1. Supplication that is for the removeing of evill of what kind soever whether of sin or punishment whether of soul or body This hath four things in its eye in reference unto evil 1. That the evill may be prevented and never come that it may passe away as a cloud and the place wherein it is feared may never know it 2 King 22.13 2. That the evill may be removed if God will have it come then prayer is made that God would remove his scourge and plague and turne away his anger Daniel 9.16 3. That the evil may be lessened if Gods anger be not yet turned away but his hand is stretched out still then they pray Domine ne in furere if God will correct they would not have him do it in anger and if he will chasten they would not have him do it in his hot displeasure Psal. 6.1 but yet if he will visit their Iniquity with stripes then more strength is called whereby they may be the better able to bear it 1 Corinth 10.13 4. That the evil may be sanctified that the judgment inflicted might have such an influence on the party affected as to make him more watchfull over his sin Psal. 39.9 and that grace might come with it to sustain the soul in the time of its abode 2 Cor. 12.8 2. Postulation that is for the procuring or obtaineing of any good of grace Psal. 73.29 as nature Matth. 8.2 As 1. For things sutable to thy calling 1 Kings 3.9 2. For things necessary to thy nature Mat. 6.11 3. For things covenient to thy temper Pro. 30.9 3. Intercession that is such petitions as are put up for the good of others each Christian must and ought to be sensible of anothers want and willing if it were but by prayers to relieve them whether they be our Equals Inferiours
the Spirit as Faith Humility Charity c. with whcih graces whosoever prays by the spirit and the humble or faithfull soul shall by putting in practise the rules before given make known their humble and faithfull petitions with good apt orderly and found words as well as with unseigned lips Quest. 2. VVhether the wicked be bound to pray That none are exempted from this duty but that it is to be performed by all good or bad wicked and prophane by the sound Christian and by the formall Hypocrite ppeares 1. The duty of prayer is as large and as universall as that of reading hearing c. therefore to be practised by all 2. Prayer is a converting ordinance It is a meanes appointed for the obtaining of pardon of sin of the Holy Ghost of drawing nigh unto God and therefore no sinner exempted from it 3. The neglect of prayer is charged upon them as a sin Psal. 14.2 Psal. 10.4 4. The consciences of wicked men accuseth them when they have not prayed 5. God hath sometimes accepted the prayers of very wicked men even of them that have sold themselves to do wickedly 1 King 21.27 Quest. 3. Whether the set forms of Prayers used by law in the Church of England be Lawfull Before this question be directly answered we shall premise a few things 1. That the book of Common prayer had never been defended in this nature but that the crossnesse and peevishnesse of hot spirited men and passionate writers hath so defamed the the thing it self and also the users of it that it appears to be thought by them a sin unto Death Publickly or privatly to own it in the Church 2. That this defence doth not at all imply its necessity I am perswaded the Church of England might stand without it and may stand in purity by it Unifomity is necessary for the well-being of the Church as was known to the publishers of the Directory and if the Magistrate will have uniformity another way it may be had and if this way it may be used 3. That much of the Common-Prayer is in the Masse may be acknowledged to its honour It is but a furious and blind zeal that makes men inveigh against the Churches practise in this because of its affinity to Rome since we are to preserve the peace of the Church to our utmost we are not to decline too far from any opinion or practise that is lawfull the Jews preists did Sacrifice so did Baals The Papists uses this or that form of prayer if it be lawfull so may I that the breach or quarrel may appear to be one his part not on mine what ever is in the Masse that is lawfull and according to godliness is not to be despised and what ever is otherwise is to be condemned and shunned 4. That the book of Common-prayer might be altered and otherwise framed in some points bettered is not rationally to be denyed what book was ever composed by the wit or art of men but others might alter it and in some measure better it Let the Guisels view their Directory and I doubt not but they will find that somewhat might be left out and something put in part of it expunged and part of it enlarged 5. That by no meanes it ought to jostle out preaching is granted and is easily to be defended Prophecying is that ordinance that cheifly discovers the secrets of the heart that deceitfull part of man Prayer and Sacraments hath done vertuously but this excells them all and therefore for none of them is it to be