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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:33:05 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Works of Mr. George Gillespie (Vol. 1
+of 2) by George Gillespie
+
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no
+restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under
+the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or
+online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license
+
+
+
+Title: The Works of Mr. George Gillespie (Vol. 1 of 2)
+
+Author: George Gillespie
+
+Release Date: October 8, 2008 [Ebook #26849]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WORKS OF MR. GEORGE GILLESPIE (VOL. 1 OF 2)***
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE WORKS OF
+
+ MR. GEORGE GILLESPIE
+
+ MINISTER OF EDINBURGH,
+
+ AND ONE OF THE COMMISSIONERS FROM SCOTLAND
+
+ TO THE WESTMINSTER ASSEMBLY, 1644
+
+ NOW FIRST COLLECTED.
+
+ WITH MEMOIR OF HIS LIFE AND WRITINGS,
+
+ BY M. W. HETHERINGTON, LL.D.
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. I.
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE AND OLIVER AND BOYD.
+
+ M. OGLE & SON AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS & CO, LONDON
+
+ 1846.
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+MEMOIR OF THE REV. GEORGE GILLESPIE.
+APPENDIX. EXTRACTS FROM WODROW'S ANALECTA (MAITLAND CLUB EDITION)
+DISPUTE AGAINST THE ENGLISH POPISH CEREMONIES OBTRUDED ON THE CHURCH OF
+SCOTLAND.
+ DEDICATION
+ AUTHOR'S PREFACE
+ PROLOGUE.
+ ORDER.
+ THE FIRST PART. AGAINST THE NECESSITY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+ CHAPTER I. THAT OUR OPPOSITES DO URGE THE CEREMONIES AS THINGS
+ NECESSARY.
+ CHAPTER II. THE REASON TAKEN OUT OF ACTS XV. TO PROVE THE NECESSITY
+ OF THE CEREMONIES, BECAUSE OF THE CHURCH'S APPOINTMENT, CONFUTED.
+ CHAPTER III. THAT THE CEREMONIES THUS IMPOSED AND URGED AS THINGS
+ NECESSARY, DO BEREAVE US OF OUR CHRISTIAN LIBERTY, FIRST, BECAUSE
+ OUR PRACTICE IS ADSTRICTED.
+ CHAPTER IV. THAT THE CEREMONIES TAKE AWAY OUR CHRISTIAN LIBERTY
+ PROVED BY A SECOND REASON, NAMELY, BECAUSE CONSCIENCE ITSELF IS
+ BOUND AND ADSTRICTED.
+ CHAPTER V. THAT THE CEREMONIES TAKE AWAY CHRISTIAN LIBERTY, PROVED
+ BY A THIRD REASON, VIZ., BECAUSE THEY ARE URGED UPON SUCH AS, IN
+ THEIR CONSCIENCES, DO CONDEMN THEM.
+ CHAPTER VI. THAT THE CEREMONIES TAKE AWAY CHRISTIAN LIBERTY PROVED
+ BY A FOURTH REASON, VIZ., BECAUSE THEY ARE PRESSED UPON US BY NAKED
+ WILL AND AUTHORITY, WITHOUT GIVING ANY REASON TO SATISFY OUR
+ CONSCIENCES.
+ CHAPTER VII. THAT FESTIVAL DAYS TAKE AWAY OUR LIBERTY, WHICH GOD
+ HATH GIVEN US, PROVED; AND FIRST OUT OF THE LAW.
+ CHAPTER VIII. THAT FESTIVAL DAYS TAKE AWAY OUR CHRISTIAN LIBERTY,
+ PROVED OUT OF THE GOSPEL.
+ CHAPTER IX. SHOWING THE WEAKNESS OF SOME PRETENCES WHICH OUR
+ OPPOSITES USE FOR HOLIDAYS.
+ THE SECOND PART. AGAINST THE EXPEDIENCY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+ CHAPTER I. AGAINST SOME OF OUR OPPOSITES, WHO ACKNOWLEDGE THE
+ INCONVENIENCY OF THE CEREMONIES, AND YET WOULD HAVE US YIELD TO
+ THEM.
+ CHAPTER II. AGAINST THOSE OF OUR OPPOSITES WHO PLEAD FOR THE
+ CEREMONIES AS THINGS EXPEDIENT.
+ CHAPTER III. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY ARE
+ PREPARATIVES FOR GREATER EVILS.
+ CHAPTER IV. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY HINDER
+ EDIFICATION.
+ CHAPTER V. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY ARE
+ OCCASIONS OF INJURY AND CRUELTY.
+ CHAPTER VI. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY HARDEN
+ AND CONFIRM THE PAPISTS.
+ CHAPTER VII. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY
+ DISTURB THE PEACE OF THE CHURCH.
+ CHAPTER VIII. THAT THE INEXPEDIENCY OF THE CEREMONIES, IN RESPECT OF
+ THE SCANDAL OF THE WEAK, MAY BE PLAINLY PERCEIVED. TWELVE
+ PROPOSITIONS TOUCHING SCANDAL ARE PREMITTED.
+ CHAPTER IX. ALL THE DEFENCES OF THE CEREMONIES, USED TO JUSTIFY THEM
+ AGAINST THE SCANDAL IMPUTED TO THEM, ARE CONFUTED.
+ THE THIRD PART. AGAINST THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES.
+ CHAPTER I. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE UNLAWFUL, BECAUSE SUPERSTITIOUS,
+ WHICH IS PARTICULARLY INSTANCED IN HOLIDAYS, AND MINISTERING THE
+ SACRAMENTS IN PRIVATE PLACES.
+ CHAPTER II. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE UNLAWFUL BECAUSE THEY ARE
+ MONUMENTS OF BY-PAST IDOLATRY, WHICH NOT BEING NECESSARY TO BE
+ RETAINED, SHOULD BE UTTERLY ABOLISHED, BECAUSE OF THEIR IDOLATROUS
+ ABUSES: ALL WHICH IS PARTICULARLY MADE GOOD OF KNEELING.
+ CHAPTER III. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE UNLAWFUL, BECAUSE THEY SORT US
+ WITH IDOLATERS, BEING THE BADGES OF PRESENT IDOLATRY AMONG THE
+ PAPISTS.
+ CHAPTER IV. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE IDOLS AMONG THE FORMALISTS
+ THEMSELVES; AND THAT KNEELING IN THE LORD'S SUPPER BEFORE THE BREAD
+ AND WINE, IN THE ACT OF RECEIVING THEM, IS FORMALLY IDOLATRY.
+ CHAPTER V. THE FIFTH ARGUMENT AGAINST THE LAWFULNESS OF THE
+ CEREMONIES TAKEN FROM THE MYSTICAL AND SIGNIFICANT NATURE OF THEM.
+ CHAPTER VI. THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES IS FALSELY
+ GROUNDED UPON THE HOLY SCRIPTURE; WHERE SUCH PLACES AS ARE ALLEGED
+ BY OUR OPPOSITES, EITHER FOR ALL THE CEREMONIES IN GENERAL, OR FOR
+ ANY ONE OF THEM IN PARTICULAR, ARE VINDICATED FROM THEM.
+ CHAPTER VII. THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES CANNOT BE
+ WARRANTED BY ANY ECCLESIASTICAL LAW, NOR BY ANY POWER WHICH THE
+ CHURCH HATH TO PUT ORDER TO THINGS BELONGING TO DIVINE WORSHIP.
+ CHAPTER VIII. THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES CANNOT BE
+ WARRANTED BY ANY ORDINANCE OF THE CIVIL MAGISTRATE; WHOSE POWER IN
+ THINGS SPIRITUAL OR ECCLESIASTICAL IS EXPLAINED.
+ DIGRESSION I. OF THE VOCATION OF MEN OF ECCLESIASTICAL ORDER.
+ DIGRESSION II. OF THE CONVOCATION AND MODERATION OF SYNODS.
+ DIGRESSION III. OF THE JUDGING OF CONTROVERSIES AND QUESTIONS OF
+ FAITH.
+ DIGRESSION IV. OF THE POWER OF THE KEYS, AND ECCLESIASTICAL
+ CENSURES.
+ CHAPTER IX. THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES CANNOT BE
+ WARRANTED BY THE LAW OF NATURE.
+ THE FOURTH PART. AGAINST THE INDIFFERENCY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+ CHAPTER I. OF OUR OPPOSITES' PLEADING FOR THE INDIFFERENCY OF THE
+ CEREMONIES.
+ CHAPTER II. OF THE NATURE OF THINGS INDIFFERENT.
+ CHAPTER III. WHETHER THERE BE ANYTHING INDIFFERENT IN ACTU EXERCITO.
+ CHAPTER IV. OF THE RULE BY WHICH WE ARE TO MEASURE AND TRY WHAT
+ THINGS ARE INDIFFERENT.
+ CHAPTER V. THE FIRST POSITION WHICH WE BUILD UPON THE GROUND
+ CONFIRMED IN THE FORMER CHAPTER.
+ CHAPTER VI. ANOTHER POSITION BUILT UPON THE SAME GROUND.
+ CHAPTER VII. OTHER POSITIONS BUILT UPON THE FORMER GROUND.
+ CHAPTER VIII. THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE NOT THINGS INDIFFERENT TO THE
+ CHURCH OF SCOTLAND; BECAUSE SHE DID ABJURE AND REPUDIATE THEM BY A
+ MOST SOLEMN AND GENERAL OATH.
+ CHAPTER IX. A RECAPITULATION OF SUNDRY OTHER REASONS AGAINST THE
+ INDIFFERENCY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+A BROTHERLY EXAMINATION OF SOME PASSAGES OF MR COLEMAN'S LATE SERMON UPON
+JOB XI. 20.
+ NOTICE.
+ EXTRACT FROM COLEMAN'S SERMON.
+ A BROTHERLY EXAMINATION, &c.
+NIHIL RESPONDES: OR A DISCOVERY OF THE EXTREME UNSATISFACTORINESS OF MR
+COLEMAN'S PIECE.
+ THAT MR COLEMAN DOTH NOT ONLY PREVARICATE, BUT CONTRADICT HIMSELF,
+ CONCERNING THE STATE OF THE QUESTION.
+ THE PARTICULARS IN MY BRIEF EXAMINATION, WHICH MR COLEMAN EITHER
+ GRANTETH EXPRESSLY, OR ELSE DOTH NOT REPLY UNTO.
+ HIS ABUSING OF THE SCRIPTURES.
+ HIS ERRORS IN DIVINITY.
+ HIS ABUSING OF THE HONOURABLE HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT.
+ HIS ABUSING THE REVEREND ASSEMBLY OF DIVINES.
+ HIS CALUMNIES.
+ THE REPUGNANCY OF HIS DOCTRINE TO THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT.
+MALE AUDIS; OR, AN ANSWER TO MR COLEMAN'S MALE DICIS.
+ PREFACE TO THE READER.
+ CHAPTER I. THAT MR COLEMAN DOTH STILL CONTRADICT HIMSELF IN THE STATING
+ OF THIS PRESENT CONTROVERSY ABOUT CHURCH GOVERNMENT.
+ CHAPTER II. A CONFUTATION OF THAT WHICH MR COLEMAN HATH SAID AGAINST
+ CHURCH GOVERNMENT; SHOWING ALSO THAT HIS LAST REPLY IS NOT MORE, BUT
+ LESS SATISFACTORY THAN THE FORMER, AND FOR THE MOST PART IS BUT A
+ TERGIVERSATION AND FLEEING FROM ARGUMENTS BROUGHT AGAINST HIM, AND FROM
+ MAKING GOOD HIS OWN ASSERTIONS AND ARGUMENTS CONCERNING THE DISTINCTION
+ OF CIVIL AND CHURCH GOVERNMENT.
+ CHAPTER III. THAT MR COLEMAN'S AND MR HUSSEY'S OPPOSING OF CHURCH
+ GOVERNMENT NEITHER IS NOR CAN BE RECONCILED WITH THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND
+ COVENANT.
+ CHAPTER IV. MR COLEMAN AND MR HUSSEY'S ERRORS IN DIVINITY.
+ CHAPTER V. THE PRELATICAL WAY AND TENETS OF MR COLEMAN AND MR HUSSEY,
+ REPUGNANT ALSO, IN DIVERS PARTICULARS, TO THE VOTES AND ORDINANCES OF
+ PARLIAMENT.
+ CHAPTER VI. MR COLEMAN'S WRONGING OF THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND.
+ CHAPTER VII. CALUMNIES CONFUTED, AND THAT QUESTION BRIEFLY CLEARED,
+ WHETHER THE MAGISTRATE BE CHRIST'S VICEGERENT.
+ CHAPTER VIII. THAT MR COLEMAN DOTH GREAT VIOLENCE, BOTH TO HIS OWN
+ WORDS AND TO THE WORDS OF OTHERS WHOM HE CITETH.
+ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN PROPOSITIONS CONCERNING THE MINISTRY AND GOVERNMENT
+OF THE CHURCH.
+ PROPOSITIONS.
+A SERMON PREACHED BEFORE THE HONOURABLE HOUSE OF COMMONS AT THEIR LATE
+SOLEMN FAST
+ PREFACE TO THE READER.
+ SERMON.
+A SERMON PREACHED BEFORE THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE HOUSE OF LORDS, IN THE
+ABBEY CHURCH AT WESTMINSTER.
+ PREFACE TO THE READER.
+ SERMON.
+Footnotes
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENT.
+
+
+(Transcriber's Note: This book is an 1846 reprint of George Gillespie's
+books, which were originally published separately. Each is reprinted here
+with its original title page and other front matter. The paper book had
+no page numbers; each book is transcribed here with its own page
+numbering, which may have no correspondence with the publisher's idea of
+the page numbers.)
+
+In presenting to the public, for the first time, a Complete Edition of the
+Works of Mr GEORGE GILLESPIE, there are two or three points to which the
+Publisher begs to direct special attention.
+
+Although the great value of Gillespie's various works was well known to
+many, yet there had been no recent reprints of them, and they had become
+so very scarce that it was with great difficulty any of them could be
+obtained. Recent controversies had brought forward the very subjects which
+had been so ably treated by Gillespie; and it was felt, that justice to
+the Church of which he was so great an ornament, and to the cause which he
+so strenuously supported, demanded the republication of his whole works,
+in a form, and at a price, which should render them generally accessible.
+
+In prosecuting this task the idea was suggested, that it would be
+desirable to publish what remained of those Notes on the Proceedings of
+the Westminster Assembly of Divines, which Gillespie was known to have
+written, if the permission of the Advocates, in whose Library they were,
+could be obtained. That permission was most readily granted. The
+manuscript volumes, of what purported to be Gillespie's Notes, form part
+of the large collection entitled, the Wodrow MSS. They appear, however,
+not to be Gillespie's own Notes, but copies separately taken from the
+original. The fact that they are manifestly separate and independent
+transcriptions, furnishes good evidence of the genuineness and
+authenticity of the original manuscripts, though it is not now known where
+they are, if still in existence. In making a new copy for the press every
+facility was granted by the Librarians of the Advocates' Library, with
+their well-known courtesy and liberality; and much aid was rendered by
+David Laing, Esq., a gentleman thoroughly conversant with Scottish
+ecclesiastical literature, and generously ready to communicate to others
+the benefit of his own extensive and accurate knowledge.
+
+Being desirous to render this Edition of Gillespie's works as full and
+complete as possible, several small and comparatively unimportant papers
+have been copied from the Wodrow Manuscript, some account of which will be
+found at the close of the Memoir. An appendix to the Memoir contains all
+that could be gleaned from Wodrow's Analecta, as printed by the Maitland
+Club.
+
+The Memoir itself has been drawn up with considerable care, and is as
+extensive as the paucity of materials for its composition would admit. It
+might, indeed, have been enlarged by a more full account of the great
+events which occurred during the period in which Gillespie lived; but this
+would have been an unfair changing of biography into history, and would
+not have been suited to the object in view.
+
+As the parts of the Collected Edition of Gillespie's Works were issued
+successively, they have been paged separately; and may be arranged in
+volumes according to the taste of their purchasers. It will, however, be
+found most expedient to adopt a chronological arrangement, such as is
+indicated in the closing pages of the Memoir.
+
+
+
+
+
+MEMOIR OF THE REV. GEORGE GILLESPIE.
+
+
+George Gillespie was one of the most remarkable men of the period in which
+he lived, singularly fertile as that period was in men of great abilities.
+He seems to have been almost unknown, till the publication of his first
+work, which dazzled and astonished his countrymen by the rare combination
+it displayed of learning and genius of the highest order. From that time
+forward, he held an undisputed position among the foremost of the
+distinguished men by whose talents and energy the Church of Scotland was
+delivered from prelatic despotism. Yet, although greatly admired by all
+his compeers during his brilliant career, so very little has been recorded
+respecting him, that we can but glean a scanty supply of materials, from a
+variety of sources, out of which to construct a brief memoir of his life
+
+We have not met with any particular reference to the family from which
+George Gillespie was descended, except a very brief notice of his father,
+the Rev. John Gillespie, in Livingston's "Memorable Characteristics." From
+this we learn that he was minister at Kirkcaldy, and that he was, to use
+Livingston's language, "a thundering preacher." In that town George
+Gillespie was born; but, as the earlier volumes of the Session Register of
+Births and Baptisms have been lost, the precise year of his birth cannot
+be ascertained from that source. It could not, however, have been earlier
+than 1612, in which year his father was chosen to the second charge in
+Kirkcaldy, as appears from the town records, nor later than 1613, as the
+existing Register commences January, 1614, and, in the end of that year,
+the birth of a daughter of Mr John Gillespie is registered, and again in
+1610, of a son, baptised Patrick. It may be assumed, therefore, with
+tolerable certainty, that George Gillespie was born early in the year
+1613, a date which agrees with that engraven on his tombstone. Wodrow,
+indeed, states, on the authority of Mr Simpson, that Gillespie was born on
+the 21st of January, 1613.
+
+Nothing has been recorded respecting the youthful period of Gillespie's
+life. The earliest notice of him which appears, is merely sufficient to
+intimate that his mind must have been carefully cultivated from his
+boyhood, as it relates to the time of his being sent to the University of
+St Andrews, to prosecute his studies, in 1629, when he was, of course, in
+his 16th year. It appears to have been the custom of the Presbytery of
+Kirkcaldy, as of many others at that time, to support young men of merit
+at the University, as Presbytery Bursars, by means of the contributions of
+the parishes within its bounds. In the Session Record of Kirkcaldy the
+following statement occurs, dated November, 1629:--"The Session are content
+that Mr George Gillespie shall have as much money of our Session, for his
+interteynment, as Dysart gives, viz. 20 merks, being our Presbytery
+Bursar." In some of the brief biographical notices of him which have been
+given, we are informed that during the course of his attendance at the
+University, he gave ample evidence of both genius and industry, by the
+rapid growth and development of mental power, and the equally rapid
+acquirement of extensive learning, in both of which respects he surpassed
+his fellow-students. That this must have been the case, his future
+eminence, so early achieved, sufficiently proves; but nothing of a very
+definite nature, relating to that period, has been preserved.
+
+When he had completed his academic career, and was ready to enter into the
+office of the ministry, his progress was obstructed by a difficulty which,
+for a time, proved insurmountable. Being conscientiously convinced that
+the prelatic system of church government is of human invention, and not of
+Divine institution, and having seen the bitter fruits it bore in Scotland,
+he would not submit to receive ordination from a bishop, and could not, at
+that juncture, obtain admission into the ministerial office without it.
+Though thus excluded from the object of his pursuit, he found congenial
+employment for his pious and active mind in the household of Lord Kenmure,
+where he resided as domestic chaplain, till the death of that nobleman in
+September, 1634. Soon afterwards we find him discharging a similar duty in
+the family of the Earl of Cassilis, and, at the same time, acting as tutor
+to Lord Kennedy, the Earl's eldest son. This latter employment furnished
+him with both leisure and inducement to prosecute his studies, and that,
+too, in the very direction to which his mind had been already predisposed.
+But, in order to obtain an intelligible view of the state of matters in
+Scotland at that period, we must take a brief survey of the events which
+had been moulding the aspect of both church and kingdom for some time
+before.
+
+It may be assumed as a point which no person of competent knowledge and
+candid mind will deny or dispute, that the Reformed Church of Scotland
+was, from its very origin, Presbyterian; equally opposed to the prelatic
+superiority of one minister over others, and to the authority of the civil
+power in spiritual matters. This point, therefore, we need not occupy
+space in proving; but we may suggest, that there is a much closer and more
+important connexion between the two elements here specified, than is
+generally remarked. For, as a little reflection will show, without the
+pre-eminence of some small number of ministers over the rest, the civil
+power cannot obtain the means of directly exercising an authoritative
+control in spiritual matters. Even the indirect methods of corruption
+which may be employed can be but partially successful, and may at any time
+be defeated, whenever the general body shall be restored to purity and put
+forth its inherent power. A truly presbyterian church, therefore, never
+can be thoroughly depended on by civil rulers who wish to use it as a mere
+engine of state for political purposes; consequently, a truly presbyterian
+church has never found much favour in the estimation of the civil
+power,--and, it may be added, never will, till the civil power itself
+become truly Christian. Thus viewed, it was not strange that the civil
+power in Scotland, whether wielded by a regent such as Morton, or a king
+like James VI., should strenuously and perseveringly seek the subversion
+of the Presbyterian Church. In the earlier stage of the struggle, first
+Morton, and then James, attempted force, but found the attempt to be in
+vain. At length the King seemed inclined to leave off the hopeless and
+pernicious contest; and, in the year 1592, an Act of Parliament was
+passed, ratifying all the essential elements of the Presbyterian Church,
+in doctrine, government, discipline, and worship. But this proved to be
+merely a cessation of hostilities on the part of the King, preparatory to
+their resumption in a more insidious and dangerous manner, and by the dark
+instrumentality of his boasted "king-craft."
+
+The first indication of the crafty monarch's designs was in the year 1597,
+when he, "of his great zeal and singular affection which he always has to
+the advancement of the true religion, presently professed within this
+realm," to use his own words, enacted that all who should be appointed to
+the prelatic dignity, should enjoy the privilege of sitting and voting in
+Parliament. The pretence was, that these persons would attend better to
+the interests of the Church than could be done by laymen; the intention
+was, to introduce the prelatic order and subvert the Presbyterian Church.
+And, that this might be done quietly and imperceptibly, the question
+respecting the influence which these parliamentary representatives of the
+Church should have in the government of the Church itself, was left to be
+determined by the King and the General Assembly. Many of the most
+judicious and clear-sighted of the ministers perceived the dangerous
+tendency of this measure, and gave it their decided and strenuous
+opposition; but others, wearied out by their conflict with the avaricious
+and tyrannical conduct of the nobility, which they hoped thus more
+effectually to resist, or gained over by the persuasions of the King and
+the court party, supported the proposal. The result was, that the measure
+was carried in the Assembly of 1598, by a majority of ten, and that
+majority formed chiefly by the votes of the elders, whom the King had
+induced to support his views. Scarcely had even this step been taken, when
+the Church became alarmed at the possible consequences; and, in order to
+avoid increasing that alarm, all further consideration of the measure,
+with reference to its subordinate details, was postponed till the meeting
+of the next Assembly. Nor was this enough. As the time for the next
+Assembly drew near, the King felt so uncertain of success, that he
+prorogued the appointed meeting, and betook himself to those private
+artifices by which his previous conquest had been gained.
+
+When the Assembly of 1600 met, the most intense interest was felt by the
+whole kingdom in its proceedings, all men perceiving that upon its
+decision would depend the continuation or the overthrow of the
+presbyterian form of church government in Scotland. The King's first step
+was the arbitrary exclusion from the Assembly of the celebrated Andrew
+Melville. The discussion commenced respecting the propriety of ministers
+voting in Parliament. But when those who favoured the measure could not
+meet the argument of its opponents, the King again interposed, and
+authoritatively declared that the preceding General Assembly had already
+decided the general question in the affirmative; and that they had now
+only to determine subordinate arrangements. The measure was thus saved
+from defeat. The next question, whether the parliamentary ministers should
+hold their place for life, or be annually elected, was decided in favour
+of annual election. Yet James prevailed upon the cleric to frame an
+ambiguous statement in the minute of proceedings, virtually granting what
+the Assembly had rejected. Even then, though thus both overborne and
+tricked by the King, the Church framed a number of carefully expressed
+"caveats," or cautions, for protecting her liberties, and guarding against
+the introduction of Prelacy. It was not, however, the intention of the
+King to pay any regard to these "caveats," so soon as he might think it
+convenient to set them aside; and, accordingly, within a few months he
+appointed three bishops to the vacant sees of Ross, Aberdeen, and
+Caithness, directly in violation of all the "caveats" by which he had
+agreed that the appointment of ecclesiastical commissioners to Parliament
+should be regulated.
+
+That mysterious event, the Gowry conspiracy, and the views taken of it by
+some of the best and most influential of the ministers, tended to alter
+the aspect of the struggle between the King and the Church; and though the
+King twice interposed to change the Assembly's time and place of meeting
+by his own authority, contrary to the provisions of the act, 1592, yet the
+church succeeded in maintaining a large measure of its primitive freedom
+and purity, against the encroachments of the crafty and perfidious monarch
+and his "creatures," to use their own phrase, the bishops.
+
+The Assembly of 1602, however, was the last that retained anything like
+presbyterian liberty, and ventured to act on its own convictions of duty.
+But, the death of Queen Elizabeth, and the accession of James to the
+English throne, directed his main attention for a time to other matters,
+and gave occasion to a temporary pause in his violations of all the laws
+which he had repeatedly sworn to maintain. The pause was brief. The
+flattering servility of the English bishops inflated his vanity to an
+extravagant degree, and rendered him the more determined to subvert wholly
+the Presbyterian Church of Scotland, and to erect Prelacy on its ruins. He
+had already presumed more than once to postpone meetings of the General
+Assembly, by his own arbitrary authority; he resumed this course,
+postponed the Assembly for one year, naming another,--then prorogued it
+again, without naming another day of meeting, which was nearly equivalent
+to an intimation, that it should entirely depend upon his pleasure whether
+it should ever meet again,--directly contrary to the act, 1592, in which it
+was expressly stipulated that the Assembly should meet at least once a
+year. The most zealous and faithful of the ministers were now fully aware
+of the imminent peril to which spiritual liberty was exposed. On the 2d of
+July, 1605, the day on which the General Assembly had been appointed to
+meet at Aberdeen, nineteen ministers met, constituted the Assembly in the
+usual form, and while engaged in reading a letter presented by the King's
+Commissioner, a messenger-at-arms entered, and in the King's name, charged
+them to dismiss, on pain of being held guilty of rebellion. The moderator
+appointed another day of meeting, and dissolved the Assembly in the usual
+manner. This bold and independent, though perfectly legal and
+constitutional conduct, roused the wrath of the King to fury. Six of the
+most eminent of the ministers, one of whom was John Welsh of Ayr,
+son-in-law of Knox, were confined in a miserable dungeon in the castle of
+Blackness, for a period of fourteen months, and then banished to France.
+Eight others were imprisoned for a time, and banished to the remotest
+parts of Scotland. The severity of Robert Bruce's treatment was increased;
+and six other ministers, who had not been directly involved in the
+resistance to the King's authority, by the suppressed Assembly of
+Aberdeen, were called to London, and engaged in captious disputations by
+the crafty monarch, and his sycophantic prelates, in order to find
+occasion against them also. The result was, the confinement in the Tower
+of Andrew Melville, and his subsequent banishment to France; and the
+prohibition of his nephew, James Melville, to return to Scotland.
+
+Having thus succeeded, by fraud and force, in cutting off the leading
+ministers, James next summoned an Assembly to meet at Linlithgow, in
+December 1606, naming the persons who were to be sent by the presbyteries.
+In this packed Assembly he succeeded in his design of introducing more
+generally the prelatic element, by the appointment of constant moderators
+in each presbytery. Advancing now with greater rapidity, he instituted, in
+1610, the Court of High Commission, which may be well termed the Scottish
+Inquisition; and in the same year, in an Assembly held at Glasgow, both
+nominated by the King, and corrupted by lavish bribery, the whole prelatic
+system of church government was introduced; the right of calling and
+dismissing Assemblies was declared to belong to the royal prerogative, the
+bishops were declared moderators of diocesan synods; and the power of
+excommunicating and absolving offenders was conferred on them.
+
+The government of the Church was thus completely subverted in its external
+aspect. Its forms indeed remained. There were still presbyteries and
+synods, and there might be a General Assembly, if the King pleased; but
+the power of presbyteries or synods was vested in the Prelates, and the
+King could prevent any Assembly from being held, as long as he thought
+proper. But the Presbyterian Church, though overborne, was not destroyed,
+nor was its free spirit wholly subdued. When, in 1617, the King attempted
+to arrogate to himself and his prelatic council the power of enacting
+ecclesiastical laws, he was immediately met by a protestation against a
+measure so despotic. By an arbitrary stretch of power, he banished the
+historian Calderwood, the person who presented to him the protestation;
+but he felt it necessary to have recourse once more to his previously
+employed scheme, of a packed and bribed Assembly, in which to enact his
+innovations. This was accordingly done in the Assembly of 1618, held in
+Perth, in which, by the joint influence of bribery and intimidation, he
+succeeded in obtaining a majority of votes in favour of _the five articles
+of Perth_, as they are usually called. These _five articles_
+were,--_kneeling at the communion_,--_the observance of
+holidays_,--_episcopal confirmation_,--_private baptism_,--_and the private
+dispensation of the Lord's Supper_. It will at once be seen that these
+innovations were directly contrary to the presbyterian principle, which
+holds that human inventions ought not to be added to divine institutions.
+
+This was the last attempt made by King James for the overthrow of the
+Presbyterian Church. It was but partially successful. Not less than
+forty-five, even of the ministers summoned to Perth by the King, voted
+against the _five articles_; and in defiance of the authority of the King,
+and the Prelates, and the terrors of the Court of High Commission, a large
+proportion of the ministers, and a much larger proportion of the people
+throughout the kingdom, never conformed to these articles. Various
+attempts were made by the prelatic faction to suppress the resistance of
+the faithful ministers and people. At one time a minister who would not
+yield was suspended from his ministry; at another, he was banished from
+his flock, and confined to some remote district of the country. But all
+was ineffectual, although much suffering and distress of mind was caused
+by these harrassing persecutions. Very gladly would the ministers and
+people have abandoned the prelatised church, and maintained the government
+and ritual of the Church of their fathers by their own unaided exertions,
+had they been permitted. But no such permission could be obtained. They
+were compelled either to abstain from preaching altogether, or to remain
+in connection with the Church. And even this alternative was not always
+left to their choice. They were frequently kept in a species of
+imprisonment in their own houses, not permitted to leave the Church, and
+yet forbidden to preach, or even to expound the word of God to the members
+of their own households. Such was the monstrous and intolerable tyranny
+exercised by Prelacy in Scotland, in its desperate attempts to destroy the
+Presbyterian Church.
+
+But the Presbyterian Church has always proved to be not easily destroyed.
+At the very time when Prelacy and king-craft were uniting for its
+destruction, its Divine Head was graciously supporting it under its
+trials, giving it life to endure them, and preparing for its deliverance.
+The sufferings endured by the faithful ministers in many parts of the
+country, tended to make them objects of admiration, love, and respect to
+the people, who could not but draw a very striking contrast between their
+conduct, and that of the haughty and irreligious prelates. But mighty as
+was this influence in the hearts of the people, one infinitely more mighty
+began to be felt in many districts of the kingdom. God was pleased to
+grant a time of religious revival. The power of vital godliness aroused
+the land, shining in its strength, like living fire. At Stewarton, at
+Shotts, and in many others quarters, great numbers were converted, and the
+faith of still greater numbers was increased. A time of refreshing from
+the presence of God had evidently come; and it soon became equally
+evident, that the enemies of spiritual freedom were under the blinding
+influence of infatuation.
+
+The younger bishops, inflated with vanity, acted towards the Scottish
+nobility in a manner so insolent, as to rouse the pride of these stern and
+haughty barons. But the prelates had learned from Laud, what measures
+would be agreeable to Charles I., who, to all his father's despotic ideas
+of royal prerogative, and love of Prelacy, and to at least equal
+dissimulation, added the formidable elements of a temper dark and
+relentless, and a proud and inflexible will. The consequences soon
+appeared. Charles resolved, that the Church of Scotland should not only be
+episcopalian in its form of government, but also in all its discipline,
+and in its form of worship. In order to accomplish this long wished for
+purpose, it was resolved that a Book of Canons, and a Liturgy, should be
+prepared by the Scottish bishops, and transmitted to those of England, for
+their revision and approval. The book of Canons appeared in 1635, and was
+regarded by the nation with the utmost abhorrence, both on its own
+account, and as intended to introduce innovations still more detested.
+What was dreaded soon took place. The Liturgy was prepared, sent to
+England, and revised, several of the corrections being written by Laud
+himself, all tending to give it a decidedly popish character. Some copies
+of this production appeared early in the year 1637, and were immediately
+subjected to the examination of acute and powerful minds, well able to
+detect and expose their errors, and to resist this tyrannical attempt to
+do violence to the conscience of a free and religious people.
+
+The crisis came. A letter from his Majesty was procured, requiring the
+Liturgy to be used in all the churches of Edinburgh, and an act of the
+Privy Council was passed, to enforce obedience to the royal mandate.
+Archbishop Spotswood summoned the ministers together, announced to them
+the King's pleasure, and commanded them to give intimation from their
+pulpits, that on the following Sabbath the public use of the Liturgy was
+to be commenced. The 23d day of July, 1637, was that on which the perilous
+attempt was to be made. In the cathedral church of St. Giles, the Dean of
+Edinburgh, attired in his surplice, began to read the service of the day.
+At that moment, an old woman, named Jenny Geddes, unable longer to
+restrain her indignation, exclaimed, "Villain, dost thou say mass at my
+lug!" and seizing the stool on which she had been sitting, threw it at the
+Dean's head. Instantly all was uproar and confusion. Threatened or
+assailed on all sides, the Dean, terrified by this sudden outburst of
+popular fury, tore himself out of their hands and fled, glad to escape,
+though with the loss of his priestly vestments. In vain did the magistracy
+interfere. It was impossible to restore sufficient quiet to allow the
+service to be resumed; and the defeated prelatic party were compelled to
+abandon the Liturgy, thus dashed out of their trembling grasp by a woman's
+hand.
+
+Such was the state of affairs in both church and kingdom, when George
+Gillespie first appeared in public life. He had already refused to receive
+ordination at the hands of a bishop; he had marked well the pernicious
+effects of their conduct on the most sacred interests of the community;
+and his strong and active intellect was directed to the prosecution of
+such studies as might the better enable him to assail the wrong and defend
+the right. His residence in the household of the Earl of Cassilis, while
+it furnished the means of continuing his learned researches, was not
+likely to change their direction; for the Earl was one of those
+high-hearted and independent noblemen, who could not brook prelatic
+insolence, even when supported by the Sovereign's favour. The first
+production from the pen of Gillespie, the fruit, doubtless, of his
+previous studies, was a work entitled "A Dispute against the English
+Popish Ceremonies obtruded upon the Church of Scotland." Its publication
+was remarkably well timed, being in the summer of 1637, at the very time
+when the whole kingdom was in a state of intense excitement, in the
+immediate expectation that the Liturgy would be forced upon the Church.
+Nothing could have been more suited to the emergency. It encountered every
+kind of argument employed by the prelatic party; and, as the defenders of
+the ceremonies argued that they were either necessary, or expedient, or
+lawful, or indifferent, so Gillespie divided his work into four parts,
+arguing against their _necessity_, their _expediency_, their _lawfulness_,
+and their _indifferency_, with such extensiveness of learning and
+acuteness and power of reasoning, as completely to demolish all the
+arguments of all his prelatical antagonists. The effect produced by this
+singularly able work may be conjectured from the fact, that within a few
+months after its publication, a proclamation was issued by the Privy
+Council, at the instigation of the bishops, commanding all the copies of
+it that could be found to be called in and burned. Such was the only
+answer that all the learned Scottish prelates could give to a treatise,
+written by a youth who was only in his twenty-fifth year when it appeared.
+The language of Baillie shows the estimation in which that learned, but
+timid and cautious man, held Gillespie's youthful work. "This same youth
+is now given out also, by those that should know, for the author of the
+'English Popish Ceremonies,' whereof we all do marvel; for, though he had
+gotten the papers, and help of the chief of that side, yet the very
+composition would seem to be far above such an age. But, if that book be
+truly of his making, I admire the man, though I mislike much of his
+matter; yea, I think he may prove amongst the best wits of this isle."
+
+So far as argument was concerned, the controversy was ended by Gillespie's
+work, as no answer was ever attempted by the prelates. But the contest,
+which began as one of power against principle, ere long became one of
+power against power. In vain did the King attempt to overawe the firm
+minds of the Presbyterians. In vain did the bishops issue their commands
+to the ministers to use the Liturgy. These commands were universally
+disobeyed; for the spirit of Scotland was now fairly roused--a spirit which
+has often learned to conquer, but never to yield. It was to be expected
+that Gillespie would not be allowed to remain much longer in comparative
+obscurity, after his remarkable abilities had become known. The church and
+parish of Wemyss being at that time vacant, the congregation, to whom he
+had been known from his infancy, "made supplication" that he might be
+their minister. This request was granted, "maugre St Andrew's beard," as
+Baillie says; that is, in spite of the opposition made by Spotswood,
+Archbishop of St Andrews, who knew enough of the young man to regard him
+with equal fear and hatred. He was ordained by the Presbytery of Kirkcaldy
+on the 26th of April, 1638, the celebrated Robert Douglas, at that time
+minister of Kirkcaldy, presiding at the ordination; and was the first who
+was admitted by a presbytery, at that period, without regard to the
+authority of the bishops. This, indeed, soon ceased to be a singularity;
+but, it must be remembered, that though the attempt to impose the Liturgy
+upon the Church had been successfully resisted, the ostensible government
+of the Church was still held by the prelates, and continued to be held by
+them, till they were all deposed by the famous General Assembly which met
+in Glasgow on the 21st day of November, 1638. But their power had received
+a fatal blow, and it could not fail to be highly gratifying to George
+Gillespie, that the first free act of the Presbyterian Church, to the
+recovery of whose liberty he had so signally contributed, should be his
+own ordination to the ministerial office.
+
+From that time forward, the life of George Gillespie was devoted to the
+public service of the Church; and he was incessantly engaged in all the
+great measures of that momentous period. He, however, was not the man of
+the age. That man was Alexander Henderson, the acknowledged leader of the
+Church of Scotland's Second Reformation. And, as it is not our purpose to
+write a history of that period, we must confine ourselves chiefly to those
+events in which Gillespie acted a prominent part.
+
+The next intimation that we receive of Gillespie is in Baillie's account
+of the Glasgow Assembly. "After a sermon of Mr Gillespie," says Baillie,
+"wherein the youth very learnedly and judiciously, as they say, handled
+the words, 'The King's heart is in the hand of the Lord,' yet did too much
+encroach on the King's actions: he (Argyle) gave us a grave admonition, to
+let authority alone, which the Moderator seconded, and we all religiously
+observed, so long as the Assembly lasted." This proves, at least, that
+Gillespie was highly esteemed by his brethren, who had selected him as one
+to preach before that important Assembly, notwithstanding his youth. It
+should be added, that on consulting the records of that Assembly's
+proceedings, we do indeed find Argyle's grave admonition not to interfere
+with the authority due to the King in his own province, and the
+Moderator's answer; but nothing to lead us to think that it had any
+reference to Gillespie's sermon. Baillie had not, at that time, learned to
+know and appreciate Gillespie, as he did afterwards and, as he had been
+somewhat startled by the point and power of the "English Popish
+Ceremonies," he might not unnaturally conclude, that Argyle's caution
+against what might be, had been caused by what had already been beginning
+to appear in the language of the youthful preacher.
+
+The course of public affairs swept rapidly onward, though certainly not in
+such a channel as to gratify the lovers of arbitrary power and
+superstition. The King, enraged to find his beloved Prelacy overthrown at
+once and entirely, prepared to force it upon the Scottish Covenanted
+Church and people by force of arms. The Covenanters stood on the
+defensive, and met the invading host on the Border, prepared to die rather
+than submit to the loss of religious liberty. But the English army was
+little inclined to fight in such a cause. They had felt the king's tyranny
+and the oppression of their own prelates, and were not disposed to destroy
+that liberty, so nobly won by Scotland, for which they were themselves
+most earnestly longing. A peace ensued. The King granted that spiritual
+liberty which he was unable to withhold; and the ministers who had
+accompanied the Scottish army, returned to the discharge of their more
+peaceful duties. But this peace proved of short duration. The King levied
+a new and more powerful army, and again declared war against his Scottish
+subjects. Again the Covenanters resumed their weapons of defence, and
+marched towards the Border, a number of the most eminent ministers, among
+whom was Gillespie, being required to accompany the army, and empowered to
+act as a presbytery. It was, however, judged necessary to anticipate the
+approach of the English by entering England. This bold movement changed
+the nature of the contest for the time, because the English parliament
+felt the utmost jealousy of the King's despotic designs, and would not
+grant him the necessary support. Negotiations for peace were begun at
+Ripon, and transferred to London. This rendered it necessary for the
+Scottish Commissioners for the peace to reside at London. Henderson,
+Blair, Baillie and Gillespie accompanied the Commissioners to London,
+resided with them there in the capacity of chaplains, and availed
+themselves of the opportunity thus afforded, for proving to the people of
+England that presbyterian ministers were not such rude and ignorant men as
+their prelatic calumniators had asserted. The effect of their preaching
+was astonishing, as even Clarendon, their prejudiced and bitter reviler,
+admits. Wherever they preached, the people flocked in crowds to hear them,
+and even clustered round the doors and windows of the churches in which
+they were proclaiming the unsearchable riches of Christ. It soon became
+apparent that both the cause, and the men by whom it was defended, were
+too mighty to be despised. Courtly parasites might scoff, but the heart of
+England was compelled to know that living faith and true eloquence are
+equally powerful to move and guide the minds of men, whether on the bleak
+waste of a Scottish moor, or in the midst of a mighty city.
+
+Soon after the return of the Scottish Commissioners and ministers, in the
+Assembly of 1641, the town of Aberdeen gave a call to George Gillespie to
+be one of their pastors. This call, however, he strenuously and
+successfully resisted, and was permitted to remain at Wemyss. But next
+year, the town of Edinburgh applied to the General Assembly, to have him
+translated to one of the charges there, and this application was
+successful, so that he became one of the ministers of Edinburgh in the
+year 1642, and continued so during the remainder of his life.
+
+But although Edinburgh had succeeded in obtaining Gillespie, the citizens
+were not long permitted to enjoy the benefit of his ministry. Another
+class of duties awaited him, in a still more public and important sphere
+of action. It is impossible here to do more than refer to the great events
+which at that time agitated not only Scotland, but also England. The
+superstition, bigotry and intolerance of Archbishop Laud and his
+followers, combining with and urging on the despotism of the King, had at
+length completely exhausted the patience of the English people and
+parliament. Every pacific effort had proved fruitless; and it had become
+undeniably evident, to every English patriot, that Prelacy must be
+abolished and the royal prerogative limited, unless they were prepared to
+yield up every vestige of civil and religious liberty. They made the
+nobler choice, passed an act abolishing Prelacy, and summoned an Assembly
+of Divines to deliberate respecting the formation of such a Confession of
+Faith, Catechism, and Directory, as might lead to uniformity between the
+Churches of the two kingdoms, and thereby tend to secure the religious
+liberty of both. The Assembly of Divines met at Westminster, on the 1st
+day of July, 1643. Soon afterwards Commissioners from the English
+Parliament, and from the Westminster Assembly, were appointed to proceed
+to Edinburgh, to be present at the meeting of the General Assembly in
+August, and to seek a conference, respecting the best method of forming
+the basis of a religious and civil confederacy between the two kingdoms,
+in their time of mutual danger. These Commissioners, accordingly, attended
+the meeting of the Assembly in Edinburgh, and the result of their
+conferences was the framing of that well-known bond of union between the
+two countries, THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT--"a document which we may be
+pardoned for terming the noblest, in its essential nature and principles,
+of all that are recorded among the international transactions of the
+world."
+
+As the main object for which the Solemn League and Covenant was framed,
+was to secure the utmost practicable degree of uniformity in the religious
+worship of both countries; and, as the English Divines had already met at
+Westminster to take the whole subject into consideration, and had
+requested the assistance of Commissioners from the Church of Scotland, the
+General Assembly named some of the most eminent of their ministers and
+elders as Commissioners to the Westminster Assembly. These were, Alexander
+Henderson, Robert Douglas, Robert Baillie, Samuel Rutherford, and George
+Gillespie, ministers; and the Earl of Cassilis, Lord Maitland, and Sir
+Archibald Johnston of Warriston, elders; but neither the Earl of Cassilis
+nor Robert Douglas went. Three of these, Lord Maitland, Henderson, and
+Gillespie, set off for London, along with the English Commissioners,
+immediately after the rising of the General Assembly; the other three,
+Warriston, Rutherford, and Baillie, followed about a month afterwards. On
+the 15th of September the Scottish Commissioners were received into the
+Westminster Assembly with great kindness and courtesy; and, on the 25th of
+the same month, the Solemn League and Covenant was publicly sworn and
+subscribed by both Parliament and Assembly, after addresses by Nyo and
+Henderson. It was not, however, till the 12th of October, that the
+Westminster Assembly commenced its serious deliberations concerning Church
+Government, Discipline, and a Directory of Worship, in the hope of
+arriving at such conclusions as might produce religious uniformity in the
+Churches of England, Scotland, and Ireland, if not also with the Reformed
+Churches of the Continent.
+
+Scarcely had the Westminster Assembly begun its deliberations, when it
+became abundantly apparent, that, however sincere its members might all be
+in the desire to promote the religious welfare of the community, they
+were, nevertheless, divided in their views as to how that could be best
+accomplished. There were three parties in the Assembly, the Presbyterians,
+the Independents, and the Erastians. Of these the Presbyterians(1) formed
+by far the most numerous, comprising at least nine-tenths of the entire
+body. There were at first only five Independent divines, commonly termed
+"the Five Dissenting Brethren;" but their number finally amounted to ten
+or eleven. Only two ministers were decided Erastians, but a considerable
+number of the parliamentary members, chiefly those who were professionally
+lawyers, advocated that secular policy. The Scottish Commissioners refused
+to exercise the right of voting, but were continually present in the
+Assembly, and took a very prominent part in all its deliberations and
+debates, supporting, as might be expected, the views of the Presbyterians.
+The chief strength of the Independents consisted in the tenacity with
+which they adhered to their own opinions, disputing every proposition
+brought forward by others, but cautiously abstaining from giving any
+definite statement of their own; and in the close intercourse which they
+contrived to keep with Cromwell and the military Independents. And the
+Erastian party, though few in numbers within the Assembly itself,
+possessed, nevertheless, considerable influence, arising out of their
+reputation for learning, having as their ornament and support, that
+distinguished man, emphatically called "the learned Selden." But the true
+source of their power was the Parliament, which, having deprived the King
+of that ecclesiastical supremacy which he had so grievously abused, wished
+to retain it in its own possession, and therefore, supported the Erastian
+party in the Assembly.
+
+Numerous and protracted were the debates which arose in the Westminster
+Assembly, during the discussion of the various topics on which these three
+parties differed in opinion; and in all those debates no person took a
+more active part, or gained more distinction than George Gillespie. His
+previous course of studies had rendered him perfectly familiar with all
+that had been written on the subjects under discussion; his originally
+acute and powerful intellect had been thoroughly trained and exercised to
+its highest degree of clearness and vigour; and to a natural, perspicuous,
+and flowing readiness of language, the warmth and earnestness of his heart
+added the energy and elevation which form the very essence of true
+eloquence. We have already referred to the high expectations which Baillie
+entertained of his future career. But high as these had been, they were
+far surpassed by the reality, as he himself declares. "None in all the
+company did reason more, and more pertinently than Mr Gillespie. That is
+an excellent youth; my heart blesses God in his behalf!"--"Very learned and
+acute Mr Gillespie, a singular ornament of our church, than whom not one
+in the whole Assembly speaks to better purpose, and with better acceptance
+by all the hearers."--"Mr George Gillespie, however I had a good opinion of
+his gifts, yet I profess he has much deceived me: Of a truth there is no
+man whose parts in a public dispute I do so admire. He has studied so
+accurately all the points that ever yet came to our Assembly, he has got
+so ready, so assured, so solid a way of public debating, that however
+there be in the Assembly divers very excellent men, yet, in my poor
+judgment, there is not one who speaks more rationally, and to the point,
+than that brave youth has done ever."
+
+We cannot here follow the course of the prolonged deliberations in which
+Gillespie so greatly distinguished himself; but there is one instance of
+his eminence which has so often been related, and not always very
+accurately, that it would be unpardonable not to give it here,--especially
+as some pains have been taken to obtain as full and correct a version of
+it as is now practicable. After the Westminster Divines had agreed
+respecting the office-bearers whose permanent continuation in the church
+can be proved from scriptural authority; they proceeded to inquire
+concerning the subject of Church Discipline. In this the Presbyterians
+were constrained to encounter both the Independents and the Erastians; for
+the Independents, on the one hand, denied any authoritative
+excommunication or suspension, and the Erastians, on the other, admitted
+such a power, but placed it in the hands of the civil magistracy. For a
+considerable time the discussion was between the Presbyterians and the
+Independents; but when the arguments of the latter party had been
+conclusively met and answered by their antagonists, the Erastians hastened
+to the rescue, and their champion, "the learned Selden," came to the
+Assembly, when the discussion drew near its close, prepared to pour forth
+all his learning for the discomfiture of the hitherto triumphant
+Presbyterians. His intention had been made known extensively, and even
+before the debate began, the house was crowded by all who could claim or
+obtain admission. Gillespie, who had been probably engaged in some
+Committee business as usual, was rather late in coming, and upon his
+arrival, not being recognised as a member by those who were standing about
+the door and in the passages, was told that it was impossible for him to
+get in, the throng was so dense. "Can ye not admit a _pinning_?" said he,
+using a word employed by masons, to indicate the thin slips of stone with
+which they pin, or fill up the chinks and inequalities that occur in the
+building of a plain wall. He did, however, work his way to the seat
+allotted to the Scottish Commissioners, and took his place beside his
+brethren. The subject under discussion was the text, Matt. xviii. 15-17,
+as bearing upon the question respecting excommunication. Selden arose, and
+in a long and elaborate speech, and with a great display of minute
+rabbinical lore, strove to demonstrate that the passage contained no
+warrant for ecclesiastical jurisdiction, but that it related to the
+ordinary practice of the Jews in their common civil courts, by whom, as he
+asserted, one sentence was excommunication, pronounced by their own
+authority. Somewhat confused, if not appalled, by the vast erudition
+displayed, even the most learned and able of the divines seemed in no
+haste to encounter their formidable opponent. At length both Herle and
+Marshall, two very distinguished men, attempted answers, but failed to
+counteract the effect of Selden's speech. Gillespie had been observed by
+his Scottish brethren writing occasionally in his note-book, as if marking
+the heads of Selden's argument; and one of them, some accounts say
+Rutherford, turning to him in this emergency, said, "Rise, George, rise
+up, man, and defend the right of the Lord Jesus Christ to govern, by his
+own laws, the church which he hath purchased with his blood." Thus urged,
+Gillespie arose, gave first a summary of Selden's argument, divesting it
+of all the confusion of that cumbrous learning in which it had been
+wrapped, and reducing it to its simple elements; then in a speech of
+singular acuteness and power, completely refuted it, proving that the
+passage could not be interpreted or explained away to mean a mere
+reference to a civil court. By seven distinct arguments he proved, that
+the whole subject was of a spiritual nature, not within the cognisance of
+civil courts; and he proved also, that the church of the Jews both
+possessed and exercised the power of spiritual censures. The effect of
+Gillespie's speech was so great, as not only to convince the Assembly, but
+also to astonish and confound Seldon himself, who is reported to have
+exclaimed in a tone of bitter mortification, "That young man, by this
+single speech, has swept away the learning and labour of ten years of my
+life!" Those who were clustered together in the passage near the door,
+remembering Gillespie's expression when he was attempting to enter, said
+one to another, "It was well that we admitted the _pinning_, otherwise the
+building would have fallen." Even his Scottish brethren, although well
+acquainted with his great abilities, were surprised with his masterly
+analysis of Selden's argument, and looked into his note-book, expecting
+there to find the outline of the summary which he had given. Their
+surprise was certainly not diminished when they found that he had written
+nothing but, _Da lucem, Domine_, Lord give light,--and similar brief
+petitions for the direction of that divine Head and King of the church,
+whose crown-rights he was about to defend.
+
+Various other anecdotes have been recorded respecting Gillespie's singular
+skill and ability in debate; but the preceding is at once the most
+striking and the best authenticated, and may suffice to prove his
+eminence, both in learning and in power of argument, among the Westminster
+Divines.(2)
+
+The first part of the task in which the Westminster Assembly was engaged,
+was the framing of a Directory for Public Worship. This having been
+completed about the close of the year 1644, the General Assembly of the
+Church of Scotland met on the 23d of January, 1645, to take this Directory
+into consideration, and to give it their sanction, should it be found
+satisfactory. Baillie and Gillespie were sent to Scotland, to be present
+at the Assembly, that they might introduce the subject, and give any
+explanation that might appear necessary, and to do everything in their
+power to procure for it the desired approbation. In this they were
+completely successful, and the Assembly passed an act sanctioning the
+Directory,--that act having been written, as Baillie informs us, by
+Gillespie. Having accomplished the object of their mission, they returned
+to London, where Gillespie was speedily engaged in the Erastian
+Controversy, during which he produced his greatest work.
+
+We have already referred to the distinguished ability with which Gillespie
+encountered and defeated Selden, in the discussion which arose within the
+Westminster Assembly itself. But the principles of Erastianism were
+entertained by many who were not members of that Assembly, and were
+advocated in other quarters, so as to lead to a literary controversy. The
+Rev. Thomas Coleman, one of the Erastians divines, the other being
+Lightfoot, preached a sermon before the House of Commons, on the 30th of
+July, 1645, in which there was a peculiar display of Erastianism of the
+very strongest kind. This sermon was printed, as were all sermons preached
+before either House, and excited at once the disapprobation of all the
+friends of religious liberty. It did not remain long unanswered. On the
+27th of August, the same year, Gillespie preached before the House of
+Lords; and when his sermon was also published, he added to it an appendix
+entitled, "A Brotherly Examination of some passages of Mr Coleman's late
+printed sermon." In this appendix Gillespie not only answered and refuted
+Coleman, but turned his arguments completely against himself. Coleman soon
+afterwards published a pamphlet entitled, "A Brotherly Examination
+Re-examined." To this Gillespie replied in another bearing the title,
+"Nihil Respondes," in which he somewhat sharply exposed the weak and
+inconclusive character of his opponent's argument. Irritated by the
+castigation he had received, Coleman published a bitter reply, to which he
+gave the somewhat unintelligible title of "Male Dicis
+Maledicis,"--intending, probably, to insinuate that Gillespie's answer was
+of a railing character. This roused Gillespie, and induced him to put
+forth his controversial power in a singularly vigorous pamphlet, entitled,
+"Male Audis," in which he took a rapid survey of the whole Erastian
+controversy, so far as Coleman and some of his friends had brought it
+forward, convicted him and them of numerous self-contradictions, of
+unsoundness in theology, of violating the covenant which they had sworn,
+and of inculcating opinions fatal to both civil and religious liberty. To
+this powerful production Coleman attempted no reply; nor have its
+arguments ever been answered by any subsequent advocate of Erastianism.
+
+But however able and well-timed these controversial pamphlets were, they
+were not enough to occupy even the few spare hours that Gillespie was able
+to snatch from his attendance on the business of the Assembly. He had
+planned, and was all the while prosecuting, a much larger work. That work
+appeared about the close of the year 1646, under the title of "Aaron's Rod
+Blossoming: or, the Divine Ordinance of Church Government Vindicated." In
+this remarkably able and elaborate production, Gillespie took up the
+Erastian controversy as stated and defended by its ablest advocates,
+fairly encountering their strongest arguments, and assailing their most
+formidable positions, in the frank and fearless manner of a man thoroughly
+sincere, and thoroughly convinced of the truth and goodness of his cause.
+As it may be presumed that the readers of this memoir are also in
+possession of "Aaron's Rod," we need not occupy space in giving even a
+brief outline of that admirable work; but as we are convinced that the
+Erastian conflict, which has been recently resumed, must still be fought,
+and will be ultimately won, we strenuously recommend the studious perusal
+of Gillespie's masterly production to all who wish fully to comprehend the
+subject.(3) One or two points of general information, however, it may be
+expedient to give. In the "Aaron's Rod," while Gillespie intentionally
+traversed the whole ground of the Erastian controversy, he directed also
+special attention to the productions of the day. This he could not avoid;
+but this has tended unfortunately, to give to his work the appearance of
+being to some extent an ephemeral production, suited to the period when it
+appeared, but not so well suited to the present times. It addresses itself
+to answer the arguments of Selden, and Coleman, and Hussey, and Prynne;
+and as the writings of these men have sunk into oblivion, we are liable to
+regard the work which answered them as one which has done its deed, and
+may also be allowed to disappear. Let it be observed, that Erastianism
+never had abler advocates than the above-named men. Selden was so
+pre-eminent for learning that his distinguishing designation was "the
+learned Selden." Coleman was so thoroughly conversant with Hebrew
+literature, that he was commonly termed "Rabbi Coleman." Hussey, minister
+at Chessilhurst in Kent, was a man of great eloquence, both as a speaker
+and a writer, and possessed no small influence among the strong-minded men
+of that period. And Prynne had a double claim on public attention both
+then and still; for he had been so formidable an antagonist of the Laudean
+Prelacy, as to have been marked out by Laud as a special victim,--had been
+condemned to the pillory, and suffered the loss of both his ears by the
+sentence of that cruel prelate,--and had been rescued from his sufferings,
+and restored to political life and influence, by the Long Parliament. He
+was, moreover, both a learned man, an acute lawyer, and an able and subtle
+controversialist, and his writings exercised at the time no mean
+influence. When such men undertook the advocacy of the Erastian argument,
+encouraged as they were by the English Parliament, it may well be
+conceived that they would present it both in its ablest, and in its most
+plausible form. And it is doing no discredit to Erastians of the present
+day, to say that they are not likely to produce anything either more
+profound in learning, or more able and acute in reasoning than was done by
+their predecessors of the Long Parliament, and the Westminster Assembly.
+If, therefore, Gillespie's Aaron's Rod completely defeated the acute and
+able men of that day, we may well recommend it to the perusal of those
+whose duty it may be to engage in a similar controversy in the present
+age.
+
+But while such were Gillespie's labours in the field of controversy, the
+value of which could not be easily over-estimated, his memory would be
+grievously wronged were we to regard him only as a controversialist. For
+although the topics which first engaged the attention of the Westminster
+Assembly were those on which the greatest difference of opinion existed,
+and to which, almost of necessity, the public mind, both then and ever
+since, has been most strongly directed, there was a very large portion of
+their duty, and that, too, of the highest importance, and demanding the
+utmost care, in which a much greater degree of unanimity prevailed. For a
+considerable time after the Assembly commenced its deliberations, its
+attention was almost exclusively occupied with the framing of Directories
+for public worship and ordination, and with discussions respecting the
+form of Church government, including the power of Church censure. These
+topics involved both the Independent and the Erastian controversies; and
+till some satisfactory conclusions had been reached on these points, the
+Assembly abstained from entering upon the less agitating, but not less
+important work of framing a Confession of Faith. But having completed
+their task, so far as depended upon themselves, they then turned their
+attention to their doctrinal labours.
+
+The manner in which the Assembly entered upon this solemn duty deserves
+the utmost attention, as intimating the earnest and prudent spirit by
+which their whole deliberations were pervaded. They appointed a committee
+to prepare and arrange the main propositions which were to be examined and
+digested into a system by the Assembly. The members of this committee
+were, Dr Hoyle, Dr Gouge, Messrs Herle, Gataker, Tuckney, Reynolds, and
+Vines, with the Scottish Commissioners Henderson, Baillie, Rutherford, and
+Gillespie. Those learned and able divines began their labours by
+arranging, in the most systematic order, the various great and sacred
+truths which God has revealed to man; and then reduced these to thirty-two
+distinct heads or chapters, each having a title expressive of its subject.
+These were again subdivided into sections; and the committee formed
+themselves into several subcommittees, each of which took a specific topic
+for the sake of exact and concentrated deliberation. When these
+sub-committees had completed their respective tasks, the whole results
+were laid before the entire committee, and any alterations suggested and
+debated till all were of one mind. And when any title, or chapter, had
+been thus fully prepared by the committee, it was reported to the
+Assembly, and again subjected to the most minute and careful
+investigation, in every paragraph, sentence, and even word. All that
+learning the most profound, intellect the most searching, and piety the
+most sincere could accomplish, was thus concentrated in the Westminster
+Assembly's Confession of Faith, which may be safely termed the most
+perfect statement of systematic Theology ever framed by the Christian
+Church.
+
+In the preliminary deliberations of the Committee the Scottish divines
+took a leading part, and none more than Gillespie. But no report of these
+deliberations either was or could be made public. The results alone
+appeared when the Committee, from time to time, laid its matured
+propositions before the Assembly. And it is gratifying to be able to add,
+that throughout the deliberations of the Assembly itself, when composing,
+or rather, formally sanctioning the Confession of Faith, there prevailed
+almost an entire and perfect harmony. There appears, indeed, to have been
+only _two_ subjects on which any difference of opinion existed among them.
+The one of these was the doctrine of Election, concerning which Baillie
+informs us they had "long and tough debates;" the other was concerning
+that which heads the chapter entitled "Of Church Censures," as its
+fundamental proposition, viz. "The Lord Jesus Christ, as King and Head of
+his Church, has therein appointed a government in the hand of
+church-officers distinct from the civil magistrate." This proposition the
+Assembly manifestly intended and understood to contain a principle
+directly and necessarily opposed to the very essence of Erastianism, and
+it was regarded in the same light by the Erastians themselves, hence it
+had to encounter their most strenuous opposition. It was, however,
+somewhat beyond the grasp of the lay-members of the Assembly, especially
+since their champion Selden had in a great measure withdrawn from the
+debates after his signal discomfiture by Gillespie, and consequently it
+was triumphantly carried, the single dissentient voice being that of
+Lightfoot, the other Erastian divine, Coleman, having died before the
+conclusion of the debate. The framing of the Confession occupied the
+Assembly nearly a year. After having been carefully transcribed, it was
+presented to the parliament on the 3d of December, 1646.
+
+A plan similar to that already described was also employed in preparing
+that admirable digest of Christian doctrine, the Shorter Catechism, and so
+far as can be ascertained, by the same Committee. For a time, indeed, they
+attempted to prosecute the framing of both Confession and Catechism at
+once; but after some progress had been made with both, the Assembly
+resolved to finish the Confession first, and then to construct the
+Catechism upon its model, so far at least as to have no proposition in the
+one which was not in the other. By this arrangement they wisely avoided
+the danger of subsequent debate and delay. Various obstacles, however,
+interposed, and so greatly impeded the progress of the Assembly, that the
+Catechism was not so speedily completed as had been expected. It was,
+however, presented to the House of Commons on the 5th of November 1647,
+and the Larger, in the spring of the following year.
+
+There is one anecdote connected with the formation of the Shorter
+Catechism both full of interest and so very beautiful, that it must not be
+omitted. In one of the earliest meetings of the Committee, the subject of
+deliberation was to frame an answer to the question "_What is God_?" Each
+man felt the unapproachable sublimity of the divine idea suggested by
+these words; but who could venture to give it expression in human
+language! All shrunk from the too sacred task in awe-struck reverential
+fear. At length it was resolved, as an expression of the Committee's deep
+humility, that the youngest member should first make the attempt. He
+consented; but begged that the brethren would first unite with him in
+prayer for divine enlightenment. Then in slow and solemn accents he thus
+began his prayer:--"O God, Thou art a Spirit, infinite, eternal, and
+unchangeable, in Thy being, wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness and
+truth."--When he ceased, the first sentence of his prayer was immediately
+written down and adopted, as the most perfect answer that could be
+conceived, as, indeed, in a very sacred sense, God's own answer,
+descriptive of Himself.(4) Who, then, was the youngest member of the
+Committee? When we compare the birth-dates of the respective members of
+the Committee, we find that George Gillespie was the youngest by more than
+a dozen years. We may, therefore, safely conclude, that George Gillespie
+was the man who was thus guided to frame this marvellous answer.
+
+Without further enlarging on these points, we may, without hazard, affirm,
+that however eminent Gillespie was in the department of controversy, he
+was scarcely, if at all, less so in that of systematic theology, while his
+personal piety was of the most elevated and spiritual character. Rarely,
+indeed, have such qualities met in any one man, as were united in him; but
+when God requires such a man, he creates, endows and trains him, so as to
+meet the necessity.
+
+When the public labours of the Westminster Assembly drew near a close, the
+Scottish commissioners returned to their native country. Henderson had
+previously found the repose of the grave, Rutherford remained a short time
+behind. Baillie and Gillespie appeared at the General Assembly which met
+in August, 1647, and laid before that supreme ecclesiastical court the
+result of their protracted labours. The Confession of Faith was ratified
+by that Assembly. The same Assembly caused to be printed a series of
+propositions, or "Theses against Erastianism," as Baillie terms them,
+amounting to one hundred and eleven, drawn up by George Gillespie,
+embodying eight of them in the act which authorised their publication. The
+perusal of these propositions would enable any person of unprejudiced and
+intelligent mind to master and refute the whole Erastian theory; and could
+not fail, at the same time, to draw forth sentiments of admiration towards
+the clear and strong mind by which they were framed.
+
+But the incessant toils in which Gillespie's life had been spent had
+shattered his constitution beyond the power of recovery; and the state in
+which he found Scotland on his return was such as to permit no relaxation
+of these toils. The danger in which the obstinacy and duplicity of Charles
+I. had placed that unhappy monarch's life, drew forth towards him the
+strong compassion of all who cherished sentiments of loyalty to the
+sovereign and pity for the man. But in many instances these generous
+feelings were allowed to bias the dictates of religious principle and
+sound judgment; and a party began to be formed for the purpose of
+attempting to save the King even at the hazard of entering into a war with
+England. This was, of course, eagerly encouraged by all who had previously
+adhered to the King's party in the contest between him and the
+Covenanters; and a series of intrigues began and were carried on, breaking
+the harmony which had previously existed, and preparing for the disastrous
+consequences which soon afterwards ensued. Gillespie exerted himself to
+the utmost of his power to avert the coming calamities which he
+anticipated, by striving to prevent the commission of crimes which provoke
+judgment. His influence was sufficient to restrain the Church from
+consenting to countenance the weak and wicked movements of politicians.
+But his health continued to sink under these incessant toils and
+anxieties. He was chosen moderator of the General Assembly of 1648,
+though, as Baillie states, "he did much deprecate the burden, as he had
+great reason, both for his health's sake, and other great causes."
+
+This Assembly met on the 12th of July, 1648, and so arduous and difficult
+were the duties which it had to discharge, that it did not end its labours
+till the 12th of August. Although Gillespie was then rapidly sinking under
+the disease of which he died, which, from its symptoms, must have been
+consumption, he continued to take an active part in all its deliberations,
+and drew up the last public paper which it directed to be framed, in
+answer to a document, issued by the State, respecting the engagement that
+had been formed for the support of the King. The arduous labours of the
+Assembly being thus ended, Gillespie left Edinburgh and retired to
+Kirkcaldy, with the view of seeking, by change of scene and air, some
+renovation to his health. But the disease had taken too firm a hold of his
+enfeebled constitution, and he continued to suffer from increasing
+weakness. Still the cares of the distracted Church and country pressed
+heavily on his mind. He was now unable to attend the public meetings of
+Church courts; but on the 8th of September he addressed a letter to the
+Commission of Assembly, in which he stated clearly and strongly his
+opinion concerning the duties and the dangers of the time. Continuing to
+sink, and feeling death at hand, he partly wrote and partly dictated what
+may be termed his dying "Testimony against association with malignant
+enemies of the truth and godliness."(5) At length, on the 17th day of
+December, 1648, his toils and sorrows ceased, and he fell asleep in Jesus.
+
+So passed away from this world one of those bright and powerful spirits
+which are sent in troublous times to carry forward God's work among
+mankind. Incessant toil is the destiny of such highly-gifted men while
+here below; and not unfrequently is their memory assailed by those mean
+and little minds who shrunk with instinctive fear and hatred before the
+energetic movements which they could neither comprehend nor encounter. But
+their recompense is in heaven, when their work is done; and future
+generations delight to rescue their reputation from the feeble obloquy
+with which malevolence and folly had endeavoured to hide or defame it.
+Thus has it been with George Gillespie to a considerable extent already;
+and we entertain not the slightest shadow of doubt that his transcendent
+merit is but beginning to be known and appreciated as it deserves, and
+that ere very long his well-earned fame will shine too clearly and too
+strong to be approached by detractors.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We have but little more to relate respecting George Gillespie. His death
+was deeply lamented by all who loved their church and country at the time;
+and such was the feeling generally entertained of his great merit, that
+the Committee of Estates, or government of the kingdom, by an Act dated
+20th December, 1648, did, "as an acknowledgment for his faithfulness in
+all the public employments entrusted to him by this Church, both at home
+and abroad, his faithful labours, and indefatigable diligence in all the
+exercises of his ministerial calling, for his Master's service, and his
+learned writings, published to the world, in which rare and profitable
+employments, both for Church and State, he truly spent himself and closed
+his days, ordain, That the sum of one thousand pounds sterling be given to
+his widow and children." And though the Parliament did, by their Act,
+dated June 8th, 1650, unanimously ratify the preceding Act, and
+recommended to their Committee to make the same effectual, yet in
+consequence of Cromwell's invasion, and the confusion into which the whole
+kingdom was thereby thrown, this benevolent design was frustrated, as his
+grandson, the Rev. George Gillespie, minister at Strathmiglo, afterwards
+declared.(6) So much for the trust to be placed in national gratitude and
+the promises of statesmen.
+
+George Gillespie was buried at Kirkcaldy, his birth-place, and the place
+also where he died. A tomb-stone, erected to his memory by his relatives
+and friends, bore an inscription in Latin, recording the chief actions of
+his life, and stating the leading elements of his character. But when
+Prelacy was re-imposed on Scotland, after the restoration of Charles II.,
+the mean malice of the Prelatists gratified itself by breaking the
+tomb-stone. This petty and spiteful act is thus recorded in the "Mercurius
+Caledonius," one of the small quarto newspapers or periodicals of the
+time, of date January 16th to 25th, 1661. "The late Committee of Estates
+ordered the tomb-stone of Mr George Gillespie, whereon was engraven a
+scandalous inscription, should be fetched from the burial place, and upon
+a market-day, at the cross of Kirkcaldy, where he had formerly been
+minister, and there solemnly broken by the hands of the hangman; which was
+accordingly done,--a just indignity upon the memory of so dangerous a
+person."
+
+The Committee of Estates by which this paltry deed was done was that of
+Middleton's parliament, frequently called the "drunken parliament," from
+the excesses of its leading men, and which on the following year
+signalised itself by the Glasgow act,--that act which emptied nearly four
+hundred pulpits in one day. The inaccuracy of the statement made by the
+prelatic newspaper, asserting that he had formerly been minister at
+Kirkcaldy, will not surprise any person who is acquainted with the
+writings of the Prelatists of that period, who seem not to have been able
+to write the truth when relating the most common and well-known facts. But
+one is somewhat surprised to find statements equally inaccurate made
+respecting George Gillespie, by reverend and learned historians. In Dr
+Cook's History of the Church of Scotland, we find in one passage George
+Gillespie's character and conduct completely misunderstood and
+misrepresented, (vol. iii. pages 160-162), and in a subsequent passage an
+assertion that the proceedings of that party in the church called the
+Protestors were, in the year 1650, "directed by Gillespie, a factious
+minister, whose name has been frequently mentioned," (page 196). George
+Gillespie was the only person of whom mention was made, or could be made,
+in the previous portion of the history, as his brother had not then began
+to take any active part in public affairs; but he was dead nearly two
+years before the date to which the latter passage refers. It is plain that
+Dr Cook confounded George Gillespie with his brother Patrick, and ascribed
+to the former the actions of the latter, regarding them both as but one
+and the same person. He further asserts, that Gillespie was "suspected of
+corresponding with the Sectaries." That Patrick Gillespie corresponded
+with the Sectaries, and was much trusted and countenanced by Cromwell, is
+perfectly true; but before that time George Gillespie had joined the One
+Church and family in heaven. In every period of his life, and in every
+transaction in which he was engaged, George Gillespie was far above all
+private or discreditable intriguing, which is the vice of weak, cunning,
+and selfish minds. And while we do not think it necessary further to
+prosecute this vindication of his memory, we yet think it our duty, when
+writing a memoir of him, thus briefly to set aside the groundless
+accusation, whether it be adduced by prelatic or Erastian writers,--his
+baffled antagonists when living, his impotent calumniators when dead.
+
+The tomb-stone, as has been related, was broken in 1661, but the
+inscription was preserved. A plain tablet was erected in 1745, by his
+grandson, the Rev. George Gillespie, minister of Strathmiglo, on which the
+inscription was re-produced, with a slight addition, mentioning both
+events. It is still to be seen in the south-east porch of the present
+church. The inscription is as follows:--
+
+
+ MAGISTER GEORGIUS GILLESPIE, PASTOR EDINBURGENSIS, JUVENILIBUS
+ ANNIS RITUUM ANGLORUM PONTIFICIORUM TURMAM PROSTRAVIT: GLISCENTE
+ AETATE, DELEGATUS CUM MANDATIS IN SYNODO ANGLICANA, PRAESULEM E
+ ANGLIA ERADICANDUM, SINCERUM DEI CULTUM UNIFORMEM PROMOVENDUM,
+ CURAVIT; ERASTUM AARONIS GERMINANTE VIRGA CASTIGAVIT. IN PATRIAM
+ REVERSUS FOEDIFRAGOS ANGLIAM BELLO LACESSENTES LABEFACTAVIT:
+ SYNODI NATIONALIS ANNO 1648, EDINBURGI HABITAE PRAESES ELECTUS,
+ EXTREMAM PATIRAE SUAE OPERAM CUM LAUDE NAVAVIT: CUMQUE OCULATIS
+ TESTIS VIDISSET MALIGNANTIUM QUAM PRAEDIXERAT RUINAM, EODEM QUO
+ FOEDUS TRIUM GENTIUM SOLENNE RENOVATUM TUIT DIE DECEDENS IN PACE,
+ ANNO AETATIS 36, IN GAUDIUM DOMINI INTRAVIT: INGENIO PROFUNDUS,
+ GENIO MITIS, DISPUTATIONE ACUTUS, ELOQUIO FACUNDUS, ANIMO
+ INVICTUS, BONOS IN AMOREM, MALOS IN INVIDIAM, OMNES IN SUI
+ ADMIRATIONEM, RAPUIT: PATLAE SUAE ORNAMENTUM; TANTO PATRE DIGNA
+ SOBOLES.
+
+
+ THIS TOMB BEING PULLED DOWN BY THE MALIGNANT INFLUENCE OF
+ ARCHBISHOP SHARP, AFTER THE INTRODUCTION OF PRELACY, MR GEORGE
+ GILLESPIE, MINISTER OF THE GOSPEL AT STRATHMIGLO, CAUSED IT TO BE
+ RE-ERECTED, IN HONOUR OF HIS SAID WORTHY GRANDFATHER, AND AS A
+ STANDING MONUMENT OF DUTIFUL REGARD TO HIS BLESSED MEMORY; ANNO
+ DOMINI, 1746.
+
+
+It may be expedient to give a translation:--
+
+
+ "Master George Gillespie, minister at Edinburgh, in his youthful
+ years overthrew a host of 'English popish ceremonies;' as he
+ approached full manhood, having been sent as commissioner to the
+ Westminster Assembly, his attention was directed to the task of
+ extirpating Prelacy from England, and promoting purity and
+ uniformity in the worship of God. He chastised Erastianism in his
+ 'Aaron's Rod Blossoming.' Having returned to his native country he
+ weakened the violators of the covenant, who were bent on provoking
+ a war with England.(7) Having been chosen moderator of the General
+ Assembly which met at Edinburgh in the year 1648, he devoted his
+ last exertions to the service of his country so as to draw forth
+ public approbation: and having, as an eye-witness, seen that ruin
+ of the malignants which he had foretold, departing in peace on the
+ same day on which the League of the three kingdoms was solemnly
+ renewed, in the 36th year of his age, he entered into the joy of
+ the Lord. He was a man profound in genius, mild in disposition,
+ acute in argument, flowing in eloquence, unconquered in mind. He
+ drew to himself the love of the good, the envy of the bad, and the
+ admiration of all. He was an ornament of his country,--a son worthy
+ of such a father."
+
+
+Such was the "scandalous inscription" which the peevish spleen, yet bitter
+malice of Scottish Prelacy, found gratification in attempting to destroy.
+But there is a righteous retribution even in this world. Men rear their
+own monuments, and write inscriptions on them which time cannot
+obliterate. Gillespie's enduring monument is in his actions and his
+writings, which latest ages will admire. The monuments of Scottish Prelacy
+are equally imperishable, whether in the wantonly defaced tomb-stones of
+piety and patriotism, or in the moss-grown martyr-stones that stud the
+moors and glens of our native land; and the inscriptions thereupon are
+fearfully legible with records of indelible infamy.
+
+It remains but to offer a few remarks respecting Gillespie's various
+works. The first production of his pen was his remarkable "Dispute against
+the English Popish Ceremonies." It was published in 1637, when its author
+was only in the 25th year of his age; and it must have been completed some
+time previous to its publication, as it appears to have been printed
+abroad, most probably in Holland. This gives countenance to one statement
+which affirms it to have been written when Gillespie had scarcely passed
+his 22d year.
+
+His next work was published in London, in the year 1641, where he was
+during the progress of the treaty with the King. It is referred to by
+Baillie in the following terms:--"Think not we live any of us here to be
+idle; Mr Henderson has ready now a short treatise, much called for, of our
+church discipline; Mr Gillespie has the grounds of Presbyterial Government
+well Asserted; Mr Blair, a pertinent answer to Hall's Remonstrance: all
+these are ready for the press." The valuable treatise here referred to has
+not been so much noticed as several other of Gillespie's writings, but is
+included in this collective edition.
+
+His Sermons and Controversial Pamphlets were produced in the years
+1641-5-6, during the sittings of the Westminster Assembly.
+
+Aaron's Rod Blossoming was published at London also, about the close of
+the year 1646. This is his greatest work.
+
+The celebrated Hundred and Eleven Propositions were prepared before he
+left London, and laid before the General Assembly on his return to
+Scotland in the summer of 1647. Perhaps it is not possible to obtain a
+clear conception of Erastianism better than by the study of these
+propositions. They have been reprinted several times, yet were rarely to
+be obtained.
+
+The short, yet very able and high-principled papers which he prepared for
+the Assembly and its Commission in 1648, were his latest writings.
+
+A short time after his death, and during the year 1649, his brother
+Patrick published in one volume, entitled a "Treatise of Miscellany
+Questions," a series of papers, twenty-two in number, on a variety of
+important topics, which appeared to be in a condition fit for the press.
+Though this is a posthumous production, and consequently without its
+author's finishing corrections, it displays the same clearness, precision,
+and logical power, which characterise his other works. We are inclined to
+conjecture that these Essays, as we would now term them, were written at
+different times during the course of several years, and while he was
+studying the various topics to which they relate. Several of them are on
+subjects which were debated in the Westminster Assembly; and it is very
+probable that Gillespie wrote them while maturing his views on these
+points preparatory for those discussions in which he so greatly
+distinguished himself. This conjecture is strengthened by the curious and
+interesting fact, that a paper, which will be found beginning at page 109
+of the part now printed for the first time from the MS., is almost
+identical, both in argument and language, though somewhat different in
+arrangement, with chapter viii. pages 115 to 120, of Aaron's Rod. The
+arrangement in the Aaron's Rod is more succinct than in the paper referred
+to, but its principles, and very much of the language, are altogether the
+same. May not this indicate Gillespie's mode of study and composition? May
+he not have been in the habit of concentrating his mind on the leading
+topics of the subjects which he was studying, writing out pretty fully and
+carefully his thoughts on these topics, and afterwards connecting and
+arranging them so as to form one complete work? If so, then we may
+conclude that the Miscellany Questions contain such of these masses of
+separate thinking as Gillespie found no opportunity of using in any other
+manner, and, therefore, consented to their publication in their present
+form.
+
+In Wodrow's Analecta it is stated that Gillespie had a manuscript volume
+of sermons prepared for the press, which were bought from the printer by
+the Sectaries, and probably destroyed. It is also stated, that there were
+six octavo volumes of notes written by Gillespie at the Westminster
+Assembly then extant, containing an abstract of its deliberations. Of
+these manuscript volumes there are two copies in the Wodrow MSS.,
+Advocates' Library, but neither of them appears to be Gillespie's own
+hand-writing; the quarto certainly is not, and the octavo seems to be an
+accurate copy of _two_ of the original volumes. These have been collated
+and transcribed by Mr Meek, with his well-known care and fidelity, and the
+result is now, for the first time, given to the public. What has become of
+the missing volumes is not known, and it is to be feared the loss is
+irrecoverable. There is one consideration, however, which mitigates our
+regret for the loss of these volumes. The one which has been preserved
+begins February 2d, 1644, and ends January 3d, 1645.(8) Lightfoot's
+Journal continues till the end of 1644, and then terminates abruptly, as
+if he had not felt it necessary any longer to continue noting down the
+outline of the debates. Yet Lightfoot continued to attend the Assembly
+throughout the whole of its protracted deliberations. From other sources
+also, we learn that the whole of the points on which there existed any
+considerable difference of opinion in the Assembly, had been largely
+debated during the year 1644, so that little remained to be said on either
+side. The differences, indeed, continued; but they assumed the form of
+written controversy, the essence of which we have in the volume entitled,
+"The Grand Debate." It is probable, therefore, that the lost volumes of
+Gillespie's manuscript contained chiefly his own remarks on the writings
+of the Independents, and, not unlikely, the outlines of the answers
+returned by the Assembly. Supposing this to be the case, it would
+doubtless have been very interesting to have had Gillespie's remarks and
+arguments, but they could not have given much information which we do not
+at present possess.
+
+A few brief notices respecting the papers now first published may both be
+interesting, and may conduce to rendering them intelligible to the general
+reader.
+
+There is _first_, an extract attested by the scribes, or clerks, of the
+Westminster Assembly, copied from the original, by Wodrow, and giving a
+statement of the Votes on Discipline and Government, from session 76, to
+session 186.
+
+_Second_, Notes of Proceedings from February 2, to May 14, 1644, to p. 64.
+
+_Third_, Notes of Proceedings from September 4, 1644, to January 3, 1645,
+to p. 100. (By consulting Lightfoot, we learn that the time between May
+and September was occupied chiefly in debates respecting Ordination, the
+mode of dispensing the Lord's Supper, Excommunication, and Baptism, with
+some minor points.)
+
+_Fourth_, Debates in the Sub-committee respecting the Directory, 4th
+March, to 10th June, p. 101-2.
+
+_Fifth_, Notes of Proceedings in the Grand Committee, from September 20,
+to October 25, 1644, p. 103-7. This part of the manuscript, though short,
+is of very considerable importance, as giving us a specimen of the manner
+in which the Grand Committee acted. The Grand Committee was composed of
+some of the most influential persons of the Lords, of the Commons, and of
+the Assembly, together with the Scottish Commissioners. The duty of that
+Committee was to consult together respecting the subjects to be brought
+before the Assembly, and to prepare a formal statement of those subjects
+for the purpose of regular deliberation. By this process a large amount of
+debate was precluded, and the leading men were enabled to understand each
+other's sentiments before the more public discussions began. And as the
+Scottish Commissioners were necessarily constituent members of this
+Committee, their influence in directing the whole proceedings was both
+very great, and in constant operation. Lightfoot's journal gives no
+account of the proceedings of this Committee.
+
+_Sixth_, A paper on excommunication, &c. It has already been mentioned
+that this paper is nearly identical with part of a chapter in the Aaron's
+Rod.
+
+_Seventh_, A short note on some discussions which took place in the
+Committee of the General Assembly at Edinburgh, on the 7th and 8th of
+February, 1645, at the time when Baillie and Gillespie laid before the
+Assembly the Directory which had been recently completed.
+
+_Eighth_, The Ordinance of the two Houses of the English Parliament, 12th
+June, 1643, summoning the Assembly of Divines. This is added chiefly for
+the purpose of shewing the intention of the Parliament in calling the
+Assembly.
+
+It has been already stated that there are two MS. volumes, purporting to
+be copies of Gillespie's Notes. The one of these is in octavo, and seems
+to have been carefully taken; the other is in quarto, and appears to be
+partly a copy, partly an abstract. In it Gillespie is always spoken of in
+the third person, which has caused many variations. The transcriber has
+also made many omissions, not only of one, but of several paragraphs at a
+time, frequently passing over the remarks of the several speakers. It
+appears to have been his object to copy chiefly the argumentative part of
+the manuscript. This defective transcription had belonged to Mr William
+Veitch, as appears from his name written on the cover and first page, with
+the addition "minister at Peebles, 1691." In the copy transcribed for the
+press, the octavo manuscript has been followed. The quarto, however, along
+with Lightfoot, has been found useful in correcting the Scripture
+references, which had all to be carefully examined and verified; but
+sometimes all three failed to give satisfaction, and a conjectural
+substitute has been given, enclosed in brackets, and with a point of
+interrogation. In concluding these remarks, we cannot help expressing
+great gratification to see for the first time a complete edition of the
+works of George Gillespie; and in order also to complete the memoir, we
+add, as an appendix, some very interesting extracts from the Maitland Club
+edition of Wodrow's Analecta, chiefly relative to his last illness and
+death.
+
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX. EXTRACTS FROM WODROW'S ANALECTA (MAITLAND CLUB EDITION)
+
+
+"MR GEORGE GILLESPIE.
+
+"Mr George Gillespie, first minister of Kirkcaldy, and afterward minister
+of Edinburgh; when he was a child, he seemed to be somewhat dull and soft
+like, so that his mother would have stricken and abused him, and she would
+have made much of Patrick, his younger brother. His father, Mr John
+Gillespie, minister of Kirkcaldy, was angry to see his wife carry so to
+his son George; and he would have said, 'My heart, let alone; though
+Patrick may have some respect given him in the Church, yet my son George
+will be the great man in the Church of Scotland.' And he said of him when
+he was a-dying, 'George, George, I have gotten many a brave promise for
+thee.' And indeed he was very soon a great man; for it's reported, that
+before he was a preacher, he wrote the 'English Popish Ceremonies.' He
+was, of all ministers in his time, one of the greatest men for disputing
+and arguing; so that he was, being but a young man, much admired at the
+Assembly at Westminster, by all that heard him; he being one of the
+youngest members that was there. I heard old Mr Patrick Simson say, that
+he heard his cousin, Mr George Gillespie say, 'Let no man who is called of
+God to any work, be it never so great and difficult, distrust God for
+assistance, as I clearly found at that great Assembly at Westminster. If I
+were to live a long time in the world, I would not desire a more noble
+life, than the life of pure and single dependence on God; for, said he,
+though I may have a claim to some gifts of learning and parts, yet I ever
+found more advantage by single looking to God for assistance than by all
+the parts and gifts that ever I could pretend to, at that time.'
+
+"When he was at London, he would be often on his knees; at another time,
+reading and writing. And when he was sitting in that great Assembly at
+Westminster, he was often observed to have a little book, and to be
+marking down something with his pen in that book, even when some of the
+most learned men, as Coleman and Selden, were delivering their long and
+learned orations, and all he was writing was for the most part his pithy
+ejaculations to God, writing these words; _Da lucem, Domine; Da lucem!_
+When these learned men had ended their oration, the Moderator proposed who
+should give an answer to their discourse; they all generally voted Mr
+Gillespie to be the person. He being a young man, seemed to blush, and
+desired to be excused, when so many old and learned divines were present,
+yet all the brethren, with one voice, determined he should be the person
+that should give an answer to that learned oration. Though he seemed to
+take little heed, yet being thus pressed, he rose up, and resumed all the
+particulars of that learned oration very distinctly, and answered every
+part of it so fully, that all that heard him were amazed and astonished;
+for he died in 1648, and was then but about thirty-six years of age. Mr
+Calamy, if I be not forgotten, said, we were ready to think more of Mr
+Gillespie than was truly meet; if he had not been stained by being against
+our way and judgment for the Engagement.
+
+"He was one of the great men that had a chief hand in penning our most
+excellent Confession of Faith and Catechisms. He was a most grave and bold
+man, and had a most wonderful gift given him for disputing and arguing. My
+father told me, he observed that when there was a considerable number of
+ministers met, there were several of our great nobles were strongly
+reasoning with our ministers about the engagement 1648. When Mr Gillespie
+was busy studying his sermon that he was to preach before the Parliament
+to-morrow, the ministers sent privately for Mr Gillespie, whom he observed
+to come in very quietly, and when Lauderdale, Glencairn, and some others,
+rose up and debated very strongly for the engagement, Mr Gillespie rose up
+and answered them so fully and distinctly, firstly, secondly, and thirdly,
+that he fully silenced them all; and Glencairn said, 'There is no standing
+before this great and mighty man!' I heard worthy Mr Rowat say, that Mr
+Gillespie said, 'The more truly great a man is, he was really the more
+humble and low in his own eyes,' as he instanced in the great man Daniel;
+and, said he, 'God did not make choice of some of us as his instruments in
+the glorious work of Reformation, because we were more fit than others,
+but rather because we were more unfit than others.' He was called _Malleus
+Mallignantium_, and Mr Baillie, writing to some in this church anent Mr
+George Gillespie, said, 'He was truly an ornament to our church and
+nation.' And Mr James Brown, late minister of Glasgow, told me that there
+was an English gentleman said to him, that he heard Mr Gillespie preach,
+and he said, he believed he was one of the greatest Presbyterians in the
+world. He was taken from the Greyfriars' Church to the New Church. He has
+written several pieces, as 'Aaron's Rod Blossoming,' and 'Some Miscellany
+Questions,' and his 'Assertion of the Government of the Church of
+Scotland, about Ruling Elders.' He had several little books wherein he set
+down his remarks upon the proceedings of the Assembly at
+Westminster."--WODROW'S ANALECTA, vol. iii. pp. 109-18.
+
+"What follows here I have in conversation with Mr Patrick Simpson, whose
+memory was most exact. What concerns Mr Gillespie, and the Marquis of
+Montrose, I read over to him, and he corrected. The rest are hints I set
+down after conversation, when two or three days with him in his house at
+Renfrew, in the year 1707.
+
+(ACCOUNT OF THE LAST ILLNESS AND DEATH OF MR GEORGE GILLESPIE.)
+
+"Mr George Gillespie being moderator of the Assembly held at Edinburgh,
+July 12th, 1648, was all the time thereof, as also half a year before, in
+a greater weakness of body than ordinary; that being now come to a height,
+which long before had been gathering. He had a great hoasting and
+sweating, which in the time of the General Assembly began to grow worse;
+but being extraordinarily (so I may say) upheld, was not so sensible as
+when the Assembly dissolved it appeared to be. On occasion whereof, the
+next Wednesday after the rising of the Assembly, he went with his wife
+over to Kirkcaldy, there intending to tarry for a space, till it should
+please the Lord, by the use of means, to restore him to some more health
+to come over again. But when he was come there, his weakness and disease
+grew daily more and more, so that no application of any strength durst be
+used towards him. It came to that, he kept his chamber still to his death,
+wearing and wasting hoasting, and sweating. Ten days before his death his
+sweating went away, and his hoasting lessened, yet his weakness still
+encreased, and his flux still continued. On Wednesday morning, which day
+he began to keep his bed, his pain began to be very violent, his breath
+more obstructed, his heart oppressed; and that growing all the next night
+to a very great height, in the midst of the night there were letters
+written to his brother, and Mr Rutherford, and Mr John Row, his death
+approaching fast. On Friday all day, and Thursday all night, he was at
+some ease. Friday at night, till Saturday in the afternoon, in great
+violence, the greatness of pain causing want of sleep. Mr Rutherford and
+Lord Craigihall came to visit him. Thus much for his body. Now I'll speak
+a little of what concerns his soul, and the exercise of his mind all the
+while.
+
+Monday, December 11, 1648, came my Lords Argyle, Cassils, Elcho, and
+Warriston to visit him. He did faithfully declare his mind to them, as
+public men, in that point whereof he hath left a testimony to the view of
+the world, as afterwards; and the speaking was very burdensome, yet he
+spared not very freely to fasten their duty upon them. The exercise of his
+mind all the time of his sickness was vary sad and constant, without
+comfortable manifestations, and sensible presence for the time, yet he
+continued in a constant faith of adherence, which ended in an adhering
+assurance, his grips growing still the stronger.
+
+"One day, a fortnight before his death, he had leaned down on a little
+bed, and taking a fit of faintness, and his mind being heavily exercised,
+and lifting up his eyes, this expression fell with great weight from his
+mouth, 'O my dear Lord, forsake me not forever!' His weariness of this
+life was very great, and his longing to be relieved, and to be where the
+veil would be taken away.
+
+"Tuesday, December 14, (1648) he was in heavy sickness, and three pastors
+came in the afternoon to visit him, of whom one said to him, 'The Lord
+hath made you faithful in all he hath employed you in, and it's likely we
+be put to the trial; therefore what encouragement give you us thereanent!'
+Whereto he answered in few words, 'I have gotten more by the Lord's
+immediate assistance than ever I had by study, in the disputes I had in
+the Assembly of Divines in England; therefore let never man distrust God
+for assistance that cast themselves on him, and follow his calling. For my
+own part, the time that I have had in the exercise of the ministry is but
+a moment.' To which sentence another pastor answered, 'But your moment
+hath exceeded the gray heads of others! This I may speak without
+flattery.' To which he answered disclaiming it with a 'no;' for he desired
+still to have Christ exalted, as he said at the same time, and another.
+And at other times, when any such things were spoken to him, 'What are all
+my righteousnesses but rotten rags? All that I have done cannot abide the
+touchstone of his justice. They are all but abominations, and as an
+unclean thing, when they are reckoned between my God and me. Christ is all
+things, and I am nothing!' The other pastor when the rest were out, asked,
+'Whether he was enjoying the comforts of God's presence, or if they were
+for a time suspended! He answered, Indeed they were suspended.' Then
+within a little while he said, 'Comforts! aye comforts!' meaning, that
+they were not easily attained. His wife said, 'What reck'd the comfort if
+believing is not suspended!' He said, 'No.' Speaking farther to that his
+condition, he said, 'Although that I should never see any more light of
+comfort than I do see, yet I shall adhere, and do believe that He is mine,
+and I am his!'
+
+"The next morrow being Friday, he not being able to write, did dictate out
+the rest of a paper, which he had been before writing himself, and did
+subscribe it before two witnesses, who also did subscribe; wherein he gave
+faithful and clear testimony to the work and cause of God, and against the
+enemies thereof, to stop the mouths of calumniators and to confirm his
+children.
+
+"In all his discourses this was mixed as one thing, that he longed for the
+time of relief, and rejoiced because it was so near. His breath being very
+short, he said, 'Where the hallelujahs are sung to the Lamb, there is no
+shortness of breath!' And being in very great pain all the Friday night,
+his mother said in the morning, 'In all appearance you will not have
+another night.' To which he said, 'Think you that your word will hold
+good?' She said, 'I fear it will hold over good.' He said, 'Not over
+good.' That day he blessed his children and some others, (Mr Patrick
+Simson, the writer of this) and said, 'God bless you: and as you carry the
+name of your grandfather, so God grant you his graces.' That afternoon,
+being Saturday, came Mr Samuel Rutherford, who, among other things, said,
+'The day, I hope, is dawning, and breaking in your soul, that shall never,
+have an end.' He said, 'It is not broken yet; but though I walk in
+darkness and see no light, yet I will trust in the name of the Lord and
+stay upon my God!' Mr Samuel said, 'Would not Christ be a welcome guest to
+you?' He answered, 'Welcome! the welcomest guest that ever I saw.' He said
+further, 'Doth not your soul love Christ above all things?' He answered,
+'I love him heartily: who ever knew any thing of him but would love him!'
+
+"Mr James Wilson going to pray, asked 'What petitions he would have him to
+put up for him?' He said, 'For more of himself, and strength to carry me
+through the dark valley.'
+
+"Saturday night he became weaker, and inclined to drowsiness and sleeping,
+and was discerned in his drowsiness a little to rave; yet being till the
+last half hour in his full and perfect senses, and having taken a little
+jelly and drink, about half an hour before his death he spake as sensibly
+betwixt as ever, and blessed some persons that morning with very spiritual
+and heavenly expressions. About seven or eight of the clock his drowsiness
+encreased, and he was overheard in it speaking (after he had spoken more
+imperfectly some words before) those words, 'Glory! Glory! a seeing of
+God! a seeing of God! I hope it shall be for his glory!' After he had
+taken a little refreshment of jelly, and a little drink through a reed, he
+said that the giving him these things made him drowsy; and a little
+afterwards, 'There is a great drowsiness on me, I know not how it comes.'
+
+"His wife seeing the time draw near, spake to him and said, 'The time of
+your relief is now near, and hard at hand.' He answered, 'I long for that
+time. O! happy they that are there.' This was the last word he was heard
+sensibly to speak. Mr Frederick Carmichael being there, they went to
+prayer, expecting death so suddenly. In the midst of prayer he left his
+rattling(9) and the pangs and fetches of death begin thence, his senses
+went away. Whereupon they rose from prayer, and beheld till, in a very
+gentle manner, the pins of his tabernacle were loosed.
+
+"He said (_supra_) 'Say not over good,' because he thought she wronged him
+so far in wishing the contrary of what he longed for.
+
+"Mr Carmichael said, 'You have been very faithful, and the Lord has
+honoured you to do him very much service, and now you are to get your
+reward.' He answered 'I think it reward enough, that ever I got leave to
+do him any service in truth and sincerity.' "
+
+This account was dictated to me by Mr Patrick Simson, Mr Gillespie's
+cousin, who was with him to his last sickness, and at his death, and took
+minutes at the time of these his expressions. I read it over, after I had
+written it, to him. He corrected some words, and said to me, "This is all
+I mind about his expressions toward his close. They made some impression
+on me at the time, and I then set them down. I have not read the paper
+that I mind these forty years, but I am pretty positive these were his
+very words." A day or two after, I went in with him to his closet to look
+for another paper, for now he had almost lost his sight, and in a bundle,
+I fell on the paper he wrote at the time, and told him of it. When we
+compared it with what I wrote, there was not the least variation betwixt
+the original and what I wrote, save an inconsiderable word or two, here
+altered; which is an instance of a strong memory, the greatest ever I
+knew.
+
+(Subscribed) R WODROW
+
+Sept. 8, 1707 WODROW's ANALECTA, vol. I, pp. 154-159
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_What follows about Mr Gillespie I wrote also from Mr Simson's mouth._
+
+"George Gillespie was born January 21st, 1613. He was first minister at
+Weemyse, the first admitted under Presbytery 1638. He was minister at
+Weemyse about two years. He was very young when laureate, before he was
+seventeen. He was chaplain first to my lord Kenmure, then to the Lord of
+Cassilis. When he was with Cassilis, he wrote his 'English Popish
+Ceremonies,' which when printed, he was about twenty-two. He wrote a
+'Dialogue between a Civilian and Divine,' a piece against Toleration,
+entitled 'Wholesome Severity reconciled with Christian Liberty.' He died
+in strong faith of adherence, though in darkness as to assurance, which
+faith of adherence he preached much. He died December seventeen, 1648. If
+he had lived to January 21, 1649, he had been thirty six years.
+
+"The last paper he wrote, was 'The Commission of the Kirk's Answer to the
+State's Observations on the Declaration of the General Assembly anent the
+Unlawfulness of the Engagement.' The Observations were penned, (as my
+relator supposes) by Mr William Colville, who wrote all these kind of
+papers for the Committee of Estates, and printed during the Assembly
+whereof he was moderator. They could not overtake it, but remitted it to
+the Commission to sit on Monday, and Mr Gillespie wrote the answer on
+Saturday and the Sabbath, when he (the thing requiring haste) staid from
+sermon, and my informer, Mr Patrick Simson, transcribed it against Monday
+at ten, when it passed without any alteration. And just the week after, he
+went over to Fife, where he died. He was not full ten years in the
+ministry. He had all his sermons in England, part polemical, part
+practical prepared for the press, and but one copy of them, which he told
+the printer's wife he used to deal with, and bade her have a care of them.
+And she was prevailed on by some money from the Sectaries, who were mauled
+by him, to suppress them. He was very clear in all his notions, and the
+manner of expressing them. There are six volumes in 8vo manuscript which
+he wrote at the Assembly of Divines remaining."--WODROW'S ANALECTA, vol. i.
+p. 159-160.
+
+
+
+
+
+DISPUTE AGAINST THE ENGLISH POPISH CEREMONIES OBTRUDED ON THE CHURCH OF
+SCOTLAND.
+
+
+ DISPUTE AGAINST THE ENGLISH POPISH CEREMONIES
+
+ OBTRUDED ON THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND;
+
+ WHEREIN NOT ONLY OUR OWN ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE SAME ARE STRONGLY
+CONFIRMED, BUT LIKEWISE THE ANSWERS AND DEFENCES OF OUR OPPOSITES, SUCH AS
+ HOOKER, MORTOUNE, BURGES, SPRINT, PAYBODY, ANDREWS, SARAVIA, TILEN,
+ SPOTSWOOD, LINDSEY, FOSBESSE, ETC., PARTICULARLY CONFUTED
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH,
+
+ 1662.
+
+ Jer. ix. 12-14.
+
+"Who is the wise man, that may understand this? and who is he to whom the
+ mouth of the Lord hath spoken, that he may declare it, for what the land
+perisheth?" "And the Lord saith, Because they have forsaken my law which I
+set before them, and have not obeyed my voice, neither walked therein, but
+ here walked after the imagination of their own heart, and after Baalim."
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE, AND OLIVER & BOYD.
+
+ M. OGLE & SON AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW.
+
+ D. DEWAR, PERTH. G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN. W. M'COMB, BELFAST.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS & CO., AND JAMES NISBET & CO., LONDON.
+
+ MDCCCXLIV.
+
+ Reprinted from Edition of 1660.
+
+ A. MURRAY, PRINTER, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH.
+
+
+
+
+DEDICATION
+
+
+TO
+ALL AND EVERY ONE
+IN THE
+REFORMED CHURCHES
+OF
+SCOTLAND, ENGLAND, AND IRELAND,
+WHO
+LOVE THE LORD JESUS, AND MEAN TO ADHERE UNTO THE REFORMATION OF RELIGION.
+GRACE, MERCY, AND PEACE, FROM GOD OUR FATHER,
+AND FROM
+THE LORD JESUS CHRIST.
+
+
+
+
+AUTHOR'S PREFACE
+
+
+As Satan's malice, and man's wickedness, cease not to molest the thrice
+happy estate of the church of Christ, so hath the eternal council of the
+only wise God predetermined the coming of offences, persecutions,
+heresies, schisms and divisions, that professors may be proved before they
+be as approved and made manifest, 1 Cor. xi. 19. And hence "It must needs
+be that offences come," Matt. xviii. 17; neither hath the church ever
+enjoyed both purity and peace any long time together. But whiles the
+church of God, thus disquieted, at well with dangerous alterations, as
+with doleful altercations, is presented in the theatre of this world, and
+crieth out to beholders, "Have ye no regard, all ye that pass by!" Lam. i.
+12. A pity it is to see the crooked and sinistrous courses of the greatest
+part, every man moving his period within the enormous confines of his own
+exorbitant desires; the atheistical nullisidian, nothing regardeth the
+assoiling of ecclesiastical controversies,--he is of Gallio's humour, Acts
+xviii. 17, and cares for none of those things; the sensual Epicurean and
+riotous ruffian (go church matters as they will) eats and drinks, and
+takes his pleasure; the cynical critic spueth out bitter aspersions,
+gibeth and justleth at everything that can be said or done in the cause of
+religion; the acenical jester playeth fast and loose, and can utter
+anything in sport, but nothing in earnest; the avaricious worldling hath
+no tune but _Give_, _give_, and no anthem pleaseth him but _Have_, _have_;
+the aspiring Diotrephes puffeth down every course which cannot puff up;
+the lofty favourite taketh the pattern of his religion from the court
+iconography, and if the court swim, he cares not though the church sink;
+the subdulous Machiavillian accounteth the show of religion profitable,
+but the substance of it troublesome: he studieth not the oracles of God
+but the principles of Satanical guile, which be learneth so well that he
+may go to the devil to be bishopped; the turn-coat temporiser wags with
+every wind, and (like Diogenes turning about the mouth of his voluble
+hogshead, after the course of the sun) wheresoever the bright beams of
+coruscant authority do shine and cherish, thither followeth and sitteth
+he; the gnathonic parasite sweareth to all that his benefactor holdeth;
+the mercenary pensioner will bow before he break; he who only studieth to
+have the praise of some witty invention, cannot strike upon another anvil;
+the silly idiot (with Absolom's two hundred, 2 Sam. xv. 11,) goeth, in the
+simplicity of his heart, after his perverse leaders; the lapped Nicodemite
+holds it enough to yield some secret assent to the truth, though neither
+his profession nor his practice testify so much; he whose mind is
+possessed with prejudicate opinions against the truth, when convincing
+light is holden forth to him, looketh asquint, and therefore goeth awry;
+the pragmatical adiaphorist, with his span-broad faith and ell-broad
+conscience, doth no small harm--the poor pandect of his plagiary profession
+in matters of faith reckoneth little for all, and in matters of practice
+all for little. Shortly, if an expurgatory index were compiled of those,
+and all other sorts of men, who either through their careless and neutral
+on looking, make no help to the troubled and disquieted church of Christ,
+or through their nocent accession and overthwart intermeddling, work out
+her greater harm, alas! how few feeling members were there to be found
+behind who truly lay to heart her estate and condition? Nevertheless, in
+the worst times, either of raging persecution or prevailing defection, as
+God Almighty hath ever hitherto, so both now, and to the end, he will
+reserve to himself a remnant according to the election of grace, who
+cleave to his blessed truth and to the purity of his holy worship, and are
+grieved for the affliction of Joseph, as being themselves also in the
+body, in confidence whereof I take boldness to stir you up at this time,
+by putting you in remembrance. If you would be rightly informed of the
+present estate of the reformed churches, you must not acquiesce in the
+pargetting verdict of those who are wealthy and well at ease, and mounted
+aloft upon the uncogged wheels of prosperous fortune (as they call it).
+Those whom the love of the world hath not enhanced to the serving of the
+time can give you the soundest judgment. It is noted of Dionysius
+Hallicarnasseus(10) (who was never advanced to magistracy in the Roman
+republic) that he hath written far more truly of the Romans than Fabius,
+Salustius, or Cato, who flourished among them with riches and honours.
+
+After that it pleased God, by the light of his glorious gospel, to dispel
+the more than cimmerian darkness of antichristianism, and, by the antidote
+of reformation, to avoid the poison of Popery; forasmuch as in England and
+Ireland, every noisome weed which God's hand had never planted was not
+pulled up, therefore we now see the faces of those churches overgrown with
+the repullulating twigs and sprigs of popish superstition. Mr Sprint
+acknowledgeth the Reformation of England to have been defective, and
+saith, "It is easy to imagine of what difficulty it was to reform all
+things at the first, where the most part of the privy council, of the
+nobility, bishops, judges, gentry, and people, were open or close Papists,
+where few or none of any countenance stood for religion at the first, but
+the Protector and Cranmer."(11) The church of Scotland was blessed with a
+more glorious and perfect reformation than any of our neighbour churches.
+The doctrine, discipline, regiment, and policy established here by
+ecclesiastical and civil laws, and sworn and subscribed unto by the king's
+majesty and several presbyteries and parish churches of the land, as it
+had the applause of foreign divines; so was it in all points agreeable
+unto the word, neither could the most rigid Aristarchus of these times
+challenge any irregularity of the same. But now, alas! even this church,
+which was once so great a praise in the earth is deeply corrupted, and
+hath "turned aside quickly out of the way," Exod. xxxii. 8. So that this
+is the Lord's controversy against Scotland. "I had planted thee a noble
+vine, wholly a right seed? How then art thou turned into the degenerate
+plant of a strange vine unto me?" Jer. ii. 21.
+
+It is not this day feared, but felt, that the rotten dregs of Popery,
+which were never purged away from England and Ireland and having once been
+spued out with detestation, are licked up again in Scotland, prove to be
+the unhappy occasions of a woeful recidivation. Neither is there need of
+Lyncean eyes, for if we be not poreblind, it cannot be hid from us. What
+doleful and disastrous mutation (to be bewailed with tears of blood) hath
+happened to the church and spouse of Christ in these dominions? Her comely
+countenance is miscoloured with the fading lustre of the mother of
+harlots, her shamefaced forehead hath received the mark of the beast, her
+lovely locks are frizled with the crisping pins of antichristian fashions,
+her chaste ears are made to listen to the friends of the great whore, who
+bring the bewitching doctrine of enchanting traditions, her dove eyes look
+pleasantly upon the well attired harlot, her sweet voice is mumming and
+muttering some missal and magical liturgies, her fair neck beareth the
+halter like to kens of her former captivity, even a burdensome chain of
+superfluous and superstitious ceremonies, her undefiled garments are
+stained with the meritricious bravery of Babylonish ornaments, and with
+the symbolising badges of conformity with Rome, her harmless hands reach
+brick and mortar to the building of Babel, her beautiful feet with shoes
+are all besmeared, whilst they return apace in the way of Egypt, and wade
+the ingruent brooks of Popery. Oh! transformed virgin, whether is thy
+beauty gone from thee? Oh! forlorn prince's daughter, how art thou not
+ashamed to look thy Lord in the face? Oh! thou best beloved among women,
+what hast thou to do with the inveigling appurtenances and habilement of
+Babylon the whore?--But among such things as have been the accursed means
+of the church's desolation, which peradventure might seem to some of you
+to have least harm or evil in them, are the ceremonies of kneeling in the
+act of receiving the Lord's supper, cross in baptism, bishopping,
+holidays, &c., which are pressed under the name of things indifferent; yet
+if you survey the sundry inconveniences and grievous consequences of the
+same, you will think far otherwise. The vain shows and shadows of these
+ceremonies have hid and obscured the substance of religion; the true life
+of godliness is smothered down and suppressed by the burden of these human
+inventions, for their sakes, many, who are both faithful servants to
+Christ and loyal subjects to the king, are evil spoken of, mocked,
+reproached, menanced, molested; for their sakes Christian brethren are
+offended, and the weak are greatly scandalised; for their sakes the most
+powerful and painful ministers in the land are either thrust out, or
+threatened to be thrust out from their callings; for their sakes the best
+qualified and most hopeful expectants are debarred from entering into the
+ministry; for their sakes the seminaries of learning are so corrupted,
+that few or no good plants can come forth from thence, for their sakes
+many are admitted into the sacred ministry, who are either popish and
+Arminianised, who minister to the flock poison instead of food; or silly
+ignorants, who can dispense no wholesome food to the hungry; or else
+vicious in their lives, who draw many with them into the dangerous
+precipice of soul perdition; or, lastly, so earthly minded, that they
+favour only the things of this earth, not the things of the Spirit of God,
+who feed themselves, but not the flock, and to whom the Great Shepherd of
+the sheep wilt say, "The diseased have ye not strengthened, neither have
+ye healed that which was sick, neither have ye bound up that which was
+broken, neither have ye brought again that which was driven away, neither
+have ye sought that which was lost," Ezek. xxxiv. 4. Simple ones, who have
+some taste and relish of popish superstition (for many such there be in
+the land), do suck from the intoxicated drugs of conformity, the softer
+milk which makes them grow in error. And who can be ignorant what a large
+spread Popery, Arminianism and reconciliation with Rome, have taken among
+the arch urgers of the ceremonies? What marvel that Papists clap their
+hands! for they see the day coming which they wish for. Woe to thee, O
+land, which bears professed Papists and avouched Atheists, but cannot bear
+them who desire to "abstain from all appearance of evil," 1 Thes. v. 22,
+for truth and equity are fallen in thee, and "he that departeth from evil
+maketh himself a prey," Isa. lix. 14, 15.
+
+These are the best wares which the big hulk of conformity, favoured with
+the prosperous gale of mighty authority, hath imported amongst us, and
+whilst our opposites so quiverly go about to spread the bad wares of these
+encumbering inconveniences, is it time for as luskishly to sit still and
+to be silent? "Woe unto us, for the day goeth away, for the shadows of the
+evening are stretched out," Jer. vi. 4.
+
+Moreover, besides the prevailing inconveniency of the controverted
+ceremonies, the unlawfulness of them is also plainly evinced in this
+ensuing dispute by such convincing arguments, as, being duly pondered in
+the equal balance of an attentive mind, shall, by God's grace, afford
+satisfaction to so many as purpose to buy the truth, and not to sell it.
+Wherefore, referring to the dispute the points themselves which are
+questioned, I am in this place to beseech you all by the mercies of God,
+that, remembering the words of the Lord, "Them that honour me I will
+honour, and they that despise me shalt be lightly esteemed," 1 Sam. ii.
+30, remembering, also, the curse and condemnation of Meroz, which came not
+to help the Lord against the mighty, Judg. v. 23, of the nobles of Tekoa,
+who put not their necks to the work of the Lord, Neh. iii. 5 and, shortly,
+of all such as have no courage for the truth, Jer. ix. 3, but seek their
+own things, not the things which are Jesus Christ's, Phil. ii. 21, and,
+finally, taking to heart how the Lord Jesus, when he cometh in the glory
+of his Father with his holy angels, Mark viii. 38, will be ashamed of
+every one who hath been ashamed of him and his words in the midst of a
+sinful and crooked generation, you would, with a holy zeal and invincible
+courage, against all contrary error, superstition, and abuse whatsoever,
+set yourselves both to speak and do, and likewise (having a calling) to
+suffer for the truth of Christ and for the purity of his worship, being in
+nothing terrified by your adversaries, Phil. i. 28, 1 Pet. iii. 14, which,
+that ye may the better perform, I commend to your thoughts these wholesome
+admonitions which follow--
+
+I. When you see so much diversity both of opinion and practice in things
+pertaining to religion, the rather ye ought to give all diligence for
+trying the things which are different, Phil. i. 10. If you judge us before
+you hear us, then do you contrary to the very law of nature and nations,
+John vii. 51, Acts v. 16. Neither will it help you at your reckoning to
+say, We believed our spiritual guides, our prelates and preachers, whom
+God had set over us. Nay, what if your guides be blind? then they not only
+fall in the ditch themselves, but you with them, Matth. iv. 14. Our Master
+would not have the Jews to rest upon the testimony of John Baptist
+himself, but would have them to search the Scriptures, John v. 33, 34, 39,
+by which touch stone the Bereans tried the Apostle's own doctrine, and are
+commended for so doing, Acts xvii. 11. But as we wish you not to condemn
+our cause without examining the same by the Word, so neither do we desire
+you blindly to follow us in adhering unto it, for what if your seeing
+guides be taken from you? How, then, shall you see to keep out of the
+ditch? We would neither have you to fight for us nor against us, like the
+blind sword players, Andabatae, a people who were said to fight with their
+eyes closed. Consider, therefore, what we say, and the Lord give you
+understanding in all things, 2 Tim. ii. 7.
+
+II. Since the God of heaven is the greatest king, who is to rule and reign
+over you by his Word, which he hath published to the world, and, _tunc
+vere_, &c., then is God truly said to reign in us when no worldly thing is
+harboured and haunted in our souls, saith Theophylact,(12) since also the
+wisdom of the flesh is enmity against God, Rom. viii. 7, who hath made
+foolish the wisdom of this world, 1 Cor. i. 20, therefore never shall you
+rightly deprehend the truth of God, nor submit yourselves to be guided by
+the same, unless, laying aside all the high soaring fancies and
+presumptuous conceits of natural and worldly wisdom, you come in an
+unfeigned humility and babe-like simplicity to be edified by the word of
+righteousness. And far less shall you ever take up the cross and follow
+Christ (as you are required), except, first of all, you labour and learn
+to deny yourselves, Matth. xvi. 24, that is, to make no reckoning what
+come of yourselves, and of all that you have in the world, so that God
+have glory and yourselves a good conscience, in your doings or sufferings.
+
+III. If you would not be drawn away after the error of the wicked, neither
+fall from your own stedfastness, the apostle Peter teacheth you, that ye
+must grow both in grace and knowledge, 2 Pet. iii. 18, for, if either your
+minds be darkened through want of knowledge, or your affections frozen
+through want of the love of God, then are you naked, and not guarded
+against the tentations of the time. Wherefore, as the perverters of the
+truth and simplicity of religion do daily multiply errors, so must you
+(shunning those shelves and quicksands of deceiving errors which witty
+make-bates design for you), labour daily for increase of knowledge, and as
+they to their errors in opinion do add the overplus of a licentious
+practice and lewd conversation, so must you (having so much the more ado
+to flee from their impiety), labour still for a greature measure of the
+lively work of sanctifying grace; in which respects Augustine saith well,
+that the adversaries of the truth do this good to the true members of the
+church, that the fall of those makes these to take better hold upon
+God.(13)
+
+IV. Be not deceived, to think that they who so eagerly press this course
+of conformity have any such end as God's glory, or the good of his church
+and profit of religion. When a violent urger of the ceremonies pretendeth
+religious respects for his proceedings, it may be well answered in
+Hillary's(14) words. _Subrepis nomine blandienti, occidis specie
+religionis_--Thou privily creepest in with an enticing title, thou killest
+with the pretence of religion, for, 1. It is most evidently true of these
+ceremonies, which our divines(15) say of the gestures and rites used in
+the mass, "They are all frivolous and hypocritical, stealing away true
+devotion from the heart, and making men to rest in the outward gestures of
+the body." There is more sound religion among them who refuse, than among
+them who receive the same, even our enemies themselves being judges, the
+reason whereof let me give in the words of one of our opposites(16)
+_Supervacua hoec occupatio circa traditiones humanas, gignit semper
+ignorantiam et contemptum proeceptorum divinorum_--This needless business
+about human traditions doth ever beget the ignorance and contempt of
+divine commandments. 2. Where read we that the servants of God have at any
+time sought to advance religion by such hideous courses of stern violence,
+as are intended and assayed against us by those who press the ceremonies
+upon us? The jirking and nibbling of their unformal huggermugger cometh
+nearer to sycophancy than to sincerity, and is sibber to appeaching
+hostility than fraternal charity, for just so they deal with us as the
+Arians did with the catholics of old. _Sinceros_, &c.(17) "The sincere
+teachers of the churches they delated and accused before magistrates, as
+if they alone did continually perturb the church's peace and tranquillity,
+and did only labour that the divided churches might never again piously
+grow together, and by this calumny they persuaded politic and civil men
+(who did not well enough understand this business), that the godly
+teachers of the churches should be cast forth into exile, and the Arian
+wolves should be sent into the sheepfolds of Christ." Now, forasmuch as
+God hath said, "They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain,"
+Isa. ix. 11, and will not have his flock to be ruled with force and with
+cruelty, Ezek. xxxiv. 4. _Nec potest_ (saith Lactantius(18)) _aut veritas
+cum vi, aut justitia cum crudelitate conjungi_--Neither can either truth be
+conjoined with violence, or righteousness with cruelty therefore, if our
+opposites would make it evident that they are in very deed led by
+religious aims let them resile from their violent proceedings, and deal
+with us in the spirit of meekness showing us from God's word and good
+reason the equity of their cause, and iniquity of ours, wherein we require
+no other thing of them, than that which Lactantius required of the
+adversaries of his profession, even that they would debate the matter
+_verbis pontius quam verberibus_--by words rather than by whips
+_Distringant aciem ingeniorem suorum: siratio eorum vera est, asseratur:
+parati sumus audire, si doceant_--Let them draw out the sharpness of their
+engines; if their reason be true let it be averred, we are ready to hear,
+if they teach us. 3. If their aims were truly for the advancement of
+religion, how comes it to pass, that whilst they make so much ado and move
+every stone against us for our modest refusing of obedience to certain
+ordinances of men, which in our consciences we are persuaded to be
+unlawful, they manumiss and set free the simony, lying, swearing,
+profanation of the Sabbath, drunkenness, whoredom, with other gross and
+scandalous vices of some of their own side, by which God's own
+commandments are most fearfully violated? This just recrimination we may
+well use for our own most lawful defence. Neither do we hereby intend any
+man's shame (God knows), but his reformation rather. We wish from our
+hearts we had no reason to challenge our opposites of that superstition
+taxed in the Pharisees, _Quod argubant &c._--that they accused the
+disciples of little things, and themselves were guilty in great things,
+saith Nicolaus Goranus.(19)
+
+V. Do not account ceremonies to be matters of so small importance that we
+need not stand much upon them, for, as Hooker(20) observeth, a ceremony,
+through custom, worketh very much with people. Dr Burges allegeth(21) for
+his writing about ceremonies, that the matter is important for the
+consequence of it. Camero(22) thinketh so much of ceremonies, that he
+holdeth our simplicity to notify that we have the true religion, and that
+the religion of Papists is superstitious because of their ceremonies. To
+say the truth, a church is in so far true or hypocritical as it mixeth or
+not mixeth human inventions with God's holy worship, and hence the
+Magdeburgians profess,(23) that they write of the ceremonies for making a
+difference betwixt a true and a hypocritical church. _Vere enim ecclesia,
+&c._--for a true church, as it retains pure doctrine, so also it keeps
+simplicity of ceremonies, &c., but a hypocritical church, as it departs
+from pure doctrine, so for the most part it changeth and augmenteth the
+ceremonies instituted of God, and multiplieth its own traditions, &c. And
+as touching our controverted ceremonies in particular, if you consider
+what we have written against them, you shall easily perceive that they are
+matters of no small, but very great consequence. Howbeit these be but the
+beginnings of evils, and there is a worse gallimaufry gobber-wise
+prepared. It hath been observed of the warring Turks(24) that often they
+used this notable deceit--to send a lying rumour and a vain tumult of war
+to one place, but, in the meanwhile, to address their true forces to
+another place, that so they might surprise those who have been unwarily
+led by pernicious credulity. So have we manifest (alas too, too manifest)
+reasons to make us conceive, that whilst the chief urgers of the course of
+conformity are skirmishing with us about the trifling ceremonies (as some
+men count them), they are but labouring to hold our thoughts so bent and
+intent upon those smaller quarrels, that we may forget to distinguish
+betwixt evils immanent and evils imminent, and that we be not too much
+awake to espy their secret sleight in compassing further aims.
+
+VI. Neither let the pretence of peace and unity cool your fervour, or make
+you spare to oppose yourselves unto those idle and idolised ceremonies
+against which we dispute, for whilst our opposites make a vain show and
+pretence of peace, they do like the Romans,(25) who built the Temple of
+Concord just in the place where the seditious outrages of the two Gracchi,
+Tiberius and Caius, had been acted, which temple,(26) in the subsequent
+times, did not restrain, but, by the contrary, gave further scope unto
+more bloody seditions, so that they should have built _discord_ a temple
+in that place rather than _concord_, as Augustine pleasantly tickleth
+them. Do our opposites think that the bane of peace is never in yielding
+to the course of the time, but ever in refusing to yield? Or will they not
+rather acknowledge, that as a man is said to be made drunk by drinking the
+water of Lyncestus, a river of Macedonia,(27) no less than if he had
+filled himself with the strongest wine, so one may be inebriate with a
+contentious humour in standing stiffly for yielding, as well as in
+standing stedfastly for refusing? Peace is violated by the oppugners of
+the truth, but established by the possessors of the same, for (as was
+rightly said by Georgius Scolarius in the Council of Florence(28)) the
+church's peace "can neither stay among men, the truth being unknown,
+neither can it but needs return, the truth being known." _Nec veritate
+ignorata manere inter homines potest, nec illa agnita necessario non
+redire._ We must therefore be mortised together, not by the subscudines of
+error, but by the bands of truth and unity of faith. And we go the true
+way to regain peace whilst we sue for the removal of those popish
+ceremonies which have both occasioned and nourished the discord, we only
+refuse that peace (falsely so called) which will not permit us to brook
+purity, and that because (as Joseph Hall(29) noteth) St James' (chap. iii.
+17,) describeth the wisdom which is from above to be "first pure, then
+peaceable," whence it cometh that there can be no concord betwixt Christ
+and antichrist, nor any communion betwixt the temple of God and idols, 2
+Cor. vii. 15, 16. _Atque ut coelum_, &c.: "And though heaven and earth
+should happen to be mingled together, yet the sincere worship of God and
+his sacred truth, wherein eternal salvation is laid up for us, should
+worthily be unto us of more estimation than a hundred worlds," saith
+Calvin.(30) John Fox(31) judgeth it better to contend against those who
+prefer their own traditions to the commandments of God, than to be at
+peace with them. True it is,--_Pax optima rerum, quas homini novisse datum
+est._--Yet I trust we may use the words of that great adiaphorist, Georgius
+Cassander--_Ea __ demion vera_, &c. "That alone (saith he) is true and
+solid Christian peace which is conjoined with the glory of God and the
+obedience of his will, and is rejoined from all depravation of the
+heavenly doctrine and divine worship."
+
+VII. Beware, also, you be not deceived with the pretence of the church's
+consent, and of uniformity as well with the ancient church as with the now
+reformed churches, in the forms and customs of both, for, 1. Our opposites
+cannot show that the sign of the cross was received and used in the church
+before Tertullian, except they allege either the Montanists or the
+Valentian heretics for it. Neither yet can they show, that apparel proper
+for divine service, and distinguished from the common, is more ancient
+than the days of Pope Coelestinus, nor lastly, that kneeling in the act of
+receiving the communion was ever used before the time of Pope Honorious
+III. They cannot prove any one of the controverted ceremonies to have been
+in the church the first two hundred years after Christ, except the feast
+of Easter (which yet can neither be proved to have been observed in the
+apostles' own age, nor yet to have been established in the after age by
+any law, but only to have crept in by a certain private custom), and for
+some of them they cannot find any clear testimony for a long time
+thereafter. Now, in the third century,(32) historiographers observe, that
+_Paulatum ceremoniae auctae sunt, hominum superstitionorum opinionibus: unde
+in baptismo unctionem olei, cruces signaculum, et osculum
+addiderunt_--Ceremonies were by little and little augmented by the opinions
+of superstitious men, whence it was that they added the unction of oil,
+the sign of the cross, and a kiss in baptism. And in the fourth century
+they say, _Subinde magis magisque, traditiones humanae cumulatae
+sunt_--Forthwith human traditions were more and more augmented. And so from
+that time forward vain and idle ceremonies were still added to the worship
+of God, till the same was, under Popery, wholly corrupted with
+superstitious rites, yes, and Mr Sprint hath told us, even of the first
+two hundred years after Christ, that the "devil, in those days, began to
+sow his tares (as the watchmen began to sleep), both of false doctrine and
+corrupt ceremonies." And now, though some of the controverted ceremonies
+have been kept and reserved in many (not all), the reformed churches, yet
+they are not therefore to be the better liked of. For the reason of the
+reservation was, because some reverend divines who dealt and laboured in
+the reformation of those churches, perceiving the occurring lets and
+oppositions which were caused by most dangerous schisms and seditions, and
+by the raging of bloody wars, scarcely expected to effectuate so much as
+the purging of the church from fundamental errors and gross idolatry,
+which wrought them to be content, that lesser abuses in discipline and
+church policy should be then tolerated, because they saw not how to
+overtake them all at that time. In the meanwhile, they were so far from
+desiring any of the churches to retain these popish ceremonies, which
+might have convenient occasion of ejecting them (far less to recal them,
+being once ejected), that they testified plainly their dislike of the
+same, and wished that those churches wherein they lived, might have some
+blessed opportunity to be rid of all such rotten relics, riven rags and
+rotten remainders of Popery. All which, since they were once purged away
+from the church of Scotland and cast forth as things accursed into the
+jakes of eternal detestation, how vile and abominable may we now call the
+resuming of them? Or what a piacular prevarication is it to borrow from
+any other church which was less reformed, a pattern of policy for this
+church which was more reformed. But, 2. Though there could be more alleged
+for the ceremonies than truly there can be, either from the customs of the
+ancient or reformed churches, yet do our opposites themselves profess,
+that they will not justify all the ceremonies either of the ancient or
+reformed churches. And, indeed, who dare take this for a sure rule, that
+we ought to follow every ancient and universally received custom? For as
+Casaubon showeth, though the church's consent ought not to be contemned,
+yet we are not always to hold it for a law or a right rule. And do not our
+divines teach, that _nihil faciendum est ad ahorum exemplum, sed juxta
+verbum_--Nothing is to be done according to the example of others, but
+according to the word _Ut autem_, &c. "As the multitude of them who err
+(saith Osiander), so long prescription of time purchaseth no patrociny to
+error."
+
+VIII. Moreover, because the foredeck and hind deck of all our opposites'
+probations do resolve and rest finally into the authority of a law, and
+authority they use as a sharp knife to cut every Gordian knot which they
+cannot unloose, and as a dreadful peal to sound so loud in all ears that
+reason cannot be heard, therefore we certiorate you with Calvin, that _a
+acquievistis imperio, pessimo laqueo vos in duistis_--If you have
+acquiesced in authority, you have wrapped yourselves in a very evil snare.
+As touching any ordinance of the church we say with Whittaker, _Obediendum
+ecclesioe est sed jubents ac docenti recta_--We are to obey the church but
+commanding and teaching right things. Surely, if we have not proved the
+controverted ceremonies to be such things as are not right to be done we
+shall straight obey all the ceremonial laws made thereanent, and as for
+the civil magistrate's part, is it not holden that he may not enjoin us
+"to do that whereof we have not good ground to do it of faith?" and that,
+"although all thy external condition is in the power of the magistrate,
+yet internal things, as the keeping of faith, and obedience, and a good
+conscience, are not in his power." For every one of us "shall give account
+of himself to God," Rom. xiv. 12, but until you hear more in the dispute
+of the power which either the church or the magistrate hath to enact laws
+anent things belonging to the worship of God, and of the binding power of
+the same, let me add here touching human laws in general, that where we
+have no other reason to warrant unto us the doing of that which a human
+law prescribeth, beside the bare will and authority of the law maker, in
+this case a human law cannot bind us to obedience. Aquinas holdeth with
+Isidore, that a human law (among other conditions of it) must both be
+necessary for removing of some evil, and likewise profitable for guiding
+us to some good. Gregorius Sayrus following them herein, saith, _Debet lex
+homines a malo retrahere, et idio dicatur necessaria debet __ etiam
+promovere in bonum, et ideo dicitur utilis_--A law ought to draw back men
+from evil, and therefore is called necessary, it ought also to promove
+them unto good, and therefore is called profitable. Human laws, in Mr
+Hooker's judgment,(33) must teach what is good, and be made for the
+benefit of men. Demosthenes(34) describeth a law to be such a thing _cui
+convenit omnibus parere_ which it is convenient for every one to obey.
+Camero(35) not only alloweth us to seek a reason of the church's laws
+(_Non enim_ saith he, _verae ecclesiae libet leges ferre quarum non reddat
+rationem_--It pleaseth not the true church to make and publish laws,
+whereof she giveth not a reason), but he(36) will likewise have us, in
+such things as concern the glory and honour of God, not to obey the laws
+of any magistrate blindly and without a reason. "There was one (saith the
+Bishop of Winchester(37)), that would not have his will stand for reason,
+and was there none such among the people of God? Yes, we find, 1 Sam. ii,
+one of whom it is said, Thus it must be, for Hophni will not have it so,
+but thus his reason is, For he will not. And God grant none such may be
+found among Christians." From Scripture we learn, that neither hath the
+magistrate any power, but for our good only, Rom. xiii. 4, nor yet hath
+the church any power, but for our edification only, Ephes. iv. 12. Law
+makers, therefore, may not enjoin _quod libet_, that which liketh them,
+nay, nor always _quod licet_, that which is in itself lawful, but only
+_quod expedit_, that which is expedient and good to the use of edifying.
+And to them we may well say with Tertullian,(38) _Iniquam exercetis
+dominationem si ideo negatis licere quia vultis, non quia debuit non
+licere_--You exercise an unjust dominion, if, therefore, you deny anything
+to be free, because you will so, not because it ought not to be free.
+Besides all this, there is nothing which any way pertaineth to the worship
+of God left to the determination of human laws, beside the mere
+circumstances, which neither have any holiness in them, forasmuch as they
+have no other use and praise in sacred than they have in civil things, nor
+yet were particularly determinable in Scripture, because they are
+infinite, but sacred, significant ceremonies, such as cross, kneeling,
+surplice, holidays, bishopping, &c., which have no use and praise except
+in religion only, and which, also, were most easily determinate (yet not
+determined) within those bounds which the wisdom of God did set to his
+written word, are such things as God never left to the determination of
+any human law. Neither have men any power to burden us with those or such
+like ordinances, "For (saith not our Lord himself to the churches), I will
+put upon you none other burden, but that which ye have already, hold fast
+till I come," Rev. ii. 24, 25. Wherefore, _pro hac_, &c., for this liberty
+we ought stoutly to fight against false teachers.(39) Finally, it is to be
+noted, that though in some things we may and do commendably refuse
+obedience to the laws of them whom God hath set over us, yet are we ever
+obliged (and accordingly intend) still to subject ourselves onto them, for
+to be subject doth signify (as Zanchius showeth(40)), to be placed under,
+to be subordinate, and so to give honour and reverence to him who is
+above, which may well stand without obedience to every one of his laws.
+Yea, and Dr Field(41) also tells us, that "subjection is generally and
+absolutely required where obedience is not."
+
+IX. Forasmuch as some ignorant ones are of opinion, that when they
+practise the ceremonies, neither perceiving any unlawfulness in them (but,
+by the contrary, being persuaded in their consciences of the lawfulness of
+the same), nor yet having any evil meaning (but intending God's glory and
+the peace of the church), therefore they practise them with a good
+conscience. Be not ye also deceived, but rather advert unto this, that a
+peaceable conscience, allowing that which a man doth, is not ever a good
+conscience, but oftentimes an erring, bold, presuming, secure, yea,
+perhaps, a seared conscience. A good conscience, the testimony whereof
+giveth a man true peace in his doings, is, and is only, such a one as is
+rightly informed out of the word of God. Neither doth a good meaning
+excuse any evil action, or else they who killed the apostles were to be
+excused, because in so doing they thought they did God good service, John
+xiv. 2. It is the observation even of Papists, that men may commit many a
+soul-ruining scandal, though they intend no such thing as the ruin of
+souls.(42)
+
+X. If once you yield to these English ceremonies, think not that
+thereafter you can keep yourselves back from any greater evils, or grosser
+corruptions which they draw after them; for as it is just with God to give
+such men over to strong delusions as have not received the love of the
+truth, nor taken pleasure in the sincerity of his worship, 2 Thess. ii.
+10, 11; so there is not a more deceitful and dangerous temptation than in
+yielding to the beginnings of evil. "He that is unjust in the least, is
+also unjust in much" saith he who could not lie, Luke xvi. 20. When Uriah
+the priest had once pleased king Ahaz, in making an altar like unto that
+at Damascus, he was afterwards led on to please him in a greater matter,
+even in forsaking the altar of the Lord, and in offering all the
+sacrifices upon the altar of Damascus, 2 Kings xvi. 10-16. All your
+winning or losing of a good conscience, is in your first buying; for such
+is the deceitfulness of sin, and the cunning conveyance of that old
+serpent, that if his head be once entering in, his whole body will easily
+follow after; and if he make you handsomely to swallow gnats at first, he
+will make you swallow camels ere all be done. Oh, happy they who dash the
+little ones of Babylon against the stones! Psal. cxxxvii. 9.
+
+XI. Do not reckon it enough to bear within the inclosure of your secret
+thoughts a certain dislike of the ceremonies and other abuses now set
+afoot, except both by profession and action you evidence the same, and so
+show your faith by your fact. We are constrained to say to some among you,
+with Elijah, "How long halt ye between two opinions?" 1 Kings xviii. 21;
+and to call unto you, with Moses, "Who is on the Lord's side?" Exod.
+xxxii. 26. Who? "Be not deceived; God is not mocked;" Gal. vi. 7; and, "No
+man can serve two masters," Mat. vi. 24. However, he that is not against
+us, _pro tanto_, is with us, Mark ix. 40, that is, in so far he so
+obligeth himself unto us as that he cannot speak lightly evil of our
+cause, and we therein rejoice, and will rejoice, Phil. i. 18; yet,
+_simpliciter_, he that is not with us is against us, Matt. xii. 30; that
+is, he who by profession and practice showeth not himself to be on our
+side, is accounted before God to be our enemy.
+
+XII. Think not the wounds which the church hath received by means of these
+nocent ceremonies to be so deadly and desperate, as if there were no balm
+in Gilead; neither suffer your minds so far to miscarry as to think that
+ye wish well to the church, and are heartily sorry that matters frame with
+her as they do, whilst, in the meantime, you essay no means, you take no
+pains and travail for her help. When king Ahasuerus had given forth a
+decree for the utter extirpation of the Jews, Mordecai feared not to tell
+Esther, that if she should then hold her peace enlargement and deliverance
+should arise unto the Jews from another place, but she and her father's
+house should be destroyed; whereupon she, after three days' humiliation
+and prayer to God, put her very life in hazard by going in to supplicate
+the king, which was not according to the law, Esth. iv. But now, alas!
+there are too many professors who detract themselves from undergoing
+lesser hazards for the church's liberty, yea, from using those very
+defences which are according to the laws of the kingdom. Yet most certain
+it is, that without giving diligence in the use of the means, you shall
+neither convince your adversaries, nor yet exonerate your own consciences,
+nor, lastly, have such comfort in the day of your suffering as otherwise
+you should. I know that principally, and, above all, we are to offer up to
+God prayers and supplications, with strong crying and tears, which are the
+weapons of our spiritual warfare, Heb. v. 7; but as this ought to be done,
+so the achieving of other secondary means ought not to be left undone.
+
+If you disregard these things whereof, in the name of God, I have
+admonished you, and draw back your helping hands from the reproached and
+afflicted cause of Christ, for which we plead, then do not put evil far
+from you, for wrath is determined against you. And as for you, my dear
+brethren and countrymen of Scotland, as it is long since first
+Christianity was preached and professed in this land, as also it was
+blessed with a most glorious and much-renowned Reformation:(43) and,
+further, as the gospel hath been longer continued in purity and peace with
+us than with any church in Europe: moreover, as the Church of Scotland
+hath treacherously broken her bonds of oath and subscription wherewith
+other churches about us were not so tied; and, finally, as Almighty God,
+though he hath almost consumed other churches by his dreadful judgments,
+yet hath showed far greater long-suffering kindness towards us, to reclaim
+us to repentance, though, notwithstanding all this, we go on in a most
+doleful security, induration, blindness, and backsliding: so now, in the
+most ordinary course of God's justice, we are certainly to expect, that
+after so many mercies, so great long-suffering, and such a long day of
+grace, all despised, he is to send upon us such judgments as should not be
+believed though they were told. O Scotland! understand and turn again, or
+else, as God lives, most terrible judgments are abiding thee.
+
+But if you lay these things to heart,--if you be humbled before God for the
+provocation of your defection, and turn back from the same,--if with all
+your hearts and according to all your power, you bestow your best
+endeavours for making help to the wounded church of Christ, and for
+vindicating the cause of pure religion, yea, though it were with the loss
+of all that you have in the world, (_augetur enim religio Dei, quo magis
+premitur_(_44_)--God's true religion is enlarged the more it is pressed
+down), then shall you not only escape the evils which shall come upon this
+generation, but likewise be recompensed a hundred fold with the sweet
+consolations of God's Spirit here, and with the immortal crown of never
+fading glory hence. Now, our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and God, even our
+Father, which hath loved us, and hath given us everlasting consolation and
+good hope through grace, stablish you and keep you from evil, that ye may
+be presented before his throne. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with
+you all, Amen.
+
+
+
+
+PROLOGUE.
+
+
+How good reason those wise men had for them who did not allow of the
+English popish ceremonies at the first introducing of these novations into
+the Church of Scotland, foreseeing the bad effects and dangerous evils
+which might ensue thereupon, and how greatly the other sort were mistaken
+who did then yield to the same, apprehending no danger in them, it is this
+day too too apparent to us whose thoughts concerning the event of this
+course cannot be holden in suspense betwixt the apprehensions of fear and
+expectations of hope, because doleful experience hath made us feel that
+which the wiser sort before did fear. Since, then, this church, which was
+once a praise in the earth, is now brought to a most deplorable and daily
+increasing desolation by the means of these ceremonies, which have been
+both the sparkles to kindle, and the bellows to blow up, the consuming
+fire of intestine dissensions among us, it concerneth all her children,
+not only to cry out Ah! and Alas! and to "bewail with the weeping of
+Jazer," Isa. xvi. 9, but also to bethink themselves most seriously how to
+succour their dear, though distressed mother, in such a calamitous case.
+Our best endeavours which we are to employ for this end, next unto praying
+earnestly "for the peace of Jerusalem," Psal. cxxii. 6, are these: 1. So
+far as we have attained "to walk by the same rule, to mind the same
+thing," Phil. iii. 19, and to labour as much as is possible that the
+course of the gospel, the doctrine of godliness, the practice of piety lie
+not behind, because of our differing one from another about the
+ceremonies, lest otherwise {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} grow to be {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}. 2. In such things
+whereabout we agree not, to make diligent search and inquiry for the
+truth. For to have our judgments in our heels, and so blindly to follow
+every opinion which is broached, and squarely to conform unto every custom
+which is set afoot, becometh not men who are endued with reason for
+discerning of things beseeming from things not beseeming, far less
+Christians, who should have their senses exercised to discern both good
+and evil. Heb. v. 14, and who have received a commandment "to prove all
+things," 1 Thess. v. 21, before they hold fast anything; and least of all
+doth it become us who live in these most dangerous days, wherein error and
+defection so much abound. 3. When we have attained to the acknowledging of
+the truth, then to give a testimony unto the same, according to our
+vocation, contending for the truth of God against the errors of men, for
+the purity of Christ against the corruptions of Antichrist: For to
+understand the truth, and yet not contend for it, argueth cowardliness,
+not courage; fainting, not fervour; lukewarmness, not love; weakness, not
+valour. Wherefore, since we cannot impetrate from the troublers of our
+Israel that true peace which derogateth not from the truth, we may not, we
+dare not, leave off to debate with them. Among the laws of Solon, there
+was one which pronounced him defamed and unhonest who, in a civil uproar
+among the citizens, sitteth still a looker-on and a neuter (_Plut. in
+Vita. Solon_); much more deserve they to be so accounted of who shun to
+meddle with any controversy which disquieted the church, whereas they
+should labour to win the adversaries of the truth, and, if they prove
+obstinate, to defend and propugn the truth against them. In things of this
+life (as Calvin noteth in _Epist. ad Protect. Angl._) we may remit so much
+of the right as the love of peace requireth, but as for the regiment of
+the church which is spiritual, and wherein everything ought to be ordered
+according to the word of God, it is not in the power of any mortal man
+_quidquam hic aliis dare, aut in illorum gratiam deflectere_. These
+considerations have induced me to bestow some time, and to take some pains
+in the study of the controversies which are agitated in this church about
+the ceremonies, and (after due examination and discussion of the writings
+of such as have played the proctors for them) to compile this ensuing
+dispute against them, both for exonering myself, and for provoking of
+others to contend yet more for the truth, and for Zion's sake not to hold
+their peace, nor be at rest, until the amiable light of long-wished-for
+peace break forth out of all these confusions, Isa. lxii. 1; which, O
+Prince of Peace! hasten, who "wilt ordain peace for us: for thou also hast
+wrought all our works in us," Isa. xxvi. 12.
+
+
+
+
+ORDER.
+
+
+Because polemic and eristic discourses must follow the adversaries at the
+heels whithersoever they go, finding them out in all the lurking-places of
+their elaborate subterfuges, and conflicting with them wheresoever they
+pitch, until not only all their blows be awarded, but themselves also all
+derouted, therefore, perceiving the informality of the Formalists to be
+such that sometimes they plead for the controverted ceremonies as
+necessary, sometimes as expedient, sometimes as lawful, and sometimes as
+indifferent, I resolve to follow the trace, and to evince, by force of
+reason, that there is none of all those respects to justify either the
+urging or the using of them. And albeit the Archbishop of Spalato (_Pref.
+Libror. de Rep. Eccl._) cometh forth like an Olympic champion, stoutly
+brandishing and bravading, and making his account that no antagonist can
+match him except a prelate, albeit likewise the Bishop of Edinburgh
+(_Proc. in Perth, Assembly_, part iii. p. 55) would have us to think that
+we are not well advised to enter into combat with such Achillean strength
+as they have on their side, yet must our opposites know, that we have more
+daring minds than to be dashed with the vain flourish of their great
+words. Wherefore, in all these four ways wherein I am to draw the line of
+my dispute, I will not shun to encounter and handle strokes with the most
+valiant champions of that faction, knowing that--_Trophoeum ferre me a
+forti viro, pulchrum est: sin autem et vincar, vinci a tali nullum est
+probrum_--But what? Shall I speak doubtfully of the victory, or fear the
+foil? Nay, I consider that there is none of them so strong as he was who
+said, "We can do nothing against the truth, but for the truth," 2 Cor.
+xxiii. 8. I will therefore boldly adventure to combat with them even where
+they seem to be strongest, and to discuss their best arguments,
+allegations, answers, assertions, and distinctions. And my dispute shall
+consist of four parts, according to those four pretences which are given
+out for the ceremonies, which, being so different one from another, must
+be severally examined. The lawfulness of a thing is in that it may be
+done; the indifferency of it in that it may either be done or left undone,
+the expediency of it in that it is done profitably; and the necessity of
+it in that it may not be left undone. I will begin with the last respect
+first, as that which is the weightiest.
+
+
+
+
+ THE FIRST PART.
+
+
+AGAINST THE NECESSITY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+THAT OUR OPPOSITES DO URGE THE CEREMONIES AS THINGS NECESSARY.
+
+
+_Sect_. 1. This I prove, 1. From their practice; 2. From their pleading.
+In their practice, who seeth not that they would tie the people of God to
+a necessity of submitting their necks to this heavy yoke of human
+ceremonies? which are with more vehemency, forwardness, and strictness
+urged, than the weighty matters of the law of God, and the refusing
+whereof is far more inhibited, menaced, espied, delated, aggravated,
+censured, and punished, than idolatry, Popery, blasphemy, swearing,
+profanation of the Sabbath, murder, adultery, &c. Both preachers and
+people have been, and are, fined, confined, imprisoned, banished,
+censured, and punished so severely, that he may well say of them that
+which our divines say of the Papists, _Hoec sua inventa Decalago
+anteponunt, et gravius eos-multarent qui ea violarent, quam qui divina
+praecepta transgrederentur._(45) Wherefore, seeing they make not only as
+much, but more ado, about the controverted ceremonies than about the most
+necessary things in religion, their practice herein makes it too, too
+apparent what necessity they annex to them.
+
+_Sect_. 2. And if we will hearken to their pleading it tells no less; for
+howbeit they plead for their ceremonies, as things indifferent in their
+own nature, yet, when the ceremonies are considered as the ordinances of
+the church, they plead for them as things necessary. M. G. Powel, in the
+_Consideration of the Arguments directed to the High Court of Parliament
+in behalf of the Ministers suspended and deprived_ (ans. 3 to arg. 16),
+hath these words, yea, these particulars: "Subscription, ceremonies, &c.,
+being imposed by the church, and commanded by the magistrate, are
+necessary to be observed under the pain of sin." The Bishop of Edinburgh
+resolves us concerning the necessity of giving obedience to the laws of
+the church, enacted anent the ceremonies, thus: "Where a man hath not a
+law, his judgment is the rule of his conscience, but where there is a law,
+the law must be the rule. As, for example, before that apostolical canon
+that forbade to eat blood or strangled things, every man might have done
+that which in his conscience he thought most expedient, &c., but after the
+making and the publication of the canon that enjoined abstinence, the same
+was to rule their consciences. And, therefore, after that time, albeit a
+man had thought in his own private judgment that to abstain from these
+things was not expedient, &c. yet, in that case, he ought not to have
+eaten, because now the will of the law, and not the judgment of his own
+mind, was the rule of his conscience."(46) The Archbishop of St Andrews,
+to the same purpose saith, "In things indifferent we must always esteem
+that to be best and most seemly which seemeth so in the eye of public
+authority, neither is it for private men to control public judgment, as
+they cannot make public constitutions, so they may not control nor disobey
+them, being once made, indeed authority ought to look well to this, that
+it prescribe nothing but rightly, appoint no rights nor orders in the
+church but such as may set forward godliness and piety, yet, put the case,
+that some be otherwise established, they must be obeyed by such as are
+members of that church, as long as they have the force of a constitution,
+&c. But thou wilt say, My conscience suffers me not to obey, for I am
+persuaded that such things are not right, nor appointed. I answer thee, In
+matters of this nature and quality the sentence of thy superiors ought to
+direct thee, and that is a sufficient ground to thy conscience for
+obeying."(47) Thus we see that they urge the ceremonies, not only with a
+necessity of practice upon the outward man, but also with a necessity of
+opinion upon the conscience, and that merely because of the church's
+determination and appointment; yea, Dr Mortoune maketh kneeling in the act
+of receiving the communion to be in some sort necessary in itself, for he
+maintaineth,(48) that though it be not essentially necessary as food, yet
+it is accidentally necessary as physic. Nay, some of them are yet more
+absurd, who plainly call the ceremonies necessary in themselves,(49)
+beside the constitution of the church. Others of them, who confess the
+ceremonies to be not only unnecessary,(50) but also inconvenient, do,
+notwithstanding, plead for them as things necessary. Dr Burges tells
+us,(51) that some of his side think that ceremonies are inconvenient, but
+withal he discovers to us a strange mystery brought out of the
+unsearchable deepness of his piercing conception, holding that such things
+as not only are not at all necessary in themselves,(52) but are
+inconvenient too, may yet be urged as necessary.
+
+_Sect_. 3. The urging of these ceremonies as necessary, if there were no
+more, is a sufficient reason for our refusing them. "To the precepts of
+God (saith Balduine) nothing is to be added,(53) Deut. xii. Now God hath
+commanded these things which are necessary. The rites of the church are
+not necessary, wherefore, if the abrogation or usurpation of any rite be
+urged as necessary, then is an addition made to the commandment of God,
+which is forbidden in the word, and, by consequence, it cannot oblige me,
+neither should anything herein be yielded unto." Who can purge these
+ceremonies in controversy among us of gross superstition, since they are
+urged as things necessary? But of this superstition we shall hear
+afterward in its proper place.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+THE REASON TAKEN OUT OF ACTS XV. TO PROVE THE NECESSITY OF THE CEREMONIES,
+BECAUSE OF THE CHURCH'S APPOINTMENT, CONFUTED.
+
+
+The Bishop of Edinburgh, to prove that of necessity our consciences must
+be ruled by the will of the law, and that it is necessary that we give
+obedience to the same, albeit our consciences gainsay, allegeth that
+apostolical canon,(54) Acts xv., for an example, just as Bellarmine
+maintaineth, _Festorum observationem ex se indifferentem esse sed posita
+lege fieri necessariam_(_55_)_._ Hospinian, answering him, will
+acknowledge no necessity of the observation of feasts, except divine law
+could be showed for it.(56) So say we, that the ceremonies which are
+acknowledged by formalists to be indifferent in themselves, cannot be made
+necessary by the law of the church, neither doth that example of the
+apostolical canon make anything against us, for, according to Mr Sprint's
+confession,(57) it was not the force or authority of the canon, but the
+reason and ground whereupon the canon was made, which caused the necessity
+of abstaining, and to abstain was necessary for eschewing of scandal,
+whether the apostles and elders had enjoined abstinence or not.(58) The
+reason, then, why the things prescribed in that canon are called
+necessary, ver. 28, is not because, being indifferent before the making
+and publication of the canon, they became necessary by virtue of the canon
+after it was made, as the Bishop teacheth, but _quia tunc __ charitas
+exigebat, ut illa sua libertate qui ex gentibus conversi erant, propter
+proximi edificationem inter judeos non uterentur, sed ab ea abstinerent,_
+saith Chemnitius.(59) This law, saith Tilen,(60) was _propter charitatem
+et vitandi offendiculi necessitatem ad tempus sancita._ So that these
+things were necessary before the canon was made. _Necessaria fuerunt,_
+saith Ames,(61) _antequam Apostoli quidquam de iis statuerant, non
+absolute, sed quatenus in iis charitas jubebat morem gerere infirmis, ut
+cajetanus notat. Quamobrem,_ saith Tilen,(62) _cum charitas semper sit
+colenda, semper vitanda sandala._ "Charity is necessary (saith Beza), even
+in things which are in themselves indifferent."(63) What they can allege
+for the necessity of the ceremonies, from the authority and obligatory
+power of ecclesiastical laws, shall be answered by and by.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES THUS IMPOSED AND URGED AS THINGS NECESSARY, DO BEREAVE
+US OF OUR CHRISTIAN LIBERTY, FIRST, BECAUSE OUR PRACTICE IS ADSTRICTED.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. Who can blame us for standing to the defence of our Christian
+liberty, which we ought to defend and pretend in _rebus quibusvis?_ saith
+Bucer.(64) Shall we bear the name of Christians, and yet make no great
+account of the liberty which hath been bought to us by the dearest drops
+of the precious blood of the Son of God? _Sumus empti_, saith Parcus:(65)
+_non igitur nostri juris ut nos mancipemus hominum servitio: id enim
+manifesta cum injuria redemptoris Christi fieret: sumus liberti Christi.
+Magistratui autem,_ saith Tilen,(66) _et ecclesioe proepositis, non nisi
+usque ad aras obtemperandum, neque ullum certamen aut periculum pro
+libertatis per Christum nobis partae defensione defugiendum, siquidem
+mortem ipsius irritam fieri, Paulus asserit, si spiritualis servitutis
+jugo, nos implicari patiamur._ Gal. v. 1, "Let us stand fast, therefore,
+in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made us free, and not be entangled
+again with the yoke of bondage." But that the urging of the ceremonies as
+necessary doth take away our Christian liberty, I will make it evident in
+four points.
+
+_Sect._ 2. First, They are imposed with a necessity of practice. Spotswood
+tells us,(67) that public constitutions must be obeyed, and that private
+men may not disobey them, and thus is our practice adstricted in the use
+of things which are not at all necessary, and acknowledged _gratis_ by the
+urgers to be indifferent, adstricted (I say) to one part without liberty
+to the other, and that by the mere authority of a human constitution,
+whereas Christian liberty gives us freedom both for the omission and for
+the observation of a thing indifferent, except some other reason do
+adstrict and restrain it than a bare human constitution. Chrysostome,
+speaking of such as are subject to bishops,(68) saith, _In potestate
+positum est obedire vel non._ Liberty in things indifferent,(69) saith
+Amandus Polanus, _est per quam Christiani sunt liberi in usu vel
+abstinentia rerum adiaphorarom._ Calvin, speaking of our liberty in things
+indifferent,(70) saith, We may _eas nunc usurpare nunc omittere
+indifferenter_, and places this liberty,(71) _tam in abstinendo quam in
+utendo._ It is marked of the rites of the ancient church,(72) that
+_liberae fuerunt horum rituum observationes in ecclesia._ And what meaneth
+the Apostle while he saith, "If ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments
+of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to
+ordinances, (touch not, taste not, handle not, which all are to perish
+with the using,) after the commandments and doctrines of men?" Col. ii.
+20-22. Surely he condemneth not only _humana decreta de ritibus_, but also
+subjection and obedience to such ordinances of men as take from us liberty
+of practice in the use of things indifferent,(73) obedience (I say) for
+conscience of their ordinances merely. What meaneth also that place, 1
+Cor. vii. 23, "Be not ye the servants of men?" "It forbids us, (saith
+Paybody) to be the servants of men, that is, in wicked or superstitious
+actions, according to their perverse commandments or desires."(74) If he
+mean of actions that are wicked or superstitious in themselves, then it
+followeth, that to be subject unto those ordinances, "Touch not, taste
+not, handle not," is not to be the servants of men, because these actions
+are not wicked and superstitious in themselves. Not touching, not tasting,
+not handling, are in themselves indifferent. But if he mean of actions
+which are wicked and superstitious, in respect of circumstances, then is
+his restrictive gloss senseless; for we can never be the servants of men,
+but in such wicked and superstitious actions, if there were no more but
+giving obedience to such ordinances as are imposed with a necessity upon
+us, and that merely for conscience of the ordinance, it is enough to
+infect the actions with superstition, _Sunt hominum servi_, saith
+Bullinqer,(75) _qui aliquid in gratiam hominum faciunt_. This is nearer
+the truth; for to tie ourselves to the doing of anything for the will or
+pleasure of men, when our conscience can find no other reason for the
+doing of it, were indeed to make ourselves the servants of men. Far be it
+then from us to submit our necks to such a heavy yoke of human precepts,
+as would overload and undo us. Nay, we will stedfastly resist such
+unchristian tyranny as goeth about to spoil us of Christian liberty,
+taking that for certain which we find in Cyprian,(76) _periculosum est in
+divinis rebus ut quis cedat jure suo_.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Two things are here replied, 1. That there is reason for
+adstricting of our practice in these things, because we are commanded to
+obey them that have the rule over us, and to submit ourselves, Heb. xiii.
+17,(77) and to submit ourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's
+sake, 1 Pet. ii. 16, and that except public constitutions must needs be
+obeyed, there can be no order,(78) but all shall be filled with strife and
+contention. _Ans._ 1. As touching obedience to those that are set over us,
+if they mean not to tyrannise over the Lord's inheritance, 1 Pet. v. 3;
+and to make the commandments of God of no effect by their traditions, Mark
+vii. 9, they must give us leave to try their precepts by the sure will of
+God's word; and when we find that they require of us anything in the
+worship of God which is either against or beside his written word, then
+modestly to refuse obedience, which is the only way for order, and
+shunning of strife and contention. It will be said again, that except we
+prove the things commanded by those who are set over us to be unlawful in
+themselves, we cannot be allowed to refuse obedience to their ordinances.
+_Ans._ This unlawfulness of the ceremonies in themselves hath been proved
+by us already, and shall yet again be proved in this dispute. But put the
+case, they were lawful in themselves, yet have we good reason for refusing
+them: "David thought the feeding of his body was cause sufficient to break
+the law of the shew-bread; Christ thought the satisfying of the disciples'
+hunger to be cause sufficient to break the ceremony of the Sabbath. He
+thought, also, that the healing of the lepers' bodies was a just excuse to
+break the law that forbade the touching of them; much more, then, may we
+think now in our estimation, that the feeding of other men's souls, the
+satisfying of our own consciences, together with the consciences of other
+men, and the healing of men's superstition and spiritual leprosy, are
+causes sufficient to break the law of the ceremonies and of the cross,
+which are not God's but men's," saith Parker.(79) 2. As touching
+submission or subjection, we say with Dr Field,(80) _that subjection is
+generally and absolutely required where obedience is not,_ and even when
+our consciences suffer us not to obey, yet still we submit and subject
+ourselves, and neither do nor shall (I trust) show any the least contempt
+of authority.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Secondly, It is replied, that our Christian liberty is not
+taken away when practice is restrained, because conscience is still left
+free. "The Christian liberty (saith Paybody(81)), is not taken away by the
+necessity of doing a thing indifferent, or not doing, but only by that
+necessity which takes away the opinion or persuasion of its indifferency,"
+So saith Dr Burges,(82) "That the ceremonies in question are ordained to
+be used necessarily, though the judgment concerning them, and immediate
+conscience to God, be left free." _Ans._ 1. Who doubts of this, that
+liberty of practice may be restrained in the use of things which are in
+themselves indifferent? But, yet, if the bare authority of an
+ecclesiastical law, without any other reason than the will and pleasure of
+men, be made to restrain practice, then is Christian liberty taken away.
+Junius saith,(83) that _externum opus ligatur_ from the use of things
+indifferent, when the conscience is not bound; but in that same place he
+showeth, that the outward action is bound and restrained only _quo usque
+circumstantiae ob quas necessitas imperata est, se extendunt_. So that it
+is not the authority of an ecclesiastical law, but the occasion and ground
+of it, which adstricts the practice when the conscience is left free. 2.
+When the authority of the church's constitution is obtruded to bind and
+restrain the practice of Christians in the use of things indifferent, they
+are bereaved of their liberty, as well as if an opinion of necessity were
+borne in upon their consciences. Therefore we see when the Apostle, 1 Cor.
+vii., gives liberty of marriage, he doth not only leave the conscience
+free in its judgment of the lawfulness of marriage, but also give liberty
+of practice to marry or not to marry. And Col. ii. 21, when he giveth
+instances of such human ordinances as take away Christian liberty, he
+saith not, _you must think that you may not touch_, &c., but "touch not,"
+&c., telling us, that when the practice is restrained from touching,
+tasting, handling, by the ordinances of men, then is Christian liberty
+spoiled, though the conscience be left free. Camero, speaking of the
+servitude which is opposed to Christian liberty, saith,(84) that it is
+either _animi servitus_, or _corporis servitus_. Then if the outward man
+be brought in bondage, this makes up spiritual thraldom, though there be
+no more. But, 3. The ceremonies are imposed with an opinion of necessity
+upon the conscience itself, for proof whereof I proceed to the next point.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES TAKE AWAY OUR CHRISTIAN LIBERTY PROVED BY A SECOND
+REASON, NAMELY, BECAUSE CONSCIENCE ITSELF IS BOUND AND ADSTRICTED.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. Bishop Lindsey hath told us,(85) that the will of the law must
+be the rule of our conscience, so that conscience may not judge other ways
+than the law determines. Bishop Spotswood will have the sentence of
+superiors to direct the conscience,(86) and will have us to esteem that to
+be best and most seemly which seemeth so to them. Bishop Andrews, speaking
+of ceremonies,(87) not only will have every person inviolably to observe
+the rites and customs of his own church, but also will have the ordinances
+about those rites to be urged under pain of the anathema. I know not what
+the binding of the conscience is, if this be not it: _Apostolus gemendi
+partes relinquit, non cogendi auctoritatem tribuit ministris quibus plebs
+non auscultat_.(88) And shall they who call themselves the apostles'
+successors, compel, constrain and enthral, the consciences of the people
+of God? Charles V., as popish as he was, did promise to the
+Protestants,(89) _Nullam vim ipsorum conscientiis illatum iri_. And shall
+a popish prince speak more reasonable than protestant prelates? But to
+make it yet more and plentifully to appear how miserably our opposites
+would enthral our consciences, I will here show, 1. What the binding of
+the conscience is. 2. How the laws of the church may be said to bind. 3.
+What is the judgment of formalists touching the binding-power of
+ecclesiastical laws.
+
+_Sect._ 2. Concerning the first of these we will hear what Dr Field
+saith:(90) "To bind the conscience (saith he) is to bind the soul and
+spirit of man, with the fear of such punishments (to be inflicted by him
+that so bindeth) as the conscience feareth; that is, as men fear, though
+none but God and themselves be privy to their doings; now these are only
+such as God only inflicteth," &c. This description is too imperfect, and
+deserves to be corrected. To bind the conscience is _illam auctoritatem
+habere, ut conscientia illi subjicere sese debeat, ita ut peccatum sit, si
+contra illam quidquam fiat_, saith Ames.(91) "The binder (saith
+Perkins(92)) is that thing whatsoever which hath power and authority over
+conscience to order it. To bind is to urge, cause, and constrain it in
+every action, either to accuse for sin, or to excuse for well-doing; or to
+say, this may be done, or it may not be done." "To bind the conscience
+(saith Alsted(93)) _est illam urgere et adigere, ut vel excuset et
+accuset, vel indicet quid fieri aut non fieri possit_." Upon these
+descriptions, which have more truth and reason in them, I infer that
+whatsoever urges, or forces conscience to assent to a thing as lawful, or
+a thing that ought to be done, or dissent from a thing as unlawful, or a
+thing which ought not to be done, that is a binder of conscience, though
+it did not bind the spirit of a man with the fear of such punishments as
+God alone inflicteth. For secluding all respect of punishment, and not
+considering what will follow, the very obliging of the conscience for the
+time, _ad assensum_, is a binding of it.(94)
+
+_Sect._ 3. Touching the second, it is certain that human laws, as they
+come from men, and in respect of any force or authority which men can give
+them, have no power to bind the conscience. _Neque enim cum hominibus, sed
+cum uno Deo negotium est conscientis nostris_, saith Calvin.(95) Over our
+souls and consciences, _nemini quicquam juris nisi Deo_, saith Tilen.(96)
+From Jerome's distinction, that a king _praeest nolentibus_ but a bishop
+_volentibus_, Marcus Antonius de Dominis well concludeth: _Volentibus
+gregi praeesso, excludit omnem jurisdictionem et potestatem imperativam ac
+coactivam et solam significat directivam, ubi, viz., in libertate subditi
+est et parere et non parere, ita ut qui praeest nihil habeat quo nolentem
+parere adigat ad parendum._(97) This point he proveth in that chapter at
+length, where he disputeth both against temporal and spiritual coactive
+jurisdiction in the church. If it be demanded to what purpose serveth then
+the enacting of ecclesiastical laws, since they have not in them any power
+to bind the conscience, I answer, The use and end for which ecclesiastical
+laws do serve is, 1. For the plain discovery of such things as the law of
+God or nature do require of us, so that law which of itself hath power to
+bind, cometh from the priests and ministers of the Lord neither
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} nor {~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, but _declarative_, Mal. ii. 7. 2. For
+declaring to us what is fittest in such things as are, in their own
+nature, indifferent, and neither enforced by the law of God nor nature,
+and which part should be followed in these things as most convenient. The
+laws of the church, then, are appointed to let us see the necessity of the
+first kind of things, and what is expedient in the other kind of things,
+and therefore they are more properly called directions, instructions,
+admonitions, than laws. For I speak of ecclesiastical laws _qua tales_,
+that is, as they are the constitutions of men who are set over us; thus
+considered, they have only _vim dirigendi et monendi_.(98) It is said of
+the apostles, that they were constituted _doctrinae Christi testes, non
+novae doctrinae legist tores_.(99) And the same may be said of all the
+ministers of the gospel, when discipline is taken in with doctrine. He is
+no nonconformist who holdeth _ecclesiam in terris agere partes oratoris,
+seu legati obsecrantis et suadentis_.(100) And we may hitherto apply that
+which Gerson, the chancellor of Paris, saith:(101) "The wisest and best
+among the guides of God's church had not so ill a meaning as to have all
+their constitutions and ordinances taken for laws properly so named, much
+less strictly binding the conscience, but for threatenings, admonitions,
+counsels, and directions only, and when there groweth a general neglect,
+they seem to consent to the abolishing of them again;" for seeing, _lex
+instituitur, cum promulgatur, vigorem habet, cum moribus utentium
+approbatur._
+
+_Sect._ 4. But as we have seen in what respect the laws of the church do
+not bind, let us now see how they may be said to bind. That which bindeth
+is not the authority of the church, nor any force which the church can
+give to her laws. It must be then somewhat else which maketh them able to
+bind, when they bind at all, and that is _ratio legis_, "the reason of the
+law," without which the law itself cannot bind, and which hath the
+chiefest and most principal power of binding. An ecclesiastical law, saith
+Junius,(102) {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} _sive depositio, non vere lex est, sed_ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
+aut canon, ac proindedirigit quidem ut canon agentem voluntarie: non autem
+necessitate cogit, ut lex etiam involuntarium quod si forte ante accedit
+coactio, ea non est de natura canonis sed altunde pervenit. An
+ecclesiastical canon, saith Tilen,(103) _ducit volentem, non trahit
+nolentem: quod si accedat coactio, ea ecclesiastici canonis natura est
+prorsus aliena_, Calvin's judgment is,(104) that an ecclesiastical canon
+binds, when _manifestam utilitatem prae se fert_, and when either _tu
+prepon_ or _charitatis ratio_ doth require, that we impose a necessity on
+our liberty. It binds not, then, by its own authority in his mind. And
+what saith the canon law itself?(105) _Sed sciendum est quod
+ecclesiasticae prohibitiones proprias habent causas quibus cessantibus,
+cessant et ipsae._ Hence Junius saith,(106) that the law binds not _per
+se_, but only _propter ordinem charitatem, et cautionem scandali_. Hence
+Ames,(107) _quamvis ad justas leges humanas, justo modo observandas,
+obligentur homines in conscientiis suis a Deo; ipsae tamen leges humanae,
+qua sunt leges hominum, non obligant conscientiam._ Hence Alsted:(108)
+"Laws made by men of things indifferent, whether they be civil or
+ecclesiastical, do bind the conscience, in so far as they agree with God's
+word, serve for the public good, maintain order, and finally, take not
+away liberty of conscience." Hence the professors of Leyden say,(109) that
+laws bind not _primo et per se, sed secundario, et per accidens_; that
+is,(110) _quatenus in illis lex aliqua Dei violator_. Hence I may compare
+the constitutions of the church with _responsa juris consultorum_ among
+the Romans, which obliged no man, _nisi ex aequo et bono_, saith
+Daneus.(111) Hence it may be said, that the laws of the church do not only
+bind _scandali et contemptus ratione_, as Hospinian,(112) and in case
+_libertas fiat cum scandalo_, as Parcus;(113) for it were scandal not to
+give obedience to the laws of the church, when they prescribe things
+necessary or expedient for the eschewing of scandal, and it were contempt
+to refuse obedience to them, when we are not certainly persuaded of the
+unlawfulness or inexpediency of the things prescribed.
+
+_Sect._ 5. But out of the case of scandal or contempt, divines teach that
+conscience is not bound by the canon of the church made about order and
+policy. _Extra casum scandali et destinatae rebellionis, propter commune
+bonum, non peccat qui contra constitutiones istas fecerit_, saith
+Junius.(114) "If a law (saith Perkins)(115) concerning some external right
+or thing indifferent, be at some time or upon some occasion omitted, no
+offence given, nor contempt showed to ecclesiastical authority, there is
+no breach made in the conscience." Alsted's rule is,(116) _Leges humanae
+non obligant quando omitti possunt sine impedimento finis ob quem feruntur
+sine scandalo aliorum, et sine contemptu legislatoris._ And Tilen teacheth
+us,(117) that when the church hath determined the mutable circumstances,
+in the worship of God, for public edification, _privatorum conscientiis
+liberum est quandoque ista omittere, modo offendicula vitentur, nihil que
+ex contemptu ecclesiae ac ministerii publici petulanti {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} vel
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} facere videantur._
+
+_Sect._ 6. We deny not, then, that the church's canons about rites, which
+serve for public order and edification, do bind. We say only, that it is
+not the authority of the church framing the canon that binds, but the
+matter of the canon chiefly warranted by God's word.(118) _Scimus enim
+quaecunque ad decorum et ordinem pertinent, non habenda esse pro humanis
+placitas, quia divinitus approbantur._ Therefore we think concerning such
+canons, "that they are necessary to be observed so far forth only, as the
+keeping of them maintaineth decent order, and preventeth open
+offence."(119)
+
+_Sect._ 7. If any say that I derogate much from the authority of the
+church when I do nothing which she prescribeth, except I see it lawful and
+expedient, because I should do this much for the exhortation and
+admonition of a brother. _Ans._ 1. I give far more reverence to the
+direction of the church than to the admonition of a brother, because that
+is ministerial, this fraternal, that comes from authority, this only from
+charity, that is public, this private, that is given by many, this by one.
+And, finally, the church hath a calling to direct me in some things
+wherein a brother hath not. 2. If it be still instanced that, in the point
+of obedience, I do no more for the church than for any brother, because I
+am bound to do that which is made evident to be lawful and expedient,
+though a private Christian do but exhort me to it, or whether I be
+exhorted to it or not. For answer to this I say, that I will obey the
+directions of the church in many things rather than the directions of a
+brother; for in two things which are in themselves indifferent, and none
+of them inexpedient, I will do that which the church requireth, though my
+brother should exhort me to the contrary. But always I hold me at this
+sure ground, that I am never bound in conscience to obey the ordinances of
+the church, except they be evidently lawful and expedient. This is that,
+_sine quo non obligant_, and also that which doth chiefly bind, though it
+be not the only thing which bindeth. Now, for making the matter more
+plain, we must consider that the constitutions of the church are either
+lawful or unlawful. If unlawful, they bind not at all; if lawful, they are
+either concerning things necessary, as Acts xv. 28, and then the necessity
+of the things doth bind, whether the church ordain them or not; or else
+concerning things indifferent, as when the church ordaineth, that in great
+towns there shall be sermon on such a day of the week, and public prayers
+every day at such an hour. Here it is not the bare authority of the church
+that bindeth, without respect to the lawfulness or expediency of the thing
+itself which is ordained (else we were bound to do every thing which the
+church ordains, were it never so unlawful, for _quod competit alicui qua
+tali, competit omni tali_: we behold the authority of the church making
+laws, as well in unlawful ordinances as in lawful), nor yet is it the
+lawfulness or expediency of the thing itself, without respect to the
+ordinance of the church (for possibly other times and diets were as
+lawful, and expedient too, for such exercises, as those ordained by the
+church); but it is the authority of the church prescribing a thing lawful
+or expedient. In such a case, then neither doth the authority of the
+church bind, except the thing be lawful and expedient, nor doth the
+lawfulness and expediency of the thing bind, except the church ordain it;
+but both these jointly do bind.
+
+_Sect._ 8. I come now to examine what is the judgment of formalists
+touching the binding of the conscience by ecclesiastical laws. Dr Field
+saith, that the question should not be proposed, whether human laws do
+bind the conscience, but "whether binding the outward man to the
+performance of outward things by force and fear of outward punishment to
+be inflicted by men, the non-performance of such things, or the
+non-performance of them with such affections as were fit, be not a sin
+against God, of which the conscience will accuse us,"(120) &c. Unto this
+question thus proposed and understood of human laws, and where no more is
+considered as giving them power to bind, but only the authority of those
+who make them; some formalists do give (as I will show), and all of them
+(being well advised) must give an affirmative answer. And, I pray, what
+did Bellarmine say more,(121) when, expressing how conscience is subject
+to human authority, he taught that conscience belongeth _ad humanum forum,
+quatenus homo ex praecepto ita obligator ad opus externum faciendum, ut si
+non faciat, judicat ipse in conscientia sua se male facere, et hoc
+sufficit ad conscientiam obligandam?_ But to proceed particularly.
+
+_Sect._ 9. I begin with Field himself, whose resolution of the question
+proposed is,(122) that we are bound only to give obedience to such human
+laws as prescribe things profitable, not for that human laws have power to
+bind the conscience, but because the things they command are of that
+nature, that not to perform them is contrary to justice or charity.
+Whereupon he concludeth out of Stapleton, that we are bound to the
+performance of things prescribed by human laws, in such sort, that the
+non-performance of them is sin, not _ex sola legislatoris voluntate, sed
+ex ipsa legum utilitate_. Let all such as be of this man's mind not blame
+us for denying of obedience to the constitutions about the ceremonies,
+since we find (for certain) no utility, but, by the contrary, much
+inconveniency in them. If they say that we must think those laws to be
+profitable or convenient, which they, who are set over us, think to be so,
+then they know not what they say. For, exempting conscience from being
+bound by human laws in one thing, they would have it bound by them in
+another thing. If conscience must needs judge that to be profitable, which
+seemeth so to those that are set over us, then, sure, is power given to
+them for binding the conscience so straitly, that it may not judge
+otherwise than they judge, and force is placed in their bare authority for
+necessitating and constraining the assenting judgment of conscience.
+
+_Sect._ 10. Some man perhaps will say that we are bound to obey the laws
+made about the ceremonies, though not for the sole will of the law-makers,
+nor yet for any utility of the laws themselves, yet for this reason, that
+scandal and contempt would follow in case we do otherwise. _Ans._ We know
+that human laws do bind in the case of scandal or contempt. But that
+nonconformity is neither scandal nor contempt, Parker hath made it most
+evident.(123) For, as touching contempt, he showeth out of fathers,
+councils, canon law, schoolmen, and modern divines, that _non obedire_ is
+not contempt, but _nolle obedire_, or _superbiendo repugnare_. Yea, out of
+Formalists themselves, he showeth the difference betwixt subjection and
+obedience. Thereafter he pleadeth thus, and we with him: "What signs see
+men in us of pride and contempt? What be our _cetera opera_ that bewray
+such an humour? Let it be named wherein we go not two miles, when we are
+commanded to go but one, yea, wherein we go not as many miles as any shoe
+of the preparation of the gospel will bear us. What payment, what pain,
+what labour, what taxation made us ever to murmur? Survey our charges
+where we have laboured, if they be not found to be of the faithfulest
+subjects that be in the Lord, we deserve no favour. Nay, there is wherein
+we stretch our consciences to the utmost to conform and to obey in divers
+matters. Are we refractory in other things, as Balaam's ass said to his
+master? Have I used to serve thee so at other times?" And as touching
+scandal, he showeth first, that by our not conforming, we do not
+scandalise superiors, but edify them, although it may be we displease
+them, of which we are sorry, even as Joab displeased David when he
+contested against the numbering of the people, yet did he not scandalise
+David, but edify him. And, secondly, whereas it might be alleged, that
+nonconformity doth scandalise the people, before whom it soundeth as it
+were an alarm of disobedience, we reply with him, "Daniel will not omit
+the ceremony of looking out at the window towards Jerusalem. Mordecai
+omitteth the ceremony of bowing the knee to Haman; Christ will not use the
+ceremony of washing hands, though a tradition of the elders and governors
+of the church then being. The authority of the magistrate was violated by
+these, and an incitement to disobedience was in their ceremonial breach,
+as much as there is now in ours."
+
+_Sect._ 11. But some of our opposites go about to derive the obligatory
+power of the church's laws, not so much from the utility of the laws
+themselves, or from any scandal which should follow upon the not obeying
+of them, as from the church's own authority which maketh them. Camero
+speaketh of two sorts of ecclesiastical laws:(124) 1. Such as prescribe
+things frivolous or unjust, meaning such things as (though they neither
+detract anything from the glory of God, nor cause any damage to our
+neighbour, yet) bring some detriment to ourselves. 2. Such as prescribe
+things belonging to order and shunning of scandal. Touching the former, he
+teacheth rightly, that conscience is never bound to the obedience of such
+laws, except only in the case of scandal and contempt, and that if at any
+time such laws may be neglected and not observed, without scandal given,
+or contempt shown, no man's conscience is holden with them. But touching
+the other sort of the church's laws, he saith, that they bind the
+conscience indirectly, not only _respectu materiae praecepti_ (which doth
+not at all oblige, except in respect of the end whereunto it is referred,
+namely, the conserving of order, and the not giving of scandal), but also
+_respectu praecipientis_, because God will not have those who are set over
+us in the church to be contemned. He foresaw (belike), that whereas it is
+pretended in behalf of those ecclesiastical laws which enjoin the
+controverted ceremonies, that the things which they prescribe pertain to
+order and to the shunning of scandal, and so bind the conscience
+indirectly in respect of the end, one might answer, I am persuaded upon
+evident grounds that those prescribed ceremonies pertain not to order, and
+to the shunning of scandal, but to misorder, and to the giving of scandal;
+therefore he laboured to bind such an one's conscience with another tie,
+which is the authority of the law-makers. And this authority he would have
+one to take as ground enough to believe, that that which the church
+prescribeth doth belong to order and the shunning of scandal, and in that
+persuasion to do it. But, 1. How doth this doctrine differ from that which
+himself setteth down as the opinion of Papists,(125) _Posse los qui
+praesunt ecclesiae, cogere fideles ut id credant vel faciant, quod ipsi
+judicaverint?_ 2. It is well observed by our writers,(126) that the
+apostles never made things indifferent to be necessary, except only in
+respect of scandal, and that out of the case of scandal they still left
+the consciences of men free, which observation they gather from Acts XV.
+and 1 Cor. x. Camero himself noteth,(127) that though the church
+prescribed abstinence from things sacrificed to idols, yet the Apostle
+would not have the faithful to abstain for conscience' sake: why then
+holdeth he, that beside the end of shunning scandal and keeping order,
+conscience is bound even by the church's own authority? 3. As for the
+reason whereby he would prove that the church's laws do bind, even
+_respectu praecipientis_, his form of speaking is very bad. _Deus_ (saith
+he) _non vult contemni praepositos ecclesiae, nisi justa et necessaria de
+causa._ Where falsely he supposeth, not only that there may occur a just
+and necessary cause of contemning those whom God hath set over us in the
+church, but, also, that the not obeying of them inferreth the contemning
+of them. Now, the not obeying of their laws inferreth not the contemning
+of themselves (which were not allowable), but only the contemning of their
+laws. And as Jerome,(128) speaketh of Daniel, _Et nunc Daniel regis jussa
+contemnens_, &c.; so we say of all superiors in general, that we may
+sometimes have just reasons for contemning their commandments, yet are we
+not to contemn, but to honour themselves. But, 4. Let us take Camero's
+meaning to be, that God will not have us to refuse obedience unto those
+who are set over us in the church: none of our opposites dare say, that
+God will have us to obey those who are set over us in the church in any
+other things than such as may be done both lawfully and conveniently for
+the shunning of scandal; and if so, then the church's precept cannot bind,
+except as it is grounded upon such or such reasons.
+
+_Sect._ 12. Bishop Spotswood and Bishop Lindsey, in those words which I
+have heretofore alleged out of them, are likewise of opinion, that the
+sole will and authority of the church doth bind the conscience to
+obedience. Spotswood will have us, without more ado, to esteem that to be
+best and most seemly, which seemeth so in the eye of public authority. Is
+not this to bind the conscience by the church's bare will and authority,
+when I must needs constrain the judgment of my conscience to be conformed
+to the church's judgment, having no other reason to move me hereunto but
+the sole will and authority of the church? Further, he will have us to
+obey even such things as authority prescribeth not rightly (that is, such
+rites as do not set forward godliness), and that because they have the
+force of a constitution. He saith that we should be directed by the
+sentence of superiors, and take it as a sufficient ground to our
+consciences for obeying. Bellarmine speaketh more reasonably:(129) _Legesae
+human non obligant sub poena mortis aeternae, nisi quatenus violatione legis
+humanae offenditur Deus._ Lindsey thinketh that the will of the law must be
+the rule of our consciences; he saith not the _reason_ of the law, but the
+_will_ of the law. And when we talk with the chief of our opposites, they
+would bind us by sole authority, because they cannot do it by any reason.
+But we answer out of Pareus,(130) that the particular laws of the church
+bind not _per se_, or _propter ipsum speciale mandatum ecclesiae. Ratio:
+quia ecclesia res adiaphoras non jubet facere vel omittere propter suum
+mandatum, sed tantum propter justas mandandi causas, ut sunt conservatio
+ordinis, vitatio scandali: quae quamdiu non violantur, conscientias liberas
+relinquit._
+
+_Sect._ 13. Thus we have found what power they give to their canons about
+the ceremonies for binding of our consciences, and that a necessity not of
+practice only upon the outward man, but of opinion also upon the
+conscience is imposed by the sole will of the law-makers. Wherefore, we
+pray God to open their eyes, that they may see their ceremonial laws to be
+substantial tyrannies over the consciences of God's people. And for
+ourselves, we stand to the judgment of sounder divines, and we hold with
+Luther,(131) that _unum Dominum habemus qui animas nostras gubernat._ With
+Hemmingius,(132) that we are free _ab omnibus humanis ritibus, quantum
+quidem ad conscientiam attinet._ With the Professors of Leyden,(133) that
+this is a part of the liberty of all the faithful, that in things
+pertaining to God's worship, _ab omni traditionum humanarum jugo liberas
+habeant conscientias, cum solius Dei sit, res ad religionem pertinentes
+praescribere_.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES TAKE AWAY CHRISTIAN LIBERTY, PROVED BY A THIRD REASON,
+VIZ., BECAUSE THEY ARE URGED UPON SUCH AS, IN THEIR CONSCIENCES, DO
+CONDEMN THEM.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. If Christian liberty be taken away, by adstricting conscience
+in any, much more by adstricting it in them who are fully persuaded of the
+unlawfulness of the thing enjoined; yet thus are we dealt with. Bishop
+Lindsay gives us to understand, that after the making and publication of
+an ecclesiastical canon, about things of this nature, albeit a man in his
+own private judgment think another thing more expedient than that which
+the canon prescribeth, yet in that case his conscience must be ruled by
+the will of the law, and not by his own judgment. And Bishop Spotswood, to
+such as object, that their conscience will not suffer them to obey,
+because they are persuaded that such things are not right, answereth; that
+the sentence of their superiors ought to direct them, and make their
+conscience yield to obedience. Their words I have before transcribed. By
+which it doth manifestly appear, that they would bear dominion over our
+consciences, not as lords only, by requiring the willing and ready assent
+of our consciences to those things which are urged upon us by their sole
+will and authority, but even as tyrants, not caring if they get so much as
+constrained obedience, and if by their authority they can compel
+conscience to that which is contrary to the {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} and full persuasion
+which it hath conceived.
+
+_Sect._ 2. It will be said, that our consciences are in an error, and
+therefore ought to be corrected by the sentence of superiors, whose
+authority and will doth bind us to receive and embrace the ceremonies,
+though our consciences do condemn them. _Ans._ Giving, and not granting,
+that our consciences do err in condemning the ceremonies, yet, so long as
+they cannot be otherwise persuaded, the ceremonies ought not to be urged
+upon us; for if we be made to do that which our consciences do condemn, we
+are made to sin, Rom. xiv. 23. It is an audacious contempt, in Calvin's
+judgment,(134) to do anything _repugnante conscientia_. The learned
+Casuists teach us, that an erring conscience, though _non obligat_, yet
+_ligat_; though we be not obliged to do that which it prescribeth, yet are
+we bound not to do that which it condemneth. _Quicquid fit repugnante et
+reclamante conscientia, peccatum est, etiamsi repugnantia ista gravem
+errorem includat_, saith Alsted.(135) _Conscientia erronca obligat, sic
+intelligendo, quod faciens contra peccet_, saith Hemmingius.(136) This
+holds ever true of an erring conscience about matters of fact, and
+especially about things indifferent. If any say, that hereby a necessity
+of sinning is laid on them whose consciences are in an error, I answer,
+that so long as a man keeps an erroneous conscience, a necessity of
+sinning lies on him, and that through his own fault. This necessity
+ariseth from this supposition, that he retain his erring conscience, and
+so is not absolute, because he should inform his conscience rightly, so
+that he may both do that which he ought to do, and do it so from the
+approbation of his conscience. If it be said again, What should be done to
+them who have not laid down the error of conscience, but do still retain
+the same? I answer, _eligatur id quod tutius et melius est_.(137) If
+therefore the error of conscience be about weighty and necessary matters,
+then it is better to urge men to the doing of a necessary duty in the
+service of God, than to permit them to neglect the same, because their
+erring conscience disapproveth it; for example, it is better to urge a
+profane man to come and hear God's word than to suffer him to neglect the
+hearing of the same, because his conscience alloweth him not to hear. But
+if the error of conscience be about unnecessary things, or such as are in
+themselves indifferent, then it is _pars tutior_, the surest and safest
+part not to urge men to do that which in their consciences they condemn.
+Wherefore, since the ceremonies are not among the number of such necessary
+things as may not be omitted without the peril of salvation, the
+invincible disallowance of our consciences should make our opposites not
+press them upon us, because by practising them we could not but sin, in
+that our consciences judge them unlawful. If any of our weak brethren
+think that he must and should abstain from the eating of flesh upon some
+certain day, though this thing be in itself indifferent, and not
+necessary, yet, saith Baldwin,(138) "he who is thus persuaded in his
+conscience, if he should do the contrary, sinneth."
+
+_Sect._ 3. Conscience, then, though erring, doth ever bind in such sort,
+that he who doth against his conscience sinneth against God. Which is also
+the doctrine of Thomas.(139) But, without any more ado, it is sufficiently
+confirmed from Scripture. For, was not their conscience in an error who
+thought they might not lawfully eat all sorts of meat? Yet the Apostle
+showeth that their conscience, as erring as it was, did so bind, that they
+were damned if they should eat such meat as they judged to be unclean,
+Rom. xiv. 14, 23. The reason wherefore an erring conscience bindeth in
+this kind is, _quoniam agens_, &c.(140) "Because he who doth any thing
+against his conscience doth it against the will of God, though not
+materially and truly, yet formally and by way of interpretation, forsomuch
+as that which conscience counselleth or prescribeth, it counselleth it
+under the respect and account of the will of God. He who reproacheth some
+private man, taking him to be the king, is thought to have hurt not the
+private man, but the king himself. So he that contemneth his conscience
+contemneth God himself, because that which conscience counselleth or
+adviseth is taken to be God's will." If I go with certain men upon such a
+course as I judge and esteem to be a treasonable conspiracy against the
+king (though it be not so indeed), would not his Majesty (if he knew so
+much), and might he not, justly condemn me as a wicked traitor? But how
+much more will the King of kings condemn me if I practice the ceremonies
+which I judge in my conscience to be contrary to the will of God, and to
+rob him of his royal prerogative?
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES TAKE AWAY CHRISTIAN LIBERTY PROVED BY A FOURTH REASON,
+VIZ., BECAUSE THEY ARE PRESSED UPON US BY NAKED WILL AND AUTHORITY,
+WITHOUT GIVING ANY REASON TO SATISFY OUR CONSCIENCES.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. When the Apostle forbiddeth us to be the servants of men, 1
+Cor. vii. 23, is it not his meaning that we should do nothing upon the
+mere will and pleasure of men, or _propter hominem et non propter Deum_,
+as Becane the Jesuit expoundeth it,(141) illustrating what he saith by
+another place, Eph. vi. 6, 7. Christian servants thought it an unworthy
+thing to serve wicked men,(142) neither yet took they well with the
+serving of godly men, for that they were all brethren in Christ. The
+Apostle answereth them, that they did not the will of man, because it was
+the will of man, but because it was the will of God, and so they served
+God rather than man, importing that it were indeed a grievous yoke for any
+Christian to do the will of man, if he were not sure that it is according
+to the will of God. Should any synod of the church take more upon them
+than the synod of the apostles did, who enjoined nothing at their own
+pleasure, but only what they show to be necessary, because of the law of
+charity? Acts xv. 28. Or should Christians, who ought not to be children,
+carried about with every wind, Eph. iv. 14; who should be able to discern
+both good and evil, Heb. v. 14; in whom the word of God ought to dwell
+plentifully, Col. iii. 16; who are commanded to beware of men, Matt. x.
+17; not to believe every spirit, to prove all things, 1 John iv. 1; and to
+judge of all that is said to them, 1 Thes. v. 21; should they, I say, be
+used as stocks and stones, not capable of reason, and therefore to be
+borne down by naked will and authority? 1 Cor. x. 15. Yet thus it fareth
+with us. Bishop Lindsey will have the will of the law to rule our
+consciences,(143) which is by interpretation, _Sic volo, sic jubeo, sit
+pro ratione voluntas._ He gives us not the reason or equity of the law,
+but only the will of it, to be our role. Bishop Spotswood(144) will have
+us to be so directed by the sentence of our superiors, that we take their
+sentence as a sufficient ground to our consciences for obeying. Which is
+so much as to say, you should not examine the reason and utility of the
+law, the sentence of it is enough for you: try no more when you hear the
+sentence of superiors, rest your consciences upon this as a sufficient
+ground: seek no other, for their sentence must be obeyed. And who among us
+knoweth not how, in the Assembly of Perth, free reasoning was shut to the
+door, and all ears were filled with the dreadful pale of authority? There
+is this much chronicled(145) in two relations of the proceedings of the
+same, howbeit otherwise very different. They who did sue for a reformation
+of church discipline in England, complained that they received no other
+answer but this:(146) "There is a law, it must be obeyed;" and after the
+same manner are we used. Yet is this too hard dealing, in the judgment of
+a Formalist, who saith,(147) that the church doth not so deal with them
+whom Christ hath redeemed: _Ac si non possint capere quid sit religiosum,
+quid minus, itaque quae ab ecclesia proficiscuntur, admonitiones potius et
+hortationes dici debent, quam leges._ And after, he says of ecclesiastical
+authority, _tenetur reddere paerscripti rationem._ "I grant (saith
+Paybody(148)) it is unlawful to do, in God's worship, anything upon the
+mere pleasure of man." Chemnitius(149) taketh the Tridentine fathers for
+not expounding _rationes decreti._ Junius observeth,(150) that in the
+council of the apostles, mention was made of the reason of their decree.
+And a learned historian observeth(151) of the ancient councils, that there
+were in them, reasonings, colloquies, discussions, disputes, yea, that
+whatsoever was done or spoken, was called the acts of the council, and all
+was given unto all. _Caeterum_ (saith Danaeus(152)) _quoniam ut ait
+Tertullianus in Apologetico, iniqua lex est quae se examinari non patitur;
+non tam vi cogere homines ad obsequium quam ratione persuadere debent cae
+leges, quae scribuntur a pio nomotheta. Ergo fere sunt duae cujusvis legis
+partes, quemadmodum etiam Plato,_ lib. 4, _de legibus scribit, nimirum
+praefacio __ et lex ipsa,_ _i.e._ _jussio lege comprehensa. Praefatio
+causam affert, cur hominum negotiis sic prospiciatur._ Ecclesiastical
+authority should prescribe what it thinks fit, _Magis docendo, quam
+jubendo; magis monendo, quam minando,_ as Augustine speaketh.(153) _Non
+oportet vi vel necessitate constringere, sed ratione et vitae exemplis
+suadere,_ saith Gregory Nazianzen,(154) speaking of ecclesiastical
+regiment. They, therefore, who give their will for a law, and their
+authority for a reason, and answer all the arguments of opponents, by
+bearing them down with the force of a public constitution and the judgment
+of superiors, to which theirs must be conformed, do rule the Lord's flock
+"with force and with cruelty," Ezek. xxxiv. 4; "as lords over God's
+heritage," 1 Pet. v. 3.
+
+_Sect._ 2. Always, since men give us no leave to try their decrees and
+constitutions, that we may hold fast no more than is good, God be thanked
+that we have a warrant to do it (without their leave) from his own word, 1
+Thess. v. 25. _Non numeranda suffragia, sed appendenda_, saith Augustine
+in Psal. xxxix. Our divines hold,(155) that all things which are proposed
+by the ministers of the church, yea, by aecumenical councils,(156) should
+be proved and examined; and that, when the guides of the church do
+institute any ceremonies as necessary for edification, yet _ecclesia
+liberum habet judicium approbandi aut reprobandi eas._(157) Nay, the canon
+law,(158) prohibiting to depart or swerve from the rules and discipline of
+the Roman church, yet excepteth _discretionem justitiae_ and so permitteth
+to do otherwise than the church prescribeth, if it be done _cum
+discretione justitiae_. The schoolmen also give liberty to a private man,
+of proving the statutes of the church, and neglecting the same, if he see
+cause for doing so, _Si causa fit evidens, per se ipsum licite potest homo
+statuti observantiam praeterire._(159) If any be not able to examine and
+try all such things, _debebant omnes posse, Dei jussu: Deficiunt ergo sua
+culpa_, saith Parcus.(160) _Si recte probandi facultate destitui nos
+sentimus, ab eodem spiritu qui per prophetas suos __ loquitur portenda
+est_, saith Calvin.(161) We will not then call any man rabbi, nor _jurare
+in verba magistri_, nor yet be Pythagorean disciples to the church
+herself, but we will believe her and obey her in so far only as she is the
+pillar and ground of truth.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+THAT FESTIVAL DAYS TAKE AWAY OUR LIBERTY, WHICH GOD HATH GIVEN US, PROVED;
+AND FIRST OUT OF THE LAW.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. That which hath been said against all the controverted
+ceremonies in general, I will now instance of festival days in particular,
+and prove, both out of the law and gospel, that they take away our liberty
+which God hath given us, and which no human power can take from us. Out of
+the law we frame this argument: If the law of God permit us to work all
+the six days of the week, the law of man cannot inhibit us. But the law of
+God doth permit us to work all the six days of the week, therefore our
+opposites deny not the assumption, which is plain from the fourth
+commandment, "Six days shalt thou labour," &c. But they would have
+somewhat to say against the proposition, which we will hear. Hooker tells
+us,(162) that those things that the law of God leaves arbitrary and at
+liberty, are subject to the positive ordinances of men. This, I must say,
+is strange divinity, for if this were true, then might the laws of men
+prohibit marriage, because it is left arbitrary, 1 Cor. vii. 36. Then
+might they also have discharged the apostle Paul to take wages, because
+herein he was at liberty, 1 Cor. ix. 11-13.
+
+_Sect._ 2. Talen lendeth the cause another lift, and answereth,(163) that
+no sober man will say, _permissionen Dei, principibus suum circa res
+medias jus imminuere, num enim ob permissum hominibus dominium in volucres
+coeli, in pisces maris, et bestias agrii, impiae fuerint leges principum,
+quibus aucupii, piscationes, et venationis libertatem, sebditis aliis
+indulgent, aliis adimunt. Ans._ That case and this are very different. For
+every particular man hath not dominion and power over all fowls, fishes,
+and beasts (else, beside that princes should have no privilege of
+inhibiting the use of those things, there should be no propriety of
+heritage and possession among subjects); but power over all these is given
+to mankind. Pareus observeth,(164) _hominem collective intelligi_ in that
+place, Gen. i. 26; and Junius observeth,(165) _nomen Adam de specie esse
+intelligendum._ But each particular man, and not mankind alone, is
+permitted to labour six days. Wherefore it is plain, that man's liberty is
+not abridged in the other case as in this, because mankind hath dominion
+over these creatures, when some men only do exercise the same, as well as
+if all men did exercise it.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Bishop Lindsey's answer is no better,(166) viz., that this
+liberty which God hath given unto men for labour is not absolute, but
+subject unto order. For, 1. What tyranny is there so great, spoiling men
+wholly of their liberty, but this pretence agreeth to it? For, by order,
+he understandeth the constitutions of our governors, as is clear from his
+preceding words, so that this may be alleged for a just excuse of any
+tyranny of governors (that men must be subject unto order), no less than
+for taking away from us the liberty of labouring six days. 2. This answer
+is nothing else but a begging of that which is in question, for the
+present question is, whether or not the constitutions of our governors may
+inhibit us to labour all the six days of the week, and yet he saith no
+more, but that this liberty of labour must be subject to order, _i.e._, to
+the constitutions of governors. 3. Albeit we should most humbly subject
+ourselves to our governors, yet we may not submit our liberty to them,
+which God hath graciously given us, because we are forbidden to be the
+servants of men, 1 Cor. vii. 23; or to be entangled with the yoke of
+bondage, Gal. v. 1.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Yet we must hear what the Bishop can say against our
+proposition:(167) "If under the law (saith he) God did not spoil his
+people of liberty, when he appointed them to rest two days at Pasche, one
+at Whitsunday, &c., how can the king's majesty and the church be esteemed
+to spoil us of our liberty, that command a cessation from labour on three
+days?" &c. O horrible blasphemy! O double deceitfulness! Blasphemy,
+because so much power is ascribed to the king and the church over us, as
+God had over his people of old. God did justly command his people, under
+the law, to rest from labour on other days beside the Sabbath, without
+wronging them; therefore the king and the church may as justly, and with
+doing as little wrong, command us to rest likewise, because God, by a
+ceremonial law, did hinder his people from the use of so much liberty, as
+the moral law did give them; therefore the king and the church may do so
+also. Deceitfulness, in that he saith, God did not spoil his people of
+liberty, &c. We know that, by appointing them to rest on those days, God
+did not take away liberty from his people, simply and absolutely, because
+they had no more liberty than he did allow to them by his laws, which he
+gave by the hand of Moses, yet he did take away that liberty which one
+part of his laws did permit to them, viz., the fourth commandment of the
+moral law, which permitted them to labour six days. The Bishop knew that
+this question in hand hath not to do with liberty, in the general notion
+of it, but with liberty which the moral law doth permit. We say, then,
+that God took away from his people Israel, some of the liberty which his
+moral law permitted to them, because he was the Lawgiver and Lord of the
+law; and that the king and the church cannot do the like with us, because
+they are no more lords over God's law than the people who are set under
+them.
+
+_Sect._ 5. But he hath yet more to say against us: "If the king (saith he)
+may command a cessation from economical and private works, for works civil
+and public, such as the defence of the crown, the liberty of the country,
+&c., what reason have ye why he may not enjoin a day of cessation from all
+kind of bodily labour, for the honour of God and exercise of religion?"
+&c. _Ans._ This kind of reasoning is most vicious, for three respects: 1.
+It supposeth that he who may command a cessation from one kind of labour,
+upon one of the six days, may also command a cessation from all kind of
+labour, but there is a difference; for the law of God hath allowed us to
+labour six days of every week, which liberty no human power can take from
+us. But we cannot say that the law of God alloweth us six days of every
+week to economical and private works (for then we should never be bound to
+put our hands to a public work), whence it cometh that the magistrate hath
+power left him to command a cessation from some labour, but not from all.
+2. The Bishop reasoneth from a cessation from ordinary labour for
+extraordinary labour, to a cessation from ordinary labour for no labour,
+for they who use their weapons for the defence of the crown, or liberty of
+the country, do not cease from labour, but only change ordinary labour
+into extraordinary, and private labour into public, whereas our opposites
+plead for a cessation from all labour upon their holidays. 3. He skippeth
+_de genere in genus_, because the king may command a cessation for civil
+works, therefore he may command a holy rest for the exercise of religion,
+as if he had so great power in sacred as in civil things.
+
+_Sect._ 6. The Bishop hath yet a third dart to throw at us: "If the church
+(saith he)(168) hath power, upon occasional motives, to appoint occasional
+fasts or festivities, may not she, for constant and eternal blessings,
+which do infinitely excel all occasional benefits, appoint ordinary times
+of commemoration or thanksgiving?" _Ans._ There are two reasons for which
+the church may and should appoint fasts or festivities upon occasional
+motives, and neither of them agreeth with ordinary festivities. 1.
+Extraordinary fasts, either for obtaining some great blessing, or averting
+some great judgment, are necessary means to be used in such cases,
+likewise, extraordinary festivities are necessary testifications of our
+thankfulness for the benefits which we have impetrate by our extraordinary
+fasts, but ordinary festivities, for constant and eternal blessings, have
+no necessary use. The celebration of set anniversary days is no necessary
+mean for conserving the commemoration of the benefits of redemption,
+because we have occasion, not only every Sabbath day, but every other day,
+to call to mind these benefits, either in hearing, or reading, or
+meditating upon God's word. _Dies Christo dicatos tollendos existimo
+judicoque_, saith Danaeus(169) _quotidie nobis in evangelii proedicatione
+nascitur, circumciditur, moritur, resurgit Christus._ God hath given his
+church a general precept for extraordinary fasts, Joel i. 14, ii. 15, as
+likewise for extraordinary festivities to praise God, and to give him
+thanks in the public assembly of his people, upon the occasional motive of
+some great benefit which, by the means of our fasting and praying, we have
+obtained, Zech. viii. 19 with vii. 3. If it be said that there is a
+general command for set festivities, because there is a command for
+preaching and hearing the word, and for praising God for his benefits; and
+that there is no precept for particular fasts more than for particular
+festivities, I answer: Albeit there is a command for preaching and hearing
+the word, and for praising God for his benefits, yet is there no command
+(no, not in the most general generality) for annexing these exercises of
+religion to set anniversary days more than to other days; whereas it is
+plain, that there is a general command for fasting and humiliation at some
+times more than at other times. And as for particularities, all the
+particular causes, occasions, and times of fasting, could not be
+determined in Scripture, because they are infinite, as Camero saith.(170)
+But all the particular causes of set festivities, and the number of the
+same, might have been easily determined in Scripture, since they are not,
+nor may not be infinite; for the Bishop himself acknowledgeth,(171) that
+to appoint a festival day for every week, cannot stand with charity, the
+inseparable companion of piety. And albeit so many were allowable, yet who
+seeth not how easily the Scripture might have comprehended them, because
+they are set, constant, and anniversary times, observed for permanent and
+continuing causes, and not moveable or mutable, as fasts which are
+appointed for occurring causes, and therefore may be infinite. I conclude
+that, since God's word hath given us a general command for occasional
+fasts, and likewise particularly determined sundry things anent the
+causes, occasions, nature, and manner of fastings, we may well say with
+Cartwright,(172) that days of fasting are appointed at "such times, and
+upon such occasions, as the Scripture doth set forth; wherein because the
+church commandeth nothing, but that which God commandeth, the religious
+observation of them, falleth unto the obedience of the fourth commandment,
+as well as of the seventh day itself."
+
+_Sect._ 7. The Bishop presseth us with a fourth argument,(173) taken from
+the calling of people in great towns from their ordinary labours to divine
+service, which argument Tilen also beateth upon.(174) _Ans._ There is huge
+difference betwixt the rest which is enjoined upon anniversary
+festivities, and the rest which is required during the time of the weekly
+meetings for divine worship. For, 1. Upon festival days, rest from labour
+is required all the day over, whereas, upon the days of ordinary and
+weekly meetings, rest is required only during the time of public worship.
+2. Cessation from labour, for prayers or preaching on those appointed days
+of the week, at some occasions may be omitted; but the rest and
+commemoration appointed by the church, to be precisely observed upon the
+anniversary festival days, must not be omitted, in the Bishop's
+judgment.(175) 3. Men are straitly commanded and compelled to rest from
+labour upon holidays; but to leave work to come to the ordinary weekly
+meetings, they are only exhorted. And here I mark how the Bishop
+contradicteth himself; for in one place where his antagonist maintaineth
+truly, that the craftsman cannot be lawfully commanded nor compelled to
+leave his work and to go to public divine service, except on the day that
+the Lord hath sanctified, he replieth,(176) "If he may be lawfully
+commanded to cease from his labour during the time of divine service, he
+may be as lawfully compelled to obey the command." Who can give these
+words any sense, or see anything in them said against his antagonist's
+position, except he be taken to say, that the craftsman may be both
+commanded and compelled to leave his work and go to divine service on the
+week-days appointed for the same? Nay, he laboureth to prove thus much out
+of the ninth head of the _First Book of Discipline_, which saith, "In
+great towns we think expedient, that every day there be either sermon or
+common prayers," &c., where there is nothing of compulsion, or a forcing
+command, only there is an exhortation. But ere the Bishop have said much,
+he forgetteth himself, and tells us,(177) that it were against equity and
+charity to adstrict the husbandman to leave his plough so oft as the days
+of weekly preaching do return, but that, on the festival days, reason
+would, that if he did not leave his plough willingly, by authority he
+should be forced. Which place confirmeth this difference which we give
+betwixt rest on the holidays, and rest at the times of weekly meeting.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+THAT FESTIVAL DAYS TAKE AWAY OUR CHRISTIAN LIBERTY, PROVED OUT OF THE
+GOSPEL.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. My second argument whereby I prove that the imposing of the
+observation of holidays doth bereave us of our liberty, I take out of two
+places of the Apostle, the one, Gal. iv. 10, where he finds fault with the
+Galatians for observing of days, and giveth them two reasons against them;
+the one, ver. 3, They were a yoke of bondage which neither they nor their
+fathers were able to bear; another, ver, 8, They were weak and beggarly
+rudiments, not beseeming the Christian church, which is liberate from the
+pedagogical instruction of the ceremonial law. The other place is Col. ii.
+16, where the Apostle will have the Colossians not to suffer themselves to
+be judged by any man in respect of an holiday, _i.e._ to be condemned for
+not observing a holiday, for _judicare hic significat culpae reum
+facere,_(178) and the meaning is, suffer not yourselves to be condemned by
+those false apostles, or by any mortal man in the cause of meat, that is,
+for meat or drink taken, or for any holiday, or any part of an holiday
+neglected.(179) Two other reasons the Apostle giveth in this place against
+festival days; one, ver. 17, What should we do with the shadow, when we
+have the body? another, ver. 20, Why should we be subject to human
+ordinances, since through Christ we are dead to them, and have nothing ado
+with them? Now, by the same reasons are all holidays to be condemned, as
+taking away Christian liberty; and so, that which the Apostle saith doth
+militate as well against them as against any other holidays; for whereas
+it might be thought, that the Apostle doth not condemn all holidays,
+because both he permitteth others to observe days, Rom. xiv. 5, and he
+himself also did observe one of the Jewish feasts, Acts xviii. 21: it is
+easily answered, that our holidays have no warrant from these places,
+except our opposites will say, that they esteem their festival days holier
+than other days, and that they observe the Jewish festivities, neither of
+which they do acknowledge, and if they did, yet they must consider, that
+that which the Apostle either said or did hereanent, is to be expounded
+and understood of bearing with the weak Jews, whom he permitted to esteem
+one day above another, and for whose cause he did, in his own practice,
+thus far apply himself to their infirmity at that time when they could not
+possibly be as yet fully and thoroughly instructed concerning Christian
+liberty, and the abrogation of the ceremonial law, because the gospel was
+as yet not fully propagated; and when the Mosaical rites were like a dead
+man not yet buried, as Augustine's simile runs. So that all this can make
+nothing for holidays after the full promulgation of the gospel, and after
+that the Jewish ceremonies are not only dead, but also buried, and so
+deadly to be used by us. Hence it is, that the Apostle will not bear with
+the observation of days in Christian churches, who have known God, as he
+speaks.
+
+_Sect._ 2. The defenders of holidays answer to these places which we
+allege against them, that the Apostle condemneth the observation of
+Judaical days, not of ecclesiastical days, which the church instituteth
+for order and policy; which evasion Bishop Lindsey(180) followeth so hard,
+that he sticketh not to hold, that "all the days whereof the Apostle
+condemneth the observation were Judaical days prescribed in the ceremonial
+law," &c. And this he is not contented to maintain himself, but he will
+needs father it upon his antagonist by such logic, forsooth, as can infer
+_quidlibet ex quodlibet._ The Apostle comports with the observation of
+days in the weak Jews, who understood not the fulness of the Christian
+liberty, especially since those days, having had the honour to be once
+appointed by God himself, were to be honourably buried; but the same
+Apostle reproves the Galatians who had attained to this liberty, and had
+once left off the observation of days. What ground of consequence can
+warrant such an illation from these premises as this which the Bishop
+formeth, namely, that "all the days whereof the Apostle condemned the
+observation were Judaical days," &c.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Now, for confutation of this forged exposition of those places
+of the Apostle, we say, 1. If all the days whereof the Apostle condemned
+the observation were Judaical days prescribed in the ceremonial law, then
+do our divines falsely interpret the Apostle's words against popish
+holidays, and the Papists do truly allege that their holidays are not
+condemned by the Apostle. The Rhemists affirm, that the Apostle condemneth
+only Jewish days,(181) but not Christian days, and that we do falsely
+interpret his words against their holidays.(182) Cartwright answereth
+them,(183) that if Paul condemned the observing of feasts which God
+himself instituted, then much more doth he condemn the observation of
+feasts of man's devising. So Bellarmine allegeth,(184) _loqui ibi
+Apostolum de judaeorum tantum festis_. Hospinian, answering him, will have
+the Apostle's words to condemn the Christian feasts more than the
+Judaical.(185) Conradus Vorstius rejecteth this position, _Apostolus non
+nisi judaicum discremen dierum in_ N.T. _sublatum esse docet_, as a popish
+error.(186) 2. If the Apostle mean only of Judaical days, either he
+condemneth the observing of their days _materialiter_, or _formaliter,
+i.e._ either he condemneth the observation of the same feasts which the
+Jews observed, or the observing of them with such a meaning, after such a
+manner, and for such an end as the Jews did. The former our opposites dare
+not hold, for then they should grant that he condemneth their own Easter
+and Pentecost, because these two feasts were observed by the Jews. Nor yet
+can they hold them at the latter, for he condemneth that observation of
+days which had crept into the church of Galatia, which was not Jewish nor
+typical, seeing the Galatians, believing that Christ was already come,
+could not keep them as figures of his coming as the Jews did, but rather
+as memorials that he was already come, saith Cartwright.(187) 1. If the
+Apostle's reasons wherewith he impugns the observation of days, hold good
+against our holidays so well as against the Jewish or popish days, then
+doth he condemn those, no less these. But the Apostle's reasons agree to
+our holidays for, 1. According to that reason, Gal. iv. 3, they bring us
+under a yoke of bondage. Augustine,(188) complaining of some ceremonies
+wherewith the church in his time was burdened, thought it altogether best
+that they should be cut off, _Etiamsi fidei non videantur adversari, quia
+religionem quam Christus liberam esse voluit, servilibus oneribus
+premunt._ Yea, he thought this yoke of servitude greater bondage, and less
+tolerable than the servility of the Jews, because they were subject to the
+burdens of the law of God, and not to the presumptions of men. The yoke of
+bondage of Christians, in respect of feasts, is heavier than the yoke of
+the Jews, not only for the multitude of them, but because _Christianorum
+festa, ab hominibus tantum, judaeorum vero a Deo fuerint instituta_, saith
+Hospinian.(189) Have not we then reason to exclaim against our holidays,
+as a yoke of bondage, heavier than that of the Jews, for that our holidays
+are men's inventions, and so were not theirs? The other reason, Gal. iv.
+9, holdeth as good against our holidays. They are rudimental and
+pedagogical elements, which beseem not the Christian church, for as
+touching that which Tilen objecteth,(190) that many in the church of the
+New Testament are still babes to be fed with milk, it maketh as much
+against the Apostle as against us; for by this reason, he may as well
+throw back the Apostle's ground of condemning holidays among the
+Galatians, and say, because many of the Galatians were babes, therefore
+they had the more need of those elements and rudiments. The Apostle, Gal.
+iv. 3, compareth the church of the Old Testament to an infant, and
+insinuateth, that in the days of the New Testament the infancy of the
+church hath taken an end. And whereas it might be objected, that in the
+church of the New Testament there are many babes, and that the Apostle
+himself speaketh of the Corinthians and Hebrews as babes: it is answered
+by Pareus,(191) _Non de paucis personis, sed de statu totius ecclesiae
+intelligendum est quod hic dicitur._ There were also some in the church of
+the Old Testament, _adulti fide heroes_; but in respect of the state of
+the whole church, he who is least in the kingdom of God, is greater than
+John Baptist, Luke vii. 28. _Lex_, saith Beza, _vocatur elementa, quia
+illis velut __ rudimentis, Deus ecclesiam suam erudivit, postea pleno
+cornu effudit Spiritum Sanctum tempore evangelii_.(192) 3. That reason
+also taken from the opposition of the shadow and the body, Col. ii. 17,
+doth militate against our holidays; for the Apostle there speaketh in the
+present time, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}: whereas the Judaical rites were abolished,
+whereupon Zanchius noteth,(193) that the Apostle doth not so much speak of
+things by-past, as of the very nature of all rites, _Definiens ergo ipsos
+ritus in sese, dixit eos nil aliud esse quam umbram_. If all rites, then
+our holidays among the rest, serve only to adumbrate and shadow forth
+something, and by consequence are unprofitable and idle, when the
+substance itself is clearly set before us. 4. That reason, Col. ii. 20,
+doth no less irresistibly infringe the ordinances about our holidays than
+about the Jewish; for if men's ordinances, about things once appointed by
+God himself, ought not to be obeyed, how much less should the precepts of
+men be received about such things in religion as never had this honour to
+be God's ordinances, when their mere authority doth limit or adstrict us
+in things which God hath made lawful or free to us.
+
+_Sect_. 4. Thus we see how the Apostle's reasons hold good against our
+holidays; let us see next what respects of difference the Bishop can
+imagine to evidence wherefore the Judaical days may be thought condemned
+by the Apostle, and not ours. He deviseth a double respect; and first he
+tells us,(194) that the Jewish observation of days was to a typical use.
+And whereas it is objected by us, that the converted Jews did not observe
+them as shadows of things to come, because then they had denied Christ, he
+answereth thus: "Howbeit the converted Jews did not observe the Jewish
+days as shadows of things to come, yet they might have observed them as
+memorials of by-past temporal and typical benefits, and for present
+temporal blessings, as the benefit of their delivery out of Egypt, and of
+the fruits of the earth, which use was also typical." _Ans._ 1. This is
+his own conjecture only, therefore he himself propoundeth it doubtfully,
+for he dare not say, they did observe them as memorials, &c., but, they
+might have observed, to which guessing, if I reply, they might also not
+have observed them as memorials of those by-past or present benefits, we
+say as much against him, and as truly, as he hath said against us. 2. His
+form of reasoning is very uncouth, for, to prove that the observation of
+days by the converted Jews was to a typical use, he allegeth, that they
+might have observed, &c. Thus proving a position by a supposition. O
+brave! 3. There is no sense in his conjecture, for he yields that they did
+not observe those days as shadows of things to come, and yet he saith,
+they might have observed them as memorials of by-past typical benefits;
+now they could not observe those days as memorials of types, except they
+observed them also as shadowing forth the antitypes. Pentecost, saith
+Davenant,(195) _et illa legis datae celebratio. Spiritus Sancti missionem,
+et legis in tabulis cordium per eundem Spiritum inscriptionem, adumbravit.
+Scenopegiae festum peregrinationem hominis pii per hoc mundi desertum ad
+caelestem patriam delineabat, &c._ So that the feast of Pentecost, if it
+had been observed as a memorial of the promulgation of the law, could not
+but shadow forth the sending of the Holy Spirit into our hearts, to write
+the law in them. And the feast of tabernacles, if it had been observed as
+a memorial of the benefits which God bestowed on his people in the
+wilderness, could not but shadow out God's conducting of his children,
+through the course of their pilgrimage in this world, to the heavenly
+Canaan. 4. If feasts which were memorials of temporal benefits, were for
+this reason mystical, then he must grant against himself, that much more
+are our feasts mystical, which are memorials of spiritual benefits, and
+consecrated to be holy signs and symbols, for making us call to mind the
+mysteries of our redemption. 5. Before this dispute take an end, we shall
+see out of the best learned among our opposites, that they observe the
+holidays as mystical,(196) and more mystical than the Bishop here
+describeth the Jewish days to have been, and so we shall see the falsehood
+of that pretence, that they are observed only for order and policy, and
+not for mystery. 6. If we would know the true reason which made the
+converted Jews to observe those days, it was not any mystical use, but
+that which made them think themselves obliged to other Mosaical rites;
+even _propter auctoritatem legis_, saith Junius;(197) for albeit they
+could not be ignorant, that these rites were shadows of things to come,
+and that the body was of Christ, in whom, and in the virtue of whose death
+they did stablish their faith, yet they did not at first understand how
+such things as were once appointed by God himself, and given to his people
+as ordinances to be kept by him throughout their generations, could be
+altogether abolished, and for this cause, though they did condescend to a
+change of the use and signification of those ceremonies, as being no more
+typical of the kingdom of Christ, which they believed to be already come,
+yet still they held themselves bound to the use of the things themselves
+as things commanded by God.
+
+Thus much may be collected from Acts xv. 21, where James gives a reason
+wherefore it was expedient that the Gentiles should observe some of the
+Jewish rites for a time, as Calvin,(198) Beza,(199) and Junius,(200)
+expound the place. His reason is, because the Jews, being so long
+accustomed with the hearing of the law of Moses, and such as did preach
+the same, could not be made at first to understand how the ordinances
+which God gave to his people by the hand of Moses, might be cast off and
+not regarded, which importeth as much as I say, namely, that the reason
+wherefore the converted Jews were so apt to be scandalised by such as
+cared not for the ceremonial law, and held themselves obliged to observe
+the same, was because they saw not how they could be exempted from the
+ordinances and statutes of the law of Moses, with which they had been
+educated and accustomed.
+
+_Sect._ 5. Rests the second respect of difference given by the Bishop:
+"Further (saith he), they did observe them with opinion of necessity, as
+things instituted by God for his worship and their salvation, which sort
+of observation was legal."(201) _Ans._ 1. Be it so; he cannot hereupon
+infer, that the Apostle doth only condemn the observation of Judaical
+days, for he seeth nothing of observing days with opinion of necessity,
+but simply and absolutely he condemneth the observing of days, and his
+reasons reflex on our holidays, as well as the Jewish. 2. Their opinion of
+necessity he either refers to the institution which these days once had
+from God, or else to the use which, at that time, they had for God's
+worship and their salvation. That they observed them with opinion of
+necessity, as things which had been instituted by God, it is most likely,
+but that they observed them with opinion of necessity, as things necessary
+for God's worship and their salvation, is more than can be made good, it
+is more probable that they observed them merely and simply for that they
+had the honour to be instituted by God in his law. For to say that they
+observed them to the same use and end for which God did institute them, is
+false, because then they had observed them as types and shadows of the
+coming of Christ, and so had denied Christ. 3. If the Apostle condemn the
+observing of days instituted by God, with opinion of necessity, much more
+doth he condemn the observing of days instituted by men with such an
+opinion. And such is the observation of days urged upon us. Though the
+Bishop pretend that the observing of our holidays is not imposed with
+opinion of necessity, shall we therefore think it is so? Nay, Papists do
+also pretend that the observation of their ceremonies is not
+necessary,(202) nor the neglecting of them a mortal sin. I have proved
+heretofore, out of their opposites' own words, that the ceremonies in
+question (and, by consequence, holidays among the rest) are urged upon us
+with opinion of necessity, and as their words, so their works bewray them,
+for they urge the ceremonies with so exorbitant vehemency, and punish
+refusers with so excessive severity, as if they were the weightiest
+matters of the law of God. Yet they would have us believe, that they have
+but sober and mean thoughts of these matters, as of circumstances
+determined for order and policy only. Just like a man who casts firebrands
+and arrows, and yet saith, Am not I in sport? Prov. xvi. 18, 19. They will
+tell us that they urge not the ceremonies as necessary in themselves, but
+only as necessary in respect of the church's determination, and because of
+the necessity of obeying those who are set over us. But, I pray, is not
+this as much as the Rhemists say,(203) who place the necessity of their
+rites and observances, not in the nature of the things themselves, but in
+the church's precept?