disesteemed 6. That the Author hath competency of gifts for which he desires to be thankfull to do without Common-prayer as well as others Can they baptise pray bury marry c. without it absit a verbo I. Etantia so can he can they visit or pray sutably over the sick without it so can he can they promptly and readily vary their petitions at any time sutable to the duty in hand so can he In obedience to authority he useth it and so ought others though their gifts were more eminent then they are These things being considered we come now to answer the question And That the Liturgy Service book or Common-prayer of the Church of England is lawfull and with a safe conscience may be used appears by these following reasons 1. From the piety eminency and godlinesse of its composers they were men eminent and famous in their generation opposers of and to death some of them suffered for their not compliance to popish superstition when they were rooting out popery and disclaiming the Pope with all his adherents was that book compiled shall we Imagin the Guisels when they were composing the Directory were establishing Episcopacy if it were found to conjecture that why ought we to conceite the other in collecting the formes of that book of Common-prayer were confirming popery when of any other they most opposed it and suffered most by it It will not be a needlesse digression to spend a little time in shewing the occasion of compiling the book of Common-prayer and see the compilers The occasion of it was breifly this When Edward the sixth was by the Grace of God Crowned King of England c. and it being in his mind to perfect that reformation begun by his Father made many glorious acts for puryfying of the Church from Romish superstition particularly for administring the Sacrament of the supper under both kinds there were some in that time obeyed the King and some that did not so that the Sacraments were given by some one way and by others another way some were for the King some for the Pope and some were neuter to rectify which abuse and to extirpate popery with as little voyce as could be a writ is directed to the Archbishop of Canterbury who afterwards was burned by Queen Mary for his adhering to the Catholick or as the terme now is the protestant faith by the King and his counsell requiring him with others to meet and consult how to prevent for the future and remove that confusion for the present the service of the Church being then various after the use of Sarum Of York of Bangor and of Lincolne and besides them diverse other formes and bookes called Antiphoners Missales Graites Processionals Manuells Legends Pies Portuasses Couchers Iournalls Ordinals In a word every man used what form fashion or manner pleased him best This writ being sent to those persons hereafter to be mentioned they meet and after much debate consulting with the antient liturgyes of the Church expunging from them all what ever was not either in or agreeable to the word of God presented to that Godly King a book entituled The book of the Common-prayer and administration of the sacraments and other rites and Ceremonys of the Church after the use of the Church of England at the reading of which his Majesty being very thankfull both to God and man presented it to both his houses of Parliament assembled
the garden that the Cup might passe from him and upon the Crosse that God had forsaken hm men in a ditch will cry help help and in a Town fier fier and yet no vain repetition a soul may cry Lord have mercy upon us Lord have mercy upon us O Christ hear us and be singularly devout 2. Through holy affection Thus Daniel often calls Lord hear Dan. 9.17 18 19. So Solomon often repeats Then here thou in h●aven thy dwelling place and forgive or do which is above 7. times prayed for in a prayer 2 King 8. 3. Through strength of faith so the Psalmist Blessed be the Lord for evermore Amen and Amen so the Church Reve. 22.20 In a word if repetitions barely considered as such were unlawfull the Church must be blamed for singing and the Psalmist for composing the Psalm 163. and the 57 and the 42 and the 67. In all which Psalms that there are repetitions in the sence above spoken is apparent and that they are and may be used without sin is not to be questioned 2. Vaine repetitions which are to be shunned in prayer and of them we are forwarned by our Saviour Mat. 6.7 of which we have above spoken Now repetitions are vaine 1. When they are affected as strains of Eloquence and signs of wit when to show the quaintnesse of the expession that it may be observed it is brought over again and again such were those of the Gentiles and Heathens 2. When they are Impertient empty frothy unprofitable when there is no Spiritual life nor hear holy zeal nor activity and such vaine repetitions can never be in a book they being in the cold heart and dul soul of a Christian. 