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+SHOWING THE WEAKNESS OF SOME PRETENCES WHICH OUR OPPOSITES USE FOR
+HOLIDAYS.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. Since it hath been evinced by unanswerable reasons that
+holidays, as now urged upon us, take away our Christian liberty, I will
+now pull off them the coat of some fig leaves wherewith they are trimmed
+up. And first, I hope it will appear to how small purpose Dr Davenant
+would conciliate his reader's mind(204) to allow of the church's
+ordinances about holidays (peradventure because he saw all that he had
+said of that purpose to be too invalid proof), by six cautions, whereby
+all superstition and abuse which may ensue upon them may be shunned. For
+whatsoever doth manifestly endanger men's souls, being a thing not
+necessary in itself, at which they take occasion of superstitious abuse,
+should rather be removed altogether out of the way, than be set about with
+a weak and easily-penetrable hedge of some equivocative cautions, which
+the ruder sort do always, and the learned do too oft, either not
+understand or not remember. Now, Bishop Lindsey confesseth,(205) and puts
+it out of all doubt, that when the set times of these solemnities return,
+superstitious conceits are most pregnant in the heads of people; therefore
+it must be the safest course to banish those days out of the church, since
+there is so great hazard, and no necessity, of retaining them.
+
+What they can allege for holidays, from our duty to remember the
+inestimable benefits of our redemption, and to praise God for the same,
+hath been already answered.(206) And as touching any expediency which they
+imagine in holidays, we shall see to that afterward.(207)
+
+_Sect._ 2. The Act of Perth Assembly allegeth the practice of the ancient
+church for warrant of holidays, and Tilen allegeth the judgment of
+antiquity to the same purpose.(208) _Ans._ The festivities of the ancient
+church cannot warrant ours; for, 1. In the purest times of the church
+there was no law to tie men to the observation of holidays. _Observandum
+est_, say the divines of Magdeburg,(209) _apostolos et apostolicos viros,
+neque de paschate, neque de aliis quibuscunque, festivitatibus legem
+aliquam constituisse_. Socrates reporteth,(210) that men did celebrate the
+feast of Easter, and other festival days, _sicuti voluerunt, ex
+consuetudine quadam_. Nicephorus saith,(211) that men did celebrate
+festivities, _sicuti cuique visum erat, in regionibus passim ex
+consuitudine quadam per traditionem accepta adducti_. In which place, as
+the reader will plainly perceive, he opposeth tradition to an evangelical
+or apostolical ordinance. Sozomen tells us,(212) that men were left to
+their own judgment about the keeping of Easter, Jerome saith of the
+feasts(213) which the church in his time observed, that they were _pro
+varietate regionum diversa_. The first who established a law about any
+festival day,(214) is thought to have been Pius I, bishop of Rome, yet it
+is marked that the Asiatican doctors did not care much for this
+constitution of Pius. I conclude with Cartwright,(215) that those feasts
+of the primitive church "came by custom, and not by commandment, by the
+free choice of men, and not by constraint." So that from these, no
+commendation ariseth to our feasts, which are not only established by
+laws, but also imposed with such necessity and constraint, as spoileth us
+of our liberty.
+
+2. The festival days observed by the ancient church, were not accounted
+more excellent than other days, for, saith Jerome,(216) _non quod
+celebrior sit dies illa qua conveniumus, &c._ But our festival days are
+made _aliis diebus celebriores_, yea, are taken to be holier than other
+days, as I will afterwards prove.(217)
+
+_Sect._ 3. Moreover, the proctors for holidays among us think to make
+advantage of the practice of other reformed churches, and the judgment of
+modern divines. But we are to consider, 1. As they have the example of
+some churches for them, so we have the example of other churches for us,
+for the church of Geneva in Savoy, and the church of Strasburg in Germany,
+did abolish festival days, as Calvin writeth.(218) Yea, _in hac tota
+provincia aboliti fuerunt dies festi_, saith he. The church of Zurich in
+Helvetia did also banish them all away, as Bullinger writeth to
+Calvin.(219) 2. The practice of the greatest part of the reformed churches
+in observing holidays, cannot commend them in the church of Scotland, 1.
+Because she did spue them out with so great detestation, that she is more
+bound to abhor them than other churches which did not the like, and I may
+well apply to them that which Calvin saith(220) of the ceremonies of the
+Interim, to Valentinus Pacaeus, _Ut concedam faetidas illas sordes quibus
+purgatae fuerunt vestrae ecclesiae, inrebus medus posse censeri: earum
+tamen restitutio eritne res media?_ 2. The church of Scotland is tied yet
+with another bond to hate holidays, of which other churches are free; for,
+by a solemn oath sworn to the God of heaven, she hath abjured all
+antichristian and popish rites, and dedicating of days particularly. When
+Tilen would make answer to this argument, he saith,(221) that men's
+consciences should not be snared with rash oaths and superstitious vows,
+and if that such bonds be laid on, they should be broken and shaken off.
+What! Calls he this a superstitious vow, which abjured all superstition
+and superstitious rites? Or calls he this a rash oath, which, upon so sage
+and due deliberation, so serious advisement, so pious intention, so decent
+preparation, so great humiliation, was religiously, publicly, solemnly
+sworn throughout this land, and that at the straight command of authority?
+Who is ignorant of these things, except he be a stranger in our Israel?
+But say the oath had been rash and temeratious, shall it not therefore
+oblige? His judgment is, it doth not; and so thinks the Bishop of
+Winchester,(222) who teacheth us, that if the oath be made rashly,
+_paenitenda promissio non perficienda praesumptio_, he had said better
+thus, _paenitenda praesumptio, perficienda promissio_; for was not that a
+very rash oath which the princes of Israel did swear to the Gibeonites,
+not asking counsel at the mouth of the Lord? Josh. ix. 14-16, yet it bound
+both them, Josh ix. 19, and their posterity, some hundred years after, 2
+Sam. xxi. 1. If the matter then be lawful, the oath binds, were it sworn
+ever so rashly.
+
+_Sect._ 4. As touching the judgment of divines, we say, 1. Many divines
+disallow of festival days, and with the church, were free of them. For the
+Belgic churches, in their synod, anno 1578, wished that the six days might
+be wrought upon, and that the Lord's day alone might be celebrated. And
+Luther in his book, _de Bonis Operibus_, wished that there were no
+feast-days among Christians but the Lord's day. This wish of theirs
+declareth plainly, that they allowed of no holiday except the Lord's day;
+yet Bishop Lindsey must make a fashion of saying something for an answer.
+"This wish (saith he(223)) Luther and the Belgic churches conceived, out
+of their miscontent at the number, corruptions, and superstitions of the
+festival days, beside the Lord's day, as ye do." _Ans._ 1. Their wish
+importeth a simple and absolute mistaking of all festival days besides the
+Lord's day, and not of their number and corruptions only. 2. It is well
+that he acknowledgeth both them and us to have reason of miscontentment at
+holidays, from their corruptions and superstitions. The old Waldenses
+also,(224) whose doctrine was restored and propagated by John Huss, and
+Jerome of Prague, after Wiclif, and that with the congratulation of the
+church of Constantinople, held,(225) that they were to rest from labour
+upon no day but upon the Lord's day, whereby it appeareth, that holidays
+have had adversaries before us. I find that they pervert some places which
+they allege against us out of Calvin. Tilen allegeth,(226) _Calvin.
+Inst._, lib. 2, cap. 8, sec. 32, acknowledging _alios quoque dies festos
+praeter dominicum_, &c. I marvel how a judicious reader could imagine such
+a thing to be in that place, for both in that and the subsequent section,
+he is speaking of the Lord's day against the Anabaptists, and if any man
+will think that in sec. 32 he is speaking of holy assemblies of Christians
+in the general, yet he can see nothing there of any festival days, beside
+the Lord's day, dedicated to holy meetings. There is another place of
+Calvin abused by Bishop Spotswood(227) and Bishop Lindsey,(228) taken out
+of one of his Epistles to Hallerus, which I find in the volume before
+quoted, p. 136, 137, that which they grip to in this epistle is, that
+Calvin, speaking of the abrogation of festival days in Geneva, saith, _hoc
+tamen testatum esse volo, si mihi delata optio fuisset, quod nunc
+constitutum est, non fuisse pro __ sententia dicturum. Ans._ That which
+made Calvin say so, was not any liking which he had to festival days, for
+he calls the abolishing of them _ordo bene compositus_;(229) but as
+himself showeth in the following epistle, which beareth this title, _Cal.
+Ministro Burensi, S.D._, the reason why he durst scarcely have so
+determined, if his judgment had been required, was, because, he saw
+neither end nor remedy for the prevailing tumult of contention raised
+about festival days, and likely to impede the course of reformation;
+therefore _fovendae pacis studio_, he professeth that he durst not make
+mention of the abrogation of those holidays. Because he would have
+tolerated holidays, because he durst not at that time, and as the case
+then stood, have spoken of the abolishing them, can it be hereupon
+concluded that he allowed of them? No, sure. But it is observable how both
+those prelates pervert Calvin's words. Bishop Spotswood allegeth his words
+anent the abolishing of these festival days, thus: _Ego neque suasor neque
+impulsor fui, atque hoc testatum volo, si mihi delata optio_, &c. Whereas
+the words in that epistle lie thus: _Ego tametsi neque suasor, neque
+impulsor fui, sic tamen accidisse non moleste fero. Quod si statum nostrae
+ecclesiae aeque compertum haberes, non dubitares meo judicio subscribere.
+Hoc tamen testatum esse volo, si mihi delata optio_, &c. The Bishop would
+have made his hearers believe that Calvin _was not content with the
+abolishing of the festival days_, whereas his words testify the very
+contrary. Bishop Lindsey is as gross in perverting the end of that
+epistle. _Nec tamen est cur homines adeo exasperentur, si libertate nostra
+ut ecclesiae edificatio postulat utimur_, &c., from which words he
+concludes, that in Calvin's judgment, the observation and abrogation of
+those days is in the power and liberty of the church. But the reader will
+perceive, that Calvin there speaketh only of the church's liberty to
+abrogate holidays, and nothing of her power to observe them, for he is
+showing, that howbeit he durst not have given advice to abolish them, if
+the decision had been referred to him, yet they had no reason for them who
+were offended at the abolishing of them in Geneva, because that church had
+done no more than she had power and liberty to do for edification. 3.
+Other testimonies they produce, which cannot help them much. That which
+Bishop Lindsey(230) allegeth out of Zanchius's confession, maketh him but
+small advantage; for though Zanchius there alloweth of the sanctification
+of some festival days, yet, writing on the fourth commandment, he
+acknowledgeth that it is more agreeable to the first institution, and to
+the writings of the apostles, that one day of the week only be sanctified.
+What meant the Bishop to say?(231) that this place is falsified and
+mutilated by his antagonist, who quotes it not to prove that Zanchius
+disalloweth of festival days, but to prove that, in Zanchius's judgment,
+the sanctification of the Sabbath only, and no other day in the week,
+agreeth best with divine and apostolical institution? Was there any need
+to allege more of Zanchius's words than concerned the point which he had
+to prove? The Bishop allegeth also a testimony out of Perkins on Gal. iv.
+10,(232) which makes him but very little help; for albeit Perkins thought
+good, in some sort, to excuse the observing of days in his own mother
+church of England, yet I find in that place, 1. He complaineth that the
+greatest part respects those holidays more than they should. 2. He
+alloweth only the observing of days for order's sake, that men may come to
+the church to hear God's word, which respect will not be enough to the
+Bishop, if there be not a solemnising and celebrating of the memory of
+some of God's inestimable benefits, and a dedicating of the day to this
+end and purpose. 3. He saith, that it is the privilege of God to appoint
+an extraordinary day of rest, so that he permitteth not power to the
+church for appointing a set, constant, and anniversary day of rest, for
+such a day becometh an ordinary day of rest. 4. He preferreth the practice
+of those churches of the Protestants who do not observe holidays, because,
+saith he, the church, in the apostles' days, had no holiday besides the
+Lord's day, and the fourth commandment enjoins the labour of six days.
+
+_Sect._ 5. The Bishop meeteth with another answer in his antagonist which
+crosseth his testimonies, namely, that howsoever foreign divines, in their
+epistles and councils, spake sometimes sparingly against holidays, when
+their advice was sought of churches newly risen out of Popery and greatly
+distressed, yet they never advised a church to resume them where they were
+removed. The Bishop objecteth against this answer,(233) that Calvin,
+epist. 51, "adviseth the Monbelgardens not to contend against the prince
+for not resuming (he should have said, for not receiving, if he had
+translated Calvin's words faithfully) of all festival days, but only such
+as served not to edification, and were seen to be superstitious." _Ans._
+1. Albeit he spake sparingly against holidays, when he gave advice to that
+distressed and lately reformed church, lest the work of reformation should
+have been letted, yet he did not allow holidays among them. For in another
+epistle written to them he saith,(234) _De pulsu campanarum et diebus
+festis ita sentimus, ferendas potius esse vobis has ineptias, quam
+stationem in qua estis a domino collocati deferendum, modo ne approbetis;
+modo etiam liberum vobis sit reprehendere, quae inde sequentur
+superstitiones._ And this he setteth down for one of these superstitions,
+_quod dies a die discernitur_, where also he condemneth both the observing
+of days to the honour of man as superstitious, and the observing of them
+for the honour of God as Judaical. If holidays, in Calvin's judgment, be
+fooleries--if he gave advice not to approve them--if he thought them
+occasions of superstition--if he held it superstition to distinguish one
+day from another, or to esteem one above another--if he call them Judaical,
+though kept to the honour of God, judge then what allowance they had from
+him. 2. If the Bishop stand to Calvin's judgment in that place which he
+quoteth, he must allow as to refuse some festival days, though enjoined by
+the prince. _In festis non recipiendis cuperem vos esse constantiores, sic
+tamen ut non litigetis de quibuslibet._ Then he allowed them to contend
+against some holidays, though the prince imposed them. 3. The church of
+Scotland did remove festival days in another manner, and bound herself
+never to receive them by another bond than ever the Monbelgardens did; so
+that having other bonds lying upon us than other churches have, we are so
+much the more straightly obliged neither to receive holidays, nor any
+other antichristian and popish ceremony.
+
+
+
+
+ THE SECOND PART.
+
+
+AGAINST THE EXPEDIENCY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+AGAINST SOME OF OUR OPPOSITES, WHO ACKNOWLEDGE THE INCONVENIENCY OF THE
+CEREMONIES, AND YET WOULD HAVE US YIELD TO THEM.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. The Archbishop of St Andrews, now Lord Chancellor forsooth,
+speaking of the five articles concluded at the pretended Assembly of
+Perth, saith,(235) "The conveniency of them for our church is doubted of
+by many, but not without cause, &c.; novations in a church, even in the
+smallest things, are dangerous, &c.; had it been in our power to have
+dissuaded or declined them, most certainly we would, &c.; but now being
+brought to a necessity, either of yielding, or disobeying him, whom, for
+myself, I hold it religion to offend," &c. Dr Burgess confesseth,(236)
+that some of his side think and believe, that the ceremonies are
+inconvenient, and yet to be observed for peace and the gospel's sake; and
+how many Formalists let us hear their hearty wishes, that the ceremonies
+had never been brought into our church, because they have troubled our
+peace, and occasioned great strife? When they are demanded why do they
+yield to them, since they acknowledge great inconveniency in them? they
+answer, lest by their refusal they should cast their coal to the fire, to
+entertain and increase discord, and lest, shunning one inconveniency, they
+should draw on a great. Mr Sprint saith,(237) "It may be granted, that
+offence and hinderance to edification do arise from those our
+ceremonies."(238) He confesseth also, that the best divines wished them to
+be abolished, as being many ways inconvenient; notwithstanding, he hath
+written a whole treatise, of the necessity of conformity in case of
+deprivation.
+
+_Sect._ 2. But let us understand how he proveth(239) that sometimes it is
+expedient and necessary to conform unto such burdensome and beggarly
+ceremonies, as are many ways inconvenient, and occasions of sundry evil
+effects. His principal reason is,(240) That the apostles, by direction of
+the Holy Ghost, and upon reasons of common and perpetual equity, did
+practise themselves, and caused others to practise, yea, advised and
+enjoined (as matters good and necessary to be done) ceremonies so
+inconvenient and evil in many main and material respects, as the
+ceremonies enjoined and prescribed in the church of England are supposed
+to be; whence he would have it to follow, that to suffer deprivation for
+refusing to conform to the ceremonies of the church of England, is
+contrary to the doctrine and practice of the apostles. _Ans._ These Jewish
+ceremonies in the use and practice of the apostles, were no way evil and
+inconvenient, as himself everywhere confesseth, whereas, therefore, he
+tells us,(241) that those ceremonies were abused to superstition, were of
+mystical signification, imposed and observed as parts of God's worship,
+swerving from the general rules of God's word, not profitable for order,
+decency, and edification, offensive many ways, and infringing Christian
+liberty, he runs at random all the while; for these things agree not to
+the Jewish ceremonies, as they were rightly used by the apostles
+themselves, and by others at their advice, but only as they were
+superstitiously used with opinion of necessity by the obstinate Jews, and
+by the false teachers, who impugned Christian liberty. So that all that
+can follow upon Mr Sprint's argument is this: That notwithstanding of the
+evils and inconveniences which follow upon certain ceremonies in the
+superstitious abuse of them by others, yet if, in our practice, they have
+a necessary or expedient use, then (after the example of the apostles) we
+may well conform unto them. Now, all this cometh not near the point which
+Mr Sprint undertaketh to prove, namely, that granting the controverted
+ceremonies to be, in our use and practice of the same, many ways evil and
+inconvenient, yet to suffer deprivation for refusing to conform to the
+same is contrary to the doctrine and practice of the apostles. And as
+touching the comparison instituted betwixt our controverted ceremonies,
+and these antiquated ceremonies of the Jews, practised and prescribed by
+the apostles after the ascension of Christ, and before the full
+promulgation of the gospel, many evils there be in ours, which could not
+be found in theirs. For, 1. Ours have no necessary use, and might well be
+spared; theirs had a necessary use for avoiding of scandal, Acts xv. 28.
+2. Ours produce manifold inconveniences (whereof we are to speak
+hereafter) in over use and practice of the same, which is prescribed,
+theirs in the use and practice of the same, which was enjoined by the
+apostles, were most expedient for winning of the obstinate Jews, 1 Cor.
+ix. 20; and for keeping of the weak, 1 Cor. ix. 22; and for teaching the
+right use of Christian liberty to such as were strong in the faith, both
+among the believing Jews and converted Gentiles, Rom. iv. &c.; 1 Cor.
+viii.; x. 3. Ours are proved to be, in their nature unlawful; theirs were
+(during the foresaid space) in their nature indifferent, Rom. xiv. 6; Gal.
+vi. 15. 4. Ours are imposed and observed as parts of God's worship (which
+we will prove afterward);(242) theirs not so, for where read we, that
+(during the foresaid space) any holiness was placed in them by the
+apostles? 5. Ours have certain mystical significations; theirs not so: for
+it is no where to be read, that the apostles either practised or
+prescribed them as significative resemblances of any mystery of the
+kingdom of God. 6. Ours make us (though unnecessarily) like unto
+idolaters, in their idolatrous actions; theirs not so. 7. Ours are imposed
+with a necessity both of practice and opinion, even out of the case of
+scandal; theirs not so. 8. Ours are pressed by naked will and authority;
+theirs, by such special grounds of momentaneous reason, as made the
+practice of the same necessary for a certain time, whether the apostles
+had enjoined it or not. 9. Ours are urged even upon such as, in their
+consciences, judge them to be unlawful; theirs not so. 10. Ours have no
+better original than human and antichristian invention; theirs had their
+original from God's own institution. 11. Ours are the accursed monuments
+of popish idolatry, to be ejected with detestation; theirs were the
+memorials of Mosaical policy, to be buried with honour. 12. Ours are
+pressed by such pretended reasons, as make them ever and everywhere
+necessary; theirs, by such reasons as did only conclude a necessity of
+using them at some times, and in some places. 13. Ours are urged after the
+full promulgation of the gospel and acknowledgment of Christian liberty;
+theirs, before the same. 14. Ours are urged with the careless neglect of
+pressing more necessary duties; theirs not so. These and other differences
+betwixt the controverted and Jewish ceremonies, do so break the back of Mr
+Sprint's argument, that there is no healing of it again.
+
+_Sect._ 3. His second reason whereby he goeth about to prove the necessity
+of conforming to inconvenient ceremonies, in the case of deprivation, he
+taketh from this ground:(243) That when two duties commanded of God, do
+meet in one practice, so as we cannot do them both, in this case we must
+perform the greater duty, and neglect the lesser. Now, whereas he saith,
+when two duties do meet, &c., he means not, that both may be duties at
+once, for then a man shall be so straitened that he must needs commit a
+sin, in that he must needs omit one of the duties. But (as he explaineth
+himself) he calleth them duties, being considered apart: as, to hear a
+sermon at the church on the Sabbath, and to tend a sick person ready to
+die at home, at the same time, both are duties, being considered apart,
+but meeting together in our practice at one time, there is but one duty,
+because the lesser work binds not for that present. Now, he assumes that
+the doctrine and practice of suffering deprivation for refusing to conform
+to inconvenient ceremonies, doth cause men to neglect greater duties to
+perform the lesser, for proof whereof he enlargeth a needless discourse,
+tending to prove that preaching is a greater duty and of higher bond than
+the duty of labouring unto fit ceremonies, or of refusing inconvenient
+ceremonies, which cannot help his cause. That which he had to prove was,
+that not to suffer deprivation for refusing of inconvenient ceremonies, is
+a greater duty than the refusing of inconvenient ceremonies. But it will
+be said, that to suffer deprivation for the refusing of inconvenient
+ceremonies, doth cause men to neglect the preaching of the word, and that
+is a greater duty than the refusing of inconvenient ceremonies. _Ans_ 1.
+Mr Sprint himself layeth down one ground, which proveth the refusing of
+inconvenient ceremonies to be a greater duty than the preaching of the
+word, for he holdeth(244) that the substantials of the second table do
+overrule the ceremonials of the first table, according to that which God
+saith, "I will have mercy and not sacrifice," Matt. xii. 7. And elsewhere
+he teacheth,(245) that to tend a sick person ready to die is a greater
+duty than the hearing of the word. Now, to practice inconvenient and
+scandalous ceremonies, is to commit soul-murder, and so to break one of
+the most substantial duties of the second table. Therefore, according to
+Mr Sprint's own ground, the refusing of inconvenient and scandalous
+ceremonies is a greater duty than the preaching of the word, which is but
+a ceremonial of the first table, and if the neglect of tending a sick
+person's body be a greater sin than to omit the hearing of many sermons,
+much more to murder the souls of men, by practising inconvenient and
+scandalous ceremonies, is a greater sin than to omit the preaching of many
+sermons, which is all the omission (if there be any) of those who suffer
+deprivation for refusing to conform unto inconvenient ceremonies. But, 2.
+We deny that the suffering of deprivation for refusing to conform unto
+inconvenient ceremonies, causeth men to neglect or omit the duty of
+preaching. Neither hath Mr Sprint alleged anything for proof hereof,
+except that this duty of preaching cannot be done with us ordinarily, as
+things do stand, if ministers do not conform, for, by order, they are to
+be deprived of their ministry. Now, what of all this? For though, by the
+oppressing power of proud prelates, many are hindered from continuing in
+preaching, because of their refusing inconvenient ceremonies, yet they
+themselves who suffered deprivation for this cause cannot be said to
+neglect or omit the duty of preaching: most gladly would they preach, but
+are not permitted. And how can a man be said to omit or neglect that which
+he would fain do but it lieth not in his power to get it done? All the
+strength of Mr Sprint's argument lieth in this: That forasmuch as
+ministers are hindered from preaching, if they do not conform, therefore,
+their suffering of deprivation for refusing conformity, doth cause them
+neglect the duty of preaching. Which argument, that I may destroy it with
+his own weapons, let us note,(246) that he alloweth a man (though not to
+suffer deprivation, yet) to suffer any civil penalty or external loss, for
+refusing of inconvenient ceremonies commanded and enjoined by the
+magistrate. Now, put the case, that for refusing inconvenient ceremonies,
+I be so fined, spoiled, and oppressed, that I cannot have sufficient
+worldly means for myself and them of my household, hence I argue thus (if
+Mr Sprint's argument hold good): That forasmuch as I am, by strong
+violence, hindered from providing for myself and them of my household, if
+I do not conform, therefore, my suffering of those losses for refusing of
+conformity, doth cause me to neglect the duty of providing for myself and
+for them of my family, which neglect should make me worse than an infidel.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Mr Sprint now addeth a third, proving, that to suffer
+deprivation for refusing to conform to the prescribed ceremonies(247)
+(howbeit many ways inconvenient,) is contrary to the royal law of love,
+which he labours to evidence three ways. _First_, he saith, that to suffer
+deprivation for refusing to conform, doth, by abstaining from a thing in
+nature indifferent (such as our ceremonies, saith he, are proved to be),
+needlessly deprive men of the ordinary means of their salvation, which is
+the preaching ministry of the word, &c. _Ans._ 1. That the controverted
+ceremonies are in nature indifferent, neither he, nor any of his side,
+hath yet proven; they suppose that they are indifferent, but they prove it
+not. 2. We deny that the suffering of deprivation for refusing to conform
+to the prescribed ceremonies, doth deprive men of the preaching of the
+word. Neither saith Mr Sprint aught for proof hereof but that which we
+have already confuted, viz., that as things do stand, all such as do not
+conform are to be deprived, whence it followeth only, that the injury and
+violence of prelates (not the suffering of deprivation for refusing to
+conform) depriveth men of the preaching of the word. _Secondly_, he
+saith,(248) that the doctrine and practice of suffering deprivation for
+inconvenient ceremonies, condemneth both the apostolical churches, and all
+churches since their times, because there hath been no church which hath
+not practised inconvenient ceremonies. _Ans._ It is most false which he
+saith of the apostolical churches; for those Jewish ceremonies practised
+by them were most convenient, as we have said before. And as for other
+churches in after ages, so many of them as have practised inconvenient
+ceremonies, are not herein to be followed by us. Better go right with a
+few than err with a multitude. Thirdly, he saith,(249) that the suffering
+of deprivation for refusing to conform, breedeth and produceth sundry
+scandals. First, saith he, it is the occasion of fraternal discord. O
+egregious impudency! who seeth not that the ceremonies are the incendiary
+sparkles, from which the fire of contention hath its being and burning; so
+that conforming (not refusing) is the furnishing of fuel and casting of
+faggots to the fire. Secondly, He allegeth that the suffering of
+deprivation for refusing to conform, twofold more scandaliseth the Papist
+than conformity; for he doth far more insult to see a godly minister
+thrust out, and with him all the truth of God pressed, than to see him
+wear a surplice, &c. _Thirdly_, he saith, It twofold more scandaliseth the
+Atheist, libertine, and Epicure, who, by the painful minister's deprival,
+will triumph to see a door opened for him without resistance, to live in
+drunkenness, whoredom, swearing, &c. Now, for answer to his second and
+third pretences, we say, 1. Mr Sprint implieth indirectly, that when
+non-conforming ministers are thrust out, Papists, Atheists, libertines,
+and Epicures, expect but small opposition from those conforming ministers
+who come in their rooms. Our opposites have a skilful proctor (forsooth)
+of Mr Sprint. And, indeed, if Papists and Atheists were so afraid of
+Conformists as of Nonconformists, they would not thus insult. 2. We must
+distinguish betwixt deprivation and the suffering of deprivation. Papists
+insult indeed, that their assured friends, the prelates, are so powerful,
+as to thrust out from the public ministry the greatest enemies of Popery.
+But as for the ministers' suffering of themselves to be thrust out, and
+deprived for refusing of conformity, it is so far from giving to Papists
+any matter of insulting, that it will rather grieve them and gall them to
+the heart, to understand that sundry powerful, painful, and learned
+ministers are so averse from Popery, that before they conform to any
+ceremony of the same, they will suffer for refusal; and that their
+constancy and courage, in suffering for such a cause, will confirm many
+professors in the persuasion of the truth of their doctrine, which they
+taught against conforming unto popish ceremonies. But to go on.
+_Fourthly_, saith he, It twofold more scandaliseth such an one as doth
+truly fear the name of God, who could be more contented to enjoy the means
+of his faith and salvation, with a small inconveniency of some ceremonies
+which he grieveth at, than to lose his pastor, the gospel, and the
+ordinary means of his faith and salvation. _Ans._ 1. Mr Sprint supposeth
+that such an one, as for no respect whatsoever would be contented with the
+practice of some inconvenient ceremonies, doth not truly fear the name of
+God. And who is the Puritan now? Is not Mr Sprint, who standeth in such a
+huge distance from all who are of our mind, and so far preferreth himself
+and his followers to us as if we did not truly fear the name of God?
+Secondly, He supposeth that, when non-conforming ministers are thrust out,
+the ordinary means of faith and salvation are not dispensed (to the
+comfort and contentment of such as truly fear the name of God) by those
+conforming ministers, who are surrogate in their stead which, how his
+fellows will take with, let them look to it. 3. Forasmuch as the fear of
+God is to depart from evil, therefore such an one as doth truly fear the
+name of God, in so far as he doth fear the name of God, and _quatenus_, he
+is such an one, will never take well with the practice of inconvenient
+ceremonies, which is not a parting from, but a cleaving unto evil. 4. They
+who truly fear the name of God, are indeed scandalised by the prelates'
+depriving of ministers for refusing to conform; but by the ministers'
+suffering of deprivation for this cause, they are not scandalised but
+edified. But, _Fifthly_, saith Mr Sprint, it offendeth the magistrate, by
+provoking him (persuaded and resolved as he is) to disgrace these
+otherwise well-deserving ministers, and to strike them with the sword of
+authority. _Ans._ Our refusal to conform to inconvenient ceremonies being
+a necessary duty, if the magistrate be provoked therewith, we are
+blameless; neither can it any otherwise provoke him to disgrace those
+well-deserving ministers, than Moses' seeking of liberty for Israel to go
+and serve God according to his will, provoked Pharaoh the more to oppress
+them; or than Christ's preaching of the truth, and his abstaining from the
+superstitious ceremonies of the Pharisees, provoked them to disgrace him,
+and plot his hurt. Howbeit we are not ignorant that the magistrate is not
+provoked by our refusing to conform, except as it is misreported,
+misdeemed, and misconstructed to him by the false calumnies of our
+adversaries, which being so, he is not incited by our deed, but by theirs.
+
+_Sect._ 5. Now, _Sixthly_, saith Mr Sprint, it unjustly condemneth the
+harmony of all true churches that ever were primitive and reformed, and
+all sound teachers of all times and places, whose universal doctrine it
+hath been, that conformity to inconvenient ceremonies is necessary, in
+case of deprivation. _Ans._ That the ceremonies practised by the apostles
+and apostolic churches were not inconvenient, it hath been already showed;
+that since their times, sundry churches, both ancient and reformed, have
+practised inconvenient ceremonies, we deny not: yet Mr Sprint himself(250)
+will not defend all the practices of those churches, whose practice he
+allegeth against us. But that all sound teachers, of all times and places,
+have taught the necessity of conformity to inconvenient ceremonies, in
+case of deprivation, he neither doth, neither can make good; it is but a
+bare and a bold affirmation to deceive the minds of the simple. Did not
+the good old Waldenses,(251) notwithstanding of all the hot persecutions
+raised against them, constantly refuse to conform unto any of those
+ceremonies of the church of Rome, which they perceived to have no
+necessary use in religion, and to occasion superstition rather than to
+serve for edification? And we verily rejoice to be ranked with those
+Waldenses, of whom a popish historiographer speaketh thus:(252) _Alius in
+libris cathari dicuntur, quibus respondent qui hodie in Anglia puriorum
+doctrinam __ prae se ferunt_. Moreover, it cannot be unknown to such as are
+acquainted with the history of the Reformation, how that not Flacius
+Illiricus only, but many others,(253) among whom was Calvin,(254) and the
+Magdeburgian doctors,(255) and all the churches of Nether Saxony subject
+to Maurice,(256) opposed themselves to those inconvenient and hurtful
+ceremonies of the Interim, urged by the Adiaphorists. And howsoever they
+perceived many great and grievous dangers ensuing upon their refusing to
+conform to the same, yet they constantly refused, and many ministers
+suffered deprivation for their refusal.(257) Besides, do not our divines
+require, that the church's canons, even in matters of rite, be "profitable
+to the edification of the church,"(258) and that the observation of the
+same must carry before it a manifest utility,(259) that in rites and
+ceremonies the church hath no power to destruction, but only to
+edification?(260) Do they not put this clause in the very definition of
+ecclesiastical rites,(261) that they be profitably ordained; considering,
+that otherwise they are but intolerable misorders and abuses? Do they not
+teach,(262) that no idle ceremony which serveth not unto edifying is to be
+suffered in the church; and that godly brethren are not holden to subject
+themselves unto such things as they perceive neither to be right nor
+profitable?(263) That whatsoever either would scandalise our brother,(264)
+or not be profitable to him for his edification, Christians for no respect
+must dare to meddle with it? Do they not stand so much upon expediency,
+that this tenet is received with them: That the negative precepts of the
+law, do bind, not only at all times, but likewise to all times (whereupon
+it followeth, that we may never do that which is inconvenient or
+scandalous), and that the affirmative precepts though they bind at all
+times, yet not to all times, but only _quando expedit_, whereupon it
+followeth, that we are never bound to the practice of any duty commanded
+in the law of God, except only when it is expedient to be done; but Mr
+Sprint excepteth against this rule,(265) that it is not generally true;
+for evidence whereof he allegeth many things, partly false, partly
+impertinent, upon which I hold it not needful here to insist. As for such
+examples, objected by him, as carry some show of making against this rule,
+which he dare not admit, I will make some answer thereto. He saith, that
+sometimes even negative precepts have been lawfully violated; for these
+precepts were negative,--none but priests must eat shew-bread, yet David
+did lawfully violate it; thou shalt do no work upon the Sabbath, yet the
+priests brake this, and are blameless; let nothing of God's good creatures
+be lost, yet Paul and his company did lawfully cast away their goods in
+the ship, to save their lives, &c. _Ans._ Mr Sprint might easily have
+understood, that when divines say, the affirmative precepts bind at all
+times, but not to all times,--the negative precepts both at all times and
+to all times, they ever mean, _specie actionis manente cadem_; so long as
+an action forbidden in a negative precept ceaseth not to be evil, as long
+the negative precept bindeth to all times: whereas even whilst an action
+commanded in an affirmative precept, ceaseth not to be good, yet the
+affirmative precept bindeth not to all times. So that the rule is not
+crossed by the alleged examples; for David's eating of the shew-bread; the
+priests' labour upon the Sabbath; and Paul's casting of the goods into the
+sea, were not evil, but good actions (the kind of the action being changed
+by the circumstances). In the meantime, the foresaid rule still crosseth
+Mr Sprint's tenet; for he holdeth that even whilst certain ceremonies
+remain evil in their use, and cease not to be scandalous and inconvenient,
+yet we are not ever bound to abstain from them, but may in the case of
+deprivation practice them, which directly contradicteth the rule.
+
+_Sect._ 6. The position therefore which we maintain against Mr Sprint, and
+from which we will not depart the breadth of one nail, is this, that we
+can never lawfully conform (no not in the case of deprivation) unto any
+ceremony which is scandalous and inconvenient in the use of it. For
+further confirmation whereof, we say, 1. Every negative precept of the law
+of God bindeth to all times, in such sort, that the action which it
+forbiddeth (so long as it remaineth evil, and the kind of it is not
+changed) can never lawfully be done. Therefore, forasmuch as to abstain
+from things scandalous and inconvenient, is one of the negative precepts
+of the law of God, and the ceremonies whereunto Mr Sprint would have us to
+conform in the case of deprivation, are, and remain scandalous and
+inconvenient in our practice and use of them according to his own
+presupposal; it followeth, that the use and practice of the same is
+altogether unlawful unto us. 2. That which is lawful in the nature of it
+is never lawful in the use of it, except only when it is expedient for
+edification, as teacheth the Apostle, 1 Cor. vi. 12; x. 23. The
+Corinthians objected that all indifferent things were lawful. The Apostle
+addeth a limitation,(266) _esse licita quatenus conducunt_, they are
+lawful to be used in so far as they are expedient. 3. It is the Apostle's
+commandment, let all things be done unto edifying, 1 Cor. xiv. 26.
+Therefore whatsoever is not done unto edifying ought not to be done. 4.
+The Apostle saith, 1 Cor. viii. 13, "If meat make my brother to offend, I
+will eat no flesh while the world standeth." Now, put the case, the
+Apostle had been hindered from preaching the gospel for his precise
+abstaining from those meats whereat his brother would be offended, would
+he in that case have eaten? Nay, he saith peremptorily, that whilst the
+world standeth he would not eat. 5. Say not our writers,(267) that we must
+flee and abstain from every thing which is not expedient for the
+edification of our brother? And doth not the Bishop of Winchester
+teach,(268) that in our going out, and coming in, and in all our actions,
+we must look to the rule of expediency? And saith not Bishop
+Spotswood,(269) "It is not to be denied, but they are ceremonies, which
+for the inconveniency they bring, ought to be resisted?" 6. Dare Mr Sprint
+deny that which Ames saith he heard once defended in Cambridge,(270) viz.,
+that _quicquid non expedit, quatenus non expedit, non licet_: Whatsoever
+is not expedient, in so far as it is not expedient, it is not lawful. Doth
+not Pareus likewise show out of Augustine,(271) that such things as are
+not expedient but scandalous, and do not edify but hurt our brother,
+_Fiunt ex accidenti illicita et peccata, proinde vitanda_? 7. To conform
+unto inconvenient and scandalous ceremonies, in the case of deprivation,
+is at the best, to do evil that good may come of it; which was the
+pretence of those councillors of Pope Pius V. who advised him to suffer
+stews at Rome, for preventing a greater evil of abusing chaste women and
+honest matrons. So the pseudo-Nicodemites allege for their abstaining from
+flesh upon the days forbidden by the church, that this they do for
+shunning a greater evil, which is the scandal of Papists. Our divines
+answer them,(272) that evil ought not to be done that good may come of it.
+But, saith Mr Sprint,(273) this rule of the Apostle (Rom. iii. 8) must be
+limited,(274) and in some cases holdeth not; for a man may, for doing of
+good, do that which is evil in use, circumstance, and by accident, so it
+be not simply and in nature evil. _Ans._ 1. He begs the thing in question,
+for that rule is alleged against him to prove that nothing which is evil
+in the use of it may be done for any good whatsoever. 2. The difference
+betwixt that which is simply evil, and that which is evil in use and by
+accident, is in that the one may never be done, the other is unlawful only
+_pro tempore_; but in this they agree, that both are unlawful; for that
+which is evil by accident,(275) whilst it is such, is unlawful to be done,
+no less than that which is in nature evil. 3. Divines hold
+absolutely,(276) that _Inter duo vel plura mala culpae_ (such as things
+scandalous and inconvenient) _nullum est eligendum_; that though in evils
+of punishment we may choose a lesser to shun a greater, yet in evils of
+fault, election hath no place, neither may we do a lesser fault to shun a
+greater,(277) _nec ullum admittendum malum, ut eveniat aliquod bonum, sive
+per se sive per accidens_. But let us hear what Mr Sprint can say to the
+contrary. He allegeth, the priests' breaking of the Sabbath, David's
+eating of the shewbread, and the apostles' practising of very hurtful
+ceremonies; all which things being unlawful were done lawfully, to further
+greater duties.
+
+We have answered already, that the priests' killing of the sacrifices on
+the Sabbath, and David's eating of the shew-bread, were not unlawful,
+because the circumstances changed the kind of the actions. Also, that the
+Jewish ceremonies used by the apostles were in their practice no way
+hurtful, but very profitable. Mr Sprint allegeth another example out of 2
+Chron. xxx. 18-21: To perform God's worship not as it was written, was a
+sin, saith he, yet to further God's substantial worships, which was a good
+thing, was not regarded of God. _Ans._ One cannot guess from his words how
+he thought here to frame an argument, which might conclude the lawfulness
+of doing some evil, that some good may come of it. Howsoever, that we may
+have some light in this matter, let us distinguish betwixt these two
+things: 1. The people's legal uncleanness, when they came to eat the
+passover. 2. Their adventuring to eat it, notwithstanding their
+uncleanness. That they were at that time unclean, it was a sin. But whilst
+they prepared their hearts truly to seek God, and repented of their
+uncleanness; that in this case they adventured to eat the passover, was no
+sin, because it is the will of God, that such as prepare their hearts
+unfeignedly to seek him, lament their wants, and repent for that they are
+not so prepared and sanctified for his worship as they ought (there being
+no other thing to hold them back beside some defect of sanctity in
+themselves), notwithstanding of any defect which is in them, draw near to
+him in the use of his holy ordinances. As touching the former, no man will
+say, that they chose to be unclean, that they might further God's worship.
+But as for the latter, repenting of their uncleanness, they chose to keep
+the passover, this did they to further God's worship, and this was no sin,
+especially if we observe with Tremellius, that it is said, ver. 20, the
+Lord healed the people, that is, by the virtue of his Spirit purified and
+cleansed them, so that, that which was lame was not turned out of the way,
+but rather made straight and healed.
+
+_Sect._ 7. And now we leave Mr Sprint, who hath not only conformed to the
+controverted ceremonies, even upon presupposal of their inconveniency, but
+hath also made it very questionable,(278) whether in the case of
+deprivation he ought to conform to sundry other popish ceremonies, such as
+shaven crown, holy water, cream, spittle, salt, and I know not how many
+more which he comprehendeth under &c., all his pretences of greater
+inconveniences following upon not conforming than do upon conforming, we
+have hitherto examined. Yet what saith Bishop Spotswood(279) to the cause?
+He also allegeth there is a great inconveniency in the refusing of the
+ceremonies, namely, the offending of the king. But for answer unto this,
+look what the largest extent of the prince's power and privilege in
+matters belonging unto God's worship, which either God's word or the
+judgment of sound divines doth allow to him, none shall be found more
+willingly obsequious to his commandments than we. But as touching these
+ceremonies in question, we are upon evident grounds persuaded in our
+consciences, that they are both unlawful, and inexpedient for our church,
+and though they were lawful in themselves, yet we may answer as the
+oppugners of the Interim replied to those who urged yielding to the
+ceremonies of the same,(280) surplice, holidays, tapers, &c., because of
+the emperor's commandment. That the question is not about things
+indifferent, but about a main article of faith, namely, Christian liberty,
+which admitteth not any yoke to be imposed upon the conscience, no not in
+things indifferent. Our gracious prince who now, by the blessing of God,
+happily reigns over us, will not (we assure ourselves) be offended at us,
+for having regard to our consciences, God's own deputies placed in our
+souls, so far, that for all the world we dare not hazard their peace and
+quiet, by doing anything with their repugnance and aversation. Wherefore,
+we are more than confident that his Majesty will graciously accept from us
+such a reasonable apology, as they of Strasburg used to Charles V.(281)
+_Quantum omnino fieri potest, parati sumus tibi giatificari, non solum
+civilibus verum etiam in rebus sacris. Veruntamen oramus invicem, ut
+cogites, quoniam sui facti rationem oportet unumquemque Deo reddere,
+merito nos de salute nostra solicitos esse, et providere nequid contra
+conscientiam a nobis fiat._ And as the Estates of Germany to
+Ferdinand,(282) when they besought him only not to grieve nor burden their
+consciences. _Te quidem summum, et a Deo nobis datum magistrum agnoscimus,
+et libentissime quidem, ac nihil est omnium rerum, quod non possis aut
+debeas a nobis expectare, sed in hac unare propitium te nobis esse
+flagitamus._ If these hoped that popish princes would accept such answers
+from them, shall not we? O, shall we not be persuaded that the Defender of
+the Faith will not refuse to take them from us! especially seeing his
+Majesty shall ever find, that he hath none more loyal and true subjects,
+who will more gladly employ and bestow their lives, lands, houses, holds,
+goods, gear, rents, revenues, places, privileges, means, moities, and all
+in his Highness' service, and maintenance of his royal crown, and
+moreover, have so deeply conceived a strong and full persuasion of his
+Majesty's princely virtues, and much renowned propension to piety and
+equity, that they will urge their consciences by all good and lawful
+means, to assent unto every thing which he enjoins as right and
+convenient, and when the just aversation of conscience upon evident
+reasons is invincible, will notwithstanding be more willing to all other
+duties of subjection, and more averse from the least show of contempt.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+AGAINST THOSE OF OUR OPPOSITES WHO PLEAD FOR THE CEREMONIES AS THINGS
+EXPEDIENT.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. As for those who allege some conveniency in the ceremonies,
+they say more than can abide the proof of reason, which the induction of
+some particulars shall demonstrate. Dr Mortoune(283) allegeth for the
+surplice, that the difference of outward garments cannot but be held
+convenient for the distinguishing of ministers from laics in the discharge
+of their function. _Ans._ This conveniency is as well seen to without the
+surplice. If a man having a black gown upon him be seen exercising the
+function of a minister, it is very strange if any man think it not
+sufficiently distinguished from laics. The Act of Perth, anent
+confirmation and bishoping of children, would make it appear, that this
+ceremony is most profitable to cause young children in their tender years
+drink in the knowledge of God and his religion. _Ans._ 1. If this rite be
+so profitable for the instruction of children, then why do prelates
+appropriate it to themselves, who use to be employed in higher affairs,
+that permit them not to have leisure for exact catechising of children?
+Or, 2. Though they might attend the discharging of this duty; why should
+it be made their peculiar? Is not the parish minister able to catechise
+them? Or, 3. If it must depend upon prelates, and wait upon their leisure;
+what hath imposition of hands ado with catechising? 4. How comes it, that
+children who are not bishopped are as well catechised as they who are
+bishopped.
+
+_Sect._ 2. Tilen(284) setteth out the expediency of holidays, for
+imprinting in the minds of people the sense and knowledge of the benefits
+of redemption. _Ans._ 1. There is no mean so good for this purpose as
+catechising and preaching, out of season and in season. 2. What could he
+say unto them who have attained his end without his mean? I find people
+better instructed, and made more sensible of those benefits, where the
+feasts are not kept than where they are. 3. Think they their people
+sufficiently instructed in the grounds of religion, when they hear of the
+nativity, passion, &c.--what course will they take for instructing them in
+other principles of faith? Why do they not keep one way, and institute an
+holiday for every particular head of catechise?
+
+But Bishop Lindsey thinks yet to let us see a greater expediency for
+observing holidays. "Certainly (saith he)(285) nothing is so powerful to
+abolish profaneness, and to root out superstition out of men's hearts, as
+the exercise of divine worship, in preaching, praying and thanksgiving,
+chiefly then when the superstitious conceits of merit and necessity are
+most pregnant in the heads of people,--as doubtless they are when the set
+times of solemnities return,--for then it is meet to lance the aposteme
+when it is ripe." _Ans._ This is a very bad cure; and is not only to heal
+the wound of the people slightly, but to make it the more inveterate and
+festered. I might object, that little or nothing is preached or spoken by
+him and his companions at the revolution of those festivities against the
+superstitious keeping of them; but though they should speak as much as can
+be against this superstition, their lancing being in word only, and not in
+deed, the recidivation will prove worse than the disease. The best lancing
+of the aposteme were not to observe them at all, or to preach against
+them, which are tried to work this effect more powerfully than the
+Bishop's cure hath done; for all know that there is none so free of this
+superstition as those who observe not the holidays.
+
+_Sect._ 3. The same prelate pleadeth(286) for the expediency of giving the
+communion to the sick in private houses, because he thinks they should not
+want this mean of comfort, as if the wanting of the sacramental signs, not
+procured by a man's own negligence or contempt, could stop or stay the
+comforts of the Holy Spirit. Nay, it is not so. We have seen some who
+received not the communion in time of their sickness, end more gloriously
+and comfortably than ever we heard of any who received the sacrament for
+their _viaticum_ when they were a-dying. Paybody(287) thinks kneeling, in
+the act of receiving the communion, to be expedient for the reverend using
+and handling of that holy sacrament, and that much reverence ariseth to
+the sacrament from it. _Ans._ I verily believe that more reverence ariseth
+to the sacrament from kneeling than is due to it; but I am sure there is
+no less true reverence of that holy sacrament among such as kneel not in
+the receiving of it, than among such as do kneel. I hope it is not unknown
+how humbly and reverently many sincere Christians, with fear and
+trembling, do address themselves to that most holy sacrament, who yet for
+all the world would not kneel in receiving it. Thus we see that these
+expediences, pretended for the ceremonies, are attained unto as well and
+better without them than by them. But I will go forward to show some
+particular inconveniences found in them.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY ARE PREPARATIVES FOR
+GREATER EVILS.
+
+
+First, then, the ceremonies are inexpedient, because our most holy faith,
+for which we should earnestly contend, received no small harm and
+prejudice, and is like to receive still more and more, by their means. Our
+case is not much different from the estate of the churches in Germany,
+when Charles V. caused the book called _Interim_ to be published:(288)
+expediency then was pretended of settling the peace of Germany by this as
+the best way; but it produced a very great inconveniency, and instead of
+effectuating peace, it brought forth a hotter contention, as well between
+the Protestants themselves, as between them and Papists. Expediency is now
+no less pretended for the ceremonies, yet no more truly. But before the
+bad effects of the _Interim_ were seen, the wiser sort of Protestants(289)
+wrote against it, and warned men, _ut ab eo tanquam a praesentissima peste
+sibi caverent_. Notwithstanding that the emperor did straitly inhibit all
+impugning of it. And Sleidane tells us,(290) the reason which made them so
+mistake it was, because they thought such as were upon that course, were
+opening a way to the popish religion, _per adiaphora seu res medias_, and
+because(291) they wished to retain the saving doctrine _puram et salvam a
+technis illorum, qui nunc dum ceremonias restaurare videri volunt,
+colluviem totam doctrinae pontificiae rursus introducunt_. The like reason
+have we to mistake conformity with antichrist in these ceremonies which
+are obtruded upon our church, for may we not justly fear that hereby we
+shall be drawn on to conform with him also in dogmatical and fundamental
+points of faith. Nay, what talk I of fear? We have already seen this bad
+consequence in a great part, for it is well enough known how many
+heterodox doctrines are maintained by Formalists, who are most zealous for
+the ceremonies anent universal grace, free-will, perseverance,
+justification, images, antichrist, the church of Rome, penance, Christ's
+passion and descending into hell, necessity of the sacraments, apocrypha
+books, Christ's presence in the eucharist, assurance of salvation, &c.
+Their errors about those heads we will demonstrate, if need be, to such as
+doubt of their mind. In the meantime it hath been preached from pulpits
+among ourselves, that Christ died for all alike, that the faithful may
+fall away from grace, that justification is a successive action, that none
+can be assured of salvation in this life, that images in churches are not
+to be condemned, that Christ descended locally unto the place of the
+damned, that the Pope is not antichrist, that Rome is not Babylon the
+whore, that the government and discipline of the church must alter like
+the French fashion, at the will of superiors, that we should not run so
+far away from Papists, but come as near to them as we can, that abstinence
+and alms are satisfactions or compensations for sin. These, and sundry
+such like tenets, have not been spoken in a corner.
+
+_Sect._ 2. How far conformity to the ceremonies of the church of Rome hath
+drawn Conformists, of greatest note, to conform to her faith also, I may
+give instance in the Archbishop of Spalato.(292) He holds, that many rites
+of the Roman church are ancient and approvable, that others, though
+neither ancient nor universal, yet, because of custom, should be
+tolerated, and that few only are either to be abolished, or, by some
+prudent and easy way, purged and refined. Now, will we know how far this
+unity in ceremonies drew him to unity in substance, then let us hear what
+is his verdict of Protestants as well as of Papists, who suffer for their
+religion.(293) _Certe potius martyres mundi, quam Dei sunt, qui ex utraque
+parte sub titulo conscientiae sanguinem frustra fundunt: quasi vero fides
+et religio Romana, et fides ac religio protestantium sunt duae fides et
+duae religiones_, &c. He tells us,(294) moreover, that if the Protestants
+will not have peace with those whom they call Papists, and communicate
+with them, then are they schismatics, and are not in the true church. And
+in the declaration of the motives whereupon he undertook his departure out
+of the territory of Venice, he expresseth his judgment of such books as
+are framed against the doctrine of the church of Rome, that he held them
+above measure detestable. Neither doth he stand alone in this pitch, for
+among the sect of Formalists, is swarming a sect of Reconcilers, who
+preach and profess unity with the church of Rome in matters of faith. For
+example, they say, that that which the learned Papists hold concerning
+justification, is orthodox, and therefore they will not contend against
+them, except it be for their contending with us, who do agree with
+them.(295)
+
+_Sect._ 3. These Reconcilers are too far on in the way to Popery already;
+but if they will be fully reconciled with Papists, they must transport
+themselves altogether into their tents, because Papists will not come
+forth to meet them midway. The _Interim_ of Germany tended to
+reconciliation, yet the Papists wrote against it.(296) Cassander sought
+this reconciliation, but Bellarmine confuteth his opinion.(297) The
+Archbishop of Spalato was upon the same course of reconciliation, but his
+books were condemned as heretical, in the decree given at Rome, anno 1616,
+by the congregation of cardinals deputed by Pope Paul V., for the making
+and renewing of the index of prohibited books. The Rhemists tell us,(298)
+that they will avoid not only our opinions, but our very words which we
+use. Our adversaries profess that they reject some expositions of certain
+places of Scripture, against which they have no other reason but because
+they are our expositions. Are their minds so aliened from us? And must we
+be altogether drawn overstays to them? Are they so unwilling to be
+reconciled to the prejudice of their errors? And shall we be so willing to
+be reconciled with them to the prejudice of the truth? O strange and
+monstrous invention! that would reconcile Christ with antichrist,--agree
+the temple of God and idols,--mix light and darkness together. He had good
+reason for him who objected to the Archbishop of Spalato,(299) that _qui
+ubique est, nusquam est_; for instead of reconciling Protestants and
+Papists, they make themselves a third party, and raise more controversy.
+_O bellua multorum capitum!_
+
+_Sect._ 4. Thus we perceive what prejudice hath arisen, and yet ariseth to
+the true and saving doctrine, by the means of symbolising with the church
+of Rome in these ceremonies. But because some Formalists approve not of
+this course of reconciliation, they (I know) would purge the ceremonies of
+the blame of it. I will therefore show, that Reconcilers are set forward
+in their course of reconciliation, by means of the Roman rites remaining
+in reformed churches.
+
+G. Cassander, in his book _de Officio pii Viri_, relates unto us how he
+was entered into this course, and conceived this purpose of
+reconciliation, and tells, that from his youthhood, he was most observant
+of ecclesiastical ceremonies, yet so, that he abhorred all superstition.
+And when he had read the writers of that age, who promised some
+reformation and repurgation of superstitious worships and absurd opinions,
+he saith, _Mire illorum institutum placuit: qui tamen ita superstitiones
+et abusiones, quae nonnullis ceremoniis ecclesiasticis admixtae erant,
+exosas haberem ut ipsum ecclesiasticam politiam, quae his ceremoniis fere
+constant, non sublatum et eversam, sed repurgatam et emendatam esse
+vellum_. We see the first thing which induced him to a reconciliation, was
+his liking which he had to popish ceremonies, and their remaining in
+protestant churches, and as this course hath been attempted, so is it also
+advanced by the ceremonies, for thereby people are induced to say, as they
+said once, when popish ceremonies did re-enter in Germany.(300) "We
+perceive now, that the Pope is not so black as Luther made him." And as
+for the Reconcilers themselves, may they not conceive strong hopes to
+compass their end? May they not confidently embark in this business? May
+they not with great expectation of prosperous success achieve their
+project? When once they have footing upon our union with Rome in
+ceremonies and church policy, they cannot but hereupon conceive no small
+animosity to work out their intended purpose.
+
+Do I talk of a chimera, and imagine now that which is not? Nay, I will
+really exemplify that which I say, in that Proteus and Versipelles, the
+Archbishop of Spalato, for, in the narration of the passages which were
+betwixt his Majesty and him, collected by the Bishop of Durham, we
+find,(301) that he thought the procuring of concord betwixt the church of
+England and the church of Rome to be easy. And his reasons were,(302)
+because he was verily persuaded, that the Pope would approve the English
+liturgy and the public use of it, as he professed in his colloquy with the
+Bishops of London and Durham, and the Dean of Winchester. And
+further,(303) he told he was of opinion, that the churches of Rome and of
+England, excluding Puritans, were radically one church. This made him
+say,(304) "I do find here why to commend this church, as a church
+abhorring from Puritanism, reformed with moderation, and worthy to be
+received into the communion of the Catholic church." In the following
+words, he tells, that he could carry something out of the church of
+England which should comfort all them who hate puritan strictness, and
+desire the peace of the church (meaning them who desired the same
+reconciliation with himself). What is more clear, than that the English
+ceremonies were that which made him prosecute, and gave him hope to
+effectuate a reconciliation betwixt the church of England and that of
+Rome.
+
+_Sect._ 5. But put the case, that as yet we had seen no greater evils
+following upon the ceremonies, yet must they be acknowledged to be
+inconvenient, because they are dangerous preparatives for many worse
+things than we are aware of, and may draw after them sundry evil
+consequences which are not feared. We have heard before from Spotswood,
+that novations in a church, even in the smallest things, are dangerous.
+Who can then blame us to shun a danger, and, fearing the worst, to resist
+evil beginnings,--to give no place to the devil,--to crush the viper while
+it is in the shell,--to abstain from all appearance of evil, 1 Thes. v.
+22,--and to take the little ones of Babylon whilst they are young, and dash
+their heads against the stones?
+
+It matters not that many will judge us too precise for doing so. What? Do
+they think this preciseness any other than that which the law of God
+requireth, even observing of the commandment of God, without adding to it,
+or diminishing from it, Deut. xii. 32; and keeping the straight path,
+without declining to the right hand or the left? Deut. xxviii. 14; or, do
+they think us more precise than Mordecai, who would do no reverence to
+Haman, because he was an Amalekite, Esth. iii. 2, and so not to be
+countenanced nor honoured by an Israelite? Deut. xxv. 19. Are we more
+precise than Daniel, who would not close his window when he was praying,
+no, not for the king's edict, knowing, that because he had used to do so
+aforetime, his doing otherwise had been both a denying of his former
+profession, and an ensnaring of himself by yielding in small things, to
+yield in greater, and after an inch to take an ell? Dan. vi. 10. Are we
+more precise than the Apostle Paul who gave no place to the adversaries of
+Christian liberty, no, not for an hour? Gal. ii. 5. Are we more precise
+than David, who would not do so much as take up the names of idols into
+his lips, least from speaking of them he should be led to a liking of
+them? Psal. xvi. 4; or, may not the sad and doleful examples of so many
+and so great abuses and corruptions which have crept into the church from
+so small and scarcely observable originals, make us loath at our hearts to
+admit a change in the policy and discipline of a well constitute church,
+and rightly ordered before the change, and especially in such things as
+are not at all necessary?
+
+O! from how small beginnings did the mystery of iniquity advance its
+progression? How little motes have accressed to mountains! Wherefore(305)
+_simplicitatem Christi nos opportet colere, a qua ubi primum extulit pedem
+vanitas, vanitatem sequitur superstitio, superstitionem error, errorem
+presumptio presumptionem impietas, idololatrica_. We have cause to fear,
+that if with Israel we come to the sacrifices of idols, and eat of
+idolothites, and bow down or use any of superstitious and idolatrous
+rites, thereafter we be made to join ourselves to these idols, and so the
+fierce anger of the Lord be kindled against us, as it was against them,
+Num. xxv. 2, 3.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY HINDER EDIFICATION.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. That the ceremonies are a great hinderance to edification,
+appeareth, First, In that they obscure the substance of religion, and
+weaken the life of godliness by outward glory and splendour, which draws
+away the minds of people so far after it, that they forget the substance
+of the service which they are about. The heathenish priests laboured,(306)
+_per varietatem ceremoniarum, rem in precio retinere_. The use for which
+Papists appoint their ceremonies,(307) is, _ut externam quandam majestatem
+sensibus objiciant_; and so are the ceremonies urged upon us,(308) though
+to conciliate reverence and due regard to divine worship, and to stir up
+devotion. In the meanwhile it is not considered,(309) that _mentes humanae
+mirificae capiuntur et facinantur, ceremoniarum splendore et pompa.
+Videmus siquidem_, saith Bucer,(310) _vulgus delectari actionibus
+scaenicis, et multis uti signis_. Chemnitius marks of the cumulating of
+ceremonies in the ancient church,(311) that it drew to this, _ut tandem in
+theatricum ferme apparatum ceremoniae illae abierint_. Musculus reprehends
+bishops for departing from the apostolical and most ancient
+simplicity,(312) and for adding ceremonies unto ceremonies in a worldly
+splendour and respectability, whereas the worship of God ought to be pure
+and simple.
+
+The policy, then, which in most simple and single, and least lustred with
+the pomp and bravery of ceremonies, cannot but be most expedient for
+edification. The king's daughter is most like herself when she is all
+glorious within, not without, Psal. xlv. 13, and the kingdom of God
+appeareth best what it is, when it cometh not with observation, Luke xvii.
+20, 21. But "superstition (saith Camero),(313) the mother of ceremonies,
+is lavish and prodigal; spiritual whoredom, as it is, it hath this common
+with the bodily; both of them must have their paintings, their trinkets,
+their inveiglements."
+
+_Sect._ 2. Secondly, The ceremonies are impediments to the inward and
+spiritual worship, because they are fleshly and external. In the second
+commandment are forbidden _omnes ritus, qui a spirituali Dei cultu
+discrepant_.(314) "The kingdom of God is within you," saith Christ, Luke
+xvii. 21. Now, if the Apostle, 1 Tim. iv. 8, say, that bodily exercise,
+such as fasting, watching, &c., which are requisite as helps and
+furtherances to the humiliation of the soul, do but profit a little, then
+may we say of our unnecessary and unprofitable ceremonies, that they are
+exceedingly nocent and harmful to true and spiritual worship. The Apostle
+is not speaking of plays and pastimes, as Bellarmine would have us to
+think. Who can believe that Timothy was so much addicted to play, that the
+Apostle had need to admonish him, that such exercise profiteth little? He
+is speaking, then, of such bodily exercises as in those primitive times
+were used religiously, as fasting, watching, lying on the ground, and such
+like; and he would have Timothy rather to exercise himself to the life and
+power of godliness, and to substantial worship, than to any of these
+outward things. Neither doth the Apostle condemn only the superstitious
+use of these exercises, as Calvin well observeth,(315) _alioqui in totum
+damnaret_: whereas he doth only extenuate and derogate from them, saying,
+that they profit little. Therefore (saith he), _ut maxime integer sit
+animus, et rectus finis, tamen in externis actionibus nihil reperit Paulus
+quod magnifaciat. Valde necessaria admonitio, nam semper propendet mundus
+in illam partem, uti Deum externis obsequiis velit colere._ But what will
+some say? Do we allow of no external rites and ceremonies in divine
+worship?
+
+Saravia tells us,(316) that _dum vitia vitant stulti, in contraria ruunt_,
+and that he is no less in the fault, _qui nullas in externo Dei cultu
+ceremonias admittit, quae tantum decori serviunt, hominesque sui admoneant
+officii, quam qui quasvis citra, delectum recipiunt, &c._ Wherefore,
+because a transition from idolatry and superstition is more easy to
+Atheism and the profanation of holy things, than to the golden mediocrity,
+he saith, he could have wished that Beza had not generally condemned all
+ceremonies without making any difference.
+
+_Ans._ Neither Beza, nor any other, who dislike the English ceremonies,
+condemneth such rites and circumstances in the external worship of God as
+serve only for decency, but those sacred and significant ceremonies which
+admonish men of their duty are not of this sort. What shall we say then of
+such a conjunction as this, _quae tantum decori serviunt, hominesque sui
+admoneant officii_? Why would not Saravin write a chronology; I say not
+_magnarum_ (as others), but _mirandarum conjunctionum_, and record that at
+such a time he found out the conjunction and compatibility of two things
+which were ever thought incompatible in former ages, namely, rites serving
+only for decency, and holy significant ceremonies admonishing men of their
+duty in God's worship? Had there been no moralist (trow we) then to note,
+that decency and things serving only for decency, have place in civility
+and all moral actions, in which notwithstanding there is no significant
+nor admonitory sacred signs of men's duty in God's worship? And thus
+should these two things be severed, which he hath conjoined and
+confounded.
+
+To conclude, we condemn the English controverted ceremonies which are
+regarded as holy and significant, as most inexpedient, because they
+derogate from the true inward and spiritual worship; for man's nature,
+saith Camero,(317) "is delighted in that which is fleshly and outward,
+neglecting that which is spiritual and inward." And this is the reason why
+least spiritual, lively, and holy disposition hath followed upon the
+addition of unnecessary ceremonies; and why there was never so much zeal,
+life, and power of religion inwardly, in the church of Christ, as then,
+when she was freest of ceremonies. This much(318) a Formalist of great
+note is forced to acknowledge. Let us consider, saith he, "the primitive
+church, flourishing more in times of the apostles than ever it did
+afterwards. Who will not admire her great simplicity in all points, and
+especially in ceremonies? for excepting the celebration of baptism by
+washing of water, and of the holy supper, according to the Lord's
+institution, in taking the bread and wine, and distributing them after
+thanksgiving; excepting also the imposition of hands upon those who
+extraordinarily received the Holy Ghost, whether it were in a general
+calling or a particular, to a charge in the church, and availing for a
+miraculous effect of healing the sick; I say, these excepted, there will
+not be found any other ceremony in those primitive times, so admirable was
+their simplicity."
+
+_Sect._ 3. Thirdly, the ceremonies are a great hinderance to edification,
+because they make much time and pains to be spent about them, which might
+be, and (if they were removed) should be spent more profitably for godly
+edifying. That which is said of the ceremonies which crept into the
+ancient church, agreeth well to them.(319) _Ista ceremoniarum accumulatio,
+tum ipsos doctores, __ tum etiam ipsos auditores, a studio docendi atque
+discendi verbum Dei abstraxit, atque impedivit necessarias et utiles
+divini eloquii institutiones._
+
+Pulpits sound oftentimes with declamations for the ceremonies, when there
+is need of pressing the power of godliness upon the consciences of people,
+and when there are many more necessary things to be urged. The press also
+sends forth idle discourses and defences of the ceremonies which might be
+employed more profitably.
+
+And, moreover, faithful men whose labours might be very profitable to the
+church in the holy ministry, have neither a door of entrance nor a door of
+utterance licentiated to them, and that because they will not consent nor
+yield themselves to be the unhappy instruments of imposing this yoke of
+ceremonial bondage upon the necks of God's people. Others who have
+entered, and have been both faithful and painful labourers in the Lord's
+vineyard, are thrust from their changes for no other quarrel, but that of
+non-conformity. O unhappy ceremonies! woe unto you, you mischievous lets
+and prejudices to the edification of the church.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY ARE OCCASIONS OF INJURY
+AND CRUELTY.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. The ceremonies serve to be instruments of cruelty against the
+sincere servants of Christ, they are used as Absalom's sacrifice, to be
+cloaks of wicked malice, they occasion the fining, confining, depriving,
+imprisoning, and banishing of very worthy and good men.
+
+Such instruments of cruelty brought into the habitation, not of the sons
+of Jacob, Gen. xlix. 5, but of the God of Jacob, are to be accursed by all
+who love the peace of Jerusalem, or bear the bowels of Christian
+compassion within them, because they are not of Christ the meek Lamb of
+God, who did not cry, nor lift up, nor cause his voice to be heard in the
+street, who did not break the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax,
+Isa. xlii. 2, 3; but they are of antichrist, to whom it is given to make
+war with the saints.(320)
+
+Surely those bowels of mercies, kindness, and forbearance, which the
+Apostle requireth, as they should be in every Christian, Col. iii. 12, 13,
+so chiefly _in iis qui praesunt_, as Melancthon noteth,(321) in them
+towards all, but chiefly towards these who are both good Christians and
+good subjects; towards these in all things, but chiefly in matters of
+ceremony and indifferency. In such matters always, but chiefly when there
+is no contempt nor refractory disposition, but only a modest and Christian
+desire to conserve the peace of a pure conscience, by forbearing to do
+that which it is persuaded is not right. Let magistrates remember well,
+
+"Parcere subjectis et debellare superbos."
+
+_Sect._ 2. If there were no more but such a doleful and woeful effect as
+the cruel dealing with the faithful ministers of Jesus Christ, occasioned
+by the ceremonies, this is too much for evincing the inconveniency of
+them.
+
+Dr Burges, in a sermon preached before King James, related a speech of the
+emperor Augustus, who commanded that all the glasses should be broken,
+that no man might incur such a fright as one Pollio was put into, for
+breaking one of his master's glasses. Whereby (as he expounds
+himself)(322) he meant to intimate unto that wise king, that it were
+better to take away the ceremonies than to throw out the ministers for
+them. Yet it is the verdict of some,(323) that the blame lieth not upon
+the ceremonies, but upon ministers themselves, who leave their places and
+draw all this evil upon themselves. This is even as Nabal blamed David for
+breaking away from his master, when he was chased away against his will, 1
+Sam. xxv. 10, and as Julian,(324) when he had impoverished the Christians,
+laughed them to scorn, as if they had impoverished themselves to get that
+blessing which Christ had promised to the poor.
+
+The canon law speaketh for the Lord's bishops, which are persecuted from
+city to city:(325) _Nec ipsi in hoc peccant, quoniam non sponte sed coacte
+hoc agunt: sed illi __ qui eos persequuntur, nec ipsis episcopis hoc
+imputari potest, sed illis qui eos hoc agere cogunt_. How is it that they
+are not ashamed, who say, that ministers have their own places and
+callings, when they would fain abide in them, and with heavy hearts are
+thrust from them.
+
+_Sect. 3._ Neither is this all the injury which is occasioned by the
+ceremonies, they make godly and zealous Christians to be mocked and
+nick-named Puritans, except they can swallow the camel of conformity. Our
+consciences bear us witness, how without all reason we are branded with
+the name of those ancient heretics, from whose opinions and manners, O,
+how far are we!(326) And as for ourselves, notwithstanding all this, we
+shrink not to be reproached for the cause of Christ. We know the old
+Waldenses before us,(327) were also named by their adversaries, Cathares
+or Puritans, and that, without cause, hath this name been given both to
+them and us. But we are most sorry that such as are walking humbly with
+their God, seeking eagerly after the means of grace and salvation, and
+making good conscience of all their ways, should be made odious, and that
+piety, humility, repentance, zeal, conscience, &c., should be mocked, and
+all by occasion of the ceremonies.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY HARDEN AND CONFIRM THE
+PAPISTS.
+
+
+The Papists make advantage of the ceremonies, and thereby confirm
+themselves in Popery. First, in that they use them as the bellows to blow
+up the fire of contention among us, remembering the old rule, _divide et
+impera_. They set us by the ears among ourselves, that they may be in
+peace, and that intestine discord may make us forget the common
+adversary.(328) Calvin wrote to the Earl of Somerset, _Fieri non posse qum
+Papistae superbius insolescerent, nisi mature compositum esset dissidium de
+ceremonus_. Dr White saith,(329) that our strife about ceremonies is
+kindled and nourished by Papists. If we were liberate from the ceremonies,
+then might we do more against the Papists, and they should not insult as
+they do.
+
+_Sect._ 2. But they have yet more advantage from our Formalists, for they
+like very well the course of conformity, as the way of returning to
+Popery, and some of them tell us in broad terms, that they hope we are
+coming fast home to them. They perceive us receiving and retaining their
+Roman rites and popish policy, which makes them resolve to stay where they
+are, promising, that themselves are in the surest hold, and looking for
+our returning back to them. This was ere now both foreseen and foretold by
+the wiser sort.
+
+Zanchius told,(330) that he seemed to himself to hear the monks and
+Jesuits saying among themselves, _Ipsa quoque Regina Angliae doctissima et
+prudentissima, paulatim incipit ad Sanctae Romanae ecclesiae redire
+religionem, resumptis jam sanctissimus et sacratissimis clericorum
+vestibus, sperandum est fore ut reliqua etiam omnia_, &c. Papists count
+all to be _Calvino Papistae_, _i.e._, half Papists, who are not Puritans,
+and daily invite them to an association with them against the Puritans, as
+Parker(331) showeth out of a treatise entitled, _Concertatio Ecclesiae
+Catholicae in Anglia contra Calvino Papistos et Puritanos_. And we may
+perceive out of Franciscus a Sancta Clara,(332) that they despair of any
+agreement with Puritans, yet hoping that Formalists will agree with them.
+In these hopes they are still more and more confirmed whilst they observe
+this conformity in ceremonies to be yet prevailing and proceeding, and not
+like to take a stand. Whereupon they (poor souls) delight to stay still in
+Babylon, finding us so fast turning back thither, as if we repented we
+come out from thence.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Some would here defend the ceremonies, as being most expedient
+to gain the Papists, who otherwise should be the more aliened from us. O
+what a fiction! As if, forsooth, hardening of them in Popery were to win
+them, and fostering of them in the same were to wean them from it. Woeful
+proof hath taught us, that they are but more and more hardened, and
+resolutely continued in Popery by these Roman remainders among us, neither
+will they, whilst they expect that we are turning back to them, do so much
+as meet us midway; but they flee from us,(333) _quam longissime_; their
+over-passing and over-reaching Pharisaical zeal, makes them hold fast the
+least point of their religion, and adhere to the whole entire fabric of
+the Roman both doctrine and discipline.
+
+Of the gaining of the adversaries, Augustine speaketh better,(334) for if
+you demand, _Unde vincantur pagani, unde illuminentur, unde ad salutem
+vocentur?_ He maketh this answer, _Deserite omnes solennitates ipsorum,
+deserite nugas eorum: et si non consentiunt veritati nostra, saltem pudeat
+paucitatis suae. Nulla est concedenda gratia adversariis_ (say the divines
+of Germany(335)), _in mutatione ceremoniarum, nisi prius nobiscum
+consentiant in fundamento hoc est, in vera doctrina et usu sacramentorum._
+They that yield to the adversaries in matters of rite, _cos hoc ipso in
+impietate sua confirmant_; and the adversaries _cessione ista non parum
+adjuvantur_, saith Balduin. Bellarmine,(336) rejecteth Cassander's
+reconciliation,(337) for this reason among others, because, according to
+the judgment of the fathers, we should not change nor innovate the
+smallest matters for gratifying of heretics.
+
+The best way, then, which we can use for winning of the Papists, is to
+shine as lights in the world, Phil. ii. 15, 16, holding forth the word of
+life by a pure and plain profession, to be blameless and harmless, the
+sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse
+nation, that so the name of God and his doctrine be not blasphemed, 1 Tim.
+vi. 1. If thus we hold fast the profession of the truth, and walk in all
+honest conversation according to the truth, so many as are ordained to
+eternal life shall be converted, and made to glorify God in the day of
+visitation, 1 Pet. ii. 12.
+
+_Sect. 4._ If it be said, that the Apostle observed some Jewish ceremonies
+for winning of the Jews, as we read, Acts xviii. 21; xx. 16; xxi. 26; and
+that it appeareth, we may by the same reason yield to some popish
+ceremonies for winning of the Papists. _Ans._ 1. There is not a like
+reason of the weak Jews, who then could not have been fully instructed
+concerning Christian liberty, and obstinate Papists who might have been,
+and yet may be instructed, but will not. Nor, 2. Is the same to be done in
+the bright shining meridian light of the gospel, which was done before the
+full promulgation of the same? Nor, 3. Is so much honour to be given,(338)
+and so great respect to be had to popish and antichristian rites, as to
+the ceremonies which were ordained by God himself. These were to be
+suffered awhile, that they might be honourably buried; to those we are to
+say with detestation, "Get you hence." Nor, 4. Can the same things be done
+at Antioch which are done at Jerusalem. At Antioch Peter sinned by using
+Jewish rites, because there the greatest part were Gentiles, who had both
+heard his preaching and seen his practice against the ceremonies of the
+Jews. But at Jerusalem Paul had to do with the weak Jews, who had heard
+little or no preaching against those ceremonies, and had seen as little
+practice contrary unto them. Now Scotland must not be likened to
+Jerusalem, no not to Antioch; for Scotland hath been filled both with
+preaching and practice contrary to the ceremonies of the Papists, yea,
+hath moreover spewed them out openly and solemnly, with a religious and
+strict oath never to lick them up again.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE INEXPEDIENT, BECAUSE THEY DISTURB THE PEACE OF THE
+CHURCH.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. The great evils which have befallen to many famous churches,
+through the means of intestine dissensions, should teach us not to admit
+the occasions of the like inconveniences among ourselves; for as by
+concord _minima crescunt_, so by discord _maxima dilabuntur_.
+
+Now, the ceremonies are the bane of our church's peace, and the unhappy
+instruments of lamentable discord among brethren who should dwell together
+in unity. I know that the refusers of the ceremonies are blamed, as if
+they were the troublers of the peace of the church, and the tumultuating
+contentious spirits who make so much ado about matters of rite and
+ceremony. But I know also that none have been more ordinarily and commonly
+blamed for troubling the peace of the church than they who least deserved
+to be blamed for it. So was Elijah himself(339) thought to be he that
+troubled Israel, when he contended against the corruptions of the church
+in his time, 1 Kings xviii. 17. I will therefore observe four marks
+whereby it may be known when contentions are in a church, which side is
+reprehensible, and also who are to be blamed as the troublers of our
+Israel.
+
+_Sect._ 2. In contentions raised in the church, we are to consider the
+motive, the measure, the matter, the manner. And, 1st. Touching the
+motive: They who contend in a church reprehensibly, are moved and induced
+to the course which they follow, by some worldly respect, Acts xix. 26; 1
+Tim. vi. 5. Now, as for those in our church who contend for the
+ceremonies, many of them are led by such _argumenta inartificialia_, as
+wealth, preferment, &c., and if conscience be at all looked to by them,
+yet they only throw and extort an assent and allowance from it, when
+worldly respects have made them to propend and incline to an anterior
+liking of the ceremonies. We do not judge them when we say so, but by
+their fruits we know them. As Pope Innocent VII., while he was yet a
+cardinal, used to reprehend the negligence and timidity of the former
+popes, who had not removed the schism and trouble of the church of Rome,
+yet when himself was advanced to the popedom, he followed the footsteps of
+his predecessors, governing all things tumultuously, and making the schism
+worse; so among our opposites, not a few have been overcome with ease,
+pleasure, riches, favour, pre-eminence, &c., to like well of the
+ceremonies which never had their first love, when they had both spoken and
+disputed against them. What drew them overstays to contend for them,
+except (I say not the seeking of, lest I be thought uncharitable, but)
+their being sought by some worldly benefit? And how could such an one
+excuse himself but by Paris's apology, _Ingentibus ardent, judicium domis
+solicitare meum._ And what marvel that Balak's promotion, Num. xxii. 17;
+and Saul's fields and vineyards, 1 Sam. xxii. prevail with such as love
+this present world, 2 Tim. iv. 10.
+
+The popish oil and chrism were defended by Islebius and Sidonius, _ut ipsi
+nimirum __ discederent unctiores_.(340) How like to them have we known
+many Formalists! The best respect which Bishop Lindsey nameth for kneeling
+at the communion is,(341) the eschewing the prince's offence; but, as for
+us, let it be told, who hath ever of a Conformist become a Non-Conformist,
+for any worldly benefit which he might expect by his non-conformity? What
+worldly respect have we to move us to refuse the ceremonies? What wealth?
+What preferment? What ease? What pleasure? What favour? Do we not expose
+ourselves to the hazard of all these things? Only our consciences suffer
+us not to consent to such things as we see to be unlawful and hurtful for
+the church.
+
+_Sect._ 3. 2d. Let it be considered which side exceeds in contending they
+are in the fault, 1 Tim. vi. 4. Now, our opposites do far overmatch us and
+overstride us in contention; for, 1. They harbour an inveterate dislike of
+every course and custom which we like well of, and they carp at many
+deeds, words, writings, opinions, fashions, &c. in us, which they let pass
+in others of their own mind. Whereas we (God knows) are glad to allow in
+them anything which we allow in others, and are so far from _nitimur in
+vetitum, semper cupimusque negata_, that most heartily we condescend to
+apply ourselves, by all possible means, to observe them, please them, and
+entertain peace with them, who impose and urge upon us an unconscionable
+observation of certain ceremonies, and to do as much for them as any
+ground of conscience or reason can warrant. So far as we have attained, we
+walk by the same rule with them, Phil. iii. 16, and so exceed not in the
+measure. 2. It may be seen that they exceed in contending with us, if we
+be compared with the Papists; against them they contend more remissly,
+against us more intensively. Saravia professeth(342) that he thinketh
+worse of us than of Papists. He hath reason who complaineth of Formalists'
+desire not to stir and contend against the Papists, and their fierceness
+against their own brethren.(343) "This (saith he) is ill provided for, and
+can have no excuse, that some, not to contend with Papists, should contend
+with their brethren, and displease the sons of their own mother, to please
+the enemies of their father, and beat not the dog before the lion, but the
+lion for favour of the dog, and make the natural child to weep, while the
+son of the bondwoman doth triumph." 3. That they exceed, appeareth from
+the effects of their contending; hurt and damage is a main effect of
+contention. Calvin, Perkins, and Pareus, observe upon Gal. v. 15, that
+contentions breed hurtful and pernicious effects, which tend to
+consumption and destruction. Now, wherein do we injure or harm our
+opposites in their persons, callings, places, &c.? Yet in all these, and
+many other things, do they wrong us, by defamation, deprivation,
+spoliation, incarceration, &c.? How much better were it to remove the
+Babylonian baggage of antichristian ceremonies, which are the mischievous
+means, both of the strife and of all the evil which ariseth out of it! Put
+away the ceremonies, cast out this Jonas, and, behold, the storm will
+cease. A wise pilot will, in an urgent storm, cast out even some precious
+wares, that the rest may be safe. "And shall we then (saith Parker(344))
+cast out the pilots of the ship themselves, and all to spare the wares of
+Rome, which are no lawful traffic?"
+
+_Sect._ 4. 3d. Let the matter be looked to for which each side contendeth.
+"Brethren (saith the Archbishop of St Andrews),(345) to contend is not be
+contentious in a light business, this is faulty." Now, I wish it may
+please him to understand that when we contend about the removal of the
+ceremonies, we content for a very weighty matter; for we prove the removal
+of them to be necessary, in respect of their inconvenience and
+unlawfulness. They who urge the ceremonies, contend for things which are
+not necessary; and we who refuse them, contend for things which are most
+necessary, even for the doctrine and discipline warranted by God's word,
+against all corruptions of idolatry and superstition. That the ceremonies
+can neither be purged of superstition nor idolatry I have proved in the
+third part of this dispute.
+
+_Sect._ 5. 4th. If the manner of contending be observed, our opposites
+will be found reprovable, not we. We contend by the grounds of truth and
+reason; but they use to answer all objections, and resolve all questions,
+by the sentence of superiors and the will of the law; we contend from
+God's word and good reason, they from man's will and no reason. This was
+clearly seen at the first conclusion of the five Articles at Perth
+Assembly.
+
+Bishop Lindsey himself, relating the proceedings of the same, tells
+us,(346) that Mr John Carmichell and Mr William Scot alleged, that if any
+would press to abolish the order which had been long kept in this church,
+and draw in things not received yet, they should be holden to prove either
+that the things urged were necessary and expedient for our church, or the
+order hitherto kept not meet to be retained. This was denied, upon this
+ground, that it was the prince (who by himself had power to reform such
+things as were amiss in the outward policy of the church) that required to
+have the change made. Well, since they must needs take the opponent's
+part, they desired this question to be reasoned, "Whether kneeling or
+sitting at the communion were the fitter gesture?" This also was refused,
+and the question was propounded thus: "His Majesty desires our gesture of
+sitting at the communion to be changed into kneeling, why ought not the
+same to be done?" At length, when Mr John Carmichell brought an argument
+from the custom and practice of the church of Scotland, it was
+answered,(347) That albeit the argument held good against the motions of
+private men, yet his Majesty requiring the practice to be changed, matters
+behoved to admit a new consideration, and that because it was the prince's
+privilege, &c.
+
+I must say, the Bishop was not well advised to insert this passage, which
+(if there were no more) lets the world see that free reasoning was denied;
+for his Majesty's authority did both exeem the affirmers from the pains of
+probation (contrary to the laws of disputation), and state the question,
+and also answer arguments.
+
+And, moreover, when the Articles were put in voting, the Archbishop, in
+calling on the names, did inculcate these and the like words: "Have the
+king in your mind--remember on the king--look to the king." This Bishop
+Lindsey passeth over in deep silence, though it be challenged by his
+antagonist. Plinius proveth,(348) that _animalia insecta_ do sometimes
+sleep, because sometimes when light is holden near them, yet they stir
+not. And may not we conclude that the Bishop was sleeping, when, though
+both in this and divers other places, such convincing light was holden out
+before them, yet hath he said nothing, nor stirred himself at all for the
+matter? Yet, farther, we find that Bishop Spotswood, in his sermon at that
+pretended Assembly, answereth all such as cannot yield to the ceremonies
+with the peace of their consciences, that without any more ado, they may
+not control public judgment, but must always esteem that to be best and
+most seemly which seemeth so in the eye of public authority,--that even
+such rites and orders as are not rightly established must be obeyed so
+long as they have the force of a constitution,--that the sentence of
+superiors ought to direct us, and be a sufficient ground to our conscience
+for obeying. This is the best of their reasoning, and before all fail. The
+Bishop of Winchester reasoneth from bare custom.(349) Have we not cause to
+renew the complaint which John Lascus made in behalf of the Protestants in
+Germany,(350) _nulla cognitione causae per colloquium aut amicam
+suffragiorum collationem habita, sed praejudicio tantum ipsorum sententiam
+damnari_.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+THAT THE INEXPEDIENCY OF THE CEREMONIES, IN RESPECT OF THE SCANDAL OF THE
+WEAK, MAY BE PLAINLY PERCEIVED. TWELVE PROPOSITIONS TOUCHING SCANDAL ARE
+PREMITTED.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. There remaineth yet another inconveniency found in the
+ceremonies, which is scandal. They hinder our spiritual edification and
+growth in faith and plerophory, and make us stumble instead of going
+forward. The best members of the body should be cut off when they offend,
+much more the superfluous humours, such as the popish ceremonies must be
+reckoned to be, Matt. v. 29, 30. And what if some wide consciences think
+the ceremonies no stumbling-blocks? Nay, what if some pretend that they
+edify? _Ferulae asinis gratissimae sunt in pabulo, caeteris vero jumentis
+praesentaneo veneno._(_351_) It is enough to evince the inconveniency of
+the ceremonies, that some are scandalised, yea, many tender consciences
+are made to stumble by their means. We learn from our Master, that the
+scandal of one is to be cared for, much more the scandal of many,
+especially if those many be of the number of the little ones which believe
+in him, Matt. xviii. 6. But for our clearer proceeding in this argument I
+will premit these propositions, of which we are to make use.
+
+_Sect_ 2. 1st. {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, Scandal or offence is not the
+grieving or displeasing of my brother, for peradventure when I grieve him
+or displease him, I do edify him. Now edification and scandal are not
+compatible, but scandal is a word or deed proceeding from me, which is, or
+may be, the occasion of another man's halting, or falling, or swerving
+from the straight way of righteousness. _Scandalum_ (saith Jerome(352))
+_nos offendiculum, vel j uinam et impactionem pedis possumus dcac quando
+ergo legimus, quieunque de minimus istis scandalizavenit quempiam hoc
+intelligimus quieunque dicto factove occasionem j uinoe cuiquam dederit
+Scandalum_ (saith Almandus Polanus(353)) _est dictum vel factum, quo alius
+detenor redditum_.
+
+2d. This occasion of halting, stumbling, or swerving, which we call
+scandal, is some times only given on the part of the offender, sometimes
+only taken on the part of the offended, sometimes both given on the one
+part, and taken on the other. The first sort is _scandal given and not
+taken_, the second is _scandal taken and not given_, the third is _scandal
+both taken and given_.
+
+3d. All these three kinds of scandal are sinful. The first is the sin of
+the offender, for it is a fault to give my brother occasion of stumbling,
+though he stumble not. The second is the sin of the offended, who should
+not take offence where he hath no cause. The third is a sin on both sides,
+for as it is a fault to lay an occasion of falling before another, so it
+is a fault in him to fall, though he have occasion.
+
+_Sect._ 3. 4th. A scandal given, or active, is not only such a word or
+deed whereby we intend the fall of our brother, but also such a word or
+deed(354), _quod de sui ratione habet, quod sit inductivum ad peccandum,
+puta __ cum aliquis publice facit peccatum, vel quod habet similitudinem
+peccati_, John xvi. 2. Put the case: A man staying away from the Christian
+assemblies and public worship of God, intending to employ his studies all
+this time for the good of the church by writing, such a man doth not only
+not intend the fall of others, but, by the contrary, he intendeth
+edification; yet doth he scandalise them, because _ratio et conditio
+operis_ is scandalous and inductive to sin.
+
+5th. An active scandal is given (and so is faulty) many ways. If it be in
+a thing lawful, then it makes our brother condemn our lawful deed, yea,
+animates him by our example to that which in his conscience he condemneth,
+both which are sin. If it be in a thing unlawful, then is the scandal
+given and peccant, it, 1. Either our brother be made to fall into the
+outward act of sin; or, 2. If he be made to stumble in his conscience, and
+to call in question the way of truth; or, 3. If it do so much as to make
+him halt, or weaken his plerophory or full assurance; or, 4. If it hinder
+his growth and going forward, and make him, though neither to fall, nor to
+stumble, nor to halt, yet to have a smaller progress; or, 5. If none of
+these evils be produced in our brother, yet when, either through our
+intention and the condition of the deed together, or through the condition
+of the deed alone, occasion is given him of sinning any one of these ways.
+_Opus nostrum_ (saith a great proctor for popish ceremonies(355)) _quoties
+sive natura sua, sive superaddito accidente alicujus circumstantiae, est
+inductivum proximi ad peccatum, sive causativum magni mali, sive
+turbativum boni spiritualis; sive impeditivum fidei, &c., quamvis etiam
+effectus non sequeretur, malum est et peccatum._
+
+_Sect._ 4. 6th. A passive scandal, which is taken and not given, is not
+only faulty when it proceedeth of malice, but also when it proceedeth of
+ignorance and infirmity; and _scandalum pusillorum_ may be _scandalum
+acceptum_, on the part of the offended faulty, as well as _scandalum
+Pharisaeorum_. When weak ones are offended at me for the use of a lawful
+thing, before I know of their weakness, and their taking of offence, the
+scandal is only passive; and so we see that weak ones may take offence
+where none is given, as well as the malicious. Now, their taking of
+offence, though it proceed of weakness, yet is sinful; for their weakness
+and ignorance is a fault, and doth not excuse them.
+
+7th. A scandal may be at first only passive, and yet afterward become
+active. For example, Gideon's ephod and the brazen serpent were monuments
+of God's mercies, and were neither evil nor appearances of evil; so that
+when people were first scandalised by them the scandal was merely passive,
+but the keeping and retaining of them, after that scandal rose out of
+them, made the scandal to become active also, because the reserving of
+them after that time was not without appearance of evil.
+
+_Sect._ 5. 8th. The occasion of a scandal which is only passive should be
+removed, if it be not some necessary thing, and we are not only to shun
+that which giveth scandal, but also that whereupon followeth a scandal
+taken, whatsoever it be, if it be not necessary. This is so evident, that
+Papists themselves subscribe to it; for both Cardinal Cajetan(356) and
+Dominicus Bannes say, that we should abstain even _a spiritualibus non
+necessariis_ when scandal riseth out of them.
+
+9th. Neither can the indifferency or lawfulness of the thing done, nor the
+ordinance of authority commanding the use of it, make the scandal
+following upon it to be only passive, which otherwise, _i.e._, in case the
+thing were neither lawful nor ordained by authority, should be active. Not
+the former; for our divines teach,(357) that _scandalum datum_ riseth
+sometimes, _ex facto in se adiaphoro_, when it is done _intempestive,
+contra charitatis regulam_. Not the latter; for no human authority can
+take away the condition of scandal from that which otherwise should be
+scandal, because _nullus homo potest vel charitati, vel conscientiis
+nostris imperare, vel periculum scandali dati prestare_, saith a learned
+Casuist.(358)
+
+10th. A scandal is passive and taken by the scandalised without the fault
+of the doer, only in this case,(359) _cum factum unius est alteri occasio
+peccandi praeter intentionem facientis, et conditionem facti_, so that to
+the making of the doer blameless, is not only required that he intend not
+his brother's fall, but also that the deed be neither evil in itself, nor
+yet done inordinately, and with appearance of evil.
+
+_Sect._ 6. 11th. The scandal not to be cared for is only in necessary
+things, such as the hearing of the word, prayer, &c., from which we may
+not abstain, though all the world should be offended at us. In these, I
+say, and these only, _scandalum quod oritur ex rebus per se bonis et
+necessariis, non licet evitare, &c., at rerum legitimarum sed non
+necessariarum dispar est ratio, &c.,_ saith a great Formalist.(360)
+
+12th. We ought, for the scandal of the malicious, to abstain from all
+things from which we ought to abstain for the scandal of the weak; for we
+ought not to abstain from necessary things for the scandal of the weak, no
+more than for the scandal of the malicious, and from things that are not
+necessary, we ought to abstain for the scandal of the malicious as well as
+for the scandal of the weak. So that weakness and malice in the offended
+_non variant speciem scandali_, but only _gradum ejusdem speciei_. Both
+his fault who is offended through malice, is greater than his fault who is
+offended through weakness, and likewise his fault who offends the weak in
+the faith, is greater than his fault who offends those who are malicious
+against the faith, because as we ought to do good to all men, so chiefly
+to those of the household of faith. Nevertheless, the kind of scandal
+remains the same, whether we have to do with the malicious or the weak.
+
+They are, therefore, greatly mistaken, who conclude from Paul's not
+circumcising of Titus, Gal. ii. 4, 5, that he cared not for the scandal of
+the malicious. The argument were good if those false brethren had been
+scandalised by his not circumcising of Titus; but they were only
+displeased hereby, not scandalised. The Apostle saw that they were to be
+scandalised by his circumcising of Titus; therefore, of very purpose, he
+circumcised him not, because he foresaw _statim fore ut illi traherent in
+calumniam_, saith Calvin.(361) _Ne eo circumciso gloriarentur evangelicam
+libertatem quam Paulus praedicabat sublatam_, saith Bullinger.(362) If
+they had compelled him to circumcise Titus, _falsis fratribus parata erat
+calumniandi ansa adversus Paulum_, saith Pareus,(363) who also inferreth
+well from this place, that we are taught to beware of two extremes, to
+wit, the scandal of the weak on the one part, and the pervicacy of false
+brethren on the other part: _Si enim_, saith he, _usu rerum mediarum
+videmus, vel illos offendi, hoc est, in fide labefactari vel istos in
+falsa opinione obfirmari omittendae potius sunt, quia tunc per accidens
+fiunt illicitae._ Whereupon I throw back the argument, and prove from this
+place, that Paul cared to shun the scandal of the malicious, which should
+have followed upon his circumcising of Titus, as well as he cared to shun
+the offence of the weak, which should have followed upon his not
+circumcising of Timothy; and that Paul cared for the scandal of the
+malicious is further confirmed by his not taking wages at Corinth. They
+who would have been offended at his taking wages there were malicious, and
+did but seek occasion against him, 2 Cor. xi. 12, yet his taking wages
+there not being necessary (as appeareth from 2 Cor. xi. 9), he abstained.
+
+Christ's not caring for the scandal of the Pharisees is also objected, to
+prove that if the thing be lawful or indifferent, we are not to care for
+the offence of the malicious. But Parker answereth well:(364) "The scandal
+there not cared for is, when the Pharisees are offended at his abstaining
+from their washings and his preaching of true doctrine,--both of which were
+necessary duties for him to do. And when he defendeth his healing on
+Sabbaths, Luke xiii. 15, and his disciples' plucking ears, Matt. xii. 7,
+upon this reason they are duties of necessity and charity, he plainly
+insinuateth, there is no defence for deeds unnecessary when the malicious
+are scandalised. When the thing was indifferent, doth he not forego his
+liberty for to please them, as when he paid tribute, lest he should offend
+them, although he knew they were malicious?" Matt. xvii. 27.
+
+Thus have I evinced a main point, namely, that when scandal is known to
+follow upon anything, if it be not necessary, there is no respect
+whatsoever which can justify it.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+ALL THE DEFENCES OF THE CEREMONIES, USED TO JUSTIFY THEM AGAINST THE
+SCANDAL IMPUTED TO THEM, ARE CONFUTED.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. From that which hath been said it followeth inevitably, that
+since scandal riseth out of the controverted ceremonies, and since they
+are not things necessary, they are to be condemned and removed as most
+inconvenient. But that the inconveniency of them, in respect of the
+scandal which they cause, may be particularly and plainly evinced, I come
+to discuss all the defences which our opposites use against our argument
+of scandal. These Formalists, who acknowledge the inconveniency of the
+ceremonies in respect of scandal, and yet conform themselves to the same,
+are brought in by Hooker(365) making their apology on this wise: "Touching
+the offence of the weak, we must adventure it; if they perish, they
+perish, &c. Our pastoral charge is God's absolute commandment, rather than
+that shall be taken from us," &c. The opinion of such, beside that it will
+be hateful and accursed to every one who considereth it, I have said
+enough against it heretofore.(366)
+
+_Sect._ 2. Wherefore I will here meddle only with such as go about to
+purge the ceremonies from the inconveniency of scandal. And first, they
+commonly answer us, that the scandal which followeth upon the ceremonies
+is passive and taken only, not active and given, which answer I find both
+impertinent and false. It is impertinent, because, put the case: the
+scandal were only passive and taken, yet the occasion of it should be
+removed out of the way when it is not a thing necessary, according to my
+8th, 11th, and 12th propositions; and if any of our opposites will deny
+this, let them blush for shame. A Jesuit shall correct them,(367) and
+teach them from Matt. xvii. 27, that Christ shunned a scandal which would
+have been merely passive, and therefore that this is not to be taken for a
+sure and perpetual rule, _scandalum datum, not acceptum esse vitandum_.
+One of our own writers upon this same place noteth,(368) that this scandal
+which Christ eschewed, had been a scandal taken only, because the exactors
+of the tribute-money ought not to have been ignorant of Christ's immunity
+and dignity; yet because they were ignorant of the same, lest he should
+seem to give a scandal, _cedere potius sua libertate voluit. Ideo non
+tantum dicit: ne scandalizentur: sed ne scandalizemus eos, hoc est, ne
+scandali materiam eis demus_.
+
+_Sect_. 3. Their answer is also false: 1. There is no scandal taken but
+(if it be known to be taken, and the thing at which it is taken be not
+necessary) it is also given. The scandal of the weak, in the apostles'
+times, who were offended with the liberty of eating all sorts of meats,
+was passive and taken, as Zanchius observeth,(369) yet was that scandal
+given and peccant upon their part, who used their liberty of eating all
+sorts of meats, and so cared not for the offence of the weak. Think they
+then that our taking of offence can excuse their giving of offence? Nay,
+since the things whereby they offend us are no necessary things, they are
+greatly to be blamed.
+
+That the ceremonies are not necessary in themselves our opposites
+acknowledge, and that they are not necessary in respect of the church's
+determination, I have proved in the first part of my dispute. Wherefore,
+having no necessity in them, they ought to be abolished, when scandal is
+known to arise out of them.
+
+2. Giving and not granting that the scandal of them who were first
+offended at the ceremonies was only passive, yet the using of them after
+scandal is known to rise out of them, must be an active scandal, because
+the keeping of a thing which is not necessary, after scandal riseth out of
+it, is an active scandal, though the scandal which at first rose out of it
+had been only passive, as I show in my seventh proposition.
+
+3. The truth is, that both first and last the scandal of the ceremonies is
+active and given; for an active scandal is _dictum vel factum vere malum,
+aut mali speciem habens, quo auctor aliis peccandi occasionem praebet_,
+say our divines.(370) An active scandal is ever a sin in him who
+offendeth, _quia vel ipsum opus quod facit est peccatum, vel etiam si
+habeat speciem peccati_, &c., say the schoolmen.(371) A scandal given and
+faulty, _id opus aut ex se malum, aut apparentur_, say Formalists
+themselves.(372)
+
+_Sect._ 4. Now to say the least that can be said, the ceremonies have a
+very great appearance of evil, and so the scandal which followeth them
+shall be proved to be active. The divines of Magdeburg(373) infer from 1
+Thess. v. 22, _speciem mali etiam scandala conficere_. Junius
+teacheth,(374) that scandal is given, _sive exemplo malo, sive speciem
+habente mali_. M. Ant. de Dominis maketh(375) the scandal sin, _Ubi quis
+opere suo aliquo, vel de se malo vel indifferenti, aut bono, sed cum
+specie apparentis mali, proximum inducit ad peccandum, etiamsi intentio
+ipsius ad hoc non feratur._
+
+But to discover the appearance of evil which is in the ceremonies, let us
+consider with Zanchius,(376) that the appearance of evil from which the
+Apostle exhorteth to abstain may be expounded two ways. First, It may be
+referred to the preceding words, and so meant of prophecy and trying the
+doctrine of prophets or preachers, for we should beware in this matter of
+all which hath any appearance of evil, that is, from all things, _quae ab
+haereticis in suam sententiam, malamque consequentiam trahi possunt_. For
+example, saith Zanchius, Nestorius said, that we are saved by the blood,
+not of the Son of God, but of the Son of man. Now if any, suppressing that
+negative, should say, we are saved by the blood of the Son of man, though
+this might receive a right explication, yet it hath an appearance of evil,
+because from it Nestorius might confirm his heresy. Appearance of evil
+thus expounded will be found in the ceremonies in question. If a phrase or
+form of speaking from which heretics may draw bad consequences, and
+confirm their errors, though not truly, yet in show, be an appearance of
+evil, then much more are visible ceremonies and received customs, from
+which heretics get occasion to confirm their heretical errors, and
+damnable superstitions, very plain and undeniable appearances of much
+evil.
+
+Now Papists confirm many of their superstitions by the English ceremonies.
+Parker(377) giveth too many clear instances, namely, that by the English
+cross Martial justifieth the popish cross, and Saunders the popish images.
+That the English service-book is drawn by Parsons and Bristowe, to a
+countenancing of their mass-book; that Rainold draweth private baptism to
+a proof of the necessity which they put in that sacrament; that the
+Rhemists draw the absolution of the sick, prescribed in the
+communion-book, to an approbation of their absolution, auricular
+confession, and sacrament of penance. To these instances I add, that the
+Rhemists(378) confirm the least of their assumption of Mary for the other
+feasts which the church of England observeth. And so doth J. Hart.(379)
+
+_Sect._ 5. It will be said, that Papists have no ground nor reason to
+confirm any of their superstitions by the English ceremonies. But I
+answer: 1. If it were so, yet forasmuch as Papists draw them to a
+confirmation of their superstitions, we should abstain from them as
+appearances of evil. Eating (at a private banquet) of that which was
+sacrificed to idols, did confirm an idolator and infidel in his religion,
+as Pareus(380) noteth; yet from this the idolator had no reason to confirm
+himself in his idolatry; but because the idolator, seeing it, might draw
+it to a confirmation, the Apostle will have it for that respect forborne.
+When the Arians abused trin-immersion in baptism, to signify three natures
+of the three persons, Pope Gregory,(381) and the fourth council of Toledo
+ordained,(382) that in Spain, thrice washing should no longer be used in
+baptism, but once only. The Arians had no just reason to draw such a
+signification from the ceremony of trin-immersion, yet was it abolished
+when those heretics did so abuse it. If any say, that we are saved by the
+blood of the Son of man, the phrase is orthodox, because of the
+communication, or rather communion of properties, and the Nestorians
+cannot with good reason by it confirm their heresy, yet are we to abstain
+from this form of speech, in Zanchius's judgment, when it is drawn to the
+confirmation of that error.
+
+I conclude with that which Parker(383) allegeth out of the _Harmony of
+Confessions: Cum adiaphora rapiuntur ad confessionem, libera esse
+desinunt_. Mark _rapiuntur_. 2. The ceremonies do indeed greatly
+countenance those superstitions of Papists, because _communio rituum est
+quasi symbolum communionis in religione_;(384) so that Papists get
+occasion from the ceremonies, of confirming, not only those popish rites
+which we have not yet received, but also the whole popish religion,
+especially since they see Conformists so siding with them against
+Non-Conformists, and making both their opinions and practices to be better
+than we reckon them to be.
+
+Saravia,(385) perceiving how much the popish sacrament of confirmation is
+countenanced and confirmed by our bishoping, thinks it best to put the
+fairest face he can upon the Papists' judgment of that bastard sacrament.
+He would have us believe, that the Papists do not extol the dignity of the
+sacrament of confirmation above baptism. But he should have considered
+that which Cartwright(386) marketh out of the first tome of the councils,
+that in the epistle which is ascribed to Eusebius and Melciades, bishops
+of Rome, it is plainly affirmed, that the sacrament of confirmation "is
+more to be reverenced than the sacrament of baptism."
+
+_Sect._ 6. Zanchius hath another exposition of the appearance of evil,
+which doth also agree to the ceremonies. The appearance of evil which
+maketh scandal, and from which the Apostle would have us to abstain, may
+be taken generally of all sorts of sin, and all evil things whatsoever;
+for so we should abstain from all that which hath any appearance of evil;
+_nullam proebentes occasionem proximo nostro aliquid mali de nobis
+suspicandi_. He instanceth for example, the eating of idolothites in
+Paul's time, 1 Cor. x. Now if the eating of idolothite meats was an
+appearance of evil, and so scandalous, because it gave the weak occasion
+to suspect some evil of such as did eat them, much more idolothite rites
+which have not only been dedicated and consecrated to the honour of idols,
+but also publicly and commonly used and employed in idolatrous worship;
+surely whosoever useth such idolothites, gives great occasion to his
+brother to suspect some evil of him, because of such evil-favoured
+appearances. And thus we see how great appearance of evil is more than
+manifest in the ceremonies, which maketh the scandal active, if there were
+no more; but afterwards we shall see the ceremonies to be evil and
+unlawful in themselves, and so to be in the worst kind of active scandal.
+
+_Sect._ 7. Two things are objected here by our adversaries, to make it
+appear that the scandal of conformity is not active nor faulty upon their
+part. 1. They say they are blameless, because they render a reason of that
+which they do, so that we may know the lawfulness of it. To this
+sufficient answer hath been made already by one whose answers I may well
+produce to provoke Conformists therewith, because no reply hath ever been
+made to them. "This (saith he(387)), if it be true, then see we an end of
+all the duty of bearing with the weak; of forbearing our own liberty,
+power, and authority in things indifferent, for their supportance; yea, an
+end of all the care to prevent their offence, by giving them occasion _aut
+condemnandi factum nostrum, aut illud imitandi contra conscientiam_,(388)
+which we have so often,(389) so seriously, with so many reasons,
+obtestations, yea, woes and threatenings, commanded to us throughout the
+word. What needed Paul to write so much against the scandal of meats, and
+against the scandal of idolothious meats? This one precept might have
+sufficed, let the strong give a reason for his eating, &c. Though he hath
+given many reasons to them of Corinth for the lawfulness of taking wages;
+though he hath given divers reasons for the lawfulness of all sorts of
+meats to them of Rome, yet neither will take wages himself, nor suffer
+others to eat all sorts of meats, when others are offended. And what is
+that which he writeth Rom. x.? Take and receive the weak for their
+supportance, and not for controversy and disputation," &c.
+
+It will be said that they are to be thought obstinate, who, after a reason
+given, are still scandalised. But the answer is in readiness: _Fieri
+potest ut quidam nondum sint capaces rationis redditae, qui idcirco quamvis
+ratio sit illis reddita, habendi sunt adhuc propusillis_.(390) They are
+rather to be thought obstinate in scandalising, who, perceiving the
+scandal to remain, notwithstanding of their reason given, yet for all that
+take not away the occasion of the scandal. But say some,(391) whoever
+ought to be esteemed weak, or not capable of reason, ministers must not be
+so thought of. Whereunto I answer with Didoclavius:(392) _Infirmitatem in
+doctiores cadere posse, neminem negaturum puto, et superiorum temporum
+historia de dimicatione inter doctores ecclesiae, ob ceremonias, idipsum
+probat. Parati etiam sunt coram Deo testari se non posse acquiescere __ in
+Formalistarum foliis ficulneis_. The reason which they give us commonly is
+will and authority; or if at any time they give another reason, it is such
+an one as cannot clear nor resolve our consciences. But let their reasons
+be so good as any can be, shall we be thought obstinate for being
+offended, notwithstanding of their reason? Dare they say that those who
+contended so much of old about the celebration of Easter, and about the
+feast of the Sabbath, were not weak, but obstinate and malicious, after a
+reason was given? Why consider they not, that "men may, for their
+science,(393) be profitable ministers, and yet fail of that measure of
+prudence whereby to judge of a particular use of indifferent things?"
+
+_Sect._ 8. 2d. They say they give no scandal by the ceremonies, because
+they have no such intent as to draw any into sin by them. _Ans._ A
+scandalous and inordinate quality or condition of an action, any way
+inductive to sin, maketh an active scandal, though the doer have no
+intention to draw into sin. This I made good in my fourth proposition; and
+it is further confirmed by that great scandal whereby Peter compelled the
+Gentiles to Judaise, Gal. ii. 14. "He constrained them (saith
+Perkins(394)) by the authority of his example, whereby he caused them to
+think that the observation of the ceremonial law was necessary." It was
+then the quality of his action which made the scandal active, because that
+which he did was inductive to sin, but we are not to think that Peter had
+an intention to draw the Gentiles to sin. Cardinal Baronius(395) laboureth
+to make Peter blameless, and his fact free of all fault; _quia praeter
+ipsius spem id acciderat_, and it fell forth only _ex accidenti et
+inopinato, ac praeter intentionem ipsius_. M. Ant. de Dominis(396)
+confuteth him well: _Est scandalum et cum peccato, quando quis licet non
+intendat peccatum alterius, facit autem opus aut ex se malum aut
+apparenter, ex quo scit, aut scire debet, consequuturum alterius peccatum,
+aut quodeunque malum: nam etiam dicitur illud voluntarium interpretative._
+
+_Sect._ 9. I will yet descend more particularly to confute our opposites'
+several answers and defences, which they have used against our argument of
+scandal. And I begin with our Lord Chancellor: "As for the godly amongst
+us (saith he(397)), we are sorry they should be grieved; but it is their
+own fault, for if the things be in themselves lawful, what is it that
+should offend them?"
+
+_Ans._ 1. He does not well express scandal (whereof he is there speaking)
+by grief; for I may be grieved, yet not scandalised, and scandalised, yet
+not grieved, according to my first proposition touching scandal.
+
+2. To what purpose tells he it is their own fault? Thinks he that there
+are any offended without their own fault? To be offended is ever a
+fault,(398) as I show in my third and sixth propositions; so that if a
+scandal be not removed where it is men's own fault that they are offended,
+then no scandal shall ever be removed, because all who are scandalised
+commit a fault in being scandalised. _Nihil potest esse homini causa
+sufficiens peccati, quod est spiritualis ruina, nisi propria voluntas; et
+ideo dicta vel facta alterius hominis possunt esse solum causa imperfecta
+aliqualiter inducens ad ruinam_, saith Aquinas,(399) giving a reason why,
+in the definition of scandals, he saith not that it giveth cause, but that
+it giveth occasion of ruin.
+
+3. Why thinks he that if the things be in themselves lawful, they are
+purged of scandal? What if they edify not? 1 Cor. xx. 23. What if they be
+not expedient? Are they not therefore scandalous, because in themselves
+lawful? This shift is destroyed by my ninth proposition. And, I pray, were
+not all meats lawful for the Gentiles in the apostles' times? Yet this
+could not excuse their eating all sorts of meats, when the Jews were
+thereby offended.
+
+4. Whereas he demandeth, if the things be in themselves lawful, what is it
+that should offend them? I demand again, though adultery, murder, &c., be
+in themselves unlawful, what is it that should offend us? Should we offend
+or be scandalised for anything? Nay, then, we should sin; for to be
+offended is a sin.
+
+5. He had said to better purpose, What is it that may offend them, or doth
+offend them, that it may be voided? Whereunto I answer, that there is a
+twofold scandal which may be and hath been given by things lawful in
+themselves (as I touched in my fifth proposition), viz, the giving of
+occasion to the weak to condemn our lawful deeds, and the animating of
+them to follow our example against their own consciences--both ways we may
+make them to sin. The Apostle, 1 Cor. x. 29, where he is speaking of a
+certain kind of idolothites which are in themselves lawful, and only evil
+in the case of scandal, showeth, that if the weak, in a private banquet,
+see the strong eating such meats as have been offered to idols,
+notwithstanding of warning given, then is the weak one scandalised,
+because, would the Apostle say, _Vel ipse etiam edet tuo exemplo,
+vacillante conseientia, vel tacite factum tuum damnabit._(400) Behold what
+scandal may arise even out of things which are in themselves lawful, which
+also ariseth out of the ceremonies (let them be as lawful as can be). 1.
+We art provoked to disallow of lawful things, and to condemn the doers as
+superstitious and popishly affected. 2. We are animated by the example of
+Formalists to practise conformity, which in our consciences we condemn,
+and by consequence do sin, because he that doubteth is damned, and
+whatsoever is not of faith is sin.
+
+_Sect._ 10. Let us see next how the Bishop of Edinburgh can help the
+cause. He will have us not to respect scandal, because it is removed by
+the law. "For (saith he(401)) by obedience to a lawful ordinance, no man
+gives scandal, and if any take offence, both the cause and occasion
+thereof is the perverseness only of the person offended." Tertullian saith
+well, _Res bona neminem offendit nisi malam mentem_.
+
+_Ans._ 1. I show in my ninth proposition, that the ordinance of superiors
+cannot make that to be no scandal which otherwise should be scandal. If
+this be not taken well from us, let one of our opposites speak for us, who
+acknowledgeth that human power cannot make us do that which we cannot do
+without giving of scandal, and that, in this case, the pretext of
+obedience to superiors shall not excuse us at the hands of the Supreme
+Judge.
+
+2. I would learn of him what makes a lawful ordinance about matters of
+fact or things to be done? Not the will of superiors, else there shall be
+no unlawful ordinances (for every ordinance hath the will of the
+ordainer), not the lawfulness of the thing in itself which is ordained
+neither, for then every ordinance which prescribeth a thing lawful in
+itself, were it never so inexpedient in respect of supervenient
+circumstances, should be lawful. To a lawful ordinance then is required,
+not only that the thing ordained be lawful in itself, but also that it be
+not inexpedient, so that a thing may be lawful in itself, yet not lawfully
+ordained, because the ordinance commandeth the doing of it, whereas there
+are many things lawful which ought not to be done, because they are not
+expedient, 1 Cor. vi. 12.
+
+3. Since it cannot be a lawful ordinance which ordaineth a thing
+inexpedient, it cannot be a lawful obedience which is yielded to such an
+ordinance.
+
+4. If by a lawful ordinance he mean (as it seems he doth) an ordinance
+prescribing that which is lawful in itself, then his answer is false. What
+if an ordinance of superiors had ordained the Corinthians to eat freely of
+all meats which were in themselves clean? Durst the Bishop say that this
+ordinance of superiors had been of greater weight and superior reason than
+the law of charity, which is God's law? Had no man given scandal by
+obedience to this ordinance? And would not the Apostle for all that have
+forbidden, as he did, the using of this liberty with the offence of
+others?
+
+5. When any man is offended at a thing lawful, prescribed by an ordinance,
+the cause thereof is indeed in himself (yet it is not always his
+perverseness, but oftimes weakness), but the occasion of it is the thing
+at which he offendeth, which occasion should ever be removed when it is
+not a thing necessary, as I showed already.
+
+6. As for that sentence of Tertullian, it must admit the exception of a
+reverend divine. He signifieth, saith Pareus,(402) scandal not to be
+properly committed, save in things evil in themselves, or else indifferent
+_quanquam interdum cuma bonas intempestive factas, etiam committi possit_.
+
+_Sect._ 11. In the third place, we will look what weapons of war Dr
+Forbesse produceth in his _Irenicum_,(403) falsely so called. And first,
+he will not hear us touching scandal, except we first acknowledge the
+ceremonies not to be evil in themselves otherwise he thinks we debate in
+vain about scandal, since we have a more convenient way to exterminate the
+ceremonies, by proving them to be evil in themselves, and also because,
+when we are pressed with the weight of arguments, we will still run back
+to this point, that nothing which in itself is unlawful can be done
+without scandal.
+
+_Ans._ 1. The argument of scandal is not vainly or idly debated, for
+though we prove the ceremonies to be evil in themselves, yet fitly we
+argument also from the scandal of them, because this maketh yet more. 1.
+_Ad rem_, for the scandal of a thing is more than the unlawfulness of it;
+every unlawful thing is not scandalous, but that only which is done to the
+knowledge of another. 2. _Ad hominem_, for that we may either content or
+convince our opposites, we argument _ex ipsorum concessis_, to this
+purpose,--that since they yield the ceremonies to be in themselves
+indifferent, therefore they must acknowledge that they are to be forborne,
+because scandal followeth upon them, and they should abstain from things
+indifferent, in the case of scandal.
+
+2. Whereas he thinks we will still turn back to the unlawfulness of the
+ceremonies in themselves, albeit we may justly make use of this answer,
+when they go about to purge the ceremonies from scandal by the lawfulness
+of them in themselves, (because the argument of scandal doth not
+presuppose our concession of the lawfulness of the ceremonies, but
+theirs,) yet he deceives himself in thinking that we cannot handle this
+argument without it, for were they never so lawful in themselves, we
+evince the scandal of them from the appearance of evil which is in
+them,(404) so that, without respecting the unlawfulness of the ceremonies
+in themselves, we can and do make good our argument of scandal, so far as
+concerneth the ceremonies considered by themselves.
+
+But when our opposites object, that many are scandalised by us who refuse
+the ceremonies, we here compare the scandal of non-conformity, if there be
+any such (for though some be displeased at it, I see not how they are
+scandalised by it), with the scandal of conformity, and show them that the
+scandal of non-conformity is not to be cared for, because it is necessary,
+and that by reason of the unlawfulness of the ceremonies. I will make all
+this plain by a simile.
+
+A pastor dealing with a fornicator, layeth before him both his sin and the
+scandal of it too. Now, as touching the scandal, the fornicator careth not
+for it, because he is in the opinion that fornication is indifferent.
+Whereupon the pastor thus proceedeth, If it were indifferent, as you say,
+yet because scandal riseth out of it, you should abstain. And so, amongst
+many arguments against fornication, the pastor useth this argument taken
+from the scandal of it, both for aggravating the sin in itself, and for
+convincing the sinner, and this argument of scandal the pastor can make
+good against the fornicator out of his own ultroneous and unrequired
+concession of the indifferency of fornication (because things indifferent,
+and in the case of scandal, and when they are done with the appearance of
+evil, should be forborne), without ever mentioning the unlawfulness of it.
+But if in a froward tergiversation, the fornicator begin to reply, that he
+also is scandalised and provoked to go on in his fornication obstinately,
+by the pastor rebuking him for so light a matter, and that the pastor's
+reproof to him hath appearance of evil, as much as his fornication hath to
+the pastor, albeit here it may be answered, that the pastor's reproof is
+not done inordinate, neither hath any appearance of evil, except in the
+fornicator's perverse interpretation, yet for stopping the fornicator's
+mouth, as well more forceably as more quickly, the pastor rejoineth, that
+if any scandal follow upon his reproof, it is not to be regarded, because
+the thing is necessary, and that because fornication being a great sin, he
+may not but reprove it.
+
+So, albeit our argument of scandal holdeth out against the ceremonies
+considered by themselves, without making mention of the unlawfulness of
+them in themselves albeit also when the scandal of non-conformity (if
+there be any such) is compared with the scandal of conformity, we say
+truly that this hath appearance of evil in its own condition, and that
+hath none, except in the false interpretation of those who glory in
+gainsaying.
+
+Yet for further convincing of our opposites, and darting through their
+most subtile subterfuges with a mortal stroke, we send them away with this
+final answer,--You should abstain from the ceremonies when scandal riseth
+out of them, because you confess them to be in themselves indifferent. But
+we do avouch and prove them to be unlawful, wherefore it is necessary for
+us to abstain, though all the world should be offended.
+
+_Sect._ 12. The Doctor(405) proceedeth to throw back the argument of
+scandal upon our own heads, and to charge us with scandalising both the
+church and commonwealth by our refusing the ceremonies. But what? should a
+doctor be a dictator? or a proctor a prater? Why, then, doth he ventilate
+words for reason? That some are displeased at our non-conformity, we
+understand to our great grief; but that thereby any are scandalised, we
+understand not; and if we did, yet that which is necessary, such as
+non-conformity is, can be taken away by no scandal.
+
+But the Doctor(406) goeth forward, denying that there is in the ceremonies
+so much as any appearance of evil, to make them scandalous. Where I
+observe, that he dare not adventure to describe how a thing is said to
+have appearance of evil, and consequently a scandalous condition. The man
+is cautelous, and perceiveth, peradventure, that the appearance of evil
+can be made to appear no other thing than that which doth more than appear
+in the ceremonies. And this I have heretofore evinced out of Zanchius.
+
+The Doctor(407) holdeth him upon kneeling in receiving the sacramental
+elements, and denieth that it is scandalous, or any way inductive to
+spiritual ruin. But (if he will) he may consider that the ruder sort, who
+cannot distinguish betwixt worshipping the bread, and worshipping before
+the bread, nor discern how to make Christ the passive object of that
+worship and the bread the active, and how to worship Christ in the bread,
+and make the worship relative from the bread to Christ, are, by his
+example, induced to bread-worship, when they perceive bowing down before
+the consecrated bread in the very same form and fashion wherein Papists
+are seen to worship it, but cannot conceive the nice distinctions which he
+and his companions use to purge their kneeling in that act from idolatry.
+As for others who have more knowledge, they are also induced to ruin,
+being animated by his example to do that which their consciences do
+condemn.
+
+There occurreth next an objection, taken from Paul's not taking wages at
+Corinth (though he might lawfully), for shunning the offence both of the
+malicious and the weak; in the solution whereof the Doctor(408) spendeth
+some words. The substance of his answer is this, that Paul taught it was
+lawful to take wages, and that they should not be offended at it; and if
+we do as he did, we must teach that the ceremonies are lawful in
+themselves, yet not using our power for the time, lest the weak be
+offended, or lest the malicious glory: but for all that, not denying our
+right and liberty, nor suffering a yoke of bondage to be imposed upon us
+by contumacious men. And, besides, that the Apostle was commanded by no
+ecclesiastical decree to take wages from the Corinthians, as we are
+commanded by the decree of Perth to receive the five Articles; so that
+Paul might, without contempt of ecclesiastical authority, abstain from
+taking of wages, but we cannot, without contempt of the church, reject the
+Articles.
+
+_Ans._ 1. This importeth, that if the question were not _de jure_, and if
+we disliked the ceremonies, and were offended at them, for some other
+reason than their unlawfulness, for this offence they would abstain. It
+may be his reverend fathers return him small thanks for this device. For
+let some men be brought forth, acknowledging the ceremonies to be in
+themselves indifferent, yet offended at them for their inexpediency,
+whether they be weak or malicious, the Doctor thinks he should abstain for
+their cause.
+
+2. How knows he that they who were offended at Paul's taking of wages at
+Corinth, thought not his taking of wages there unlawful, even as we think
+the ceremonies unlawful?
+
+3. Why judgeth he that we are not scandalised through weakness, but
+through malice and contumacy? So he giveth it forth both in this place and
+elsewhere.(409) Who art thou that judgest another man's servant?
+
+But, 4. If we were malicious in offending at the ceremonies as things
+unlawful, and in urging of non-conformity as necessary, should they
+therefore contemn our being scandalised? Those that would have Titus
+circumcised, were they not malicious? Did they not urge circumcision as
+necessary? Held they it not unlawful not to circumcise Titus? Yet did the
+Apostle abstain because they were to be scandalised, that is, made worse
+and more wicked calumniators by the circumcising of Titus, as I have
+showed;(410) so that albeit we know not to take care for the displeasing
+of men that maliciously (as necessary) abstaining from that which is
+lawful to be done, yet must we take care for scandalising them and making
+them worse; rather, ere that be, we ought to abstain from the use of our
+liberty.
+
+5. If an ecclesiastical decree had commanded Paul at that time to take
+wages at Corinth, the Doctor thinks he had contemned ecclesiastical
+authority in not taking wages, though some should be offended at his
+taking wages. What! could an ecclesiastical decree command Paul to take
+wages in the case of scandal? or could he have obeyed such a decree in the
+case of scandal? We have seen before that no human authority can make that
+no scandal which otherwise were scandal, so that Paul had not contemned
+ecclesiastical authority by not obeying their command in this case of
+scandal which had followed by his obeying, for he had not been bound to
+obey, nay, he had been bound not to obey in such a case, yea, further,
+albeit scandal had not been to follow by his taking wages, yet he had no
+more contemned the church by not obeying a command to take wages than he
+had done by living unmarried, if the church had commanded him to marry.
+The bare authority of the church could neither restrain his liberty nor
+ours in things indifferent, when there is no more to bind but the
+authority of an ordinance.
+
+6. Why holds he us contemners of the church for not receiving the five
+Articles of Perth? We cannot be called contemners for not obeying, but for
+not subjecting ourselves, wherewith we cannot be charged. Could he not
+distinguish betwixt subjection and obedience? Art thou a Doctor in Israel,
+and knowest not these things? Nil, art thou a Conformist, and knowest not
+what thy fellow Conformists do hold?
+
+_Sect._ 13. One point more resteth, at which the Doctor(411) holdeth him
+in this argument, namely, that for the offence of the weak necessary
+things are not to be omitted, such as is obedience to superiors, but their
+minds are to be better informed.
+
+_Ans._ 1. Obedience to superiors cannot purge that from scandal which
+otherwise were scandal, as we have seen before.(412)
+
+2. That information and giving of a reason cannot excuse the doing of that
+out of which scandal riseth, we have also proved already.(413)
+
+3. That the ordinance of superiors cannot make the ceremonies necessary, I
+have proved in the first part of this dispute. This is given for one of
+the chief marks of the man of sin,(414) "That which is indifferent, he by
+his laws and prohibitions maketh to be sin;" and shall they who profess to
+take part with Christ against antichrist, do no less than this? It will be
+replied, that the ceremonies are not thought necessary in themselves, nor
+non-conformity unlawful in itself, but only in respect of the church's
+ordinance. Just so the Papists profess,(415) that the omission of their
+rites and observances is not a sin in itself, but only in respect of
+contemning the church's customs and commandments. How comes it, then, that
+they are not ashamed to pretend such a necessity for the stumbling-blocks
+of those offending ceremonies among us, as Papists pretend for the like
+among them?
+
+_Sect._ 14. But the English Formalists have here somewhat to say, which we
+will hear. Mr Hooker tells us,(416) that ceremonies are scandalous, either
+in their very nature, or else through the agreement of men to use them
+unto evil; and that ceremonies of this kind are either devised at first
+unto evil, or else having had a profitable use, they are afterwards
+interpreted and wrested to the contrary. As for the English ceremonies, he
+saith, that they are neither scandalous in their own nature, nor because
+they were devised unto evil, nor yet because they of the church of England
+abuse them unto evil.
+
+_Ans._ 1. Though all this were true, yet forasmuch as they have been
+abused by the Papists unto idolatry and superstition, and are monuments of
+Popery, the trophies of Antichrist, and the relics of Rome's whorish
+bravery,--they must be granted, at least for this respect, to be more than
+manifest appearances of evil, and so scandalous.
+
+But secondly, It is false which he saith; for kneeling in receiving the
+communion is, in its own nature, evil and idolatrous, because religious
+adoration before a mere creature, which purposely we set before us in the
+act of adoring, to have state in the worship, especially if it be an
+actual image in that act representing Christ to us (such as the bread in
+the act of receiving) draweth us within the compass of co-adoration or
+relative worship, as shall be copiously proved afterwards.
+
+Other of the ceremonies that are not evil in their own nature, yet were
+devised to evil; for example, the surplice. The replier(417) to Dr
+Mortoune's particular defence, observeth, that this superstition about
+apparel in divine worship, began first among the French bishops, unto whom
+Caelestinus writeth thus:--_Discernendi, &c._ "We are to be distinguished
+from the common people and others by doctrine, not by garment,--by
+conversation, not by habit,--by the purity of mind, not by attire; for if
+we study to innovation, we tread under foot the order which hath been
+delivered unto us by our fathers, to make place to idle superstitions;
+wherefore we ought not to lead the minds of the faithful into such things,
+for they are rather to be instructed than played withal; neither are we to
+blind and beguile their eyes, but to infuse instructions into their
+minds." In which words Caelestinus reprehends this apparel, as a novelty
+which tended to superstition, and made way to the mocking and deceiving of
+the faithful.
+
+Lastly, Whereas he saith the ceremonies are not abused by them in England,
+I instance the contrary in holidays. Perkins saith,(418) that the feast of
+Christ's nativity, so commonly called, is not spent in praising the name
+of God, but in rifling, dicing, carding, masking, mumming, and in all
+licentious liberty, for the most part, as though it were some heathen
+feast of Ceres or Bacchus. And elsewhere(419) he complaineth of the great
+abuses of holidays among them.
+
+_Sect._ 15. As touching the rule which is alleged against the ceremonies
+out of Paul's doctrine, namely, that in those things from which we may
+lawfully abstain, we should frame the usage of our liberty with regard to
+the weakness of our brethren. Hooker answereth to it, 1. That the weak
+brethren among them were not as the Jews, who were known to be generally
+weak, whereas, saith he, the imbecility of ours is not common to so many,
+but only here and there some such an one is found. 2. He tells us that
+these scandalous meats, from which the Gentiles were exhorted to abstain
+for fear of offending the Jews, cannot represent the ceremonies, for their
+using of meats was a matter of private action in common life, where every
+man was free to order that which himself did, but the ceremonies are
+public constitutions for ordering the church, and we are not to look that
+the church is to change her public laws and ordinances, made according to
+that which is judged ordinarily and commonly fittest for the whole,
+although it chance that, for some particular men, the same be found
+inconvenient, especially when there may be other remedies also against the
+sores of particular inconveniences. Let them be better instructed.
+
+_Ans._ 1. This is bad divinity that would make us not regard the
+scandalising of a few particular men. Christ's woe striketh not only upon
+them who offend many, but even upon them who offend so much as one of his
+little ones, Matt. xviii 6.
+
+2. That which he saith of the few in England, and not many, who are
+scandalised by the ceremonies, hath been answered by a countryman of his
+own.(420) And as for us, we find most certainly that not a few, but many,
+even the greatest part of Scotland, one way or other, are scandalised by
+the ceremonies. Some are led by them to drink in superstition, and to fall
+into sundry gross abuses in religion, others are made to use them
+doubtingly, and so damnably. And how many who refuse them are animated to
+use them against their consciences, and so to be damned? Who is not made
+to stumble? And what way do they not impede the edificatlon of the church?
+
+3. What if there had been a public constitution, commanding the Gentiles
+to eat all meats freely, and that this hath been judged ordinarily and
+commonly fittest for the whole, even to signify the liberty of the church
+of the New Testament? Should not the Gentiles, notwithstanding of this
+constitution, have abstained because of the scandal of the Jews? How comes
+it then, that that which the Apostle writeth against the scandal of meats,
+and the reasons which he giveth, are found to hold over good, whether
+there be a constitution or not?
+
+4. As for his remedy against the scandal of particular men, which is to
+instruct them better, it hath been answered before.(421)
+
+_Sect._ 16. Now, if I reckon Paybody to be no body, perhaps some body will
+not take it well. I will therefore examine how he handleth this argument.
+Four things are answered by him(422) to those places, Rom. xiv. 16; 1 Cor.
+viii. 10; Matt. xviii. 6, which are alleged against the use of things
+indifferent, when we cannot use them without scandal.
+
+First, he saith, that all those Scriptures which are quoted as condemning
+the scandalising of others in things indifferent, speak only of
+scandalising them who are weak.
+
+_Ans._ 1. Be it so, thought he, that they are all malicious, and none
+weak, who are offended by the ceremonies. He himself describeth the weak
+whom we are forbidden to scandalise, to be such as are weak in knowledge
+and certainty of the truth. Now there are many who are in this respect
+weak, scandalised by the ceremonies. But I say, moreover, that his
+description is imperfect; for there are some who know the truth, and that
+certainly, who are, notwithstanding, to be accounted weak, in regard of
+the defect of that prudence which should guide, and that stability which
+should accompany all their actions, in the particular usage of such things
+as they know certainly, in their general kind, to be agreeable to truth
+and righteousness. Such Christians are impeded by the ceremonies from
+going on in their Christian course so fast as otherwise they would, if not
+also made to waver or stumble. And thus are they properly scandalised
+according to my fifth proposition. _Si quis nostra culpa vel impingit, vel
+abducitur a recto cursu, vel tardatur, cum dicimur offendere_, saith
+Calvin.(423) _Porro scandalum est dictum vel factum quo impeditur
+evangelii cursus, cujus ampliationem et propagationem, totius vitae
+nostrae scopum esse oportet_, saith Martyr.(424)
+
+2. It is a fault to give offence even to the strong, or else Peter was not
+to be blamed for giving offence to Christ, Matt. xvi. 23. Yea, it is a
+fault to offend the very malicious by things that are not necessary, as I
+have proved in my twelfth proposition.
+
+_Sect._ 17. Secondly, saith he, all those Scriptures condemn only the
+scandal of the weak which is made at that time when we know they will be
+scandalised.
+
+_Ans._ 1. If he speak of certain and infallible knowledge, none but God
+knoweth whether a man shall be scandalised or not, by that which we are to
+do. He must mean, therefore, of such knowledge as we can have of the event
+of our actions, and so his answer bringeth great damage to his own cause.
+Formalists know that then weak brethren have been of a long time
+scandalised by the ceremonies, and they hear them professing that they are
+yet scandalised, and how then can they but know that scandal will still
+follow upon that which they do?
+
+2. Albeit they know not that their brethren will be scandalised by the
+ceremonies, yea, albeit then brethren should not be scandalised thereby,
+yet because the ceremonies are appearances of evil, inductive to sin, and
+occasions of ruin, scandal is given by them, whether it be taken by their
+brethren or not, according to my fourth and fifth propositions.
+
+_Sect._ 18. Thirdly, saith Paybody, all those Scriptures condemn only that
+offence of another in things indifferent, which is made by him who is at
+liberty and not bound, they speak not of using or refusing those things,
+as men are tied by the commandment of authority. Where he laboureth to
+prove that obedience to the magistrate in a thing indifferent is a better
+duty than the pleasing of a private person in such a thing.
+
+_Ans._ 1. I have proved heretofore, that the commandment of authority
+cannot make the use of a thing indifferent to be no scandal, which
+otherwise were scandal.
+
+2. I have also proved in the first part of this dispute, that an
+ecclesiastical constitution cannot bind us, nor take away our liberty in
+the using or not using of a thing indifferent in itself, except some other
+reason be showed us than the bare authority of the church. As touching the
+civil magistrate's place and power to judge and determine in things
+pertaining to the worship of God, we shall see it afterwards, and so shall
+we know how far his decisions and ordinances in this kind of things have
+force to bind us to obedience.
+
+3. He should have proved that obedience to the magistrate in a thing
+indifferent, is a better duty than abstaining from that which scandaliseth
+many Christians. He should not have opposed pleasing and scandalising (for
+perhaps a man is most scandalised when he is most pleased), but edifying
+and scandalising, according to my first proposition. Now, will anybody
+except Paybody say, that obedience to the magistrate in a thing
+indifferent, out of which scandal riseth, is a better duty than forbearing
+for the edification of many Christian souls, and for shunning to
+scandalise them. This we must take to be his meaning, or else he saith
+nothing to the purpose.
+
+_Sect._ 19. His fourth answer is, that all those scriptures condemning
+scandal, must needs especially condemn that which is greatest. Peter and
+his companions coming to Antioch, were in danger of a double scandal;
+either of the Jews by eating with the Gentiles, which was the less, or of
+the Gentiles in refusing their company, as if they had not been brethren,
+which was far the greater. Now Paul blamed Peter very much, that for the
+avoiding the lesser scandal, he and his companions fell into the greater.
+
+_Ans._ 1. He is greatly mistaken whilst he thinks that a man can be so
+straitened betwixt two scandals, that he cannot choose but give the one of
+them. For, _nulla datur talis perplexitas, ut necessarium sit pro homini
+sive hoc sive illud faciat, scandalum alicui dare_.(425)
+
+2. That sentence of choosing the least of two evils, must be understood of
+evils of punishment, not of evils of sin, as I showed before,(426) so that
+he is in a foul error whilst he would have us to choose the least of two
+scandals.
+
+3. As for the example which he allegeth, he deceiveth himself to think
+that Peter had given scandal to the Jews by his eating with the Gentiles.
+_Cum Gentibus cibum capiens, recte utebatur libertate Christiana_, say the
+Magdeburgians;(427) but when certain Jews came from James, he withdrew
+himself, fearing the Jews, and so _quod ante de libertate Christiana
+aedificarat, rursus destruebat_, by eating, then, with the Gentiles, he
+gave no scandal, but by the contrary he did edify. And farther, I say,
+that his eating with the Gentiles was a thing necessary, and that for
+shunning of two great scandals; the one of the Gentiles, by compelling
+them to Judaise; the other of the Jews, by confirming them in Judaism,
+both which followed upon his withdrawing from the Gentiles; so that by his
+eating with the Gentiles no scandal could be given, and if any had been
+taken, it was not to be cared for. Wherefore there was but one scandal
+which Peter and his companions were in danger of, which also they did
+give, and for which Paul apprehended them, namely, their withdrawing of
+themselves from the Gentiles, and keeping company only with the Jews,
+whereby both the Jews and the Gentiles were scandalised, because both were
+made to think (at least occasion was given to both for thinking) the
+observation of the ceremonial law necessary. That which deceiveth Paybody,
+is the confounding of _scandalising_ and _displeasing_. Peter, by eating
+with the Gentiles, perhaps had displeased the Jews, but he had thereby
+edified them, though the scandal which he gave them was by Judaising;
+_Judaizabat olim Petrus per dissimulationem_, saith Gerson:(428) by this
+Judaising through such dissimulation and double-dealing, as was his eating
+with the Gentiles first, and then withdrawing of himself, when certain
+Jews came; for keeping company with them only, he scandalised the Jews and
+confirmed them in Judaism, as Pareus noteth.(429) How then can it be said,
+that he that scandalised them by his eating with the Gentiles? For
+hereupon it should follow that there was a necessity of doing evil laid
+upon Peter, so that he behoved to offend the Jews either by his eating
+with the Gentiles, or by his not eating with the Gentiles; for he could
+not both eat with them and not eat with them. This is therefore plain,
+that if he scandalised the Jews by his not eating with the Gentiles, as I
+have showed, then had he not scandalised them, but edified them by his
+eating with the Gentiles.
+
+I perceive he would say, that the scandal of non-conformity is a greater
+scandal than the scandal of conformity; and so he would make us gain
+little by our argument of scandal. He is bold to object,(430) "Where one
+is offended with our practice of kneeling, twenty, I may say ten thousand,
+are offended with your refusal." O adventurous arithmetic! O huge
+hyperbole! O desultorious declamation! O roving rethoric! O prodigal
+paradox!
+
+Yet, I reply, 1. Though sundry (yet not ten thousand for one) are
+displeased by our refusal, who can show us that any are thereby
+scandalised; that is, made worse and induced to ruin? This man is bold to
+say well to it; but we have solidly proved that scandal riseth out of
+kneeling and the rest of the ceremonies: let it be measured to us with the
+same measure wherewith we mete.
+
+2. Put the case, that ten thousand were scandalised by our refusal, will
+it thereupon follow that our refusal is a greater scandal than their
+practising? Nay, then, let it be said that the cross of Christ is a
+greater scandal than a private man's fornication, because both Jews and
+Greeks were offended at that, 1 Cor. i. 23; whereas, perhaps, a small
+congregation only is offended at this.
+
+3. Our refusal is necessary, because of the unlawfulness of the ceremonies
+which we refuse, so that we may not receive them, but must refuse them,
+notwithstanding of any scandal which can follow upon our refusal. If he
+had aught to say against this answer, why is he silent? He might have
+found it at home. "Our forbearance of conformity (saith Parker(431)) is a
+necessary duty, there is therein no fault of any scandal in us."
+
+4. Our opposites should do well to assail our argument of scandal before
+they propound any other argument against us; for so long as they make it
+not evident that the scandal of the ceremonies, which we object, is an
+active or faulty scandal, so long they cannot object the scandal of
+non-conformity to us; because if the scandal (which is to be avoided) be
+in their practising of the ceremonies, it cannot be in our refusing of
+them.
+
+5. We know many are grieved and displeased with our non-conformity, yet
+that every one who is grieved is not by and by scandalised, the Bishop of
+Winchester teacheth as well as we. "Many times (saith he(432)) men are
+grieved with that which is for their good, and earnestly set on that which
+is not expedient for them." But, in good earnest, what do they mean who
+say they are scandalised, or made worse by our non-conformity? for neither
+do we make them condemn our lawful deed as unlawful, nor yet do we animate
+them by our example to do that which, in their consciences, they judge
+unlawful. They themselves acknowledge that sitting is as lawful as
+kneeling; that the not-observing of the five holidays is as lawful as the
+observing of them; that the not-bishoping of children is as lawful as the
+bishoping of them. Do they not acknowledge the indifferency of the things
+themselves? Do they not permit many of their people either to kneel or to
+sit at the communion? Have not many of themselves taken the communion
+sitting in some places? Have not our Conformists in Scotland hitherto
+commonly omitted bishoping of children, and the ministration of the
+sacraments in private places? As for ourselves we make our meaning plain
+when we object the scandal of conformity; for many ignorant and
+superstitious persons are, by the ceremonies, confirmed (_expertus
+loquor_) in their error and superstition; so that now they even settle
+themselves upon the old dregs of popish superstition and formality, from
+which they were not well purged. Others are made to practise the
+ceremonies with a doubting and disallowing conscience, and to say with
+Naaman, "In this the Lord be merciful unto us if we err:" with my own ears
+have I heard some say so. And even those who have not practised the
+ceremonies, for that they cannot see the lawfulness of them, yet are
+animated by the example of practising Conformists to do these things
+which, in their consciences, they condemn as unlawful (which were to sin
+damnably), and if they do them not, then is there no small doubting and
+disquietness, trouble, and trepidation, harboured in their consciences.
+And thus, one way or other, some weakening or deterioration cometh to us
+by the means of the ceremonies; and if any of our opposites dare think
+that none of us can be so weak as to stumble or take any harm in this
+kind, because of the ceremonies, we take God himself to witness, who shall
+make manifest the counsels of the heart, that we speak the truth, and lie
+not.
+
+Finally, Let that be considered which divines observe to be the perpetual
+condition of the church,(433) namely, that as in any other family there
+are found some great, some small, some strong, some weak, some wholesome,
+some sickly, so still is there found such an inequality in the house of
+God, which is the church,--and that because some are sooner, some are later
+called, some endued with more gifts of God, and some with fewer.(434)
+
+
+
+
+ THE THIRD PART.
+
+
+AGAINST THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE UNLAWFUL, BECAUSE SUPERSTITIOUS, WHICH IS
+PARTICULARLY INSTANCED IN HOLIDAYS, AND MINISTERING THE SACRAMENTS IN
+PRIVATE PLACES.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. The strongest tower of refuge to which our opposites make their
+main recourse, is the pretended lawfulness of the ceremonies, which now we
+are to batter down and demolish, and so make it appear how weak they are
+even where they think themselves strongest.
+
+My first argument against the lawfulness of the ceremonies I draw from the
+superstition of them. I cannot marvel enough how Dr Mortoune and Dr Burges
+could think to rub the superstition upon Non-conformists, whom they set
+forth as fancying their abstinence from the ceremonies to be a singular
+piece of service done to God, placing religion in the not using of them,
+and teaching men to abstain from them for conscience' sake. Dr Ames(435)
+hath given a sufficient answer, namely, that abstaining from sin is one
+act of common obedience, belonging as well to things forbidden in the
+second table, as to those forbidden in the first; and that we do not
+abstain from those ceremonies but as from other unlawful corruptions, even
+out of the compass of worship. We abstain from the ceremonies even as from
+lying, cursing, stealing, &c. Shall we be holden superstitious for
+abstaining from things unlawful? The superstition therefore is not on our
+side, but on theirs:--
+
+_Sect._ 2. For, 1st, Superstition is the opposite vice to religion, in the
+excess, as our divines describe it; for it exhibits more in the worship of
+God than he requires in his worship. Porro saith,(436) _Zanchius in cultum
+ipsum excessu ut, peccatur; si quid illi quem Christus instituit, jam
+addas, aut ab aliis additum sequar is; ut si sacramentis a Christo
+institutis, alia addas sacramenta; si sacrificiis, alia sacrificia; si
+ceremoniis cujusvis sacramenti, alios addas ritus, qui merito omnes
+superstitionis nomine appellantur._ We see he accounteth superstition to
+be in the addition of ceremonies not instituted by Christ, as well as in
+the addition of more substantial matters. _Superstitio_ (as some derive
+the word) is that which is done _supra statutum_; and thus are the
+controverted ceremonies superstitious, as being used in God's worship upon
+no other ground than the appointment of men.
+
+_Sect._ 3. 2d. Superstition is that which exhibits divine worship, _vel
+cui non debet, vel eo non modo quo debet_, say the schoolmen.(437) Now our
+ceremonies, though they exhibit worship to God, yet this is done
+inordinately, and they make the worship to be otherwise performed than it
+should be; for example, though God be worshipped by the administration of
+the sacraments in private places, yet not so as he should be worshipped.
+The Professors of Leyden(438) condemn private baptism as inordinate,
+because _baptismus publici ministerii, non privatae exhortationis est
+appendix_. It is marked in the fourth century,(439) both out of councils
+and fathers, that it was not then permitted to communicate in private
+places; but this custom was thought inordinate and unbeseeming. If it be
+said, that the communion was given to the sick privately in the ancient
+church, I answer: Sometimes this was permitted, but for such special
+reasons as do not concern us; for, as we may see plainly by the fourteenth
+canon of the first Council of Nice (as those canons are collected by
+Ruffinus), the sixty-ninth canon of the Council of Eleberis, and the sixth
+canon of the Council of Ancyra, the communion was only permitted to be
+given in private houses to the _paenitentes_, who were _abstenti_ and
+debarred from the sacrament, some for three years, some for five, some for
+seven, some for ten, some for thirteen, some longer, and who should
+happily be overtaken with some dangerous and deadly sickness before the
+set time of abstention was expired. As for the judgment of our own
+divines, _Calviniani_, saith Balduine,(440) _morem illum quo eucharastia
+ad aegrotos tanquam viaticum defertur improbant, eamque non nisi in
+coetibus publicis usurpendam censent_. For this he allegeth Beza, Aretius,
+and Musculus. It was a better ordinance than that of Perth, which said,
+_non oportet in domibus oblationes ab episcopis sive presbyteris
+fieri_.(441) But to return.
+
+_Sect._ 4. 3d. The ceremonies are proved to be superstitious, by this
+reason, if there were no more, they have no necessary nor profitable use
+in the church (as hath been proved), which kind of things cannot be used
+without superstition. It was according to this rule that the
+Waldenses(442) and Albigenses taught that the exorcisms, breathings,
+crossings, salt, spittle, unction, chrism, &c. used by the church of Rome
+in baptism, being neither necessary nor requisite in the administration of
+the same, did occasion error and superstition, rather than edification to
+salvation,
+
+4th. They are yet more superstitious, for that they are not only used in
+God's worship unnecessary and unprofitably, but likewise they hinder other
+necessary duties. They who, though they serve the true God, "yet with
+needless offices, and defraud him of duties necessary," are superstitious
+in Hooker's judgment.(443) I wish he had said as well to him as from him.
+What offices more unnecessary than those Roman rituals? yet what more
+necessary duties than to worship God in a spiritual and lively manner,--to
+press the power of godliness upon the consciences of professors,--to
+maintain and keep faithful and well qualified ministers in the church,--to
+bear the bowels of mercy and meekness,--not to offend the weak, nor to
+confirm Papists in Popery,--to have all things in God's worship disposed
+according to the word, and not according to the will of man,--not to
+exercise lordship over the consciences of those whom Christ hath made
+free,--to abolish the monuments of by-past and badges of present idolatry;
+yet are those and other necessary duties shut quite out of doors by our
+needless ceremonial service.
+
+_Sect._ 5. 5th. The ceremonies are not free of superstition, inasmuch as
+they give to God an external service, and grace-defacing worship, which he
+careth not for, and make fleshly observations to step into the room of
+God's most spiritual worship. Augustine(444) allegeth that which is
+said,--"The kingdom of God is within you," Luke xvii. against superstitious
+persons, who _exterioribus principalem curam impendunt_. The Christian
+worship ought to be "in spirit, without the carnal ceremonies and rites,"
+saith one of our divines;(445) yea, the kingdom of God cometh not _cum
+apparatu aut pompa mundana, ita ut observari possit tempus vel locus_,
+saith a Papist.(446) Carnal worship, therefore, and ceremonial
+observations, are (to say the least) superfluous in religion, and by
+consequence superstitious.
+
+_Sect._ 6. 6th. Worship is placed in the ceremonies, therefore they are
+most superstitious. To make good what I say, holiness and necessity are
+placed in the ceremonies, _ergo_, worship. And, 1st, Holiness is placed in
+them. Hooker(447) thinks festival days clothed with outward robes of
+holiness; nay, he saith plainly,(448)--"No doubt, as God's extraordinary
+presence hath hallowed and sanctified certain places, so they are his
+extraordinary works that have truly and worthily advanced certain times,
+for which cause they ought to be, with all men that honour God, more holy
+than other days." He calleth also the cross an holy sign.(449) Dr
+Burges(450) defendeth that the ceremonies are and may be called worship of
+God, not only _ratione modi_, as belonging to the reverend usage of God's
+prescribed worship, but also _ratione medii_, though not _medii per se_,
+of and by itself, yet _per aliud_, by virtue of somewhat else. Now, do not
+Papists place worship in their cross and crucifix? yet do they place no
+holiness in it _per se_, but only _per aliud_, in respect of Christ
+crucified thereby represented, and they tell us,(451) that _creaturae
+insensibili non debetur honor vel reverentia, nisi ratione rationalis
+naturae_; and that they give no religious respect unto the tree whereon
+Christ was crucified, the nails, garments, spear, manger, &c., but only
+_quantum ad rationem contactus membrorum Christi_. Saith Dr Burges any
+less of the ceremonies? Nay, he placeth every way as much holiness and
+worship in them in the forequoted place. And elsewhere he teacheth,(452)
+that after a sort the ceremonies are worship in themselves, even such a
+worship as was that of the free-will offerings under the law, and such a
+worship as was the building and use of altars here and there(453) (before
+God had chosen out the standing place for his altar), though to the same
+end for which the Lord's instituted altar served. Thus we see that they
+offer the ceremonies as worship to God: yet put the case they did not, the
+school saith,(454) that a thing belongeth to the worship of God, _vel quo
+ad offerendum, vel quo ad assumendum_. Whereupon it followeth, that
+superstition is not only to be laid to their charge who offer to God for
+worship that which he hath not commanded, but theirs also who assume in
+God's worship the help of anything as sacred or holy which himself hath
+not ordained. 2. They place as great a necessity in the ceremonies as
+Papists place in theirs, whereby it shall also appear now superstitiously
+they place worship in them; for _quaecunque observatio quasi necessaria
+commendatur, continuo censetur ad cultum Dei pertinere_, saith
+Calvin.(455) The Rhemists think,(456) that meats of themselves, or of
+their own nature, do not defile, "but so far as by accident they make a
+man to sin; as the disobedience of God's commandment, or of our superiors,
+who forbid some meats for certain times and causes, is a sin." And they
+add, "that neither flesh nor fish of itself doth defile, but the breach of
+the church's precept defileth." Aquinas(457) defendeth that trin-immersion
+is not _de necessitate baptismi_, only he thinks it a sin to baptise
+otherwise, because this rite is instituted and used by the church. Do not
+Formalists place the same necessity in the ceremonies, while, as they say,
+they urge them not as necessary in themselves, but only as necessary in
+respect of the determination of the church, and the ordinance of those who
+are set over us? Nay, Papists place not so great necessity in many
+ordinances of their church as Formalists place in the ceremonies. If the
+cause be doubtful, Aquinas(458) sends a man to seek a dispensation from
+the superior. But _si causa sit evidens, per seipsum licite potest homo
+statuti observantiam praeterire_. What Formalist dare yield us such
+liberty, as by ourselves, and without seeking a dispensation from
+superiors, to neglect the observation of their statutes, when we see
+evident cause for so doing? They think that we have no power at our own
+hand to judge that we have an evident cause of not obeying those who are
+set over us; yet this much is allowed by this Papist, who also elsewhere
+acknowledged(459) that there is nothing necessary in baptism but the form,
+the minister, and the washing of water, and that all the other ceremonies
+which the church of Rome useth in baptism are only for solemnity.
+Bellarmine saith,(460) that the neglecting and not observing the
+ceremonies of the church, with them is not a mortal sin, except it proceed
+_ex contemptu_. And that he who, entering into a church, doth not asperge
+himself with holy water, sinneth not,(461) if so be he do it _circa
+contemptum_. Now, to be free of contempt will not satisfy our Formalists,
+except we obey and do that very same thing which we are commanded to do.
+Cornelius Jansenius,(462) commenting upon these words, "In vain do they
+worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men," saith, that
+the commandments of men there forbidden and condemned, are those which
+command nothing divine, but things merely human; and therefore he pleadeth
+for the constitutions of the church about feasts, choice of meats,
+festivities, &c., and for obedience to the same upon no other ground than
+this, because _pius quisque facile videt quam habeant ex scripturis
+originem et quomodo eis consonant, eo quod faciant ad __ carnis
+castigationem et temperantiam, aut ad fidelium unionem et edificationem_.
+I know it to be false which this Papist affirmeth; yet in that he thus
+pleadeth for those constitutions of the church from Scripture and reason,
+forsaking the ground of human authority, he is a great deal more modest
+and less superstitious than those our opposites, who avouch the ceremonies
+as necessary, and will have us bound to the practice of them upon no other
+ground than the bare will and authority of superiors, who have enjoined
+them, as hath been shown in the first part of this dispute. Yea, some of
+them place a certain and constant necessity in the ceremonies themselves,
+even beside and without the church's constitution (which is more than
+Papists have said of their ceremonies). Dr Forbesse(463) calleth the
+Articles of Perth, _pauca necessaria_, &c., a few things necessary for
+God's glory, and the promoting of piety in our church, for order, peace,
+unity, and charity; and particularly he teacheth, that a minister may not
+lawfully omit to administer the sacraments in private places, and without
+the presence of the congregation, to such as through sickness cannot come
+to the public assemblies; which he calleth, _eis necessaria ministrare_.
+To say the truth, the ministration of the sacraments in private places
+importeth a necessity in the matter itself, for which cause the divines of
+Geneva resolved(464) that in _Ecclesiis publice institutis_, baptism might
+not be administered in private places, but only publicly in the
+congregation of the faithful, _partim ne sacramenta, &c._, "partly (say
+they) lest the sacraments, being separate from the preaching of the word,
+should be again transformed in certain magical ceremonies, as in Popery it
+was; partly that the gross superstition of the absolute necessity of
+external baptism may be rooted out of the minds of men." Sure, the
+defenders of private baptism place too great necessity in that sacrament.
+Hooker plainly insinuates(465) the absolute necessity of outward baptism,
+at least in wish or desire, which is the distinction of the schoolmen, and
+followed by the modern Papists to cloak their superstition. But whatsoever
+show it hath, it was rightly impugned in the Council of Trent(466) by
+Marianarus, who alleged against it that the angel said to Cornelius his
+prayers were acceptable to God, before ever he knew of the sacrament of
+baptism; so that, having no knowledge of it, he could not be said to have
+received it, no not in vow or wish; and that many holy martyrs were
+converted in the heat of persecution, by seeing the constancy of others,
+and presently taken and put to death, of whom one cannot say, but by
+divination, that they knew the sacraments, and made a vow.
+
+_Sect._ 7. 7th. I will now apply this argument, taken from superstition,
+particularly to holidays. _Superstitiosum esse docemus_, saith Beza,(467)
+_arbitrari unum aliquem diem altero sanctiorem_. Now I will show that
+Formalists observe holidays, as mystical and holier than other days,
+howbeit Bishop Lindsey thinks good to dissemble and deny it.(468) "Times
+(saith he) are appointed by our church for morning and evening prayers in
+great towns; hours for preaching on Tuesday, Thursday, &c.; hours for
+weekly exercises of prophecying, which are holy in respect of the use
+whereunto they are appointed; and such are the five days which we esteem
+not to be holy, for any mystic signification which they have, either by
+divine or ecclesiastical institution, or for any worship which is
+appropriated unto them, that may not be performed at another time, but for
+the sacred use whereunto they are appointed to be employed as
+circumstances only, and not as mysteries." _Ans._ This is but falsely
+pretended, for as Didoclavius observeth,(469) _aliud est deputare, aliud
+dedicare, aliud sanctificare_. Designation or deputation is when a man
+appoints a thing for such an use, still reserving power and right to put
+it to another use if he please; so the church appointeth times and hours
+for preaching upon the week-days, yet reserving power to employ those
+times otherwise, when she shall think fit. Dedication is when a man so
+devotes a thing to some pious or civil use, that he denudes himself to all
+right and title which thereafter he might claim unto it, as when a man
+dedicates a sum of money for the building of an exchange, a judgment-hall,
+&c., or a parcel of ground for a church, a churchyard, a glebe, a school,
+an hospital, he can claim no longer right to the dedicated thing.
+Sanctification is the setting apart of a thing for a holy and religious
+use, in such sort that hereafter it may be put to no other use, Prov. xx.
+25. Now whereas times set apart for ordinary and weekly preaching, are
+only designed by the church for this end and purpose, so that they are not
+holy, but only for the present they are applied to an holy use; neither is
+the worship appointed as convenient or beseeming for those times, but the
+times are appointed as convenient for the worship. Festival days are holy
+both by dedication and consecration of them; and thus much the Bishop
+himself forbeareth not to say,(470) only he laboureth to plaster over his
+superstition with the untempered mortar of this quidditative distinction,
+that some things are holy by consecration of them to holy and mystical
+uses,(471) as water in baptism, &c., but other things are made holy by
+consecration of them to holy political uses. This way, saith he, the
+church hath power to make a thing holy, as to build and consecrate places
+to be temples, houses to be hospitals; to give rent, lands, money and
+goods, to the ministry and to the poor; to appoint vessels, and vestures,
+and instruments for the public worship, as table, table-cloths, &c. _Ans._
+1. The Bishop, I see, taketh upon him to coin new distinctions at his own
+pleasure; yet they will not, I trust, pass current among the judicious. To
+make things holy by consecration of them to holy uses for policy, is an
+uncouth speculation, and, I dare say, the Bishop himself comprehendeth it
+not. God's designation of a thing to any use, which serves for his own
+glory, is called the sanctification of that thing, or the making of it
+holy, and so the word is taken, Isa. xiii. 3; Jer. i. 5, as G. Sanctius
+noteth in his commentaries upon these places; and Calvin, commenting upon
+the same places, expoundeth them so likewise; but the church's appointing
+or designing of a thing to an holy use, cannot be called the making of it
+holy. It must be consecrated at the command of God, and by virtue of the
+word and prayer: thus are bread and wine consecrated in the holy supper,
+_Res sacrae_, saith Fennerus,(472) _sunt quae Dei verbo in praedictum usum
+sanctificatae et dedicatae sunt_. Polanus, speaking of the sacramental
+elements, saith,(473) _Sanctificatio rei terrenae est actio ministri, qua
+destinat __ rem terrenam ad sanctum usum, ex mandato Dei, &c._ The
+Professors of Leyden(474) call only such things, persons, times and places
+holy, as are consecrated and dedicated to God and his worship, and that
+_divina praescriptione_. If our ordinary meat and drink cannot be
+sanctified to us, so that we may lawfully, and with a good conscience, use
+those common things, but by the word of God and prayer, how then shall
+anything be made holy for God's worship but by the same means? 1 Tim. iv.
+5. And, I pray, which is the word, and which be the prayers, that make
+holy those things which the Bishop avoucheth for things consecrated and
+made holy by the church, namely, the ground whereupon the church is built,
+the stones and timber of an hospital; the rents, lands, money, or goods
+given to the ministry and the poor; the vessels, vestures, tables,
+napkins, basons, &c., appointed for the public worship.
+
+_Sect._ 8. 2d. Times, places and things, which the church designeth for
+the worship of God, if they be made holy by consecration of them to holy
+political uses, then either they may be made holy by the holy uses to
+which they are to be applied, or else by the church's dedicating of them
+to those uses. They cannot be called holy by virtue of their application
+to holy uses; for then (as Ames argueth(475)) the air is sacred, because
+it is applied to the minister's speech whilst he is preaching, then is the
+light sacred which is applied to his eye in reading, then are his
+spectacles sacred which are used by him reading his text, &c. But neither
+yet are they holy, by virtue of the church's dedicating of them to those
+uses for which she appointed them; for the church hath no such power as by
+her dedication to make them holy. P. Martyr(476) condemneth the dedication
+or consecration (for those words he useth promiscuously) whereby the
+Papists hallow churches, and he declareth against it the judgment of our
+divines to be this, _Licere, imo jure pietatis requiri, ut in prima
+cujusque rei usurpatione gratias Deo agamus, ejusque bonitatem celebremus,
+&c. Collati boni religiosum ac sanctum usum poscamus._ This he opposeth to
+the popish dedication of temples and bells, as appeareth by these words:
+_Quanto sanius rectusque decernimus._ He implieth, therefore, that these
+things are only consecrated as every other thing is consecrated to us. Of
+this kind of consecration he hath given examples. _In libro Nehemiae
+dedicatio maeniam civitatis commemoratur, quae nil aliud fuit nisi quod
+muris urbis instauratis, populus una cum Levitis et sacerdotibus, nec non
+principibus, eo se contulit, ibique gratias Deo egerunt de maenibus
+reaedificatis, et justam civitatis usuram postularunt, qua item ratione
+prius quam sumamus cibum, nos etiam illum consecramus._ As the walls of
+Jerusalem then, and as our ordinary meat are consecrated, so are churches
+consecrated, and no otherwise can they be said to be dedicated, except one
+would use the word _dedication_, in that sense wherein it is taken, Deut.
+xx. 5; where Calvin turns the word _dedicavit_; Arias Montanus,
+_initiavit_; Tremelius, _caepit uti_. Of this sort of dedication, Gaspar
+Sanctius writeth thus: _Alia dedicatio est, non solum inter prophanos, sed
+etiam inter Haebreos usitata, quae nihil habet sacrum sed tantum est
+auspicatio aut initium operis, ad quod destinatur locus aut res cujus tunc
+primum libatur usus. Sic Nero Claudius dedicasse dicitur domum suam cum
+primum illam habitare caepit. Ita Suetonius in Nerone. Sic Pompeius
+dedicavit theatrum suum, cum primum illud publicis ludis et communibus
+usibus aperuit; de quo Cicero,_ lib. 2, epist. 1. Any other sort of
+dedicating churches we hold to be superstitious. Peter Waldus, of whom the
+Waldenses were named, is reported to have taught that the dedication of
+temples was but an invention of the devil.(477) And though churches be
+dedicated by preaching and praying, and by no superstition of sprinkling
+them with holy water, or using such magical rites, yet even these
+dedications, saith the Magdeburgians,(478) _ex Judaismo natae videntur
+sine nullo Dei praecepto_. There is, indeed, no warrant for such
+dedication of churches as is thought to make them holy. Bellarmine would
+warrant it by Moses' consecrating of the tabernacle, the altar, and the
+vessels of the same; but Hospinian answereth him:(479) _Mosis factum
+expressum habuit Dei mandatum: de consecrandis autem templis
+Christianorum, nullum uspiam in verbo Dei praeceptum extat, ipso quoque
+Bellarmino teste._ Whereupon he concludeth that this ceremony of
+consecrating or dedicating the churches of Christians, is not to be used
+after the example of Moses, who, in building and dedicating of the
+tabernacle, did follow nothing without God's express commandment. What I
+have said against the dedication of churches, holds good also against the
+dedication of altars; the table whereupon the elements of the body and
+blood of Christ are set, is not to be called holy; neither can they be
+commended who devised altars in the church, to be the seat of the Lord's
+body and blood, as if any table, though not so consecrated, could not as
+well serve the turn. And what though altars were used in the ancient
+church? Yet this custom _a Judaica, in ecclesiam Christi permanavit ac
+postea superstitioni materiam praebuit_, say the Magdeburgians.(480) Altars
+savour of nothing but Judaism, and the borrowing of altars from the Jews,
+hath made Christians both to follow their priesthood and their sacrifices.
+_Haec enim trio, scilicet sacerdos, altare, et sacrificium, sunt
+correlativa, ut ubi unum est, coetera duo adesse necesse sit_, saith
+Cornelius a Lapide.(481)
+
+_Sect._ 9. 3d. If some times, places and things, be made holy by the
+church's dedication or consecration of them to holy uses, then it
+followeth that other times, places and things, which are not so dedicated
+and consecrated by the church, howbeit they be applied to the same holy
+uses, yet are more profane, and less apt to divine worship, than those
+which are dedicated by the church. I need not insist to strengthen the
+inference of this conclusion from the principles of our opposites; for the
+most learned among them will not refuse to subscribe to it. Hooker
+teacheth us,(482) that the service of God, in places not sanctified as
+churches are, hath not in itself (mark _in itself_) such perfection of
+grace and comeliness, as when the dignity of the place which it wisheth
+for, doth concur; and that the very majesty and holiness of the place
+where God is worshipped, bettereth even our holiest and best actions. How
+much more soundly do we hold with J. Rainolds,(483) that unto us
+Christians, "no land is strange, no ground unholy,--every coast is Jewry,
+every town Jerusalem, and every house Sion,--and every faithful company,
+yea, every faithful body, a temple to serve God in." The contrary opinion
+Hospinian rejecteth as favouring Judaism,(484) _alligat enim religionem ad
+certa loca_. Whereas the presence of Christ among two or three gathered
+together in his name, maketh any place a church, even as the presence of a
+king with his attendants maketh any place a court. As of places, so of
+times, our opposites think most superstitiously. For of holidays Hooker
+saith thus,(485) "No doubt as God's extraordinary presence hath hallowed
+and sanctified certain places, so they are his extraordinary works that
+have truly and worthily advanced certain times, for which cause they ought
+to be with all men that honour God more holy than other days." What is
+this but popish superstition? For just so the Rhemists think that the
+times and places of Christ's nativity,(486) passion, burial, resurrection,
+and ascension, were made holy; and just so Bellarmine holdeth,(487) that
+Christ did consecrate the days of his nativity, passion, and resurrection,
+_eo quod nascens consecrarit praesepe, moriens crucem, resurgens
+sepulchrum_. Hooker hath been of opinion, that the holidays were so
+advanced above other days, by God's great and extraordinary works done
+upon them, that they should have been holier than other days, even albeit
+the church had not appointed them to be kept holy. Yet Bishop Lindsey
+would have us believe that they think them holy, only because of the
+church's consecration of them to holy political uses. But that now, at
+last, I may make it appear to all that have common sense, how falsely
+(though frequently) it is given forth by the Bishop, that holidays are
+kept by them only for order and policy, and that they are not so
+superstitious as to appropriate the worship to those days, or to observe
+them for mystery and as holier than other days:--
+
+_Sect._ 10. First, I require the Bishop to show us a difference betwixt
+the keeping of holidays by Formalists, and their keeping of the Lord's
+day; for upon holidays they enjoin a cessation from work, and a dedicating
+of the day to divine worship, even as upon the Lord's day. The Bishop
+allegeth five respects of difference,(488) but they are not true. _First_,
+he saith, that the Lord's day is commanded to be observed of necessity,
+for conscience of the divine ordinance as a day sanctified and blessed by
+God himself. _Ans._ 1. So have we heard from Hooker, that holidays are
+sanctified by God's extraordinary works; but because the Bishop dare not
+say so much, therefore I say, 2. This difference cannot show us that they
+observe holidays only for order and policy, and that they place no worship
+in the observing of them, as in the observing of the Lord's day (which is
+the point that we require), for worship is placed in the observing of
+human as well as of divine ordinances, otherwise worship hath never been
+placed in the keeping of Pharisaical and popish traditions. This way is
+worship placed in the keeping of holidays, when for conscience of an human
+ordinance, they are both kept as holy and thought necessary to be so kept.
+3. The Bishop contradicteth himself; for elsewhere he defendeth,(489) that
+the church hath power to change the Lord's day. _Secondly_, He giveth us
+this difference, that the Lord's day is observed as the Sabbath of
+Jehovah, and as a day whereon God himself did rest after the creation.
+_Ans._ 1. This is false of the Lord's day; for after the creation, God
+rested upon the seventh day, not upon the first. 2. Dr Downame saith,(490)
+that festival days also are to be consecrated as Sabbaths to the Lord.
+_Thirdly_, The Bishop tells us, that the Lord's day is observed in memory
+of the Lord's resurrection. _Ans._ He shall never make this good; for, we
+observe the Lord's day in memory of the whole work of redemption. 2. If it
+were so, this could make no difference; for just so Christmas is observed
+in memory of the Lord's nativity, Good Friday in memory of his passion,
+&c. His _fourth_ and _fifth_ respects of differences are certain mysteries
+in the Lord's day. But we shall see by and by how his fellow Formalists
+who are more ingenuous than himself, show us mysteries in the festival
+days also. Lastly, Albeit the Bishop hath told us that there is no worship
+appropriated unto the festival days, which may not be performed at any
+other time, yet this cannot with him make a difference betwixt them and
+the Lord's day; for in his epistle, which I have quoted, he declareth his
+judgment to be the same of the Lord's day, and teacheth us, that the
+worship performed on it is not, so appropriated to that time, but lawfully
+the same may be performed at any other convenient time, as the church
+shall think fit. Now, as the worship performed on the Lord's day is
+appropriated (in his judgment) to that time, so long as the church
+altereth it not, and no longer, just as much thinks he of the
+appropriating to festival days the worship performed on the same.
+
+_Sect._ 11. 2d. If the holidays be observed by Formalists only for order
+and policy, then they must say the church hath power to change them. But
+this power they take from the church, by saying that they are dedicated
+and consecrated to those holy uses to which they are applied. _Simul Deo
+dicatum non est ad usus humanos ulterius transferendum_, saith one of the
+popes.(491) And, by the dedication of churches, the founders surrender
+that right which otherwise they might have in them, saith one of the
+Formalists themselves.(492) If, then, the church hath dedicated holidays
+to the worship of God, then hath she denuded herself of all power to
+change them, or put them to another use: which were otherwise if holidays
+were appointed to be kept only for order and policy. Yea, farther, times
+and places which are applied to the worship of God, as circumstances only
+for outward order and policy, may be by a private Christian applied to
+civil use, for in so doing he breaketh not the ordinance of the church.
+For example, material churches are appointed to be the receptacles of
+Christian assemblies, and that only for such common commodity and decency
+which hath place as well in civil as in holy meetings, and not for any
+holiness conceived to be in them more than in other houses. Now, if I be
+standing in a churchyard when it raineth, may I not go into the church
+that I may be defended from the injury of the weather? If I must meet with
+certain men for putting order to some of my worldly affairs, and it fall
+out that we cannot conveniently meet in any part but in the church, may we
+not there keep our trust? A material church, then, may serve for a civil
+use the same way that it serveth to an holy use. And so, for times
+appointed for ordinary preaching upon week-days in great towns, may not I
+apply those times to a civil use when I cannot conveniently apply them to
+the use for which the church appointeth them? I trust our prelates shall
+say, I may, because they use to be otherwise employed than in divine
+worship during the times of weekly preaching. Now if holidays were
+commanded to be kept only for order and policy, they might be applied to
+another use as well as those ordinary times of weekly meetings in great
+towns, whereas we are required of necessity to keep them holy.
+
+_Sect._ 12. 3d. If the holidays be kept only for order and policy, why do
+they esteem some of them above others? Doth not Bishop Andrews call the
+feast of Easter the highest and greatest of our religion?(493) and doth
+not Bishop Lindsey himself, with Chrysostom, call the festival of Christ's
+nativity, _metropolim omnium festorum_?(494) By this reason doth
+Bellarmine prove(495) that the feasts of Christians are celebrated _non
+solum ratione ordinis et politiae, sed etiam mysterii_, because otherwise
+they should be all equal in celebrity, whereas Leo calls Easter _festum
+festorum_, and Nazianzen, _celebritatem celebritatum_.
+
+_Sect._ 13. 4. If the holidays be kept only for order and policy, then the
+sanctification of them should be placed _in ipso actuali externi cultus
+exercitio_.(496) But Hooker hath told us before, that they are made holy
+and worthily advanced above other days by God's extraordinary works
+wrought upon them. Whereupon it followeth, that as _Deus septimum
+sanctificavit vacatione sancta, et ordinatione ad usum sanctum_(497) so
+hath he made festival days no less holy in themselves, and that as the
+Sabbath was holy from the beginning, because of God's resting upon it, and
+his ordaining of it for an holy use, howbeit it had never been applied by
+men to the exercises of God's worship, even so festival days are holy,
+being advanced truly and worthily by the extraordinary works of God, and
+for this cause commended to all men that honour God to be holier with them
+than other days, albeit it should happen that by us they were never
+applied to an holy use. If Bishop Lindsey thinketh that all this toucheth
+not him, he may be pleased to remember that he himself hath
+confessed,(498) that the very presence of the festivity puts a man in mind
+of the mystery, howbeit he have not occasion to be present in the holy
+assembly. What order or policy is here, when a man being quiet in his
+parlour or cabinet, is made to remember of such a mystery on such a day?
+What hath external order and policy to do with the internal thoughts of a
+man's heart, to put in order the same?
+
+_Sect._ 14. 5th. By their fruits shall we know them. Look whether they
+give so much liberty to others, and take so much to themselves upon their
+holidays, for staying from the public worship and attending worldly
+business, as they do at the diets of weekly and ordinary preaching, yet
+they would make the simple believe that their holidays are only appointed
+to be kept as those ordinary times set apart for divine service on the
+week-days, nay, moreover, let it be observed whether or not they keep the
+festival days more carefully, and urge the keeping of them more earnestly
+than the Lord's own day. Those prelates that will not abase themselves to
+preach upon ordinary Sabbaths, think the high holidays worthy of their
+sermons. They have been also often seen to travel upon the Lord's day,
+whereas they hold it irreligion to travel upon an holiday. And whereas
+they can digest the common profanation of the Lord's day, and not
+challenge it, they cannot away with the not observing of their
+festivities.
+
+_Sect._ 15. 6th. By their words shall we judge them. Saith not Bishop
+Lindsey(499) that the five anniversary days are consecrate to the
+commemoration of our Saviour, his benefits being separate from all other
+ordinary works, and so made sacred and holidays? Will he say this much of
+ordinary times appointed for weekly preaching? I trow not. Dr Downame(500)
+holdeth that we are commanded, in the fourth commandment, to keep the
+feasts of Christ's nativity, passion, resurrection, ascension, and
+Pentecost, and that these feasts are to be consecrated as sabbaths to the
+Lord. Bishop Andrews, a man of the greatest note amongst our opposites,
+affordeth us here plenty of testimonies of the proof of the point in hand,
+namely, that the anniversary festival days are kept for mystery, and as
+holier than other days. Simon on Psal. lxxxv. 10, 11, he saith of
+Christmas, That mercy and truth, righteousness and peace, "of all the days
+of the year meet most kindly on this day." Sermon on Psal. ii. 7, he saith
+of the same day, That of all other "_hodies_, we should not let slip the
+_hodie_ of this day, whereon the law is most kindly preached, so it will
+be most kindly practised of all others." Sermon on Heb. xii. 2, he saith
+of Good Friday, "Let us now turn to him, and beseech him by the sight of
+this day." Sermon on 1 Cor. v. 7, 8, he saith of the keeping of the
+Christian passover upon Easter, That then "it is best for us to do it, it
+is most kindly to do it, most like to please Christ, and to prosper with
+us. And, indeed, if at any time we will do it, _quando pascha nisi in
+pascha, &c._, so that without any more ado, the season pleadeth for this
+effectually," &c. Sermon on Col. iii. 1, he saith, That "there is no day
+in the year so fit for a Christian to rise with Christ, and seek the
+things above, as Easter day." Sermon on Job. ii. 19, he saith, That "the
+act of receiving Christ's body is at no time so proper, so in season, as
+this very day." Sermon on 1 Cor. xi. 16, he tells us out of Leo, "This is
+a peculiar that Easter day hath, that on it all the whole church obtaineth
+remission of their sins." Sermon on Acts ii. 1-3, he saith of the feast of
+Pentecost, That "of all days we shall not go away from the Holy Ghost
+empty on this day, it is _dies donorum_ his giving day." Sermon on Eph.
+iv. 30, he saith, "This is the Holy Ghost's day, and not for that
+originally so it was, but for that it is to be intended, ever he will do
+his own chief work upon his own chief feast, and _opus diei_, the day's
+work upon the day itself." Sermon on Psal. lxviii. 18, he saith, That
+"love will be best and soonest wrought by the sacrament of love upon
+Pentecost, the feast of love." Sermon on Acts x. 34, 35, he saith, That
+the receiving of the Holy Ghost in a more ample measure is _opus diei_,
+"the proper work of this day." Sermon on James i. 16, 17, he calls the
+gift of the Holy Ghost the gift of the day of Pentecost, and tells us that
+"the Holy Ghost, the most perfect gift of all, this day was, and any day
+may be, but chiefly this day, will be given to any that will desire."
+Sermon on Luke iv. 18, he saith of the same feast, That "because of the
+benefit that fell on this time, the time itself it fell on, is, and cannot
+be but acceptable, even _eo nomine_, that at such a time such a benefit
+happened to us." Much more of this stuff I might produce out of this
+prelate's holiday sermons,(501) which I supersede as more tedious than
+necessary; neither yet will I stay here to confute the errors of those and
+such like sentences of his; for my purpose is only to prove against Bishop
+Lindsey, that the festival days, whereabout we dispute, are not observed
+as circumstances of worship, for order and policy, but that, as the chief
+parts of God's worship are placed in the celebration and keeping of the
+same, so are they kept and celebrated most superstitiously, as having
+certain sacred and mystical significations, and as holier in themselves
+than other days, because they were sanctified above other days by the
+extraordinary works and great benefits of God which happened upon them; so
+that the worship performed on them is even appropriated to them; all which
+is more than evident from those testimonies which I have in this place
+collected.
+
+And, finally, the author of _The Nullity of Perth Assembly_(502) proveth
+this point forcibly: Doth not Hooker say "That the days of public
+memorials should be clothed with the outward robes of holiness? They
+allege for the warrant of anniversary festivities, the ancients, who call
+them sacred and mystical days. If they were instituted only for order and
+policy, that the people might assemble to religious exercises, wherefore
+is there but one day appointed betwixt the passion and the resurrection;
+forty days betwixt the resurrection and ascension; ten betwixt the
+ascension and Pentecost? Wherefore follow we the course of the moon, as
+the Jews did, in our moveable feasts? &c. Wherefore is there not a certain
+day of the month kept for Easter as well as for the nativity?" &c. That
+which is here alleged out of Hooker and the ancients, Bishop Lindsey
+passeth quite over it, and neither inserts nor answers it. As touching
+those demands which tie him as so many Gordian knots, because he cannot
+unloose them, he goeth about to break them, telling us,(503) that they
+order these things so for unity with the catholic church. This is even as
+some natural philosophers, who take upon them to give a reason and cause
+for all things in nature, when they can find no other, they flee to
+_sympathia physica_. When it is asked, wherefore the loadstone doth
+attract iron rather than other metal? they answer, that the cause thereof
+is _sympathia physica inter magnetem et ferrum_. With such kind of
+etymology doth the Bishop here serve us; yet peradventure he might have
+given us another cause. If so, my retractation is, that if he be excused
+one way, he must be accused another way; and if he be blameless of
+ignorance, he is blameworthy for dissimulation. The true causes why those
+things are so ordered, we may find in Bishop Andrew's sermons, which I
+have made use of in handling this argument. For example,(504) the reason
+why there is but one day betwixt the passion and the resurrection, is,
+because that Jonas was but one day in the whale's belly, and Christ but
+one day in the bosom of the earth; for in their going thither he sets out
+Good Friday; in their being there, Easter eve; in their coming thence,
+Easter day. As for the fifty days betwixt Easter and Pentecost, he
+saith,(505) "Fifty is the number of the jubilee; which number agreeth well
+with this feast, the feast of Pentecost;--what the one in years, the other
+in days;--so that this is the jubilee as it were of the year, or the yearly
+memory of the year of jubilee: that, the pentecost of years; this, the
+jubilee of days." In the end of the same sermon, he tells us the reason
+why there are ten days appointed betwixt the ascension and Pentecost. "The
+feast of jubilee (saith he) began ever after the high priest had offered
+his sacrifice, and had been in the _sancta sanctorum_, as this jubilee of
+Christ also took place from his entering into the holy places, made
+without hands, after his propitiatory sacrifice, offered up for the quick
+and the dead, and for all yet unborn, at Easter. And it was the tenth day;
+and this now is the tenth day since." He hath told us also why there is
+not a certain day of the month appointed for Easter,(506) as there is for
+the nativity, namely, because the fast of Lent must end with that high
+feast, according to the prophecy of Zechariah. Wherefore I conclude,
+_aliquid mysterii alunt_, and so _aliquid monstri_ too.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE UNLAWFUL BECAUSE THEY ARE MONUMENTS OF BY-PAST
+IDOLATRY, WHICH NOT BEING NECESSARY TO BE RETAINED, SHOULD BE UTTERLY
+ABOLISHED, BECAUSE OF THEIR IDOLATROUS ABUSES: ALL WHICH IS PARTICULARLY
+MADE GOOD OF KNEELING.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. I have here proved the ceremonies to be superstitious; now I
+will prove them to be idolatrous. These are different arguments; for every
+idolatry is superstition, but every superstition is not idolatry, as is
+rightly by some distinguished.(507) As for the idolatry of the
+controverted ceremonies, I will prove that they are thrice idolatrous: 1.
+_Reductive_, because they are monuments of by-past idolatry;
+2._Participative_, because they are badges of present idolatry;
+3._Formaliter_, because they are idols themselves.
+
+First, then, they are idolatrous, because having been notoriously abused
+to idolatry heretofore, they are the detestable and accursed monuments,
+which give no small honour to the memory of that by-past idolatry which
+should lie buried in hell. Dr Burges(508) reckons for idolatrous all
+ceremonies devised and used in and to the honouring of an idol, whether
+properly or by interpretation such. "Of which sort (saith he) were all the
+ceremonies of the pagans, and not a few of the Papists." If an opposite,
+writing against us, be forced to acknowledge this much, one may easily
+conjecture what enforcing reason we have to double out our point. The
+argument in hand I frame thus:--
+
+All things and rites which have been notoriously abused to idolatry, if
+they be not such as either God or nature hath made to be of a necessary
+use, should be utterly abolished and purged away from divine worship, in
+such sort that they may not be accounted nor used by us as sacred things
+or rites pertaining to the same.
+
+But the cross, surplice, kneeling in the act of receiving the communion,
+&c., are things and rites, &c., and are not such as either God or nature,
+&c.
+
+Therefore they should be utterly abolished, &c.
+
+_Sect._ 2. As for the proposition I shall first explain it and then prove
+it. I say, "all things and rites," for they are alike forbidden, as I
+shall show. I say, "which have been notoriously abused to idolatry,"
+because if the abuse be not known, we are blameless for retaining the
+things and rites which have been abused. I say, "if they be not such as
+either God or nature hath made to be of a necessary use," because if they
+be of a necessary use, either through God's institution, as the
+sacraments, or through nature's law, as the opening of our mouths to speak
+(for when I am to preach or pray publicly, nature makes it necessary that
+I open my mouth to speak audibly and articularly), then the abuse cannot
+take away the use. I say, "they may not be used by us as sacred things,
+rites pertaining to divine worship," because without the compass of
+worship they may be used to a natural or civil purpose. If I could get no
+other meat to eat than the consecrated host, which Papists idolatrise in
+the circumgestation of it, I might lawfully eat it; and if I could get no
+other clothes to put on than the holy garments wherein a priest hath said
+mass, I might lawfully wear them. Things abused to idolatry are only then
+unlawful when they are used no otherwise than religiously, and as things
+sacred.
+
+_Sect._ 3. The proposition thus explained is confirmed by these five
+proofs: 1. God's own precept,--"Ye shall defile also the covering of thy
+graven images of silver, and the ornaments of thy molten images of gold:
+thou shalt cast them away as a menstruous cloth, thou shalt say unto it,
+Get thee hence," Isa. xxx. 22. The covering of the idol here spoken of,
+Gaspar Sanctus(509) rightly understandeth to be that, _quo aut induebantur
+simulacra Gentilico ritu, aut bracteas quibus ligneae imagines integantur,
+aut quo homines idolis sacrificaturi amiciebantur_; so that the least
+appurtenances of idols are to be avoided. When the apostle Jude(510) would
+have us to hate garments spotted with the flesh, his meaning is,
+_detestandam essevel superficiem ipsam mali sive peccati, quam tunicae
+appellatione subinnuere videtur_, as our own. Rolloke hath observed,(511)
+If the very covering of an idol be forbidden, what shall be thought of
+other things which are not only spotted, but irrecoverably polluted with
+idols? Many such precepts were given to Israel, as "Ye shall destroy their
+altars, break their images, and cut down their groves," Exod. xxxiv. 13.
+"The graven images of their gods shall ye burn with fire: thou shalt not
+desire the silver nor gold that is on them, nor take it unto thee, lest
+thou be snared therein; for it is an abomination to the Lord thy God,"
+Deut. vii. 25, 26. Read to the same purpose, Num. xxxiii. 52; Deut. vii.
+5; xii. 2, 3.
+
+Secondly, God hath not only by his precepts commanded us to abolish all
+the relics of idolatry, but by his promises also manifested unto us how
+acceptable service this should be to him. There is a command "That the
+Israelites should destroy the Canaanites," Num. xxxiii. 52, _evertantque
+res omnes idololatricas ipsorum cui mandato_, saith Junius,(512)
+_subjicitur sua promissio_, namely, that the Lord would give them the
+promised land, and they should dispossess the inhabitants thereof, ver.
+53; yea, there is a promise of remission and reconciliation to this work:
+"By this shall the iniquity of Jacob be purged, and this is all the fruit
+to take away his sin; when he maketh all the stones of the altar as
+chalk-stones that are beaten asunder, the groves and images shall not
+stand up." Isa. xxvii. 9.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Thirdly, The churches of Pergamos and Thyatira are reproved for
+suffering the use of idolothites, Rev. ii. 14-20, where the eating of
+things sacrificed to idols is condemned as idolatry and spiritual
+adultery, as Perkins(513) noteth. Paybody, therefore, is greatly mistaken
+when he thinks that meats sacrificed to idols, being the good creatures of
+God, were allowed by the Lord, out of the case of scandal, notwithstanding
+of idolatrous pollution; for the eating of things sacrificed to idols is
+reproved as idolatry, Rev. ii.; and the eating of such things is condemned
+as a fellowship with devils, 1 Cor. x. 20. Now idolatry and fellowship
+with devils, I suppose, are unlawful, though no scandal should follow upon
+them. And whereas he thinks meats sacrificed to idols to be lawful enough
+out of the case of scandal, for this reason, because they are the good
+creatures of God, he should have considered better the Apostle's mind
+concerning such idolothites; which Zanchius(514) setteth down thus: _Verum
+est, per se haec nihil __ sunt, sed respectu eorum quibut immolantur
+aliquid sunt; quia per hoec illis quibus immolantur, nos consociamur. Qui
+isti? Daemones._ For our better understanding of this matter, we must
+distinguish two sorts of idolothites, both which we find, 1 Cor. x. Of the
+one, the Apostle speaks from the 14th verse of that chapter to the 23d; of
+the other, from the 23d verse to the end. This is Beza's distinction in
+his Annotations on that chapter. Of the first sort, he delivers the
+Apostle's mind thus: That as Christians have their holy banquets, which
+are badges of their communion both with Christ and among themselves; and
+as the Israelites, by their sacrifices, did seal their copulation in the
+same religion, so also idolaters, _cum suis idolis aut potius daemonibus,
+solemnibusillis epulis copulantur_. So that this sort of idolothites were
+eaten in temples, and public solemn banquets, which were dedicated to the
+honour of idols, 1 Cor. viii. 10. Cartwright showeth(515) that the Apostle
+is comparing the table of the Lord with the table of idolaters; whereupon
+it followeth, that as we use the Lord's table religiously, so that table
+of idolaters of which the Apostle speaketh, had state in the idolatrous
+worship like that feast, Num. xxv. 3; _quod in honorem falsorum Deorum
+celebrabatur_, saith Calvin.(516) This first sort of idolothites
+Pareus(517) calls the sacrifices of idols; and from such, he saith, the
+Apostle dissuadeth by this argument, _Participare epulis idolorum, est
+idololatria_. Of the second sort of idolothites, the Apostle begins to
+speak in ver. 23. The Corinthians moved a question, Whether they might
+lawfully eat things sacrificed to idols? _In privatis conviviis_, saith
+Pareus.(518) The Apostle resolves them that _domi in privato convictu_,
+they might eat them, except it were in the case of scandal; thus
+Beza.(519) The first sort of idolothites are meant of Rev. ii., as Beza
+there noteth; and of this sort must we understand Augustine(520) to mean
+whilst he saith, that it were better _mori fame, quam idolothites vesci_.
+These sorts are simply and in themselves unlawful. And if meats sacrificed
+to idols be so unlawful, then much more such things and rites as have not
+only been sacrificed and destinated to the honour of idols (for this is
+but one kind of idolatrous abuse), but also of a long time publicly and
+solemnly employed in the worshipping of idols, and deeply defiled with
+idolatry, much more, I say, are they unlawful to be applied to God's most
+pure and holy worship, and therein used by us publicly and solemnly, so
+that the world may see us conforming and joining ourselves unto idolaters.
+
+_Sect._ 5. Fourthly, I fortify my proposition by approved examples; and,
+first, we find that Jacob, Gen. xxxv. 4, did not only abolish out of his
+house the idols, but their ear-rings also, because they were
+_superstitionis insignia_, as Calvin; _res ad idololatriam pertinentes_,
+as Junius; _monilia idolis consecrata_, as Pareus calleth them; all
+writing upon that place. We have also the example of Elijah, 1 Kings
+xviii. 30: he would by no means offer upon Baal's altar, but would needs
+repair the Lord's altar, though this should hold the people the longer in
+expectation. This he did, in P. Martyr's judgment, because he thought it a
+great indignity to offer sacrifice to the Lord upon the altar of Baal;
+whereupon Martyr(521) reprehendeth those who, in administering the true
+supper of the Lord, _uti velint Papisticis vestibus et instrumentis_.
+Further, we have the example of Jehu, who is commended for the destroying
+of Baal out of Israel, with his image, his house, and his very vestments,
+2 Kings x. 22-28. And what example more considerable than that of
+Hezekiah, who not only abolished such monuments of idolatry as at their
+first institution were but men's invention, but brake down also the brazen
+serpent (though originally set up at God's own command), when once he saw
+it abused to idolatry? 2 Kings xviii. 4. This deed of Hezekiah Pope
+Steven(522) doth greatly praise, and professeth that it is set before us
+for our imitation, that when our predecessors have wrought some things
+which might have been without fault in their time, and afterward they are
+converted into error and superstition, they may be quickly destroyed by us
+who come after them. Farellus saith,(523) that princes and magistrates
+should learn by this example of Hezekiah what they should do with those
+significant rites of men's devising which have turned to superstition.
+Yea, the Bishop of Winchester acknowledgeth,(524) that whatsoever is taken
+up at the injunction of men, when it is drawn to superstition, cometh
+under the compass of the brazen serpent, and is to be abolished; and he
+excepteth nothing from this example but only things of God's own
+prescribing. Moreover, we have the example of good Josiah, 2 Kings xxiii.,
+for he did not only destroy the houses, and the high places of Baal, but
+his vessels also, and his grove, and his altars; yea, the horses and
+chariots which had been given to the sun. The example also of penitent
+Manasseh, who not only overthrew the strange gods, but their altars too, 2
+Chron. xxxiii. 15. And of Moses, the man of God, who was not content to
+execute vengeance on the idolatrous Israelites, except he should also
+utterly destroy the monument of their idolatry, Exod. xxxii. 17-20.
+Lastly, we have the example of Daniel, who would not defile himself with a
+portion of the king's meat, Dan. i. 8; because, saith Junius,(525) it was
+converted in _usum idololatricum_; for at the banquets of the Babylonians
+and other Gentiles, _erant praemessa sive praemissa, quoe diis
+proemittebantur_, they used to consecrate their meat and drink to idols,
+and to invocate the names of their idols upon the same, so that their meat
+and drink fell under the prohibition of idolothites. This is the reason
+which is given by the most part of the interpreters for Daniel's fearing
+to pollute himself with the king's meat and wine; and it hath also the
+approbation of a Papist.(526)
+
+_Sect._ 6. Fifthly, Our proposition is backed with a twofold reason, for
+things which have been notoriously abused to idolatry should be abolished:
+1. Quia _monent. Quia movent._ First, then, they are monitory, and
+preserve the memory of idols; _monumentum_ in good things is both
+_monimentum_ and _munimentum_; but _monumentum_ in evil things (such as
+idolatry) is only _monimentum_, which _monet mentem_, to remember upon
+such things as ought not to be once named among saints, but should lie
+buried in the eternal darkness of silent oblivion. Those relics therefore
+of idolatry, _quibus quasi monumentis posteritas admoneatur_ (as Wolphius
+rightly saith(527)), are to be quite defaced and destroyed, because they
+serve to honour the memory of cursed idols. God would not have so much as
+the name of an idol to be remembered among his people, but commanded to
+destroy their names as well as themselves, Exod. xxiii. 13; Deut. xii. 3;
+Josh. xxiii. 7; whereby we are admonished, as Calvin saith,(528) how
+detestable idolatry is before God, _cujus memoriam vult penitus deleri, ne
+posthac ullum ejus vestigium appareat_: yea, he requireth,(529) _eorum
+omnium memoriam deleri, quoe semeldicata sunt idolis_. If Mordecai would
+not give his countenance, Esth. iii. 2, nor do any reverence to a living
+monument of that nation whose name God had ordained to be blotted out from
+under heaven, much less should we give connivance, and far less
+countenance, but least of all reverence, Deut. xxv. 19, to the dead and
+dumb monuments of those idols which God hath devoted to utter destruction,
+with all their naughty appurtenances, so that he will not have their names
+to be once mentioned or remembered again. But, secondly, _movent_ too;
+such idolothous remainders move us to turn back to idolatry. For _usu
+compertum habemus, superstitiones etiam postquam explosoe essent, si qua
+relicta fuissent earum monumenta, cum memoriam sui ipsarum apud homines,
+tum id tandem ut revocerantur obtinuisse_, saith Wolphius,(530) who
+hereupon thinks it behoveful to destroy _funditus_ such vestiges of
+superstition, for this cause, if there were no more: _ut et aspirantibus
+ad revocandam idololatriam spes frangatur, et res novas molientibus ansa
+pariter ac materia proeripiatur_. God would have Israel to overthrow all
+idolatrous monuments, lest thereby they should be snared, Deut. vii. 25;
+xii. 30. And if the law command to cover a pit, lest an ox or an ass
+should fall therein, Exod. xxi. 23, shall we suffer a pit to be open
+wherein the precious souls of men and women, which all the world cannot
+ransom, are likely to fall? Did God command to make a battlement for the
+roof of a house, and that for the safety of men's bodies, Deut. xxii. 8,
+and shall we not only not put up a battlement, or object some bar for the
+safety of men's souls, but also leave the way slippery and full of snares?
+Read we not that the Lord, who knew what was in man, and saw how propense
+he was to idolatry, did not only remove out of his people's way all such
+things as might any way allure or induce them to idolatry (even to the
+cutting off the names of the idols out of the land, Zech. xiii. 2), but
+also hedge up their way with thorns that they might not find their paths,
+nor overtake their idol gods, when they should seek after them? Hos. ii.
+6, 7. And shall we by the very contrary course not only not hedge up the
+way of idolatry with thorns, which may stop and stay such as have an
+inclination aiming forward, but also lay before them the inciting and
+enticing occasions which add to their own propension, such delectation as
+spurreth forward with a swift facility?
+
+_Sect._ 7. Thus, having both explained and confirmed the proposition of
+our present argument, I will make my next for the confutation of the
+answers which our opposites devise to elude it. And, First, They tell us,
+that it is needless to abolish utterly things and rites which the Papists
+have abused to idolatry and superstition, and that it is enough to purge
+them from the abuse, and to restore them again to their right use. Hence
+Saravia(531) will not have _pium crucis usum_ to be abolished _cum abusu_,
+but holds it enough that the abuse and superstition be taken away. Dr
+Forbesse's answer is,(532) that not only things instituted by God are not
+to be taken away for the abuse of them, but farther, _neque res medioe ab
+hominibus prudenter introductoe, propter sequentem abusum semper tollendoe
+sunt. Abusi sunt Papistoe templis, et oratoriis, et cathedris, et sacris
+vasis, et campanis, et benedictione matrimoniali; nec tamen res istas
+censuerunt prudentes reformatores abjiciendas. Ans._ 1. Calvin,(533)
+answering that which Cassander allegeth out of an Italian writer, _abusu
+non tolli bonum usum_, he admits it only to be true in things which are
+instituted by God himself, not so in things ordained by men, for the very
+use of such things or rites as have no necessary use in God's worship, and
+which men have devised only at their own pleasure, is taken away by
+idolatrous abuse. _Pars tutior_ here, is to put them wholly away, and
+there is by a great deal more danger in retaining than in removing them.
+2. The proofs which I have produced (or the proposition about which now we
+debate,) do not only infer that things and rites which have been
+notoriously abused to idolatry should be abolished, in case they be not
+restored to a right use, but simply and absolutely that in any wise they
+are to be abolished. God commanded to say to the covering, and the
+ornaments of idols, "Get you hence," Isa. xxx. 22. It is not enough they
+be purged from the abuse, but _simpliciter_ they themselves must pack them
+and be gone. How did Jacob with the ear-rings of the idols; Elijah with
+Baal's altar; Jehu with his vestments; Josiah with his houses; Manasseh
+with his altars; Moses with the golden calf; Joshua with the temples of
+Canaan; Hezekiah with the brazen serpent? Did they retain the things
+themselves, and only purge them from the abuse? Belike, if these our
+opposites had been their councillors, they had advised them to be
+contented with such a moderation; yet we see they were better counselled
+when they destroyed utterly the things themselves, whereby we know that
+they were of the same mind with us, and thought that things abused to
+idolatry, if they have no necessary use, are far better away than a-place.
+Did Daniel refuse Bel's meat because it was not restored to the right use?
+Nay, if that had been all, it might have been quickly helped, and the meat
+sanctified by the word of God and prayer. Finally, Were the churches of
+Pergamos and Thyatira reproved because they did not restore things
+sacrificed to idols to their right use? Or, were they not rather reproved
+for having anything at all to do with the things themselves?
+
+_Sect._ 8. As for that which Dr Forbesse objecteth to us, we answer, that
+temples, places of prayer, chairs, vessels, and bells, are of a necessary
+use, by the light and guidance of nature itself; and matrimonial
+benediction is necessary by God's institution, Gen. i. 28; so that all
+those examples do except themselves from the argument in hand. But the
+Doctor(534) intendeth to bring those things within the category of things
+indifferent; and to this purpose he allegeth, that it is indifferent to
+use this or that place for a temple, or a place of prayer; also to use
+these vessels, and bells, or others. And of matrimonial benediction to be
+performed by a pastor, he saith there is nothing commanded in Scripture.
+_Ans._ Though it be indifferent to choose this place, &c., also to use
+these vessels or other vessels, &c.; yet the Doctor, I trust, will not
+deny that temples, houses of prayer, vessels and bells, are of a necessary
+use (which exempteth them from the touch of our present argument);
+whereas, beside that it is not necessary to kneel in the communion in this
+place more than in that place, neither to keep the feast of Christ's
+nativity, passion, &c. upon these days more than upon other days, &c., the
+things themselves are not necessary in their kind; and it is not necessary
+to keep any festival day, nor to kneel at all in the act of receiving the
+communion. There is also another respect which hindereth temples, vessels,
+&c. from coming within the compass of this our argument, but neither doth
+it agree to the controverted ceremonies. Temples, houses of prayer,
+vessels for the ministration of the sacraments, and bells, are not used by
+us in divine worship as things sacred, or as holier than other houses,
+vessels, and bells; but we use them only for natural necessity,--partly for
+that common decency which hath no less place in the actions of civil than
+of sacred assemblies; yea, in some cases they may be applied to civil
+uses, as hath been said;(535) whereas the controverted ceremonies are
+respected and used as sacred rites, and as holier than any circumstance
+which is alike common to civil and sacred actions, neither are they used
+at all out of the case of worship. We see now a double respect wherefore
+our argument inferreth not the necessity of abolishing and destroying such
+temples, vessels, and bells, as have been abused to idolatry, viz. because
+it can neither be said that they are not things necessary, nor yet that
+they are things sacred.
+
+_Sect._ 9. Nevertheless (to add this by the way), howbeit for those
+reasons the retaining and using of temples which have been polluted with
+idols be not in itself unlawful, yet the retaining of every such temple is
+not ever necessary, but sometimes it is expedient, for farther extirpation
+of superstition, to demolish and destroy some such temples as have been
+horribly abused to idolatry, Calvin also(536) and Zanchius(537) do plainly
+insinuate. Whereby I mean to defend (though not as in itself necessary,
+yet as expedient _pro tunc_,) that which the reformers of the church of
+Scotland did in casting down some of those churches which had been
+consecrate to popish idols, and of a long time polluted with idolatrous
+worship. As on the one part the reformers (not without great probability)
+feared, that so long as these churches were not made even with the ground,
+the memory of that superstition, whereunto they had been employed and
+accustomed, should have been in them preserved, and, with some sort of
+respect, recognised; so, on the other part, they saw it expedient to
+demolish them, for strengthening the hands of such as adhered to the
+reformation, for putting Papists out of all hope of the re-entry of
+Popery, and for hedging up the way with thorns, that the
+idolatrously-minded might not find their paths. And since the pulling down
+of those churches wanted neither this happy intent not happy event, I must
+say that the bitter invectives given forth against it, by some who carry a
+favourable eye to the pompous bravery of the Romish whore, and have
+deformed too much of that which was by them reformed, are to be detested
+by all such as wish the eternal exile of idolatrous monuments out of the
+Lord's land, yet let these Momus-like spirits understand that their
+censorious verdicts do also reflect upon those ancient Christians of whom
+we read,(538) that with their own hands they destroyed the temples of
+idols, and upon Chrysostom, who stirred up some monks, and sent them into
+Phoenicia, together with workmen, and sustained them on the expences and
+charges of certain godly women, that they might destroy the temples of
+idols, as the Magdeburgians(539) have marked out of Theodoret, likewise
+upon them of the religion in France, of whom Thuanus recordeth, that
+_templa confractis ac disjectis statuis et altaribus, expilaverant_,
+lastly, upon foreign divines,(540) who teach, that not only _idola_, but
+_idolia_ also, and _omnia idololatria instrumenta_ should be abolished.
+Moreover, what was it else but reason's light which made Cambyses to fear
+that the superstition of Egypt could not be well rooted out if the temples
+wherein it was seated were not taken away; so that _offensus
+superstitionibus AEgyptiorum, Apis coeterorumque Deorum oedes dirui jubet:
+ad Ammonis quoque nobilissimum templum expugnandum, exercitum mittit_,
+saith Justinus.(541) And is not the danger of retaining idolatrous
+churches thus pointed at by P. Martyr: _Curavit_, &c. "Jehu (saith
+he(542)) took care to have the temples of Baal overthrown, lest they
+should return any more to their wonted use. Wherefore, it appears, that
+many do not rightly, who, having embraced the gospel of the Son of God,
+yet, notwithstanding, keep still the instruments of Popery. And they have
+far better looked to piety who have taken care to have popish images,
+statues and ornaments, utterly cut off; for, as we read in the
+ecclesiastical histories, Constantine the Great, after he had given his
+name to Christ, by an edict provided and took order that the temples of
+the idols might be closed and shut up; but, because they did still remain,
+Julian the Apostate did easily open and unlock them, and thereafter did
+prostitute the idols of old superstition to be worshipped in them,--which
+Theodosius, the best and commended prince, animadverting, commanded to
+pull them down, lest they should again any more be restored." But because
+I suppose no sober spirit will deny that sometimes, and in some cases, it
+may be expedient to rase and pull down some temples polluted with idols,
+where other temples may be had to serve sufficiently the assemblies of
+Christian congregations (which is all I plead for), therefore I leave this
+purpose and return to Dr Forbesse.
+
+_Sect._ 10. As touching matrimonial benediction, it is also exempted out
+of the compass of our present argument, because through divine institution
+it hath a necessary use, as we have said. And though the Doctor, to make
+it appear that a pastor's performing of the same is a thing indifferent,
+allegeth, that in Scripture there is nothing commanded thereanent; yet
+plain it is from Scripture itself, that matrimonial benediction ought to
+be given by a pastor; for God hath commanded his ministers to bless his
+people, Num. vi., which by just analogy belongeth to the ministers of the
+gospel; neither is there any ground for making herein a difference betwixt
+them and the minister of the law, but we must conceive the commandment to
+tie both alike to the blessing of God's people. Unto which ministerial
+duty of blessing, because no such limits can be set as may exclude
+matrimonial blessing, therefore they are bound to the performance of it
+also. And if farther we consider, that the duty of blessing was performed
+by the minister of the Lord, Heb. vi. 7, even before the law of Moses, we
+are yet more confirmed to think, that the blessing of the people was not
+commanded in the law as a thing peculiar and proper to the Levitical
+priesthood, but as a moral and perpetual duty belonging to the Lord's
+ministers for ever. Wherefore, notwithstanding of any abuse of matrimonial
+benediction among Papists, yet, forasmuch as it hath a necessary use in
+the church, and may not (as the controverted ceremonies may) be well
+spared, it is manifest that it cometh not under the respect and account of
+those things whereof our argument speaketh.
+
+_Sect._ 11. Lastly, Whereas the Doctor would bear his reader in hand, that
+in the judgment of wise reformators, even such things as have been brought
+in use by men only, without God's institution, are not to be ever taken
+away, for the abuse which followeth upon them; let reformators speak for
+themselves: _Nos quoque priscos ritus, quibus indifferenter uti licet,
+quia verbo Dei consentanei sunt, non rejicimus; modo ne superstitio et
+pravus abusus eos abolere cogat_.(543) This was the judgment of the wisest
+reformators,--that rights which were both ancient and lawful, and agreeable
+to God's word, were notwithstanding of necessity to be abolished, because
+of their superstition and wicked abuse.
+
+_Sect._ 12. Secondly, Our opposites answer us, that beside the purging of
+things and rites abused by idolaters from the idolatrous pollution, and
+the restoring of them to a right use, preaching and teaching against the
+superstition and abuse which hath followed upon them, is another means to
+avoid that harm which we fear to ensue upon the retaining of them. _Ans._
+1. This is upon as good ground pretended for the keeping of images in
+churches: _At inquiunt statim, docemus has imagines non esse adorandas.
+Quasi vero_, saith Zanchius,(544) _non idem olim fecerit diligentius Deus,
+per Mosen et prophetas, quam nos faciamus. Cur igitur etiam volebat tolli
+imagines omnes? quia non satis est verbo docere non esse faciendum malum;
+sed tollenda etiam sunt malorum offendicula, irritamenta, causoe,
+occasiones._ It is not enough, with the scribes and Pharisees, to teach
+out of Moses' chair what the people should do, but all occasions, yea,
+appearances of evil, are to be taken out of their sight. _Efficacious enim
+et plus movent, quae in oculos quam quae in aures incidunt. Potuerat et
+Hezekias populum monere, ne serpentem adorarent, sed muluit confringere et
+penitus e conspectu auferre; et rectius fecit,_ saith one well to this
+purpose.(545) 2. Experience hath taught to how little purpose such
+admonitions do serve. Calvin,(546) writing to the Lord Protector of
+England of some popish ceremonies which did still remain in that church
+after the reformation of the same, desireth that they may be abolished,
+because of their former abuse, in time of Popery. _Quid enim_, saith he,
+_illae ceremoniae aliud fuerunt, quam totidem lenocinia quae miseras
+animas ad malum perducerent?_ &c. But because he saw that some might
+answer that which our Formalists answer now to us, and say, it were enough
+to warn and teach men that they abuse not these ceremonies, and that the
+abolishing of these ceremonies themselves were not necessary; therefore
+immediately he subjoineth these words: _Jam si de cautione agitur,
+monebuntur homines scilicet, ne ad illas nunc impingant, &c. Quis tamen
+non videt obdurari ipsos nihilominus, nihil ut infelici illa cautione
+obtineri possit._ Whereupon he concludes, that if such ceremonies were
+suffered to remain, this should be a means to nourish a greater hardness
+and confirmation in evil, and a veil drawn, so that the sincere doctrine
+which is propounded should not be admitted as it ought to be. In another
+epistle to Cranmer,(547) archbishop of Canterbury, he complaineth that
+external superstitions were so corrected in the church of England, _ut
+residui maneant innumeri surculi, qui assidue pullulent_. And what good,
+then, was done by their admonitions, whereby they did, in some sort, send
+the reviving twigs of old superstition, since forasmuch as they were not
+wholly eradicate, they did still shoot forth again? If a man should dig a
+pit by the way-side, for some commodity of his own, and thou admonish the
+travellers to take heed to themselves, if they go that way in the darkness
+of the night, who would hold him excusable? How then shall they be excused
+who dig a most dangerous pit, which is like to ruin many souls, and yet
+will have us to think that they are blameless, for that they warn men to
+beware of it?
+
+_Sect._ 13. Thirdly, we are told that if these answers which our opposites
+give get no place, then shall we use nothing at all which hath been used
+by idolaters, and by consequence, neither baptism nor the Lord's supper.
+But let Zanchius answer for us,(548) that these things are by themselves
+necessary, so that it is enough they be purged from the abuse. And
+elsewhere(549) he resolveth, that things which are by themselves both good
+and necessary, may not for any abuse be put away. _Si vero res sint
+adiaphorae sua natura et per legem Dei, eoque tales quae citra jacturam
+salutis omitti possunt, etiam si ad bonos usus initio fuerunt institutae;
+si tamen postea videamus illas in abusus pernitiosos esse conversas;
+pietas in Deum, et charitas erga proximum, postulant ut tollantur, &c._ He
+adds, for proof of that which he saith, the example of Hezekiah in
+breaking down that brazen serpent; which example doth indeed most
+pregnantly enforce the abolishing of all things or rites notoriously
+abused to idolatry when they are not of any necessary use, but it
+warranteth not the abolishing of anything which has a necessary use,
+because the brazen serpent is not contained in the number of those things,
+_quibus carere non possumus_, saith Wolphius,(550) answering to the same
+objection which presently I have in hand. Now, that the ceremonies have
+not in themselves, nor by the law of God, any necessary use, and that
+without hazard of salvation they may be omitted, is acknowledged by
+Formalists themselves; wherefore I need not stay to prove it.
+
+_Sect._ 14. Besides these answers which are common in our adversaries'
+mouths, some of them have other particular subterfuges, which now I am to
+search. "We must consider (saith Bishop Lindsey(551)) the ceremony itself
+(dedicated to, and polluted with idolatry,) whether it be of human or
+divine institution. If it be of human institution it may be removed, &c.;
+but if the ceremony be of divine institution, such as kneeling is,--for the
+same is commended by God unto us in his word,--then we ought to consider
+whether the abuse of that ceremony hath proceeded from the nature of the
+action wherein it was used; for if it be so, it ought to be abolished,
+&c.; but if the abuse proceed not from the nature of the action, but from
+the opinion of the agent, then, the opinion being removed, the religious
+ceremony may be used without any profanation of idolatry. For example, the
+abuse of kneeling in elevation, &c., proceedeth not only from the opinion
+of the agent, but from the nature of the action, which is idolatrous and
+superstitious, &c., and, therefore, both the action and gesture ought to
+be abolished. But the sacrament of the supper, being an action instituted
+by God, and kneeling being of its own nature an holy and religious
+ceremony, it can never receive contagion of idolatry from it, but only
+from the opinion of the agent: then remove the opinion, both the action
+itself may be rightly used, and kneeling therein," &c. _Ans._ 1. Since he
+granteth that a ceremony dedicated to and polluted with idolatry, may (he
+answereth not the argument which there he propounded, except he say must)
+be abolished, if it be of human institution, he must grant from this
+ground, if there were no more, that the cross, surplice, kneeling at the
+communion, &c., having been so notoriously abused to idolatry, must be
+abolished, because they have no institution except from men only. But, 2,
+Why saith he that kneeling is a ceremony of divine institution? which he
+pronounceth not of kneeling, as it is actuated by some individual case, or
+clothed with certain particular circumstances, (for he maketh this
+kneeling whereof he speaketh to be found in two most different actions,
+the one idolatrous, the other holy,) but kneeling in the general, _per
+se_, and _praecise ab omnibus circumstantiis_. Let him now tell where
+kneeling thus considered is commended unto us in God's word. He would
+possibly allege that place, Psal. xcv. 6, "O come, let us worship and bow
+down: let us kneel before the Lord our Maker," which is cited in the Canon
+of Perth about kneeling; but I answer, whether one expounded that place
+with Calvin,(552) in this sense, _ut scilicet ante arcam faederis populus
+se prosternat, quia sermo de legali cultu habetur_: whereupon it should
+follow that it commendeth only kneeling to the Jews in that particular
+case, or whether it be taken more generally, to commend kneeling (though
+not as necessary, yet as laudable and beseeming) in the solemn acts of
+God's immediate worship, such as that praise and thanksgiving whereof the
+beginning of the psalm speaketh,--whether, I say, it be taken in this or
+that sense, yet it condemneth not kneeling, except in a certain kind of
+worship only. And as for kneeling in the general nature of it, it is not
+of divine institution, but in itself indifferent, even as sitting,
+standing, &c., all which gestures are then only made good or evil when in
+_actu exercito_, they are actuated and individualised by particular
+circumstances. 3. If so be the ceremony be abused to idolatry, it skills
+not how, for, as I have showed before, the reasons and proofs which I have
+produced for the proposition of our present argument, hold good against
+the retaining of anything which hath been known to be abused to idolatry,
+and only such things as have a necessary use are to be excepted. 4. The
+nature of an action, wherein a ceremony is used, cannot be the cause of
+the abuse of that ceremony; neither can the abuse of a ceremony proceed
+from the nature of the action wherein it is used, as one effect from the
+cause, for _nihil potest esse homini causa sufficiens peccati_, except
+only _propria voluntas_(_553_). 5. The abuse of kneeling in the idolatrous
+action of elevation, proceedeth not from the nature of the action, but
+from the opinion of the agent, or rather from his will, for (_principium
+actionum humanarum_, is not opinion, but will, choosing that which opinion
+conceiteth to be chosen, or _voluntas praeunte luce intellectus_,) it is
+the will of the agent only which both maketh the action of elevation to be
+idolatrous, and likewise kneeling in this action to receive the contagion
+of idolatry. For the elevation of the bread _materialiter_ is not
+idolatrous (more than the lifting up of the bread among us by elders or
+deacons, when in taking it off the table, or setting it on, they lift it
+above the heads of the communicants), but _formaliter_ only, as it is
+elevated with a will and intention to place it in state of worship. So
+likewise kneeling to the bread _materialiter_ is not idolatry (else a man
+were an idolater who should be against his will thrust down and holden by
+violence kneeling on his knees when the bread is elevated), but
+_formaliter_, as it proceedeth from a will and intention in men to give to
+the bread elevated a state in that worship, and out of that respect to
+kneel before it. 6. What can he gain by this device, that the abuse of
+kneeling in the Lord's supper proceeded not from the nature of the action,
+but from the will of the agent? Can he hereupon infer, that kneeling in
+that action is to be retained notwithstanding of any contagion of idolatry
+which it hath received? Nay, then, let him say that Hezekiah did not
+rightly in breaking down the brazen serpent, which was set up at God's
+command, and the abuse whereof proceeded not from the thing itself, which
+had a most lawful, profitable, and holy use, but only from the perverse
+opinion and will of them who abused it to idolatry.
+
+_Sect._ 15. But the comparing of kneeling to the brazen serpent is very
+unsavoury to the Bishop; and wherefore? "The brazen serpent (saith he), in
+the time it was abolished, had no use: that ceased with the virtue of the
+cure that the Israelites received by looking upon it; the act of kneeling
+continueth always in a necessary use, for the better expressing of our
+thankfulness to God." _Ans._ 1. Both kneeling, and all the rest of the
+popish ceremonies, may well be compared to the brazen serpent. And divines
+do commonly allege this example, as most pregnant to prove that things or
+rites polluted with idols, and abused to idolatry, may not be retained, if
+they have no necessary use; and I have cited before the Bishop of
+Winchester, acknowledging that this argument holdeth good against all
+things which are taken up, not at God's prescription, but at men's
+injunction. J. Rainold(554) argumenteth from Hezekiah's breaking down of
+the brazen serpent, to the plucking down of the sign of the cross. 2. Why
+saith he that the brazen serpent, in the time it was abolished, had no
+use? The use of it ceased not with the cure, but it was still kept for a
+most pious and profitable use, even to be a monument of that mercy which
+the Israelites received in the wilderness, and it served for the better
+expressing of their thankfulness to God, which the Bishop here calleth a
+necessary use. 3. When he saith that kneeling continueth always in a
+necessary use, we must understand him to speak of kneeling in the act of
+receiving the communion; else he runs at random; for it is not kneeling in
+the general, but kneeling in this particular case, which is compared to
+the brazen serpent. Now, to say that this gesture in this action is
+necessary for our better expressing of our thankfulness to God, importeth
+that the church of Scotland, and many famous churches in Europe, for so
+many years have omitted that which was necessary for the better expressing
+of their thankfulness to God, and that they have not well enough expressed
+it. And, moreover, if kneeling be necessary in the Lord's supper for our
+better expressing of our thankfulness to God, then it is also necessary at
+our own common tables. Though we be bound to be more thankful at the
+Lord's table, and that because we receive a benefit of infinite more
+worth, yet we are bound to be _tam grati_, as well thankful at our own
+tables, albeit not _tanta gratitudine_. If, then, the same kind of
+thankfulness be required of us at our own tables (for _intentio et
+remissio graduum secundum magis et minus, non variant speciem rei_,) that
+which is necessary for expressing of our thankfulness at the Lord's table
+must be necessary also for the expressing of it at our own. When I see the
+Bishop sitting at his table, I shall tell him that he omitteth the gesture
+which is necessary for the expressing of his thankfulness to God. 4. Did
+not the apostles' receiving this sacrament from Christ himself well enough
+express their thankfulness to God? yet they kneeled not, but sat, as is
+evident, and shall be afterwards proved against them who contradict
+everything which crosseth them. 5. God will never take a ceremony of men's
+devising for a better expressing of our thankfulness than a gesture which
+is commended to us by the example of his own Son, and his apostles,
+together with the celebration of this sacrament in all points according to
+his institution. 6. How shall we know where we have the Bishop and his
+fellows? It seems they know not where they have themselves; for sometimes
+they tell us that it is indifferent to take the communion sitting, or
+standing, or passing, or kneeling, yet here the Bishop tells us that
+kneeling is necessary. 7. I see the Bishop perceiveth that no answer can
+take kneeling at the communion out of the compass of the brazen serpent,
+except to say it hath a necessary use; this is the dead lift, which yet
+helpeth not, as I have showed. All things, then, which are not necessary
+(whereof kneeling is one), being notoriously abused to idolatry, fall
+under the brazen serpent.