3. When they are Idolized when men conceit that God either will refuse to heare them if they repeat not or that he will here them the better for them that is a vaine repetition Thus the Gentiles thought they should be heard for their much babling or speaking Mat. 6.7 4. When they are pretended when men sets themselves to repeat that they may be thought to spend much time in prayer and so be accounted religious which is indeed a taking Gods name in vaine and abusing of his eare by their vain and needless repetition From which we conclude that no vain repetitions are in the book of Common-prayers they being of that nature that the soul and heart of man may zealously and holyly close withall And let me declare my thoughts in this particular since the reestablishment of the Common-prayer I have seen more ardent zeal more watery eyes more lifted up hands and reverent deportment in the publick Churches at the using of those formes then ever I saw in my life at extempore deliveryes Not that I am against those prayers whose rise is immediatly from the heart whether in the house top or in the closet but this I say if set formes were used as they ought to be by laying aside prejudice they would never be spoke against and if conceived prayer or as the phrase is extempore were more used it would not be so much undervalued as it is If he that hath utterance in prayer and promptnesse on a sudden to expresse himself be thankfull he doth well but if he think himself the better Christian because he seeth another use a forme In this he is not to be praised Men of themselves may make vaine repetitions yea vaine petitions yet the same request that to the and by the is vaine may be to another a holy ardent and affectionate request condemn not therefore the service of the Church which in all things is well ordered and sure but thy own heart for not having life enough to answer Amen and Amen to all her holy repetitions but of these things we have spoken elsewhere Quest. 5. Whether it would be convenient to alter any part of these formes This question shall not be directly answered being a matter wherein I ought not to be positive but shall lay down my thoughts concerning both the negative and affirmative part resolving to acquiesce in and submit unto lawfull Authority When those formes are considered and the nature of its adversaries marked in strength of reason it seems inconvenient to alter those formes 1. From the wisdom and opinion of King Iames of blessed and glorious memory who in his Proclamation for ratifying Common-prayer prefixed to that service after the Hampton Court conference resolved never to give way to any alteration by the frivolous suggestions of any light Spirit not being ignorant of the Inconveniences that do arise in Government by admitting Innovation in things once setled by mature deliberation the danger that followes such alterations we shall for the present leave to Statsmen to consider 2. It would incourage brain sick people to proceed further in their opposition to pleasure them in this is but to make ●hem bold in asking a reformation or alteration in higher matters let them in this be satisfied they will but boast and create fresh strength to bawl for something of another nature to let the Common-prayer stand as it doth will be a barre to keep them from approaching higher and shall be a bone for them to pick upon and busie themselves about that his Majesty and his counsell may dive and follow their designs with the lesse trouble the Kings Crown may at last come under some mens censure if every thing be altered with which they are displeased It is good therefore to prevent an evil at first and let those formes stand for the future as they do for the present 3. It will bring the Liturgy itself under contempt not only by Forriagners but natives what reverence or devotion can the generality of people have to it when at every crosse humour of malecontent persons it must be altered and reformed and again reformed and again reformed which consideration moved the glorious King Iames in that forementioned Proclamation to assert That such is the unquietnesse and unstedfastnesse of some dispositions effecting every year new formes of things as if they should be followed in their unconstancy would make all actions of State rediculous and contemptible 4. It would never please the party now offended Let their pretences be what they will it is the book in the bulk of it with which they are displeased a forme that hath in it a prayer for a Bishop will never be digested by many except they be of that society or dignity themselves if they should be quiet this s●ring yet next curow time they would be mad again and the alteration will not please them except it be altered into a Directory and that will not please the people neither so that no satisfaction peace quiet or content can be rationally hoped for therefore it were best to let Common-prayer live as it doth and and remaine as it was brought by law unto us since the alteration will never make us more quiet in matters of religion but the worse