+
+_Sect._ 16. Paybody also will here talk with us, therefore we will talk
+with him too. He saith,(555) that God did not absolutely condemn things
+abused to idolatry, and tells us of three conditions on which it was
+lawful to spare idolatrous appurtenances. 1. If there were a needful use
+of them in God's worship. 2. In case they were so altered and disposed, as
+that they tended not to the honour of the idol, and his damnable worship.
+3. If they were without certain danger of ensnaring people into idolatry.
+_Ans._ 1. Either he requires all these conditions in every idolothite and
+idolatrous appurtenance which may be retained, or else he thinks that any
+one of them sufficeth. If he require all these, the last two are
+superfluous; for that which hath a needful use in God's worship, can
+neither tend to the honour of the idol, nor yet can have in it any danger
+of ensnaring people into idolatry. If he think any one of those conditions
+enough, then let us go through them: The first I admit, but it will not
+help his cause, for while the world standeth they shall never prove that
+kneeling in the act of receiving the communion, and the other controverted
+ceremonies, have either a needful, or a profitable, or a lawful use in
+God's worship. As for his second condition, it is all one with that which
+I have already confuted,(556) namely, that things abused to idolatry may
+be kept, if they be purged from their abuse, and restored to the right
+use. But he allegeth for it a passage of Parker, _of the Cross_, cap. 1,
+sect. 7, p. 10, where he showeth out of Augustine, that an idolothite may
+not be kept for private use, except, 1. _Omnis honor idoli, cum
+appertessima destructione subvertatur_. 2. That not only his honour be not
+despoiled, but also all show thereof. How doth this place (now would I
+know) make anything for Paybody? Do they keep kneeling for private use? Do
+they destroy most openly all honour of the idol to which kneeling was
+dedicated? Hath their kneeling not so much as any show of the breaden
+god's honour? Who will say so? And if any will say it, who will believe
+it? Who knoweth not that kneeling is kept for a public, and not for a
+private use, and that the breaden idol receiveth very great show of honour
+from it? He was scarce of warrants when he had no better than Parker could
+afford him. His third condition rests, and touching it I ask, what if
+those idolatrous appurtenances be not without apparent danger of ensnaring
+people into idolatry? Are we not commanded to abstain from all appearance
+of evil? Will he correct the Apostle, and teach us, that we need not care
+for apparent, but for certain dangers? What more apparent danger of
+ensnaring people into idolatry than unnecessary ceremonies, which have
+been dedicated to and polluted with idols, and which, being retained, do
+both admonish us to remember upon old idolatry, and move us to return to
+the same, as I have before made evident?(557)
+
+_Sect._ 17. Now, as for the assumption of our present argument, it cannot
+be but evident to any who will not harden their minds against the light of
+the truth, that the ceremonies in question have been most notoriously
+abused to idolatry and superstition, and withal, that they have no
+necessary use to make us retain them. I say, they have been notoriously
+abused to idolatry. 1. Because they have been dedicated and consecrated to
+the service of idols. 2. Because they have been deeply polluted, and
+commonly employed in idolatrous worship. For both these reasons does
+Zanchius condemn the surplice,(558) and such like popish ceremonies left
+in England, because the whore of Rome has abused, and does yet abuse them,
+_ad alliciendos homines ad scortandum. Sunt enim pompae istae omnes, et
+ceremoniae Papistisae, nihil aliud quam fuci meretricii, ad hoc
+excogitati, ut homines ad spiritualem scortationem alliciantur._ O golden
+sentence, and worthy to be engraven with a pen of iron, and the point of a
+diamond! for most needful it is to consider, that those ceremonies are the
+very meretricious bravery and veigling trinkets wherewith the Romish whore
+doth faird and paint herself, whilst she propineth to the world the cup of
+her fornications. This makes Zanchius(559) to call those ceremonies the
+relics and symbols of popish idolatry and superstition. When Queen Mary
+set up Popery in England, and restored all of it which King Henry had
+overthrown, she considered that Popery could not stand well-favoredly
+without the ceremonies; whereupon she ordained,(560) _ut dies omnes
+festicelebrentur, superioris aetatis ceremoniae restituantur, pueri
+adultiores __ ante baptisati, ab episcopis confirmentur._ So that not in
+remote regions, but in his Majesty's dominions,--not in a time past memory,
+but about fourscore years ago,--not by people's practice only, but by the
+laws and edicts of the supreme magistrate, the ceremonies have been abused
+to the reinducing and upholding of Popery and idolatry. Both far and near,
+then, both long since and lately, it is more than notorious how grossly
+and grievously the ceremonies have been polluted with idolatry and
+superstition.
+
+I cannot choose but marvel much how Paybody was not ashamed to deny that
+kneeling has been abused by the Papists.(561) Blush, O paper, which art
+blotted with such a notable lie! What will not desperate impudency dare to
+aver? But Bishop Lindsey seemeth also to hold that kneeling hath been
+abused by the Papists(562) only in the elevation and circumgestation of
+the host, but not in the participation, and that Honorius did not command
+kneeling in the participation, but only in the elevation and
+circumgestation. _Ans._ 1. _Saltem mendacem oportet essememorem._ Saith
+not the Bishop himself elsewhere of the Papists,(563) "In the sacrament
+they kneel to the sign," whereby he would prove a disconformity between
+their kneeling and ours; for we kneel, saith he, "by the sacrament to the
+thing signified." Now if the Papists in the sacrament kneel to the sign,
+then they have idolatrously abused kneeling, even in the participation;
+for the Bishop dare not say that, in the elevation or circumgestation,
+there is either sacrament or sign. 2. Why do our divines controvert with
+the Papists, _de adoratione euchuristiae_, if Papists adore it not in the
+participation? for the host, carried about in a box, is not the sacrament
+of the eucharist. 3. In the participation, Papists think that the bread is
+already transubstantiate into the body of Christ, by virtue of the words
+of consecration. Now, if in the participation they kneel to that which
+they falsely conceive to be the body of Christ (but is indeed corruptible
+bread), with an intention to give it _latria_ or divine worship, then in
+the participation they abuse it to idolatry. But that is true; therefore,
+&c. 4. Durand showeth,(564) that though in the holidays of Easter and
+Pentecost, and the festivities of the blessed Virgin, and in the Lord's
+day, they kneel not in the church, but only stand (because of the joy of
+the festivity), and at the most do but bow or incline their heads at
+prayer, yet _in praesentia corporis et sanguinis Christi_, in presence of
+the bread and wine, which they think to be the body and blood of Christ,
+they cease not to kneel. And how will the Bishop make their participation
+free of this idolatrous kneeling? The Rhemists show us,(565) that when
+they are eating and drinking the body and blood of our Lord, they adore
+the sacrament, and, humbling themselves, they say to it, _Domine non sum
+dignus, Deus propitius esto mihi peccatori_. 5. As for that which Honorius
+III. decreed, Dr White calleth it the adoration of the sacrament,(566)
+which, if it is so, then we must say, that he decreed adoration in the
+participation itself, because _extra usum sacramenti_, the bread cannot be
+called a sacrament. Honorius commanded that the priest should frequently
+teach his people to bow down devoutly when the host is elevated in the
+celebration of the mass, and that they should do the same when it is
+carried to the sick. All this was ordained in reference to the
+participation. _Ad usum illa instituta sunt_, says Chemnitius,(567)
+speaking of this decree, _quando scilicet panis consecratur, et quando ad
+infirmos defertur, ut exhibeatur et sumatur_. So that that which was
+specially respected in the decree, was adoring in the participation.
+
+Lastly, Here we have to do with Dr Burges, who will have us to think, that
+adoration in receiving the sacrament(568) hath not been idolatrously
+intended to the sacrament in the church of Rome, neither by decree nor
+custom. Not by decree, because albeit Honorius appointed adoration to be
+used in the elevation and circumgestation, yet not in the act of
+receiving. And albeit the Roman ritual do appoint, that clergymen coming
+to receive the sacrament do it kneeling, yet this was done in veneration
+of the altar,(569) or of that which standeth thereupon, and not for
+adoration of the host put into their mouths. Not by custom; for he will
+not have it said that kneeling in the time of receiving was ever in the
+church of Rome any rite of or for adoration of the sacrament, because
+albeit the people kneel in the act of receiving, yet I "deny (saith he)
+that they ever intended adoration of the species, at that moment of time
+when they took it in their mouths, but then turned themselves to God," &c.
+_Ans._ 1. As for the decree of Honorius, I have already answered with
+Chemnitius, that it had reference specially to the receiving. 2. When
+clergymen are appointed in the Roman ritual to receive the sacrament at
+the altar kneeling, this was not for veneration of the altar, to which
+they did reverence at all times when they approached to it, but this was
+required particularly in their receiving of the sacrament, for adoration
+of it. Neither is there mention made of the altar as conferring anything
+to their kneeling in receiving the sacrament; for the sacrament was not
+used the more reverently because it stood upon the altar, but by the
+contrary, for the sacrament's sake reverence was done to the altar, which
+was esteemed the seat of the body of Christ. It appeareth, therefore, that
+the altar is mentioned, not as concerning the kneeling of the clergymen in
+their communicating, but simply as concerning their communicating, because
+none but they were wont to communicate at the altar, according to that
+received canon, _Solis autem ministris altaris liceat ingredi ad altare et
+ibidem communicare_.(570) The one of the Doctor's own conjectures is, that
+they kneeled for reverence of that which stood upon the altar; but I would
+know what that was which, standing upon the altar, made them to kneel in
+the participation, if it was not the host itself? Now, whereas he denies,
+as touching custom, that people did ever intend the adoration of the
+species, I answer: 1. How knows he what people in the Roman church did
+intend in their minds? 2. What warrant hath he for this, that they did not
+in the participation adore the host, which was then put into their mouth?
+3. Though this which he saith were true, he gaineth nothing by it; for put
+the case, they did not intend the adoration of the species, dare he say,
+that they intended not the adoration of that which was under the species?
+I trow not. Now, that which was under the species, though in their conceit
+it was Christ's body, yet it was indeed bread; so that, in the very
+participation, they were worshipping the bread. But, 4, What needeth any
+more? He maketh himself a liar, and saith plainly,(571) that after
+transubstantiation was embraced, and when all the substance of the visible
+creature was held to be gone, they did intend the adoration of the
+invisible things, as if there had been now no substance of any creature
+left therein, whereby he destroyeth all which he hath said of their not
+intending the adoration of the species.
+
+_Sect._ 20. Last of all, for the other part of my assumption, that the
+ceremonies have no necessary use in God's worship, I need no other proof
+than the common by-word of Formalists, which saith they are things
+indifferent. Yet the Bishop of Edinburgh(572) and Paybody(573) have turned
+their tongues bravely, and chosen rather to say anything against us than
+nothing. They spare not to answer, that kneeling hath a necessary use.
+They are most certainly speaking of kneeling in the act of receiving the
+communion, for they and their opposites, in those places, are disputing of
+no other kneeling but this only. Now we may easily perceive they are in an
+evil taking, when they are driven to such an unadvised and desperate
+answer. For, 1. If kneeling in the act of receiving the Lord's supper be
+necessary, why have themselves too written so much for the indifferency of
+it? O desultorious levity that knows not where to hold itself! 2. If it be
+necessary, what makes it to be so? What law? What example? What reason? 3.
+If it be necessary, not only many reformed churches, and many ancient too,
+but Christ himself and his apostles have, in this sacrament, omitted
+something that was necessary. 4. If it be necessary, why do many of their
+own disciples take the communion sitting, in places where sitting is used?
+What need I to say more? In the first part of this dispute I have proved
+that the ceremonies are not necessary, in respect of the church's
+ordinance, howbeit if it were answered in this place, that they are in
+this respect necessary, it helpeth not, since the argument proceedeth
+against all things notoriously abused to idolatry, which neither God nor
+nature hath made necessary. And for any necessity of the ceremonies in
+themselves, either our opposites must repudiate what hath unadvisedly
+fallen from their pens hereanent, or else forsake their beaten ground of
+indifferency, and say plainly, that the ceremonies are urged by them, to
+be observed with an opinion of necessity, as worship of God, and as things
+in themselves necessary. Look to yourselves, O Formalists, for you stand
+here upon such slippery places, that you cannot hold both your feet.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE UNLAWFUL, BECAUSE THEY SORT US WITH IDOLATERS,
+BEING THE BADGES OF PRESENT IDOLATRY AMONG THE PAPISTS.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. It followeth according to the order which I have proposed, to
+show next, that the ceremonies are idolatrous, _participative_. By
+communicating with idolaters in their rites and ceremonies, we ourselves
+become guilty of idolatry; even as Ahaz, 2 Kings xvi. 10, was an idolater,
+_eo ipso_, that he took the pattern of an altar from idolators. Forasmuch,
+then, as kneeling before the consecrated bread, the sign of the cross,
+surplice, festival days, bishopping, bowing down to the altar,
+administration of the sacraments in private places, &c., are the wares of
+Rome, the baggage of Babylon, the trinkets of the whore, the badges of
+Popery, the ensigns of Christ's enemies, and the very trophies of
+antichrist,--we cannot conform, communicate and symbolise with the
+idolatrous Papists in the use of the same, without making ourselves
+idolaters by participation. Shall the chaste spouse of Christ take upon
+her the ornaments of the whore? Shall the Israel of God symbolise with her
+who is spiritually called Sodom and Egypt? Shall the Lord's redeemed
+people wear the ensigns of their captivity? Shall the saints be seen with
+the mark of the beast? Shall the Christian church be like the
+antichristian, the holy like the profane, religion like superstition, the
+temple of God like the synagogue of Satan? Our opposites are so far from
+being moved with these things, that both in pulpits and private places
+they used to plead for the ceremonies by this very argument, that we
+should not run so far away from Papists, but come as near them as we can.
+But for proof of that which we say, namely, that it is not lawful to
+symbolise with idolaters (and by consequence with Papists), or to be like
+them in their rites or ceremonies, we have more to allege than they can
+answer.
+
+_Sect._ 2. For, 1st, We have Scripture for us. "After the doings of the
+land of Egypt, wherein you dwelt, shall ye not do and after the doings of
+the land of Canaan, whither I bring ye, shall ye not do, neither shall ye
+walk in their ordinances," Lev. xviii. 3. "Take heed to thyself that thou
+be not snared by following them, &c., saying, How did these nations serve
+their gods? even so will I do likewise. Thou shalt not do so unto the Lord
+thy God," Deut. xii. 30. "Thou shalt not do after their works," Exod.
+xxiii. 24. Yea, they were straitly forbidden to round the corners of their
+heads, or to make any cuttings in the flesh for the dead, or to print any
+mark upon them, or to make baldness upon their heads, or between their
+eyes, forasmuch as God had chosen them to be a holy and a peculiar people,
+and it behoved them not to be framed nor fashioned like the nations, Lev.
+xix. 27, 28, and xxi. 5, and Deut. xiv. 1. And what else was meant by
+those laws which forbade them to suffer their cattle to gender with a
+diverse kind, to sow their field with diverse seed, to wear a garment of
+diverse sorts, as of woollen and linen, to plough with an ox and an ass
+together? Levit. xix. 19, Deut. xxii. 6-11. This was the hold that people
+in simplicity and purity, _ne hinc inde accersat ritus alienos_, saith
+Calvin, upon these places. Besides, find we not that they were sharply
+reproved when they made themselves like other nations? "Ye have made you
+priests after the manner of the nations of other lands," 2 Chron. xxii. 9.
+"They followed vanity, and became vain, and went after the heathen that
+were round about them, concerning whom the Lord had charged them, that
+they should not do like them," 2 Kings xvii. 15. The gospel commendeth the
+same to us which the law did to them: "Be not ye unequally yoked with
+unbelievers, for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?
+and what communion hath light with darkness? and what concord hath Christ
+with Belial? and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols," &c.
+"Wherefore, come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord,
+and touch not the unclean thing," 2 Cor. vi. 14-17. "If any man worship
+the beast, and his image, and receive his mark in his forehead, or in his
+hand, the same shall drink of the wine of the wrath of God," Rev. xiv. 9.
+And the apostle Jude ver. 12, will have us to hate the very garment
+spotted with the flesh, importing, that as under the law men were made
+unclean not only by leprosy, but by the garments, vessels and houses of
+leprous men, so do we contract the contagion of idolatry, by communicating
+with the unclean things of idolaters.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Before we go further, we will see what our opposites have said
+to those Scriptures which we allege. Hooker saith,(574) that the reason
+why God forbade his people Israel the use of such rites and customs as
+were among the Egyptians and the Canaanites, was not because it behoved
+his people to be framed of set purpose to an utter dissimilitude with
+those nations, but his meaning was to bar Israel from similitude with
+those nations in such things as were repugnant to his ordinances and laws.
+_Ans._ 1. Let it be so, he has said enough against himself. For we have
+the same reason to make us abstain from all the rites and customs of
+idolaters, that we may be barred from similitude with them in such things
+as are flatly repugnant to God's word, because dissimilitude in ceremonies
+is a bar to stop similitude in substance, and, on the contrary, similitude
+in ceremonies openeth a way to similitude in greater substance. 2. His
+answer is but a begging of that which is in question, forasmuch as we
+allege those laws and prohibitions to prove that all the rites and customs
+of those nations were repugnant to the ordinances and laws of God, and
+that Israel was simply forbidden to use them. 3. Yet this was not a
+framing of Israel of set purpose to an utter dissimilitude with those
+nations, for Israel used food and raiment, sowing and reaping, sitting,
+standing, lying, walking, talking, trading, laws, government, &c.,
+notwithstanding that the Egyptians and Canaanites used so. They were only
+forbidden to be like those nations in such unnecessary rites and customs
+as had neither institution from God nor nature, but were the inventions
+and devices of men only. In things and rites of this kind alone it is that
+we plead for dissimilitude with the idolatrous Papists; for the ceremonies
+in controversy are not only proved to be under the compass of such, but
+are, besides, made by the Papists badges and marks of their religion, as
+we shall see afterwards.
+
+_Sect._ 4. To that place, 2 Cor. vi., Paybody answereth,(575) that nothing
+else is there meant, than that we must beware and separate ourselves from
+the communion of their sins and idolatries. _Ans._ 1. When the Apostle
+there forbiddeth the Corinthians to be unequally yoked with unbelievers,
+or to have any communion or fellowship with idolaters, and requireth them
+so to come out from among them, that they touch none of their unclean
+things, why may we not understand his meaning to be, that not only they
+should not partake with pagans in their idolatries, but that they should
+not marry with them, nor frequent their feasts, nor go to the theatre to
+behold their plays, nor go to law before their judges, nor use any of
+their rites? For with such idolaters we ought not to have any fellowship,
+as Zanchius resolves,(576) but only in so far as necessity compelleth, and
+charity requireth. 2. All the rites and customs of idolaters, which have
+neither institution from God nor nature, are to be reckoned among those
+sins wherein we may not partake with them, for they are the unprofitable
+works of darkness, all which Calvin judgeth to be in that place generally
+forbidden,(577) before the Apostle descend particularly to forbid
+partaking with them in their idolatry. As for the prohibition of diverse
+mixtures, Paybody saith,(578) the Jews were taught thereby to make no
+mixture of true and false worship. _Ans._ 1. According to his tenets, it
+followeth upon this answer, that no mixture is to be made betwixt holy and
+idolatrous ceremonies, for he calleth kneeling a _bodily worship_, and a
+_worship gesture_, more than once or twice. And we have seen before, how
+Dr Burges calleth the ceremonies _worship of God_. 2. If mixture of true
+and false worship be not lawful, then forasmuch as the ceremonies of God's
+ordinance, namely, the sacraments of the New Testament are true worship;
+and the ceremonies of Popery, namely, cross, kneeling, holidays, &c., are
+false worship; therefore, there ought to be no mixture of them together.
+3. If the Jews were taught to make no mixture of true and false worship,
+then by the self-same instruction, if there had been no more, they were
+taught also to shun all such occasions as might any ways produce such a
+mixture, and by consequence all symbolising with idolaters in their rites
+and ceremonies.
+
+_Sect._ 5. As touching those laws which forbade the Israelites to make
+round the corners of their heads, or to mar the corners of their beards,
+or to make any cuttings in their flesh, or to make any baldness between
+their eyes, Hooker answereth,(579) that the cutting round of the corners
+of the head, and the tearing off the tufts of the beard, howbeit they were
+in themselves indifferent, yet they are not indifferent being used as
+signs of immoderate and hopeless lamentation for the dead; in which sense
+it is, that the law forbiddeth them. To the same purpose saith
+Paybody,(580) that the Lord did not forbid his people to mar and abuse
+their heads and beards for the dead, because the heathen did so, but
+because the practice doth not agree to the faith and hope of a Christian,
+if the heathen had never used it. _Ans._ 1. How much surer and sounder is
+Calvin's judgment,(581) _non aliud fuisse Dei consilium, quam ut
+interposito obstaculo populum suum a prophanis Gentibus dirimiret_? For
+albeit the cutting the hair be a thing in itself indifferent, yet because
+the Gentiles did use it superstitiously, therefore, saith Calvin, albeit
+it was _per se medium, Deus tamen noluit populo suo liberum esse, ut
+tanquam pueri discerent ex parvis rudimentis, se non aliter Deo fore
+gratos, nisi exteris et proeputiatis essent prorsus dissimiles, ac
+longissime abessent ab eorum exemplis, praesertim vero ritus omnes
+fugerent, quibus testata fuerit religio_. So that from this law it doth
+most manifestly appear, that we may not be like idolaters, no not in
+things which are in themselves indifferent, when we know they do use them
+superstitiously. 2. What warrant is there for this gloss, that the law
+forbiddeth the cutting round of the corners of the head, and the matting
+of the corners of the beard, to be used as signs of immoderate and
+hopeless lamentation for the dead, and that in no other sense they are
+forbidden? Albeit the cutting of the flesh may be expounded to proceed
+from immoderate grief, and to be a sign of hopeless lamentation; yet this
+cannot be said of rounding the hair, marring the beard, and making of
+baldness, which might have been used in moderate and hopeful lamentation,
+as well as our putting on of mourning apparel for the dead. The law saith
+nothing of the immoderate use of these things, but simply forbiddeth to
+round the head, or mar the beard for the dead; and that because this was
+one of the rites which the idolatrous and superstitious Gentiles did use,
+concerning whom the Lord commanded his people, that they should not do
+like them, because he had chosen them to be a holy and peculiar people,
+above all people upon the earth. So that the thing which was forbidden, if
+the Gentiles had not used it, should have been otherwise lawful enough to
+God's people, as we have seen out of Calvin's commentary.
+
+_Sect._ 6. Secondly, We have reason for that which we say; for by
+partaking with idolaters in their rites and ceremonies, we are made to
+partake with them in their religion too. For, _ceremonioe omnes sun
+quoedam protestationes fidei_, saith Aquinas.(582) Therefore _communio
+rituum est quasi symbolum communionis in religione_, saith Balduine.(583)
+They who did eat of the Jewish sacrifices were partakers of the altar, 1
+Cor. x. 18, that is, saith Pareus,(584) _socios Judaicae religionis et
+cultus se profitebantur_. For the Jews by their sacrifices _mutuam in una
+eademque religione copulationem sanciunt_, saith Beza.(585) Whereupon Dr
+Fulk noteth,(586) that the Apostle in that place doth compare our
+sacraments with the altars, hosts, sacrifices or immolations of the Jews
+and Gentiles, "in that point which is common to all ceremonies, to declare
+them that use them to be partakers of that religion whereof they be
+ceremonies." If then Isidore thought it unlawful for Christians to take
+pleasure in the fables of heathen poets,(587) because _non solum thura
+offerendo daemonibus immolatur, sed etiam eorum dicta libentius capiendo_;
+much more have we reason to think that, by taking part in the ceremonies
+of idolaters, we do but offer to devils, and join ourselves to the service
+of idols.
+
+_Sect._ 7. Thirdly, As by Scripture and reason, so by antiquity, we
+strengthen our argument. Of old, Christians did so shun to be like the
+pagans, that in the days of Tertullian it was thought they might not wear
+garlands, because thereby they had been made conform to the pagans. Hence
+Tertullian justifieth the soldier who refused to wear a garland as the
+pagans did.(588) Dr Mortoune himself allegeth another case out of
+Tertullian,(589) which maketh to this purpose, namely, that Christian
+proselytes did distinguish themselves from Roman pagans, by casting away
+their gowns and wearing of cloaks. But these things we are not to urge,
+because we plead not for dissimilitude with the Papists in civil fashions,
+but in sacred and religious ceremonies. For this point then at which we
+hold us, we allege that which is marked in the third century out of
+Origen,(590) namely, that it was held unlawful for Christians to observe
+the feasts and solemnities, either of the Jews or of the Gentiles. Now we
+find a whole council determining thus,(591) _Non oportet a Judoeis vel
+hoereticis, feriatica quoe mittuntur accipere, nec cum cis dies agere
+feriatos._ The council of Nice also condemned those who kept Easter upon
+the fourteenth day of the month. That which made them pronounce so (as is
+clear from Constantine's epistle to the churches(592)) was, because they
+held it unbeseeming for Christians to have anything common with the Jews
+in their rites and observances. Augustine condemneth fasting upon the
+Sabbath day as scandalous, because the Manichees used so, and fasting upon
+that day had been a conformity with them;(593) and wherefore did Gregory
+advise Leander to abolish the ceremony of trim-immersion? His words are
+plain:(594) _Quia nunc huc usque ab hoereticis infans in baptismate tertio
+mergebatur, fiendum apud vos esse non censeo._ Why doth Epiphanius,(595)
+in the end of his books _contra haereses_, rehearse all the ceremonies of
+the church, as marks whereby the church is discerned from all other sects?
+If the church did symbolise in ceremonies with other sects, he could not
+have done so. And, moreover, find we not in the canons of the ancient
+councils,(596) that Christians were forbidden to deck their houses with
+green boughs and bay leaves, to observe the calends of January, to keep
+the first day of every month, &c., because the pagans used to do so? Last
+of all, read we not in the fourth century of the ecclesiastical
+history,(597) that the frame of Christians in that age was such, that _nec
+cum haereticis commune quicquam habere voluerunt_?
+
+_Sect._ 8. One would think that nothing could be answered to any of these
+things, by such as pretend no less than that they have devoted themselves
+to bend all their wishes and labours for procuring the imitation of
+venerable antiquity. Yet Hooker can coin a conjecture to frustrate all
+which we allege.(598) "In things (saith he) of their own nature
+indifferent, if either councils or particular men have at any time with
+sound judgment misliked conformity between the church of God and infidels,
+the cause thereof hath not been affectation of dissimilitude, but some
+special accident which the church, not being always subject unto, hath not
+still cause to do the like. For example (saith he), in the dangerous days
+of trial, wherein there was no way for the truth of Jesus Christ to
+triumph over infidelity but through the constancy of his saints, whom yet
+a natural desire to save themselves from the flame might, peradventure,
+cause to join with the pagans in external customs, too far using the same
+as a cloak to conceal themselves in, and a mist to darken the eyes of
+infidels withal; for remedy hereof, it might be, those laws were
+provided." _Ans._ 1. This answer is altogether doubtful and conjectural,
+made up of _if_, and _peradventure_, and _it might be_. Neither is
+anything found which can make such a conjecture probable. 2. The true
+reason why Christians were forbidden to use the rites and customs of
+pagans, was neither a bare affectation of dissimilitude, nor yet any
+special accident which the church is not always subject unto, but because
+it was held unlawful to symbolise with idolaters in the use of such rites
+as they placed any religion in. For in the fathers and councils which we
+have cited to this purpose, there is no other reason mentioned why it
+behoved Christians to abstain from those forbidden customs, but only
+because the pagans and infidels used so. 3. And what if Hooker's
+divination shall have place? Doth it not agree to us, so as it should make
+us mislike the Papists? Yes, sure, and more properly. For put the case,
+that those ancient Christians had not avoided conformity with pagans in
+those rites and customs which we read to have been forbidden them, yet for
+all that, there had been remaining betwixt them and the pagans a great
+deal more difference than will remain betwixt us and the Papists, if we
+avoid not conformity with them in the controverted ceremonies; for the
+pagans had not the word, sacraments, &c., which the Papists do retain, so
+that we may far more easily use the ceremonies as a mist to darken the
+eyes of the Papists, than they could have used those forbidden rites as a
+mist to darken the eyes of pagans. Much more, then, Protestants should not
+be permitted to conform themselves unto Papists in rites and ceremonies,
+lest, in the dangerous days of trial (which some reformed churches in
+Europe do presently feel, and which seem to be faster approaching to
+ourselves than the most part are aware of), they join themselves to
+Papists in these external things, too far using the same as a cloak to
+conceal themselves in, &c. 4. We find that the reason why the fourth
+council of Toledo forbade the ceremony of thrice dipping in water to be
+used in baptism, was,(599) lest Christians should seem to assent to
+heretics who divide the Trinity. And the reason why the same council
+forbade the clergymen to conform themselves unto the custom of
+heretics,(600) in the shaving off the hair of their head, is mentioned to
+have been the removing of conformity with the custom of heretics from the
+churches of Spain, as being a great dishonour unto the same. And we have
+heard before, that Augustine condemneth conformity with the Manichees, in
+fasting upon the Lord's day, as scandalous. And whereas afterwards the
+council of Caesar-Augusta forbade fasting upon the Lord's day, a grave
+writer layeth out the reason of this prohibition thus:(601) "It would
+appear that this council had a desire to abolish the rites and customs of
+the Manichean heretics, who were accustomed to fast upon the Lord's day."
+Lastly, we have seen from Constantine's epistle to the churches, that
+dissimilitude with the Jews was one (though not the only one) reason why
+it was not thought beseeming to keep Easter upon the fourteenth day of the
+month. Who then can think that any special accident, as Hooker imagineth,
+was the reason why the rites and customs of pagans were forbidden to
+Christians? Were not the customs of the pagans to be held unbeseeming for
+Christians, as well as the customs of the Jews? Nay, if conformity with
+heretics (whom Hooker acknowledgeth to be a part of the visible
+church(602)), in their customs and ceremonies, was condemned as a scandal,
+a dishonour to the church, and an assenting unto their heresies, might he
+not have much more thought that conformity with the customs of pagans was
+forbidden as a greater scandal and dishonour to the church, and as an
+assenting to the paganism and idolatry of those that were without?
+
+_Sect._ 9. But to proceed. In the fourth place, the canon law itself
+speaketh for the argument which we have in hand: _Non licet iniquas
+observationes agere calendarum, et otiis vacare Gentilibus, neque lauro,
+aut viriditate arborum, cingere domos: omnis enim haec observatio
+paganismi est._(603) And again: _Anathema sit qui ritum paganorum et
+calendarum observat._(604) And after: _Dies Aegyptiaci et Januarii
+calendae non sunt observandae._(605)
+
+Fifthly, Our assertion will find place in the school too, which holdeth
+that Jews are forbidden to wear a garment of diverse sorts,(606) as of
+linen and woollen together, and that their women were forbidden to wear
+men's clothes, or their men women's clothes, because the Gentiles used so
+in the worshipping of their gods. In like manner, that the priests were
+forbidden to round their heads,(607) or mar their beards, or make incision
+in their flesh, because the idolatrous priests did so.(608) And that the
+prohibition which forbade the commixtion of beasts of diverse kinds among
+the Jews hath a figurative sense,(609) in that we are forbidden to make
+people of one kind of religion, to have any conjunction with those of
+another kind.
+
+Sixthly, Papists themselves teach,(610) that it is generally forbidden to
+communicate with infidels and heretics, but especially in any act of
+religion. Yea, they think,(611) that Christian men are bound to abhor the
+very phrases and words of heretics, which they use. Yea, they condemn the
+very heathenish names of the days of the week imposed after the names of
+the planets,(612) Sunday, Monday, &c. They hold it altogether a great and
+damnable sin to deal with heretics in matter of religion,(613) or any way
+to communicate with them in spiritual things. Bellarmine is plain,(614)
+who will have catholics to be discerned from heretics, and other sects of
+all sorts, even by ceremonies, because as heretics have hated the
+ceremonies of the church, so the church hath ever abstained from the
+observances of heretics.
+
+_Sect._ 10. Seventhly, Our own writers do sufficiently confirm us in this
+argument. The bringing of heathenish or Jewish rites into the church is
+altogether condemned by them,(615) yea, though the customs and rites of
+the heathen(616) be received into the church for gaining them, and drawing
+them to the true religion, yet is it condemned as proceeding _ex {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH YPOGEGRAMMENI~}
+seu prava Ethnicorum imitatione_. J. Rainolds(617) rejecteth the popish
+ceremonies, partly because they are Jewish, and partly because they are
+heathenish. The same argument Beza(618) useth against them. In the second
+command, as Zanchius(619) expoundeth it, we are forbidden to borrow
+anything, _ex ritibus idololatrarum Gentium_. _Fidelibus_ (saith
+Calvin(620)) _fas non est ullo symbolo ostendere, sibi cum superstitiosis
+esse consensum_. To conclude, then, since not only idolatry is forbidden,
+but also, as Pareus noteth,(621) every sort of communicating with the
+occasion, appearances, or instruments of the same; and since, as our
+divines have declared,(622) the Papists are in many respects gross
+idolaters, let us choose to have the commendation which was given to the
+ancient Britons for being enemies to the Roman customs,(623) rather than,
+as Pope Pius V. was forced to say of Rome,(624) that it did more
+_Gentilizare, quam Christianizare_; so they who would gladly wish they
+could give a better commendation to our church, be forced to say, that it
+doth not only more _Anglizare, quam Scotizare_, but also more _Romanizare,
+quam Evangelizare_.
+
+_Sect._ 11. But our argument is made by a great deal more strong, if yet
+further we consider, that by the controverted ceremonies, we are not only
+made like the idolatrous Papists, in such rites of man's devising as they
+place some religion in, but we are made likewise to take upon us those
+signs and symbols which Papists account to be special badges of Popery,
+and which also, in the account of many of our own reverend divines, are to
+be so thought of. In the oath ordained by Pius IV., to be taken of bishops
+at their creation (as Onuphrius writeth(625)), they are appointed to
+swear, _Apostolicas et ecclesiasticas traditiones, reliquasque ejusdem
+ecclesiae observationes et constitutiones firmissime admitto et amplector_;
+and after, _Receptos quoque ac approbatos ecclesiae Catholicae ritus, in
+supra dictorum sacramentorum solemni administratione, recipio, et
+admitto_. We see bishops are not created by this ordinance, except they
+not only believe with the church of Rome, but also receive her ceremonies,
+by which, as by the badges of her faith and religion, cognizance may be
+had that they are indeed her children. And farther, Papists give it forth
+plainly,(626) that as the church hath ever abstained from the observances
+of heretics, so now also catholics (they mean Romanists) are very well
+distinguished from heretics (they mean those of the reformed religion) by
+the sign of the cross, abstinence from flesh on Friday, &c. And how do our
+divines understand the mark of the beast, spoken of Rev. xiii. 16, 17?
+Junius(627) comprehendeth confirmation under this mark. Cartwright(628)
+also referreth the sign of the cross to the mark of the beast. Pareus(629)
+approveth the Bishop of Salisbury's exposition, and placeth the common
+mark of the beast the observation of antichrist's festival days, and the
+rest of his ceremonies, which are not commanded by God. It seems this much
+has been plain to Joseph Hall, so that he could not deny it; for whereas
+the Brownists allege, that not only after their separation, but before
+they separated also, they were, and are verily persuaded that the
+ceremonies are but the badges and liveries of that man of sin whereof the
+Pope is the head and the prelates the shoulders,--he, in this
+_Apology_(630) against them, saith nothing to this point.
+
+_Sect._ 12. As for any other of our opposites, who have made such answers
+as they could to the argument in hand, I hope the strength and force of
+the same hath been demonstrated to be such that their poor shifts are too
+weak for gain-standing it. Some of them (as I touched before) are not
+ashamed to profess that we should come as near to the Papists as we can,
+and therefore should conform ourselves to them in their ceremonies (only
+purging away the superstition), because if we do otherwise, we exasperate
+the Papists, and alienate them the more from our religion and reformation.
+_Ans._ 1. Bastwick,(631) propounding the same objection, _Si quis objiciat
+nos ipsos pertinaci ceremoniarum papalium contemptu, Papistis offendiculum
+posuisse, quo minus se nostris ecclesiis associent_, he answereth out of
+the Apostle, Rom. xv. 2, that we are to please every one his neighbour
+only in good things to edification, and that we may not wink at absurd or
+wicked things, nor at anything in God's worship which is not found in
+Scripture. 2. I have showed(632) that Papists are but more and more
+hardened in evil by this our conformity with them in ceremonies. 3. I have
+showed also,(633) the superstition of the ceremonies, even as they are
+retained by us, and that it is as impossible to purge the ceremonies from
+superstition, as to purge superstition from itself.
+
+There are others, who go about to sew a cloak of fig leaves, to hide their
+conformity with Papists, and to find out some difference betwixt the
+English ceremonies and those of the Papists; so say some, that by the sign
+of the cross they are not ranked with Papists, because they use not the
+material cross, which is the popish one, but the aerial only. But it is
+known well enough that Papists do idolatrise the very aerial cross; for
+Bellarmine holds,(634) _venerabile esse signum crucis, quod effingitur in
+fronte, aere, &c._ And though they did not make an idol of it, yet
+forasmuch as Papists put it to a religious use, and make it one of the
+marks of Roman Catholics (as we have seen before), we may not be conformed
+to them in the use of the same. The fathers of such a difference between
+the popish cross and the English have not succeeded in this their way, yet
+their posterity approve their sayings, and follow their footsteps. Bishop
+Lindsey(635) by name will trade in the same way, and will have us to think
+that kneeling in the act of receiving the communion, and keeping of
+holidays, do not sort us with Papists; for that, as touching the former,
+there is a disconformity in the object, because they kneel to the sign, we
+to the thing signified. And as for the latter, the difference is in the
+employing of the time, and in the exercise and worship for which the
+cessation is commanded. What is his verdict, then, wherewith he sends us
+away? Verily, that people should be taught that the disconformity between
+the Papists and us is not so much in any external use of ceremonies, as in
+the substance of the service and object whereunto they are applied. But,
+good man, he seeks a knot in the bulrush; for, 1, There is no such
+difference betwixt our ceremonies and those of the Papists, in respect of
+the object and worship whereunto the same is applied, as he pretendeth;
+for, as touching the exercise and worship whereunto holidays are applied,
+Papists tell us,(636) that they keep Pasche and Pentecost yearly for
+memory of Christ's resurrection, and the sending down of the Holy Ghost;
+and, I pray, to what other employment do Formalists profess that they
+apply these feasts, but to the commemoration of the same benefits? And as
+touching kneeling in the sacrament, it shall be proved in the next
+chapter, that they do kneel to the sign, even as the Papists do. In the
+meanwhile, it may be questioned whether the Bishop meant some such matter,
+even here where professedly he maketh a difference betwixt the Papists'
+kneeling and ours. His words, wherein I apprehend this much, are these:
+"The Papists in prayer kneel to an idol, and in the sacrament they kneel
+to the sign: we kneel in our prayer to God, and by the sacrament to the
+thing signified." The analogy of the antithesis required him to say, that
+we kneel "in the sacrament" to the thing signified; but changing his
+phrase, he saith, that we kneel "by the sacrament" to the thing signified.
+Now, if we kneel "by the sacrament to Christ," then we adore the sacrament
+as _objectum materiale_, and Christ as _objectum formale_. Just so the
+Papists adore their images; because _per imaginem_, they adore
+_prototypon_. 2. What if we should yield to the Bishop that kneeling and
+holidays are with us applied to another service, and used with another
+meaning than they are with the Papists? Doth that excuse our conformity
+with Papists in the external use of these ceremonies? If so, J. Hart(637)
+did rightly argument out of Pope Innocentius, that the church doth not
+Judaise by the sacrament of unction or anointing, because it doth figure
+and work another thing in the New Testament than it did in the Old.
+Rainold answereth, that though it were so, yet is the ceremony Jewish; and
+mark his reason (which carrieth a fit proportion to our present purpose),
+"I trust (saith he) you will not maintain but it were Judaism for your
+church to sacrifice a lamb in burnt-offering, though you did it to
+signify, not Christ that was to come, as the Jews did, but that Christ is
+come," &c. "St. Peter did constrain the Gentiles to Judaise, when they
+were induced by his example and authority to follow the Jewish rite in
+choice of meats; yet neither he nor they allowed it in that meaning which
+it was given to the Jews in; for it was given them to betoken that
+holiness, and train them up into it, which Christ by his grace should
+bring to the faithful. And Peter knew that Christ had done this in truth,
+and taken away that figure, yea the whole yoke of the law of Moses; which
+point he taught the Gentiles also. Wherefore, although your church do keep
+the Jewish rites with another meaning than God ordained them for the Jews,
+&c., yet this of Peter showeth that the thing is Jewish, and you to
+Judaise who keep them." By the very same reasons prove we that Formalists
+do Romanise by keeping the popish ceremonies, though with another meaning,
+and to another use, than the Romanists do. The very external use,
+therefore, of any sacred ceremony of human institution, is not to be
+suffered in the matter of worship, when in respect of this external use we
+are sorted with idolaters. 3. If conformity with idolaters in the external
+use of their ceremonies be lawful, if so be there be a difference in the
+substance of the worship and object whereunto they are applied, then why
+were Christians forbidden of old (as we have heard before) to keep the
+calends of January, and the first day of every month, forasmuch as the
+pagans used so? Why was trin-immersion in baptism, and fasting upon the
+Lord's day forbidden, for that the heretics did so? Why did the Nicene
+fathers inhibit the keeping of Easter upon the fourteenth day of the
+month,(638) so much the rather because the Jews kept it on that day? The
+Bishop must say there was no need of shunning conformity with pagans,
+Jews, heretics, in the external use of their rites and customs, and that a
+difference ought to have been made only in the object and use whereunto
+the same was applied. Nay, why did God forbid Israel to cut their hair as
+the Gentiles did? Had it not been enough not to apply this rite to a
+superstitious use, as Aquinas showeth(639) the Gentiles did? Why was the
+very external use of it forbidden?
+
+_Sect._ 14. There is yet another piece brought against us, but we will
+abide the proof of it, as of the rest. Nobis saith,(640) _Saravia, satis
+est, modestis et piis Christianis satisfacere, qui ita recesserunt a
+superstitionibus et idololatriae Romanae ecclesiae, ut probatos ab
+orthodoxis patribus mores, non rejiciant._ So have some thought to escape
+by this postern, that they use the ceremonies, not for conformity with
+Papists, but for conformity with the ancient fathers. _Ans._ 1. When
+Rainold speaketh of the abolishing of popish ceremonies,(641) he answereth
+this subtlety: "But if you say, therefore, that we be against the ancient
+fathers in religion, because we pluck down that which they did set up,
+take heed lest your speech do touch the Holy Ghost, who saith that
+Hezekiah (in breaking down the brazen serpent) did keep God's commandments
+which he commanded Moses," 2 Kings xviii. 6; and yet withal saith, "That
+he brake in pieces the serpent of brass which Moses had made," 2 Kings
+xviii. 4. 2. There are some of the ceremonies which the fathers used not,
+as the surplice (which we have seen before(642)) and kneeling in the act
+of receiving the eucharist (as we shall see afterwards(643)). 3. Yielding
+by concession, not by confession, that all the ceremonies about which
+there is controversy now among us, were of old used by the fathers; yet
+that which these Formalists say, is (as Parker showeth(644)) even as if a
+servant should be covered before his master, not as covering is a late
+sign of pre-eminence, but as it was of old, a sign of subjection; or as if
+one should preach that the prelates are _tyranni_ to their brethren,
+_fures_ to the church, _sophistae_ to the truth, and excuse himself thus:
+I use these words, as of old they signified a ruler, a servant, a student
+of wisdom. All men know that words and actions must be interpreted, used
+and received, according to their modern use, and not as they have been of
+old.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE IDOLS AMONG THE FORMALISTS THEMSELVES; AND THAT
+KNEELING IN THE LORD'S SUPPER BEFORE THE BREAD AND WINE, IN THE ACT OF
+RECEIVING THEM, IS FORMALLY IDOLATRY.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. My fourth argument against the lawfulness of the ceremonies
+followeth, by which I am to evince that they are not only idolatrous
+_reductive_, because monuments of by-past, and _participative_, because
+badges of present idolatry, but that likewise they make Formalists
+themselves to be formally, and in respect of their own using of them,
+idolaters, consideration not had of the by-past or present abusing of them
+by others. This I will make good: first, of all the ceremonies in general;
+then, of kneeling in particular. And I wish our opposites here look to
+themselves, for this argument proveth to them the box of Pandora, and
+containeth that which undoeth them, though this much be not seen before
+the opening.
+
+First, then, the ceremonies are idols to Formalists. It had been good to
+have remembered that which Ainsworth noteth,(645) that idolothites and
+monuments of idolatry should be destroyed, lest themselves at length
+become idols. The idolothious ceremonies, we see now, are become idols to
+those who have retained them. The ground which the Bishop of Winchester
+taketh for his sermon _of the worshipping of imaginations_,--to wit, that
+the devil, seeing that idolatrous images would be put down, bent his whole
+device, in place of them, to erect and set up divers imaginations, to be
+adored and magnified instead of the former,--is, in some things, abused and
+misapplied by him. But well may I apply it to the point in hand; for that
+the ceremonies are the imaginations which are magnified, adored, and
+idolised, instead of the idolatrous images which were put down, thus we
+instruct and qualify:
+
+_Sect._ 2. First, They are so erected and extolled, that they are more
+looked to than the weighty matters of the law of God: all good discipline
+must be neglected before they be not holden up. A covetous man is an
+idolater, for this respect among others, as Davenant noteth,(646) because
+he neglects the service which he oweth to God, and is wholly taken up with
+the gathering of money. And I suppose every one will think that those
+traditions, Mark vii. 8, 9, which the Pharisees kept and held, with the
+laying aside of the commandments of God, might well be called idols. Shall
+we not then call the ceremonies idols, which are observed with the
+neglecting of God's commandments, and which are advanced above many
+substantial points of religion? Idolatry, blasphemy, profanation of the
+Sabbath, perjury, adultery, &c., are overlooked, and not corrected nor
+reproved, nay, not so much as discountenanced in those who favour and
+follow the ceremonies; and if in the fellows and favourites, much more in
+the fathers. What if order be taken with some of those abominations in
+certain abject poor bodies? _Dat veniam corvis, vexat censura columbas._
+What will not an episcopal conformist pass away with, if there be no more
+had against him than the breaking of God's commandments by open and gross
+wickedness? But O what narrow notice is taken of non-conformity! How
+mercilessly is it menaced! How cruelly corrected! Well, the ceremonies are
+more made of than the substance. And this is so evident, that Dr Burges
+himself lamenteth the pressure of conformity,(647) and denieth not that
+which is objected to him, namely, that more grievous penalties are
+inflicted upon the refusal of the ceremonies than upon adultery and
+drunkenness.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Secondly, Did not Eli make idols of his sons, 1 Sam. ii. 29,
+when he spared them and bare with them, though with the prejudice of God's
+worship? And may not we call the ceremonies idols, which are not only
+spared and borne with, to the prejudice of God's worship, but are likewise
+so erected, that the most faithful labourers in God's house, for their
+sake, are depressed, the teachers and maintainers of God's true worship
+cast out? For their sake, many learned and godly men are envied,
+contemned, hated, and nothing set by, because they pass under the name (I
+should say the nickname) of puritans. For their sake many dear Christians
+have been imprisoned, fined, banished, &c. For their sake many qualified
+and well-gifted men are holden out of the ministry, and a door of entrance
+denied to those to whom God hath granted a door of utterance. For their
+sake, those whose faithful and painful labours in the Lord's harvest have
+greatly benefited the church, have been thrust from their charges, so that
+they could not fulfil the ministry which they have received of the Lord,
+to testify of the gospel of the grace of God. The best builders, the wise
+master-builders, have been over-turned by them. This is objected to Joseph
+Hall by the Brownists; and what can he say to it? Forsooth, "that not so
+much the ceremonies are stood upon as obedience. If God please to try Adam
+but with an apple, it is enough. What do we quarrel at the value of the
+fruit when we have a prohibition? Shemei is slain. What! merely for going
+out of the city? The act was little, the bond was great. What _is_
+commanded matters not so much as _by whom._" _Ans._ 1. If obedience be the
+chief thing stood upon, why are not other laws and statutes urged as
+strictly as those which concern the ceremonies? 2. But what means he? What
+would he say of those Scottish Protestants imprisoned in the castle of
+Scherisburgh in France,(648) who, being commanded by the captain to come
+to the mass, answered, "That to do anything that was against their
+conscience, they would not, neither for him nor yet for the king?" If he
+approve this answer of theirs, he must allow us to say, that we will do
+nothing which is against our consciences. We submit ourselves and all
+which we have to the king, and to inferior governors we render all due
+subjection which we owe to them, but no mortal man hath domination over
+our consciences, which are subject to one only Lawgiver, and ruled by his
+law. I have shown in the first part of this dispute how conscience is
+sought to be bound by the law of the ceremonies, and here, by the way, no
+less may be drawn from Hall's words, which now I examine; for he implieth
+in them that we are bound to obey the statutes about the ceremonies merely
+for their authority's sake who command us, though there be no other thing
+in the ceremonies themselves which can commend them to us. But I have also
+proved before that human laws do not bind to obedience, but only in this
+case, when the things which they prescribe do agree and serve to those
+things which God's law prescribeth; so that, as human laws, they bind not,
+neither have they any force to bind, but only by participation with God's
+law. This ground hath seemed to P. Bayne(649) so necessary to be known,
+that he hath inserted it in his brief _Exposition of the Fundamental
+Points of Religion_. And besides all that which I have said for it before,
+I may not here pass over in silence this one thing, that Hall himself
+calleth it superstition to make any more sins than the ten
+commandments.(650) Either, then, let it be shown out of God's word that
+non-conformity, and the refusing of the English popish ceremonies, is a
+fault, or else let us not be thought bound by men's laws where God's law
+hath left us free. Yet we deal more liberally with our opposites, for if
+we prove not the unlawfulness of the ceremonies, both by God's word and
+sound reason, let us then be bound to use them for ordinance' sake.
+
+3. His comparisons are far wide. They are so far from running upon four
+feet, that they have indeed no feet at all, whether we consider the
+commandments, or the breach of them, he is altogether extravagant. God
+might have commanded Adam to eat the apple which he forbade him to eat,
+and so the eating of it had been good, the not eating of it evil; whereas
+the will and commandment of men is not _regula regulans_, but _regula
+regulata_. Neither can they make good or evil, beseeming or not beseeming,
+what they list, but their commandments are to be examined by a higher
+rule. When Solomon commanded Shemei to dwell at Jerusalem, and not to go
+over the brook Kidron, he had good reason for that which he required; for
+as P. Martyr noteth,(651) he was a man of the family of the house of Saul,
+2 Sam. xv. 5, and hated the kingdom and throne of David, so that _relictus
+liber multa fuisset molitus, vel cum Israelitis, vel cum Palestinis_. But
+what reason is there for charging us with the law of the ceremonies,
+except the sole will of the lawmakers? Yet, say that Solomon had no reason
+for this his commandment, except his own will and pleasure for trying the
+obedience of Shemei, who will say that princes have as great liberty and
+power of commanding at their pleasure in matters of religion as in civil
+matters? If we consider the breach of the commandments, he is still at
+random. Though God tried Adam but with an apple, yet divines mark in his
+eating of that forbidden fruit many gross and horrible sins,(652) as
+infidelity, idolatry, pride, ambition, self-love, theft, covetousness,
+contempt of God, profanation of God's name, ingratitude, impostacy,
+murdering of his posterity, &c. But, I pray, what exorbitant evils are
+found in our modest and Christian-like denial of obedience to the law of
+the ceremonies? When Shemei transgressed king Solomon's commandment,
+besides the violation of this,(653) and the disobeying of the charge
+wherewith Solomon (by the special direction and inspiration of God) had
+charged him, that his former wickedness, and that which he hath done to
+David, might be returned upon his head, the Divine Providence so fitly
+furnishing another occasion and cause of his punishment. There was also a
+great contempt and misregard showed to the king, in that Shemei, knowing
+his own evil-deservings, acknowledged (as the truth was) he had received
+no small favour, and therefore consented to the king's word as good, and
+promised obedience. Yet for all that, upon such a petty and small occasion
+as the seeking of two runagate servants, he reckoned not to despise the
+king's mercy and lenity, and to set at nought his most just commandment.
+What! Is nonconformity no less piacular? If any will dare to say so, he is
+bound to show that it is so. And thus have we pulled down the untempered
+mortar wherewith Hall would hide the idolising of the ceremonies.
+
+_Sect._ 4. But Thirdly, Did not Rachel make Jacob an idol, when she
+ascribed to him a power of giving children? "Am I in God's stead?" saith
+Jacob, Gen. xxx. 1, 3. How much more reason have we to say that the
+ceremonies are idols, are set up in God's stead, since an operative virtue
+is placed in them, for giving stay and strength against sin and tentation,
+and for working of other spiritual and supernatural effects? Thus is the
+sign of the cross an idol to those who conform to Papists in the use of
+it. M. Ant. de Dominis holdeth,(654) _Crucis signum contra daemones esse
+praesidium_; and that even(655) _ex opere operato, effectus mirabiles
+signi crucis, etiam apud infideles, aliquando enituerint_. "Shall I say
+(saith Mr Hooker),(656) that the sign of the cross (as we use it) is a
+mean in some sort to work our preservation from reproach? Surely the mind
+which as yet hath not hardened itself in sin, is seldom provoked thereunto
+in any gross and grievous manner, but nature's secret suggestion objecteth
+against it ignominy as a bar, which conceit being entered into that place
+of man's fancy (the forehead), the gates whereof have imprinted in them
+that holy sign (the cross), which bringeth forthwith to mind whatsoever
+Christ hath wrought and we vowed against sin; it cometh hereby to pass,
+that Christian men never want a most effectual, though a silent teacher,
+to avoid whatsoever may deservedly procure shame." What more do Papists
+ascribe to the sign of the cross, when they say, that by it Christ keeps
+his own faithful ones(657) _contra omnes tentationes et hostes_. Now if
+the covetous man be called an idolater, Eph. v. 5, because, though he
+think not his money to be God, yet he trusteth to live and prosper by it
+(which confidence and hope we should repose in God only, Jer. xvii. 7), as
+Rainold marketh,(658) then do they make the sign of the cross an idol who
+trust by it to be preserved from sin, shame, and reproach, and to have
+their minds stayed in the instant of tentation. For who hath given such a
+virtue to that dumb and idle sign as to work that which God only can work?
+And how have these good fellows imagined, that not by knocking at their
+brains, as Jupiter, but by only signing their foreheads, they can
+procreate some menacing Minerva, or armed Pallas, to put to flight the
+devil himself.
+
+_Sect._ 5. The same kind of operative virtue is ascribed to the ceremony
+of confirmation or bishopping; for the English service book teacheth, that
+by it children receive strength against sin, and against tentation. And
+Hooker hath told us,(659) that albeit the successors of the apostles had
+but only for a time such power as by prayer and imposition of hands to
+bestow the Holy Ghost, yet confirmation hath continued hitherto for very
+special benefits; and that the fathers impute everywhere unto it "that
+gift or grace of the Holy Ghost, not which maketh us first Christian men,
+but when we are made such, assisteth us in all virtue, armeth us against
+tentation and sin." Moreover, whilst he is a-showing why this ceremony of
+confirmation was separated from baptism, having been long joined with it,
+one of his reasons which he giveth for the separation is, that sometimes
+the parties who received baptism were infants, at which age they might
+well be admitted to live in the family, but to fight in the army of God,
+to bring forth the fruits, and to do the works of the Holy Ghost, their
+time of hability was not yet come; which implieth, that by the
+confirmation men receive this hability, else there is no sense in that
+which he saith. What is idolatry, if this be not, to ascribe to rites of
+man's devising, the power and virtue of doing that which none but He to
+whom all power in heaven and earth belongs can do; and howbeit Hooker
+would strike us dead at once, with the high-sounding name of the fathers,
+yet it is not unknown, that the first fathers from whom this idolatry hath
+descended were those ancient heretics, the Montanists. For as Chemnitius
+marketh out of Tertullian and Cyprian,(660) the Montanists were the first
+who began to ascribe any spiritual efficacy or operation to rites and
+ceremonies devised by men.
+
+_Sect._ 6. Fourthly, That whereunto more respect and account is given than
+God alloweth to be given to it, and wherein more excellency is placed than
+God hath put into it, or will at all communicate to it, is an idol exalted
+against God; which maketh Zanchius to say,(661) _Si Luthero vel Calvino
+tribuas, quod non potuerant errare, idola tibi fingis._ Now, when
+Hooker(662) accounteth festival days, for God's extraordinary works
+wrought upon them, to be holier than other days, what man of sound
+judgment will not perceive that these days are idolised, since such an
+eminence and excellency is put in them, whereas God hath made no
+difference betwixt them and any other days? We have seen also that the
+ceremonies are urged as necessary,(663) but did ever God allow that things
+indifferent should be so highly advanced at the pleasure of men? And,
+moreover, I have shown(664) that worship is placed in them; in which
+respect they must needs be idols, being thus exalted against God's word,
+at which we are commanded to hold us in the matter of worship. Last of
+all, they are idolatrously advanced and dignified, in so much as holy
+mystical significations are given them, which are a great deal more than
+God's word alloweth in any rites of human institution, as shall be
+shown(665) afterwards; and so it appeareth how the ceremonies, as now
+urged and used, are idols.
+
+Now to kneeling in the act of receiving the Lord's supper, which I will
+prove to be direct and formal idolatry; and from idolatry shall it never
+be purged while the world standeth, though our opposites strive for it,
+_tanquam pro aris et focis_.
+
+_Sect._ 7. The question about the idolatry of kneeling betwixt them and us
+standeth in this: Whether kneeling, at the instant of receiving the
+sacrament, before the consecrated bread and wine,--purposely placed in our
+sight in the act of kneeling as signs standing in Christ's stead, before
+which we, the receivers, are to exhibit outwardly religious adoration,--be
+formally idolatry or not? No man can pick a quarrel at the stating of the
+question thus; for, 1. We dispute only about kneeling at the instant of
+receiving the sacramental elements, as all know. 2. No man denies inward
+adoration in the act of receiving, for in our minds we then adore by the
+inward graces of faith, love, thankfulness, &c., by the holy and heavenly
+exercise whereof we glorify God; so that the controversy is about outward
+adoration. 3. No man will deny that the consecrated elements are purposely
+placed in our sight when we kneel, except he say, that they are in that
+action only accidentally present before us no otherwise than the
+table-cloth or the walls of the church are. 4. That the sacramental
+elements are in our sight (when we kneel) as signs standing in Christ's
+stead, it is most undeniable; for if these signs stand not in Christ's
+stead to us, the bread bearing _vicem corporis Christi_, and the wine
+_vicem sanguinis_, it followeth, that when we eat the bread and drink the
+wine, we are no more eating the flesh and drinking the blood of Christ,
+spiritually and sacramentally, than if we were receiving any other bread
+and wine not consecrated. I stay not now upon this head, because our
+opposites acknowledge it; for Dr Burges(666) calls the sacraments the
+Lord's images and deputies; and the Archbishop of Spalato saith,(667) that
+when we take the sacrament of Christ's body, we adore _Christum sub hac
+figura figuratum_. 5. That kneelers, at the instant of receiving, have the
+consecrated bread and wine in the eyes both of their bodies and minds, as
+things so stated in that action, that before them they are to exhibit
+outward religious adoration as well as inward, it is also most plain; for
+otherwise they should fall down and kneel only out of incogitancy, having
+no such purpose in their minds, or choice in their wills, as to kneel
+before these sacramental signs.
+
+_Sect._ 8. The question thus stated, Formalists deny, we affirm. Their
+negative is destroyed, and our affirmative confirmed by these reasons:--
+
+First, The kneelers worship Christ in or by the elements, as their own
+confessions declare. "When we take the eucharist, we adore the body of
+Christ, _per suum signum_," saith the Archbishop of Spalato.(668) "We
+kneel by the sacrament to the thing specified," saith the Bishop of
+Edinburgh.(669) The Archbishop of St Andrews(670) and Dr Burges(671)
+profess the adoring of Christ in the sacrament. Dr Mortoune maintaineth
+such an adoration in the sacrament as he calleth relative from the sign to
+Christ; and Paybody(672) defendeth him herein. But the replier(673) to Dr
+Mortoune's _Particular Defence_ inferreth well, that if the adoration be
+relative from the sign, it must first be carried to the sign as a means of
+conveyance unto Christ. Dr Burges(674) alloweth adoration, or divine
+worship (as he calleth it), to be given to the sacrament respectively; and
+he allegeth a place of Theodoret,(675) to prove that such an adoration as
+he there taketh for divine worship is done to the sacrament in relation to
+Christ, and that this adoration performed to the mysteries as types, is to
+be passed over to the archetype, which is the body and blood of Christ.
+Since, then, that kneeling about which our question is, by the confession
+of kneelers themselves, is divine worship given by the sign to the thing
+signified, and done to the sacrament respectively or in relation to
+Christ, he that will say that it is not idolatry must acquit the Papists
+of idolatry also in worshipping before their images; for they do in like
+manner profess that they adore _prototypon per imaginem, ad imaginem_ or
+_in imagine_, and that they give no more to the image but relative or
+respective worship. The Rhemists(676) tell us that they do no more but
+kneel before the creatures, at, or by them, adoring God. It availeth not
+here to excogitate some differences betwixt the sacramental elements and
+the popish images, for what difference soever be betwixt them when they
+are considered in their own natural being, yet as objects of adoration
+they differ not, because when they are considered _in esse adorabili_, we
+see the same kind of adoration is exhibited by Formalists before the
+elements which is by Papists before their images. To come nearer the
+point, Papists profess that they give to the outward signs in the
+sacrament no other adoration than the same which Formalists give to them.
+Franciscus a Sancta Clara saith,(677) that divine worship doth not agree
+to the signs _per se_, but only _per accidens_, and he allegeth for
+himself that the Council of Trent, can 6. _de euch_, saith not that the
+sacrament, but that Christ in the sacrament, is to be adored with
+_latria_. To the same purpose I observe that Bellarmine(678) will not take
+upon him to maintain any adoration of the sacrament with _latria_, holding
+only that Christ in the eucharist is to be thus adored, and that _symbola
+externa per se et proprie non sunt adoranda_. Whereupon he determineth,
+_status questionis non est, nisi an Christus in eucharistia sit adorandus,
+cultu latriae_. Now, albeit Papists understand by the outward sign of
+Christ's body in the eucharist nothing else but the species or accidents
+of the bread, yet since they attribute to the same _quod sub illis
+accidentibus ut vocant sit substantialiter corpus Christi vivum, cum sua
+Deitate conjunctum_,(679) and since they give adoration or _latria_(680)
+to the species, though not _per se_, yet as _quid unum_ with the Body of
+Christ which they contain,--hereby it is evident that they worship
+idolatrously those very accidents. And I would understand, if any of our
+opposites dare say that Papists commit no such idolatry as here I impute
+to them? Or, if they acknowledge this idolatry of Papists, how make they
+themselves clean? for we see that the worship which Papists give to the
+species of the bread is only relative to Christ, and of the same kind with
+that which Formalists give to the bread and wine.
+
+_Sect._ 9. Secondly, Religious kneeling before the bread which is set
+before us for a sign to stand in Christ's stead, and before which we adore
+whilst it is to us actually an image representing Christ,(681) is the very
+bowing down and worshipping forbidden in the second commandment. The
+eucharist is called by the fathers _imago, signum, figura, similitudo_, as
+Hospinian(682) instanceth out of Origen, Nazianzen, Augustine, Hilary,
+Tertullian, Ambrose. The Archbishop of Armagh hath also observed,(683)
+that the fathers expressly call the sacrament an image of Christ's body,
+and well might they call it so, since the sacramental elements do not only
+represent Christ to us, but also stand in Christ's stead, in such sort
+that by the worthy receiving of them we are assured that we receive Christ
+himself; and in eating of this bread, and drinking of this wine, we eat
+the flesh, and drink the blood of Christ spiritually, and by faith.
+Neither could the consecrated elements make a sacrament if they were not
+such images standing in Christ's stead. But what needeth any more? Dr
+Burges(684) himself calleth the sacraments the Lord's images. Now, that a
+man who adoreth before the painted or graven image of Christ, though he
+profess that he intendeth his whole adoration to Christ, and that he
+placeth the image before him only to represent Christ, and to stir up his
+mind to worship Christ, doth nevertheless commit idolatry, I trust none of
+our opposites will deny. Nay, Bishop Lindsey teacheth plainly,(685) that
+it is idolatry to set before the eyes of our minds or bodies any image as
+a mean or motive of adoration, even though the worship should be
+abstracted from the image, and not given unto it. Well, then, will it
+please him to let us see that kneeling before the actual images of
+Christ's body and blood in the sacrament, even though these images should
+be no otherwise considered in the act of adoration, but as active objects,
+motives and occasions which stir up the mind of the kneeler to worship
+Christ (for this is the best face which himself puts upon kneeling, though
+falsely, as we shall see afterward), is not so great idolatry as the
+other. All the difference which he maketh is,(686) "that no true worship
+can be properly occasioned by an image, which is a doctor of lies,
+teaching nothing of God, but falsehood and vanities; but the blessed
+sacrament being instituted by Christ, to call to our remembrance his
+death, &c., gives us, so oft as we receive it, a most powerful and
+pregnant occasion of thanksgiving and praise." Dr Burges,(687)
+intermeddling with the same difference-making, will not have the
+sacraments, which are images of God's making and institution, to be
+compared with images made by the lust of men. Two differences, then, are
+given us. 1. That the sacramental elements have their institution from
+God; images not so. 2. That the sacrament is an occasion of worship; an
+image not so. The first difference makes them no help; for though the
+ordinance and institution of God makes the use of sacramental images to be
+no will-worship, yet doth it not any whit avail to show that adoration
+before them is no idolatry. May I not commit idolatry with images of God's
+institution no less than with those invented by men, when (_coeteris
+paribus_) there is no other difference betwixt them, considered as objects
+of adoration, but that of the ordinance and institution which they have?
+What if I fall down at the hearing of a sermon, and religiously adore
+before the pastor, as the vicarious sign of Christ himself, who stands
+there, in Christ's stead, 2 Cor. v. 20, referring my adoration to Christ
+only, yet in or by that ambassador who stands in Christ's stead? If this
+my adoration should be called so great idolatry as if I should fall down
+before a graven image, to worship God in or by it (for it is, indeed, as
+great every way), our kneelers, I perceive, would permit me to answer for
+myself, that my worshipping of God by the minister cannot be called
+idolatrous, by this reason, (because the worshipping of God by a graven
+image is such, therefore also the worshipping of him by a living image is
+no other,) since images of God's institution must not be paralleled with
+those of men's invention. As to the second difference, I answer, 1. Though
+the Bishop muttereth here that no true worship can be occasioned by an
+image, yet belike he and his fellows will not stand to it, for many of
+them allow the historical use of images; and the Bishop hath not denied,
+though his antagonist objecteth it. Dr Mortoune(688) plainly alloweth of
+images for historical commemoration; and herein he is followed by Dr
+Burges.(689) 2. Whereas he saith that the blessed sacrament is instituted
+by Christ to call to our remembrance his death, this inferreth not that it
+is an occasion of thanksgiving and praise in the very act of receiving, as
+we shall see afterward. Our question is only about kneeling in the act of
+receiving. 3. We confess that the sacrament is an occasion of inward
+worship in the receiving of it; for in _eucharistia exercetur summa fides,
+spes, charitas, religio, caeteraeque virtutes, quibus Deum colimus et
+glorificamus_.(690) But the outward adoration of kneeling down upon our
+knees can be no more occasioned by the blessed sacrament, in the act of
+receiving it, than by a graven image in the act of beholding it. The point
+which the Bishop had to prove is, that whereas an image cannot be the
+occasion of outward adoration and kneeling to God before it in the act of
+looking upon it, the sacrament may be, and is, an occasion of kneeling,
+when it is set before us in the act of receiving. This neither he, nor any
+for him, shall ever make good.
+
+_Sect._ 10. Thirdly, Kneeling in the act of receiving the sacrament before
+the vicarious signs which stand in Christ's stead, and are purposely set
+before us in the act of adoration, that before them we may adore, wanteth
+nothing to make up idolatrous co-adoration or relative worship. Our
+opposites here tell us of two things necessary to the making up of
+idolatry, neither of which is found in their kneeling. First, they say,
+except there be an intention in the worshipper to adore the creature which
+is before his eyes, his kneeling before it is no idolatry. "What shall I
+say? saith Paybody.(691) What need I say in this place, but to profess,
+and likewise avouch, that we intend only to worship the Lord our God, when
+we kneel in the act of receiving? We worship not the bread and wine; we
+intend not our adoring and kneeling unto them. Give us leave to avouch our
+sincerity in this matter, and it will take away the respect of idolatry in
+God's worship." _Ans._ I showed before, that Paybody defendeth Dr
+Mortoune's adoration, which he calleth relative from the sign to Chris;
+yet let it be so, as here he pretendeth, that no adoration is intended to
+the sign; will this save their kneeling from idolatry? Nay, then, the
+three children should not have been idolaters, if they had kneeled before
+Nebuchadnezzar's image, intending their worship to God only, and not to
+the image. Our opposites here take the Nicodemites by the hand. But what
+saith Calvin?(692) _Si isti boni sapientesque sophistae ibi tum fuissent,
+simplicitatem illorum trium servorum Dei irrisissent. Nam hujusmodi credo
+eos verbis objurgassent: miseri homines, istud quidem_(_693_)_ non est
+adorare, quum vos in rebus nullam fidem adhibetis: nulla est idololatria
+nisi ubi est __ devotio, hoc est quaedam animi ad idola colenda
+venerandaque adjunctio atque applicatio_, &c. If Paybody had been in
+Calvin's place, he could not have called the Nicodemites idolaters,
+forasmuch as they have no intention to worship the popish images when they
+kneel and worship before them. Nay, the grossest idolaters that ever were,
+shall by this doctrine be no idolaters, and Paul shall be censured for
+teaching that the Gentiles did worship devils, 1 Cor. x. 10, since they
+did not intend to worship devils. _Idolatrae nec olim in paganismo
+intendebant, nec hodie in papatu intendant, daemonibus offere quid tum?
+Apostolus contrarium pronuntiat, quicquid illi intendant_, saith
+Pareus.(694)
+
+_Sect._ 11. The other thing which our kneelers require to the making up of
+idolatry is, that the creature before which we adore be a passive object
+of the adoration; whereas, say they,(695) the sacramental elements are "no
+manner of way the passive object of our adoration, but the active only of
+that adoration which, at the sacrament, is given to Christ; that is, such
+an object and sign as moves us upon the sight, or by the signification
+thereof, to lift up our hearts and adore the only object of our faith, the
+Lord Jesus; such as the holy word of God, his works, and benefits are, by
+meditation and consideration whereof we are moved and stirred up to adore
+him." _Ans._ 1. That which he affirmeth is false, and out of one page of
+his own book I draw an argument which destroyeth it, thus: If the
+sacramental elements were only the active object of their adoration who
+kneel before them in the receiving, then their real presence should be but
+accidental to the kneelers. But the real presence of the elements, in the
+act of receiving, is not accidental to the kneelers; therefore, the
+proposition I draw from his own words: "We can neither (saith he(696))
+pray to God, nor thank him, nor praise him, but ever there must be, before
+the eyes of our minds, at least something of his works, word, or
+sacraments, if not before our external senses." He confesseth it will be
+enough, that these active objects of worship be before the eyes of our
+minds, and that their real presence, before our external senses, is not
+necessary but accidental to us, whose minds are by their means stirred up
+to worship. And so it is indeed. For _esse scibile_, or _rememoratiuum_ of
+an active object of adoration, is that which stirreth up the mind to
+worship, so that the real presence of such an object is but accidental to
+the worshipper. The assumption I likewise draw out of the Bishop's own
+words. For he saith(697) that we kneel before the elements, "having them
+in our sight, or object to our senses, as ordinary signs, means, and
+memorials, to stir us up to worship," &c. Now if we have them in our sight
+and before our senses for this purpose, that they may be means, signs, and
+memorials to stir us up to worship, then, sure, their being really before
+our senses, is not accidental to us when we kneel. Since Dr Burges(698)
+hath been so dull and sottish as to write that "signs are but accidentally
+before the communicants when they receive," he is to be ignominiously
+exsibilat for making the sacred sacramental signs to be no otherwise
+present than the walls of the church, the nails and timber of the material
+table whereupon the elements are set, or anything else accidentally before
+the communicants. But, 2. Put the case, they did make the elements only
+active objects of worship when they kneel in the act of receiving them.
+What! Do some Papists make more of their images when they worship before
+them? They hold, as the Archbishop of Spalato noteth,(699) that _Imago est
+medium duntaxat seu instrumentum quo exemplar occurrit suo honoratori,
+cultori, adoratori: imago excitat tantummodo memoriam, ut in exemplar
+feratur_. Will we have them to speak for themselves? Suarez will have
+_Imagines esse occasiones vel signa excitantia hominem ad adorandum
+prototype_.(700) Friar Pedro de Cabrera,(701) a Spaniard, taketh the
+opinion of Durand and his followers to be this: That images are adored
+only improperly, because they put men in mind of the persons represented
+by them; and he reasoneth against them thus: "If images were only to be
+worshipped by way of rememoration and recordation, because they make us
+remember the samplers which we do so worship as if they had been then
+present, it would follow that all creatures should be adored with the same
+adoration wherewith we worship God, seeing all of them do lead us unto the
+knowledge and remembrance of God." Whereby it is evident, that in the
+opinion of Durand,(702) and those who are of his mind, images are but
+active objects of adoration. Lastly, what saith Becane the Jesuit?(703)
+_Imago autem Christi non est occasio idololatriae apud nos catholicos, quia
+non alium ob finem eam retinemus, quam ut nobis Christum salvatorem, et
+beneficia ejus representet._ More particularly he will have the image of
+Christ honoured for two reasons. 1. _Quia honor qui exhibetur imagini,
+redundat in eum cujus est imago._ 2. _Quia illud in pretio haberi potest,
+quod per se revocat nobis in memoriam beneficia Dei, et est occasio ut pro
+eis acceptis grati existamus. At imago Christi per se revocat nobis in
+memoriam beneficium nostrae redemptionis_, &c. That for this respect the
+image of Christ is honoured, he confirmed by this simile: _Quia ob eandem
+causam apud nos in pretio ac honore sunt sacra Biblia, itemque festa
+paschatis, pentecostes, nativitatis, et passionis Christi_. What higher
+account is here made of images than to be active objects of worship? For
+even whilst it is said that the honour done to the image resulteth to him
+whose image it is, there is no honour ascribed to the image as a passive
+object; but they who honour an image for this respect, and with this
+meaning, have it only for an active object which represents and calls to
+their mind the first sampler, as the Archbishop of Spalato also
+observeth.(704) Neither the Papists only, but some also of the very
+heathen idolaters, _norunt in imaginibus nihil deitatis inesse, meras
+autem esse rerum absentium repraesentationes_,(705) &c. And what if neither
+heathens nor Papists had been of this opinion, that images are but active
+objects of worship? Yet I have before observed, that the Bishop himself
+acknowledgeth it were idolatry to set before us an image as the active
+object of our adoration, though the worship should be abstracted from the
+image.
+
+_Sect._ 12. Finally, To shut up this point, it is to be noted that the
+using of the sacramental elements, as active objects of worship only,
+cannot make kneeling before them in the receiving to be idolatry; for then
+might we lawfully, and without idolatry, kneel before every active object
+which stirreth up our minds to worship God. All the works of God are such
+active objects, as the Bishop also resolveth in the words before cited.
+Yet may we not, at the sight of every one of God's works, kneel down and
+adore, whilst the eyes, both of body and mind, are fixed upon it, as the
+means and occasion which stirreth us up to worship God. The Bishop,
+indeed, holdeth, we may, only he saith this is not necessary,(706) because
+when, by the sight of the creatures of God we are moved privately to
+worship, our external gesture of adoration is arbitrary, and sometimes no
+gesture at all is required. But in the ordinary ministry, when the works
+of God or his benefits are propounded, or applied publicly, to stir us up
+to worship in the assemblies of the church, then our gesture ceaseth to be
+arbitrary; for it must be such as is prescribed and received in the church
+where we worship. _Ans._ 1. He shuffleth the point decently, for when he
+speaks of being moved to worship at the sight of any creature, he means of
+inward worship, as is evident by these words, "Sometime no gesture at all
+is required;" but when he speaks of being moved to worship in the
+assemblies of the church, by the benefits of God propounded publicly (for
+example, by the blessed sacrament), then he means of outward worship, as
+is evident by his requiring necessarily a gesture. He should have spoken
+of one kind of worship in both cases, namely, of that which is outward;
+for of no other do we dispute. When we are moved by the sacrament to adore
+God in the act of receiving, thus can be no other but that which is
+inward, and thus we adore God by faith, hope, and love, though neither the
+heart be praying, nor the body kneeling. That which we deny (whereof
+himself could not be ignorant) is, that the sacramental elements may be to
+us, in the receiving, active objects of outward adoration; or because they
+move us to worship inwardly, that therefore we should adore outwardly. 2.
+Whereas he teacheth that kneeling before any creature, when thereby we are
+moved to worship privately, is lawful; but kneeling before the sacramental
+elements, when thereby we are moved to worship in the assemblies of the
+church, is necessary; that we may kneel there, but we must kneel here, he
+knew, or else he made himself ignorant that both these should be denied by
+us. Why, then, did he not make them good? Kneeling before those active
+objects which stir up our hearts to worship, if it be necessary in the
+church, it must first be proved lawful both in the church and out of it.
+Now, if a man meeting his lord riding up the street upon his black horse,
+have his heart stirred up to worship God, by something which he seeth
+either in himself or his horse, should fall down and kneel before him or
+his horse, as the active object of his worship, I marvel whether the
+Bishop would give the man leave to kneel, and stand still as the active
+object before the man's senses? As for us, we hold that we may not kneel
+before every creature which stirreth up our hearts to worship God; kneel,
+I say, whilst the eyes both of body and mind are fastened upon it as the
+active object of our adoration.
+
+_Sect._ 13. The fourth reason whereby I prove the kneeling in question to
+be idolatry, proceedeth thus. Kneeling in the act of receiving, for
+reverence to the sacrament, is idolatry. But the kneeling in question is
+such, therefore, &c. The proposition is necessary. For if they exhibit
+divine adoration (such as then kneeling is confessed to be) for reverence
+of the sacrament, they do not only give, but also intend to give, divine
+adoration to the same. This is so undeniable that it dasheth Bishop
+Lindsey,(707) and makes him give a broad confession, that it is idolatry
+to kneel at the sacrament for reverence to the elements. The assumption I
+prove from the confession of Formalists. King Edward's book of Common
+Prayer teacheth, that kneeling at the communion is enjoined for this
+purpose, that the sacrament might not be profaned, but held in a reverent
+and holy estimation. So doth Dr Mortoune tell us,(708) that the reason
+wherefore the church of England hath institute kneeling in the act of
+receiving the sacrament, is, that thereby we might testify our due
+estimation of such holy rites. Paybody(709) makes one of the respects of
+kneeling to be the reverent handling and using of the sacrament. The
+Bishop of Winchester exclaimeth against such as do not kneel, for not
+regarding the table of the Lord, which hath ever been thought of all
+holies the most holy, and for denying reverence to the holy symbols and
+precious memorials of our greatest delivery, even the reverence which is
+given to prayer. Where, by the way, I observe, that when we kneel at
+prayer it is not to give reverence to prayer, but to God, whom then most
+immediately we adore, so that kneeling for reverence of the sacrament
+receiveth no commendation from kneeling at prayer. The Act of Perth about
+kneeling, when Bishop Lindsey had polished and refined it as well as he
+could, ordained us to kneel at the sacrament in due regard of so divine a
+mystery. And what think we is understood by this mystery, for reverence
+whereof we are commanded to kneel? The Bishop(710) expoundeth this mystery
+to be the receiving of the body and blood of Christ. But here he either
+means the spiritual receiving of the body and blood of Christ, or the
+sacramental. If the spiritual, why did not the Synod ordain us to kneel in
+hearing the gospel? for therein we receive spiritually the body and blood
+of Christ, and that as truly and really as in the sacrament. Whereupon the
+Archbishop of Armagh showeth,(711) that the spiritual and inward feeding
+upon the body and blood of Christ is to be found out of the sacrament, and
+that divers of the fathers do apply the sixth of John to the hearing of
+the word also, Clemens Alexandrinus, Origen, Eusebius, as Caesiriensis, and
+others. Basilius Magnus likewise teacheth plainly, that we eat the flesh
+of Christ in his word and doctrine. This, I am sure, no man dare deny. The
+Bishop, then, must mean by this mystery the sacramental receiving of the
+body and blood of Christ. Now, the sacramental receiving of the body and
+blood of Christ, is the receiving of the sacramental signs of his body and
+blood. And as the Archbishop of Armagh also observeth,(712) the substance
+which is outwardly delivered in the sacrament, is not really the body and
+blood of Christ. Again he saith,(713) that the bread and wine are not
+really the body and blood of Christ, but figuratively and sacramentally.
+Thus he opposeth the sacramental presence of the body and blood of Christ
+not only to bodily, but also to real presence; and by just analogy,
+sacramental receiving of the body and blood of Christ is not only to be
+opposed to a receiving of his body and blood into the hands and mouths of
+our bodies, but likewise to the real receiving of the same spiritually
+into our souls. It remaineth, therefore, that kneeling in due regard of
+the sacramental receiving of the body and blood of Christ, must be
+expounded to be kneeling in reverence of the sacramental signs of Christ's
+body and blood; and so Perth's canon, and the Bishop's commentary upon it,
+fall in with the rest of those Formalists cited before, avouching and
+defending kneeling for reverence to the sacrament.
+
+_Sect._ 14. Those who speak out more plainly than Bishop Lindsey, do here
+object to us, that reverence is due to the sacrament, and that we
+ourselves do reverence it when we sit uncovered at the receiving of it.
+But Didoclavius(714) doth well distinguish betwixt veneration and
+adoration, because in civility we use to be uncovered, even to inferiors
+and equals, for the regard which we bear to them, yet do we not worship
+them as we worship the king, on our knees.(715) As, then, in civility,
+there is a respect and reverence different from adoration, so it is in
+religion also. Yea, Bellarmine(716) himself distinguisheth the reverence
+which is due to holy things from adoration. Paybody(717) and Dr
+Burges(718) will by no means admit this distinction betwixt veneration and
+adoration. But since neither of them hath alleged any reason against it, I
+hope they will be weighed down by the authority of the Archbishop of
+Spalato,(719) and the Bishop of Edinburgh,(720) both of whom agree to this
+distinction. So, then, we give no adoration at all to the sacrament,
+because neither by any outward or inward action do we perform any worship
+for the honour of the same. Burges himself hath noted to us,(721) that the
+first Nicene council exhorteth that men should not be _humiliter intenti_
+to the things before them. We neither submit our minds nor humble our
+bodies to the sacrament, yet do we render to it veneration,(722) forasmuch
+as we esteem highly of it, as a most holy thing, and meddle reverently
+with it, without all contempt or unworthy usage. _Res profecto
+inanimatae_, saith the Archbishop of Spalato,(723) _sint sacrae quantum
+placet, alium honorem a nobis non merentur, nisi in sensu negativo_, as
+that they be not contemned, nor unworthily handled. If it be said that we
+ought not to contemn the word, yet hath it not that respect given to it
+which the sacrament hath, at which we are uncovered, so that this
+veneration given to the sacrament must be somewhat more than
+_profanatio_,--I answer, as honour both in the positive and negative sense,
+has various degrees, and according to the more or less immediate
+manifestation of divine ordinances to us, so ought the degrees of our
+veneration to be intended or remitted; which is not so to be understood as
+if one part of God's sacred worship were to be less contemned than another
+(for none of God's most holy ordinances may be in any sort contemned), but
+that for the greater regard of those things which are more immediately
+divine, we are not in the usage of them, to take to ourselves so much
+scope and liberty as otherwise we may lawfully allow to ourselves in
+meddling with such things as are not merely but mixedly divine, and which
+are not from God so immediately as the other, but more by the intervention
+of means; and thus a higher degree of veneration is due to the sacrament
+than to the word preached, not by taking aught from the word, but by
+adding more respect to the sacrament than the word hath. The reason hereof
+is given to be this,(724) because when we come to the sacrament, _nihil
+hic humanum, sed divina omnia_; for Christ's own words are, or at least
+should be spoken to us when we receive the sacrament, and the elements
+also are, by Christ's own institution, holy symbols of his blessed body
+and blood; whereas the word preached to us is but fixedly and mediately
+divine; and because of this intervention of the ministry of men, and
+mixture of their conceptions with the holy Scriptures of God, we are
+bidden try the spirits, and are required, after the example of the
+Bereans, to search the Scriptures daily, whether these things which we
+hear preached be so or not. Now we are not in the like sort to try the
+elements, and the words of the institution, whether they be of God or not,
+because this is sure to all who know out of Scripture the first principles
+of the oracles of God. The consideration hereof warneth us, that the
+sacrament given, according to Christ's institution, is more merely and
+immediately divine than is the word preached; but others (I hear) object,
+that if a man should uncover his head at the sight of a graven image, we
+would account this to be an adoring of the image; and why then shall not
+we call our uncovering at the sacrament adoration also? _Ans._ Though
+veneration and adoration be distinguished in holy things to show that
+adoration given to them is idolatry, but veneration given to them is not
+idolatry, yet in profane things, such as images are, veneration given to
+them is idolatry, as well as adoration; and we are idolaters for doing so
+much as to respect and reverence them as things sacred or holy; for, as I
+touched before, and as Zanchius evidenceth by sundry instances,(725)
+idolatry is committed when more estimation is had of anything, more
+dignity and excellency placed in it, and more regard had to it than God
+alloweth, or than can stand with God's revealed will; for a thing thus
+regarded, though it be not exalted _ut Deus simpliciter_, yet it is set up
+_tanquam Deus ex parte_.
+
+_Sect._ 15. Now Fifthly, If the kneeling in question be not idolatrously
+referred to the sacrament, I demand whereunto is it specially intended? We
+have heard the confession of some of our opposites (and those not of the
+smallest note) avouching kneeling for reverence of the sacrament. Neither
+can the mystery spoken of in the Act of Perth (in due regard whereof we
+are ordained to kneel), be any other than the sacrament. Yet because
+Bishop Lindsey, and some of his kind who desire to hide the foul shape of
+their idolatry with the trimmest fairding they can, will not take with the
+kneeling in reverence of the sacrament, let them show us which is the
+object which they do specially adore, when they kneel in receiving of the
+same; for this their kneeling at this time ariseth from another respect
+than that which they consider in other parts of God's worship, let two of
+our prelates tell it out: Archbishop of St. Andrews would teach out of
+Mouline that we ought to adore the flesh of Jesus Christ in the
+eucharist;(726) the Bishop of Edinburgh also will have us to worship the
+flesh and blood of Christ in the sacrament,(727) because the humanity of
+Christ is there present, being ever and everywhere joined with the
+divinity. But a twofold idolatry may be here deprehended. 1. In that they
+worship the flesh and blood of Christ. 2. In that they worship the same in
+the sacrament. As touching the first, albeit we may and should adore the
+man Christ with divine worship, yet we may not adore his manhood, or his
+flesh and blood. 1. Because though the man Christ be God, yet his manhood
+is not God, and by consequence cannot be honoured with divine worship. 2.
+If adorability agree to the humanity of Christ, then may his humanity help
+and save us: idolaters are mocked by the Spirit of God for worshipping
+things which cannot help nor save them. But the humanity of Christ cannot
+save us nor help us, because _omnis actio est suppositi_, whereas the
+human nature of Christ is not _suppositum_. 3. None of those who defend
+the adoring of the humanity of Christ with divine worship, do well and
+warrantably express their opinion. First, some of the schoolmen have found
+no other respect wherefore the manhood of Christ can be said to be
+adored,(728) except this, that the flesh of Christ is adored by him who
+adores the word incarnate, even as the king's clothes are adored by him
+who adores the king. And thus they make the flesh of Christ to be adored
+only _per accidens. Ego vero_, saith the Archbishop of Spalato,(729) _non
+puta a quoquam regis vestimenta quibus est indutus, adorari_. And, I pray,
+why doth he that worships the king worship his clothes more than any other
+thing which is about him, or beside him, perhaps a hawk upon his hand, or
+a little dog upon his knee? There is no more but the king's own person set
+by the worshipper to have any state in the worship, and therefore no more
+worshipped by him. Others devise another respect wherefore the manhood of
+Christ may be said to be worshipped,(730) namely, that as divine worship
+agrees only to the Godhead, and not _personis divinis praecise sumptis_,
+_i.e._, _sub ratione formali constitutiva personarum quae est __ relatio_:
+but only as these relations _identificantur_ with the essence of the
+Godhead; so the manhood of Christ is to be adored _non per se proecise,
+sed prout suppositatur a Deo_. I answer, if by _suppositatur_ they mean
+(as they must mean) that the manhood is assumed into the unity of the
+person of the Son of God (for otherwise if they mean that the manhood is
+made a person, they are Nestorians), that which they say cannot warrant
+the worshipping of the manhood with divine worship, because the manhood,
+even after this assumption and hypostatical union, and being considered by
+us as now assumed into this personal union, is still for all that a
+creature, and a distinct nature from the Godhead (except we will be
+Eutychians), so that it cannot yet be said to be worshipped with divine
+worship. Dr Field layeth out a third way;(731) for whilst he admitteth the
+phrase of the Lutherans, who say not only concretively that the man Christ
+is omnipresent, but the humanity also, he forgeth a strange distinction.
+"When we speak (saith he) of the humanity of Christ, sometimes we
+understand only that human created essence of a man that was in him,
+sometimes all that is implied in the being of a man, as well subsistence
+as essence." By the same distinction would Field defend the attributing of
+the other divine properties (and adorability among the rest) to the human
+nature. But this distinction is no better than if a man should say, by
+blackness sometimes we understand blackness, and sometimes whiteness. Who
+ever confounded _abstractum_ and _concretum_, before that in Field's field
+they were made to stand for one? It is the tenet of the school, that
+though in God _concretum_ and _abstractum_ differ not, because _Deus_ and
+_Deitas_ are the same, yet in creatures (whereof the manhood of Christ is
+one) they are really differenced. For _concretum_ signifieth _aliquid
+completum subsistens_, and _abstractum_ (such as humanity) signifieth(732)
+something, _non ut subsistens, sed in quo aliquid est_, as whiteness doth
+not signify that thing which is white, but that whereby it is white. How
+comes it then that Field makes humanity, in the abstract, to have a
+subsistence? Antonius Sadeel censures Turrianus(733) for saying that
+_albedo cum pariete, idem est atque paries albus_: his reason is, because
+_albedo dicitur __ esse, non cum pariete sed in pariete._ An abstract is
+no more an abstract if it have a subsistence.
+
+There is yet a fourth sense remaining, which is Augustine's, and theirs
+who speak with him. His sentence which our opposites cite for them is,
+that it is sin not to adore the flesh of Christ, howbeit very erroneously
+he groundeth that which he saith upon those words of the psalm, "Worship
+at his footstool," taking this footstool to be the flesh of Christ. Yet
+that his meaning was better than his expression, and that he meant not
+that adoration should be given to the flesh of Christ, but to the Godhead,
+whose footstool the flesh is, it is plain from those words which Burges
+himself citeth out of him:(734) "To whatsoever earth, _i.e._, flesh of
+Christ, thou bowest and prostrate thyself, look not on it as earth,
+_i.e._, as flesh; but look at that Holy One whose footstool is that thou
+dost adore, _i.e._, look to the Godhead of Christ, whose flesh thou dost
+adore in the mysteries." Wherefore if we would give any sound sense to
+their words who say that the flesh of Christ is to be adored, we must note
+with A. Polanus,(735) that _cum dicitur carnem Christi adorari, non est
+propria sed figurata enunciatio; quia non adoratur proprie caro secundum
+se, quia creatura est, sed Deus in carne manifestatis, seu Deus carne
+vestitus_. But two things I will here advertise my reader of.
+
+1. That though this form of speaking, which saith that the flesh of Christ
+is to be adored, being thus expounded, receiveth a sound sense, yet the
+expression is very bad, and violence is done to the phrase when such a
+meaning is drawn out of it. For how can we, by the flesh of Christ,
+understand his Godhead? The communion of properties admitteth us to put
+the man Christ for God, but not his manhood. And Hooker teacheth
+rightly,(736) "that by force of union, the properties of both natures (and
+by consequence, adorability, which is a property of the divine nature) are
+imputed to the person only in whom they are, and not what belongeth to the
+one nature really conveyed or translated into the other."
+
+2. Yet our kneelers who say they adore the flesh of Christ in the
+sacrament, have no such orthodox (though forced) meaning whereby to
+expound themselves. For Bishop Lindsey will have us,(737) in receiving the
+sacrament, to bow our knees and adore the humanity of Christ, by reason of
+the personal union that it hath with the Godhead; therefore he means that
+we should, and may adore with divine worship, that which is personally
+united with the Godhead. And what is that? Not the Godhead sure, but the
+created nature of the manhood (which not being God but a creature only,
+cannot without idolatry be worshipped with divine worship). I conclude,
+therefore, that by the flesh of Christ, which he will have to be adored in
+the sacrament, he understands not the Godhead, as Augustine doth, but that
+created nature which is united with the Godhead.
+
+_Sect._ 16. But, Secondly, As we have seen what is to be thought of
+worshipping the flesh of Christ, so let us next consider what may be
+thought of worshipping his flesh in the sacrament; for this was the other
+head which I proposed. Now, they who worship the flesh of Christ in the
+sacrament, must either consider it as present in the sacrament, and in
+that respect to be adored, because of the personal union of it with the
+word, or else because of the sacramental union of it with the outward
+sign, which is a respect supervenient to that of the ubiquity of it in the
+person of the word. First, then, touching the former of those respects,
+the personal union of the flesh with the word can neither infer the
+presence of the flesh in the sacrament to those who worthily receive, nor
+yet can it make anything for the adoration of the flesh. Not the former;
+for in respect of the ubiquity of the flesh in the person of the word, it
+is ever and alike present with the communicants, whether they receive
+worthily or not, and with the bread and wine, whether they be consecrated
+to be the signs of his body and blood or not. Therefore divines rightly
+hold _praesentiam corporis Christi in caena, non ab ubiquitate, sed a
+verbis Christi pendere_.(738) Not the latter neither; for (as I have
+showed already) notwithstanding of the personal union, yet the flesh of
+Christ remaineth a creature, and is not God, and so cannot at all be
+worshipped with divine worship. And if his flesh, could be at all so
+worshipped,(739) yet were there no reason for worshipping it in the
+sacrament (in respect of its personal union with the word) more than in
+all other actions, and at all other times, for ever and always is the
+flesh of Christ personally united with the word, and in that respect
+present to us. There remaineth therefore nothing but that other respect of
+the sacramental union of the flesh of Christ with the sacramental sign,
+which they can have for worshipping his flesh in the sacrament. Whereas
+Bishop Lindsey saith,(740) "that it is no error to believe the spiritual,
+powerful, and personal presence of Christ's body at the sacrament, and in
+that respect to worship his flesh and blood there,"--he means, sure, some
+special respect, for which it may be said that Christ's body is present at
+the sacrament (so as it is not present out of the sacrament), and in that
+respect to be there adored. Now Christ's body is spiritually and
+powerfully present to us in the word (as I showed before), yea, as often
+as looking by faith upon his body broken and blood shed for us, we receive
+the sense and assurance of the remission of our sins through his merits,
+and as for this personal presence of Christ's body which he speaketh of, I
+have showed also that the adoring of the flesh of Christ in the sacrament
+cannot be inferred upon it, wherefore he can tell us nothing which may be
+thought to infer the presence of Christ's flesh in the sacrament, and the
+adoration of it in that respect, save only the sacramental union of it
+with the outward sign. Now adoration in this respect, and for this reason,
+must suppose the bodily presence of Christ's flesh in the sacrament.
+Whereupon the Archbishop of Spalato saith, "that the Papists adore the
+body of Christ in the sacrament, only because of the supposition of the
+bodily presence of it, and if they knew that the true body of Christ is
+not under the species of the bread and wine, they would exhibit no
+adoration." And elsewhere he showeth,(741) that the mystery of the
+eucharist cannot make the manhood of Christ to be adored, _quia in pane
+corporalis Christi praesentia non est_ implying, that if the flesh of
+Christ be adored in respect of the mystery of the eucharist, then must it
+be bodily present in the sign, which is false, and hereupon he gathereth
+truly, that it cannot be adored in respect of the mystery of the
+eucharist.
+
+Further, It is to be remembered (which I have also before noted out of Dr
+Usher(742)) that the sacramental presence of the body of Christ, or that
+presence of it which is inferred upon that sacramental union which is
+betwixt it and the outward sign, is not the real or spiritual presence of
+it (for in this manner it is present to us out of the sacrament, even as
+oft as by faith we apprehend it and the virtue thereof); but it is
+figuratively only so called, the sense being this, that the body of Christ
+is present and given to us in the sacrament, meaning by his body, the sign
+of his body. These things being so, whosoever worshippeth Christ's body in
+the eucharist, and that in respect of the sacramental presence of it in
+the same, cannot choose but hold that Christ's body is bodily and really
+under the species of the bread, and so fall into the idolatry of
+bread-worship; or else our divines(743) have not rightly convinced the
+Papists, as idolatrous worshippers of the bread in the eucharist,
+forasmuch as they attribute to it that which it is not, nor hath not, to
+wit, that under the accidents thereof is contained substantially the true
+and living body of Christ, joined and united to his Godhead. What can
+Bishop Lindsey now answer for himself, except he say with one of his
+brethren,(744) that we should adore the flesh of Christ in the sacrament,
+because _corporalis praesentia Christi, sed non modo corporalis, comitatur
+sacramentum eucharistiae_. And Christ is there present _corporaliter, modo
+spirituali_? But this man contradicts himself miserably; for we had him a
+little before acknowledging that _in pane corporalis Christi praesentia
+non est_. How shall we then reconcile him with himself? He would say that
+Christ is not bodily present in the sacrament after a bodily manner, but
+he is bodily present after a spiritual manner. Why should I blot paper
+with such a vanity, which implieth a contradiction, bodily and not bodily,
+spiritually and not spiritually.
+
+_Sect._ 17. The sixth and last argument whereby I prove the kneeling in
+question to be idolatry, is taken from the nature and kind of the worship
+wherein it is used. For the receiving of the sacrament being a mediate
+worship of God, wherein the elements come between God and us, in such sort
+that they belong to the substance of the worship (for without the
+elements, the sacrament is not a sacrament), and withal are susceptive of
+co-adoration, forasmuch as in the act of receiving, both our minds and our
+external senses are, and should be, fastened upon them, hereby we evince
+the idolatry of kneeling in the receiving. For in every mediate worship,
+wherein some creature is purposely set between God and us to have state in
+the same, it is idolatry to kneel before such a creature, whilst both our
+minds and senses are fastened upon it. Our opposites have talked many
+things together to infringe this argument. First, They allege the bowing
+of God's people before the ark,(745) the temple, the holy mountain, the
+altar, the bush, the cloud, the fire which came from heaven. _Ans._ 1.
+Where they have read that the people bowed before the altar of God, I know
+not. Bishop Lindsey indeed would prove(746) from 2 Chron vi. 12, 13, and
+Mich. vi. 6, that the people bowed before the altar and the offering. But
+the first of those places speaks nothing of kneeling before the altar, but
+only of kneeling before the congregation, that is, in the sight of the
+congregation. And if Solomon had then kneeled before the altar, yet the
+altar had been but occasionally and accidentally before him in his
+adoration, for to what end and use could he have purposely set the altar
+before him, whilst he was kneeling and praying? The place of Micah cannot
+prove that God's people did kneel before the offerings at all (for it
+speaks only of bowing before God), far less, that they kneeled before them
+in the very act of offering, and that with their minds and senses fixed
+upon them, as we kneel in the very act of receiving the sacrament, and
+that at that instant when our minds and senses are fastened upon the
+signs, that we may discern the things signified by them, for the
+exercising of our hearts in a thankful meditation upon the Lord's death.
+2. As for the other examples here alleged, God was immediately present, in
+and with the ark, the temple, the holy mountain, the bush, the cloud, and
+the fire which came from heaven, speaking and manifesting himself to his
+people by his own immediate voice, and miraculous extraordinary presence,
+so that worshipping before these things had the same reason which makes
+the twenty-four elders in heaven worship before the throne, Rev. iv. 10;
+for in these things God did immediately manifest his presence as well as
+in heaven. Though there be a difference in the degrees of the immediate
+manifestation of his presence in earth and in heaven, yet _magis et minus
+non variant speciem_. Now God is present in the sacrament, not
+extraordinarily, but in the way of an ordinary dispensation, not
+immediately, but mediately. They must therefore allege some commendable
+examples of such a kneeling as we dispute about, in a mediate and ordinary
+worship, else they say nothing to the point.
+
+_Sect._ 18. Yet to no better purpose they tell us,(747) that when God
+spoke, Abraham fell on his face, and when the fire came down at Elijah's
+prayer, the people fell on their faces. What is this to the purpose? And
+how shall kneeling in a mediate and ordinary worship be warranted by
+kneeling in the hearing of God's own immediate voice, or in seeing the
+miraculous signs of his extraordinary presence? Howbeit it cannot be
+proved, neither, that the people fell on their faces in the very act of
+seeing the fire fall (when their eyes and their minds were fastened upon
+it), but that after they had seen the miracle wrought, they so considered
+of it as to fall down and worship God.
+
+But further, it is objected,(748) "that a penitentiary kneels to God
+purposely before the congregation, and with a respect to the congregation,
+&c. When we come to our common tables before we eat, either sitting with
+our heads discovered, or standing, or kneeling, we give thanks and bless,
+with a respect to the meat, which is purposely set on table, &c. The
+pastor, when he begins the holy action, hath the bread and the cup set
+before him purposely upon the table, and with respect to them he gives
+thanks," &c.
+
+_Ans._ Though a penitentiary kneel to God purposely in the presence and
+sight of the congregation, that he may make known to them his repentance
+for the sin whereby he hath scandalised them, yet is the confessing of his
+sin to God, kneeling there upon his knees, an immediate worship, neither
+doth the congregation come betwixt him and God, as belonging to the
+substance of this worship, for he kneeleth to God as well, and maketh
+confession of his sin, when the congregation is not before him. But I
+suppose our kneelers themselves will confess, that the elements come so
+betwixt God and them when they kneel, that they belong to the essence of
+the worship in hand, and that they would not, nor could not, worship the
+flesh and blood of Christ in the sacrament, if the elements were not
+before them.
+
+To be short, the case of a penitentiary standeth thus, that not in his
+kneeling _simpliciter_, but in his kneeling publicly and in sight of the
+congregation, he setteth them before him purposely, and with a respect to
+them, whereas our kneelers do kneel in such sort that their kneeling
+_simpliciter_, and without an adjection or adjunct, hath a respect to the
+elements purposely set before them, neither would they at all kneel for
+that end and purpose for which they do kneel, namely, for worshipping the
+flesh and blood of Christ in the sacrament,(749) except the elements were
+before the eyes both of their minds and bodies, as the penitentiary doth
+kneel for making confession of his sin to God, when the congregation is
+not before him.
+
+And if one would say, that in kneeling at the sacrament he worshippeth not
+the flesh and blood of Christ, but the Lord his God only, yet is the same
+difference to be put betwixt his kneeling before the elements, and the
+kneeling of a penitentiary before the congregation, for the very kneeling
+itself (simply considered) before the elements, respecteth them as then
+purposely set in our sight that we may kneel before them, whereas, in the
+case of the penitentiary, it is not his kneeling to confess his sin to God
+which hath a respect to the congregation as set in his sight for that
+purpose, but some circumstances of his kneeling only, to wit, _when_? At
+that time when the congregation is assembled. And _where_? Publicly in
+sight of the congregation! In regard of these circumstances, he hath the
+congregation purposely in his sight, and so respecteth them, but in regard
+of the kneeling itself simply, the presence of the congregation is but
+accidental to him who kneeleth and confesseth his sin before God. As
+touching giving thanks before the meat set on our common tables, though a
+man should do it kneeling, yet this speaketh not home to the point now in
+controversy, except a man so kneel before his meat, that he have a
+religious respect to it as a thing separated from a common use and made
+holy, and likewise have both his mind, and his external senses of seeing,
+touching, and tasting, fastened upon it in the act of his kneeling. And if
+a man should thus kneel before his meat, he were an idolater.
+
+Lastly, Giving thanks before the elements of bread and wine, in the
+beginning of the holy action, is as far from the purpose; for this giving
+of thanks is an immediate worship of God, wherein we have our minds and
+senses, not upon the bread and wine as upon things which have a state in
+that worship of the Lord's supper, and belong to the substance of the same
+(for the very consecration of them to this use is but then _in fieri_),
+but we worship God immediately by prayer and giving of thanks, which is
+all otherwise in the act of receiving.
+
+_Sect._ 19. Moreover it is objected(750) out of Lev. ix. 24; 2 Chron. vii.
+3; Mich. vi. 6; 2 Chron. xxix. 28-30, that all the people fell on their
+faces before the legal sacrifices, when the fire consumed the
+burnt-offering.
+
+Whereunto it may be answered, that the fire which came from God and
+consumed the burnt-offerings, was one of the miraculous signs of God's
+extraordinary and immediate presence (as I have said before), and
+therefore kneeling before the same hath nothing to do with the present
+purpose.
+
+But if we will particularly consider all these places, we find in the
+first two, that beside the fire, the glory of the Lord did also appear in
+a more miraculous and extraordinary manner, Lev. ix. 23, "The glory of the
+Lord appeared to all the people;" 2 Chron. vii. 1, 12, "The glory of the
+Lord filled the house." They are therefore running at random who take hold
+of those places to draw out of them the lawfulness of kneeling in a
+mediate and ordinary worship.
+
+The place of Micah I have answered before; and here I add, that though it
+could be proved from that place (as it cannot), that the people have bowed
+before the offerings, and that in the very act of offering, yet how shall
+it be proved, that in the act of their kneeling they had the offerings
+purposely before them, and their minds and senses fixed upon them in the
+very instant of their worshipping.
+
+This I make clear by the last place, 2 Chron. xxix., out of which no more
+can be drawn but that the people worshipped whilst the priests were yet
+offering the burnt-offering. Now the burnt-offering was but accidentally
+before the people in their worshipping, and only because it was offered at
+the same time when the song of the Lord was sung, ver. 27. Such was the
+forwardness of zeal in restoring religion and purging the temple, that it
+admitted no stay, but eagerly prosecuted the work till it was perfected;
+therefore the thing was done suddenly, ver. 36. Since, then, the song and
+the sacrifice were performed at the same time, we must note that the
+people worshipped at that time, not because of the sacrifice, which was a
+mediate worship, but because of the song of the Lord, which was an
+immediate worship. Now we all commend kneeling in an immediate worship.
+But this cannot content our opposites; they will needs have it lawful to
+kneel, in the hearing of the word, purposely, and with a respect to the
+word preached (though this be a mediate worship only). Their warrants(751)
+are taken out, Exod. iv. 30, 31; Exod. xii. 27; 2 Chron. xx. 18; Matt.
+xvii. 6. From the first three places no more can be inferred but that
+these hearers bowed their heads and worshipped, after that they heard the
+word of the Lord; neither shall they ever warrant bowing and worshipping
+in the act of hearing.
+
+In the fourth place, we read that the disciples fell on their faces when
+they heard God's own immediate voice out of the cloud. What maketh this
+for falling down to worship at the hearing of the word preached by men?
+How long shall our opposites not distinguish betwixt mediate and immediate
+worship?
+
+Lastly, It is alleged(752) that God, in his word, allows not only kneeling
+at prayer, out also at circumcision, passover, and baptism. The reason of
+this assertion is given to be this, that a bodily gesture being necessary,
+God not determining man upon any one, leaves him at plain liberty. _Ans._
+Whether we be left at plain liberty in all things which being in the
+general necessary, are not particularly determined in God's word, it shall
+be treated of elsewhere in this dispute. In the meantime, whatsoever
+liberty God leaves man in bodily gestures, he leaves him no liberty of an
+unlawful and idolatrous gesture, such as kneeling in the instant of
+receiving a sacrament, when not only we have the outward sign purposely
+before us, and our minds and senses fastened upon it, for discerning the
+signification thereof, and the analogy betwixt it and the thing signified,
+but also to look upon it as an image of Christ, or as a vicarious sign
+standing there in Christ's stead. The indifferency of such a gesture in
+such a mediate worship should have been proved before such a rule (as this
+here given us for a reason) had been applied to it.
+
+_Sect._ 20. But the kneelers would yet make more ado to us, and be still
+stirring if they can do no more. Wherefore one of our doctors
+objecteth,(753) that we lift up our eyes and our hands to heaven, and
+worship God, yet we do not worship the heaven; that a man going to bed,
+prayeth before his bed; that David offered the sacrifices of thanksgiving,
+in the presence of all the people, Psal. cxvi; that Paul, having taken
+bread, gave thanks before all them who were in the ship, Acts xxvii. 36;
+that the Israelites worshipped before Moses and Aaron, Exod. iv. 31.
+Hereupon another doctor, harping upon the same string, tells us,(754) that
+when we kneel in the act of receiving the sacrament, "we kneel no more to
+bread than to the pulpit when we join our prayers with the minister's."
+Oh, unworthy instances, and reproachful to doctors! All these things were
+and are accidentally present to the worshippers, and not purposely before
+them, nor respected as having a religious state in the worship. What? Do
+we worship before the bread in the sacrament, even as before a pulpit, a
+bed, &c.? Nay, graduate men should understand better what they speak of.
+
+Another objection is,(755) that a man who is admitted to the office of a
+pastor, and receiveth imposition of hands, kneeleth still on his knees
+till the ordination be ended, the rest about him being standing or
+sitting.
+
+_Ans._ Kneeling in receiving imposition of hands, which is joined with
+prayer and invocation, hath nothing ado with kneeling in a mediate
+worship; for in this case a man kneels because of the immediate worship of
+invocation; but when there is no prayer, I suppose no man will kneel
+religiously, and with a religious respect to those persons or things which
+are before him, as there purposely in his sight, that before them he may
+adore (which is the kind of kneeling now in question), or if any did so,
+there were more need to give him instruction than ordination.
+
+It is further told us, that he who is baptized,(756) or he who offers him
+that is to be baptized, humbleth himself, and prayeth that the baptism may
+be saving unto life eternal, yet worshippeth not the bason nor the water.
+But how long shall simple ones love simplicity, or rather, scorners hate
+knowledge? Why is kneeling in the immediate worship of prayer, wherein our
+minds do purposely respect no earthly thing (but the soul, Psal. xxv. 1,
+the heart, the hands, Lam. iii. 41, the eyes, Psal. cxxiii. 1, the voice,
+Psal. v. 3, all directed immediately to heaven) paralleled with kneeling
+in the mediate worship of receiving the sacrament, wherein we respect
+purposely the outward sign, which is then in our sight, that both our
+minds and our external senses may be fastened upon it? Our minds, by
+meditation, and attentive consideration of that which is signified, and of
+the representation thereof by the sign. Our senses, by seeing, handling,
+breaking, tasting, eating, drinking.
+
+_Sect._ 21. Thus we see that in all these examples alleged by our
+opposites, there is nothing to prove the lawfulness of kneeling in such a
+mediate worship, wherein something belonging to the substance of the
+worship comes between God and us, and is not accidentally, but purposely
+before us, upon which also our minds and senses in the action of worship
+are fast fixed. Howbeit there is another respect, wherefore none of these
+examples can make ought for kneeling in the act of receiving the sacrament
+(which I have showed before), namely, that in the instant of receiving the
+sacrament, the elements are actually images and vicarious signs standing
+in Christ's stead. But belike our kneelers have not satisfied themselves
+with the roving rabble of these impertinent allegations which they have
+produced to prove the lawfulness of kneeling in a mediate worship, they
+have prepared another refuge for themselves, which had been needless, if
+they had not feared that the former ground should fail them.
+
+What then will they say next to us? Forsooth, that when they kneel in the
+act of receiving, they are praying and praising, and so worshipping God
+immediately. And if we would know what a man doth then pray for, it is
+told us, that he is praying and earnestly crying to God,(757) _ut eum
+faciat dignum convivam_. To us it seems very strange how a man, when he is
+actually a banqueter, and at the instant of his communicating can be made
+in any other sort a banqueter than he is; for _quicquid est, dum est, non
+potest non esse_. Wherefore if a man in the instant of his receiving be an
+unworthy banqueter, he cannot at that instant be made any other than he
+is.
+
+_Sect._ 22. The truth is, we cannot lawfully be either praying or praising
+in the very act of receiving, because our hearts and minds should then be
+exercised in meditating upon Christ's death, and the inestimable benefits
+which comes to us thereby. 1 Cor. xi. 23, "Do this in remembrance of me."
+
+This remembrance is described, ver. 26, "Ye do show the Lord's death." Now
+one of the special ways whereby we remember Christ, and so do show forth
+his death, is by private meditation upon his death, as Pareus
+resolveth.(758)
+
+This meditation is a speech of the soul to itself; and though it may stand
+with short ejaculations, which may and should have place in all our
+actions, yet can it not stand with an ordinary and continued prayer
+purposely conceived, as Bishop Lindsey would maintain.(759) For how can we
+orderly both speak to God by prayer, and to ourselves by meditation, at
+one instant of time? If therefore prayer be purposely and orderly
+conceived, it banisheth away meditation, which should be the soul's
+exercise in the receiving of the sacrament. And by the contrary, if
+meditation be entertained as it should be, it admitteth not prayer to have
+place at that time. For it is well said,(760) that _Dum auribus, oculis,
+manibus, dentibus exterius, auribus, oculis, manibus, dentibus fidei
+interius occupamur, orationem continuam et durabilem, absque mentis
+divagatione __ ab opere praecepto et imperato, instruere non possumus._
+
+_Sect._ 23. But let us hear how the Bishop proveth that we should be
+praying and praising in the act of receiving the sacrament. "Whatsoever
+spiritual benefit (saith he)(761) we should receive with a spiritual
+hunger and thirst, and with a spiritual appetite and desire after the
+grace and virtue that is therein to salvation, the same we should receive
+with prayer, which is nothing else but such an appetite and desire; but
+the body and blood of Christ is such a benefit," &c.
+
+_Ans._ 1. Why did not he prove his proposition? Thought he his bare
+assertion should suffice? God's word is a spiritual benefit, which we
+should receive with spiritual hunger and thirst; yet the Bishop will not
+say that we should be praying all the while we are hearing and receiving
+it, for then could not our minds be attentive. His proposition therefore
+is false; for though prayer should go before the receiving of such a
+spiritual benefit as the word or the sacrament, yet we should not pray in
+the act of receiving. For how can the heart attend, by serious
+consideration, to what we hear in the word, or what is signified and given
+to us in the sacrament, if in the actions of hearing the word and
+receiving the sacrament, it should be elevated out of the world by prayer?
+
+2. Why saith he that prayer is nothing else but a spiritual appetite or
+desire? He thought hereby to strengthen his proposition, but we deny all.
+He said before,(762) that every prayer is a meditation, and here he saith,
+that prayer is nothing else but a spiritual desire. These are uncouth
+descriptions of prayer. Prayer is not meditation, because meditation is a
+communing with our own souls, prayer a communing with God. Nor yet can it
+be said that prayer is nothing else but a spiritual desire; for prayer is
+the sending up of our desires to God, being put in order.
+
+_Sect._ 24. He speeds no better in proving that we should receive the
+sacrament with thanksgiving. "Whatsoever benefit (saith he) we should
+receive by extolling, and preaching, and magnifying, and praising the
+inestimable worth and excellency thereof, the same we ought to receive
+with thanksgiving. But in the sacrament we should receive the blood of
+Christ with extolling and preaching," &c. The assumption he confirms by
+the words of our Saviour, "Do this in remembrance of me," and by the words
+of St. Paul, "So oft as ye shall eat this bread and drink this cup, ye
+shall declare, that is, extol, magnify, and praise the Lord's death, till
+he come again."
+
+_Ans._ His assumption is false, neither can his proofs make it true.
+
+1. We remember Christ in the act of receiving by meditation, and not by
+praise.
+
+2. We show forth the Lord's death in the act of receiving, by using the
+signs and symbols of his body broken, and his blood shed for us, and by
+meditating upon his death thereby represented.
+
+3. We deny not that by praise we show forth the Lord's death also, but
+this is not in the act of receiving. It is to be marked with Pareus,(763)
+that the showing forth of the Lord's death, must not be restricted to the
+act of receiving the sacrament, because we do also show forth his death by
+the preaching of the gospel, and by private and public celebration of it,
+yea, by a perpetual study of sanctification and thankfulness. So that the
+showing forth of the Lord's death, by extolling, preaching, magnifying,
+and praising the same, according to the twenty-third section of the
+Confession of Faith, to which his argument hath reference, may not be
+expounded of the very act of receiving the sacrament. Neither do the words
+of the institution refuse, but easily admit, another showing forth of the
+Lord's death than that which is in the very act of receiving, for the word
+is not _quando_, but _quoties_. It is only said, "As often as ye eat this
+bread, and drink this cup, ye do show," &c. Which words cannot be taken
+only of the instant of eating and drinking.
+
+_Sect._ 25. Now having so strongly proved the unlawfulness and idolatry of
+kneeling in the act of receiving the holy communion, let me add,
+_corolarii loco_, that the reader needs not to be moved with that which
+Bishop Lindsey, in the tail of his dispute about the head of kneeling,
+offers at a dead lift, namely, the testimonies of some modern doctors.
+
+For, 1, What can human testimony avail against such a clear truth? 2. We
+have more testimonies of divines against kneeling than he hath for it. And
+here I perceive Dr Mortoune, fearing we should come to good speed this
+way,(764) would hold in our travel: "We are not ignorant (saith he) that
+many Protestant authors are most frequent in condemning the gesture of
+kneeling at the receiving of the holy communion."
+
+3. Testimonies against kneeling are gathered out of those very same
+divines whom the Bishop allegeth for it; for Didoclavius(765) hath clear
+testimonies against it out of Calvin, Beza, and Martyr, whom yet the
+Bishop taketh to be for it.
+
+_Sect._ 26. Neither yet need we here to be moved with Dr Burges's(766)
+adventurous untaking to prove that, in the most ancient times, before
+corruption of the sacrament began, the sacrament was received with an
+adoring gesture.
+
+He shoots short of his proofs, and hits not the mark. One place in
+Tertullian, _de Oratione_, he hammers upon: _Similiter de stationum diebus
+non putant plerique sacrificiorum orationibus interveniendum, quod statio
+solvenda sit accepto corpore Domini. Ergo devotum Deo obsequium
+eucharistiae resoluit, an magis Deo obligat? Nonne solennior, erit statio
+tua, si et ad aram dei steteris? Accepto corpore Domini et reservato,
+utrumque salvum est, et participatio sacrificii, et executio officii._
+
+To these words the Doctor giveth this sense: That many withdrew themselves
+when they came to the celebration of the supper, because the body of our
+Lord, that is, the sacramental bread, being taken of the minister's hand,
+the station, _i.e._, standing, must be dissolved and left; and because
+standing on those days might not be left (as they thought), therefore they
+rather left the sacrament on those days than they would break the rule of
+standing on those days; therefore they forbore:
+
+Which can have no reason but this, that taking the holy things at the
+table standing, yet they used not to partake them, _i.e._, eat the bread
+or drink the wine, in any other gesture than what was on the station days
+then forbidden, kneeling; and that Tertullian wishes them to come, though
+they might not then kneel, and to take the bread in public, standing at
+the table, and reserve it, and carry it away with them, and receive it at
+their own houses as they desired, kneeling.
+
+_Ans._ The Doctor by this puts a weapon in our hands against himself; for
+if, when they had taken the bread of the minister's hand, their standing
+was to be left and dissolved, and Tertullian, by commending to them
+another gesture in the eating of the bread, not standing, then whether
+urgeth he that other gesture to be used in the public eating of the bread
+or the private? Not in the private; for his advice of reserving and eating
+it in private, cometh after, and is only put for a remedy or next best, in
+case they would not condescend to this course in public, _quod statio
+solvenda sit accepto corpore domini_. Needs, then, it must be understood
+of the public. Now, if in the public eating of the bread standing was to
+be left, which gesture was to come in place of it? Not kneeling.
+
+For, 1. Tertullian saith(767) elsewhere: _Diebus dominicis jejunare nefas
+ducimus, vel de geniculis adorare; cadem immunitate a die Paschae ad
+Pentcostem usque gaudemus._
+
+2. The doctor himself saith, that upon these station days kneeling was
+restrained, not only in prayer, but in all divine service.
+
+Wherefore, if, according to the Doctor's gloss, the gesture of standing
+was left or dissolved, that gesture which had come in place of it to be
+used in the partaking of the sacrament, can hardly be imagined to have
+been any other nor sitting.
+
+Well, the doctor hath unhappily raised this spirit to disquiet himself:
+let him bethink how to lay him again. If he cannot, I will assay to make
+some help, and to lay him in this fashion. The station days were not the
+Lord's days, together with those fifty betwixt Easter and Pentecost (on
+which both fasting and kneeling were forbidden), as the Doctor thinketh,
+but they were certain set days of fasting; for they appointed the fourth
+and sixth day of the week (that is, Wednesday and Friday) for their
+stations, as Tertullian saith;(768) whose words we may understand by
+another place of Epiphanus,(769) who writeth that the fast of the fourth
+and the sixth day was kept throughout all churches, and held to be an
+apostolical constitution. Howbeit herein they did err; for to appoint a
+certain time of fasting to be kept by the whole church agreeth not with
+Christian liberty, and wanteth the example of Christ and his apostles, as
+Osiander noteth.(770) Always we see what was meant by station days, to
+wit, their set days of fifty, fasting, which were called station days, by
+a speech borrowed from a military custom, as Tertullian teacheth. For as
+soldiers kept those times and places which were appointed for their
+watches, and fasted all the while they continued in them, so did
+Christians upon their station days resort and meet in the place appointed,
+and there remained fasting till their station dissolved. The Doctor taketh
+upon him to confute those who understand by the station days set days of
+fasting; but all which he allegeth to the contrary is, that he findeth
+somewhere in Tertullian _statio_ and _jejunia_ put for different things.
+Now this helpeth him not, except he could find that _statio_ and _stata
+jejunia_ are put for different things; for no man taketh the stations to
+have been occasional, but only set fasts. Touching the meaning, then, of
+the words alleged by the Doctor (to give him his own reading of them,
+howbeit some read otherwise), thus we take it. There were many who came
+not to the sacrament upon the station days, because (in their opinion) the
+receiving thereof should break the station, _i.e._, the service of the
+day, and that because it should break their fast, a principal duty of the
+same. Tertullian showeth they were in error, because their partaking of
+the sacrament should not break their station, but make it the more solemn
+and remarkable. But if they could not be drawn from that false persuasion
+of theirs, that the sacrament should break their fast, yet he wisheth them
+at least to come and stand at the table, and receive the sacrament into
+their hands, and take it away to eat after (for permitting whereof he had
+no warrant), so should they both partake the sacrament and also (according
+to their mind, and to their full contentment) keep their stations, which
+were often prorogated till even,(771) but ever and at least till the ninth
+hour.(772) Finally, from this place, which the Doctor perverteth for
+kneeling, it appeareth that the gesture or posture in receiving the
+sacrament used in that place where Tertullian lived, was standing;
+because, speaking of the receiving of the sacrament, he saith, _Si et ad
+aram Dei steteris_.
+
+_Sect._ 27. As for the rest of the testimonies Dr Burges produceth out of
+the fathers for kneeling,(773) I need not insist upon them, for either
+they speak of the inward adoration of the heart, which we ought to direct
+unto Christ when we receive the sacrament (and this none of us denieth),
+or else they speak of adoring the sacrament, where, by the word
+_adoration_, we may not understand any divine worship, inward or outward,
+but a reverence of another nature called _veneration_. That this (which we
+deny not neither), and no more, is meant by the fathers when they speak of
+the adoration of the sacrament, Antonius de Dominis showeth more
+copiously.(774) And thus we have suffered the impetuous current of the
+Doctor's audacious promises, backed with a verbal discourse to go softly
+by us. _Quid dignum tanto tulit hic promissor hiatu?_
+
+_Sect._ 28. Finally, If any be curious to know what gesture the ancient
+church did use in the receiving of the eucharist, to such I say, first of
+all, that Didoclavius maintaineth that which none of our opposites are
+able to infringe, namely, that no testimony can be produced which may
+evince that ever kneeling was used before the time of Honorius III.,
+neither is it less truly observed by the author of the _History of the
+Waldenses_,(775) that bowing of the knees before the host was then only
+enjoined when the opinion of transubstantiation got place.
+
+Next I say, the ancient gesture, whereof we read most frequently, was
+standing. Chrysostom, complaining of few communicants, saith,(776)
+_Frustra habetur quotidiana oblatio, frustra stamus ad altare, nemo est
+qui simul participet_. The century writers(777) make out of Dionysius
+Alexandrinus's epistle to Xistus, bishop of Rome, that the custom of the
+church of Alexandria in receiving the sacrament, was, _ut mensae
+assisterent_. It is also noted by Hospiman,(778) that in the days of
+Tertullian the Christians _stantes sacramenta percipiebant_.
+
+Thirdly, I say, since we all know that the primitive Christians did take
+the holy communion mixedly, and together with their love-feasts, in
+imitation of Christ,(779) who, whilst he did eat his other supper, did
+also institute the eucharist; and since (as it is observed from 1 Cor. xi.
+21, 33(780)) there was a twofold abuse in the church of Corinth "one in
+their love-feasts, whilst that which should have served for the knitting
+of the knot of love was used to cut the cords thereof, in that every one
+(as he best liked) made choice of such as he would have to sit at table
+with him (the other either not tarried for, or shut out when they came,
+especially the poor). The other abuse (pulled in by the former) was, for
+that those which were companions at one table in the common feast
+communicated also in the sacred with the same separation, and severally
+from the rest of the church (and the poor especially) which was in their
+former banquets."
+
+Since also we read that the same custom of joining the Lord's supper
+together with common feasts continued long after; for Socrates
+reporteth,(781) that the Egyptians adjoining unto Alexandria, together
+with the inhabitants of Thebes, used to celebrate the communion upon the
+Sunday,(782) after this manner, "when they have banqueted, filled
+themselves with sundry delicate dishes, in the evening, after service,
+they use to communicate." How, then, can any man think that the gesture
+then used in the Lord's supper was any other, than the same which was used
+in the love-feast or common supper? And what was that but the ordinary
+fashion of sitting at table? Since the Laodicean canon,(783) which did
+discharge the love-feasts about the year 368, importeth no less than that
+the gesture used in them was sitting _Non oportet in Basilicis seu
+ecclesiis. Agapen facere et intus manducare, vel accubitus sternere._ Now,
+if not only divines of our side, but Papists also, put it out of doubt
+that Christ gave the eucharist to his apostles sitting, because being set
+down to the preceding supper, it is said, "_while as they did eat, he took
+bread_," &c. (of which things I am to speak afterward), what doth hinder
+us to gather, in like manner, that forasmuch as those primitive Christians
+did take the Lord's supper whilst they did eat their own love-feasts,
+therefore they sat at the one as well as the other? And so I close with
+this collection. Whatsoever gesture in process of time crept into the
+Lord's supper otherwise than sitting, of it we may truly say, "from the
+beginning it was not so."
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THE FIFTH ARGUMENT AGAINST THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES TAKEN FROM THE
+MYSTICAL AND SIGNIFICANT NATURE OF THEM.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. That mystical significations are placed in the controverted
+ceremonies, and that they are ordained to be sacred signs of spiritual
+mysteries, to teach Christians their duties, and to express such holy and
+heavenly affections, dispositions, motions and desires, as are and should
+be in them,--it is confessed and avouched by our opposites. Saravia
+holdeth,(784) that by the sign of the cross we profess ourselves to be
+Christians; Bishop Mortoune calleth(785) the cross a sign of constant
+profession of Christianity; Hooker calleth(786) it "Christ's mark applied
+unto that part where bashfulness appeareth, in token that they which are
+Christians should be at no time ashamed of his ignominy;" Dr Burges(787)
+maintaineth the using of the surplice to signify the pureness that ought
+to be in the minister of God; Paybody(788) will have kneeling at the
+Lord's supper to be a signification of the humble and grateful
+acknowledging of the benefits of Christ. The prayer which the English
+service book appointeth bishops to use after the confirming of children by
+the imposition of hands, avoucheth that ceremony of confirmation for a
+sign whereby those children are certified of God's favour and good-will
+towards them. In the general, our opposites defend(789) that the church
+hath power to ordain such ceremonies, as by admonishing men of their duty,
+and by expressing such spiritual and heavenly affections, dispositions,
+motions, or desires, as should be in men, do thereby stir them up to
+greater fervour and devotion.
+
+_Sect._ 2. But against the lawfulness of such mystical and significant
+ceremonies, thus we dispute: First, A chief part of the nature of
+sacraments is given unto those ceremonies when they are in this manner
+appointed to teach by their signification. This reason being alleged by
+the _Abridgement of the Lincoln ministers_, Paybody answereth,(790) that
+it is not a bare signification that makes a thing participate of the
+sacrament's nature, but such a signification as is sacramental, both in
+what is signified and how. _Ans._ 1. This is but to beg the question; for
+what other thing is alleged by us, but that a sacramental signification is
+placed in those ceremonies we speak of? 2. What calls he a sacramental
+signification, if a mystical resemblance and representation of some
+spiritual grace which God hath promised in his word be not it? and that
+such a signification as this is placed in the ceremonies, I have already
+made it plain, from the testimonies of our opposites. This, sure, makes
+those ceremonies so to encroach upon the confines and precincts of the
+nature and quality of sacraments, that they usurp something more than any
+rites which are not appointed by God himself can rightly do. And if they
+be not sacraments, yet, saith Hooker,(791) they are as sacraments. But in
+Augustine's dialect, they are not only as sacraments, but they themselves
+are sacraments. _Signa_ (saith the father) _cum ad res divinas pertinent,
+sacramenta appellantur_; which testimony doth so master Dr Burges, that he
+breaketh out into this witless answer,(792) That the meaning of Augustine
+was to show that the name of sacraments belongeth properly to divine
+things, and not to all signs of holy things. I take he would have said,
+"belongeth properly to the signs of divine things."
+
+And here, beside that which Ames hath said against him, I add these two
+things: 1. That this distinction cannot be conceived which the Doctor
+maketh betwixt the signs of divine things and the signs of holy things. 2.
+That his other distinction can as little be conceived, which importeth
+that the name of sacraments belongeth to divine things properly, and to
+all signs of holy things improperly.
+
+Lastly, If we call to mind that which hath been evinced before, namely,
+that the ceremonies are not only thought to be mystically significant for
+setting forth and expressing certain spiritual graces, but also operative
+and available to the begetting of those graces in us, if not by the work
+wrought, at least by the work of the worker; for example, that the sign of
+the cross is not only thought by our opposites to signify that at no time
+we should be ashamed of the ignominy of Christ, but is also esteemed(793)
+to be a means to work our preservation from shame, and a most effectual
+teacher to avoid that which may deservedly procure shame; and that
+bishopping is not only thought to be a sign for certifying young children
+of God's favour and good-will towards them, but also an exhibitive
+sign,(794) whereby they receive strength against sin and tentation, and
+are assisted in all virtue.
+
+If these things, I say, we call to mind, it will be more manifest that the
+ceremonies are given out for sacred signs of the very same nature that
+sacraments are of. For the sacraments are called by divines commemorative,
+representative and exhibitive signs; and such signs are also the
+ceremonies we have spoken of, in the opinion of Formalists.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Mystical and significant ceremonies (to proceed to a second
+reason), ordained by men, can be no other than mere delusions, and serve
+only to feed men's minds with vain conceits. For to what other purpose do
+_signa instituta_ serve, if it be not in the power of him who gives them
+institution to give or to work that which is signified by them?
+
+Now, it is not in the power of prelates, nor of any man living, to give us
+these graces, or to work them in us, which they will have to be signified
+by their mystical and symbolical ceremonies. Wherefore Beza saith(795)
+well of such human rites as are thought to be significant: _Quum nulla res
+signis illis subsit, propterea quod unius Dei est promittere, et suis
+promissionibus sigillum suum opponere; consequitur omnia illa commenta,
+inanes esse larvas, __ et vana opinione miseros homines illis propositis
+signis deludi._ Dr Fulk thinks(796) he hath alleged enough against the
+significative and commemorative use of the sign of the cross, when he hath
+said that it is not ordained of Christ, nor taught by his apostles; from
+which sort of reasoning it followeth, that all significant signs which are
+not ordained of Christ, nor taught by his apostles, must be vain, false,
+and superstitious.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Thirdly, To introduce significant sacred ceremonies into the
+New Testament other than the holy sacraments of God's own institution,
+were to reduce Judaism, and to impose upon us again the yoke of a
+ceremonial law, which Christ hath taken off.
+
+Upon this ground doth Amandus Polanus reprehend the popish clergy,(797)
+for that they would be distinguished from laics by their priestly apparel
+in their holy actions, especially in the mass: _Illa vestium sacerdotalium
+distinctio et varietas, erat in veteri Testamento typica; veritate autem
+exhibita, quid amplius typos requirunt?_
+
+Upon this ground also doth Perkins(798) condemn all human significant
+ceremonies. "Ceremonies (saith he) are either of figure and signification,
+or of order. The first are abrogated at the coming of Christ," &c.
+
+Upon the same ground doth Chemnitius condemn them,(799) _Quod vero
+praetenditur_, &c. "But, whereas (saith he) it is pretended that by those
+rites of men's addition, many things are probably signified, admonished
+and taught,--hereto it may be answered, that figures do properly belong to
+the Old Testament, but those things which Christ would have to be taught
+in the New Testament, he would have them delivered and propounded, not by
+shadows, but by the light of the word; and we have a promise of the
+efficacy of the word, but not of figures invented by men."
+
+Upon the same ground Junius(800) findeth fault with ceremonies used for
+signification: _Istis elementis mundi (ut vocantur Col. ii.) Dominus et
+servator noluit nec docuit, ecclesiam suam informari_.
+
+Lastly, We will consider the purpose of Christ whilst he said to the
+Pharisees,(801) "The law and the prophets were until John: from that time
+the kingdom of God is preached." He had in the parable of the unjust
+steward, and in the application of the same, spoken somewhat contemptibly
+of riches, which, when the Pharisees heard, they derided him, and that for
+this pretended reason (as is evident from the answer which is returned
+unto them), because the law promises the world's goods as rewards and
+blessings to the people of God, that by the temporal things which are set
+forth for types and shadows of eternal things, they might be instructed,
+helped, and led, as it were by the hand, to the contemplation, desire and
+expectation, of those heavenly and eternal things which are not seen. Now
+Christ did not only rip up the hypocrisy of their hearts, ver. 15, but
+also gave a formal answer to their pretended reason, by showing how the
+law is by him perfected, ver. 16, yet not destroyed, ver. 17. Then will we
+observe how he teacheth that the law and the prophets are perfected, and
+so our point shall be plain. "The law and the prophets were until John,"
+_i.e._, they did typify and prophesy concerning the things of the kingdom
+until John; for before that time the faithful only saw those things afar
+off, and by types, shadows, and figures, and the rudiments of the world,
+were taught to know them. "But from that time the kingdom of God is
+preached," _i.e._, the people of God are no longer to be instructed
+concerning the things of the kingdom of God by outward signs, or visible
+shadows and figures, but only by the plain word of the gospel; for now the
+kingdom of God {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} is not typified as before, but plainly
+preached, as a thing exhibited to us, and present with us. Thus we see
+that to us, in the days of the gospel, the word only is appointed to teach
+the things belonging to the kingdom of God.
+
+_Sect._ 5. If any man reply, that though after the coming of Christ we are
+liberate from the Jewish and typical significant ceremonies, yet ought we
+to embrace those ceremonies wherein the church of the New Testament
+placeth some spiritual signification:
+
+I answer, 1. That which hath been said in this argument holdeth good
+against significant ceremonies in general. Otherwise, when we read of the
+abrogation of the ceremonial law, we should only understand the abrogation
+of those particular ordinances which Moses delivered to the Jews
+concerning the ceremonies that were to endure to the coming of Christ, and
+so, notwithstanding all this, the church should still have power to set up
+new ceremonial laws instead of the old, even which and how many she
+listeth.
+
+2. What can be answered to that which the _Abridgement_ propoundeth(802)
+touching this matter? "It is much less lawful (say those ministers) for
+man to bring significant ceremonies into God's worship now than it was
+under the law. For God hath abrogated his own (not only such as prefigured
+Christ, but such also as served by their signification to teach moral
+duties), so as now (without great sin) none of them can be continued in
+the church, no, not for signification." Whereupon they infer: "If those
+ceremonies which God himself ordained to teach his church by their
+signification may not now be used, much less may those which man hath
+devised."
+
+_Sect._ 6. Fourthly, Sacred significant ceremonies devised by man are to
+be reckoned among those images forbidden in the second commandment.
+Polanus saith,(803) that _omnis figura illicita_ is forbidden in the
+second commandment. The Professors(804) of Leyden call it _imaginem
+quamlibet, sive mente conceptam, sive manu effictam_.
+
+I have showed elsewhere,(805) that both in the writings of the fathers,
+and of Formalists themselves, sacraments get the name of images; and why,
+then, are not all significant and holy ceremonies to be accounted images?
+Now, the second commandment forbiddeth images made by the lust of man
+(that I may use Dr Burges's phrase(806)), therefore it forbiddeth also all
+religious similitudes, which are homogeneal unto them. This is the
+inference of the _Abridgement_, whereat Paybody starteth,(807) and
+replieth, that the gestures which the people of God used in circumcision
+and baptism, the rending of the garment used in humiliation and prayer,
+Ezra ix. 5; 2 Kings xxii. 19, Jer. xxxvi. 24, lifting up the hands,
+kneeling with the knees, uncovering the head in the sacrament, standing
+and sitting at the sacrament, were, and are, significant in worshipping,
+yet are not forbidden by the second commandment.
+
+_Ans._ There are three sorts of signs here to be distinguished. 1. Natural
+signs: so smoke is a sign of fire, and the dawning of the day a sign of
+the rising of the sun. 2. Customable signs; and so the uncovering of the
+head, which of old was a sign of preeminence, hath, through custom, become
+a sign of subjection. 3. Voluntary signs, which are called _signa
+instituta_; these are either sacred or civil. To appoint sacred signs of
+heavenly mysteries or spiritual graces is God's own peculiar, and of this
+kind are the holy sacraments. Civil signs for civil and moral uses may be,
+and are, commendably appointed by men, both in church and commonwealth;
+and thus the tolling of a bell is a sign given for assembling, and hath
+the same signification both in ecclesiastical and secular assemblings.
+Now, besides the sacred signs of God's own institution, we know that
+natural signs have also place in divine worship; thus kneeling in time of
+prayer signifieth the submission of our hearts and minds, the lifting up
+of our eyes and hands signifieth the elevation of our affections; the
+rending of the garments signified the rending of the heart by sorrow;
+standing with a religious suspect to that which is before us signifieth
+veneration or reverence; sitting at table signifieth familiarity and
+fellowship. "For which of you (saith our Master), Luke xvii. 7, having a
+servant ploughing, or feeding cattle, will say unto him by and by, when he
+is come from the field, Go and sit down to meat?" All these signs have
+their significations from nature. And if it be said that howbeit sitting
+at our common tables be a sign natural to signify familiarity amongst us,
+yet nature hath not given such a signification to sitting at the Lord's
+table,--I answer, that sitting is a natural sign of familiarity, at what
+table soever it be used. At the heavenly table in the kingdom of glory,
+familiarity is expressed and signified by sitting: "Many shall come from
+the east and west, and shall sit down with Abraham," &c., Matt. xviii. 11.
+Much more, then, at the spiritual table in the kingdom of grace.
+
+The difference betwixt other common tables and the Lord's table can infer
+no more, but that with great humility we ought to address ourselves unto
+it; yet still we are to make use of our familiarity with Christ _ut
+tanquam in eodem toro accumbentes_, as saith Chrysostom.(808) Wherefore we
+do not there so look to Christ in his princely throne and glorious
+majesty, exalted far above all principalities and powers, as to forget
+that he is our loving and kind banqueter, who hath admitted us to that
+familiar fellowship with him which is signified by our sitting at his
+table.
+
+Secondly, Customable signs have likewise place in divine service; for so a
+man coming into one of our churches in time of public worship, if he see
+the hearers covered, he knows by this customable sign that sermon is
+begun.
+
+Thirdly, Civil or moral signs instituted by men for that common order and
+decency which is respect both in civil and sacred actions, have also place
+in the acts of God's worship. Thus a bason and a laver set before a pulpit
+are signs of baptism to be ministered; but common decency teacheth us to
+make the same use of a bason and a laver in civility which a minister
+maketh of them in the action of baptising. All our question is about
+sacred mystical signs. Every sign of this kind which is not ordained of
+God we refer to the imagery forbidden in the second commandment; so that
+in the tossing of this argument Paybody is twice naught, neither hath he
+said aught for evincing the lawfulness of sacred significant ceremonies
+ordained of men, which we impugn.
+
+_Sect._ 7. Fifthly, The significancy and teaching office of mystical
+ceremonies invented by men, must be drawn under those doctrines of men
+condemned in the gospel. Wherefore was it that the divers washings of the
+Pharisees were rejected by Christ as a vain worship? Was it not because
+they were appointed for doctrines? "In vain (saith he) do they worship me,
+teaching for doctrines the commandments of men," Mark vii. 7.
+
+The divers washings commanded in the law were fore-signifying to the
+people, and for teaching them what true and inward holiness God required
+of them. Now, the Pharisees, when they multiplied their washings of hands,
+of cups and pots, brazen vessels and tables, had the same respect of
+significancy before their eyes. _Neque enim alio spectabant_ (that I may
+use the words of a Formalist(809)) _quam ut se sanctitatis __ studiosos
+hoc externu ritu probarent_. Neither have we any warrant to think that
+they had another respect than this. But the error was in their addition to
+the law, and in that they made their own ceremonial washings, which were
+only the commandments of men, to serve for doctrines, instructions and
+significations. For those washings, as they were significant, and taught
+what holiness or cleanness should be among the people of God, they are
+called by the name of worship; and as they were such significant
+ceremonies as were only commanded by men, they are reckoned for vain
+worship.
+
+And further, I demand why are the Colossians, Col. ii. 20-22, rebuked for
+subjecting themselves to those ordinances,--"Touch not, taste not, handle
+not?" We see that those ordinances were not bare commandments, but
+commandments under the colour of doctrines, to wit, as law commanded a
+difference of meats, for signifying that holiness which God would have his
+people formed unto; so these false teachers would have the same to be
+signified and taught by that difference of meats and abstinence which they
+of themselves, and without the commandment of God, had ordained.
+
+Moreover, if we consider how that the word of God is given unto us "for
+doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,
+that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good
+works," 2 Tim. iii. 16, 17, it cannot but be evident how superfluously,
+how superstitiously, the office of sacred teaching and mystical
+signification is given to dumb and lifeless ceremonies ordained of men,
+and, consequently, how justly they are taxed as vain worship. We hold,
+therefore, with the worthiest of our divines,(810) _nullam doctrinam,
+nullum sacram signum debere inter pios admitti, nisi a Deo profecta esse
+constet_.
+
+_Sect._ 8. To these reasons which I have put in order against men's
+significant ceremonies, I will add a pretty history before I go further.
+
+When the Superior of the Abbey of St. Andrews(811) was disputing with John
+Knox about the lawfulness of the ceremonies devised by the church, to
+decore the sacraments and other service of God, Knox answered: "The church
+ought to do nothing but in faith, and ought not to go before, but is bound
+to follow the voice of the true Pastor." The Superior replied, that "every
+one of the ceremonies hath a godly signification, and therefore they both
+proceed from faith, and are done in faith." Knox replieth: "It is not
+enough that man invent a ceremony, and then give it a signification
+according to his pleasure; for so might the ceremonies of the Gentiles,
+and this day the ceremonies of Mahomet be maintained. But if that anything
+proceed from faith it must have the word of God for the assurance," &c.
+The Superior answereth: "Will ye bind us so strait that we may do nothing
+without the express word of God? What, and I ask drink? think ye that I
+sin? and yet I have not God's word for me."
+
+Knox here telleth him, first, that if he should either eat or drink
+without the assurance of God's word, he sinned; "for saith not the
+Apostle, speaking even of meat and drink, that the creatures are
+sanctified unto men by the word and prayer? The word is this: all things
+are clean to the clean: Now let me hear thus much of your ceremonies, and
+I shall give you the argument?"
+
+But secondly, He tells him that he compared indiscreetly together profane
+things with holy; and that the question was not of meat and drink, wherein
+the kingdom of God consisteth not, but of matters of religion, and that we
+may not take the same freedom in the using of Christ's sacraments that we
+may do in eating and drinking, because Moses commanded, "All that the Lord
+thy God commanded thee to do, that do thou to the Lord thy God; add
+nothing to it, diminish nothing from it." The Superior now saith that he
+was dry, and thereupon desireth the grey friar Arbugkill to follow the
+argument; but he was so pressed with the same that he was confounded in
+himself, and the Superior ashamed of him:--
+
+Dicite Io Paean, et Io bis dicite Paean.
+
+_Sect._ 9. As for the examples alleged by our opposites out of Scripture
+for justifying their significant ceremonies, they have been our propugners
+of evangelical simplicity so often and so fully answered, that here I need
+do no more but point at them. Of the days of Purim and feast of dedication
+I am to speak afterward. In the meanwhile, our opposites cannot, by these
+examples, strengthen themselves in this present argument, except they
+could prove that the feast of dedication was lawfully instituted, and that
+the days of Purim were appointed for a religious festivity, and that upon
+no such extraordinary warrant as the church hath not ever and always. The
+rite which Abraham commanded his servant to use when he sware to him,
+namely, the putting of his hand under his thigh, Gen. xxiv. 2, maketh them
+as little help; for it was but a moral sign of that civil subjection,
+reverence and fidelity which inferiors owe unto superiors, according to
+the judgment of Calvin, Junius, Pareus, and Tremellius, all upon that
+place. That altar which was built by the Reubenites, Gadites, and half
+tribe of Manasseh, Josh. xxii., had (as some think) not a religious, but a
+moral use, and was not a sacred, but a civil sign, to witness that those
+two tribes and the half were of the stock and lineage of Israel; which, if
+it were once called in question, then their fear (deducing the connection
+of causes and consequents) led them in the end to forecast this issue: "In
+time to come your children might speak unto our children, saying, What
+have you to do with the Lord God of Israel? for the Lord hath made Jordan
+a border betwixt us and you," &c. Therefore, to prevent all apparent
+occasions of such doleful events, they erected the pattern of the Lord's
+altar, _ut vinculum sit fraternae conjunctionis._(812)
+
+And besides all this, there is nothing which can urge us to say that the
+two tribes and the half did commendably in the erecting of this
+altar.(813) Calvin finds two faults in their proceeding. 1. In that they
+attempted such a notable and important innovation without advising with
+their brethren of the other tribes, and especially without inquiring the
+will of God by the high priest. 2. Whereas the law of God commanded only
+to make one altar, forasmuch as God would be worshipped only in one place,
+they did inordinately, scandalously, and with appearance of evil, erect
+another altar; for every one who should look upon it could not but
+presently think that they had forsaken the law, and were setting up a
+strange and degenerate rite. Whether also that altar which they set up for
+a pattern of the Lord's altar, was one of the images forbidden in the
+second commandment, I leave it to the judicious reader to ruminate upon.
+But if one would gather from ver. 33, that the priest, and the princes,
+and the children of Israel, did allow of that which the two tribes and the
+half had done, because it is said, "The thing pleased the children of
+Israel, and the children of Israel blessed God, and did not intend to go
+up against them in battle:"
+
+I answer, the Hebrew text hath it thus: "And the word was good in the eyes
+of the children of Israel," &c.; that is, the children of Israel blessed
+God for the word which Phinehas and the ten princes brought to them,
+because thereby they understood that the two tribes and the half had not
+turned away from following the Lord, nor made them an altar for
+burnt-offerings or sacrifice; which was enough to make them (the nine
+tribes and a half) desist from their purpose of going up to war against
+their brethren, to shed their blood. Again, when Phinehas and the ten
+princes say to the Reubenites, Gadites, and the half tribe of Manasseh,
+This day we perceive that the Lord is among us, "because ye have not
+committed this trespass against the Lord," they do not exempt them from
+all prevarication; only they say _signanter_, "this trespass," to wit, of
+turning away from the Lord, and building an altar for sacrifice, whereof
+they were accused. Thus we see that no approbation of that which the two
+tribes and the half did, in erecting the altar, can be drawn from the
+text.
+
+_Sect._ 10. But to proceed, our opposites allege for another example
+against us, a new altar built by Solomon, 1 Kings viii. 64. In which place
+there is no such thing to be found as a new altar built by Solomon; but
+only that he sanctified the pavement of the inner court, that the whole
+court might be as an altar, necessity so requiring, because the brazen
+altar of the Lord was not able to contain so many sacrifices as then were
+offered. The building of synagogues can make as little against us.
+
+For, 1. After the tribes were settled in the land of promise, synagogues
+were built, in the case of an urgent necessity, because all Israel could
+not come every Sabbath day to the reading and expounding of the law in the
+place which God had chosen that his name might dwell there. What hath that
+case to do with the addition of our unnecessary ceremonies?
+
+2. If Formalists will make any advantage of the building of synagogues,
+they must prove that they were founded, not upon the extraordinary warrant
+of prophets, but upon that ordinary power which the church retaineth
+still. As for the love-feasts used in the primitive church, 1. They had no
+religious state in divine worship, but were used only as moral signs of
+mutual charity. The Rhemists(814) will have them to be called _caenas
+dominicas_. But what saith Cartwright against them? "We grant that there
+were such feasts used in times past, but they were called by the name of
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} or love-feasts, not by the name of the Lord's supper; neither could
+one without sacrilege give so holy a name to a common feast, which never
+had ground out of the word, and which after, for just cause, was thrust
+out by the word of God." 2. If it be thought that they were used as sacred
+signs of Christian charity because they were eaten in the church, I
+answer, the eating of them in the church is forbidden by the Apostle.
+"What! (saith he) have ye not houses to eat and to drink in? or despise ye
+the church of God?" _Aperte vetat_ (saith Pareus),(815) _commessationes in
+ecclesia, quocunque fuco pingantur. Vocabant {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} charitates; sod nihil
+winus erant. Erant schismatum fomenta. Singulae enim sectae suas
+instituebant._ And a little after: _Aliquae ecclesiae obtemperasse
+videntur. Nam Justini temporibus Romana ecclesia {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} non habuit._
+Concerning the kiss of charity used in those times, 2 Cor. xiii. 22, we
+say in like manner that it was but a moral sign of that reconciliation,
+friendship and amity, which showed itself as well at holy assemblies as
+other meetings in that kind and courtesy, but with all chaste salutation,
+which was then in use.
+
+_Sect._ 11. As for the veils wherewith the Apostle would have women
+covered whilst they were praying (that is, in their hearts following the
+public and common prayer), or prophesying (that is, singing, 1 Sam. x. 10;
+1 Chron. xxv. 1), they are worthy to be covered with shame as with a
+garment who allege this example for sacred significant ceremonies of human
+institution. This covering was a moral sign for that comely and orderly
+distinction of men and women which civil decency required in all their
+meetings; wherefore that distinction of habits which they used for decency
+and comeliness in their common behaviour and conversation, the Apostle
+will have them, for the same decency and comeliness, still to retain in
+their holy assemblies. And further, the Apostle showeth that it is also a
+natural sign, and that nature itself teacheth it; therefore he urgeth it
+both by the inferiority or subjection of the woman, ver. 3, 8, 9 (for
+covering was then a sign of subjection), and by the long hair which nature
+gives to a woman, ver. 25; where he would have the artificial covering to
+be fashioned in imitation of the natural. What need we any more? Let us
+see nature's institution, or the Apostle's recommendation, for the
+controverted ceremonies (as we have seen them for women's veils), and we
+yield the argument.
+
+Last of all, the sign of imposition of hands helpeth not the cause of our
+opposites, because it has the example of Christ and the apostles, and
+their disciples, which our ceremonies have not; yet we think not
+imposition of hands to be any sacred or mystical sign, but only a moral,
+for designation of a person: let them who think more highly or honourably
+of it look to their warrants.
+
+Thus have I thought it enough to take a passing view of these objected
+instances, without marking narrowly all the impertinencies and falsehoods
+which here we find in the reasoning of our opposites. One word more, and
+so an end. Dr Burges would comprehend the significancy of sacred
+ecclesiastical ceremonies, for stirring men up to the remembrance of some
+mystery of piety or duty to God, under that edification which is required
+in things that concern order and decency by all divines.
+
+Alas! what a sorry conceit is this? Divines, indeed, do rightly require
+that those alterable circumstances of divine worship which are left to the
+determination of the church be so ordered and disposed as they may be
+profitable to this edification. But this edification they speak of is no
+other than that which is common to all our actions and speeches. Are we
+not required to do all things unto edifying, yea, to speak as that our
+speech may be profitable unto edifying? Now, such significations as we
+have showed to be given to the ceremonies in question, as, namely, to
+certify a child of God's favour and goodwill towards him,--to betoken that
+at no time Christians should be ashamed of the ignominy of Christ,--to
+signify the pureness that ought to be in the minister of God,--to express
+the humble and grateful acknowledgments of the benefits of Christ,
+&c.,--belong not to that edification which divines require in things
+prescribed by the church concerning order and decency, except of every
+private and ordinary action, in the whole course of our conversation, we
+either deny that it should be done unto edifying, or else affirm that it
+is a sacred significant ceremony.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES IS FALSELY GROUNDED UPON THE HOLY
+SCRIPTURE; WHERE SUCH PLACES AS ARE ALLEGED BY OUR OPPOSITES, EITHER FOR
+ALL THE CEREMONIES IN GENERAL, OR FOR ANY ONE OF THEM IN PARTICULAR, ARE
+VINDICATED FROM THEM.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. It remaineth now to examine the warrants which our opposites
+pretend for the lawfulness of the ceremonies. But I perceive they know not
+well what ground to take hold on. For instance whereof, Hooker defendeth
+the lawfulness of festival days by the law of nature.(816) Dr Downame
+groundeth the lawfulness of them on the law of God,(817) making the
+observation of the sabbaths of rest appointed by the church, such as the
+feasts of Christ's nativity, passion, &c., to be a duty commanded in the
+law of God, and the not observing of them to be a thing forbidden by the
+same law. But Bishop Lindsey proveth the lawfulness of those holidays(818)
+from the power of the church to make laws in such matters. "As for the
+Lord's day (saith he) which has succeeded to the Jewish Sabbath, albeit
+God hath commanded to sanctify it, yet neither is the whole public
+worship, nor any part of it appropriated to that time; but lawfully the
+same may be performed upon any other convenient day of the week, of the
+month, or of the year, as the church shall think expedient. Upon this
+ground Zanchius affirmed, _Ecclesiae Christi liberum esse quos velit praeter
+dominicos dies sibi sanctificandos deligere_. And by this warrant did the
+primitive church sanctify those five anniversary days of Christ's
+nativity," &c.
+
+Nay, let us observe how one of them wavereth from himself in seeking here
+some ground to rest upon. Paybody groundeth the lawfulness of kneeling at
+the sacrament on nature, part 2, cap. 4, sect. 1, on the act of
+Parliament, part 3, cap. 1, sect. 31; on an ecclesiastical canon, part 3,
+cap. 1, sect. 33, on the king's sovereign authority, part 3, cap. 1, sect.
+36. Yet again he saith, that this kneeling is grounded upon the
+commandment of God, part 3, cap. 3, sect. 11.
+
+Well, I see our opposites sometimes warrant the lawfulness of the
+ceremonies from the law of God, sometimes from the law of man, and
+sometimes from the law of nature, but I will prove that the lawfulness of
+those ceremonies we speak of can neither be grounded upon the law of God,
+nor the law of man, nor the law of nature, and by consequence that they
+are not lawful at all, so that, besides the answering of what our
+opposites allege for the lawfulness of them, we shall have a new argument
+to prove them unlawful.
+
+_Sect._ 2. I begin with the law of God. And, first, let us see what is
+alleged from Scripture for the ceremonies in general; then, after, let us
+look over particulars. There is one place which they will have in
+mythology to stand for the head of Medusa, and if they still object to us
+for all their ceremonies even that of the Apostle, "Let all things be done
+decently and in order," 1 Cor. xiv. 40. What they have drawn out of this
+place, Dr Burges(819) hath refined in this manner. He distinguished
+betwixt _praeceptum_ and _probatum_, and will have the controverted
+ceremonies to be allowed of God, though not commanded. And if we would
+learn how these ceremonies are allowed of God, he gives us to
+understand,(820) that it is by commanding the general kind to which these
+particulars do belong. If we ask what is this general kind commanded of
+God, to which these ceremonies do belong? he resolves us,(821) that it is
+order and decency: And if further we demand, how such ceremonies as are
+instituted and used to stir up men, in respect of their signification,
+unto the devout remembrance of their duties to God, are in such an
+institution and use, matters of mere order? as a magisterial dictator of
+_quodlibets_, he tells us(822) that they are matters of mere order, _sensu
+largo_, in a large sense. But lastly, if we doubt where he readeth of any
+worship commanded in the general, and not commanded, but only allowed in
+the particular, he informeth us,(823) that in the free-will offerings,
+when a man was left at liberty to offer a bullock, goat, or sheep at his
+pleasure, if he chose a bullock to offer, that sacrifice, in that
+particular, was not commanded, but only allowed. What should I do, but be
+_surdus contra absurdum_? Nevertheless, least this jolly fellow think
+himself more jolly than he this, I answer, 1st, How absurd a tenet is
+this, which holdeth that there is some particular worship of God allowed,
+and not commanded? What new light is this which maketh all our divines to
+have been in the mist, who have acknowledged no worship of God, but that
+which God hath commanded? Who ever heard of commanded and allowed worship?
+As for the instances of the free-will offerings, Ames hath answered
+sufficiently,(824) "that though the particulars were not, nor could not
+be, determined by a distinct rule in general, yet they were determined by
+the circumstances, as our divines are wont to answer the Papists about
+their vows, councils, supererogations _not by a general law, but by
+concurrence of circumstances._ So Deut. xvi. 10, Moses showeth that the
+freest offerings were to be according as God had blessed them, from whence
+it followeth, it had been sin for any Israelite whom God had plentifully
+blessed, to offer a pair of pigeons, instead of a bullock or two, upon his
+own mere pleasure. Where that proportion was observed, the choice of a
+goat before a sheep, or a sheep before a goat, was no formal worship."
+
+_Sect._ 3. How will Dr Burges make it appear that the English ceremonies
+do belong to that order and decency which is commanded? Bellarmine(825)
+would have all the ceremonies of the church of Rome comprehended under
+order and decency, and therefore warranteth them by that precept of the
+Apostle, "let all things be done decently and in order." The one shall as
+soon prove his point as the other, and that shall be never.
+
+For, 1. The Apostle only commanded that each action and ceremony of God's
+worship be decently and orderly performed, but gives us no leave to
+excogitate or devise new ceremonies, which have not been instituted
+before. He hath spoken in that chapter of assembling in the church,
+prophesying and preaching, praying and praising there.
+
+Now let all these things, and every other action of God's worship,
+ceremonies and all, be done decently and in order. _Licit ergo Paulus_,
+&c. "Albeit, therefore (saith John Bastwick),(826) Paul hath committed to
+the church the judging both of decency and order, yet hath he not granted
+any liberty of such mystical ceremonies as by their more inward
+signification do teach the duty of piety; for since the whole liberty of
+the church, in the matter of divine worship, is exercised only in order
+and decency, it followeth that they do impudently scorn both God and the
+Scriptures, who do extend this liberty to greater things, and such as are
+placed above us. Most certain it is, that Christ, the doctor of the
+church, hath, by his own written and sealed word, abundantly expounded
+unto us the will of God. Neither is there further need of any ceremonies,
+which by a secret virtue may instruct us: neither is it less evident that
+order consisteth not in the institution or use of new things, but only in
+the right placing of things which have been instituted before." "Decency
+(saith Balduine)(827) is opposed to levity, and order to confusion."
+_Spectat autem hic ordo potissimum ad ritus ecclesiae in officiis sacris
+in quibus nullum debet esse scandalum, nulla confusio._
+
+Then, in his judgment, order is not to the rites of the church a general
+kind, but only a concomitant circumstance; neither are the rites of the
+church comprehended under order as particulars under the general kind to
+which they belong; but order belongeth to the rites of the church as an
+adjunct to the subject. And, I pray, must not the rights of the church be
+managed with decency and order? If so, then must our opposites either say
+that order is managed with order, which is to speak nonsense, or else,
+that the rights of the church are not comprehended under order. But if
+not, then it followeth that the rites of the church are to be managed with
+levity, confusion, and scandal; for every action that is not done in
+decency and in order must needs be done scandalously and confusedly. 2.
+Order and decency, whether taken _largo_ or _stricto sensu_, always
+signify such a thing as ought to be in all human actions, as well civil as
+sacred; for will any man say, that the civil actions of men are not to be
+done decently and in order? The directions of order and decency(828) are
+not (we see) _propria religionis_, but as Balduine showeth(829) out of
+Gregory Nazianzen, order is in all other things as well as in the church.
+Wherefore sacred significant ceremonies shall never be warranted by the
+precept of order and decency, which have no less in civility than in
+religion.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Now to the particulars. And first, that which Christ did, Matt.
+xix. 13, 15, cannot commend unto us the bishopping or confirmation of
+children by prayer and imposition of hands; for as Maldonat saith
+rightly,(830) _Hebreorum consuetudinem fuisse, ut qui majores erant et
+aliqua polle bant divina gratia, manuum impositione inferioribus
+benedicerent, constat ex_ Gen. xlviii. 14, 15, _hac ergo ratione adducti
+parentes, infantes ad Christum afferebant, ut impositis manibus illis
+benediceret_. And as touching this blessing of children and imposition of
+hands upon them (saith Cartwright),(831) it is peculiar unto our Saviour
+Christ, used neither by his disciples nor his apostles, either before or
+after his ascension, whereunto maketh that the children being brought,
+that he should pray over them, he did not pray for them, but blessed them,
+that is to say, commended them to be blessed, thereby to show his divine
+power. These being also yet infants, and in their swaddling clouts, as by
+the word which the evangelist useth, and as by our Saviour Christ's taking
+them into his arms, doth appear, being also, in all likelihood,
+unbaptised. Last of all, their confirmation is a notable derogation unto
+the holy sacrament of baptism, not alone in that it presumeth the sealing
+of that which was sealed sufficiently by it; but also in that, both by
+asseveration of words, and by speciality of the minister that giveth it,
+it is even preferred unto it.
+
+_Sect._ 5. The act of Perth about kneeling would draw some commendation to
+this ceremony from those words of the psalm, "O come let us worship and
+bow down, let us kneel before the Lord our Maker," Psal. xcv. 6. Which is
+as if one should argue thus: We may worship before the Lord, therefore
+before a creature; we may kneel in an immediate worship of God, therefore
+in a mediate; for who seeth not that the kneeling there spoken of is a
+kneeling in the action of solemn praise and joyful noise of singing unto
+the Lord? I wish you, my masters, more sober spirits, that ye may fear to
+take God's name in vain, even his word which he hath magnified above all
+his name. Dr Forbesse goeth about to warrant private baptism,(832) by
+Philip's baptising the eunuch, there being no greater company present, so
+far as we can gather from the narration of Luke, Acts viii.; as likewise
+by Paul and Silas's baptising the jailer and all his in his own private
+house, Acts xvi. Touching the first of those places, we answer, 1. How
+thinks he that a man of so great authority and charge was alone in his
+journey? We suppose a great man travelling in a chariot must have some
+number of attendants, especially having come to a solemn worship at
+Jerusalem. 2. What Philip then did, the extraordinary direction of the
+Spirit guided him unto it, ver. 29, 39. As to the other place, there was,
+in that time of persecution, no liberty for Christians to meet together in
+temples and public places, as now there is. Wherefore the example of Paul
+and Silas doth prove the lawfulness of the like deed in the like case.
+
+_Sect._ 6. Hooker muttereth some such matter as a commendation of the sign
+of the cross from these two places, Ezek. ix. 4; Rev. vii. 3; alleging,
+that because in the forehead nothing is more plain to be seen than the
+fear of contumely and disgrace, therefore the Scripture describeth them
+marked of God in the forehead, whom his mercy hath undertaken to keep from
+final confusion and shame.(833) Bellarmine allegeth for the cross the same
+two places.(834) But for answer to the first, we say, that neither the
+sign whereof we read in that place, nor yet the use of it can make aught
+for them. As for the sign itself; albeit the ancients did interpret the
+sign of the letter _Tau_, to have been the sign of the cross, yet saith
+Junius, _Bona illorum venia; Tquidem Graecorum, Latinorumque majusculum,
+crucis quodam modo signum videtur effingere, verum hoc ad literam
+Haebreorum_ Tau _non potest pertinere. Deinde ne ipsum quidem Grcaecorum
+Latinorumque T, formam crucis quae apud veteres in usu erat quum
+sumebantur supplicia, representat._(835)
+
+Whereupon dissenting from the ancients, he delivers his own judgment, that
+_tau_ in this place is taken _technicos_, for that sign or mark of the
+letter wherewith the Lord commanded to mark the elect for their safety and
+preservation. And so there was no mystery to be sought in that letter more
+than in any other. As for the use of that mark wherewith the elect in
+Jerusalem were at that time sealed, it was only for distinction and
+separation. It had the same use which that sprinkling of the posts of the
+doors had, Exod. xii. 7, only the foreheads of men and women, and not the
+posts of doors were here marked, because only the remnant according to
+election, and not whole families promiscuously, were at this time to be
+spared, as Junius noteth.
+
+But the use of the sign of the cross pretended by Formalists, is not to
+separate us in the time of judgment, but to teach that at no time we ought
+to be ashamed of the ignominy of Christ.
+
+Shortly, the sign wherewith they in Jerusalem were marked, was for
+preservation from judgment; but the sign of the cross is used for
+preservation from sin. Thus we see, that neither the sign nor the use of
+it, had any affinity with the cross. Now, the surest interpretation of
+that place, Ezek. ix. 4, is to take _Tau_ for an appellative noun,
+signifying generally and indefinitely a mark or sign, so that there is no
+mark determined by this word; only there was a commandment given to set a
+certain mark, some sign or other, upon the foreheads of the elect. So have
+our English translators taken the place.
+
+This exposition is confessed by Gasper Sanctius,(836) to be followed
+almost by all the Hebrew masters, and by the most ancient interpreters, to
+wit, the Septuagint, Aquilla and Symmachus. The word beareth this gloss,
+even according to the confession of those who expound it otherwise in this
+place, to wit, for an image or representation of the cross. _Tau_ (saith
+Sanctius) _commune nomen est, quod signum indefinite significat_.(837)
+_Tau_ is expounded by Bellarmine(838) to signify _signum_ or _terminus_.
+Well then: our adversaries themselves can say nothing against our
+interpretation of the word _tau_. We have also Buxtorff for us, who in his
+Hebrew Lexicon turneth _tau_ to _signum_, and for this signification he
+citeth both this place, Ezek. ix. 4, and Job. xxxi. 35. _Taui signum
+meum._
+
+Lastly, If _tau_ be not put for a common appellative noun, signifying a
+mark or sign, but for the figure or character of the letter _tau_ as an
+image of the cross, by all likelihood this character only should have been
+put in the Hebrew text, and not the noun fully written; _vehithvith a
+tau_, and mark a mark. As to the other place,(839) Rev. vii. 3, Pareus
+observeth, that there is no figure or form of any sign there expressed,
+and he thinks that seal was not outward and visible, but the same whereof
+we read, 2 Tim. ii. 19, and Rev. xiv. 1, which cannot be interpreted _de
+signo transeunte; nam Christianum semper nomen filii, et patris in fronte
+oportet gerere_, saith Junius.(840)
+
+Dr Fulk, on Rev. vii. 3, saith, that the sign here spoken of is proper to
+God's elect, therefore not the sign of the cross, which many reprobates
+have received.
+
+_Sect._ 7. Bishop Andrews will have the feast of Easter drawn from that
+place,(841) 1 Cor. v. 8, where he saith, there is not only a warrant, but
+an order for the keeping of it; and he will have it out of doubt that this
+feast is of apostolical institution, because after the times of the
+apostles, when there was a contention about the manner of keeping Easter,
+it was agreed upon by all, that it should be kept; and when the one side
+alleged for them St. John, and the other St. Peter, it was acknowledged by
+both that the feast was apostolical.
+
+I answer, The testimony of Socrates deserveth more credit than the
+Bishop's naked conclusion.
+
+"I am of opinion (saith Socrates(842)), that as many other things crept in
+of custom in sundry places, so the feast of Easter to have prevailed among
+all people, of a certain private custom and observation."
+
+But whereas Bishop Lindsey, in defence of Bishop Andrews, replieth, that
+Socrates propoundeth this for his own opinion only:
+
+I answer, that Socrates, in that chapter, proveth his opinion from the
+very same ground which Bishop Andrews wresteth to prove that this feast is
+apostolical. For while as in that hot controversy about the keeping of
+Easter, they of the East alleged John the apostle for their author, and
+they of the West alleged Peter and Paul for themselves, "Yet (saith
+Socrates), there is none that can shew in writing any testimony of theirs
+for confirmation and proof of their custom. And hereby I do gather, that
+the celebration of the feast of Easter came up more of custom than by any
+law or canon."
+
+_Sect._ 7. Downame (as I touched before) allegeth the fourth commandment
+for holidays of the church's institution. But Dr Bastwick allegeth more
+truly the fourth commandment against them:(843) "Six days shalt thou
+labour." This argument I have made good elsewhere; so that now I need not
+insist upon it. There are further two examples alleged against us for
+holidays, out of Esth. ix. 17, 18, 27, 28, and John x. 22.
+
+Whereunto we answer, 1. That both those feasts were appointed to be kept
+with the consent of the whole congregation of Israel and body of the
+people, as is plain from Esth. ix. 32, and 1 Maccab. iv. 59. Therefore,
+they have no show of making aught of such feasts as ours, which are
+tyrannically urged upon such as in their consciences do condemn them.
+
+2. It appears, that the days of Purim were only appointed to be days of
+civil mirth and gladness, such as are in use with us, when we set out
+bonfires, and other tokens of civil joy, for some memorable benefit which
+the kingdom or commonwealth hath received. For they are not called the
+holidays of Purim, but simply the days of Purim,--"A day of feasting and of
+sending portions one to another," Esth. ix. 19, 22. No word of any worship
+of God in those days. And whereas it seemeth to Bishop Lindsey,(844) that
+those days were holy, because of that rest which was observed upon them;
+he must know that the text interpreteth itself, and it is evident from
+ver. 16 and 22, that this rest was not a rest from labour, for waiting
+upon the worshipping of God, but only a rest from their enemies.
+
+_Sect._ 9. But Bishop Andrews goeth about to prove by six reasons, that
+the days of Purim were holidays, and not days of civil joy and solemnity
+only.(845)
+
+First, saith he, it is plain by verse 31, they took it in _animas_, upon
+their souls,--a _soul matter_ they made of it: there needs no soul for
+_feria_ or _festum_, play or feasting. They bound themselves _super animas
+suas_, which is more than _upon themselves_, and would not have been put
+in the margin, but stood in the text: thus he reprehendeth the English
+translators, as you may perceive.
+
+_Ans._ The Bishop could not be ignorant that _nephesch_ signifieth _corpus
+animatum_, as well as _anima_, and that the Hebrews do not always put this
+word for our souls, but very often for ourselves. So Psal. vii. 2. and
+Psal. lix. 3, we read _naphschi_,--_my soul_ for _me_; and Psal. xliv.
+25,--_naphschenu, our soul_ for _we_; and Gen. xlvi. 26,
+_col-nephesch_--_omnis animae_, for _omnes homines_.
+
+What have we any further need of testimonies? Six hundred such are in the
+holy text. And in this place, Esth. ix. 31, what can be more plain, than
+that _nighal-naphscham, upon their soul_, is put for _nghalehem, upon
+themselves_, especially since _nghalehem_ is found to the same purpose,
+both in ver. 27 and 31.
+
+If we will make the text agree well with itself, how can we but take both
+these for one? But proceed we with the Bishop. Secondly, saith he, the
+bond of it reacheth to all that _religioni eorum voluerunt copulari_, ver.
+27, then, a matter of religion it was, had reference to that: what need
+any joining in religion for a matter of good fellowship?
+
+_Ans._ There is no word in the text of religion. Our English translation
+reads it, "all such as joined themselves unto them." Montanus, _omnes
+adjunctos_; Tremellius, _omnes qui essent se adjuncturi eis._ The old
+Latin version reads it indeed as the Bishop doth.
+
+But no such thing can be drawn out of the word _hannilvim_, which is taken
+from the radix _lava_, signifying simply, and without any adjection,
+_adhaesit_, or _adjunxit se_. But let it be so, that the text meaneth only
+such as were to adjoin themselves to the religion of the Jews, yet why
+might not the Jews have taken upon them a matter of civility, not only for
+themselves, but for such also as were to be joined with them in religion.
+Could there be nothing promised for proselytes, but only a matter of
+religion?
+
+Alas! Is this our antagonist's great Achilles, who is thus falling down
+and succumbing to me, a silly stripling? Yet let us see if there be any
+more force in the remnant of his reasons.
+
+For a third, he tells us that it is expressly termed a _rite_ and a
+_ceremony_, at verses 23 and 28, as the fathers read them.
+
+In the 23rd verse we have no more but _susceperunt_, as Pagnini, or
+_receperunt_, as Tremellius reads it: but to read, _susceperunt in
+solemnem ritum_, is to make an addition to the text.
+
+The 28th verse calls not this feast a rite, but only _dies memorati_, or
+_celebres_. And what if we grant that this feast was a rite? might it not,
+for all that, be merely civil? No, saith the Bishop, "rites, I trust, and
+ceremonies, pertain to the church, and to the service of God."
+
+_Ans._ The version which the Bishop followed, hath a rite, not a ceremony.
+Now, of rites, it is certain that they belong to the commonwealth as well
+as to the church. For _in jure politico, sui sunt imperati et solemnes
+ritus_, saith Junius.(846)
+
+Fourthly, saith the Bishop, they fast and pray here in this verse (meaning
+the 31st), fast the eve, the fourteenth, and so then the day following to
+be holiday of course.
+
+_Ans._ The Latin version, which the Bishop followeth, and whereupon he
+buildeth this reason, readeth the 31st verse very corruptly, and no ways
+according to the original, as will easily appear to any who can compare
+them together. Wherefore the best interpreters take the fasting and prayer
+spoken of verse 31, to be meant of the time before their delivery. Now,
+after they were delivered, they decreed that the matters of their fasting
+and crying should be remembered upon the days of Purim, which were to
+solemnise that preservation, _quam jejunio et precibus fuerant a Deo
+consequenti_, as saith Tremellius.
+
+But Fifthly, saith he, with fasting and prayer (here), alms also is
+enjoined (at ver. 22), these three will make it past a day of revels or
+mirth.
+
+I have answered already, that their fasting and praying are not to be
+referred to the days of Purim, which were memorials of their delivery, but
+to the time past, when, by the means of fasting and prayer, they did
+impetrate their delivery, before ever the days of Purim were heard of, and
+as touching alms, it can make no holiday, because much alms may be, and
+hath been given upon days of civil joy and solemnity.
+
+If the Bishop help not himself with his sixth reason, he is like to come
+off with no great credit. May we then know what that is?
+
+Lastly, saith he, as a holiday the Jews ever kept it,--have a peculiar set
+service for it in their _Seders_, set psalms to sing, set lessons to read,
+set prayers to say, good and godly all,--none but as they have used from
+all antiquity.
+
+_Ans._ 1. The Bishop could not have made this word good, that the Jews did
+ever and from all antiquity keep the days of Purim in this fashion.
+
+2. This manner of holding that feast, whensoever it began, had no warrant
+from the first institution, but was (as many other things) taken up by the
+Jews in after ages, and so the Bishop proveth not the point which he
+taketh in hand, namely, that the days spoken of in this text were enacted
+or appointed to be kept as holidays.
+
+3. The service which the Jews in latter times use upon the days of Purim
+is not much to be regarded. For as Godwin noteth out of Hospinian,(847)
+they read the history of Esther in their synagogues, and so often as they
+hear mention of Haman, they do with their fists and hammers beat upon the
+benches and boards, as if they did knock upon Haman's head. When thus they
+have behaved themselves, in the very time of their liturgy, like furious
+and drunken people, the rest of the day they pass over in outrageous
+revelling. And here I take leave of the Bishop.
+
+_Sect._ 10. Thirdly, We say, whether the days of Purim were instituted to
+be holidays or not, yet there was some more than ordinary warrant for
+them, because Mordecai, by whose advice and direction they were appointed
+to be kept, was a prophet by the instinct and revelation of the Spirit,
+Esth. iv. 13. _Non multum fortasse aberraverimus_, saith Hospinian,(848)
+_si dicamus hoc a Mordochcaeo et Hesthera, ex peculiari Spiritus Sancti
+instinctu factum_.
+
+Bishop Lindsey believeth(849) that they had only a general warrant, such
+as the church hath still, to put order to the circumstances belonging to
+God's worship, and all his reason is, because if the Jews had received any
+other particular warrant, the sacred story should not have passed it over
+in silence.
+
+_Ans._ Thus much we understand from the sacred story, that the Jews had
+the direction of a prophet for the days of Purim; and that was a warrant
+more than ordinary, because prophets were the extraordinary ministers of
+God.
+
+_Sect._ 11. Fourthly, As touching the feast of the dedication of the altar
+by Judas Maccabeus, 1. Let us hear what Cartwright very gravely and
+judiciously propoundeth:(850) "That this feast was unduly instituted and
+ungroundly, it may appear by conference of the dedication of the first
+temple under Solomon, and of the second after the captivity returned from
+Babylon. In which dedication, seeing there was no yearly remembrance by
+solemnity of feasts, not so much as one day, it is evident that the yearly
+celebration of this feast for eight days, was not compassed by that Spirit
+that Solomon and the captivity were directed by; which Spirit, when it
+dwelt more plentifully in Solomon, and in the prophets that stood at the
+stern of the captivity's dedication, than it did in Judas, it was in him
+so much the more presumptuous, as having a shorter leg than they, he durst
+in that matter overstride them, and his rashness is so much the more
+aggravated, as each of them, for the building of the whole temple, with
+all the implements and furniture thereof, made no feast to renew the
+annual memory, where Judas only for renewment of the altar, and of certain
+other decayed places of the temple, instituted this great solemnity."
+
+2. The feast of the dedication was not free of Pharisaical invention. For
+as Tremellius observeth out of the Talmud,(851) _statuerunt sapientes
+illius seculi, ut recurrentibus annis, octo illi dies, &c._ Yet albeit the
+Pharisees were called _sapientes Israelis_, Bishop Lindsey will not grant
+that they were the wise men of whom the Talmud speaketh; for, saith he, it
+behoved those who appointed festivities, not only to be wise men, but men
+of authority also.(852)
+
+But what do we hear? Were not the Pharisees men of authority? Why, saith
+not Christ they sat in Moses' chair? Matt. xxiii. 2. Saith not
+Calvin,(853) _In ecclesiae regimene et scriptura interpretatione, haec secta
+primatum tenebat_? Saith not Camero,(854) _cum Pharisaeorum praecipua esset
+authoritas_ (_ut ubique docet Josephus_)? &c.
+
+Doth not Josephus speak so much of their authority, that in one place he
+saith,(855) _Nomen igitur regni, erat penes reginam (Alexandram) penes
+Pharisaeos vero administratio_? And in another place,(856) _Erat enim
+quaedam Judaeorum secta exactiorem patriae legis cognitionem sibi vendicans_?
+&c. _Hi Pharisaei vocantur, genus hominuum astutum, arrogans, et interdum
+regibus quoque infestum, ut eos etiam aperte impugnare non vereatur?_
+
+There is nothing alleged which can prove the lawfulness of this feast of
+the dedication.
+
+It is but barely and boldly affirmed by Bishop Lindsey,(857) that the
+Pharisees were not rebuked by Christ for this feast, because we read not
+so much in Scripture; for there were many things which Jesus did and said
+that are not written in Scripture, John xxi. 25; and whereas it seemeth to
+some, that Christ did countenance and approve this feast, because he gave
+his presence unto the same, John x. 22, 23, we must remember, that the
+circumstances only of time and place are noted by the evangelist, for
+evidence to the story, and not for any mystery, Christ had come up to the
+feast of tabernacles, John vii., and tarried still all that while, because
+then there was a great confluence of people in Jerusalem. Whereupon he
+took occasion to spread the net of the gospel for catching of many souls.
+And whilst John saith, "It was at Jerusalem the feast of the dedication,"
+he gives a reason only of the confluence of many people at Jerusalem, and
+showeth how it came to pass that Christ had occasion to preach to such a
+great multitude; and whilst he addeth "And it was winter," he giveth a
+reason of Christ's walking in Solomon's porch, whither the Jews' resort
+was. It was not thought beseeming to walk in the temple itself, but in the
+porch men used to convene either for talking or walking, because in the
+summer the porch shadowed them from the heat of the sun, and in winter it
+lay open to the sunshine and to heat. Others think, that whilst he saith,
+it was winter, importeth that therefore Christ was the more frequently in
+the temple, knowing that his time was short which he had then for his
+preaching; for in the entry of the next spring he was to suffer.
+Howsoever, it is not certain of what feast of dedication John speaketh.
+Bullinger leaves it doubtful;(858) and Maldonat saith(859) that this
+opinion which taketh the dedication of the altar by Judas Maccabeus to be
+meant by John, hath fewest authors. But to let this pass, whereas the
+Rhemists allege,(860) that Christ approved this feast, because he was
+present at it. Cartwright and Fulk answer them, that Christ's being
+present at it proveth not his approving of it. _Non festum proprie
+honoravit Christus_, saith Junius,(861) _sed caetum piorum convenientem
+festo; nam omnes ejusmodi occasiones seminandi evangelii sui observabat et
+capiebat Christus_.
+
+_Quasi vero_ (saith Hospinian(862)) _Christus Encaenoirum casua
+Hierosloymam abierit_. Nay, but he saw he had a convenient occasion, _ad
+instituendam hominum multitudenem, ad illud festum confluentiam_.
+
+Even as Paul chose to be present at certain Jewish feasts,(863) not for
+any respect to the feasts themselves, nor for any honour which he meant to
+give them, but for the multitudes' cause who resorted to the same, among
+whom he had a more plentiful occasion to spread the gospel at those
+festivities than at other times in the year.
+
+I had thought here to close this chapter; but finding that, as the parrot,
+which other while useth the form of a man's voice, yet being beaten and
+chaffed, returneth to his own natural voice, so some of our opposites, who
+have been but erst prating somewhat of the language of Canaan against us,
+finding themselves pressed and perplexed in such a way of reasoning, have
+quickly changed their tune, and begin to talk to us of warrants of another
+nature nor of the word of God. I am therefore to digress with them. And I
+perceive, ere we know well where they are, they are passed from Scripture
+to custom. For if we will listen, thus saith one of the greatest note
+among them, Bishop Andrews(864) I trow they call him: "We do but make
+ourselves to be pitied other while (well said) when we stand wringing the
+Scriptures (well said) to strain that out of them which is not in them
+(well said), and so can never come liquid from them (well said), when yet
+we have for the same point the church's custom clear enough. And that is
+enough by virtue of this text" (meaning 1 Cor. xi. 16). And after he
+saith, that we are taught by the Apostle's example in "points of this
+nature, of ceremony or circumstance, ever to pitch upon _habemus_, or _non
+habemus talem consuetudinem_."
+
+_Ans._ 1. The text gives him no ground for this doctrine, that in matters
+of ceremony we are to pitch upon _habemus_ or _non habemus talem
+consuetudinem_, so that he is wide away, whilst he spendeth the greatest
+part of his sermon in the pressing of this point, that the custom of the
+church should be enough to us in matters of ceremony, and particularly in
+the keeping of Easter; for the custom of the church there spoken of, is
+not concerning a point of circumstance, but concerning a very substantial
+and necessary point, namely, not to be contentious: neither doth the
+Apostle urge those orders of the men's praying uncovered, and the women's
+praying veiled, from this ground, because so was the church's custom (as
+the Bishop would have it), but only he is warning the Corinthians not to
+be contentious about those matters, because the churches have no such
+custom as to be contentious. So is the place expounded by Chrysostom,
+Ambrose, Calvin, Martyr, Bullinger, Marlorat, Beza, Fulk, Cartwright,
+Pareus, and our own Archbishop of St. Andrews, in his sermon upon that
+text. And for this exposition, it maketh that the Apostle, in the
+preceding part of the chapter, hath given sufficient reasons for that
+order of covering or veiling the women; wherefore, if any would contend
+about the matter, he tells them they must contend with themselves; for
+they nor the churches of God would not contend with them,--they had no such
+custom. But if we admit Bishop Andrews' gloss, then why doth the Apostle,
+after he hath given good "reason for the veiling of women, subjoin, if any
+man seem to be contentious," &c. The Bishop resolveth us, that the
+apostles saw that a wrangling wit would elude these reasons which he had
+given, and he had no other reasons to give, therefore he resolves all into
+the church's practice,--enough of itself to suffice any that will be wise
+to sobriety. _Ans._ If any seem to be blasphemous, we have no such custom,
+neither the churches of God. What! shall a wrangling wit elude the reasons
+given by the Spirit of God, in such sort, that he must give some other
+more sufficient proof for that which he teacheth? Then the whole
+Scriptures of God must yet be better proved, because the unstable do wrest
+them, as Peter speaks, 2 Pet. iii. 16.
+
+(Transcriber's Note: There is no section 12 in the original book.)
+
+_Sect._ 13. 2. The custom of the church is not enough to pitch on, and it
+is found oftentimes expedient to change a custom of the church.
+
+Basilius Magnus(865) doth flatly refuse to admit the authority of custom:
+_Consuetudo sine veritate_ (saith Cyprian),(866) _vetustas erroris est.
+Frustra enim qui ratione vincuntur_ (saith Augustine),(867) _consuetudinem
+nobis objiciunt, quasi consuetudo major sit veritate, &c. Nullus pudor est
+ad meliora transire_, saith Ambrose(868) to the Emperor Valentinian.
+_Quaelibet consuetudo_ (saith Gratian),(869) _veritati est postponenda._
+
+And again,(870) _Corrigendum est quod illicite admittitur, aut a
+praedecessoribus admissum invenitur_. A politic writer admonisheth(871)
+_retinere antiqua_, only with this caution, _Si proba._
+
+Calvin(872) (speaking against human ceremonies) saith, _Si objiciatur,
+&c._ "If (saith he) antiquity be objected (albeit they who are too much
+addicted to custom and to received fashions, do boldly use this buckler to
+defend all their corruptions), the refutation is easy; for the ancients
+also themselves, with heavy complaints, have abundantly testified that
+they did not approve of anything which was devised by the will of men." In
+the end of the epistle he allegeth this testimony of Cyprian: "If Christ
+alone be to be heard, then we ought not to give heed what any man before
+us hath thought fit to be done, but what Christ (who is before all) hath
+done; for we must not follow the customs of man, but the truth of God."
+
+What can be more plain than that antiquity cannot be a confirmation to
+error, nor custom a prejudice to truth?
+
+Wherefore Dr Forbesse(873) also despiseth such arguments as are taken from
+the custom of the church.
+
+_Sect._ 14. 3. There was a custom in the churches of God to give the holy
+communion to infants; and another custom to minister baptism only about
+Easter and Pentecost. Sundry such abuses got place in the church.
+
+If, then, it be enough to pitch upon custom, why ought not those customs
+to have been commended and continued? But if they were commendably
+changed, then ought we not to follow blindly the bare custom of the
+church, but examine the equity of the same, and demand grounds of reason
+for it.
+
+St. Paul (saith Dr Fulk(874)) doth give reason for that order of covering
+women's heads: "By whose example the preachers are likewise to endeavour
+to satisfy, by reason, both men and women, that humbly desire their
+resolution for quiet of their conscience, and not to beat them down with
+the club of custom only."
+
+4. Whereas the custom of some churches is alleged for the ceremonies, we
+have objected the custom of other churches against them; neither shall
+ever our opposites prove them to be the customs of the church universal.
+
+5. A great part of that ecclesiastical custom which is alleged for the
+ceremonies, resolveth into that idolatrous and superstitious use of them
+which hath long continued in the kingdom of antichrist; but that such a
+custom maketh against them, it hath been proved before.(875)
+
+6. If it were so that we ought to pitch upon the church's custom, yet
+(that I may speak with Mr Hooker) the law of common indulgence permitteth
+us to think of our own customs as half a thought better than the customs
+of others.
+
+But why was there such a change made in the discipline, policy, and orders
+of the church of Scotland, which were agreeable to the word of God,
+confirmed and ratified by general assemblies and parliaments, used and
+enjoyed with so great peace and purity? Our custom should have holden the
+ceremonies out of Scotland, hold them in elsewhere as it may.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES CANNOT BE WARRANTED BY ANY
+ECCLESIASTICAL LAW, NOR BY ANY POWER WHICH THE CHURCH HATH TO PUT ORDER TO
+THINGS BELONGING TO DIVINE WORSHIP.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. We have proved that the ceremonies cannot be warranted by the
+law of God. It followeth to examine whether any law of man, or power upon
+earth, can make them lawful or warrantable unto us.
+
+We will begin with laws ecclesiastical, where, first of all, it must be
+considered well what power the church hath to make laws about things
+pertaining to religion and the worship of God, and how far the same doth
+extend itself. Dr Field's resolution touching this question is as
+followeth: "Thus (saith he(876)) we see our adversaries cannot prove that
+the church hath power to annex unto such ceremonies and observations as
+she deviseth, the remission of sins, and the working of other spiritual
+and supernatural effects, which is the only thing questioned between them
+and us about the power of the church. So that all the power the church
+hath, more than by her power to publish the commandments of Christ the Son
+of God, and by her censures to punish the offenders against the same, is
+only in prescribing things that pertain to comeliness and order.
+Comeliness requireth that not only that gravity and modesty do appear in
+the performance of the works of God's service that beseemeth actions of
+that nature, but also that such rites and ceremonies be used as may cause
+a due respect unto, and regard of, the things performed, and thereby stir
+men up to greater fervour and devotion."
+
+And after: Order requireth that there be set hours for prayer, preaching,
+and ministering the sacraments; that there be silence and attention when
+the things are performed; that women be silent in the church; that all
+things be administered according to the rules of discipline.
+
+This his discourse is but a bundle of incongruities. For, 1. He saith,
+that the church's power to annex unto the ceremonies which she deviseth
+the working of spiritual and supernatural effects, is the only thing
+questioned between our adversaries and us about the power of the church.
+Now, our adversaries contend with us also about the power of the church to
+make new articles of faith, and her power to make laws binding the
+conscience, both which controversies are touched by himself.(877)
+
+2. He saith, that comeliness requireth the use of such ceremonies as may
+cause a due respect unto, and regard of, the works of God's service, and
+thereby stir men up to greater fervour and devotion. But it hath been
+already showed(878) that the comeliness which the Apostle requireth in the
+church and service of God cannot comprehend such ceremonies under it, and
+that it is no other than that very common external decency which is
+beseeming for all the assemblies of men, as well civil as sacred.
+
+3. Whilst he is discoursing of the church's power to prescribe things
+pertaining to order, contra-distinguished from her power which she hath to
+publish the commandments of Christ, he reckons forth among his other
+examples, women's silence in the church, as if the church did prescribe
+this as a matter of order left to her determination, and not publish it as
+the commandment of Christ in his word.
+
+4. Whereas he saith that the church hath power to prescribe such rites and
+ceremonies as may cause a due respect unto, and regard of, the works of
+God's service, and thereby stir men up to greater fervour and devotion, by
+his own words shall he be condemned: for a little before he reprehendeth
+the Romanists for maintaining that the church hath power to annex unto the
+ceremonies which she deviseth the working of spiritual and supernatural
+effects. And a little after he saith, that the church hath no power to
+ordain such ceremonies as serve to signify, assure, and convey unto men
+such benefits of saving grace as God in Christ is pleased to bestow on
+them. Now, to cause a regard of, and a respect unto the works of God's
+service, and thereby to stir up men to fervour and devotion, what is it
+but the working of a spiritual and supernatural effect, and the conveying
+unto men such a benefit of saving grace as God in Christ is pleased to
+bestow on them? In like manner, whereas he holdeth that the church hath
+power to ordain such ceremonies as serve to express those spiritual and
+heavenly affections, dispositions, motions, or desires, which are or
+should be in men, in the very same place he confuteth himself, whilst he
+affirmeth that the church hath no power to ordain such ceremonies as serve
+to signify unto men those benefits of saving grace which God in Christ is
+pleased to bestow on them. Now, to express such heavenly and spiritual
+affections, dispositions, motions, or desires, as should be in men, is (I
+suppose) to signify unto men such benefits of saving grace, as God in
+Christ is pleased to bestow on them. Who dare deny it?
+
+_Sect._ 2. Bishop Lindsey's opinion touching the power of the church,(879)
+whereof we dispute, is, that power is given unto her to "determine the
+circumstances which are in the general necessary to be used in divine
+worship, but not defined particularly in the word."
+
+I know the church can determine nothing which is not of this kind and
+quality. But the Prelate's meaning (as may be seen in that same epistle of
+his) is, that whatsoever the church determineth, if it be such a
+circumstance as is in the general necessary, but not particularly defined
+in the word, then we cannot say that the church had no power to determine
+and enjoin the same, nor be led by the judgment of our own consciences,
+judging it not expedient, but that in this case we must take the church's
+law to be the rule of our consciences. Now, by this ground which the
+Prelate holdeth, the church may prescribe to the ministers of the gospel
+the whole habit and apparel of the Levitical high-priest (which were to
+Judaize). For apparel is a circumstance in the general necessary, yet it
+is not particularly defined in the word. By this ground, the church may
+determine that I should ever pray with my face to the east, preach
+kneeling on my knees, sing the psalms lying on my back, and hear sermons
+standing only upon one foot. For in all these actions a gesture is
+necessary; but there is no gesture particularly defined in the word to
+which we are adstricted in any of these exercises.
+
+And further, because _uno absurdo dato, mille sequuntur_, by this ground
+the Prelate must say, that the church hath power to ordain three or four
+holidays every week (which ordinance, as he himself hath told us, could
+not stand with charity, the inseparable companion of piety), for time is a
+circumstance in the general necessary in divine worship, yet in his
+judgment we are not bound by the word to any particular time for the
+performance of the duties of God's worship.
+
+By this ground we were to say, that Pope Innocent III. held him within the
+bounds of ecclesiastical power, when in the great _Lateran_ council, anno
+1215, he made a decree, that all the faithful of both sexes should once in
+the year at least, to wit, upon Easter-day, receive the sacrament of the
+eucharist. From whence it hath come to pass, that the common people in the
+church of Rome receive the sacrament only upon Easter. Now, the time of
+receiving the sacrament is a circumstance in the general necessary, for a
+time it must have, but it is not particularly defined in the word. It is
+left indefinite, 1 Cor. xi. 26, yet the church hath no power to determine
+Easter-day, either as the only time, or as the fittest time, for all the
+faithful of both sexes to receive the eucharist. What if faithful men and
+women cannot have time to prepare themselves as becometh, being avocated
+and distracted by the no less necessary than honest adoes of their
+particular callings?
+
+What if they cannot have the sacrament upon that day administered
+according to our Lord's institution? What if they see Papists confirming
+themselves in their Easter superstition by our unnecessary practice? Shall
+they swallow these and such-like soul-destroying camels, and all for
+straining out the gnat of communicating precisely upon Easter-day? But
+since time is a necessary circumstance, and no time is particularly
+defined, the Bishop must say more also, that the church may determine
+Easter-day for the only day whereupon we may receive the Lord's supper.
+
+Last of all, if the church have power to determine all circumstances in
+the general necessary, but not particularly defined in the word, what
+could be said against that ancient order of solemn baptizing only at the
+holidays of Easter and Pentecost (whereby it came to pass that very many
+died unbaptized, as Socrates writeth(880))? Or, what shall be said against
+Tertullian's opinion,(881) which alloweth lay men, yea, women, to baptize.
+May the church's determination make all this good, forasmuch as these
+circumstances of the time when, and the persons by whom, baptism should be
+ministered, are in the general necessary, but not particularly defined in
+the word? _Ite leves nugae._
+
+_Sect._ 3. Camero,(882) as learned a Formalist as any of the former,
+expresseth his judgment copiously touching our present question. He saith,
+that there are two sorts of things which the church commandeth, to wit,
+either such as belong to faith and manners, or such as conduce to faith
+and manners; that both are in God's word prescribed _exserte_, plainly,
+but not one way, because such things that pertain unto faith and manners,
+are in the word of God particularly commanded, whereas those things which
+conduce to faith and manners are but generally commended unto us. Of
+things that pertain to faith and manners, he saith, that they are most
+constant and certain, and such as can admit no change; but as for things
+conducing to faith and manners, he saith, that they depend upon the
+circumstances of persons, place, and time, which being almost infinite,
+there could not be particular precepts delivered unto us concerning such
+things. Only this is from God commended unto the church, that whatsoever
+is done publicly be done with order, and what privately be decent.
+
+These things he so applieth to his purpose, that he determineth, in
+neither of these kinds the church hath power to make laws, because in
+things pertaining to faith and manners the law of our Lord Jesus Christ is
+plainly expressed; and in those things, wherein neither faith nor manners
+are placed, but which conduce to faith and manners, we have indeed a
+general law, not having further any particular law, for that reason
+alleged, namely, because this depends upon the circumstances.
+
+Thereafter he addeth, _Quid sit fides, quid sit pietas, quid sit charitas,
+verbo Dei demonstratur. Quid ad haec conducat, seu reputando rem in
+universum, seu reputando rem quatenus singulis competit, pendet ex
+cognitione circumstantiarum. Jam id definire Deus voluit esse penes
+ecclesiam, hae tamen lege, ut quod definit ecclesia, conveniat generali
+definitioni Dei._
+
+The matter he illustrates with this one example: God's word doth define in
+the general that we are to fast, and that publicly; but, in the
+particular, we could not have the definition of the word, because there
+are infinite occasions of a public fast, as it is said in the schools,
+_individua esse infinita_; so that it is the church's part to look to the
+occasion, and this depends upon the consideration of the circumstances.
+This discourse of his cannot satisfy the attentive reader, but deserveth
+certain animadversions.
+
+_Sect_. 4. First, then, it is to be observed how he is drawn into a
+manifest contradiction; for whereas he saith, that God's word doth
+_exserte_ and _diserte_ commend unto us _generatim_, such things as
+conduce to faith and manners, and that concerning things of this nature we
+have a general law in Scripture, how can this stand with that which he
+addeth, namely, that it is in the church's power to define what things
+conduce to faith, piety, and charity, even _reputando rem in universum_?
+
+2. Whereas he saith that the church hath no power to make laws, neither in
+things belonging to faith and manners, nor in things conducing to the
+same; I would also see how this agreeth with that other position, namely,
+that it is in the power of the church to define what things do conduce to
+faith, piety and charity.
+
+3. What means he by his application of order to public, and decency to
+private actions, as if the Apostle did not require both these in the
+public words of God's service performed in the church?
+
+4. Whereas he saith that such things as conduce to faith and manners do
+depend upon the circumstances, and so could not be particularly defined in
+the word, either he speaks of those things as they are defined in the
+general, or as they are defined in the particular. Not the first; for as
+they are defined in the general, they cannot depend upon changeable
+circumstances, and that because, according to his own tenet, the word
+defines them in the general, and this definition of the word is most
+certain and constant, neither can any change happen unto it. Wherefore
+(without doubt) he must pronounce this of the definition of such things in
+the particular. Now, to say that things conducing to faith and manners, as
+they are particularly defined, do depend upon circumstances, is as much as
+to say that circumstances depend upon circumstances. For things conducing
+to faith and manners, which the church hath power to determine
+particularly, what are they other than circumstances? Surely he who taketh
+not Camero's judgment to be, that the church hath power to determine
+somewhat more than the circumstances (and by consequence a part of the
+substance) of God's worship, shall give no sense to his words. Yet, if one
+would take his meaning so, I see not how he can be saved from
+contradicting himself; forasmuch as he holdeth that such things as pertain
+to faith and manners are particularly defined in the word. To say no more,
+I smell such things in Camero's opinion as can neither stand with reason
+nor with himself.
+
+5. God's word doth not only define things pertaining to faith and manners,
+but also things conducing to the same, and that not only generally, but in
+some respects, and sometimes, particularly. And we take for example his
+own instance of fasting. For the Scripture defineth very many occasions of
+fasting; Ezra viii. 21; 2 Chron. xx.; Jonah iii.; Joel ii.; Acts xiii. 3;
+Josh. vii. 6; Judg. xx. 16; Esth. iv. 16; Ezra ix. x.; Zech. vii. From
+which places we gather that the Scripture defineth fasting to be used,
+
+1. For supplication, when we want some necessary or expedient good thing.
+
+2. For deprecation, when we fear some evil.
+
+3. For humiliation, when, by our sins, we have provoked God's wrath.
+Neither can there be any occasion of fasting whereof I may not say that
+either it is particularly designed in Scripture, or else that it may be by
+necessary consequence defined out of Scripture; or, lastly, that it is of
+that sort of things which were not determinable by Scripture, because
+circumstances are infinite, as Camero hath told us.
+
+_Sect._ 5. Thus having failed by those rocks of offence, I direct my
+course straight to the dissecting of the true limits, within which the
+church's power of enacting laws about things pertaining to the worship of
+God is bounded and confined, and which it may not overleap nor transgress.
+
+Three conditions I find necessarily requisite in such a thing as the
+church hath power to prescribe by her laws:
+
+1st. It must be only a circumstance of divine worship; no substantial part
+of it; no sacred significant and efficacious ceremony. For the order and
+decency left to the definition of the church, as concerning the
+particulars of it, comprehendeth no more but mere circumstances. Bishop
+Lindsey(883) doth but unskilfully confound things different when he
+talketh of "the ceremonies and circumstances left to the determination of
+the church." Now, by his leave, though circumstances be left to the
+determination of the church, yet ceremonies, if we speak properly, are
+not.
+
+Bishop Andrews avoucheth(884) that ceremonies pertain to the church only,
+and to the service of God, not to civil solemnities. But so much, I trust,
+he would not have said of circumstances which have place in all moral
+actions, and that to the same end and purpose for which they serve in
+religious actions, namely, for beautifying them with that decent demeanour
+which the very light and law of natural reason requireth as a thing
+beseeming all human actions. For the church of Christ being a society of
+men and women, must either observe order and decency in all the
+circumstances of their holy actions, time, place, person, form, &c., or
+also be deformed with that disorder and confusion which common reason and
+civility abhorreth. Ceremonies, therefore, which are sacred observances,
+and serve only to a religious and holy use, and which may not, without
+sacrilege, be applied to another use, must be sorted with things of
+another nature than circumstances. _Ceremonioe_, "ceremonies (saith Dr
+Field(885)) are so named, as Livy thinketh, from a town called Caere, in
+the which the Romans did hide their sacred things when the Gauls invaded
+Rome. Others think that ceremonies are so named _a carendo_, of abstaining
+from certain things, as the Jews abstained from swine's flesh, and sundry
+other things forbidden by God as unclean. Ceremonies are outward acts of
+religion," &c. _Quapropter etiam_, saith Junius,(886) _ritus et ceremonias
+inter se distincimus, quia in jure politico sunt imperati et solennes
+ritus; ceremonioe vero non nisi sacroe observationes in cultu divino
+appellantur. Ceremonia_, saith Bellarmine,(887) _proprie et simpliciter
+sic vocata, est externa actio quoe non aliunde est bona et laudabilis,
+nisi quia fit ad Deum colendum._ From which words Amesius(888) concludeth
+against him, that he, and others with him, do absurdly confound order,
+decency, and the like, which have the same use and praise in civil things
+which they have in the worship of God, with religious and sacred
+ceremonies. Yet Dr Burges(889) rejecteth this distinction betwixt
+circumstances and ceremonies, as a mere nicety or fiction. And would you
+know his reason? "For that (saith he) all circumstances (I mean
+extrinsical) which incur not the substance of the action, when they are
+once designed or observed purposely in reference to such a matter, of
+whose substance they are not, they are then ceremonies." If this be not a
+nicety or fiction, I know not what is. For what means he here by a matter?
+An action sure, or else a nicety. Well, then, we shall have now a world of
+ceremonies. When I appoint to meet with another man at Berwick, upon the
+10th day of May, because the place and the day are purposely designed in
+reference to such a matter, of whose substance they are not, namely, to my
+meeting with the other man, for talking of our business, therefore the
+town of Berwick, and the 10th day of May, must be accounted ceremonies. To
+me it is nice, that the Doctor made it not nice, to let such a nicety fall
+from his pen.
+
+When I put on my shoos in reference to walking, or wash my hands in
+reference to eating, am I using ceremonies all the while? The Doctor could
+not choose but say so, forasmuch as these circumstances are purposely
+designed and observed in reference to such matters, of whose substance
+they are not.
+
+_Sect._ 6. 2d. That which the church may lawfully prescribe by her laws
+and ordinances, as a thing left to her determination, must be one of such
+things as were not determinable by Scripture, on that reason which Camero
+hath given us, namely, because _individua_ are _infinita_. We mean not in
+any wise to circumscribe the infinite power and wisdom of God, only we
+speak upon supposition of the bounds and limits which God did set to his
+written word, within which he would have it contained, and over which he
+thought fit that it should not exceed. The case being thus put, as it is,
+we say truly of those several and changeable circumstances which are left
+to the determination of the church, that, being almost infinite, they were
+not particularly determinable in Scripture; for the particular definition
+of those occurring circumstances which were to be rightly ordered in the
+works of God's service to the end of the world, and that ever according to
+the exigency of every present occasion and different case, should have
+filled the whole world with books. But as for other things pertaining to
+God's worship, which are not to be reckoned among the circumstances of it,
+they being in number neither many, nor in change various, were most easily
+and conveniently determinable in Scripture. Now, since God would have his
+word (which is our rule in the works of his service) not to be delivered
+by tradition, but to be written and sealed unto us, that by this means,
+for obviating Satanical subtility, and succouring human imbecility, we
+might have a more certain way for conservation of true religion, and for
+the instauration of it when it faileth among men,--how can we but assure
+ourselves that every such acceptable thing pertaining any way to religion,
+which was particularly and conveniently determinable in Scripture, is
+indeed determined in it; and consequently, that no such thing as is not a
+mere alterable circumstance is left to the determination of the church?
+
+_Sect._ 7. 3d. If the church prescribe anything lawfully, so that she
+prescribe no more than she hath power given her to prescribe, her
+ordinance must be accompanied with some good reason and warrant given for
+the satisfaction of tender consciences. This condition is, alas! too
+seldom looked unto by law-makers, of whom one fitly complaineth thus:--
+
+
+ Lex quamvis ratio Ciceroni summa vocetur, Et bene laudetur lex que
+ ratione probatur, Invenies inter legistas raro logistas: Moris et
+ exempli leges sunt juraque templi.
+
+
+But this fashion we leave to them who will have all their anomalies taken
+for analogies. It becometh not the spouse of Christ, endued with the
+spirit of meekness, to command anything imperiously, and without a reason
+given.
+
+_Ecclesioe enim est docere primum, tuin proescribere_, saith Camero.(890)
+And again: _Non enim dominatur cleris, nec agit cum iis quos Christus
+redemit, ac si non possent capere quod sit religiosum, quid minus._
+
+Tertullian's testimony(891) is known: _Nulla lex_, &c. "No law (saith he)
+owes to itself alone the conscience of its equity, but to those from whom
+it expects obedience. Moreover, it is a suspected law which will not have
+itself to be proved, but a wicked law, which not being proved, yet beareth
+rule."
+
+It is well said by our divines,(892) that in rites and ceremonies the
+church hath no power "to destruction, but to edification;" and that the
+observation of our ecclesiastical canons "must carry before them a
+manifest utility."(893) _Piis vero fratribus durum est, subjicere se rebus
+illis quas nec rectas esse nec utiles animadvertunt_.(894) If here it be
+objected, that some things are convenient to be done, therefore, because
+they are prescribed by the church, and for no other reason. For example,
+in two things which are alike lawful and convenient in themselves, I am
+bound to do the one and not the other, because of the church's
+prescription. So that, in such cases, it seemeth there can be no other
+reason given for the ordinance of the church but only her own power and
+authority to put to order things of this nature.
+
+I answer, that even in such a case as this, the conveniency of the thing
+itself is anterior to the church's determination; anterior, I say, _de
+congruo_, though not _de facto_, that is to say, before ever the church
+prescribe it, it is such a thing as (when it falleth out to be done at
+all) may be done conveniently, though it be not (before the church's
+prescribing of it) such a thing as should and ought to be done as
+convenient. Which being so, we do still hold that the conveniency of a
+thing must always go before the church's prescribing of it; go before, I
+mean, at least _de congruo_. Neither can the church prescribe anything
+lawfully which she showeth not to have been convenient, even before her
+determination.
+
+_Sect._ 8. These things being permitted, I come to extract my projection,
+and to make it evident that the lawfulness of the controverted ceremonies
+cannot be warranted by any ecclesiastical law; and this I prove by three
+arguments:--
+
+1st. Those conditions which I have showed to be required in that thing
+which the church may lawfully prescribe by a law, are not quadrant nor
+competent to the cross, kneeling, surplice, holidays, &c.
+
+For, 1. They are not mere circumstances, such as have place in all moral
+actions, but sacred, mystical, significant, efficacious ceremonies, as
+hath been abundantly shown in this dispute already. For example, Dr
+Burges(895) calleth the surplice a religious or sacred ceremony. And
+again,(896) he placeth in it a mystical signification of the pureness of
+the minister of God. Wherefore the replier(897) to Dr Mortoune's
+_Particular Defence_ saith well, that there is a great difference betwixt
+a grave civil habit and a mystical garment.
+
+2. It cannot be said that these ceremonies are of that kind of thing which
+were not determinable by Scripture; neither will our opposites, for very
+shame, adventure to say that things of this kind, to which cross,
+kneeling, &c., do belong, viz., sacred significant ceremonies, left (in
+their judgment) to the definition of the church, are almost infinite, and
+therefore could not well and easily be determined in Scripture.
+
+Since, then, such things as are not mere circumstances of worship can
+neither be many nor various (as I said before), it is manifest that all
+such things were easily determinable in Scripture.
+
+3. Our ceremonial laws are not backed with such grounds and reasons as
+might be for the satisfying and quieting of tender consciences, but we are
+borne down with Will and authority; whereof I have said enough
+elsewhere.(898)
+
+_Sect._ 9. 2d. If the ceremonies be lawful to us because the law and
+ordinance of the church prescribes them, then either the bare and naked
+prescription of the church, having no other warrant than the church's own
+authority, makes them to be thus lawful; or else the law of the church, as
+grounded upon and warranted by the law of God and nature. Not the first;
+for divines hold,(899) _legem humanum ferri ab hominibus, cum ratione
+procedunt ab illis aliis antegressis legibus. Nam legis humanae regula
+proxima est duplex. Una innata quam legem naturalem dicimus, altera
+inspirata, quam divinam_, &c. _Ex his ergo fontibus lex humana procedit:
+hoec incunabila illius a quibus si aberrat, lex degener est, indigna legis
+nomine._ We have also the testimony of an adversary; for saith not Paybody
+himself,(900) "I grant it is unlawful to do in God's worship anything upon
+the mere pleasure of man?"
+
+If they take them (as needs they must) to the latter part, then let them
+either say that the ceremonies are lawful unto us, because the church
+judgeth them to be agreeable to the law of God and nature, or because the
+church proveth unto us, by evident reasons, that they are indeed agreeable
+to these laws. If they yield us the latter, then it is not the church's
+law, but the church's reasons given for her law, which can warrant the
+lawfulness of them unto us, which doth elude and elide all that which they
+allege for the lawfulness of them from the power and authority of the
+church.
+
+And further, if any such reasons be to be given forth for the ceremonies,
+why are they so long kept up from us? But if they hold them at the former,
+thereupon it will follow, that it shall be lawful for us to do every thing
+which the church shall judge to be agreeable to the law of God and nature,
+and consequently to all the Jewish, popish, and heathenish ceremonies,
+yea, to worship images, if it happen that the church judge these things to
+be agreeable to the law of God and nature.
+
+It will be answered (I know), that if the church command anything
+repugnant to God's word we are not bound to do it, nor to receive it as
+lawful, though the church judge so of it; but otherwise, if that which the
+church judgeth to be agreeable to the law of God and nature (and in that
+respect prescribeth) be not repugnant to the word of God, but in itself
+indifferent, then are we to embrace it as convenient, and consonant to the
+law of God and nature, neither ought we to call in question the lawfulness
+of it.
+
+But I reply, that either we must judge a thing to be repugnant or not
+repugnant to the word, to be indifferent or not indifferent in itself,
+because the church judgeth so of it, or else because the church proveth
+unto us by an evident reason that it is so. If the latter, we have what we
+would; if the former, we are just where we were: the argument is still set
+afoot; then we must receive everything (be it ever so bad) as indifferent,
+if only the church happen so to judge of it; for _quod competit alicui qua
+tale_, &c. So that if we receive anything as indifferent, for this
+respect, because the church judgeth it to be so, then shall we receive
+everything for indifferent which the church shall so judge of.
+
+_Sect._ 10. 3d. The church is forbidden to add anything to the
+commandments of God which he hath given unto us, concerning his worship
+and service, Deut. iv. 2; xii. 32; Prov. xxx. 6; therefore she may not
+lawfully prescribe anything in the works of divine worship, if it be not a
+mere circumstance belonging to that kind of things which were not
+determinate by Scripture.
+
+Our opposites have no other distinctions which they make any use of
+against this argument, but the very same which Papists use in defence of
+their unwritten dogmatical traditions, namely, that _additio corrumpens_
+is forbidden, but not _additio perficiens_: that there is not alike reason
+of the Christian church and of the Jewish; that the church may not add to
+the essential parts of God's worship, but to the accidentary she may add.
+
+To the first of those distinctions, we answer, 1. That the distinction
+itself is an addition to the word, and so doth but beg the question.
+
+2. It is blasphemous; for it argueth that the commandments of God are
+imperfect, and that by addition they are made perfect.
+
+3. Since our opposites will speak in this dialect, let them resolve us
+whether the washings of the Pharisees, condemned by Christ, were
+corrupting or perfecting additions. They cannot say they were corrupting,
+for there was no commandment of God which those washings did corrupt or
+destroy, except that commandment which forbiddeth men's additions. But for
+this respect our opposites dare not call them corrupting additions, for so
+they should condemn all additions whatsoever. Except, therefore, they can
+show us that those washings were not added by the Pharisees for
+perfecting, but for corrupting the law of God, let them consider how they
+rank their own ceremonial additions with those of the Pharisees. We read
+of no other reason wherefore Christ condemned them but because they were
+doctrines which had no other warrant than the commandments of men, Matt.
+xv. 9; for as the law ordained divers washings, for teaching and
+signifying that true holiness and cleanness which ought to be among God's
+people, so the Pharisees would have perfected the law by adding other
+washings (and more than God had commanded) for the same end and purpose.
+
+_Sect._ 11. To the second distinction, we say that the Christian church
+hath no more liberty to add to the commandments of God than the Jewish
+church had; for the second commandment is moral and perpetual, and
+forbiddeth to us as well as to them the additions and inventions of men in
+the worship of God. Nay, as Calvin noteth,(901) much more are we forbidden
+to add unto God's word than they were. "Before the coming of his
+well-beloved Son in the flesh (saith John Knox),(902) severely he punished
+all such as durst enterprise to alter or change his ceremonies and
+statutes,--as in Saul, (1 Kings xiii.; xv.) Uzziah, Nadab, Abihu, (Lev. x.)
+is to be read. And will he now, after that he hath opened his counsel to
+the world by his only Son, whom he commandeth to be heard, Matt, xvii.;
+and alter that, by his holy Spirit speaking by his apostles, he hath
+established the religion in which he will his true worshippers abide to
+the end,--will he now, I say, admit men's inventions in the matter of
+religion? &c., 2 Cor. xi.; Col. i.; ii. For this sentence he pronounceth:
+'Not that which seemeth good in thy eyes shalt thou do to the Lord thy
+God, but that which the Lord thy God commanded thee, that do thou: Add
+nothing unto it, diminish nothing from it,' Deut. iv. 12. Which, sealing
+up his New Testament, he repeateth in these words: 'That which ye have,
+hold till I come,' " &c., Rev. ii.
+
+Wherefore, whilst Hooker saith,(903) that Christ hath not, by positive
+laws, so far descended into particularities with us as Moses with the
+Jews; whilst Camero saith,(904) _Non esse disputandum ita, ut quoniam in
+vetere Testamento, de rebus alioqui adiaphoris certa fuit lex, &c., id in
+novo Testamento habere locum_; and whilst Bishop Lindsey saith,(905) that
+in the particular circumstances of persons by whom, place where, time
+when, and of the form and order how, the worship and work of the ministry
+should be performed, the church hath power to define whatsoever is most
+expedient, and that this is a prerogative wherein the Christian church
+differeth from the Jewish synagogue, they do but speak their pleasure in
+vain, and cannot make it appear that the Christian church hath any more
+power to add to the commandments of God than the synagogue had of old.
+
+It is well said by one:(906) "There were many points of service, as
+sacrifices, washings, anniversary days, &c., which we have not; but the
+determination of such as we have is as particular as theirs, except
+wherein the national circumstances make impediment." For one place not to
+be appointed for the worship of God, nor one tribe for the work of the
+ministry among us, as among them, not because more power was left to the
+Christian church for determining things that pertain to the worship of God
+than was to the Jewish, but because the Christian church was to spread
+itself over the whole earth, and not to be confined within the bounds of
+one nation as the synagogue was.
+
+_Sect._ 12. Let us then here call to mind the distinction which hath been
+showed betwixt religious ceremonies and moral circumstances; for as
+touching moral circumstances, which serve for common order and decency in
+the worship of God, they being so many and so alterable, that they could
+not be particularly determined in Scripture, for all the different and
+almost infinite cases which might occur, the Jewish synagogue had the same
+power for determining things of this nature which the church of Christ now
+hath. For the law did not define, but left to be defined by the synagogue,
+the set hours for all public divine service,--when it should begin, how
+long it should last, the order that should be kept in the reading and
+expounding of the law, praying, singing, catechising, excommunicating,
+censuring, absolving of delinquents, &c., the circumstances of the
+celebration of marriage, of the education of youth in schools and
+colleges, &c.
+
+But as for ceremonies which are proper to God's holy worship, shall we say
+that the fidelity of Christ, the Son, hath been less than the fidelity of
+Moses, the servant? Heb. iii. 2, which were to be said, if Christ had not,
+by as plain, plentiful, and particular directions and ordinances, provided
+for all the necessities of the Christian church in the matter of religion,
+as Moses for the Jewish; or if the least pin, and the meanest appurtenance
+of the tabernacle, and all the service thereof, behooved to be ordered
+according to the express commandment of God by the hand of Moses, how
+shall we think, that in the rearing, framing, ordering, and beautifying of
+the church, the house of the living God, he would have less honour and
+prerogative given than to his own well-beloved Son, by whom he hath spoken
+to us in these last days, and whom he hath commanded us to hear in all
+things? Or that he will accept, at our hands, any sacred ceremony which
+men have presumed to bring into his holy and pure worship, without the
+appointment of his own word and will revealed unto us? Albeit the worship
+of God and religion, in the church of the New Testament, be accompanied
+without ceremonies, _numero paucissimis, observatione facillimis,
+significatione proestantissimis_ (as Augustine speaketh of our
+sacraments,(907)) yet we have in Scripture, Eph. i. 18, no less particular
+determination and distinct direction for our few, easy, and plain
+ceremonies, than the Jews had for their many heavy and obscure ones.
+
+_Sect._ 13. As for the third distinction, of adding to the accidentary
+parts of it, I remember that I heard in the logics, of _pars essentialis_
+or _physica,_ and _pars integralis_ or _mathematica_; of _pars similaris_
+and _pars dissimilaris_; of _pars continua_ and _pars discreta_; but of
+_para accidentaria_ heard I never till now. There is (I know) such a
+distinction of _pars integralis_, that it is either _principalis_ and
+_necessaria_, or _minus principalis_ and _non necessaria_; but we cannot
+understand their _pars cultus accidentaria_ to be _pars integralis non
+necessaria_, because, then, their distribution of worship into essential
+and accidentary parts could not answer to the rules of a just
+distribution, of which one is, that _distributio debet exhaurire totum
+distributum_. Now, there are some parts of worship which cannot be
+comprehended in the foresaid distribution, namely, _partes integrales
+necessarioe_. What then? Shall we let this wild distinction pass, because
+it cannot be well nor formally interpreted? Nay, but we will observe their
+meaning who make use of it; for unto all such parts of worship as are not
+essential (and which they are pleased to call accidentary), they hold the
+church may make addition, whereunto I answer, 1. Let them make us
+understand what they mean by those essential parts to which the church may
+add nothing, and let them beware lest they give us an identical
+description of the same.
+
+2. That there are many parts of God's worship which are not essential, yet
+such as will not suffer any addition of the church: for proof whereof I
+demand, Were all the ceremonies commanded to be used in the legal
+sacraments and sacrifices essential parts of those worships? No man will
+say so. Yet the synagogue was tied to observe those (and no other than
+those) ceremonies which the word prescribed. When Israel was again to keep
+the passover, it was said, Num. ix. 3, "In the fourteenth day of this
+month at even, ye shall keep it in his appointed season, according to all
+the rites of it, and according to all the ceremonies of it, shall ye keep
+it." And again, ver. 5, "According to all that the Lord commanded Moses,
+so did the children of Israel." _Ritibus et ceremoniis divinitus
+institutis, non licuit homini suo arbitrio aliquid adjicere aut
+detrahere_, saith P. Martyr.(908)
+
+_Sect._ 14. 3. If those accidentary parts of worship, which are commanded
+in the word, be both necessary to be used _necessitate praecepti_, and
+likewise sufficient means fully adequate and proportioned to that end, for
+which God hath destinated such parts of his worship as are not essential
+(which must be granted by every one who will not accuse the Scripture of
+some defect and imperfection), then it followeth that other accidentary
+parts of worship, which the church addeth thereto, are but superfluous and
+superstitious.
+
+4. I call to mind another logical maxim: _Sublata una parte, tolitur
+totum._ An essential part being taken away, _totum essentiale_ is taken
+away also. In like manner, an integrant part being taken away, _totum
+integrum_ cannot remain behind. When a man hath lost his hand or his foot,
+though he be still a man physically, _totum essentiale_, yet he is not a
+man mathematically, he is no longer _totum integrale_. Just so if we
+reckon any additions (as the cross, kneeling, holidays, &c.) among the
+parts of God's worship, then put the case, that those additions were taken
+away, it followeth that all the worship which remaineth still will not be
+the whole and entire worship of God, but only a part of it, or at the
+best, a defective, wanting, lame, and maimed worship.
+
+5. I have made it evident that our opposites make the controverted
+ceremonies to be worship,(909) in as proper and peculiar sense as anything
+can be, and that they are equalled to the chief and principal parts of
+worship, not ranked among the secondary or less principal parts of it.
+
+6. Do not our divines condemn the addition of rites and ceremonies to that
+worship which the word prescribeth, as well as the addition of other
+things which are thought more essential? We have heard Martyr's words to
+this purpose.
+
+Zanchius will have us to learn from the second commandment,(910) in
+_externo cultu qui Deo debetur, seu in ceremonus nihil nobis esse ex
+nostro capite comminiscendum_, whether in sacraments or sacrifices, or
+other sacred things, such as temples, altars, clothes, and vessels,
+necessary for the external worship; but that we ought to be contented with
+those ceremonies which God hath prescribed.
+
+And in another place,(911) he condemneth the addition of any other rite
+whatsoever, to those rites of every sacrament which have been ordained of
+Christ, _Si ceremoniis cujusvis sacramenti, alios addas ritus_, &c. Dr
+Fulk pronounceth,(912) even of signs and rites, that "we must do in
+religion and God's service, not that which seemeth good to us, but that
+only which he commandeth," Deut. iv. 2; xii. 32.
+
+And Calvin pronounceth generally,(913) _Caenam domini rem adeo
+sacrosanctam esse, ut ullis hominum additamentis eam conspurcare sit
+nefas._
+
+_Sect._ 15. And thus have we made good our argument, that the lawfulness
+of the ceremonies cannot be warranted by any ecclesiastical law. If we had
+no more against them this were enough, that they are but human additions,
+and want the warrant of the word. When Nadab and Abihu offered strange
+fire before the Lord, and when the Jews burnt their sons and their
+daughters in the valley of the son of Hinnon, howsoever manifold
+wickedness might have been challenged in that which they did, yet if any
+would dispute with God upon the matter, he stoppeth their mouths with this
+one answer: "I commanded it not, neither came it into my heart," Lev. x.
+1; Jer. vii. 31. May we, last of all, hear what the canon law itself
+decreeth:(914) _Is qui praeest, si praeter voluntatem Dei, vel praeter
+quod in sanctis Scripturis evidenter praecipitur, vel dicit aliquid, vel
+imperat, tanquam falsus testis Dei, aut sacrilegus habeatur._
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES CANNOT BE WARRANTED BY ANY ORDINANCE
+OF THE CIVIL MAGISTRATE; WHOSE POWER IN THINGS SPIRITUAL OR ECCLESIASTICAL
+IS EXPLAINED.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. Now are we fallen upon the stronghold of our opposites, which
+is the king's majesty's supremacy in things ecclesiastical. If they did
+mean, in good earnest, to qualify the lawfulness of the ceremonies from
+holy Scripture, why have they not taken more pains and travail to debate
+the matter from thence? And if they meant to justify them by the laws and
+constitutions of the church, why did they not study to an orderly
+peaceable proceeding, and to have things concluded in a lawful national
+synod, after free reasoning and mature advisement? Why did they carry
+matters so factiously and violently? The truth is, they would have us to
+acquiesce, and to say no more against the ceremonies, when once we hear
+that they are enjoined by his Majesty, our only supreme governor. What I
+am here to say shall not derogate anything from his Highness's supremacy,
+because it includeth no such thing as a nomothetical power to prescribe
+and appoint such sacred and significant ceremonies as he shall think good.
+
+The Archbishop of Armagh, in his speech which he delivered concerning the
+King's supremacy (for which king James returned him, in a letter, his
+princely and gracious thanks, for that he had defended his just and lawful
+power with so much learning and reason), whilst he treateth of the
+supremacy, and expoundeth that title of "the only supreme governor of all
+his Highness's dominions and countries, as well in all spiritual or
+ecclesiastical things or causes, as temporal," mentioneth no such thing as
+any power to dispose, by his laws and ordinances, of things external in
+the worship of God. Neither yet shall this following discourse tend to the
+cooling and abating of that care and zeal which princes owe to the
+oversight and promotion of religion. For alas! the corruptions which have
+stept into religion, and the decays which it hath felt since princes began
+to take small thought of it, and to leave the care of it to popes,
+bishops, monks, &c., can never be enough bewailed. _Nihil enim_, &c. "For
+there is nothing (saith Zanchius(915)) more pernicious, either to the
+commonwealth or to the church, than if a prince do all things by the
+judgment of others, and he himself understand not those things which are
+propounded to be done."
+
+Nor, lastly, are we to sound an alarm of rebellion; for to say that
+subjects are not bound to obey such laws and statutes of their prince, as
+impose upon them a yoke of ceremonies which he hath no power to impose, is
+one thing, and to say that they are not bound to subject themselves unto
+him faithfully and loyally, is another thing. _Recte Gerson: Qui abusui
+potestatis resistit, non resistit divinae ordinationi_, saith the Bishop
+of Salisbury.(916) "Subjection (saith Dr Field(917)) is required generally
+and absolutely, where obedience is not." If we have leave to speak with
+divines,(918) the bond and sign of subjection is only homage, or the oath
+of fidelity, whereby subjects bind themselves to be faithful to their
+prince; and we take the Judge of all flesh to witness, before whose
+dreadful tribunal we must stand at that great day, how free we are of
+thoughts of rebellion, and how uprightly we mean to be his Majesty's most
+true and loyal subjects to the end of our lives, and to devote ourselves,
+our bodies, lives, goods, and estates, and all that we have in the world,
+to his Highness's service, and to the honour of his royal crown.
+
+_Sect._ 2. Now, for the purpose in hand, we will first examine what the
+Archbishop of Spalato saith; for he discourseth much of the jurisdiction
+and office of princes, in things and causes ecclesiastical. The title of
+the first chapter of his sixth book, _de Rep. Eccl._, holdeth, that it is
+the duty of princes _super ecclesiastica invigilare_; but in the body of
+the chapter he laboureth to prove that the power of governing
+ecclesiastical things belongeth to princes (which is far more than to
+watch carefully over them). This the reader will easily perceive. Nay, he
+himself, num. 115 and 174, professeth he hath been proving, that divine
+and ecclesiastical things are to be ruled and governed by the authority
+and laws of princes. The title prefixed to the sixth chapter of that same
+book is this, _Legibus et edictis principum laicorum, et ecclesiastica et
+ecclesiasticos gubernari_. So that in both chapters he treateth of one and
+the same office of princes about things ecclesiastical.
+
+Now, if we would learn what he means by those _ecclesiastica_ which he
+will have to be governed by princes, he resolves us(919) that he means not
+things internal, such as the deciding of controversies in matters of
+faith, feeding with the word of God, binding and loosing, and ministering
+of the sacraments (for _in pure spiritualibus_, as he speaketh in _Summa_,
+cap. 5,) he yieldeth them not the power of judging and defining, but only
+things external, which pertain to the external worship of God, or concern
+external ecclesiastical discipline; such things he acknowledged to be _res
+spirituales_;(920) but _vera spiritualia_ he will have to comprehend only
+things internal, which he removeth from the power of princes. Thus we have
+his judgment as plain as himself hath delivered it unto us.
+
+_Sect._ 3. But I demand, 1. Why yieldeth he the same power to princes in
+governing _ecclesiastica_ which he yieldeth them in governing
+_ecclesiasticos_? For ecclesiastical persons, being members of the
+commonwealth no less than laics, have the same king and governor with
+them, for which reason it is (as the Bishop himself showeth out of
+Molina(921)) that they are bound to be subject to their prince's laws,
+which pertain to the whole commonwealth. But the like cannot be alleged,
+for the power of princes to govern _ecclesiastica_, for the Bishop, I
+trust, would not have said that things ecclesiastical and things civil do
+equally and alike belong to their power and jurisdiction.
+
+2. Why confoundeth he the governing of things and causes ecclesiastical
+with watching over and taking care for the same? Let us only call to mind
+the native signification of the word {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}, _guberno_ signifieth
+properly to rule or govern the course of a ship; and in a ship there may
+be many watchful and careful eyes over her course, and yet but one
+governor directing the same.
+
+3. Why holdeth he that things external in the worship of God are not _vera
+spiritualia_? For if they be ecclesiastical and sacred ceremonies (not
+fleshly and worldly), why will he not also acknowledge them for true
+spiritual things? And if they be not _vera spiritualia_, why calls he them
+_res spirituales_? for are not _res_ and _verum_ reciprocal as well as
+_ens_ and _verum_.
+
+4. Even as a prince in his sea voyage is supreme governor of all which are
+in the ship with him, and, by consequence, of the governor who directs her
+course, yet doth he not govern the actions of governing or directing the
+course of a ship, so, though a prince be the only supreme governor of all
+his dominions, and, by consequence, of ecclesiastical persons in his
+dominions, yet he cannot be said to govern all their ecclesiastical
+actions and causes. And as the governor of a ship acknowledgeth his prince
+for his only supreme governor even then whilst he is governing and
+directing the course of the ship (otherwise whilst he is governing her
+course he should not be his prince's subject), yet he doth not thereby
+acknowledge that his prince governeth his action of directing the course
+of the ship (for then should the prince be the pilot); so when one hath
+acknowledged the prince to be the only supreme governor upon earth of all
+ecclesiastical persons in his dominions, even whilst they are ordering and
+determining ecclesiastical causes, yet he hath not thereby acknowledged
+that the prince governeth the ecclesiastical causes. Wherefore, whilst the
+Bishop(922) taketh the English oath of supremacy to acknowledge the same
+which he teacheth touching the prince's power, he giveth it another sense
+than the words of it can bear; for it saith not that the king's majesty is
+the only supreme governor of all his Highness's dominions, and _of_ all
+things and causes therein, as well ecclesiastical or spiritual as
+temporal,--but it saith that he is the only supreme governor of all his
+Highness's dominions in all things or causes, &c. Now, the spiritual
+guides of the church, substituted by Christ as deputies in his stead, who
+is the most supreme Governor of his own church, and on whose shoulder the
+government resteth, Isa. ix. 6, as his royal prerogative, even then,
+whilst they are governing and putting order to ecclesiastical or spiritual
+causes, they acknowledge their prince to be their only supreme governor
+upon earth, yet hereby they imply not that he governeth their governing of
+ecclesiastical causes, as hath been shown by that simile of governing a
+ship.
+
+_Sect._ 4. 5. Whereas the Bishop leaveth all things external, which
+pertain to the worship of God, to be governed by princes, I object, that
+the version of the holy Scripture out of Hebrew and Greek into the vulgar
+tongue is an external thing, belonging to the worship of God, yet it
+cannot be governed by a prince who is not learned in the original tongues.
+
+6. Whereas he yieldeth to princes the power of governing _in
+spiritualibus_, but not _in pure spiritualibus_, I cannot comprehend this
+distinction. All sacred and ecclesiastical things belonging to the worship
+of God are spiritual things.
+
+What, then, understands he by things purely spiritual? If he mean things
+which are in such sort spiritual, that they have nothing earthly nor
+external in them,--in this sense the sacraments are not purely spiritual,
+because they consist of two parts; one earthly, and another heavenly, as
+Rheneus saith of the eucharist;--and so the sacraments, not being things
+purely spiritual, shall be left to the power and government of princes. If
+it be said that by things purely spiritual he means things which concern
+our spirits only, and not the outward man, I still urge the same instance;
+for the sacraments are not in this sense spiritual, because a part of the
+sacraments, to wit, the sacramental signs or elements, concern our
+external and bodily senses of seeing, touching, and tasting.
+
+7. The Bishop also contradicteth himself unawares; for in one place(923)
+he reserveth and excepteth from the power of princes the judging and
+deciding of controversies and questions of faith. Yet in another
+place(924) he exhorteth kings, and princes to compel the divines of both
+sides (of the Roman and reformed churches) to come to a free conference,
+and to debate the matters controverted betwixt them; in which conference
+he requireth the princes themselves to be judges.
+
+_Sect._ 5. It remaineth to try what force of reason the Bishop hath to
+back his opinion. As for the ragged rabble of human testimonies which he
+raketh together, I should but weary my reader, and spend paper and ink in
+vain, if I should insist to answer them one by one. Only thus much I say
+of all those sentences of the fathers and constitutions of princes and
+emperors about things ecclesiastical, together with the histories of the
+submission of some ecclesiastical causes to emperors,--let him who pleaseth
+read them; and it shall appear,
+
+1. That some of those things whereunto the power of princes was applied
+were unlawful.
+
+2. There were many of them things temporal or civil, not ecclesiastical or
+spiritual, nor such as pertain to the worship of God.
+
+3. There were some of them ecclesiastical or spiritual things, but then
+princes did only ratify that which had been determined by councils, and
+punish with the civil sword such as did stubbornly disobey the church's
+lawful constitutions. Neither were princes allowed to do any more.
+
+4. Sometimes they interposed their authority, and meddled in causes
+spiritual or ecclesiastical, even before the definition of councils; yet
+did they not judge nor decide those matters, but did only convocate
+councils, and urge the clergy to see to the mis-ordered and troubled state
+of the church, and by their wholesome laws and ordinances, to provide the
+best remedies for the same which they could.
+
+5. At other times princes have done somewhat more in ecclesiastical
+matters; but this was only in extraordinary cases, when the clergy were so
+corrupted, that either through ignorance they were unable, or through
+malice and perverseness unwilling, to do their duty in deciding of
+controversies, making of canons, using the keys, and managing of other
+ecclesiastical matters, in which case princes might and did, by their
+coactive temporal jurisdiction, avoid disorder, error, and superstition,
+and cause a reformation of the church.
+
+6. Princes have likewise, in rightly constituted and well reformed
+churches, by their own regal authority, straitly enjoined things
+pertaining to the worship of God, but those things were the very same
+which God's own written word had expressly commanded.
+
+7. When princes went beyond those limits and bounds, they took upon them
+to judge and command more than God hath put within the compass of their
+power.
+
+_Sect._ 6. But as touching the passages of holy Scripture which the Bishop
+allegeth, I will answer thereto particularly. And first, he produceth that
+place, Deut. xvii. 19, where the king was appointed to have the book of
+the law of God with him, that he might learn to fear the Lord his God, and
+to keep all the words of this law and these statutes to do them. What
+logic, I pray, can from this place infer that princes have the supreme
+power of governing all ecclesiastical causes? Next, the Bishop tells us of
+David's appointing of the offices of the Levites, and dividing of their
+courses, 1 Chron. xxiii and his commending of the same to Solomon, 1
+Chron. xxviii.; but he might have observed that David did not this as a
+king, but as a prophet, or man of God, 2 Chron. viii. 14, yea, those
+orders and courses of the Levites were also commanded by other prophets of
+the Lord, 2 Chron. xxix. 25. As touching Solomon's appointing of the
+courses and charges of the priests, Levites, and porters, he did not of
+himself, nor by his own princely authority, but because David, the man of
+God, had so commanded, 2 Chron. viii. 24. For Solomon received from David
+a pattern for all that which he was to do in the work of the house of the
+Lord, and also for the courses of the priests and Levites, 1 Chron.
+xxviii. 11-13.
+
+_Sect._ 7. The Bishop comes on and tells us that Hezekiah did apply his
+regal power to the reformation of the Levites, and of the worship of God
+in their hands, saying, "Hear me, ye Levites, sanctify now yourselves, and
+sanctify the house of the Lord God of your fathers, and carry forth the
+filthiness out of the holy place."
+
+_Ans._ He exhorted them to no more than God's law required of them, for
+the law ordained them to sanctify themselves, and to do the service of the
+house of the Lord, Num. viii. 6, 11, 15; xviii. 32; so that Hezekiah did
+here constitute nothing by his own arbitration and authority, but plainly
+showeth his warrant, ver. 11, "The Lord hath chosen you to stand before
+him, to serve him, and that you should minister unto him."
+
+But the Bishop further allegeth out of 2 Chron. xxxi. that Hezekiah
+appointed the courses of the priests and Levites, every man according to
+his service.
+
+_Ans._ He might have read 2 Chron. xxix., 25, that Hezekiah did all this
+according to the commandment of David, and of Gad, the king's seer, and
+Nathan the prophet, "For so was the commandment of the Lord by his
+prophets." And who doubteth but kings may command such things as God hath
+commanded before them?
+
+_Sect._ 8. The next example which the Bishop allegeth is out of 2 Chron.
+xxxv. where we read that Josias did set the priests and Levites again in
+their charges, which example cannot prove that kings have the supreme
+power of governing ecclesiastical causes, unless it be evinced that Josias
+changed those orders and courses of the Levites and priests which the Lord
+had commanded by his prophets, 2 Chron. xxix. 25, and that he did
+institute other orders by his own regal authority, whereas the contrary is
+manifest from the text; for Josias did only set the priests and Levites
+those charges and courses which had been assigned unto them after the
+writing of David and Solomon, ver. 4, and by the commandment of David, and
+Asaph, and Heman, and Jeduthun, the king's seer, ver. 15. Neither did
+Josias command the priests and Levites any other service than that which
+was written in the book of Moses, ver. 12; so that, from his example, it
+only followeth, that when princes see the state of ecclesiastical persons
+corrupted, they ought to interpose their authority for reducing them to
+those orders and functions which God's word commandeth.
+
+_Sect._ 9. Moreover, the Bishop objecteth the example of Joash, who, while
+he yet did right in the days of Jehoiada the priest, 2 Chron. xxiv. sent
+the priests and Levites to gather from all Israel money for repairing the
+house of the Lord, and when they dealt negligently in this business, he
+transferred the charge of the same unto others, and, making himself the
+keeper of the holy money, did both prescribe how it was to be disbursed,
+and likewise take from good Jehoiada the priest the administration of the
+same. Now, where he hath read that Joash made himself the keeper of the
+money, and prescribed how it should be disbursed, also that he took the
+administration from Jehoiada, I cannot guess; for the text hath no such
+thing in it, but the contrary, viz. that the king's scribe, and the high
+priest's officer, kept the money, and disbursed the same, as the king and
+Jehoiada prescribed unto them. As to that which he truly allegeth out of
+the holy text, I answer, 1. The collection for repairing the house of the
+Lord was no human ordinance, for Joash showeth the commandment of Moses
+for it, ver. 6, having reference to Exod. xxx. 12-14. No other collections
+did Joash impose but those _quae divino jure debebantur_.(925) 2. As for
+the taking of the charge of this collection from the priests, he behooved
+to do so, because they had still neglected the work, when the twenty-third
+year of his reign was come. And so say we, that when the ministers of the
+church fail to do their duty, in providing that which is necessary for the
+service of God, princes ought by some other means to cause these things be
+redressed. 3. Joash did nothing with these monies without Jehoiada, but
+_Pontifex eas primum laborantibus tribuit, tum in aedis sacrae
+restaurationem maxime convertit_.(926) 4. And what if he had done this by
+himself? I suppose no man will reckon the hiring of masons and carpenters
+with such as wrought iron and brass, or the gathering of money for this
+purpose, among spiritual things or causes. 5. And if these employments
+about Solomon's temple were not to be called spiritual or ecclesiastical,
+far less about our material churches, which are not holy nor consecrated
+as Solomon's was for a typical use. Wherefore, without all prejudice to
+our cause, we may and do commend the building and repairing of churches by
+Christian princes.
+
+_Sect._ 10. But the Bishop returneth to another example in Solomon, which
+is the putting of Abiathar, the chief priest, from his office, and
+surrogating of another in his place. _Ans._ Abiathar was civilly dead, as
+the lawyers used to speak, and it was only by accident or by consequent
+that Solomon put him from his office: he sent him away to Anathoth,
+because of his treasonable following and aiding of Adonijah, whereupon
+necessarily followed his falling away from the honour, dignity, and office
+of the high priest, whence it only followeth, that if a minister be found
+guilty of _laese_ majesty, the king may punish him either with banishment
+or proscription, or some such civil punishment, whereupon by consequence
+will follow his falling from his ecclesiastical office and dignity. 2. As
+for Solomon's putting of Zadok in the room of Abiathar, it maketh as
+little against us, for Zadok did fall to the place _jure divino_.
+
+The honour and office of the high-priesthood was given to Eleazar, the
+elder son of Aaron, and was to remain in his family. How it came to pass
+that it was transferred to Eli, who was of the family of Ithmar, we read
+not. Always after that Abiathar, who was of the family of Ithamar and
+descended of Eli, had by a capital crime fallen from it, it did of very
+right belong to Zadok, who was chief of the family of Eleazar. And so all
+this flowed, not from Solomon's, but from God's own authority.
+
+_Sect._ 11. The Bishop remembereth another example in Hezekiah too,
+telling us that he removed the high places, and brake the images, and cut
+down the groves, and brake in pieces the brazen serpent, when the children
+of Israel did burn incense unto it. Now, we wish from our hearts that from
+this example all Christian kings may learn to remove and destroy the
+monuments of idolatry out of their dominions. And if it be said that in so
+doing kings take upon them to govern by their princely authority an
+ecclesiastical or spiritual cause, it is easily answered, that when they
+destroy idolatrous monuments, they do nothing by their own authority, but
+by the authority of God's law, which commanded to abolish such monuments,
+and to root out the very names of idols; which commandment is to be
+executed by the action of temporal power.
+
+_Sect._ 12. Finally, saith the Bishop, the kings of the Jews, 1 Kings
+xxiii.; 2 Chron. xix.; have in the temple propounded the law of the Lord
+to the people, renewed the covenant of religion, pulled down profane
+altars, broken down idols, slain idolatrous priests, liberated their
+kingdom from abomination, purged the temple, 2 Chron. xxxiv., xxxv.; 1
+Maccab. iv. 59; proclaimed the keeping of the passover, and of the feast
+of dedication, Esth. ix. 26 ; and have also instituted new feasts. For all
+which things they are in the Scriptures much praised by the Holy Spirit, 2
+Chron. xxix. 2; xxxiv. 2, &c.
+
+_Ans._ True it is, Josias did read the law of the Lord to the people in
+the temple, and made a covenant before the Lord; but, 1. he prescribed
+nothing at his own pleasure; only he required of the people to walk after
+the Lord, and to keep his commandments. 2. Neither did he this work by
+himself, but did convocate a council of the prophets, priests and elders
+of Israel, for the advancing of that reformation, 2 Kings xxiii. 1. 3. And
+if he had done it by himself, yet we are to remember that the reformation
+of a church generally and greatly corrupted, craveth the more immediate
+intermeddling of princes, and a great deal more than can be ordinarily and
+orderly done by them in a church already reformed. The slaying of the
+idolatrous priests had also the warrant and authority of the law of God,
+which appointed a capital punishment for blasphemers,(927) or such as, in
+contempt of God and to rub some ignominy upon his name, did traduce his
+doctrine and religion, and either detract from him, and attribute to idols
+that which appertained properly unto him, or else attributed unto him
+either by enunciation or imprecation, such things as could not stand with
+the glory of the Godhead. Concerning the abolishing of idolatry and all
+the relics thereof, we have answered that it was commanded by God. The
+keeping of the passover was also commanded in the law; but publish God's
+own express ordinance.
+
+Last of all, touching two remaining examples: 1. The feast of the
+dedication was not ordained by the sole authority of Judas, but by his
+brethren and by the whole congregation of Israel;(928) and the days of
+Purim were established by Mordecai, a prophet. Esth. ix. 20, 21. 2. We
+have elsewhere made it evident, that the days of Purim, by their first
+institution, were only days of civil joy and solemnity, and that the feast
+of the dedication was not lawfully instituted.
+
+_Sect._ 13. Thus having dismissed the Bishop, we will make us for clearing
+the purpose in hand. But before we come to show particularly what princes
+may do, and what they may not do, in making laws about things
+ecclesiastical, we will first of all lay down these propositions
+following:--
+
+1. Whatsoever the power of princes be in things and causes ecclesiastical,
+it is not, sure, absolute nor unbounded. _Solius Dei est_ (saith
+Stapleton),(929) _juxta suam sanctissimam voluntatem, uctiunes suas omnes
+dirigere, et omniafacere quaecunquc voluit._ And again, _Vis tuam
+voluntatem esse regulam rerum omnium, ut omnia fiant pro uuo beneplacito?_
+Whether we respect the persons or the places of princes, their power is
+confined within certain limits, so that they may not enjoin whatsoever
+they list. As touching their poisons, Bishop Spotswood would do no less
+than warrant the articles of Perth by king James's personal qualities:
+"His person (saith he(930)), were he not our sovereign, gives them
+sufficient authority, being recommended by him; for he knows the nature of
+things, and the consequences of them, what is fit for a church to have,
+and what not, better than we do all."
+
+I mean not to derogate anything from king James's duly-deserved praise,
+nor to obscure his never-dying memory; only I say, that such a prince as
+the Bishop speaketh of, who knoweth what is fit for a church to have, and
+what not, better than many learned and godly pastors assembled in a synod,
+is _rara avis in terris nigroque simillima Cygno_. For a prince being but
+a man, and so subject to error, being but one man, and so in the greater
+hazard of error; for _plus videns oculi, quam oculus_; and, "woe to him
+that is alone when he falleth, for he hath not another to help him up,"
+saith the wisest of mortal kings, Eccl. iv. 10; being also compassed or
+assailed with so many tentations which other men are free of; and lastly,
+being so taken up and distracted with secular affairs and cares, that very
+seldom is he found well versed or singularly learned in the controversies
+of religion; may not such a one, in the common sense of Christians, be
+thought more like to fail and miscarry in his judgment about things
+ecclesiastical, than a whole synod, wherein there are many of the learned,
+judicious, and godly ministers of the church. Papists tell us, that they
+will not defend the personal actions of the Pope, _quasi ipse solus
+omnibus horis sapere potuerit, id quod recte nemini concessum
+perhibetur_.(931) Their own records let the world know the abominable
+vices and impieties of popes. Witness Platina, in the life of John X.,
+Benedict IV., John XIII., Boniface VII., John XX., John XXII., Paul II.,
+&c. And further, when our adversaries dispute of the Pope's infallibility,
+they grant, for his own person, he may be an heretic, only they hold that
+he cannot err _e cathedra_.
+
+And shall we now idolise the persons of princes more than Papists do the
+persons of popes? Or shall Papists object to us, that we extol the
+judgment of our princes to a higher degree of authority and infallibility
+than they yield to the judgment of their popes? Alas, why would we put the
+weapons in the hands of our adversaries!
+
+_Sect._ 14. But what say we of princes in respect of their place and
+calling? Is not their power absolute in that respect? _Recte quidam_
+(saith Saravia),(932) _illiberalis et inverecundi censet esse ingenii, de
+prencipum potestate et rebus gestis questionem movere, quando et imperator
+sacrilegium este scribit, de eo quod a principe factum est disputare._
+Camero holdeth,(933) that in things pertaining to external order in
+religion, kings may command what they will _pro authoritate_, and forbid
+to seek another reason beside the majesty of their authority; yea, that
+when they command _frivola, dura, et iniqua respectu nostri_, our
+consciences are bound by those their frivolous and unjust commandments,
+not only in respect of the end, because scandal should possibly follow in
+case we obey them not, but also _jubentis respectu_, because the Apostle
+biddeth us obey the magistrate for conscience' sake. At the reading of
+these passages in Saravia and Camero, horror and amazement have taken hold
+on me. O wisdom of God, by whom kings do reign and princes decree justice,
+upon whose thigh and vesture is written, "King of kings and Lord of
+lords," make the kings of the earth to know that their laws are but
+_regulae regulatae_, and _mensurae mensuratae_! Be wise now, therefore, O
+ye kings, be instructed ye judges of the earth. Serve the Lord with fear,
+and rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son, and lay down your crowns at the
+feet of the Lamb that sits upon the throne,(934) _discite justitiam
+moniti_, and remember that this is the beginning of wisdom, by casting
+pride away, to addict yourselves to the dominion of Christ, who, albeit he
+hath given the kingdoms of this world unto your hands, and non _auferet
+mortalia, qui regna datio caelestia_, yet hath he kept the government of
+his church upon his own shoulder, Psalm ix. 6, xxii. 21. So that _rex non
+est propie rector ecclesiae sed reipublicae, ecclesiae vero defensor est_.
+O all ye subjects of kings and princes, understand that in things
+pertaining to the church and kingdom of Christ, ye are not the servants of
+men, to do what they list, and that for their listing, 1 Cor. vii. 23. The
+Apostle, Rom. xiii. urgeth, not obedience to magistrates for conscience'
+sake, but only subjection for conscience' sake, for he concludeth his
+whole purpose,(935) ver. 7, "Render therefore to all their dues, tribute
+to whom tribute is due, custom to whom custom, fear to whom fear, honour
+to whom honour."(936) There is not in all that chapter one word of
+obedience to magistrates.
+
+And as touching the binding power of their laws, be they never so just,
+they cannot bind you any other way, nor in respect of the general end of
+them. For, _per se_, they cannot bind more than the church's laws can.
+Which things Dr Forbesse(937) hath also told you out of Calvin.
+
+And hence it followeth, that whensoever you may omit that which princes
+enjoin, without violating the law of charity, you are not holden to obey
+them for the majesty of princely authority. Be ashamed, O ye Formalists,
+of your ascribing to princes a jurisdiction so absolute! Bury it in the
+grave of eternal silence. Tell it not in Rome; publish it not among the
+vassals of antichrist, lest the daughters of Babylon rejoice, lest the
+worshippers of the Beast triumph! O how small confidence have the
+cardinals, I say not now into the Pope's person, but even into his chair,
+when being entered in the conclave for the election of a new pope, they
+spend the whole day following in the making of laws belonging to the
+administration and handling of all things by him who shall be advanced to
+the popedom; which laws every one of them subscribeth, and sweareth to
+observe, if he be made pope, as Onephrius writeth. Though the Pope's own
+creatures, the Jesuits, in their schools and books, must dispute for his
+infallibility _e cathedra_, yet we see what trust the wise cardinals, shut
+up in the conclave, do put in him, with what bond they tie him, and within
+what bounds they confine his power. Albeit the Pope, after he is created,
+observeth not strictly this oath, as that wise writer of the _History of
+the Council of Trent_ noteth,(938) yet let me say once again, Shall we set
+up the power of princes higher, or make their power less limited than
+Papists do the power of popes? or shall they set bounds to popes and we
+set none to princes?
+
+_Sect._ 15. But I find myself a little digressed after the roving
+absurdities of some opposites. Now, therefore, to return,--the second
+proposition which I am here to lay down, before I speak particularly of
+the power of princes, is this: Whatsoever princes can commendably either
+do by themselves, or command to be done by others, in such matters as any
+way appertain to the external worship of God, must be both lawful in the
+nature of it, and expedient in the use of it; which conditions, if they be
+wanting, their commandments cannot bind to obedience.
+
+For, 1. The very ground and reason wherefore we ought to obey the
+magistrate(939) is, for that he is the minister of God, or a deputy set in
+God's stead to us. Now, he is the minister of God only for our good, Rom.
+xiii. 4. Neither were he God's minister, but his own master, if he should
+rule at his pleasure, and command things which serve not for the good of
+the subjects. Since, therefore, the commandments of princes bind only so
+far as they are the ministers of God for our good,--and God's ministers
+they are not in commanding such things as are either in their nature
+unlawful, or in their use inconvenient,--it followeth that such
+commandments of theirs cannot bind.
+
+2. Princes cannot claim any greater power in matters ecclesiastical than
+the apostle Paul had, or the church herself yet hath; that is to say,
+princes may not by any temporal or regal jurisdiction, urge any ceremony
+or form of ecclesiastical policy which the Apostle once might not, and the
+church yet may not, urge by a spiritual jurisdiction. But neither had the
+Apostle of old, nor hath the church now, power to urge either a ceremony
+or anything else which is not profitable for edifying. Paul could do
+nothing against the truth, but for the truth; and his power was given to
+him to edification, and not to destruction, 2 Cor. xiii. 8, 10; neither
+shall ecclesiastical persons, to the world's end, receive any other power
+beside that which is for the perfecting of the saints, and for the
+edifying of the body of Christ, Eph. iv. 12. Therefore, as the church's
+power(940) is only to prescribe that which may edify, so the power of
+princes is in like sort given to them for edification, and not for
+destruction; neither can they do aught against the truth, but only for the
+truth.
+
+3. We are bound by the law of God to do nothing which is not good and
+profitable, or edifying, 1 Cor. vi. 12; xiv. 26. This law of charity is of
+a higher and straiter bond than the law of any prince in the world:--
+
+"The general rule of all indifferent things, is, Let all things be done to
+edification; and, Rom. xv. 1, 2, 'Let every man please his neighbour to
+edification, even as Christ pleased not himself but others.' Whatsoever,
+then, is of this rank, which either would weaken or not edify our brother,
+be it ever so lawful, ever so profitable to ourselves, ever so powerfully
+by earthly authority enjoined,--Christians, who are not born unto
+themselves, but unto Christ, unto his church, and fellow-members, must not
+dare to meddle with it," saith one(941) well to our well to our purpose.
+
+_Sect._ 16. A third proposition I promit, which is this, Since the power
+of princes to make laws about things ecclesiastical is not absolute, but
+bound and adstricted unto things lawful and expedient, which sort of
+things, and no other, we are allowed to do for their commandments; and
+since princes many times may, and do, not only transgress those bounds and
+limits, but likewise pretend that they are within the same, when indeed
+they are without them, and enjoin things unlawful and inconvenient, under
+the name, title, and show of things lawful and convenient; therefore it is
+most necessary as well for princes to permit, as for subjects to take
+liberty to try and examine by the judgment of discretion, everything which
+authority enjoineth, whether it be agreeable or repugnant to the rules of
+the word; and if, after trial, it be found repugnant, to abstain from the
+doing of the same.
+
+For, 1. The word teacheth us, that the spiritual man judgeth all things, 1
+Cor. ii. 15; trieth the things that are different, Phil. i. 10; hath his
+senses exercised to discern both good and evil, Heb. v. 14; and that every
+one who would hold fast that which is good, and abstain from all
+appearance of evil, must first prove all things, 1 Thess. v. 21.
+
+2. Whatsoever is not of faith is sin, Rom. xiv. 23. But whatsoever a man
+doth without the trial, knowledge, and persuasion of the lawfulness of it
+by the word of God, that is not of faith; therefore a sin. It is the word
+of God, and not the arbitration of princes whereupon faith is grounded.
+And though the word may be without faith, yet faith cannot be without the
+word. By it therefore must a man try and know assuredly the lawfulness of
+that which he doth.
+
+3. "Every one of us shall give account of himself to God." But as we
+cannot give an account to God of those actions which we have done in
+obedience to our prince, except we have examined, considered, and
+understood the lawfulness of the same; so an account could not be required
+of us for them, if we were bound to obey and to keep all his ordinances in
+such sort that we might not try and examine them, with full liberty to
+refuse those which we judge out of the word to be unlawful or
+inconvenient; for then princes' ordinances were a most sufficient warrant
+to us: we needed try no more. Let him make an account to God of his
+command; we have account to make of our obedience.
+
+4. If we be bound to receive and obey the laws of princes, without making
+a free trial and examining of the equity of the same, then we could not be
+punished for doing, unwillingly and in ignorance, things unlawful
+prescribed by them. Whereas every soul that sinneth shall die; and when
+the blind leads the blind, he who is lead falls in the ditch as well as
+his leader.
+
+5. No man is permitted to do everything which seemeth right in his eyes,
+and to follow every conceit which takes him in the head; but every man is
+bound to walk by rule, Gal. vi. 6. But the law of a prince cannot be a
+rule, except it be examined whether it be consonant to the word of God,
+_index secundum legem_, and his law is only such a rule as is ruled by a
+higher rule. In so far as it is ruled by the own rule of it, in as far it
+is a rule to us; and in so far as it is not ruled by the own rule of it,
+in as far it is not a rule to us. _Quid ergo? an non licebit Christiano
+cuique convenientiam regulae et regulati (ut vocant) observare?_ saith
+Junius.(942)
+
+6. The rule whereby we ought to walk in all our ways, and according to
+which we ought to frame all our actions, is provided of God a stable and
+sure rule, that it being observed and taken heed unto, may guide and
+direct our practice aright about all those things which it prescribeth.
+But the law of a prince (if we should, without trial and examination, take
+it for our rule) cannot be such a stable and sure rule. For put the case
+that a prince enjoin two things which sometimes fall out to be
+incompatible and cannot stand together, in that case his law cannot direct
+our practice, nor resolve us what to do; whereas God hath so provided for
+us, that the case can never occur wherein we may not be resolved what to
+do if we observe the rule which he hath appointed us to walk by.
+
+7. Except this judgment of discretion which we plead for be permitted unto
+us, it will follow that in point of obedience we ought to give no less,
+but as much honour unto princes as unto God himself. For when God
+publisheth his commandments unto us, what greater honour could we give him
+by our obedience than to do that which he commandeth, for his own sole
+will and authority, without making further inquiry for any other reason?
+
+8. The Apostle, 1 Cor. vii. 23, forbiddeth us to be the servants of men,
+that is, to do things for which we have no other warrant beside the
+pleasure and will of men. Which interpretation is grounded upon other
+places of Scripture, that teach us we are not bound to obey men in
+anything which we know not to be according to the will of God, Eph. vi. 6,
+7; that we ought not to live to the lusts of men, but to the will of God,
+1 Pet. iv. 2, and that, therefore, we ought in everything to prove what is
+acceptable to the Lord, Eph. v. 20.
+
+9. They who cleanse their way must take heed thereto according to the
+word, Psal. cxix. 9; therefore, if we take not heed to our way, according
+to the word, we do not cleanse it. They who would walk as the children of
+light, must have the word for a lamp unto their feet, and a light unto
+their path, Psal. cxix. 105; therefore, if we go in any path without the
+light of the word to direct us, we walk in darkness and stumble, because
+we see not where we go. They who would not be unwise, but walk
+circumspectly, must understand what the will of Lord is, Eph. v. 17;
+therefore, if we understand not what the will of the Lord is concerning
+that which we do, we are unwise, and walk not circumspectly.
+
+10. _Dona Dei in sanctis non sunt otiosa_.(943) Whatsoever grace God
+giveth us, it ought to be used and exercised, and not to lie idle in us;
+but God giveth us _actionem cognoscendi, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} discernendi_,(944)
+&c. a certain measure of the spirit of discretion, to teach us what to
+choose as good, and what to refuse as evil, 1 John ii. 27, "The same
+anointing teacheth you of all things;" 1 Cor. ii. 15, "He that is
+spiritual judgeth all things." Therefore God would have us to exercise
+that measure of the gift of discretion which he hath bestowed on us, in
+discerning of things which are propounded to us, whether they ought to be
+done or not.
+
+11. Do not our divines plead for this judgment of private discretion which
+ought to be permitted to Christians, when anything is propounded to be
+believed or done by them? And this their judgment is to be seen in their
+writings against Papists about the controversies _de interpretatione
+Scripturae, de fide implicita_, &c.
+
+12. The Bishop of Salisbury, in his prelections _de Judice
+Controversiarum_, doth often and in many places commend unto Christians
+the same judgment of discretion which we stand upon, and holdeth it
+necessary for them to try and examine whatsoever either princes or
+prelates command them to do. _Coactiva_, &c. "The coactive power of a
+prince (saith he(945)), doth not absolutely bind the subject, but only
+with this condition, except he would compel him to that which is unlawful.
+Therefore there is ever left unto subjects a power of proving and judging
+in their own mind, whether that which is propounded be ungodly and
+unlawful or not; and if it be ungodly, that which the king threateneth
+should be suffered, rather than that which he commandeth be done. This
+Augustine hath taught," &c. And whereas it may be objected, that this
+maketh a subject to be his prince's judge, he answereth thus.(946) _Non
+se_, &c. He maketh not himself another's judge, who pondereth and
+examineth a sentence published by another, in so far as it containeth
+something either to be done or to be believed by him; but only he maketh
+himself the judge of his own actions. For howsoever he who playeth the
+judge is truly said to judge, yet every one who judgeth is not properly
+said to play the judge. He playeth the judge who, in an external court
+pronounceth a sentence, which by force of jurisdiction toucheth another;
+but he judgeth, who in the inferior court of his own private conscience,
+conceiveth such a sentence of the things to be believed or done, as
+pertaineth to himself alone. This latter way private men both may and
+ought to judge of the sentences and decrees of magistrates, neither by so
+doing do they constitute themselves judges of the magistrates, but judges
+of their own actions.
+
+_Sect._ 17. Finally, there is none of our opposites but saith so much as
+inferreth the necessity of this judgment of private and practical
+discretion; for every smatterer among them hath this much in his mouth,
+that if the king or the church command anything unlawful, then we ought to
+obey God rather than men; but when they command things indifferent and
+lawful, then their ordinance ought to be our rule. But (good men) will
+they tell us how we shall know whether the things which the king or the
+church (as they speak) do enjoin are lawful or unlawful, indifferent or
+not indifferent? and so we shall be at a point. Dare they say, that they
+may judge those things indifferent which our superiors judge to be such?
+and those unlawful which our superiors so judge of? Nay, then, they should
+deliver their distinction in other terms, and say thus: If our superiors
+enjoin anything which they judge to be unlawful, and which they command us
+so to account of, then we ought to obey God rather than men; but if they
+enjoin such things as they judge to be indifferent, and which they command
+us so to account of, then we ought to obey their ordinance. Which
+distinction, methinks, would have made Heraclitus himself to fall a
+laughing with Democritus. What then remaineth? Surely our opposites must
+either say nothing, or else say with us, that it is not only a liberty but
+a duty of inferiors, not to receive for a thing lawful that which is
+enjoined by superiors, because they account it and call it such, but by
+the judgment of their own discretion following the rules of the word, to
+try and examine whether the same be lawful or unlawful.
+
+_Sect._. 18. These _praecognita_ being now made good, come we to speak
+more particularly of the power of princes to make laws and ordinances
+about things which concern the worship of God. The purpose we will unfold
+in three distinctions: 1. Of things; 2. Of times; 3. Of ties. First, Let
+us distinguish two sorts of things in the worship of God, viz., things
+substantial, and things circumstantial. To things substantial we refer as
+well sacred and significant ceremonies as the more necessary and essential
+parts of worship, and, in a word, all things which are not mere external
+circumstances, such as were not particularly determinable within those
+bounds which it pleased God to set to his written word, and the right
+ordering whereof, as it is common to all human societies, whether civil or
+sacred, so it is investigable by the very light and guidance of natural
+reason. That among this kind of mere circumstances sacred significant
+ceremonies cannot be reckoned, we have otherwhere made it evident. Now,
+therefore, of things pertaining to the substance of God's worship, whether
+they be sacred ceremonies, or greater and more necessary duties, we say
+that princes have not power to enjoin anything of this kind which hath not
+the plain and particular institution of God himself in Scripture. They may
+indeed, and ought to publish God's own ordinances and commandments, and,
+by their coactive temporal power, urge and enforce the observation of the
+same. Notwithstanding, it is a prince's duty, "that in the worship of God,
+whether internal or external, he move nothing, he prescribe nothing,
+except that which is expressly delivered in God's own written word."(947)
+We must beware we confound not things which have the plain warrant of
+God's word with things devised by the will of man. David, Jehoshaphat,
+Hezekiah, Josiah, and other kings among the people of God, did, as well
+laudably as lawfully, enjoin and command that worship and form of religion
+which God, in his law and by his prophets, commanded; and forbid, avoid,
+and abolish such corruptions as God had forbidden before them, and
+appointed to be abolished; whence it followeth not that kings may enjoin
+things which want the warrant of the word, but only this much, which all
+of us commend, viz., "That a Christian prince's office in religion,(948)
+is diligently to take care that, in his dominion or kingdom, religion out
+of the pure word of God, expounded by the word of God itself, and
+understood according to the first principles of faith (which others call
+the analogy of faith), either be instituted, or, being instituted, be kept
+pure, or, being corrupted, be restored and reformed, that false doctrines,
+abuses, idols, and superstitions, be taken away, to the glory of God, and
+to his own and his subjects' salvation."
+
+_Sect._ 19. But in all the Scripture princes have neither a commendable
+example, nor any other warrant, for the making of any innovation in
+religion, or for the prescribing of sacred significant ceremonies of men's
+devising. Jeroboam caused a change to be made in the ceremonies and form
+of God's worship, whereas God ordained the ark of the covenant to be the
+sign of his presence, and that his glory should dwell between the
+cherubims. Jeroboam set up two calves to be the signs representative of
+that God who brought "Israel out of Egypt;" and this he means while he
+saith, "Behold thy gods," &c., 1 Kings xii. 28, giving to the signs the
+thing signified; whereas God ordained Jerusalem to be the place of
+worship, and all the sacrifices to be brought to the temple of Solomon,
+Jeroboam made Dan and Bethel to be places of worship, and built there
+altars and high places for the sacrifices; whereas God ordained the sons
+of Aaron only to be his priests, Jeroboam made priests of the lowest of
+the people, which were not of the sons of Levi; whereas God ordained the
+feast of tabernacles to be kept on the fifteenth day of the seventh month,
+Jeroboam appointed it on the fifteenth day of the eighth month. Now, if
+any prince in the world might have fair pretences for the making of such
+innovations in religion, Jeroboam much more. He might allege for his
+changing of the signs of God's presence, and of the place of worship, that
+since Rehoboam's wrath was incensed against him, and against the ten
+tribes which adhered unto him (as appeareth by the accounting of them to
+be rebels, 2 Chron. xiii. 6, and by the gathering of a huge army for
+bringing the kingdom again to Rehoboam, 2 Chron. xi. 1), it was no longer
+safe for his subjects to go up to Jerusalem to worship, in which case God,
+who required mercy more than sacrifice, would bear with their changing of
+a few ceremonies for the safety of men's lives. For his putting down of
+the priests and Levites, and his ordaining of other priests which were not
+of the sons of Levi, he might pretend that they were rebellious to him, in
+that they would not assent unto his new ordinances,(949) which he had
+enacted for the safety and security of his subjects, and that they did not
+only simply refuse obedience to these his ordinances, but in their refusal
+show themselves so stedfastly minded, that they would refuse and withstand
+even to the suffering of deprivation and deposition; and not only so, but
+likewise drew after them many others of the rest of the tribes to be of
+their judgment, 2 Chron. xi. 16, and to adhere to that manner of worship
+which was retained in Jerusalem. Lastly, For the change which he made
+about the season of the feast of tabernacles, he might have this pretence,
+that as it was expedient for the strengthening of his kingdom(950) to draw
+and allure as many as could be had to associate and join themselves with
+him in his form of worship (which could not be done if he should keep that
+feast at the same time when it was kept at Jerusalem); so there was no
+less (if not more) order and decency in keeping it in the eighth month,
+when the fruits of the ground were perfectly gathered in(951) (for
+thankful remembrance whereof that feast was celebrated) than in the
+seventh, when they were not so fully collected.
+
+These pretences he might have made yet more plausible, by professing and
+avouching that he intended to worship no idols, but the Lord only; that he
+had not fallen from anything which was fundamental and essential in divine
+faith and religion, that the changes which he had made were only about
+some alterable ceremonies which were not essential to the worship of God,
+and that even in these ceremonies he had not made any change for his own
+will and pleasure, but for important reasons which concerned the good of
+his kingdom and safety of his subjects. Notwithstanding of all this, the
+innovations which he made about these ceremonies of sacred signs, sacred
+places, sacred persons, sacred times, are condemned for this very reason,
+because he devised them of his own heart, 1 Kings xii. 33, which was
+enough to convince him of horrible impiety in making Israel to sin.
+Moreover, when king Ahaz took a pattern of the altar of Damascus, and sent
+it to Urijah the priest, though we cannot gather from the text that he
+either intended or pretended any other respect beside the honouring and
+pleasuring of his patron and protector, the king of Assyria, 2 Kings xvi.
+10, 18 (for of his appointing that new altar for his own and all the
+people's sacrifices, there was nothing heard till after his return from
+Damascus, at which time he began to fall back from one degree of defection
+to a greater), yet this very innovation of taking the pattern of an altar
+from idolaters is marked as a sin and a snare. Last of all, whereas many
+of the kings of Judah and Israel did either themselves worship in the
+groves and the high places, or else, at least, suffer the people to do so,
+howsoever they might have alleged(952) specious reasons for excusing
+themselves,--as namely, that they gave not this honour to any strange gods,
+but to the Lord only; that they chose these places only to worship in
+wherein God was of old seen and worshipped by the patriarchs, that the
+groves and the high places added a most amiable splendour and beauty to
+the worship of God, and that they did consecrate these places for divine
+worship in a good meaning, and with minds wholly devoted to God's
+honour,--yet notwithstanding, because this thing was not commanded of God,
+neither came it into his heart, he would admit no excuses, but ever
+challengeth it as a grievous fault in the government of those kings, that
+those high places were not taken away, and that the people still
+sacrificed in the high places; from all which examples we learn how highly
+God was and is displeased with men for adding any other sacred ceremonies
+to those which he himself hath appointed.(953)
+
+_Sect._ 20. Now as touching the other sort of things which we consider in
+the worship of God, namely, things merely circumstantial, and such as have
+the very same use and respect in civil which they have in sacred actions,
+we hold that whensoever it happeneth to be the duty and part of a prince
+to institute and enjoin any order or policy in these circumstances of
+God's worship, then he may only enjoin such an order as may stand with the
+observing and following of the rules of the word, whereunto we are tied in
+the use and practice of things which are in their general nature
+indifferent.
+
+Of these rules I am to speak in the fourth part of the dispute. And here I
+say no more but this: Since the word commandeth us to do all things to the
+glory of God, 1 Cor. x. 31; to do all things to edifying, 1 Cor. xiv. 29;
+and to do all things in faith, and full persuasion of the lawfulness of
+that which we do, Rom. xiv. 5, 23, therefore there is no prince in the
+world who hath power to command his subjects to do that which should
+either dishonour God, or not honour him; or that which should either
+offend their brother, or not edify him; or, lastly, that which their
+conscience either condemneth or doubteth of. For how may a prince command
+that which his subjects may not do? But a wonder it were if any man should
+so far refuse to be ashamed that he would dare to say we are not bound to
+order whatsoever we do according to these rules of the word, but only such
+matters of private action wherein we are left at full liberty, there being
+no ordinance of superiors to determine our practice, and that if such an
+ordinance be published and propounded unto us, we should take it alone for
+our rule, and no longer think to examine and order our practice by the
+rules of the word;
+
+For, 1. This were as much as to say, that in the circumstances of God's
+worship we are bound to take heed unto God's rules, then only and in that
+case when men give us none of their rules, which, if they do, God's rules
+must give place to men's rules, and not theirs to his.
+
+2. If it were so, then we should never make reckoning to God, whether that
+which we had done in obedience to superiors was right or wrong, good or
+bad, and we should only make reckoning of such things done by us as were
+not determined by a human law.
+
+3. The law of superiors is never the supreme but ever a subordinate rule,
+and (as we said before) it can never be a rule to us, except in so far
+only as it is ruled by a higher rule. Therefore we have ever another rule
+to take heed unto beside their law.
+
+4. The Scripture speaketh most generally, and admitteth no exception from
+the rules which it giveth: "Whatsoever ye do (though commanded by
+superiors) do all to the glory of God. Let all things (though commanded by
+superiors) be done to edifying. Whatsoever is not of faith (though
+commanded by superiors) is sin."
+
+5. We may do nothing for the sole will and pleasure of men, for this were
+to be the servants of men, as hath been shown. The Bishop of Salisbury
+also assenteth hereunto.(954) _Non enim_ (saith he) _Deus vult, ut hominis
+alicujus voluntatem regulam nostrae voluntatis atque vitae faciamus: sed
+hoc privilegium sibi ac verbo suo reservatum voluit._ And again,(955) _Pio
+itaque animo haec consideratio semper adesse debet, utrum id quod
+praecipitur sit divino mandato contrarium necne: atque ne ex hac parte
+fallantur, adhibendum est illud judicium discretionis, quod nos tantopere
+urgemus._
+
+_Sect._ 21. These things if Saravia had considered,(956) he had not so
+absolutely pronounced that the power of the kings may make constitutions
+of the places and times, when and where the exercises of piety may be
+conveniently had, also with what order, what rite, what gesture, what
+habit, the mysteries shall be more decently celebrated. But what! thought
+he this power of kings is not astricted to the rules of the word? Have
+they any power which is to destruction and not to edification? Can they
+command their subjects to do anything in the circumstances of divine
+worship which is not for the glory of God, which is not profitable for
+edifying, and which they cannot do in faith? Nay, that all the princes in
+the world have not such power as this, will easily appear to him who
+attendeth unto the reasons which we have propounded. And because men do
+easily and ordinarily pretend that their constitutions are according to
+the rules of the word, when they are indeed repugnant to the same,
+therefore we have also proved that inferiors may and must try and examine
+every ordinance of their superiors, and that by the judgment of private
+discretion, following the rules of the word. I say following the rules of
+the word, because we will never allow a man to follow Anabaptistical or
+Swenckfeldian-like enthusiasms and inspirations.
+
+_Sect._ 22. Touching the application of what hath been said unto the
+controverted ceremonies, there needs nothing now to be added. For that
+they belong not to that sort of things which may be applied to civil uses,
+with the same respect and account which they have being applied to
+religious uses, the account I mean of mere circumstances serving only for
+that common order and decency which is and should be observed in civil no
+less than in sacred actions, but that they belong to the substance of
+worship, as being sacred significant ceremonies, wherein both holiness and
+necessity are placed, and which may not without his sacrilege be used out
+of the compass of worship, we have elsewhere plainly evinced. And this
+kind of things, whensover they are men's devices, and not God's
+ordinances, cannot be lawfully enjoined by princes, as hath been showed.
+
+But if any man will needs have these ceremonies in question to go under
+the name of mere circumstances, let us put the case they were no other,
+yet our conforming unto them, which is urged, cannot stand with the rules
+of the word.
+
+It could not be for the glory of God, not only for that it is offensive to
+many of Christ's little ones, but likewise for that it ministereth
+occasion to the enemies of the Lord to blaspheme; to atheists, because by
+these naughty observances they see the commandments of God made of little
+or no effect, and many godly both persons and purposes despised and
+depressed, whereat they laugh in their sleeve and say, Aha! so would we
+have it; to Papists, because as by this our conformity they confirm
+themselves in sundry of their errors and superstitions, so perceiving us
+so little to abhor the pomp and bravery of their mother of harlots, that
+we care not to borrow from her some of her meretricious trinkets, they
+promise to themselves that in the end we shall take as great a draught of
+the cup of the wine of her fornications as they themselves.
+
+Neither yet can our conforming unto the ceremonies pressed upon us be
+profitable for edifying, for we have given sufficient demonstration of
+manifold hurts and inconveniences ensuing thereon.
+
+Nor, lastly, can we conform to them in faith; for as our consciences
+cannot find, so the word cannot afford, any warrant for them. Of all which
+things now I only make mention, because I have spoken of them enough
+otherwhere.
+
+_Sect._ 23. The second distinction which may help our light in this
+question about the power of princes, is of times; for when the church and
+ministers thereof are corrupted and must be reformed, princes may do much
+more in making laws about things ecclesiastical than regularly they may,
+when ecclesiastical persons are both able and willing to do their duty, in
+rightly taking care of all things which ought to be provided for the good
+of the church, and conservation or purgation of religion. "For (saith
+Junuis(957)) both the church, when the joining of the magistrate faileth,
+may extraordinarily do something which ordinarily she cannot; and again,
+when the church faileth of her duty, the magistrate may extraordinarily
+procure that the church return to her duty; that is, in such a case
+extraordinarily happening, these (ecclesiastical persons) and those
+(magistrates) may extraordinarily do something which ordinarily they
+cannot. For this belongeth to common law and equity, that unto
+extraordinary evils, extraordinary remedies must also be applied." We
+acknowledge that it belongeth to princes(958) "to reform things in the
+church, as often as the ecclesiastical persons shall, either through
+ignorance, disorder of the affection of covetousness, or ambition, defile
+the Lord's sanctuary." At such extraordinary times, princes, by their
+coactive temporal power, ought to procure and cause a reformation of
+abuses, and the avoiding of misorders in the church, though with the
+discontent of the clergy, for which end and purpose they may not only
+enjoin and command the profession of that faith, and the practice of that
+religion which God's word appointeth, but also prescribe such an order and
+policy in the circumstances of divine worship as they in their judgment of
+Christian discretion, observing and following the rules of the word, shall
+judge and try to be convenient for the present time and case, and all this
+under the commination of such temporal losses, pains, or punishments as
+they shall deprehend to be reasonable. But at other ordinary times, when
+ecclesiastical persons are neither through ignorance unable, nor through
+malice and perverseness of affection unwilling, to put order to whatsoever
+requireth any mutation to be made in the church and service of God, in
+that case, without their advice and consent, princes may not make an
+innovation of any ecclesiastical rite, nor publish any ecclesiastical law.
+
+_Sect._ 24. When Dr Field(959) speaketh of the power of princes to
+prescribe and make laws about things spiritual or ecclesiastical, he
+saith, That the prince may, with the advice and direction of his clergy,
+command things pertaining to God's worship and service, both for
+profession of faith, ministration of the sacraments, and conversation
+fitting to Christians in general, or men of ecclesiastical order in
+particular, under the pains of death, imprisonment, banishment,
+confiscation of goods, and the like; and by his princely power establish
+things formerly defined and decreed, against whatsoever error and contrary
+ill custom and observation. In all this the Doctor saith very right; but I
+demand, further, these two things: 1. What if the thing have not been
+decreed before? and what if the free assent of the clergy be not had for
+it? Would the Doctor have said that in such a case the prince hath not
+power by himself, and by his own sole authority, to enjoin it, and to
+establish a law concerning it? For example, that king James had not power
+by himself to impose the controverted ceremonies upon the church of
+Scotland at that time when as no free assent (much less the direction) of
+the clergy was had for them, so neither had they been formerly decreed,
+but laws and decrees were formerly made against them. If the Doctor would
+have answered affirmatively that he had this power, then why did he, in a
+scornful dissimulation, so circumscribe and limit the power of princes, by
+requiring a former decree, and the free assent of the clergy? If he would
+have answered negatively, that he had no such power, we should have
+rendered him thanks for his answer. 2. Whether may the clergy make any
+laws about things pertaining to the service of God which the prince may
+not as well by himself, and without them, constitute and authorise? If the
+affirmative part be granted unto us, we gladly take it. But we suppose Dr
+Field did, and our opposites yet do, hold the negative. Whereupon it
+followeth that the prince hath as much, yea, the very same power, of
+making laws in all ecclesiastical things which the clergy themselves have
+when they are convened in a lawful and free assembly, yet I guess from the
+Doctor's words that he would have replied, namely, that the difference is
+great betwixt the power of making laws about things ecclesiastical in the
+prince, and the same power in the clergy assembled together; for he
+describeth the making of a law to be the prescribing of something, under
+some pain or punishment, which he that so prescribeth hath power to
+inflict. Whereby he would make it appear that he yieldeth not unto princes
+the same power of spiritual jurisdiction, in making of ecclesiastical
+laws, which agreeth to the clergy; because, whereas a council of the
+clergy may frame canons about things which concern the worship of God, and
+prescribe them under the pain of excommunication, and other ecclesiastical
+censures, the ordinance of princes about such matters is only under the
+pain of some external or bodily punishment. But I answer, _potestas_
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~} is one thing, and _potestas_ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~} is another thing. When the
+making of a law is joined either with the intention, or with the
+commination of a punishment, in case of transgression, this is but
+accidental and adventitious to the law, not naturally nor necessarily
+belonging to the essence of the same; for many laws there hath been, and
+may be, which prescribe not that which they contain under the same pain or
+punishment. Gratian distinguisheth three sorts of laws: _Omnis_, &c.
+"Every law (saith he(960)) either permits something; for example, let a
+valorous man seek a reward: or forbids; for example, let it be lawful to
+no man to seek the marriage of holy virgins: or punisheth; for example, he
+who committeth murder let him be capitally punished." And in this third
+kind only there is something prescribed under a pain or punishment. It is
+likewise holden by schoolmen,(961) that it is a law which permitteth
+something indifferent, as well as it which commandeth some virtue, or
+forbiddeth some vice. When a prince doth statute and ordain, that
+whosoever, out of a generous and magnanimous spirit, will adventure to
+embark and hazard in a certain military exploit against a foreign enemy,
+whom he intendeth to subdue, shall be allowed to take for himself in
+propriety all the rich spoil which he can lay hold on,--there is nothing
+here prescribed under some pain or punishment, yet it is a law, and
+properly so termed. And might not the name of a law be given unto that
+edict of King Darius, whereby he decreed that all they in his dominions
+should fear the God of Daniel, forasmuch as he is the living and eternal
+God, who reigneth for ever, Dan. vi.; yet it prescribed nothing under some
+pain or punishment to be inflicted by him who so prescribed. Wherefore,
+though the prince publisheth ecclesiastical laws under other pains and
+punishments than the clergy doth, this showeth only that _potestas_
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~} is not the same, but different, in the one and in the other; yet
+if it be granted that whatsoever ecclesiastical law a synod of the clergy
+hath power to make and publish, the prince hath power to make and publish
+without them, by his own sole authority, it followeth, that the power of
+the church to make laws which is called _potestas_ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}, doth agree
+as much, as properly, and as directly to the prince, as to a whole synod
+of the church.
+
+_Sect._ 25. Now, therefore, we firmly hold, 1. That the prince may not
+innovate any custom or rite of the church, nor publish any ecclesiastical
+law, without the free assent of the clergy, they being neither unable for,
+nor unwilling unto, their ecclesiastical functions and duties; yea,
+further, that so far as is possible, the consent of the whole church ought
+to be had whensoever any change is to be made of some order or custom in
+the church; for that which toucheth the whole church, and is to be used by
+the whole church, _ab omnibus etiam merito curatur_.(962) Therefore, when
+there is any change to be made in the rites of the church, _merito fit hoc
+cum omnium ordinum ecclesiae consensu_.(963) Neither was there ever a
+rightly reformed church which was helped and not hurt by such rites and
+customs as, to their grief and miscontentment, princes did impose upon
+them. Whence it was, that "they who were orthodox did ever withstand such
+a magistrate as would have, by his commandments, tied the church to that
+which was burdensome to their consciences."(964) That such inconveniences
+may be shunned, it is fit, that, when any change is to be made in the
+policy of a church, not the clergy alone, but the elders also, and men of
+understanding among the laity, in a lawful assembly, freely give their
+voices and consent thereunto. Good reason have our writers to hold against
+Papists, that laymen ought to have place in councils wherein things which
+concern the whole church are to be deliberated upon. 2. Lest it be thought
+enough that princes devise, frame, and establish, ecclesiastical laws as
+them best liketh, and then, for more show of orderly proceeding, some
+secret and sinistrous way extort and procure the assent of the synod of
+the church; therefore we add, that it belongeth to the synod (the clergy
+having the chief place therein, to give direction and advice), not to
+receive and approve the definition of the prince in things which concern
+the worship of God, but itself to define and determine what orders and
+customs are fittest to be observed in such things, that thereafter the
+prince may approve and ratify the same, and press them upon his subjects
+by his regal coactive power. To me it is no less than a matter of
+admiration how Camero could so far forget himself as to say,(965) that in
+things pertaining unto religion, _dirigere atque disponere penes
+magistratum est proprie, penes ecclesiasticos ministerium atque executio
+proprie_, telling us further, that the directing and disposing of such
+things doth then only belong to ecclesiastical persons when the church
+suffereth persecution, or when the magistrate permitteth that the matter
+be judged by the church.
+
+Our writers have said much of the power of the church to make laws, but
+this man (I perceive) will correct them all, and will not acknowledge that
+the church hath any power of making laws about things pertaining to
+religion (except by accident, because of persecution or permission), but
+only a power of executing what princes please to direct. More fully to
+deliver our mind, we say, that in the making of laws about things which
+concern the worship of God, the prince may do much _per actus imperatos_,
+but nothing _per actus elicitos_. For the more full explanation of which
+distinction, I liken the prince to the will of man; the ministers of the
+church to man's particular senses; a synod of the church to that internal
+sense which is called _sensus communis_; the fountain and original of all
+the external things and actions ecclesiastical, or such as concern the
+worship of God, to the objects and actions of the particular senses; and
+the power of making ecclesiastical laws to that power and virtue of the
+common sense, whereby it perceiveth, discerneth, and judgeth of the
+objects and actions of all the particular senses. Now as the will
+commandeth the common sense to discern and judge of the actions and
+objects of all the particular senses, thereafter commandeth the eye to
+see, and the ear to hear, the nose to smell, &c., yet it hath not power by
+itself to exercise or bring forth any of these actions, for the will can
+neither see nor yet judge of the object and action of sight, &c. So the
+prince may command a synod of the church to judge of ecclesiastical things
+and actions, and to define what order and form of policy is most
+convenient to be observed in things pertaining to divine worship, and
+thereafter he may command the particular ministers of the church to
+exercise the works of their ministry, and to apply themselves unto that
+form of church regiment and policy which the synod hath prescribed, yet he
+may not by himself define and direct such matters, nor make any laws
+thereanent.
+
+_Sect._ 26. For proof of these things I add, 1. Politic government,
+_versatur circa res terrenas et hominem externum_ (saith one of our
+writers(966)); _magistratus_ (saith another(967)) _instituti sunt a Deo
+rerum humanarum __ quae hominum societati necessariae sunt respectu, et ad
+carum curam_; but they are ecclesiastical ministers who are "ordained for
+men in things pertaining to God," Heb. v. 1, that is, in things which
+pertain unto God's worship. It belongeth not therefore to princes to
+govern and direct things of this nature, even as it belongeth not to
+pastors to govern and direct earthly things which are necessary for the
+external and civil society of men, I mean ordinarily and regularly, for of
+extraordinary cases we have spoken otherwise. But according to the common
+order and regular form we are ever to put this difference betwixt civil
+and ecclesiastical government, which one of our best learned divines hath
+excellently conceived after this manner:(968) _Altera differentia_, &c.,
+"The other difference (saith he) taken from the matter and subject of the
+administrations. For we have put in our definition human things to be the
+subject of civil administration, but the subject of ecclesiastical
+administration we have taught to be things divine and sacred. Things
+divine and sacred we call both those which God commandeth for the
+sanctification of our mind and conscience as things necessary, and also
+those which the decency and order of the church requireth to be ordained
+and observed for the profitable and convenient use of the things which are
+necessary; for example, prayers, the administration of the word and
+sacraments, ecclesiastical censure, are things necessary, and essentially
+belonging to the communion of saints; but set days, set hours, set places,
+fasts, and if there be any such like, they belong to the decency and order
+of the church, without which the church cannot be well edified, nor any
+particular member thereof rightly fashioned and fitly set in the body. But
+human things we call such duties as touch the life, the body, goods, and
+good name, as they are expounded in the second table of the Decalogue, for
+these are the things in which the whole civil administration standeth.
+Behold how the very circumstances which pertain to ecclesiastical order
+and decency are exempted from the compass of civil government."
+
+2. "Natural reason (saith the Bishop of Salisbury) telleth,(969) that to
+judge of everything, and to instruct others, belongeth to them who before
+others take pains and study to the care and knowledge of the same, so
+physicians judge which meat is wholesome, which noisome. Lawyers declare
+what is just, what unjust, and in all arts and sciences, they who
+professedly place their labour and study in the polishing and practising
+of the same, both use and ought to direct the judgments of others." Since
+therefore(970) the ministers of the church are those _quibus ecclesiae
+cura incumbit vel maxime_, since they do above and before the civil
+magistrate devote themselves to the care and knowledge of things
+pertaining to God and his worship, whereabout they profess to bestow their
+ordinary study and painful travail, were it not most repugnant to the law
+of natural reason to say that they ought not to direct, but be directed
+by, the magistrate in such matters?
+
+3. The ministers of the church are appointed to be "watchmen in the city
+of God," Mic. vii. 4, and "overseers of the flock," Acts xx. 28; but when
+princes do, without the direction and definition of ministers, establish
+certain laws to be observed in things pertaining to religion, ministers
+are not then watchmen and overseers, because they have not the first
+sight, and so cannot give the first warning of the change which is to be
+made in the church. The watchmen are upon the walls, the prince is within
+the city. Shall the prince now view and consider the breaches and defects
+of the city better and sooner than the watchmen themselves? Or shall one,
+within the city, tell what should be righted and helped therein, before
+them who are upon the walls? Again, the prince is one of the flock, and is
+committed, among the rest, to the care, attendance, and guidance of the
+overseers; and, I pray, shall one of the sheep direct the overseers how to
+govern and lead the whole flock, or prescribe to them what orders and
+customs they shall observe for preventing or avoiding any hurt and
+inconvenience which may happen to the flock?
+
+4. Christ hath ordained men of ecclesiastical order, not only "for the
+work of the ministry,"(971) that is, for preaching the word and
+ministering the sacraments, for warning and rebuking them who sin, for
+comforting the afflicted, for confirming the weak, &c., but also for
+providing whatsoever concerneth either the private spiritual good of any
+member of the church, which the Apostle calleth "the perfecting of the
+saints," or the public spiritual good of the whole church, which he
+calleth the "edifying of the body of Christ," Eph. iv. 12. Since,
+therefore, the making of laws about such things, without which the worship
+of God cannot be orderly nor decently (and so not rightly) performed,
+concerneth the spiritual good and benefit of the whole church, and of all
+the members thereof, it followeth that Christ hath committed the power of
+judging, defining, and making laws about those matters, not to
+magistrates, but to the ministers of the church.
+
+5. The Apostle, speaking of the church ministers, saith, "Obey them that
+have the rule over you, and submit yourselves for they watch for your
+souls as they that must give account," Heb. xiii. 17. Whence we gather,
+that in things pertaining to God, and which touch the spiritual benefit of
+the soul, the ministers of the church ought to give direction, and to be
+obeyed, as those who, in things of this nature, have the rule over all
+others of the church (and by consequence over princes also), so that it be
+in the Lord. And lest this place and power which is given to ministers,
+should either be abused by themselves to the commanding of what they will,
+or envied by others, as too great honour and pre-eminence, the Apostle
+showeth what a painful charge lieth on them, and what a great reckoning
+they have to make. They watch for your souls, saith he, not only by
+preaching and warning every one, and by offering up their earnest prayers
+to God for you, but likewise by taking such care of ecclesiastical
+discipline, order, and policy, that they must provide and procure
+whatsoever shall be expedient for your spiritual good, and direct you in
+what convenient and beseeming manner you are to perform the works of God's
+worship, as also to avoid and shun every scandal and inconveniency which
+may hinder your spiritual good. And of these things, whether they have
+done them or not, they must make account before the judgment seat of the
+great Bishop of your souls. Surely, if it belong to princes to do fine and
+ordain what order and policy should be observed in the church, what forms
+and fashions should be used, for the orderly and right managing of the
+exercises of God's worship, how scandals and misorders are to be shunned,
+how the church may be most edified, and the spiritual good of the saints
+best helped and advanced, by wholesome and profitable laws, concerning
+things which pertain to religion, then must princes take also upon them a
+great part of that charge of pastors, to watch for the souls of men, and
+must liberate them from being liable to a reckoning for the same.
+
+_Sect._ 27. 6. Constantine the Great, Theodosius, both the one and the
+other, Martianus, Charles the Great, and other Christian princes, when
+there was any change to be made of ecclesiastical rites, did not, by their
+own authority, imperiously enjoin the change, but convocate synods for
+deliberating upon the matter, as Balduine noteth.(972) The great Council
+of Nice was assembled by Constantine, not only because of the Arian
+heresy, but, also (as Socrates witnesseth(973)), because of the difference
+about the keeping of Easter; and though the bishops, when they were
+assembled, did put up to him libels of accusation, one against another, so
+that there could be no great hope of their agreement upon fit and
+convenient laws; yet, notwithstanding, he did not interpone his own
+definition and decree, for taking up that difference about Easter, only he
+exhorted the bishops convened in the council to peace, and so commended
+the whole matter to be judged by them.
+
+7. We have for us the judgment of worthy divines. A notable testimony of
+Junius we have already cited. Danaeus will not allow princes by themselves
+to make laws about ecclesiastical rites,(974) but this he will have done
+by a synod. _Porro quod ad ritus,_ &c. "Furthermore (saith he), for rites
+and ceremonies, and that external order which is necessary in the
+administration of the church, let a synod of the church convene, the
+supreme and godly magistrate both giving commandment for the convening of
+it, and being present in it; and let that synod of the church lawfully
+assembled define what should be the order and external regiment of the
+church. This decree of the ecclesiastical synod shall the godly and
+supreme magistrate afterward confirm, stablish, and ratify by his edict."
+Joh. Wolphius observeth of king Joash,(975) that he did not by himself
+take order for the reparation of the temple, nor define what was to be
+done unto every breach therein, but committed this matter to be directed
+and cared for by the priests, whom it chiefly concerned, commanding them
+to take course for the reparation of the breaches of the house,
+wheresoever any breach should be found, and allowing them money for the
+work. Whereupon he further noteth, that as the superior part of man's soul
+doth not itself hear, see, touch, walk, speak, but commandeth the ears,
+eyes, hands, feet, and tongue, to do the same; so the magistrate should
+not himself either teach or make laws, but command that these things be
+done by the doctors and teachers. Cartwright and Pareus upon Heb. xiii.
+17, tell the Papists, that we acknowledge princes are holden to be
+obedient unto pastors in things that belong unto God, if they rule
+according to the word, which could not be so, if the making of laws about
+things pertaining to God and his worship did not of right and due belong
+unto pastors, but unto princes themselves. Our Second Book of Discipline,
+chap. 12, ordaineth, "That ecclesiastical assemblies have their place,
+with power to the kirk to appoint times and places convenient for the
+same, and all men, as well magistrates as inferiors, to be subject to the
+judgment of the same in ecclesiastical causes." Balduine holdeth,(976)
+that a prince may not by himself enjoin any new ecclesiastical rite, but
+must convocate a synod for the deliberation and definition of such things.
+And what mean our writers when they say,(977) that kings have no spiritual
+but only a civil power in the church? As actions are decerned by the
+objects, so are powers by the actions: if, therefore, kings do commendably
+by themselves make laws about things pertaining to God's worship, which is
+a spiritual action, then have they also a spiritual power in the church;
+but if they have no spiritual power, that is, no power of spiritual
+jurisdiction, how can they actually exercise spiritual jurisdiction? That
+the making of laws about things pertaining to God's worship is an action
+of spiritual jurisdiction, it needeth no great demonstration; for, 1. When
+a synod of the church maketh laws about such things, all men know that
+this is an action of spiritual jurisdiction flowing from that power of
+spiritual jurisdiction which is called _potestas_ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}. And how then
+can the prince's making of such laws be called an action of civil, not of
+spiritual jurisdiction? I see not what can be answered, except it be said,
+that the making of those laws by a synod is an action of spiritual
+jurisdiction, because they are made and published with the commination of
+spiritual and ecclesiastical punishments in case of transgression, but the
+making of them by the prince is an action of jurisdiction only, because he
+prescribeth and commandeth, under the pain of some temporal loss or
+punishment. But I have already confuted this answer, because
+notwithstanding of the different punishments which the one and the other
+hath power to threaten and inflict, yet, at least, that part of spiritual
+jurisdiction which we call _potestas_ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~} remaineth the same in
+both, which power of making laws must not (as I show) be confounded with
+that other power of judging and punishing offenders. 2. Actions take their
+species or kind from the object and the end, when other circumstances
+hinder not. Now, a prince's making of laws about things pertaining to
+religion, is such an action of jurisdiction, as hath both a spiritual end,
+which is the edification of the church and spiritual good of Christians,
+and likewise a spiritual object; for that all things pertaining to divine
+worship, even the very external circumstances of the same, are rightly
+called things spiritual and divine, not civil or human, our opposites
+cannot deny, except they say, not only that such things touch the lives,
+bodies, estates, or names of men, and are not ordained for the spiritual
+benefit of their souls, but also that the synod of the church, whose power
+reacheth only to things spiritual, not civil or human, can never make laws
+about those circumstances which are applied unto, and used in the worship
+of God; and as the prince's making of laws about things of this nature, is
+in respect of the object and end, an action of spiritual jurisdiction, so
+there is no circumstance at all which varieth the kind, or maketh it an
+action of civil jurisdiction only. If it be said, that the circumstance of
+the person changeth the kind of the action, so that the making of laws
+about things pertaining to religion, if they be made by ecclesiastical
+persons, is an action of spiritual jurisdiction; but if, by the civil
+magistrate, an action of civil jurisdiction, this were a most extremely
+unadvised distinction; for so might Uzziah the king have answered for
+himself, 2 Chron. xxvi. 18, that, in burning incense, he did not take upon
+him to execute the priest's office, because he was only a civil person; so
+may the Pope say, that he might not take upon him the power of emperors
+and monarchs, because he is an ecclesiastical person. Many things men do
+_de facto_, which they cannot _de jure_. Civil persons may exercise a
+spiritual jurisdiction and office, and, again, ecclesiastical persons may
+exercise a civil jurisdiction _de facto_, though not _de jure_. Wherefore
+the prince's making of laws about things spiritual remaineth still an
+action of spiritual jurisdiction, except some other thing can be alleged
+to the contrary, beside the circumstance of the person. But some man,
+peradventure, will object that a prince, by his civil power, may enjoin
+and command not only the observation of those ecclesiastical rites which a
+synod of the church prescribeth, but also that a synod (when need is)
+prescribe new orders and rites, all which are things spiritual and divine.
+And why then may he not, by the same civil power, make laws about the
+rites and circumstances of God's worship, notwithstanding that they are
+(in their use and application to the actions of worship) things spiritual,
+not civil.
+
+_Ans._ The schoolmen say,(978) that an action proceedeth from charity two
+ways, either _elicitive_ or _imperative_, and that those actions which are
+immediately produced and wrought out by charity, belong not to other
+virtues distinct from charity, but are comprehended under the effects of
+charity itself, such as are the loving of good and rejoicing for it. Other
+actions, say they, which are only commanded by charity, belong to other
+special virtues distinct from charity. So, say I, an action may proceed
+from a civil power either _elicitive_ or _imperative_. _Elicitive_ a civil
+power can only make laws about things civil or human; but _imperative_ it
+may command the ecclesiastical power to make laws about things spiritual,
+which laws thereafter it may command to be observed by all who are in the
+church.
+
+_Sect._ 28. 8. Our opposites themselves acknowledge no less than that
+which I have been pleading for. "To devise new rites and ceremonies (saith
+Dr Bilson(979)), is not the prince's vocation, but to receive and allow
+such as the Scriptures and canons commend, and such as the bishops and
+pastors of the place shall advise." And saith not the Bishop of
+Salisbury,(980) _Ceremonias utiles et decoras excogitare, ad
+ecclesiasticos pertinet; tamen easdem comprobare, et toti populo
+observandas imponere, ad reges spectat_? Camero saith,(981) that it is the
+part of a prince to take care for the health of men's souls, even as he
+doth for the health of their bodies, and that as he provideth not for the
+curing or preventing of bodily diseases directly and by himself, but
+indirectly and by the physicians, so he should not by himself prescribe
+cures and remedies for men's spiritual maladies. _Perinde principis est
+curare salutem animarum, ac ejusdem est saluti corporum prospicere: non
+est autem principis providere ne morbi grassentur directe, esset enim
+medicus, at indirecte tamen princeps id studere debet._ Whence it
+followeth, that even as when some bodily sickness spreadeth, a prince's
+part is not to prescribe a cure, but to command the physicians to do it;
+just so, when any abuse, misorder, confusion, or scandal in the church,
+requireth or maketh it necessary that a mutation be made of some rite or
+order in the same, and that wholesome laws be enacted, which may serve for
+the order, decency, and edification of the church, a prince may not do
+this by himself, but may only command the pastors and guides of the
+church, who watch for the souls of men as they who must give account, to
+see to the exigency of the present state of matters ecclesiastical, and to
+provide such laws as they, being met together in the name of the Lord,
+shall, after due and free deliberation, find to be convenient, and which,
+being once prescribed by them, he shall by his royal authority confirm,
+establish, and press.
+
+_Sect._ 29. Needs now it must be manifest, that the lawfulness of our
+conforming unto the ceremonies in question can be no way warranted by any
+ordinance of the supreme magistrate, or any power which he hath in things
+spiritual or ecclesiastical; and if our opposites would ponder the reasons
+we have given, they should be quickly quieted, understanding that, before
+the prince's ordinance about the ceremonies can be said to bind us, it
+must first be showed that they have been lawfully prescribed by a synod of
+the church, so that they must retire and hold them as the church's
+ordinance. And what needeth any more? Let us once see any lawful ordinance
+of the synod or church representative for them, we shall, without any more
+ado, acknowledge it to be out of all doubt that his Majesty may well urge
+conformity unto the same.
+
+Now, of the church's power we have spoken in the former chapter; and if we
+had not, yet that which hath been said in this chapter maketh out our
+point. For it hath been proved, that neither king nor church hath power to
+command anything which is not according to the rules of the word; that is,
+which serveth not for the glory of God, which is not profitable for
+edifying, and which may not be done in faith; unto which rules, whether
+the things which are commanded us be agreeable or not, we must try and
+examine by the private judgment of Christian discretion, following the
+light of God's word.
+
+_Sect._ 30. Resteth the third distinction, whereof I promised to speak,
+and that was of ties or bonds. _Quoedam obligatio_, &c. "Some bond (saith
+Gerhard(982)) is absolute, when the law bindeth the conscience simply, so
+that, in no respect, nor in no case, without the offence of God and wound
+of conscience, one may depart from the prescript thereof; but another bond
+is hypothetical, when it bindeth not simply, but under a condition, to
+wit, if the transgression of the law be done of contempt,--if for the cause
+of lucre or some other vicious end,--if it have scandal joined with it."
+The former way, he saith that the law of God and nature bindeth, and that
+the law of the civil magistrate bindeth the latter way; and with him we
+hold that whatsoever a prince commandeth his subjects in things any way
+pertaining to religion, it bindeth only this latter way, and that he hath
+never power to make laws binding the former way, for confirmation
+wherefore we say,
+
+1. The laws of an ecclesiastical synod, to the obedience whereof, in
+things belonging to the worship of God, we are far more strictly tied than
+to the obedience of any prince in the world, who (as hath been showed) in
+this sort of things hath not such a vocation nor power to make laws. The
+laws, I say, of a synod cannot bind absolutely, but only conditionally, or
+in case they cannot be transgressed without violating the law of charity,
+by contempt showed or scandal given, which, as I have made good in the
+first part of this dispute, so let me now produce for it a plain testimony
+of the Bishop of Salisbury,(983) who holdeth that the church's rites and
+ordinance do only bind in such sort, _ut si extra_, &c., "That if, out of
+the case of scandal or contempt, through imprudence, oblivion, or some
+reasonable cause enforcing, they be omitted, no mortal sin is incurred
+before God; for as touching these constitutions, I judge the opinion of
+Gerson to be most true, to wit, that they remain inviolated so long as the
+law of charity is not by men violated about the same." Much less, then,
+can the laws of princes about things spiritual or ecclesiastical bind
+absolutely, and out of the case of violating the law of charity.
+
+2. If we be not bound to receive and acknowledge the laws of princes as
+good and equitable, except only in so far as they are warranted by the law
+of God and nature, then we are not bound in conscience to obey them,
+except only conditionally, in case the violating of them include the
+violating of the law of God and nature; but the former is true, therefore
+the latter. It is God's peculiar sovereignty, that his will is a rule
+ruling, but not ruled, and that therefore a thing is good because God will
+have it to be good. Man's will is only such a rule as is ruled by higher
+rules, and it must be known to be _norma recta_ before it can be to us
+_norma recti_.
+
+3. If we be bound to try and examine, by the judgment of discretion
+(following the rules of the word), whether the things which princes
+command be right, and such as ought to be done; and if we find them not to
+be such, to neglect them, then their laws cannot bind absolutely and by
+themselves, (else what need were there of such trial and examination?) but
+only conditionally, and in case they cannot be neglected without violating
+some other law, which is of a superior bond. But the former we have proved
+by strong reasons, therefore the latter standeth sure.
+
+4. If neither princes may command, nor we do anything which is not lawful
+and expedient, and according to the other rules of the word, then the laws
+of princes bind not absolutely, but only in case the neglecting of them
+cannot stand with the law of charity and the rules of the word; but the
+former hath been evinced and made good, therefore the latter necessarily
+followeth.
+
+5. If the laws of princes could bind absolutely and simply, so that in no
+case, without offending God and wounding our conscience, we could neglect
+them, this bond should arise either from their own authority, or from the
+matter and thing itself which is commanded, but from neither of these it
+can arise, therefore from nothing. It cannot arise from any authority
+which they have, for if, by their authority, we mean their princely
+pre-eminence and dignity, they are princes when they command things
+unlawful as well as when they command things lawful, and so if, because of
+their pre-eminence their laws do bind, then their unlawful ordinances do
+bind no less than if they were lawful; but if by their authority we mean
+the power which they have of God to make laws, this power is not absolute
+(as hath been said) but limited; therefore from it no absolute bond can
+arise, but this much at the most, that "kings on earth must be
+obeyed,(984) so far as they command in Christ."
+
+Neither yet can the bond be absolute in respect of the thing itself which
+is commanded.
+
+When princes publish the commandments of God, the things themselves bind
+whether they should command them or not, but we speak of such things as
+God's word hath left in their nature indifferent, and of such things we
+say, that if being enjoined by princes they did absolutely bind, then they
+should be in themselves immutably necessary, even secluding as well the
+laws of princes which enjoin them, as the end of order, decency, and
+edification, whereunto they are referred. To say no more, hath not Dr
+Forbesse told us in Calvin's words,(985) _Notatu dignum_, &c.? "It is
+worthy of observation, that human laws, whether they be made by the
+magistrate or by the church, howsoever they be necessary to be observed (I
+speak of such as are good and just), yet they do not, therefore, by
+themselves bind the conscience, because the whole necessity of observing
+them looketh to the general end, but consisteth not in the things
+commanded."
+
+6. Whatsoever bond of conscience is not confirmed and warranted by the
+word is, before God, no bond at all. But the absolute bond wherewith
+conscience is bound to the obedience of the laws of princes is not
+confirmed nor warranted by the word; therefore the proposition no man can
+deny, who acknowledged that none can have power or dominion over our
+consciences but God only, the great Lawgiver, who alone can save and
+destroy, James iv. 12. Neither doth any writer, whom I have seen, hold
+that princes have any power over men's consciences, but only that
+conscience is bound by the laws of princes, for this respect, because God,
+who hath power over our consciences, hath tied us to their laws. As to the
+assumption, he who denyeth it must give instance to the contrary. If those
+words of the Apostle be objected, Rom. xiii. 5, "Ye must needs be subject,
+not only for wrath, but also for conscience' sake."
+
+I answer, 1. The Apostle saith not that we must obey, but that we must be
+subject, for conscience' sake; and how oft shall we need to tell our
+opposites that subjection is one thing, and obedience another?
+
+2. If he had said that we must obey for conscience' sake, yet this could
+not have been expounded of an absolute bond of conscience, but only of an
+hypothetical bond, in case that which the magistrate commandeth cannot be
+omitted without breaking the law of charity. If it be said again, that we
+are not only bidden be subject, but likewise to obey magistrates, Tit.
+iii. 1: _Ans._ And who denyeth this? But still I ask, are we absolutely
+and always bound to obey magistrates? Nay, but only when they command such
+things as are according to the rules of the word, so that either they must
+be obeyed or the law of charity shall be broken; in this case, and no
+other, we are bidden obey.
+
+_Sect._ 31. Thus have we gained a principal point, viz., that the laws of
+princes bind not absolutely but conditionally, not _propter se_, but
+_propter aliud_. Whereupon it followeth, that except the breach of those
+ceremonial ordinances wherewith we are pressed include the breach of the
+law of charity, which is of a superior bond, we are not holden to obey
+them. Now that it is not the breach, but the obedience of those ordinances
+which violateth the law of charity, we have heretofore made manifest, and
+in this place we will add only one general: Whensoever the laws of princes
+about things ecclesiastical do bind the conscience conditionally, and
+because of some other law of a superior bond, which cannot be observed if
+they be transgressed (which is the only respect for which they bind, when
+they bind at all), then the things which they prescribe belong either to
+the conservation or purgation of religion; but the controverted ceremonies
+belong to neither of these, therefore the laws made thereanent bind not,
+because of some other law which is of a superior bond. As to the
+proposition, will any man say that princes have any more power than that
+which is expressed in the twenty-fifth article of the Confession of Faith,
+ratified in the first parliament of king James VI., which saith thus:
+"Moreover, to kings, princes, rulers, and magistrates, we affirm that
+chiefly and most principally, the conservation and the purgation of the
+religion appertains, so that not only they are appointed for civil policy,
+but also for maintenance of the true religion, and for suppressing of
+idolatry and superstition whatsoever?" _Hoc nomine_, saith Calvin,(986)
+_maxime laudantur sancti reges in scriptura, quod Dei cultum corruptum vel
+eversum restituerint, vel curam gesserint religionis, ut sub illis pura et
+incolumis floreret_. The twenty-first Parliament of king James, holden at
+Edinburgh 1612, in the ratification of the acts and conclusions of the
+General Assembly, kept in Glasgow 1610, did innovate and change some words
+of that oath of allegiance which the General Assembly, in reference to the
+conference kept 1751, ordained to be given to the person provided to any
+benefice with cure, in the time of his admission, by the ordinate. For the
+form of the oath, set down by the Act of the Assembly, beginneth thus: "I,
+A. B., now nominate and admitted to the kirk of D., utterly testify and
+declare in my conscience, that the right excellent, right high, and mighty
+prince, James VI., by the grace of God king of Scots, is the only lawful
+supreme governor of this realm, as well in things temporal as in the
+conservation and purgation of religion," &c. But the form of the oath set
+down by the Act of Parliament beginneth thus: "I, A. B., now nominate and
+admitted to the kirk of D., testify and declare in my conscience, that the
+right excellent, &c., is the only lawful supreme governor of this realm,
+as well in matters spiritual and ecclesiastical, as in things temporal,"
+&c. Yet I demand, whether or not do the _matters spiritual and
+ecclesiastical_, of which the Act of Parliament speaketh, or those _all
+spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes_, of which the English oath
+of supremacy speaketh, comprehend any other thing than is comprehended
+under _the conservation and purgation of religion_, whereof the Act of
+Assembly speaketh? If it be answered affirmatively, it will follow that
+princes have power to destruction, and not to edification only; for
+whatsoever may edify or profit the church, pertaineth either to the
+conservation or the purgation of religion. If negatively, then it cannot
+be denied that the conservation and purgation of religion do comprehend
+all the power which princes have in things ecclesiastical.
+
+_Sect._ 32. Now to the assumption. And first, that the controverted
+ceremonies pertain not to the conservation of religion, but contrariwise
+to the hurt and prejudice of the same, experience hath, alas! made it too
+manifest; for O what a doleful decay of religion have they drawn with them
+in this land! Let them who have seen Scotland in her first glory tell how
+it was then, and how it is now. Idle and idol-like bishopping hath shut
+too the door of painful and profitable catechising.(987) The keeping of
+some festival days is set up instead of the thankful commemoration of
+God's inestimable benefits, howbeit the festivity of Christmas hath
+hitherto served more to bacchanalian lasciviousness than to the
+remembrance of the birth of Christ.(988) The kneeling down upon the knees
+of the body hath now come in place of that humiliation of the soul
+wherewith worthy communicants addressed themselves unto the holy table of
+the Lord; and, generally, the external show of these fruitless observances
+hath worn out the very life and power of religion. Neither have such
+effects ensued upon such ceremonies among us only, but let it be observed
+everywhere else, if there be not least substance and power of godliness
+among them who have most ceremonies, whereunto men have, at their
+pleasure, given some sacred use and signification in the worship of God;
+and most substance among them who have fewest shows of external rites. No
+man of sound judgment (saith Beza(989)) will deny, _Jesum Christum quo
+nudior_, &c., "that Jesus Christ, the more naked he be, is made the more
+manifest to us; whereas, contrariwise, all false religions use by certain
+external gesturings to turn away men from divine things." Zanchius saith
+well of the surplice and other popish ceremonies,(990) _Quod haec nihil ad
+pietatem accendendam, multum autem ad restinguendam valeant_.
+Bellarmine,(991) indeed, pleadeth for the utility of ceremonies, as things
+belonging to the conservation of religion. His reason is, because they set
+before our senses such an external majesty and splendour, whereby they
+cause the more reverence. This he allegeth for the utility of the
+ceremonies of the church of Rome. And I would know what better reason can
+be alleged for the utility of ours. But if this be all, we throw back the
+argument, because the external majesty and splendour of ceremonies doth
+greatly prejudge and obscure the spirit and life of the worship of God,
+and diverteth the minds of men from adverting unto the same, which we have
+offered to be tried by common experience. Durand himself, for as much as
+he hath written in the defence of ceremonies, in his unreasonable
+_Rationale_, yet he maketh this plain confession:(992) _Sane in primitiva
+ecclesia, sacrificium fiebat in vasis ligneis et vestibus communibus: tunc
+enim erant lignei calices et aurei sacerdotes: nunc vero e contra est._
+Behold what followeth upon the majesty and splendour which ceremonies
+carry with them, and how religion, at its best and first estate, was
+without the same!
+
+_Sect._ 33. Neither yet do the ceremonies in question belong to the
+purgation of religion; for wheresoever religion is to be purged in a
+corrupted church, all men know that purgation standeth in putting
+something away, not in keeping it still; in voiding somewhat, nor in
+retaining it; so that a church is not purged, but left unpurged, when the
+unnecessary monuments of bypast superstition are still preserved and kept
+in the same. And as for the church of Scotland, least of all could there
+be any purgation of it intended by the resuming of those ceremonies; for
+such was the most glorious and ever memorable reformation of Scotland,
+that it was far better purged than any other neighbour church. And of Mr
+Hooker's jest we may make good earnest; for, in very deed, as the
+reformation of Geneva did pass the reformation of Germany, so the
+reformation of Scotland did pass that of Geneva.
+
+_Sect._ 34. Now hitherto we have discoursed of the power of princes, in
+making of laws about things which concern the worship of God; for this
+power it is which our opposites allege for warrant, of the controverted
+ceremonies, wherefore to have spoken of it is sufficient for our present
+purpose. Nevertheless, because there are also other sorts of
+ecclesiastical things beside the making of laws, such as the vocation of
+men of ecclesiastical order, the convocation and moderation of councils,
+the judging and deciding of controversies about faith, and the use of the
+keys, in all which princes have some place and power of intermeddling, and
+a mistaking in one may possibly breed a mistaking in all; therefore I
+thought good here to digress, and of these also to add somewhat, so far as
+princes have power and interest in the same.
+
+
+
+ DIGRESSION I.
+
+
+OF THE VOCATION OF MEN OF ECCLESIASTICAL ORDER.
+
+
+In the vocation and calling of ecclesiastical persons, a prince ought to
+carry himself _ad modum procurantis speciem, non designantis individuum_.
+Which shall be more plainly and particularly understood in these
+propositions which follow.
+
+_Propos._ 1. Princes may and ought to provide and take care that men of
+those ecclesiastical orders, and those only which are instituted in the
+New Testament by divine authority, have vocation and office in the church.
+
+Now, beside the apostles, prophets, and evangelists, which were not
+ordained to be ordinary and perpetual offices in the church, there are but
+two ecclesiastical orders or degrees instituted by Christ in the New
+Testament,(993) viz., elders and deacons. _Excellenter canones duos tantum
+sacros ordines appellari censet, diaconatus scilicet et presbyteratus,
+quia hos solos primitiva ecclesia legitur habuisse, et de his solis
+preceptum apostoli habemus_, saith the Master of sentences.(994) As for
+the order and decree of bishops superior to that of elders, that there is
+no divine ordinance nor institution for it, it is not only holden by
+Calvin, Beza, Bucer, Martyr, Sadeel, Luther, Chemnitius, Gerhard,
+Balduine, the Magdeburgians, Musculus, Piscator, Hemmingius, Zanchius,
+Polanus, Junius, Pareus, Fennerus, Danaeus, Morney, Whittakers, Willets,
+Perkins, Cartwright, the Professors of Leyden, and the far greatest part
+of writers in reformed churches, but also by Jerome, who, upon Tit. i.,
+and in his epistle to Evagrius, speaketh so plainly, that the Archbishop
+of Spalato is driven to say,(995) _Deserimus in hac parte Hieronymum,
+neque ei in his dictis assentimus_; also by Ambrose on 1 Tim. iii.;
+Augustine in his Book of Questions out of both Testaments, quest. 101;
+Chrysostom on 1 Tim. iii.; Isidore, dist. 21, cap. 1; the Canon Law, dist.
+93, cap. 24, and dist. 95, cap. 5; Lombard., lib. 4, dist. 24. And after
+him, by many schoolmen, such as Aquinas, Alensis, Albertus, Bonaventura,
+Richardus, and Dominicus Soto, all mentioned by the Archbishop of Spalato,
+lib. 2, cap. 4, num. 25. Gerhard(996) citeth for the same judgment,
+Anselmus, Sedulius, Primasius, Theophylactus, Oecumenius, the Council of
+Basil, Arelatensis, J. Parisiensis, Erasmus, Medina, and Cassander, all
+which authors have grounded that which they say upon Scripture; for beside
+that Scripture maketh no difference of order and degree betwixt bishops
+and elders, it showeth also that they are one and the same order. For in
+Ephesus and Crete, they who were made elders were likewise made bishops,
+Acts xx. 17, 28; Tit. i. 5, 7. And the Apostle, Phil. i. 1, divideth the
+whole ministry in the church of Philippi into two orders, bishops and
+deacons. Moreover, 1 Tim. iii., he giveth order only for bishops and
+deacons, but saith nothing of a third order. Wherefore it is manifest,
+that beside those two orders of elders and deacons, there is no other
+ecclesiastical order which hath any divine institution, or necessary use
+in the church; and princes should do well to apply their power and
+authority to the extirpation and rooting out of popes, cardinals,
+patriarchs, primates, archbishops, bishops, suffragans, abbots, deans,
+vice-deans, priors, archdeacons, subdeacons, abbots, chancellors,
+chantors, subchantors, exorcists, monks, eremites, acoloths, and all the
+rabble of popish orders, which undo the church, and work more mischief in
+the earth than can be either soon seen or shortly told.
+
+But, contrariwise, princes ought to establish and maintain in the church,
+elders and deacons, according to the apostolical institution. Now elders
+are either such as labour in the word and doctrine, or else such as are
+appointed for discipline only. They who labour in the word and doctrine
+are either such as do only teach, and are ordained for conserving, in
+schools and seminaries of learning, the purity of Christian doctrine, and
+the true interpretation of Scripture, and for detecting and confuting the
+contrary heresies and errors, whom the Apostle calleth doctors or
+teachers; or else they are such as do not only teach, but also have a more
+particular charge to watch over the flock, to seek that which is lost, to
+bring home that which wandereth, to heal that which is diseased, to bind
+up that which is broken, to visit every family, to warn every person, to
+rebuke, to comfort, &c., whom the Apostle called sometimes pastors, and
+sometimes bishops or overseers. The other sort of elders are ordained only
+for discipline and church government, and for assisting of the pastors in
+ruling the people, overseeing their manners, and censuring their faults.
+That this sort of elders is instituted by the Apostle, it is put out of
+doubt, not alone by Calvin, Beza, and the divines of Geneva, but also by
+Chemnitius (_Exam._ part 2, p. 218), Gerhard (_Loc. Theol._, tom. 6, p.
+363, 364), Zanchius (in 4 _Proec._, col. 727), Martyr (in 1 Cor. xii. 28),
+Bullinger (in 1 Tim. v. 17), Junius (_Animad. in Bell._, contr. 5, lib. 1,
+cap. 2), Polanus (_Synt._, lib. 7, cap. 11), Pareus (in Rom. xii. 8; 1
+Cor. xii. 28), Cartwright (on 1 Tim. v. 17), the Professors of Leyden
+(_Syn. Pur. Theol._ disp. 42, thes. 20), and many more of our divines, who
+teach that the Apostle, 1 Tim. v. 17, directly implieth that there were
+some elders who ruled well, and yet laboured not in the word and doctrine;
+and those elders he meaneth by them that rule, Rom. xii. 8; and by
+_governments_, 1 Cor. xii. 28, where the Apostle saith not, _helps in
+governments_, as our new English translation corruptly readeth, but
+_helps, governments_, &c. plainly putting governments for a different
+order from helps or deacons. Of these elders(997) speaketh Ambrose,(998)
+as Dr Fulk also understandeth him,(999) showing that with all nations
+eldership is honourable; wherefore the synagogue also, and afterwards the
+church, hath had some elders of the congregation, without whose council
+and advice nothing was done in the church; and that he knew not by what
+negligence this had grown out of use, except it had been by the
+sluggishness of the teachers, or rather their pride, whilst they seemed to
+themselves to be something, and so did arrogate the doing of all by
+themselves.
+
+Deacons were instituted by the apostles(1000) for collecting, receiving,
+keeping, and distributing ecclesiastical goods, which were given and
+dedicated for the maintenance of ministers, churches, schools, and for the
+help and relief of the poor, the stranger, the sick, and the weak; also
+for furnishing such things as are necessary to the ministration of the
+sacrament.(1001) Besides which employments, the Scripture hath assigned
+neither preaching, nor baptising, nor any other ecclesiastical function to
+ordinary deacons.
+
+_Propos._ 2. Princes, in their dominions, ought to procure and effect,
+that there be never wanting men qualified and fit for those ecclesiastical
+functions and charges which Christ hath ordained, and that such men only
+be called, chosen, and set apart for the same.
+
+There are two things contained in this proposition. 1. That princes ought
+to procure that the church never want men qualified and gifted for the
+work and service of the holy ministry, for which end and purpose they
+ought to provide and maintain schools and colleges, entrusted and
+committed to the rule and oversight of orthodox, learned, godly, faithful,
+and diligent masters, that so qualified and able men may be still
+furnished and sent to take care that the ministers of the church neither
+want due reverence, 1 Tim. v. 17; Heb. xiii. 17, nor sufficient
+maintenance, 1 Cor. ix., that so men be not scarred from the service of
+the ministry, but rather encouraged unto the same, 2 Chron. xxxi. 4.
+
+2. That princes ought also to take order and course, that well-qualified
+men, and no others, be advanced and called to bear charge and office in
+the church, for which purpose they should cause not one disdainful
+prelate, but a whole presbytery or company of elders, to take trial of him
+who is to be taken into the number of preaching elders, and to examine
+well the piety of his life, the verity of his doctrine, and his fitness to
+teach. And further, that due trial may be continually had of the growth or
+decay of the graces and utterance of every pastor, it is the part of
+princes to enjoin the visitation of particular churches, and the keeping
+of other presbyterial meetings, likewise the assembling of provincial, and
+national synods, for putting order to such things as have not been helped
+in the particular presbyteries. And as for the other sort of elders,
+together with deacons, we judge the ancient order of this church to have
+been most convenient for providing of well-qualified men for those
+functions and offices; for the eighth head of the First Book of
+Discipline, touching the election of elders and deacons, ordaineth that
+only men of best knowledge and cleanest life be nominate to be in
+election, and that their names be publicly read to the whole church by the
+minister, giving them advertisement that from among them must be chosen
+elders and deacons, that if any of these nominate be noted with public
+infamy, he ought to be repelled; and that if any man know others of better
+qualities within the church than those that be nominate, they shall be put
+in election, that the church may have the choice.
+
+If these courses, whereof we have spoken, be followed by Christian
+princes, they shall, by the blessing of God, procure that the church shall
+be served with able and fit ministers; but though thus they may _procurare
+speciem_, yet they may not _designare individuum_, which now I am to
+demonstrate.
+
+_Propos._ 3. Nevertheless,(1002) princes may not design nor appoint such
+or such particular men to the charge of such or such particular churches,
+or to the exercise of such or such ecclesiastical functions, but ought to
+provide that such an order and form be kept in the election and ordination
+of the ministers of the church, as is warranted by the example of the
+apostles and primitive church.
+
+The vocation of a minister in the church is either inward or outward. The
+inward calling which one must have in finding himself, by the grace of
+God, made both able and willing to serve God and his church faithfully in
+the holy ministry, lieth not open to the view of men, and is only manifest
+to him from whom nothing can be hid; the outward calling is made up of
+election and ordination: that signified in Scripture by _cheirotonia_ this
+by _cheirothesia_ concerning which things we say with Zanchius,(1003)
+_Magistratus_, &c.: "It pertaineth to a Christian magistrate and prince to
+see for ministers unto his churches. But how? Not out of his own
+arbitrement, but as God's word teacheth; therefore let the Acts of the
+Apostles and the epistles of Paul be read, how ministers were elected and
+ordained, and let them follow that form."
+
+The right of election pertaineth to the whole church, which as it is
+maintained by foreign divines who write of the controversies with Papists,
+and as it was the order which this church prescribed in the Books of
+Discipline, so it is commended unto us by the example of the apostles, and
+of the churches planted by them. Joseph and Matthias were chosen and
+offered to Christ by the whole church, being about 120 persons, Acts i.
+15, 23; the apostles required the whole church and multitude of disciples,
+to choose out from among them seven men to be deacons, Acts vi. 2, 3; the
+Holy Ghost said to the whole church at Antioch, being assembled together
+to minister unto the Lord, "Separate me Barnabas and Saul," Acts xiii. 1,
+2; the whole church chose Judas and Silas to be sent to Antioch, Acts xv.
+22; the brethren who travelled in the church's affairs were chosen by the
+church, and are called the church's messengers, 2 Cor. viii. 19, 23; such
+men only were ordained elders by Paul and Barnabas who were chosen and
+approved by the whole church, their suffrages being signified by the
+lifting up of their hands, Acts xiv. 23. Albeit, Chrysostom and other
+ecclesiastical writers use the word _cheirotonia_ for ordination and
+imposition of hands, yet when they take it in this sense, they speak it
+figuratively and synecdochically, as Junius showeth.(1004) For these two,
+election by most voices, and ordination by laying on of hands, were joined
+together, did cohere, as an antecedent and a consequent, whence the use
+obtained, that the whole action should be signified by one word, _per
+modum intellectus_, collecting the antecedent from the consequent, and the
+consequent from the antecedent. Nevertheless, according to the proper and
+native signification of the word, it noteth the signifying of a suffrage
+or election by the lifting up of the hand, for _cheimotonehin_ is no other
+thing nor _chehiras tehinein_ or _hanatehineiu_ to lift or hold up the
+hands in sign of a suffrage; and so Chrysostom himself useth the word when
+he speaketh properly, for he saith that the senate of Rome took upon him
+_cheirosoiehin theohne_; that is (as D. Potter turneth his words(1005)),
+to make gods by most voices.
+
+Bellarmine(1006) reckoneth out three significations of the word
+_cheirosoiehin_: 1. To choose by suffrages; 2. Simply to choose which way
+soever it be; 3. To ordain by imposition of hands. Junius answereth
+him,(1007) that the first is the proper signification; the second is
+metaphorical; the third synecdochical.
+
+Our English translators, 2 Cor. i. 19, have followed the metaphorical
+signification, and in this place, Acts xiv. 23, the synecdochical. But
+what had they to do either with a metaphor or a synecdoche when the text
+may bear the proper sense? Now that Luke, in this place, useth the word in
+the proper sense, and not in the synecdochical, Gerhard(1008) proveth from
+the words which he subjoineth, to signify the ordaining of those elders by
+the laying on of hands; for he saith that they prayed, and fasted, and
+commended them to the Lord, in which words he implieth the laying on of
+hands upon them, as may be learned from Acts vi. 6, "When they had prayed,
+they laid their hands on them;" Acts xiii. 3, "When they had fasted, and
+prayed, and laid their hands on them;" so Acts viii. 15, 17, prayer and
+laying on of hands went together. Wherefore by _cheirotouhesagtes_ Luke
+pointeth at the election of those elders by voices, being, in the
+following words, to make mention of their ordination by imposition of
+hands.
+
+Cartwright(1009) hath for the same point other weighty reasons: "It is
+absurd (saith he) to imagine that the Holy Ghost, by Luke, speaking with
+the tongues of men, that is to say, to their understanding, should use a
+word in that signification in which it was never used before his time by
+any writer, holy or profane, for how could he then be understood, if using
+the note and name they used, he should have fled from the signification
+whereunto they used it, unless therefore his purpose was to write that
+which none could read? It must needs be that as he wrote so he meant the
+election by voices. And if Demosthenes, for knowledge in the tongue, would
+have been ashamed to have noted the laying down of hands by a word that
+signifieth the lifting of them up, they do the Holy Ghost (which taught
+Demosthenes to speak) great injury in using this impropriety and
+strangeness of speech unto himself, which is yet more absurd, considering
+that there were both proper words to utter the laying on of hands by, and
+the same also was used in the translation of the LXX, which Luke, for the
+Gentiles' sake, did, as it may seem (where he conveniently could), most
+follow. And yet it is most of all absurd that Luke, which straiteneth
+himself to keep the words of the seventy interpreters, when as he could
+have otherwise uttered things in better terms than they did, should here
+forsake the phrase wherewith they noted the laying on of hands, being most
+proper and natural to signify the same. The Greek Scholiast also, and the
+Greek Ignatius, do plainly refer this word to the choice of the church by
+voices."
+
+But it is objected, that Luke saith not of the whole church, but only of
+Paul and Barnabas, that they made them by voices elders in every city.
+
+_Ans._ But how can one imagine that betwixt them two alone the matter went
+to suffrages? Election by most voices, or the lifting up of the hand in
+taking of a suffrage, had place only among a multitude assembled together.
+Wherefore we say with Junius,(1010) that {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} is both a common
+and a particular action whereby a man chooseth, by his own suffrage in
+particular, and likewise with others in common, so that in one and the
+same action we cannot divide those things which are so joined together.
+
+From that which hath been said, it plainly appeareth that the election of
+ministers, according to the apostolic institution, pertaineth to the whole
+body of that church where they are to serve; and that this was the
+apostolic and primitive practice, it is acknowledged even by some of the
+Papists, such as Lorinus, Salmeron, and Gaspar Sanctius, all upon Acts
+xiv. 23. The canon law(1011) itself commendeth this form and saith,
+_Electio clericorum est petitio plebis_. And was he not a popish
+archbishop(1012) who condescended that the city of Magedeburg should have
+_jus vocandi ac constituendi ecclesiae ministros_? Neither would the city
+accept of peace without this condition.
+
+That in the ancient church, for a long time, the election of ministers
+remained in the power of the whole church or congregation, it is evident
+from Cypr., lib. 1, epist. 4, 68; August., epist. 106; Leo I., epist. 95;
+Socrat., lib. 4, cap. 30; and lib. 6, cap. 2; Possidon, _in Vita Aug._,
+cap. 4. The testimonies and examples themselves, for brevity's cause, I
+omit. As for the thirteenth canon of the Council of Laodicea, which
+forbiddeth to permit to the people the election of such as were to
+minister at the altar, we say with Osiander,(1013) that this canon cannot
+be approved, except only in this respect, that howbeit the people's
+election and consent be necessary, yet the election is not wholly and
+solely to be committed to them, excluding the judgment and voice of the
+clergy. And that this is all which the Council meant, we judge with
+Calvin(1014) and Gerhard.(1015) That this is the true interpretation of
+the canon, Junius(1016) proveth both by the words {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~},
+_permittere turbis_, for {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} signifieth to quit and leave the whole
+matter to the fidelity and will of others; and, likewise, by the common
+end and purpose of that Council which was to repress certain faults of the
+people which had prevailed through custom. Indeed, if the whole matter
+were altogether left to the people, contentions and confusions might be
+feared; but whilst we plead for the election of the people, we add,
+
+1. Let the clergy of the adjacent bounds, in their presbyterial assembly,
+try and judge who are fit for the ministry; thereafter let a certain
+number of those who are by them approven as fit, be offered and propounded
+to the vacant church, that a free election may be made of some one of that
+number, providing always that if the church or congregation have any real
+reason for refusing the persons nominate and offered unto them, and for
+choosing of others, their lawful desires be herein yielded unto.
+
+2. Even when it comes to the election,(1017) yet _populus non solus
+judicat, sed proeunte et moderante actionem clero et presbyterio_, let the
+elders of the congregation, together with some of the clergy concurring
+with them, moderate the action, and go before the body of the people.
+
+Would to God that these things were observed by all who desire the worthy
+office of a pastor; for neither the patron's presentation, nor the
+clergy's nomination, examination and recommendation, nor the bishop's
+laying on of hands and giving of institution, nor all these put together,
+can make up to a man's calling to be a pastor to such or such a particular
+flock, without their own free election. Even, as in those places where
+princes are elected, the election gives them _jus ad rem_ (as they speak),
+without which the inauguration can never give them _jus in re_; so a man
+hath, from his election, power to be a pastor so far as concerneth _jus ad
+rem_, and ordination only applieth him to the actual exercising of his
+pastoral office, which ordination ought to be given unto him only who is
+elected, and that because he is elected. And of him who is obtruded and
+thrust upon a people, without their own election, it is well said by
+Zanchius, that he can neither with a good conscience exercise his
+ministry, nor yet be profitable to the people, because they will not
+willingly hear him, nor submit themselves unto him.
+
+Furthermore, because patronages and presentation to benefices do often
+prejudge the free and lawful election which God's word craveth, therefore
+the Second Book of Discipline, chap. 12, albeit it permitteth and alloweth
+the ancient patrons of prebendaries, and such benefices as have not _curam
+animarum_, to reserve their patronages, and to dispone thereupon to
+benefices that have _curam animarum_, may have no place in this light of
+reformation. Not that we think a man presented to a benefice that hath
+_curam animarum_ cannot be lawfully elected, but because of the often and
+ordinary abuse of this unnecessary custom, we could wish it abolished by
+princes.
+
+It followeth to speak of ordination, wherein, with Calvin,(1018)
+Junius,(1019) Gersom Burer,(1020) and other learned men, we distinguish
+betwixt the act of it and the rite of it. The act of ordination standeth
+in the mission to the deputation of a man to an ecclesiastical function,
+with power and authority to perform the same; and thus are pastors
+ordained when they are sent to a people with power to preach the word,
+minister the sacraments, and exercise ecclesiastical discipline among
+them. For "How shall they preach except they be sent?" Rom. x. 15. Unto
+which mission or ordination neither prayer nor imposition of hands, nor
+any other of the church's rites, is essential and necessary, as the
+Archbishop of Spalato showeth,(1021) who placeth the essential act of
+ordination in _missione potestativa_, or a simple deputation and
+application of a minister to his ministerial function with power to
+perform it. This may be done, saith he, by word alone, without any other
+ceremony, in such sort that the fact should hold, and the ordination thus
+given should be valid enough. When a man is elected by the suffrages of
+the church, then his ordination is _quasi solennis missio in possessionem
+honoris illius, ex decreto_, saith Junius.(1022) Chemnitius noteth,(1023)
+that when Christ, after he had chosen his twelve apostles, ordained them
+to preach the gospel, to cast out devils, and to heal diseases, we read of
+no ceremony used in this ordination, but only that Christ gave them power
+to preach, to heal, and to cast out devils, and so sent them away to the
+work. And howsoever the church hath for order and decency used some rite
+in ordination, yet there is no such rite to be used with opinion of
+necessity, or as appointed by Christ or his apostles. When our writers
+prove against Papists that order is no sacrament, this is one of their
+arguments, that there is no rite instituted in the New Testament to be
+used in the giving of orders. Yet because imposition of hands was used in
+ordination not only by the apostles, who had power to give extraordinarily
+the gifts of the Holy Ghost, but likewise by the presbytery or company of
+elders; and Timothy did not only receive the gift that was in him, by the
+laying on of Paul's hands. 2 Tim. i. 16, as the mean, but also with the
+laying on of the hands of the presbytery, 1 Tim. iv. 14, as the rite and
+sign of his ordination; therefore the church, in the after ages, hath
+still kept and used the same rite in ordination, which rite shall, with
+our leave, be yet retained in the church, providing, 1. It be not used
+with opinion of necessity; for that the church hath full liberty either to
+use any other decent rite (not being determined by the word to any one),
+or else to use no rite at all, beside a public declaration that the person
+there presented is called and appointed to serve the church in the
+pastoral office, together with exhortation to the said person, and the
+commending of him to the grace of God, the church not being tied by the
+word to use any rite at all in the giving of ordination. 2. That it be not
+used as a sacred significant ceremony to represent and signify either the
+delivering to the person ordained authority to preach and to minister the
+sacraments, or the consecration and mancipation of him to the holy
+ministry; or, lastly, God's bestowing of the gifts of his Spirit upon him,
+together with his powerful protection and gracious preservation in the
+performing of the works of his calling, but only as a moral sign, solemnly
+to assign and point out the person ordained; which, also, was one of the
+ends and uses whereunto this rite of laying on of hands was applied by the
+apostles themselves, as Chemnitius showeth.(1024) And so Joshua was
+designed and known to the people of Israel as the man appointed to be the
+successor of Moses, by that very sign, that Moses laid his hands on him,
+Deut. xxxiv.
+
+As a sacred significant ceremony we may not use it, 1. Because it hath
+been proved,(1025) that men may never, at their pleasure, ascribe to any
+rite whatsoever, a holy signification of some mystery of faith or duty of
+piety. The apostles, indeed, by laying on of their hands, did signify
+their giving of the gift of the Holy Ghost; but, now, as the miracle, so
+the mystery hath ceased, and the church not having such power to make the
+signification answer to the sign, if now a sacred or mystical
+signification be placed in the rite, it is but an empty and void sign, and
+rather minical than mystical. 2. All such sacred rites as have been
+notoriously abused to superstition, if they have no necessary use, ought
+to be abolished, as we have also proven;(1026) therefore, if imposition of
+hands in ordination be accounted and used as a sacred rite, and as having
+a sacred signification (the use of it not being necessary), it becometh
+unlawful, by reason of the bygone and present superstitious abuse of the
+same in Popery.
+
+Now the right and power of giving ordination to the ministers of the
+church belongeth primarily and wholly to Christ, who communicateth the
+same with his bride the church. Both the bridegroom for his part, and the
+bride for her part, have delivered this power of ordination to the
+presbytery _jure_ DIVINO. Afterward the presbytery conferred, _jure
+humano_, this power upon them, who were specially called bishops, whence
+the tyrannical usurpation of bishops hath in process followed, claiming
+the proper right and ordinary position of that which at first they had
+only by free concession; and thus that great divine, Franciscus
+Junius,(1027) deriveth the power of ordination. All which, that it may be
+plain unto us, let us observe four several passages.
+
+1. The whole church(1028) hath the power of ordination communicated to her
+from Christ, to whom it wholly pertaineth; for, 1. It is most certain (and
+among our writers agreed upon) that, to the whole church collectively
+taken, Christ hath delivered the keys of the kingdom of heaven with power
+to use the same, promising that whosoever the church bindeth on earth,
+shall be bound in heaven, and whosoever she looseth on earth, shall be
+loosed in heaven, Matt. xviii. 18; therefore he hath also delivered unto
+the whole church power to call and ordain ministers for using the keys,
+otherwise the promise might be made void, because the ministers which she
+now hath may fail. 2. Christ hath appointed a certain and an ordinary way
+how the church may provide herself of ministers, and so may have ever in
+herself the means of grace and comfort sufficient to herself, according to
+that of the Apostle, 1 Cor. iii. 21, 22, "All things are yours, whether
+Paul or Apollos," &c. But if she had not the power of ordaining ministers
+unto herself when she needeth, then might she sometimes be deprived of
+such an ordinary and certain way of providing herself. 3. When the
+ministry of the church faileth or is wanting, Christian people have power
+to exercise that act of ordination which is necessary to the making of a
+minister. Dr Fulk(1029) showeth out of Ruffinus and Theodoret, that
+AEdesius and Frumentius, being but private men, by preaching of the gospel,
+converted a great nation of the Indians; and that the nation of the
+Iberians being converted by a captive woman, the king and the queen became
+teachers of the gospel to the people. And might not, then, the church in
+those places both elect and ordain ministers?
+
+2. The church hath, by divine institution, delivered the power of
+ordaining ordinary ministers to the presbytery, whereof the church
+consisteth _repraesentative_. And so saith Pareus,(1030) that the power of
+mission (which is _ordination_) belongeth to the presbytery. _Scriptura_,
+saith Balduine,(1031) _ordinationem tribuit toti presbyterio, non seorsim
+episcopo_. With whom say the Professors of Leyden in like manner.(1032)
+Now when the divines of Germany and Belgia speak of a presbytery, they
+understand such a company as hath in it both those two sorts of elders
+which we speak of, viz., some who labour in the word and doctrine, whom
+the Apostle calleth bishops, and others who labour only in discipline. The
+apostolic and primitive times knew neither parishional nor diocesan
+churches. Christians lived then in cities only, not in villages, because
+of the persecution; and it is to be remembered, that in Rome, Corinth,
+Ephesus, Colosse, Philippi, Thessalonica, and such other cities inhabited
+by Christians, there were more pastors than one. The Apostle called unto
+him the elders (not elder) of the church of Ephesus, Acts xx. 17; he
+writeth to the bishops (not bishop) of the church at Philippi, Phil. i. 1;
+he biddeth the Thessalonians know them (not him) which laboured among
+them, 2 Thess. v. 12. Now that number of pastors or bishops which was in
+one city, did in common govern all the churches within the city, and there
+was not any one pastor who, by himself, governed a certain part of the
+city particularly assigned to his charge, to which purpose the Apostle
+exhorteth the elders of the church at Ephesus, to take heed to all the
+flock, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH YPOGEGRAMMENI~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH YPOGEGRAMMENI~}, Acts xx. 28. And to the same purpose it is said by
+Jerome,(1033) that before schemes and divisions were, by the devil's
+instigation, made in religion, _communi presbyterorum consilio ecclesiae
+gubernabantur_.
+
+This number of preaching elders in one city, together with those elders
+which, in the same city, laboured for discipline only, made up that
+company which the Apostle,(1034) 1 Tim. iv. 14, calleth a presbytery, and
+which gave ordination to the ministers of the church. To the whole
+presbytery, made up of those two sorts of elders, belonged the act of
+ordination, which is mission, howbeit the right,(1035) which was
+imposition of hands, belonged to those elders alone which laboured in the
+word and doctrine. And so we are to understand that which the Apostle
+there saith of the presbytery's laying on of hands upon Timothy. As for Dr
+Downame's(1036) two glosses upon that place, which he borroweth from
+Bellarmine, and whereby he thinketh to elude our argument, we thank Dr
+Forbesse(1037) for confuting them. _Quod autem_, &c.: "But whereas (saith
+he) some have expounded the presbytery in this place to be a company of
+bishops, except by bishops thou would understand presbyteries, it is a
+violent interpretation, and an insolent meaning, and whereas others have
+understood the degree itself of eldership, this cannot stand, for the
+degree hath not hands, but hands are men's." Wherefore the Doctor himself,
+by the presbytery whereof the Apostle speaketh, understandeth (as we do)
+_confessus presbyterorum_.
+
+But since we cannot find, in the apostles' times, any other presbytery or
+assembly of elders beside that which hath been spoken of, how cometh it,
+nay, some say that the church of Scotland, and other reformed churches,
+did appoint two sorts of presbyterial assemblies, one (which here we call
+sessions) wherein the pastor of the parish, together with those elders
+within the same, whom the Apostle calleth governments and presidents, put
+order to the government of that congregation, another (which here we
+presbyteries) wherein the pastors of sundry churches, lying near together,
+do assemble themselves? Which difficulty yet more increaseth, if it be
+objected that neither of these two doth in all points answer or conform
+itself unto that primitive form of presbytery whereof we speak. _Ans._ The
+division and multiplication of parishes, and the appointment of particular
+pastors to the peculiar oversight of particular flocks, together with the
+plantation of churches in villages as well as in cities, hath made it
+impossible for us to be served with that only one form of presbytery which
+was constitute in the apostles' times. But this difference of the times
+being (as it ought to be) admitted, for an inevitable cause of the
+differences of the former, both those two forms of presbyterial meetings
+appointed by the church of Scotland do not only necessarily result from
+that one apostolic form, but likewise (the actions of them both being laid
+together) do accomplish all these ordinary ecclesiastical functions which
+were by it performed.
+
+And first, Sessions have a necessary use, because the pastors and those
+elders who assist them in the governing of their flocks must, as well
+conjunctly as severally, as well publicly as privately, govern, admonish,
+rebuke, censure, &c. As for presbyteries, because the parishes being
+divided in most places, there is but one pastor in a parish, except there
+should be a meeting of a number of pastors out of divers parishes, neither
+could trial be well had of the growth or decay of the gifts, graces, and
+utterance of every pastor, for which purpose the ninth head of the First
+book of Discipline appointed the ministers of adjacent churches to meet
+together at convenient times, in towns and public places, for the exercise
+of prophecying and interpreting of Scripture, according to that form
+commended to the church at Corinth, 1 Cor. xiv. 29-32. For yet could the
+churches be governed by the common council and advice of presbyteries,
+which being necessary by apostolic institution, and being the foundation
+and ground of our presbyteries, it maketh them necessary too.
+
+3. After the golden age of the apostles was spent and away, presbyteries,
+finding themselves disturbed with emulations, contentions, and factions,
+for unity's sake, chose one of their number to preside among them, and to
+confer, in name of the rest, the rite and sign of initiation (which was
+imposition of hands) on them whom they ordained ministers. This honour did
+the presbyters yield to him who was specially and peculiarly called
+bishop, _jure humano_; yet the act of ordination they still reserved in
+their own power. And wheresoever the act doth thus remain in the power of
+the whole presbytery, the conferring of the outward sign or rite by one in
+the name of the rest, none of us condemneth, as may be seen in Beza,
+Didoclavius, and Gersom Bucer. Neither is there any more meant by
+Jerome(1038) when he saith, "What doth a bishop (ordination being
+excepted) which a presbyter may not do?" For, 1. He speaketh not of the
+act of ordination, which remained in the power of the presbytery, but of
+the outward sign or rite, which synedochically he calls ordination.(1039)
+2. He speaketh only of the custom of that time, and not of any divine
+institution; for that the imposition of hands pertained to the bishop
+alone, not by divine institution, but only by ecclesiastical custom,
+Junius proveth(1040) out of Tertullian, Jerome and Ambrose.
+
+4. Afterward bishops began to appropriate to themselves that power which
+pertained unto them _jure devoluto_, as if it had been their own _jure
+proprio_. Yet so that some vestiges of the ancient order have still
+remained; for both Augustine and Ambrose (whose words, most plain to this
+purpose, are cited by Dr Forbesse(1041)) testify that, in their time, in
+Alexandria and all Egypt, the presbyters gave ordination when a bishop was
+not present. The canon law(1042) ordaineth that, in giving of ordination,
+presbyters lay on their hands, together with the bishop's hands. And it is
+holden by many Papists (of whom Dr Forbesse(1043) allegeth some for the
+same point) that any simple presbyter (whom they call a priest) may, with
+the Pope's commandment or concession, give valid ordination. That which
+maketh them grant so much is, because they dare not deny that presbyters
+have the power of ordination _jure divino_. Yet saith Panormitanus,(1044)
+_Olim presbytery in communi regebant ecclesiam, et ordinabant sacradotes._
+The Doctor himself holdeth, that one simple presbyter howsoever having, by
+virtue of his presbyterial order, power to give ordination, _quod ad actum
+primum sive aptitudinem_, yet _quo ad exercitium_ cannot validly give
+ordination without a commission from the bishop or from the presbytery, if
+either there be no bishop, or else he be a heretic or wolf. But I would
+learn why may not the presbytery validly ordain, either by themselves, or
+by any one presbyter with commission and power from them, even where there
+is a bishop (and he no heretic) who consenteth not thereto; for the
+Doctor(1045) acknowledgeth, that not only _quo ad aptitudinem_, but even
+_quo ad plenariam ordinationis executionem_, the same power pertaineth to
+the presbytery _collegialiter_, which he allegeth (but proveth not) that
+the apostles gave to bishops _personaliter_.
+
+Now from all these things princes may learn how to reform their own and
+the prelates' usurpation, and how to reduce the orders and vocation of
+ecclesiastical persons unto conformity with the apostolic and primitive
+pattern, from which if they go on either to enjoin or to permit a
+departing, we leave them to be judged by the King of terrors.
+
+
+
+ DIGRESSION II.
+
+
+OF THE CONVOCATION AND MODERATION OF SYNODS.
+
+
+Touching the convocation of synods, we resolve with the Professors of
+Leyden,(1046) that if a prince do so much as tolerate the order and
+regiment of the church to be public, his consent and authority should be
+craved, and he may also design the time, place, and other circumstances;
+but much more,(1047) if he be a Christian and orthodox prince, should his
+consent, authority, help, protection, and safeguard be sought and granted.
+And that according to the example, both of godly kings in the Old
+Testament, and of Christian emperors and kings in the New.(1048) Chiefly,
+then, and justly(1049) the magistrate may and ought to urge and require
+synods, when they of the ecclesiastical order cease from doing their duty.
+_Veruntamen si contra_,(1050) &c. "Nevertheless (say they), if,
+contrariwise, the magistrate be an enemy and persecutor of the church and
+of true religion, or cease to do his duty; that is, to wit, in a manifest
+danger of the church, the church notwithstanding ought not to be wanting
+to herself, but ought to use the right and authority of convocation, which
+first and foremost remaineth with the rulers of the church, as may be
+seen, Acts xv."
+
+But that this be not thought a tenet of anti-episcopal writers alone, let
+us hear what is said by one of our greatest opposites:(1051) _Neque
+defendimus ita_, &c.: "Neither do we so defend that the right of
+convocating councils pertaineth to princes, as that the ecclesiastical
+prelates may no way either assemble themselves together by mutual consent,
+or be convocated by the authority of the metropolitan, primate, or
+patriarch. For the apostles did celebrate councils without any convocation
+of princes. So many councils that were celebrate before the first Nicea,
+were, without all doubt, gathered together by the means alone of
+ecclesiastical persons; for to whom directly the church is fully
+committed, they ought to bear the care of the church. Yet princes in some
+respect indirectly, for help and aid, chiefly then when the prelates
+neglect to convocate councils, or are destitute of power for doing of the
+same, of duty may, and use to convocate them." Where we see his judgment
+to be, that the power of convocating councils pertaineth directly to
+ecclesiastical persons, and to princes only indirectly, for that they
+ought to give help and aid to the convocation of the same, especially when
+churchmen either will not or cannot assemble themselves together. His
+reasons whereupon he groundeth his judgment are two, and those strong
+ones.
+
+1. The apostolical councils, Acts vi. 2; iv. 16, and so many as were
+assembled before the first council of Nice, were not convocated by
+princes, but by ecclesiastical persons without the leave of princes;
+therefore, in the like cases, the church ought to use the like liberty,
+that is, when there is need of synods, either for preventing or reforming
+some corruptions in the doctrine or policy of the church; and for avoiding
+such inconveniences as may impede the course of the gospel (princes in the
+meantime being hostile opposites to the truth of God and to the purity of
+religion), then to convocate the same without their authority and leave.
+
+2. The church is fully committed (and that directly) to the ministers whom
+Christ hath set to rule over the same; therefore they ought to take care
+and to provide for all her necessities as those who must give account, and
+be answerable to God for any hurt which she receiveth in things spiritual
+or ecclesiastical, for which (when they might) they did not provide a
+remedy, which being so, it followeth, that when princes will neither
+convocate synods, nor consent to the convocating of them, yet if the
+convocating of a synod be a necessary mean for healing of the church's
+hurt, and ecclesiastical persons be able (through the happy occasion of a
+fit opportunity) synodically to assemble themselves, in that case they
+ought by themselves to come together, unless one would say that princes
+alone, and not pastors, must give account to God how it hath gone with the
+church in matters spiritual and ecclesiastical.
+
+If it be objected that our divines maintain against Papists, that the
+right and power of convocating synods pertaineth to princes: _Ans._, And
+so say I; but for making the purpose more plain I add three directions: 1.
+In ordinary cases, and when princes are not enemies to the truth and
+purity of the gospel, ecclesiastical persons should not do well to
+assemble themselves together in a synod, except they be convocate with the
+authority or consent of princes. Yet, as Junius showeth,(1052) in
+extraordinary cases, and when the magistrate will not concur nor join with
+the church, the church may well assemble and come together beside his
+knowledge, and without his consent, for that extraordinary evils must have
+extraordinary remedies. 2. Ecclesiastical persons may convocate councils
+simply, and by a spiritual power and jurisdiction; but to convocate them
+by a temporal and coactive power, pertaineth to princes only.
+"Ecclesiastical power (saith the Archbishop of Spalato(1053)) may appoint
+and convocate councils; but yet the ecclesiastical power itself cannot,
+with any effect or working, compel bishops, especially if the bishops of
+another province, or kingdom, or patriarchship, be to be convocated. For
+because the church can work by her censures, and deprive them who refuse
+of her communion, if they come not, yet they shall not therefore come to
+the council if they contemn the censure; therefore that no man may be able
+to resist, it is necessary that they be called by a coactive authority,
+which can constrain them who gainstand, both with banishments and bodily
+punishments, and compel the bishops, not only of one province, but also of
+the whole kingdom or empire, to convene." 3. In the main and substantial
+respects, the convocations of councils pertaineth to the ministers of the
+church, that is, as councils are ecclesiastical meetings, for putting
+order to ecclesiastical matters, they ought to be assembled by the
+spiritual power of the ministers, whose part it is to espy and note all
+the misorders and abuses in the church, which must be righted; but because
+councils are such meetings as must have a certain place designed for them
+in the dominions and territories of princes, needing further, for their
+safe assembling, a certification of their princely protection; and,
+finally, it being expedient for the better success of councils, that
+Christian princes be present therein, either personal or by their
+commissioners, that they may understand the councils, conclusions, and
+decrees, and assenting unto the same, ratify and establish them by their
+regal and royal authority, because of these circumstances it is, that the
+consent and authority of Christian princes is, and ought to be, sought and
+expected for the assembling of synods.
+
+As for the right of presidency and moderation, we distinguish, with
+Junius,(1054) two sorts of it, both which have place in councils, viz.,
+the moderation of the ecclesiastical action, and the moderation of the
+human order; and with him we say, that in councils, the whole
+ecclesiastical action ought to be moderated by such a president as is
+elected for the purpose; even as Hosius, bishop of Corduba, was chosen to
+preside in the first council of Nice: which office agreeth not with
+princes; for in the point of propounding rightly the state of questions
+and things to be handled, and of containing the disputation in good order,
+_certe praesidere debet persona ecclesiastica, in sacris literis erudita_,
+saith the Archbishop of Spalato.(1055) The presiding and moderating in the
+human order, that is, by a coactive power to compass the turbulent, to
+avoid all confusion and contention, and to cause a peaceable proceeding
+and free deliberation, pertaineth indeed to princes, and so did
+Constantine preside in the same council of Nice.
+
+
+
+ DIGRESSION III.
+
+
+OF THE JUDGING OF CONTROVERSIES AND QUESTIONS OF FAITH.
+
+
+There is a twofold judgment which discerneth and judgeth of faith. The one
+absolute, whereby the Most High God, whose supreme authority alone bindeth
+us to believe whatsoever he propoundeth to be believed by us, hath in his
+written word pronounced, declared, and established, what he would have us
+to believe concerning himself or his worship; the other limited and
+subordinate, which is either public or private. That which is public is
+either ordinary or extraordinary. The ministerial or subordinate public
+judgment, which I call ordinary, is the judgment of every pastor or
+doctor, who, by reason of his public vocation and office, ought by his
+public ministry to direct and instruct the judgments of other men in
+matters of faith, which judgment of pastors and doctors is limited and
+restricted to the plain warrants and testimonies of Holy Scripture, they
+themselves being only the ambassadors(1056) of the Judge to preach and
+publish the sentence which he hath established, so that a pastor is not
+properly _judex_ but _index_. The subordinate public judgment, which is
+extraordinary, is the judgment of a council assembled for the more public
+and effectual establishment and declaration of one or more points of faith
+and heads of Christian doctrine, and that in opposition to all contrary
+heresy or error, which is broached and set a-foot in the church. From
+which council,(1057) no Christian man who is learned in the Scriptures may
+be excluded, but ought to be admitted to utter his judgment in the same;
+for in the indagation or searching out of a matter of faith, they are not
+the persons of men which give authority to their sayings, but the reasons
+and documents which every one bringeth for his judgment. The subordinate
+judgment, which I call private, is the judgment of discretion whereby
+every Christian,(1058) for the certain information of his own mind, and
+the satisfaction of his own conscience, may and ought to try and examine,
+as well the decrees of councils as the doctrines of particular pastors,
+and in so far to receive and believe the same, as he understandeth them to
+agree with the Scriptures.
+
+Besides these, there is no other kind of judgment which God hath allowed
+to men in matters of faith, which being first observed, we say next,
+concerning the part of princes, that when questions and controversies of
+faith are tossed in the church, that which pertaineth to them is, to
+convocate a council for the decision of the matter, civilly to moderate
+the same, by causing such an orderly and peaceable proceeding as is alike
+necessary in every grave assembly, whether of the church or of the
+commonwealth; and, finally, by their coactive temporal power to urge and
+procure that the decrees of the council be received, and the faith therein
+contained professed, by their subjects.
+
+But neither may they, by their own authority and without a council, decide
+any controverted matter of faith, nor yet having convocated a council, may
+they take upon them to command, rule, order, and dispose the disputes and
+deliberations according to their arbitrement; nor, lastly, may they, by
+virtue of their regal dignity, claim any power to examine the decrees
+concluded in the council, otherwise than by the judgment of private
+discretion which is common to every Christian.
+
+First, I say, they may not by themselves presume, publicly and judicially,
+to decide and define any matter of faith, which is questioned in the
+church; but this definition they ought to remit unto a lawful and free
+council. Ambrose would not come to the court to be questioned and judged
+by the emperor Valentinian in a matter of faith, whenever he heard that
+emperors judged bishops in matters of faith, seeing, if that were granted,
+it would follow that laymen should dispute and debate matters, and bishops
+hear, yea, that bishops should learn of laymen.
+
+The true ground of which refusal (clear enough in itself) is darkened by
+Dr Field,(1059) who allegeth, 1. That the thing which Valentinian took on
+him was, to judge of a thing already resolved in a general council called
+by Constantine, as if it had been free, and not yet judged of at all. 2.
+That Valentinian was known to be partial; that he was but a novice; and
+the other judges which he meant to associate himself suspected; but
+howsoever these circumstances might serve the more to justify Ambrose's
+not compearing to be judged in a matter of faith by Valentinian, yet the
+Doctor toucheth not that which is most considerable, namely, the reason
+which he alleged for his not compearing, because it hath been at no time
+heard of that emperors judged bishops in matters of faith, and if that
+were granted, it would follow that bishops should learn of laymen; which
+reason holdeth ever good, even though the thing hath not been formerly
+judged by a council.
+
+And, furthermore, if those (which the Doctor mentioneth) were the true
+reasons of his refusing to be judged by Valentinian, then why did he
+pretend another reason (whereof we have heard), and not rather defend
+himself with the real and true reason? Wherefore we gather, that the
+reason which made Ambrose refuse to be judged by him was no other than
+this, because he considered that princes, neither by themselves, nor by
+any whom they please to choose, may, without a lawfully assembled and free
+council, usurp a public judgment and decisive sentence in controversies of
+faith, which, if they arrogate to themselves, they far exceed the bounds
+of their vocation; for it is not said of princes, but of priests, that
+their lips should preserve knowledge, and that they should seek the law
+from their mouths, Mal. ii. 7. And the priests did Jehoshaphat set in
+"Jerusalem, for the judgment of the Lord, and for controversies," 2 Chron.
+xix. 8, 10, and for judging betwixt law and commandment, statutes and
+judgments.
+
+In the meanwhile we deny not but that in extraordinary cases, when lawful
+councils cannot be had, and when the clergy is universally corrupted
+through gross ignorance, perverse affections, and incorrigible negligence,
+in such a case the prince, notwithstanding the defect of the ordinary and
+regular judges, may yet, by the power of the civil sword, repress and
+punish so many as publish and spread such doctrines as both he and other
+Christians, by the judgment of discretion, plainly understand from
+Scripture to be heretical.
+
+Next, I say, that the prince, having assembled a council, may not take so
+much upon him as imperiously to command what he thinketh good in the
+disputes and deliberations, and to have everything ordered, disposed, and
+handled according to his mind. "To debate and define theological
+controversies, and to teach what is orthodoxal, what heretical, is the
+office of divines, yet, by a coactive authority, to judge this orthodox
+faith to be received by all, and heretical pravity to be rejected, is the
+office of kings, or the supreme magistrates, in every commonwealth," saith
+the Bishop of Salisbury.(1060) And, again,(1061) "In searching, directing,
+teaching, divines ordinarily, and by reason of their calling, ought to go
+before kings themselves; but in commanding, establishing, compelling,
+kings do far excel:" where he showeth how, in defining of the
+controversies of religion, in one respect ecclesiastical persons, and in
+another respect kings, have the first place.
+
+In the debating of a question of faith, kings have not, by virtue of their
+princely vocation, any precedency or chief place, the action being merely
+ecclesiastical. For howbeit kings may convocate a council, preside also
+and govern the same as concerning the human and political order, yet,
+saith Junius,(1062) _Actiones, deliberationes, et definitiones, ad
+substantiam rei ecclesiasticae pertinentes, a sacerdotio sunt, a caetu
+servoram Dei, quibus rei suoe administrationem mandavit Deus._ And, with
+him, the Archbishop of Spalato saith, in like manner,(1063) that howbeit
+Christian princes have convocated councils, and civilly governed the same,
+yet they had no power nor authority in the very discussing, handling and
+deciding of matters of faith.
+
+What then? In the handling of controversies of faith, have princes no
+place nor power at all beside that of political government only? Surely,
+by virtue of their princely authority, they have no other place in the
+handling of these matters. Yet, what if they be men of singular learning
+and understanding in the Scriptures? Then let them propound their own
+suffrage, with the grounds and reasons of it, even as other learned men in
+the council do. But neither as princes, nor as men singularly learned, may
+they require that others in the council shall dispute and debate matters,
+and that they themselves shall sit as judges having judicial power of a
+negative voice; for in a council no man's voice hath any greater strength
+than his reasons and probation have. _Non enim admitto_, &c: "For I admit
+not in a council (saith the same prelate(1064)) some as judges, others as
+disputators, for I have showed that a conciliary judgment consisteth in
+the approbation of that sentence which, above others, hath been showed to
+have most weight, and to which no man could enough oppose. Wherefore no
+man in the council ought to have a judiciary voice, unless he be withal a
+disputator, and assigns a reason wherefore he assigns to that judgment and
+repels another, and that reason such a one as is drawn from the Scripture
+only, and from antiquity."
+
+Lastly, I hold, that, after the definition and decision of a council,
+princes may not take upon them, by any judicial power or public vocation,
+to examine the same, as if they had authority to pronounce yet another
+decisive sentence, either ratifying or reversing what the council hath
+decreed. Most certain it is, that, before princes give their royal assent
+unto the decrees of any council whatsoever, and compel men to receive and
+acknowledge the same, they ought, first of all, carefully to try and
+examine them whether they agree with the Scriptures or not; and, if they
+find them not to agree with the Scriptures, then to deny their assent and
+authority thereto. But all the princes do not by any judicial power or
+public authority, but only by the judgment of private discretion, which
+they have as Christians, and which, together with them, is common also to
+their subjects; for neither may a master of a family commend to his
+children and servants the profession of that faith which is published by
+the decrees of a council, except, in like manner, he examine the same by
+the Scriptures.
+
+
+
+ DIGRESSION IV.
+
+
+OF THE POWER OF THE KEYS, AND ECCLESIASTICAL CENSURES.
+
+
+Ecclesiastical censures and punishments, wherewith delinquents are bound,
+and from which, when they turn penitents, they are loosed, are of two
+sorts: either such as are common, and agree unto all, as excommunication
+and absolution; or such as are peculiar, and agree only to men of
+ecclesiastical order, as suspension, deprivation, &c.
+
+As touching the power of the keys, to bind and loose, excommunicate and
+absolve; first of all, princes are to remember, that neither they may, by
+themselves, exercise this power (for _regum est corporalem irrogare
+paenam; sacerdotum spiritualem inferre vindictam_(1065)), nor yet by their
+deputies or commissioners in their name, and with authority from them;
+because, as they have not themselves the power of the keys, so neither can
+they communicate the same unto others. Secondly, Forasmuch as princes are
+the wardens, defenders, and revengers of both the Tables, they ought,
+therefore, to provide and take course that neither laymen be permitted to
+have and exercise, the power of excommunication, nor yet that the prelates
+themselves be suffered, in their particular dioceses, to appropriate this
+power and external jurisdiction, as peculiar to themselves; but that it
+remain in their hands to whom it pertaineth by divine institution. What a
+woeful abuse is it, that, in our neighbour churches of England and
+Ireland, the bishop's vicar-general, or official, or commissary, being
+oftentimes such a one as hath never entered into any holy orders, shall
+sit in his courts to use (I should have said abuse) the power of
+excommunication and absolution? And what though some silly presbyter be
+present in the court? Doth not the bishop's substitute, being a layman,
+examine and judge the whole matter, decree, and give sentence what is to
+be done? Hath he not the presbyter's tongue tied to his belt? And what
+doth the presbyter more but only pronounce the sentence according to that
+which he who sitteth judge in the court hath decreed and decerned? As
+touching the prelates themselves, I pray, by what warrant have they
+appropriated to themselves the whole external jurisdiction of binding and
+loosing, excommunicating and absolving? But that we may a little scan this
+their usurpation, and discover the iniquity thereof to the view of the
+princes, whose part it is to cause the same to be reformed, let us
+consider to whom Christ himself, who hath the key of David (Rev. iii. 7),
+who openeth and no man shutteth, and shutteth and no man openeth, hath
+committed this power of the keys to be used on earth. And, first, Let us
+distinguish betwixt the power itself, and the execution of it.
+
+The power and authority of binding and loosing Christ hath delivered to
+the whole church, that is, to every particular church collectively taken.
+"The authority of excommunication pertaineth to the whole church," saith
+Dr Fulk.(1066) _Jus excommunicandi_, saith Balduine,(1067) _non est penes
+quamvis privatum, sive ex ordine sit ecclesiastico, sive politico_, &c.
+_Sed hoc jus pertiner ad totam ecclesiam._ So say Zanchius (in 4 Praec.,
+col. 756), Polanus (_Synt._, lib. 7, cap. 18), Pareus (in 1 Cor. v., _De
+Excom._), Cartwright (on 1 Cor. v. 4), Perkins (on Jude 3): and,
+generally, all our sound writers. The Magdeburgians(1068) cite, for the
+same judgment, Augustine and Primatius. Gerhard(1069) citeth also some
+popish writers assenting hereunto. The reasons which we give for
+confirmation hereof are these:--
+
+1. It pertaineth to the whole church, collectively taken, to deny her
+Christian communion to such wicked persons as add contumacy to their
+disobedience: therefore, it pertaineth to the whole church to
+excommunicate them. Again, it pertaineth to the whole church to admit and
+receive one into her communion and familiar fellowship: therefore, to the
+whole church it likewise pertaineth to cast one out of her communion.
+Sure, the sentence of excommunication is pronounced in vain, except the
+whole church cut off the person thus judged from all communion with her:
+and the sentence of absolution is to as little purpose pronounced, except
+the whole church admit one again to have communion with her. Shortly, the
+whole church hath the power of punishing a man, by denying her communion
+unto him: therefore, the whole church hath the power of judging that he
+ought to be so punished. The whole church hath the power of remitting this
+punishment again: therefore, the whole church hath the power of judging
+that it ought to be remitted.
+
+2. The Apostle, in 1 Cor. v., showeth that the Israelites' purging away of
+leaven out of their dwellings in the time of the passover, was a figure of
+excommunication, whereby disobedient and obstinate sinners, who are as
+leaven to infect other men, are to be avoided and thrust out of the
+church. Now, as the purging away of the leaven did not peculiarly belong
+unto any one, or some few, among the Israelites, but unto the whole
+congregation of Israel; so the Apostle, writing to the whole church of
+Corinth, even to as many as should take care to have the whole lump kept
+unleavened, saith to them all, "Know ye not that a little leaven leaveneth
+the whole lump? Purge out, therefore, the old leaven. Put away from among
+yourselves that wicked person," 1 Cor. v. 6, 7, 13.
+
+3. Christ hath delivered the power of binding and loosing to every
+particular church or congregation, collectively taken, which thus we
+demonstrate:--If our brother who trespasseth against us will neither be
+reclaimed by private admonition, nor yet by a rebuke given him before some
+more witnesses, then, saith Christ, "Tell it unto the church; but if he
+neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man and a
+publican. Verily, I say unto you, whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall
+be bound in heaven, and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed
+in heaven," Matt. xviii. 17, 18: where he showeth, that, in the Christian
+church (which he was to plant by the ministry of the apostles),
+excommunication was to be used as the last remedy for curing of the most
+deadly and desperate evils; which excommunication he setteth forth by
+allusion unto the order and custom of the Jews in his time, among whom
+they who were cast out, and excommunicate from the synagogue, were
+accounted as heathens and publicans. And so when he saith, "Let him be
+unto thee as an heathen man and a publican," he presupposeth that the
+church hath excommunicated him for his contumacy, which he hath added to
+his disobedience. For, as Pareus saith,(1070) "If by me, and thee, and
+every one, he is to be accounted for such a man, it must needs be that the
+judgment of the church be, by public declaration, made known to me, and
+thee, and every one. And this meaning is thoroughly drawn out of the
+following verse--'For whatsoever ye shall bind on earth,' &c.; therefore,
+the church ought first to bind him before he ought to be accounted by me
+or thee for one bound, that is, excommunicate." Now, what meaneth Christ
+by the church, to which he giveth the power of binding and loosing? Not
+the church universal, sure; for I cannot tell the church universal
+(whether it be understood _collective_ or _representative_) whensoever my
+brother trespasseth against me, and will not be reformed. He meaneth,
+therefore, the particular church, whereof, for the time, it shall happen
+one to be a member. "The power of the keys (saith Perkins(1071)) is given
+to all ministers, churches, and congregations." Neither could there,
+otherwise, an ordinary, perpetual, and ready course be had, for the
+correcting of all public contumacy and scandal, by the means of
+ecclesiastical discipline. But it will be said, when he biddeth us tell
+that particular church whereof we are members, he meaneth not that we
+should tell the whole body of that church _collective_, but that we should
+tell the governors of the church, who are the church _representative_.
+
+How, then, is this place alleged to prove that the whole church
+_collective_ hath power and authority to bind and loose?
+
+_Ans._ Christ meaneth, indeed, that we should tell those governors who
+represent the church; but whilst he calleth them by the name of the
+church, and sendeth us to them as to those who represent the church, he
+plainly insinuateth that they exercise the power of the keys (as in his
+name, so) in the name of the church, and that this power and authority
+pertaineth to the whole church, even as when one man representeth another
+man's person, whatsoever power he exerciseth _eo nomine_, doth first of
+all agree to the man who is represented.
+
+4. The Apostle, in his own proper person, writing to the whole church at
+Corinth, 1 Cor. v. 4, 5, will have them (being gathered together) to
+deliver that incestuous person to Satan; therefore, every particular
+church or congregation hath power to excommunicate such a contumacious
+sinner as that incestuous person was. It is the common answer of Papists,
+that albeit the Apostle commanded the act should be done in face of the
+church, yet the judgment and authority of giving sentence was in himself
+alone, and not in the church of Corinth, whereupon they would make it to
+follow, that the power of excommunication pertaineth to the bishop alone,
+and not the church. And the same answer doth Saravia return to Beza;(1072)
+but, howsoever, the Apostle saith, that he had already judged concerning
+the incestuous person, yet he did not hereby seclude the church of Corinth
+from the authority of excommunicating him. "It is to be observed (saith
+Calvin(1073)) that Paul, albeit he was an apostle, doth not for his own
+will excommunicate alone, but communicateth his council with the church,
+that the thing may be done by common authority. Himself, indeed, goeth
+before and showeth the way, but whilst he adjoineth to himself other
+partakers, he signifieth sufficiently that it is not the private power of
+one man." Nay, let us farther observe with Junius,(1074) that the apostles
+hath a twofold power: one common to them with other presbyters, 1 Pet. v.
+1; another, singular, proper, and extraordinary, which they had as
+apostles. By this singular power Paul saith, "What will ye? shall I come
+unto you with a rod?" 1 Cor. iv. 21; but by the common power it was that
+he said, "When ye are gathered together, and my spirit," &c., 1 Cor. v. 4.
+By no other power than that which was common to him with the rest of the
+presbyters or bishops in Corinth did he judge the incestuous person to be
+excommunicated; and thus, as though he had been present in body among the
+other presbyters of that church, and assembled together with them in their
+ordinary council or consistory (in which _fuerunt liberi apostoli, alii
+vero presbyteri ex vocatione propria, et necessitate officii_(1075)), so
+he both pronounceth(1076) his own judgment, and likewise goeth before, by
+pronouncing that judgment which was to be in common by them pronounced.
+Furthermore, that the Apostle would not have that incestuous man to be
+excommunicate by his own authority alone, but by the authority of the
+church of Corinth, thus it appeareth:
+
+1. The Apostle challengeth and condemneth the Corinthians, 1 Cor. v. 2, 6,
+9, because they had not excommunicate him before his writing unto them,
+which he would never have done if that church had not had power and
+authority of excommunication.
+
+2. Howbeit the Apostle gave his judgment, that he should be excommunicate,
+because he ought not to have been tolerated in the church, yet, for all
+that, he should not have been indeed excommunicate and thrust out of the
+church of Corinth, except the ministers and elders of that church had, in
+name of the whole body of the same, judicially cast him forth and
+delivered him to Satan, which plainly argueth that he should not have been
+excommunicate by the Apostle's authority alone, but by the authority of
+the church of Corinth.
+
+3. The Apostle only showeth that he should be excommunicate, but referreth
+the giving of sentence and judgment upon him to the Corinthians; for he
+saith not that the Corinthians, being gathered together, should declare or
+witness that such an one was delivered to Satan by Paul's own power and
+authority, but that they themselves should deliver him to Satan, ver. 4,
+5. And again, "Purge out, therefore, the old leaven; put away from among
+yourselves that wicked person," ver. 7, 13. But, saith Saravia,(1077)
+_partes apostoli in illa actione fuerunt authoritatis, ecclesiae vero
+Corinthiacae, obedientiae. Ans._ That the action was done by the authority
+of the church of Corinth, it is manifest both from that which hath been
+said, and likewise if further we consider that the Apostle ascribeth to
+the Corinthians as much authority in this action as he assumeth to
+himself. For he saith of himself, that he had judged concerning him that
+had done this deed, ver. 3; and so he saith of them, "Do not ye judge them
+that are within?" ver. 12. Where he speaketh not of the judgment of
+private discretion (for so they might have judged them that were without
+also), but even of the external and authoritative judgment of
+ecclesiastical discipline. The Apostle, indeed, saith, 2 Cor. ii. 9, that
+he wrote to the Corinthians to excommunicate that person, that he might
+know them, whether they were obedient in all things; but this proveth not
+that the authority of the excommunication was not theirs; for their part
+in this action proceeded both from authority and from obedience: from
+authority, absolutely; from obedience in, in some respect. _De jure_ they
+had no liberty nor power not to excommunicate him, but were bound to do
+that which Paul pointed out to be their duty, and in that respect he
+calleth them obedient; yet absolutely and _de facto_ it was free to them
+(notwithstanding of Paul's writing to them) either to excommunicate him or
+not to excommunicate him, and if they had not by their authority
+excommunicate him, he had not been at all excommunicate by any virtue of
+Paul's adjudging of him.
+
+4. When the Corinthians proceeded to excommunicate him, the Apostle
+calleth this a censure which was inflicted of many, ver. 6, which could
+not be said if he was to be excommunicate by the Apostle's authority
+alone.
+
+5. The Apostle, ver. 7, writeth again to the Corinthians, to forgive the
+incestuous man, to receive him into their communion, and to remit the
+punishment of his excommunication, because he was won to repentance. And
+he addeth, ver. 10, "To whom ye forgive anything, I forgive also." Now,
+who can remit the punishment and save one from underlying the censure,
+except such as have the power and authority of judgment?
+
+Hitherto we have proven that the power of binding and loosing pertaineth
+to every particular church collectively taken; but the execution and
+judicial exercising of this power pertaineth to that company and assembly
+of elders in every church which the Apostle, 1 Tim. iv. 14, calleth a
+presbytery. In Scotland we call it a session; in France it is called a
+consistory; in Germany and Belgia, according to the Scripture phrase, it
+is termed a presbytery. It is made up of the pastor or pastors of every
+congregation, together with those governing elders which labour there (not
+in doctrine, but) in discipline only, of which things we have spoken
+before.(1078) That unto this company or consistory of elders pertaineth
+the power of binding and loosing, it is averred by the best divines:
+Calvin (on Matt. viii. 17, 18, _et Lib. Epist._, col. 168, 169), Beza
+(_Contra Saraviam de Divers. Minist. Grad._), Zanchius (in 4 _Praec._,
+col. 756), Junius (_Animad. in Bell._, cont. 5, lib. 1, cap. 14, nota 28),
+Polanus (_Synt._, lib. 7, cap. 18), Tilen (_Synt._, part 2, disp. 28), the
+Professors of Leyden (_Syn. Pur. Theol._, disp. 48), Gerhard (_Loc.
+Theol._, tom. 6, p. 137, 138), Balduine (_de Cas. Cons._, lib. 4, cap. 11,
+cas. 11), Pareus (in Matt, xviii. 17, 18; and in 1 Cor. v.), Cartwright
+(in Matt. xviii., sect. 7), Fennerus (_Theol._, lib. 7, cap. 7, p. 152,
+153), Alstedius (_Theol. Casuum_, cap. 27), Danaeus (_Pol. Christ._, lib.
+6, p. 452, 464), Hemmingius (_Enchirid._, class. 3, cap. 11, p. 388),
+Martyr (in 1 Cor. v.), and sundry others. Bullinger recordeth(1079) that
+this was the manner of the particular churches in Helvetia, to choose unto
+themselves a certain senate of elders, or company of the best men in the
+church, which might, according to the canon of holy Scripture, exercise
+the discipline of excommunication, which form is well warranted by the
+Scriptures; for when Christ committeth the authority of binding and
+loosing unto the church, Matt. viii. 17, 18, however the power and
+authority itself pertain to any particular church collectively taken, as
+hath been said, yet the execution of the same is committed to the
+consistory or senate of elders which representeth that church, and which
+Paul calleth a presbytery. Zanchius saith that Chrysostom,(1080)
+Bullinger, and all good interpreters, understand the presbytery to be
+there meant by Christ when he saith, "Tell the church." Chrysostom saith
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, that is, saith Junius,(1081) the ecclesiastical
+sanhedrim made up of pastors and elders. Thus Camero likewise expoundeth
+the place.(1082) _Ecclesiae nomine_, saith he, _videtur Christus
+significasse collegium presbyterorum qui ecelesiae Christianae erant
+praefuturi, cujus presbyterii mentio fit_, 1 Tim. iv. Now if Christ hath
+committed the power of excommunication unto the church, what have bishops
+to say for themselves who appropriate this power unto themselves, each one
+in his diocese? For when we cannot give the name of the church unto a
+bishop,(1083) because he is but one man, and the church is a company of
+many men; nay, nor yet can we give the name of the church unto a company
+of bishops, for if they might be called the church, it should be for this
+respect alone, because they represent the church: but _soli episcopi_,
+&c., "Bishops alone (saith Gerhard(1084)), or they who teach, cannot
+represent the church, since hearers also pertain to the definition
+thereof, but the presbytery can represent the church, whereunto not only
+they pertain who labour in the word, but also elders or governors put in
+authority for expeding of ecclesiastical matters in name of the whole
+church:" we grant, then, that by the church, Christ meaneth that company
+of church governors whereby a certain particular church is
+represented;(1085) but forasmuch as the church consisteth of two integrant
+parts, viz., pastors and sheep, teachers and hearers, we therefore deny
+that the representative church whereof Christ speaketh, can be any other
+than that ecclesiastical consistory whereof we have spoken.
+
+Moreover, albeit the Apostle wrote to the whole church of Corinth to
+deliver the incestuous man to Satan, because the matter could not be
+otherwise done, but only in the name and with the consent of that whole
+church; yet he never meant that the common promiscuous multitude should,
+by their suffrages and voices, examine and judge that cause. But, saith
+Calvin,(1086) "Because the multitude, unless it be governed by council,
+never doth anything moderately nor gravely, there was ordained in the
+ancient church (meaning the apostolic church) a presbytery; that is, a
+company of elders which, by the consent of all, had the first judgment and
+examination of things; from it the matter was carried to the people, but
+being already determined before." Again, when the Apostle writeth to them
+in his second epistle that they should forgive him, because he hath
+repented, thus he reasoneth: "Sufficient to such a man is this censure
+which was inflicted of many," 2 Cor. ii. 6. Which words, that we may the
+better understand, it is worthy of observation (which not Calvin
+only,(1087) but Saravia also noteth(1088)), that it appeareth from this
+place, he was not to excommunicate, but, by sharp rebukes, timeously win
+to repentance, whereby the Apostle showeth it to be needless, yea, most
+inconvenient, to proceed against him to the extremity of discipline. The
+word {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, there used by the Apostle, signifieth rebuke, reprehension,
+or chiding, saith Dr Fulk;(1089) and so Scapula taketh it to be the same
+with {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} and to signify another thing than {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} or {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}.
+Beza and Tremellius turn {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} by _increpatio_; Ar. Montanus readeth
+_objurgatio_. This chiding or threatening of the man proceeded not from
+the whole church of Corinth, but only from many therein, as is plain from
+the text, and as Saravia also granteth.(1090) And who were the {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~},
+those _many_ of whom the Apostle speaketh? Not such as, from Christian and
+brotherly charity, did privately chide and rebuke him, for the matter was
+not then depending in private rebukes, but by the Apostle's direction it
+was brought to the church's part and to public discipline, the scandal
+itself being so public and notoriously manifest; they were, therefore,
+such as had public office and authority to chide him. And who were those
+but the consistory of pastors and elders which represented the whole
+church, and were set in authority for judging and managing of things
+pertaining to ecclesiastical discipline? They (no doubt) being met
+together, called the man before them, and did most sharply rebuke him and
+chide with him, and threatened that they would not only debar him from the
+Lord's table (which is called lesser excommunication, but more properly a
+step or degree tending next to excommunication), but also wholly cast him
+out of the church and deliver him to Satan. Whereupon the man being made
+to see the grievousness of his sin, and the terrible punishment which was
+to follow upon it, becometh most sorrowful, humble, and penitent. And this
+moved the Apostle to say, "Sufficient to such a man," &c., as if he would
+say, What needeth him now to be excommunicate, and so to be corrected and
+put to shame by you all, when every one of you shall deny to him your
+Christian communion, as one wholly cast out of the church? Is it not
+enough that many among you, even your whole presbytery, hath put him to
+such public shame by their sharp reprehensions, and to so great fear by
+their dreadful threatenings? And since, through the blessing of God upon
+these means, he is already win to repentance, why would you have him yet
+more publicly corrected and rejected by all and every one.
+
+And further, the Apostle addeth, that now they should not only forgive and
+comfort him, ver. 7, but also confirm ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}) their love towards him,
+ver. 8. Now {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~} signifieth to confirm or ratify by authority; and so
+Chemnitius,(1091) Bullinger,(1092) and Cartwright,(1093) expoundeth it in
+this place. It cometh from {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, _authority_, whence cometh also {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~},
+a _lord_, or one having authority. As, therefore, the presbytery, or
+company of pastors and elders, had, by their authority, established that
+he was to be excommunicate, and determined to proceed to the execution of
+extreme discipline against him, so now the Apostle would have them, by the
+same authority, to ratify and establish the remission of this punishment
+unto him, and to decree that the church should not deny her communion unto
+him. For this authority of binding and loosing, though it pertained to the
+whole church, _in actu primo sive in esse_, yet it pertained to the
+presbytery alone, _in actu secundo sive in operara_; and even as the act
+of speaking pertaineth to a man, as _principium quod_, but to the tongue
+alone, as _principium quo_; so albeit the power of the keys doth primarily
+and principally belong to the church, collectively taken, yet the actual
+execution of this power belongeth only to the presbytery which
+representeth the church, and unto which the church hath committed her
+authority to bind and loose. Wherefore, since the Apostle writeth to the
+whole church of Corinth to confirm, by their authority, their love to the
+penitent man; and since this authority, in the actual execution of it
+(which the Apostle craveth) did not agree to that whole church,
+collectively taken, we must needs understand his meaning to be, that their
+love towards that man, and their forgiving of him, should be ratified and
+confirmed by the authority of those church governors, _qui ecclesiae nomen
+ad coetum repraesentant, totius nimirum presbyterii authoritate atque
+consensu_.
+
+Thus have we showed that the actual use of the keys, or the execution of
+the authority of binding and loosing, pertaineth to that ecclesiastical
+senate in every particular church, which the Apostle calleth a presbytery.
+For further illustration of the truth whereof, I add these four
+observations:--
+
+1. We must distinguish(1094) a twofold power of the keys: the one is
+executed in doctrine; the other in discipline: the one _concionalis_; the
+other _judicialis_. Touching the former, we grant it is proper for pastors
+alone, whose office and vocation it is, by the preaching and publishing of
+God's word, to shut the kingdom of heaven against impenitent and
+disobedient men, and to open it unto penitent sinners; to bind God's heavy
+wrath upon the former, and (by application of the promises of mercy) to
+loose the latter from the sentence and fear of condemnation. When we
+ascribe the power of binding and loosing to that whole consistory, wherein
+governing elders are joined together with pastors, we mean only of the
+keys of external discipline, which are used in ecclesiastical courts and
+judicatories.
+
+2. When we teach that the pastor or pastors of every particular church and
+congregation, with the elders of the same, being met together, have power
+to bind and loose, we understand this only of such places wherein a
+competent number of understanding and qualified men may be had to make up
+an eldership; otherwise let there be one eldership made up of two or three
+of the next adjacent parishes, according as was ordained by the Church of
+Scotland, in the 7th chapter of the Second Book of Discipline. _Sine
+totius_ &c.: "Without the consent of some whole church (saith
+Zanchius(1095)) no man ought to be excommunicate. Yea, I add, if it be a
+small church, and not consisting of many learned and skilful men,
+excommunication ought not to be done, except the neighbour churches be
+asked counsel of." And, as touching the pastor's part, Calvin saith well,
+_Nunquam_, &c.:(1096) "I never thought it expedient the liberty of
+excommunicating should be permitted to every pastor." The fear of great
+inconveniences, which he thought likely to follow upon such a custom, if
+once it were permitted, makes him confess, in that epistle, that he durst
+not advise Liserus to excommunicate any man without taking counsel of
+other pastors. Now, I much marvel what butt Dr Forbesse(1097) shot at when
+he entitleth one of his chapters _De Potestate Excommunicandi_, and then,
+in the body of the chapter, doth no more at all but only quote those two
+testimonies of Zanchius and Calvin; both of which do utterly condemn the
+usurpation of bishops who appropriate to themselves the power of
+excommunication, and ascribe this power to the consistory of pastors and
+elders in every particular church; and, in the forequoted places, do only
+(for preventing of abuses) set some bounds to the execution of their
+power; which bounds we also think good to be kept, viz., that if a church
+be so small that it hath not so many well-qualified men as may be
+sufficient to assist the pastor in the government thereof, then let one
+common eldership be made up out of it and some other neighbour churches:
+by which means it shall moreover come to pass (which is the other caution
+to be given), that not every pastor (no not with the elders of his
+congregation) shall be permitted to have full liberty of binding and
+loosing, but shall, in those matters, receive counsel and advice from
+other pastors. Howbeit, for this latter purpose, the church of Scotland
+hath profitably provided another remedy also, namely, that, in certain
+chief places, all the pastors in the adjacent bounds shall, at set and
+ordinary times, assemble themselves (which assemblies, in this nation, we
+call presbyteries), that so the churches may be governed _communi
+presbyterorum consilio_, as Jerome speaketh of the primitive times of the
+church.
+
+3. Though the execution of the discipline of excommunication and
+absolution pertain to the consistory of the pastor and elders in every
+church, yet this discipline is to be by them executed in name of the whole
+church.(1098) Saravia is bold to affirm,(1099) that he who receiveth a
+sinner, or casteth him out of the church, doeth this in the name and
+authority of God alone. We have proven, by strong arguments, that the
+authority of excommunication pertaineth to the whole church; which, though
+he contradicteth, yet, in one place,(1100) forgetting himself, he
+acknowledges that the authority of the church of Corinth was to intervene
+in the excommunication of the incestuous man. Wherefore, as in the name of
+God, so in the name and authority of the whole church, must one be cast
+out or received.
+
+4. To the right execution of this discipline the manifest consent of the
+whole church is also necessary:(1101) the truth whereof, beside that it
+appeareth from that which hath been said concerning the church's
+authority, it is further confirmed, if we consider either the importance
+of the thing, or the good of the person. Touching the importance of the
+thing, _Gravissima_, &c.: "Most weighty matters in the church," saith
+Gerhard,(1102) and the same saith Zanchius also,(1103) "ought not to be
+undertaken without the consent of the whole ecclesiastical body;" and, as
+Pope Leo writeth, "Such things as pertain unto all ought to be done with
+the consent of all. But what can be more weighty, and what doth more
+pertain to the body of the church, than to cut off some member from the
+body?" And, touching the good of the person, Augustine showeth(1104) that
+then only a sinner is both stricken with fear and healed with shame, when,
+seeing himself anathematised by the whole church, he cannot find a fellow
+multitude together wherewith he may rejoice in his sin and insult upon
+good men. And that otherwise, if the tares grow so rank that they cannot
+be pulled up, and if the same evil disease take hold of so very many that
+the consent of the church cannot be had to the excommunication of a wicked
+person, then good men must grieve and groan, and endure what they cannot
+help. Therefore that excommunication may fruitfully succeed, the consent
+of the people is necessary: _Frustra enim ejicitur ex ecclesia, et
+consortio fidelium privatur, quem populus, abigere, et a quo abstinere
+recuset._(1105) Howbeit, even in such cases, when the consent of the
+church cannot be had to the execution of this discipline, faithful pastors
+and professors must, every one for his own part, take heed that he have no
+fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but even reprove them;
+yea, they ought, _in. sensu negativo_, excommunicate those who should be
+(but are not) excommunicate positively, which negative excommunication is
+not an ecclesiastical censure, but either a bare punishment, or a cautel
+and animadversion; and so saith the Archbishop of Spalato,(1106) not only
+one brother may refuse to communicate with another, but a people, also,
+may refuse to communicate with their pastor, which he confirmeth by
+certain examples. But the public censure of positive excommunication
+should not be inflicted without the church's consent, for the reasons
+foresaid. Cyprian writeth to Cornelius, bishop of Rome, that he had much
+laboured with the people that peace might be given to them who had fallen;
+that is, that they might be again received into the communion of the
+church; which, if he might have done by himself, why did he labour and
+deal so much with the people in that business? And as they were not
+received into the church's communion without the people's consent, so
+neither were they without their consent excommunicate. Chrysostom
+showeth,(1107) concerning his time, that when one was to be excommunicate,
+the whole church was humbled in prayer to God for him; and, when he was
+again released, they did all kindly salute him, and wish him peace.
+Tertullian also writeth,(1108) that he who was to be excommunicate in the
+public assembly of the church, was, by the common consent of all, stricken
+with judgment, and that all the approven and well-liked elders had the
+precedence or direction of the rest of the church in these matters.
+
+Now, from all this which hath been said of the power and authority to
+excommunicate and absolve, it is manifest how unjustly usurping prelates
+do arrogate and appropriate to themselves this power, which Christ hath
+committed to every particular church or congregation, and ordained to be
+execute by the ecclesiastical consistory within the same. Which episcopal
+usurpation, as it hath been showed to be most contrary to divine
+institution, so doth it also depart from the manner of the ancient church:
+for it may be seen, in Cyprian,(1109) that the authority of reconciling
+and receiving into the church such as had fallen, was not proper to the
+bishop, but, with him, common to his clergy and presbytery, and that _jus
+communicationis_ was given them by the clergy as well as by the bishop. We
+have heard, out of Jerome,(1110) that a bishop did nothing which a
+presbyter did not also, except only that he gave rite or sign of
+ordination, that is, imposition of hands. Whereby we understand that as
+all other things, beside ordination, so the power of excommunication,
+among the rest, was alike common to bishops and presbyters. Whence it is,
+that the same Jerome, writing to Demetriades, calleth excommunication
+_Episcoporum et Presbyterorum censura_. And elsewhere, _Alligat vel solvit
+Episcopus et Presbyter._(1111) Justinian (_Novel_. 123, cap. 11) saith,
+_Omnibus autem Episcopis et Presbyteris interdicimus segregare aliquem a
+sacra communione, antequam causa monstretur_, &c., certifying them, if
+they do otherwise, that he whom they excommunicate should be loosed from
+excommunication _a majore sacerdota_. Whence we see, that presbyters also
+were wont to excommunicate, and that this power was common to them with
+the bishops. The First Council of Carthage, can. 23, decreeth that a
+bishop hear no man's cause without the presence of his clergy; and that
+otherwise his sentence shall be void, except it be confirmed by the
+presence of his clergy. The canon law itself hath some vestiges of the
+ancient order: it ordaineth,(1112) that when a bishop either
+excommunicateth or absolveth any man, twelve of the clergy be present, and
+concur with him. Dr Forbesse now also acknowledgeth,(1113) that it is not
+lawful for a bishop to exercise the power of public jurisdiction by
+himself, and without the presbytery; and, under this power of
+jurisdiction, whereof he speaketh,(1114) he comprehendeth the visitation
+of churches, ordination, suspension, and deposition of ministers, the
+excommunicating of contumacious persons, and the reconciling of them when
+they become penitent, the calling of the fellow-presbyters to a synod, the
+making of ecclesiastical canons, &c.; which power of jurisdiction, saith
+he,(1115) remaineth one and the same, whole and entire, both in the
+bishop, and in the presbytery: in him personally; in it collegially. His
+confession of the presbytery's power and authority, we catch and lay hold
+on; but whereas he would have this power any way proper and personal to
+bishops, he is confuted by our former arguments.
+
+And thus far have we demonstrated to princes, who be they to whom Christ
+hath committed the power of excommunication, that with them they may cause
+it to remain, and correct the usurpation of prelates, who bereave them of
+it. Let us next consider what princes may, or should do, after that the
+sentence of any man's excommunication or reconciliation is given forth by
+them to whom the power of this discipline pertaineth. The Archbishop of
+Spalato is of opinion,(1116) that not only it is free to princes to
+communicate with excommunicate persons, but also, that if they shall
+happen to communicate with them, the church (for the reverence she oweth
+to princes) should straight absolve them, and that her sentence of
+excommunication should no longer have any strength. What! Shall the church
+draw and put up again the spiritual sword at the pleasure of princes? Or
+because princes will perhaps cast holy things to dogs, must others do so
+likewise? O prodigious licentiousness, and hellish misorder, worthy to be
+drowned in the lake of Lethe! But what, then, is the part of the prince,
+after that the church hath given judgment? Surely, whensoever need is, he
+ought, by the private judgment of Christian discretion, to try and examine
+whether this discipline be rightly executed or not. If he find the
+execution thereof to be unreprovable, and that yet the sinner goeth on in
+his contumacy, then, by his civil power,(1117) he ought further to punish
+him in his person or worldly estate, that he may either reform or repress
+such an one as hath not been terrified by the church's censures. But if,
+after trial, he understand that the sentence given forth is unjust and
+erroneous, either through the ignorance or the malice of the
+ecclesiastical and regular judges, then he ought to interpone his
+authority, and cause a due proceeding; for, in such extraordinary cases of
+the failing of ecclesiastical persons, princes may do much in things
+spiritual, which, ordinarily, they cannot.
+
+It remaineth to show who have the power of those censures and punishments
+which are proper to ecclesiastical persons. Where, first, we are to
+consider, that there are two sorts of faults which make ecclesiastical men
+worthy to be punished, viz., either such as violate sacred, or such as
+violate civil and human duties: the one is to be judged by ecclesiastical
+judges alone, and that according to the laws of God and the church; the
+other by civil judges alone, and that according to the civil and municipal
+laws of the commonwealth. This latter form, again, is twofold; for either
+the fault is such, that, though a man be condignly punished for it by the
+civil magistrate, yet he doth not, therefore, fall from his ecclesiastical
+office or dignity; of which sort experience showeth many; or else such as
+being punished according to their quality and demerit, a man, by necessary
+consequence, falleth from the ecclesiastical function and dignity which
+before he had: this was Abiathar's case, and the case of so many as, being
+justly punished by proscription, incarceration, or banishment, are
+_secundario et ex consequenti_ shut from their bearing office in the
+church. "If Abiathar had sinned in a sacred matter, the cognition thereof
+(saith Junius(1118)) had pertained to the priests; but because he sinned
+against the commonwealth and the king's majesty, it was necessary to deal
+with him civilly, and not ecclesiastically. What! Are no ecclesiastical
+men in this time also thought to be lawfully judged by the civil
+magistrate, if, at any time, they be found guilty of appaired majesty?" As
+for the other sorts of faults, whereby (as we have said) sacred and
+ecclesiastical duties are violate, such as the teaching of false and
+heretical doctrine, neglecting of discipline, unbeseeming and scandalous
+conversation, &c. which things (if they be not mended) they who have the
+execution of ecclesiastical jurisdiction committed to them ought to punish
+by suspension, deposition, &c. Now, as when one is called to the work of
+the ministry, his fitness and qualification for that work should be tried
+and judged by the clergy of the adjacent bounds assembled in their
+classical presbytery, to whom it also appertaineth (after that he is by
+them tried and approved, and after that he is elected by the church where
+he is to serve) to send him out from them with power to exercise the
+office of a pastor; so when there is just cause of suspending and
+depriving him, it belongeth to the same presbytery to consider and judge
+hereof; and, according to his offence, to give judgment against him. For
+who should recal him but they that sent him? Or who should discharge him
+his ministerial function, except they who ordained him to exercise the
+same? And who may take the power from him but they who gave the power unto
+him? That ordination pertaineth to the whole presbytery, and not to the
+bishop alone, we have showed before, and now, by the same reason, we say
+suspension and deposition pertaineth to the presbytery also, and are not
+in the power of the bishop. And that, in the ancient church, as bishops
+gave not ordination, so neither did they suspend nor depose any man
+without the common counsel, advice, and concurrence of the presbytery,
+yea, and sometimes of a synod, it is clear from Cypr. (lib. 1, epist. 9;
+lib. 3, epist. 2, 10), Council Carthag. 3 (can. 8), Council Carthag. 4
+(can. 22, 23), Council African. (can. 20), Council Hispan. 2 (can. 6),
+Justin. (_Novel_. 42, cap. 1), Jerome (_Comment. ad Isa_ 3), Siricius
+(_Epist ad Ambros. inter Ambr. Epist._) So, touching the suspension and
+deposition of ministers, the Assembly at Glasgow, anno 1610, ordained that
+the bishop should associate to himself the ministry of those bounds where
+the delinquent served, that is, the presbytery whereof he hath been a
+member, and, together with them, there take trial of the fact, and, upon
+just cause found, to deprive or suspend: which Act was ratified in the
+12th parliament of king James, anno 1612. Nevertheless, if any man think
+the sentence of the bishop and the presbytery, given forth against him, to
+be unjust, he ought to have liberty of recourse to the synod, and there to
+be heard, according as it was decreed by the Fourth Council of Carthage,
+can. 66. But oftimes the matter is of such difficulty or importance that
+the bishop and the presbytery may not give out any peremptory sentence of
+suspension or deprivation till the matter be brought to the synod of the
+province,(1119) where, according to the ancient order, the matter is to be
+handled,(1120) not "by the censure of one bishop, but by the judgment of
+the whole clergy gathered together."
+
+Princes, therefore, may not suffer bishops to usurp the power of
+suspending and depriving at their pleasure, and whensoever they commit any
+such tyranny in smiting of their fellow-servants, it is the part of
+princes to cause these things to be redressed, and for this end graciously
+to receive the grievances of oppressed ministers. The Arians of old, being
+assembled in a council at Antioch, decreed, that if any ecclesiastical
+person should, without the advice and the letters of the bishops(1121) of
+the province, and chiefly of the metropolitan, go to the emperor to put up
+any grievance unto him, he should be cast out, not only from the holy
+communion, but from his proper dignity which he had in the church.
+Whereupon Osiander hath this observation:(1122) "This canon also was
+composed against holy Athanasius; for Athanasius being expelled by the
+Arians, had fled to the emperor Constantine the younger, and had from him
+obtained a return to his own church. Now this canon is very unjust, which
+forbids that a bishop, or any other minister of the church, being unjustly
+oppressed, flee to his godly civil magistrate; since it was lawful to the
+apostle Paul to appeal to the Roman emperor wicked Nero, as the Acts of
+the Apostles witness. But it may be seen in this place, that bishops were
+very soon seeking dominion, yea, tyranny over the church, and over their
+colleges." Besides all this, there is yet another thing which ought to
+have a very principal consideration in the deposition of a minister, and
+that is, the consent of the church and congregation where he hath served.
+Let the magistrate know, saith Gerhard,(1123) "that as the vocation of
+ministers pertaineth to the whole church, so to the same also pertaineth
+the removing of ministers; therefore, as a minister ought not to be
+obtruded upon an unwilling church, so the hearers, being unwilling and
+striving against it, a fit minister ought not to be plucked away from
+them." The deposing of a minister, whom the church loves and willingly
+hears, Balduine accounteth to be high sacrilege,(1124) and holdeth that,
+as the calling, so the dismissing of ministers pertaineth to the whole
+church; and so teacheth Junius.(1125) Shortly, as a man is rightly called
+to the ministerial office and dignity when he is elected by the church and
+ordained by the presbytery, so is he rightly deposed and put from the same
+when he is rejected by the church and discharged by the presbytery.
+
+How there was brought forth in Scotland, anno 1610, a certain amphibian
+brood, sprung out of the stem of Neronian tyranny, and in manners like to
+his nearest kinsman, the Spanish Inquisition. It is armed with a
+transcendant power, and called by the dreadful name of the _High
+Commission_. Among other things, it arrogateth to itself the power of
+deposing ministers; but how unjustly, thus it appeareth:
+
+1. If those commissioners have any power at all to depose ministers, they
+have it from the king, whose commissioners they are: but from him they
+have it not; therefore they have none at all. The proposition is most
+certain; for they sit not in that commission to judge in their own name,
+nor by their own authority, (_quum nihil exerceat delegatus nomine
+proprio_, as Panormitan saith,(1126)) but by virtue only of the commission
+and delegation which they have of the king. Yea, bishops themselves
+exercise not any jurisdiction in the High Commission as bishops, but only
+as the king's commissioners, as Dr Downame acknowledgeth.(1127) The
+assumption is grounded upon this reason: The king hath not power to depose
+ministers; therefore he cannot give this power to others. For _nemo potest
+plus juris transferre in alium quam sibi competere dignoscatur_,(1128) the
+king may sometimes inflict such a civil punishment upon ministers,
+whereupon, secondarily and accidentally, will follow their falling away
+from their ecclesiastical office and function (in which sense it is said
+that Solomon deposed Abiathar, as we heard before), but to depose them
+directly and formally (which the High Commission usurped to do) he hath no
+power, and that because this deposition is an act of ecclesiastical
+jurisdiction; whereas the power of ecclesiastical jurisdiction doth no
+more agree to the king than the power of ecclesiastical order: his power
+is civil and temporal, not spiritual and ecclesiastical. Dr Field also
+confesseth,(1129) that none may judicially degrade, or put any one,
+lawfully admitted, from his degree and order, but the spiritual guides of
+the church alone.
+
+2. The deposing of ministers pertaineth to classical presbyteries, or (if
+the matter be doubtful and difficult) to synods, as hath been showed. And
+who, then, can give the High Commission such authority as to take this
+power from them and assume it unto itself. These commissioners profess
+that they have authority to discharge other ecclesiastical judicatories
+within the kingdom from meddling with the judging of anything which they
+shall think impertinent for them, and which they shall think good to judge
+and decide by themselves in their commission: which, if it be so, then,
+when it pleaseth them, they may make other ecclesiastical judicatories to
+be altogether useless and of no effect in the church.
+
+3. In this commission ecclesiastical and temporal men are joined together,
+and both armed with the same power; therefore it is not right nor regular,
+nor in any ways allowable. For even, as when a minister hath offended in a
+civil matter, his fault is to be judged by civil judges according to the
+civil laws, and by no other; so, when he offendeth in an ecclesiastical
+matter, his fault is to be judged only by ecclesiastical persons according
+to ecclesiastical laws; and, in such case, Justinian forbiddeth(1130)
+civil men to be joined with ecclesiastical men in judgment. They are
+ecclesiastical things or causes which are handled and examined by the High
+Commission in the process of deposing ministers; and a shame it is to
+ecclesiastical men, if they cannot, without the help and joining of
+temporal men, judge and decide things of this quality.
+
+4. As in the matters to be judged, so in the censures and punishments to
+be inflicted, ecclesiastical and civil men have, in this commission, alike
+power and authority; for ecclesiastical men therein have power of fining,
+confining, warding, &c., common to them with the temporal men; and, again,
+the temporal men have power of excommunication, suspension, deprivation,
+&c., common to them with the ecclesiastical men. For they all sit there as
+the king's commissioners, and _eo nomine_, they exercise this
+jurisdiction; which commission being alike discharged by them all, it is
+manifest that both temporal men take hold of the keys and ecclesiastical
+men take hold of the civil sword. And this monstrous confusion and mixture
+giveth sufficient demonstration that such a form of judgment is not from
+the God of order.
+
+Of the abuses and irregularities of the High Commission we may not now
+speak at greater length, but are hasted to make forward.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+THAT THE LAWFULNESS OF THE CEREMONIES CANNOT BE WARRANTED BY THE LAW OF
+NATURE.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. What our opposites have alleged for the ceremonies, either from
+the law of God, or the law of man, we have hitherto answered; but we heard
+the law of nature also alleged(1131) for holidays, and for kneeling at the
+communion. And when Hooker(1132) goeth about to commend and defend such
+visible signs, "which, being used in performance of holy actions, are
+undoubtedly most effectual to open such matter, as men, when they know and
+remember carefully, must needs be a great deal the better informed to what
+effect such duties serve," he subjoineth: "We must not think but that
+there is some ground of reason even in nature," &c. This is a smoke to
+blind the eyes of the unlearned. Our opposites have taken no pains nor
+travail to make us see any deduction of those ceremonies from the law of
+nature: we desire proofs, not words. In the meanwhile, for giving further
+evidence to the truth, we will express our own mind touching things
+warranted by the law of nature.
+
+_Sect._ 2. And, first, we must understand aright what is meant by the law
+of nature: to wit, that law which God writeth and imprinteth in the nature
+of man,(1133) so that it is as it were co-natural and born together with
+man. Now, if we consider what law was written in the nature of man in his
+first creation, it was no other than the decalogue, or the moral
+law.(1134) But the law which we are here to inquire of is that law which,
+after the fall, God still writeth in the heart of every man; which (we all
+know) cometh far short, and wanteth much of that which was written in the
+heart of man before his fall. That we may understand what this law of
+nature is which is written in all men's hearts since the fall, we must
+distinguish _jus naturale_ from _jus divinum naturale_. For that law which
+is simply called _jus naturale_ is _innatum_, and layeth before the minds
+of men that way wherein, by the guidance and conduct of nature,(1135) they
+may be led to that good which is, in the end, proportionate to nature;
+whereas _jus divinum_ is _inspiratum_, and layeth before us another way,
+wherein, by a supernatural guidance,(1136) we may be led to a supernatural
+good, which is an end exceeding the proportion of nature. As for that part
+of the law of God which is called _jus divinum naturale_, it is so called
+in opposition to _jus divinum positivum_.
+
+_Sect._ 3. _Jus naturale,_ saith Justinian,(1137) _est quod naturo omnia
+animalia docuit_. This the lawyers take to be the law of nature, which
+nature, by its sole instinct, teacheth as well to other living creatures
+as to men; for nature teacheth all living creatures to save and preserve
+their own being, to decline things hurtful, to seek things necessary for
+their life, to procreate their like, to care for that which is procreated
+by them, &c. The Archbishop of Spalato(1138) liketh to speak with the
+lawyers. _Jus naturale_, saith he, _simpliciter ponitur in omnibus
+animalibus. Videntur autem_, saith Joachinus Mynsingerus,(1139) _juris
+consulti, valde in hoc abuti vocabulo juris, cum exemplae praedicta sint
+potius affectus et inclinationes naturales, quae cum quibusque animantibus
+enascuntur; quas philosophi_ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} _appellant. In brutis enim
+cum nulla sit ratio, igitur nec ullum jus esse potest._
+
+Aquinas also showeth(1140) that beasts are not properly governed by the
+law of nature, because _lex_ is _aliquid rationis_. Wherefore they err who
+would make the law of nature to differ in kind from _jus gentium_, which
+natural reason hath taught to all nations. For this law of nations _per se
+speciem non facit_, as saith Mynsingerus.(1141) And the law of nature is
+also, by the heathen writers, often called _jus gentium_, as Rosinus
+noteth.(1142) If any will needs have the law of nature distinguished from
+the law of nations, let them either take Aquinas' distinction,(1143) who
+maketh the law of nature to contain certain principles, having the same
+place in practical reason which the principles of scientific
+demonstrations have in speculative reason; and the law of nations to
+contain certain conclusions drawn from the said principles: or, otherwise,
+embrace the difference which is put betwixt those laws by Mattheus
+Wesenbecius:(1144) _Quae bestiae naturali concitatione; ea_, saith he,
+_homines ex eodem sensu ac affectione, cum moderatione tamen ratione si
+faciunt, jure naturae faciunt. Quae bruta non faciunt, sed sola ratione
+hominis propria, non affectione communis naturae, omnes homines faciunt,
+fierique opportere intelligunt hoc fit jure gentium._
+
+_Sect._ 4. For my part, I take the law of nature and the law of nations to
+be one and the same. For what is the law of nations but that which
+nature's light and reason hath taught so to all nations? Now this is no
+other than the law of nature. We think, therefore, they have well
+said,(1145) who comprehend under the law of nature both the common
+principles of good and evil, virtue and vice, right and wrong, things
+beseeming and things not beseeming, and likewise the general conclusions
+which, by necessary consequences, are drawn from the said principles. To
+come to the particulars, there are three sort of things which the law of
+nature requireth of man, as both schoolmen(1146) and modern doctors(1147)
+have rightly taught. The first, it requireth as he is _ens_; the second,
+as he is _animal_; and the third, as he is _homo ratione praeditus_. First,
+As he is _ens_, the law of nature requireth him to seek the conservation
+of his own being, and to shun or repel such things as may destroy the
+same. For so hath nature framed not only all living creatures, but other
+things also which are without life, that they seek their own conservation,
+and flee (if they can) from apparent destruction. Let us take one example
+out of subtle Scalliger,(1148) which is this: If a small quantity of oil
+be poured upon a sound board, let a burning coal be put in the midst of
+it, and the oil will quickly flee back from its enemy, and seek the
+conservation of itself. This is, therefore, the first precept of the law
+of nature, that man seek his own conservation, and avoid his own
+destruction. Whereupon this conclusion necessarily followeth, that he may
+repel violence with violence. Secondly, As man is a living creature, the
+law of nature teacheth him to propagate and conserve his kind. Whereupon
+these conclusions do follow, viz., the commixion of male and female, the
+procreation of children, the educating of them, and providing for them.
+This nature hath taught to man, as a thing common to him with other living
+creatures.
+
+_Sect._ 5. Thirdly, As a man is a creature endowed with reason, the law of
+nature teacheth him, 1. Something concerning God; 2. Something concerning
+his neighbour; 3. Something concerning himself. I mean some general
+notions concerning good and evil, in respect of each of these; whereof the
+Apostle meaneth whilst he saith that the Gentiles "show the work of the
+law written in their hearts," Rom. ii. 15. First, then, the law of nature
+teacheth man to know that there is a God, and that this God is to be
+worshipped; whereupon it followeth that man should seek to know God and
+the manner of his worship. Now that which may be known of God is showed
+even unto the Gentiles. The Apostle saith _signanter_, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}
+{~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~}, Rom. i. 19, meaning those few and small sparkles of the knowledge of
+God which nature's inbred light discovered unto the Gentiles, for making
+them inexcusable, namely, that there is an eternal power and Godhead,
+which men ought to reverence and to worship. 2. The law of nature teacheth
+man to hold fast friendship and amity with his neighbours, forasmuch as he
+is _animal sociale. Violare alterum_, saith Cicero, _naturae legae
+prohibemur_.(1149) For the law of nature biddeth us do to others as we
+would have others to do unto us, Luke vi. 31. And from these precepts it
+followeth, that we should not offend other men; that we should keep
+promises; stand to bargains; give to every man his own, &c. 3. As touching
+a man's self, the law of nature teacheth him that he should not live as a
+reasonless creature, but that all his actions should be such as may be
+congruous and beseeming for a creature endued with reason: Whereupon it
+followeth, that he should live honestly and virtuously, that he should
+observe order and decency in all his actions, &c. Hence the Apostle saith,
+that nature itself teacheth that it is a shame for a man to have long
+hair, 1 Cor. xi. 14, because it is repugnant to that decency and
+comeliness which the law of nature requireth. For, among other
+differences(1150) which nature hath put betwixt men and women, this is
+one, that it hath given to women thicker and longer hair than to men, that
+it might be as a veil, to adorn and cover them. The reason whereof nature
+hath hid in the complexion of a woman, which is more humid than the
+complexion of a man; so that, if a man should take him to this womanish
+ornament, he should but against nature transform himself (in so far) into
+a woman.
+
+_Sect._ 6. These things being permitted, I will add four reasons to prove
+that neither sacred significant ceremonies in general, nor kneeling,
+holidays, &c., in particular, can be warranted unto us by the law of
+nature. 1. The law of nature cannot direct us unto a supernatural end, as
+is acknowledged not only by our divines,(1151) but by Aquinas also.(1152)
+It only teacheth us to seek and to do _bonum, velut finem naturae_,(1153)
+such a good as is an end proportioned to nature. All these precepts of the
+law of nature which we have spoken of could never lead men to a
+supernatural good. It is only the divine law,(1154) revealed from God,
+which informeth the minds of men with such notions as are _supra naturam_,
+and which may guide them _ad finem supernaturalem_. But all sacred
+significant ceremonies which, by their holy and spiritual significations,
+express to us some mysteries of grace, and of the kingdom of God, must be
+thought to direct us unto a supernatural good; therefore they are not of
+that sort of things which the law of nature requireth; for this law goeth
+no higher than to teach men that there is a God, and that this God is to
+be worshipped, the knowledge of which things is not a good exceeding the
+proportion of nature: for it was found in the Gentiles themselves, who
+knew no other spiritual and supernatural good than that which was
+proportioned to nature. Let me now conclude this reason with Scalliger's
+words, _Neque enim quae supra naturae leges sunt, ex naturae legibus
+judicanda censeo_.(1155)
+
+_Sect._ 7. 2. As the ceremonies, by their sacred, spiritual, and mystical
+significations, direct us unto a supernatural good, so they are thought to
+guide us unto the same by a way which nature's light could never discover
+unto men. But, in the law of nature, as we are directed unto no other good
+than such as is proportioned to nature, so are we guided unto the same
+_natura duce_,(1156) that is to say, by such common notions as God hath
+imprinted in the nature of all men. Now, I suppose our opposites will not
+unwillingly reckon their sacred significant ceremonies among those things
+of the Spirit of God which a natural man cannot receive, because they are
+spiritually decerned, 1 Cor. ii. 14. What then have they to do with the
+law of nature? If it be said, that they necessarily follow upon those
+first principles and conclusions which a natural man receiveth, I answer,
+This shall never be proved. They will say, perhaps, that nature teacheth
+us to use certain rites in the worship of God, to observe set times for
+his worship, also to kneel down in reverence of God whom we worship.
+_Ans._ Be it so: but how make they up a necessary connection betwixt
+certain rites and significant ceremonies of human institution; betwixt set
+times, and some more days than one of seven; betwixt kneeling in the
+worship of God _in genere_, and kneeling at the sacrament _in specie_,
+unless they say that nature requireth us to kneel in every act of worship,
+and never to worship God without kneeling on our knees?
+
+_Sect._ 8. 3. _Jus naturae_ is _ubique idem_, as Rosinus:(1157) it is
+approved _communi omnium gentium judicio atque assensu_, as the Professors
+of Leyden:(1158) it is one and the same among all nations, in respect of
+the principles of it, as Aquinas(1159) and Zanchius:(1160) the law of
+nature _fixa est cordibus nostris_, as Stella:(1161) yea, it is "so
+written in our hearts that iniquity itself cannot blot it out," as
+Augustine saith;(1162) and we learn from the Apostle, that the law of
+nature is manifest in the Gentiles, for God hath showed it unto them, Rom.
+i. 19; therefore there is none ignorant, saith Pareus.(1163) Whatsoever,
+then, the law of nature requireth, it doth clearly and necessarily follow
+upon those principles which are written in every man's conscience, unless
+we set up new divinity, and either say that the principles of the law of
+nature are not written in every man's conscience, or else that they may be
+at some time abolished and rased out of the consciences of men; which were
+to leave men without a witness. Nay, saith Augustine,(1164) the heaven and
+the earth, and all that is in them, on every side, cease not to bid all
+men love God, that they be made inexcusable. Now if all the principles of
+the law of nature be firmly and clearly written in every man's conscience,
+and cannot but be known to every man who has the use of natural judgment
+and reason, it followeth, that they who will prove or warrant anything by
+the law of nature, must only take their premises from every man's
+conscience, and say, as the Apostle saith, "Judge in yourselves," &c.,
+"doth not even nature itself teach you," &c., 1 Cor. xi. 13, 14; as if the
+Apostle said, This principle of nature is fixed in all your hearts, that
+men should affect honesty and comeliness. Go to reason in yourselves, from
+the judgment of nature, whether it follow not, upon this principle, that a
+man should not wear long hair, forasmuch as his wearing of long hair is
+repugnant to the principle of nature. _Committit ipsis judicium_, saith
+Pareus; _ipsos testes, imo judices appellat_,(1165) so that, if the
+ceremonies be warranted unto us by the law of nature, the judgment must be
+committed to every man's conscience, and so should every man be convinced
+in himself, by such a principle of nature, from which the ceremonies have
+a necessary and manifest deduction. Yet we attest the Searcher of all
+hearts, that we have never been convinced in ourselves, by such a
+principle of nature, no, not after diligent search and inquiry.
+
+_Sect._ 9. 4. Let our opposites say to us, once for all, upon what precept
+of the law of nature do they ground the ceremonies; for I have before
+opened up all sorts of things which the law of nature requireth of man as
+he is _ens_; and as he is _animal_ belongeth not to our purpose. As for
+that which it requireth of him as he is a creature endued with reason,
+there is one part of it that concerneth ourselves, viz., that we should
+live honestly, and _secundum modum rationis_, that we should observe order
+and decency in all our actions. This order and decency do not respect our
+holy duties to God, nor comprehend any sacred ceremony in his worship; but
+they look to usward, and are referred only to such beseeming qualities as
+are congruous and convenient to a reasonable nature in all its actions.
+Yea, even generally, we may say with Scalliger,(1166) _Ordinem dico sine
+quo natura constare non potest. Nihil enim absque ordine vel med tata est
+vel effecit illa._ Another part of that which nature requireth of man, as
+he is a creature endued with reason, concerneth (as we showed) our
+neighbours, whom it teacheth us not to harm nor offend, &c. And if our
+opposites would reckon with us here, their ceremonies will appear
+repugnant to nature, because of the detriment and offence which they offer
+unto us, whereof we have spoken in our argument of scandal. But there was
+a third part, concerning God and his worship; and here must our opposites
+seek a warrant for the ceremonies. Now, albeit nature (as was said)
+teaches all men that there is an eternal and mighty God, who should be
+worshipped and honoured by them, yet it descendeth not unto such
+particular precepts as can have any show of making aught for significant
+ceremonies. _Omnibus enim innatum est et in animo quasi insculptum, esse
+deos_; but yet _quales sint_, saith Cicero, _varium est_.(1167) And as
+nature hath not taught men to know the nature and attributes of the
+Godhead, together with the sacred Trinity of persons in the same; so
+neither hath it taught what sort or manner of worship should be given unto
+God. _Lex naturalis rerum communium est_,(1168) and doth only inform us
+with those common notions called {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~}. Concerning the worship of
+God, it speaks only _de genere_, not _de specie_: wherefore there can be
+no inference from that worship which the law of nature requireth, either
+of any distinct kind of worship or of any ceremony in that kind, no more
+than it followeth, _Si est animal, est Asinus; for a genere ad speciem non
+valet consequentia affirmando_.
+
+
+
+
+ THE FOURTH PART.
+
+
+AGAINST THE INDIFFERENCY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+OF OUR OPPOSITES' PLEADING FOR THE INDIFFERENCY OF THE CEREMONIES.
+
+
+If it seem to any that it is a strange method to speak now of
+indifferency, in the end of this dispute, which ought rather to have been
+handled in the beginning of it, they may consider, that the method is not
+ours, but our opposites'; for they have been fleeing upon Icarus' wings,
+and soaring so high that their wings could not but melt from them: so have
+they, from necessity fallen down to expediency; from it to lawfulness; and
+from thence to indifferency.
+
+I knew certain of them, who, after reasoning about the ceremonies with
+some of our side, required, in the end, no more but that they would only
+acknowledge the indifferency of the things in themselves. And so being
+wooed and solicitously importuned by our former arguments against the
+ceremonies, they take them to the weaving of Penelope's web, thereby to
+suspend us, and to gain time against us: this indifferency, I mean, which
+they shall never make out, and which themselves, otherwhiles, unweave
+again. Always, so long as they think to get any place for higher notions
+about the ceremonies, they speak not so meanly of them as of things
+indifferent; but when all their forces of arguments and answers are spent
+in vain, then are our ears filled with uncouth outcries and declamations,
+which tend to make themselves appear blameless for receiving, and us
+blameworthy for refusing matters of rite and indifferency.
+
+Upon this string they harp over and over again, in books, in sermons, in
+private discourses. Mr G. Powell (in his book _De Adiaphoris_), and Tilen
+(in the 12th and 17th chapters of his _Paraenesis_), condemn those who
+make aught ado about the controverted English ceremonies, for so much as
+they are things indifferent. Paybody, in his Apology for kneeling at the
+communion, standeth much upon the indifferency of this gesture, both in
+every worship of God, and in that sacrament namely. The Archbishop of St.
+Andrews, in his sermon at Perth Assembly, because he could not prove this
+indifferency, he chose to suppose it. "Of the indifferency of these
+articles (saith he) I think there is little or no question amongst us."
+Whether he spake this of ignorance or of policy, I leave it to be guessed
+at. Howsoever, if we should thus compose our controversy about the
+ceremonies, embrace them, and practise them, so being that they be only
+called things indifferent, this were to cure our church, as L. Sylla cured
+his country, _durioribus remediis quam pericula erant_, saith
+Seneca.(1169) Wherefore we will debate this question of indifferency also.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+OF THE NATURE OF THINGS INDIFFERENT.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. To say nothing here of the homonymy of the word _indifferent_,
+but to take it in that signification which concerneth our present purpose,
+it signifieth such a mean betwixt good and evil in human actions, as is
+alike distant from both these extremes, and yet susceptive of either of
+them. _Indifferens_, saith Calepin, is that _quod sua natura neque bonum
+est neque malum_. Aquinas(1170) calleth that an indifferent action which
+is neither good nor evil. _Rem indifferentem voco quae neque bona neque
+mala in se est_, saith a later writer.(1171)
+
+But Dr Forbesse(1172) liketh to speak in another language. He will have
+that which is indifferent to be opponed to that which is necessary; and a
+thing indifferent he taketh to be such a thing as is neither necessarily
+to be done, nor yet necessarily to be omitted, in respect of any necessity
+of the commandment of God; or such a thing as is neither remunerable with
+eternal life, and commendeth a man unto the reward of God, nor yet is
+punishable with eternal death, and polluteth a man with guiltiness. Now,
+because he knew that divines define a thing indifferent to be that which
+is neither good nor evil, he therefore distinguisheth a twofold goodness
+of an individual action.(1173) The one he calleth _bonitas generalis,
+concomitans, et sine qua non_; by which goodness is meant the doing of an
+action in faith, and the doing of it for the right end, as he expoundeth
+himself. This goodness, he saith, is necessary to every human action, and
+hindereth not an action to be indifferent. The other he calleth _bonitas
+specialis, causans, et propter quam_. This goodness he calleth legal, and
+saith that it maketh an action necessary; in which respect indifferent
+actions are not good, but those only which God in his law hath commanded,
+and which are remunerable with eternal life.
+
+_Sect._ 2. But that we may have the vanity of these quiddities discovered
+to us, let us only consider how falsely he supposeth that there are some
+things which we do neither laudably nor culpably, and for which we shall
+neither be rewarded (it is his own phrase which I use) nor yet punished by
+God. I thought we had learned from Scripture that we must all appear
+before the judgment-seat of Christ, to give an account of every word which
+we speak, and of every deed which we do in the flesh, and accordingly to
+receive either a reward or a punishment. What! Could the Doctor say that
+these good actions which he calleth indifferent, and of which he saith
+that they are done in faith, and for the right end, are not laudable nor
+remunerable? Nay, but he saith(1174) that the general goodness which
+accompanieth the action is remunerable, because it is necessary, but the
+action itself is not necessary, because that general goodness may be had
+as well in the omission of it, or in the doing of the contrary, as in the
+doing of it, whereupon he would have it to follow that the action itself
+is not remunerable.
+
+_Ans._ 1. The Doctor had done well to have remembered that he is speaking
+only of individual actions, and that _actus individuatur a circumstantus
+et adjecto modo_, so that whilst all that he saith turneth to this, that
+one action considered in itself, without the circumstances and concomitant
+goodness, is not remunerable, he maketh not out his point; for he saith no
+more in effect, but that _actus quo ad speciem_ is not remunerable, which
+none of us denieth.
+
+2. An individual good action of that kind which the Doctor calleth
+necessary, is no otherwise remunerable and laudable than an individual
+good action of that kind which he calleth indifferent, for example, when I
+go to hear God's word upon the Lord's day, let this action of mine be
+considered _quo ad individuum_, is it any otherwise remunerable than in
+respect of the goodness which accompanieth it? Whence it is that the
+hearing of hypocrites, not being accompanied with such goodness, is not
+remunerable, yet the hearing of the word is an action necessary, because
+commanded? Now may we know wherein standeth the difference betwixt the
+remunerable good of this action of hearing, and remunerable good of one of
+those actions which the Doctor calleth indifferent, for example, a woman's
+action of marrying.
+
+I perceive what the Doctor would answer, for he saith,(1175) if a woman
+marry in the Lord, this action is good _respectu adjecti modi, quamvis in
+se sit media et libera, etiam quo ad individuum_, implying that if, on the
+other part, an individual action be necessary (as for example the action
+of hearing the word), then it is in itself good, _etiam quo ad
+individuum_.
+
+But, I reply, what means he by these words, _in se_? Means he the
+individual nature of the action? Nay, then the sense shall be no other
+than this, _quo ad individuum, etiam quo ad individuum_. And, besides, the
+Doctor cannot define to us any other nature in an individual thing than
+the nature of the species or kind.
+
+Is it not holden _individuum non posse definiri, nisi definitione
+specici_?(1176) Sure a perfect definition, expressing the nature of the
+thing defined, cannot be given to any individual thing other than the
+definition of the species, needs, therefore, must the Doctor, by _in se_,
+understand the specifical nature, and, indeed, when divines speak of
+things indifferent, _in se_, _per se_, or _sua natura_, they mean only
+things indifferent _quo ad speciem_. Yet thus also the Doctor hath said
+nonsense, for so we should take his words, _quamvis quoad speciem sit
+media et libera, etiam quo ad individuum_.
+
+_Sect._ 3. But to let his manner of speaking pass, we will consider what
+he would or could have said. There is no difference which can here be
+imagined except this: That the individual action of hearing the word (when
+one heareth aright) is good and remunerable in a double respect, namely,
+because it is both good in itself, or _quo ad speciem_, and likewise
+_respectu adjecti modi_, whereas a woman's action of marrying (when she
+marrieth in the Lord) is only good and remunerable in the last respect,
+namely, _respectu modi_, for, _in se_, or, _quo ad speciem_, it hath no
+remunerable goodness in it.
+
+_Ans._ What do we hear of any difference betwixt these actions _quo ad
+speciem_? That which we crave is, that a difference may be showed betwixt
+the remunerable goodness of the one and of the other, both being
+considered _quo ad individuum_.
+
+That whereby the Doctor either was deceived, or would deceive, appeareth
+to be this: That he taketh everything which agreeth to an individual thing
+to agree to it _quo ad individuum_, as if to speak of Peter _quatenus est
+homo_, and to speak of him _quatenus est individuum signatum_, or _res
+singularis sub specie hominis_, were all one thing. Even so, to say of my
+individual action of hearing the word, that it is necessary because of the
+commandment of God (and in that respect remunerable), is not to speak of
+it _quo ad individuum_, but as the specifical nature of that action of
+hearing the word (which God hath commanded) is found in it; for if we
+speak of this individual action, _quo ad individuum_, we cannot consider
+it otherwise than _respectu adjecti modi_, because, in moral actions,
+_modus adjectus_ is _principium individuationis_, and nothing else doth
+individualise a moral action.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Thus shall my position stand good, namely, that those
+individual actions which the Doctor calleth necessary, because their
+species is commanded of God, and those individual actions which he calleth
+indifferent, because their _species_ is not commanded, both being
+considered _quo ad individuum_, the former hath no other remunerable good
+in them than the latter, and the whole remunerable good which is in either
+of them standeth only _in objecto modo_; which being so, it is all one
+when we speak of any individual moral action _quo ad individuum_, whether
+we say that it is good, or that it is remunerable and laudable, both are
+one. For, as is well said by Aquinas,(1177) _Necessarium est omnem actum
+hominis, ut bonum vel malum, culpabilis vel laudabilis rationem habere_.
+And again: _Nihil enim est aliud laudari vel culpari, quam imputari alicui
+malitiam vel bonitatem sui actus_; wherefore that distinction of a twofold
+goodness, _causans_ and _concomitans_, which the Doctor hath given us,
+hath no use in this question, because every action is laudable and
+remunerable which is morally good, whether it be necessary or not. Now
+moral goodness, saith Scalliger,(1178) _est perfectio actus cum recta
+ratione_. Human moral actions are called good or evil, _in ordine ad
+rationem, quae est proprium principium humanorum actuum_, saith
+Aquinas,(1179) thereupon inferring that _illis mores dicuntur boni, qui
+rationi congruunt; mali autem, qui a ratione discordant_. Dr Forbesse doth
+therefore pervert the question whilst he saith,(1180) _in hac cum
+fratribus quaestione, hoc bonum est quod necessarium_. Nay, those actions
+we call morally good which are agreeable to right reason, whether they be
+necessary or not. Since, then, those actions are laudable and remunerable
+which are morally good, and those are morally good which are agreeable to
+right reason, it followeth, that forasmuch as those actions which the
+Doctor calleth indifferent, are agreeable to right reason, they are,
+therefore, not only morally good, but also laudable and remunerable, and
+so not indifferent. Yea, those actions which he calleth necessary, being
+considered _quo ad individuum_, are no otherwise laudable and remunerable
+than those which he calleth indifferent, being considered in like manner
+_quo ad individuum_, as hath been showed.
+
+_Sect._ 5. And besides all this, we have somewhat more to say of the
+Doctor's speculation about the nature of things indifferent.
+
+For, 1. The Doctor maketh that which is indifferent to be opponed to that
+which is necessary, and yet he maketh both these to be morally good. Now
+albeit in natural things one good is opponed to another good, as that
+which is hot to that which is cold, yet _bonum bona non contrariatur in
+moralibus_.(1181) The reason of the difference is, because _bonitas
+physica_, or _relativa est congruentia naturae quaedem_, saith
+Scalliger;(1182) and because two natures may be contrary one to another,
+therefore the good which is congruous to the one may be contrary to the
+good which is congruous to the other; but _bonum virtutis_, saith
+Aquinas(1183) _non accipitur nisi per convenientiam ad aliquid unum,
+scilicet rationem_; so that it is impossible for one moral good to be
+opponed to another.
+
+2. Since divines take a thing indifferent to be _medium inter bonum et
+malum morale_; and since (as the very notation of the word showeth) it is
+such a means as cometh not nearer to the one extreme than to the other,
+but is alike distant from both, how comes it that the Doctor so far
+departeth both from the tenet of divines and from the notation of the
+word, as to call some such actions indifferent as have a moral remunerable
+goodness, and yet not evil in them? or where learned he such a dialect as
+giveth to some good things the name of the things indifferent?
+
+3. Why doth he also waver from himself; for he citeth(1184) out of the
+Helvetic Confessor Jerome's definition of a thing indifferent, and
+approveth it. _Indifferens_, saith he, _illud est quod nec bonum nec malum
+est, ut sive feceris sive non feceris, nec justitiam habeas nec
+injustitiam._ Behold the goodness which is excluded from the nature of a
+thing indifferent is not only necessity but righteousness also, yet hath
+the Doctor excluded only the good of necessity from things indifferent,
+making the other good of righteousness to stand with them; for things
+which are done in faith, and done for the right end (such as he
+acknowledgeth these things to be which he calleth indifferent), have
+righteousness in them, as all men know.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+WHETHER THERE BE ANYTHING INDIFFERENT IN ACTU EXERCITO.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. For our better light in this question I will premit these
+considerations, 1. When we measure the goodness or the badness of a human
+action, we must not only measure it by the object and the end, but by all
+the circumstances which accompany it. Fed. Morellus,(1185) upon those
+words of Seneca, _Refert quid, cui, quando, quare, ubi,_ &c., saith, that
+without those circumstances of things, persons, times, places, _facti
+ratio non constat_. Circumstances sometimes _constituunt rerum earum quae
+aguntur speciem_, say our divines,(1186) meaning that circumstances do
+make an action good or bad. _Humani actus_, say the schoolmen,(1187) _non
+solum ex objectis, verum ex circumstantiis boni vel mali esse dicuntur_.
+It is not every man's part, saith one of our opposites,(1188) to judge _de
+circumstantia, quae reddit actionem vel bonam vel malam_. "Some
+circumstances, saith another of them,(1189) are intrinsical and essential
+to actions, and specially making up their nature." The principal
+circumstances which here we speak of, are comprehended in this versicle:--
+
+Quis, quid, ubi, quibus auxiliis, cur quomodo,
+quando.
+
+The first circumstance which maketh an action good or bad is _quis_, which
+designeth the person: If a magistrate put to death a malefactor, the
+action is good; but if a private person put him to death, it is evil.
+
+The second is _quid_, which noteth the quality or condition of the object:
+If a man take _sua_, the action is good; if _aliena_, it is evil.
+
+The third is _ubi_: If men banquet in their own houses, the action is
+good; if in the church, it is evil.
+
+The fourth is _quibus auxiliis_: If men seek health by lawful means, the
+action is good; if by the devil, or his instruments, it is evil.
+
+The fifth is _cur_: If I rebuke my brother for his fault, out of my love
+to him, and desire to reclaim him, the action is good; if out of hatred
+and spleen, the action is evil.
+
+The sixth is _quomodo_: For he who doth the work of the Lord carefully
+doth well; but he who doth it negligently doth evil.
+
+The seventh is _quando_: To do servile work upon the six days of labour,
+is good; but to do it upon the Lord's Sabbath, is evil.
+
+2. There is another consideration which followeth upon the former; and it
+is this: The goodness or badness of a human action may be considered two
+ways, viz., either _in actu signato_, and _quo ad speciem_; or _in actu
+exercito_, and _quo ad individuum_; for an action is said to be
+specificated by its object, and individuated by its circumstances; so
+that, when an action is good or evil in respect of the object of it, then
+it is called good or evil _quo ad speciem_: when it is good or evil in
+respect of the circumstances of it, then it is said to be good or evil
+_quo ad individuum_.
+
+3. Human actions, whether considered _quo ad speciem_, or _quo ad
+individuum_, are either such as proceed from the deliberation of reason,
+or from bare imagination only. To this latter kind we refer such actions
+as are done through incogitancy, while the mind is taken up with other
+thoughts; for example, to scratch the head, to handle the beard, to move
+the foot, &c.; which sort of things proceed only from a certain stirring
+or fleeting of the imagination.
+
+4. Let it be remembered, that those things we call morally good, which
+agree to right reason; those morally evil which disagree from right
+reason; and those indifferent which include nothing belonging to the order
+of reason, and so are neither consonant unto nor dissonant from the same.
+
+5. When we speak of the indifferency of an individual action, it may be
+conceived two ways: either _absolute et sine respectu ad aliud_; or
+_comparate et cum respectu ad aliud_. In the free-will offerings, if so be
+a man offered according as God had blessed and prospered his estate, it
+was indifferent to offer either a bullock, or a sheep, or a goat; but if
+he chose to offer any of them, his action of offering could not be
+indifferent, but either good or evil. When we speak of the indifferency of
+an action _comparate_, the sense is only this, that it is neither better
+nor worse than another action, and that there is no reason to make us
+choose to do it more than another thing; but when we speak of the
+indifferency of an action considered absolutely and by itself, the simple
+meaning is, whether it be either good or evil, and whether the doing of
+the same must needs be either sin or evil doing.
+
+6. Every thing which is indifferent in the nature of it, is not by and by
+indifferent in the use of it. But the use of a thing indifferent ought
+evermore to be either chosen or refused, followed or forsaken, according
+to these three rules delivered to us in God's word: 1. The rule of piety;
+2. The rule of charity; 3. The rule of purity.
+
+The first of these rules we find, 1 Cor. x. 31, "Whether, therefore, ye
+eat or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God;" and Rom.
+xiv. 7, 8, "For none of us liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself.
+For whether we live, we live unto the Lord, and whether we die, we die
+unto the Lord:" where the Apostle, as Calvin noteth,(1190) reasoneth from
+the whole to the part. Our whole life, and, by consequence, all the
+particular actions of it, ought to be referred to God's glory, and ordered
+according to his will. Again, Col. iii. 17, "And whatsoever ye do, in word
+or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus." In the expounding of which
+words Dr Davenant saith well, that _Etiam ille actiones quae sunt sua
+natura adiaphorae, debent tamen a Christianis fieri in nomine Christi, hoc
+est, juxta voluntatem Christi, et ad gloriam Christi_.
+
+The second rule is the rule of charity; which teacheth us not to use
+anything indifferent when scandal riseth out of it: Rom. xiv. 21, "It is
+good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor anything whereby thy
+brother stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak;" yea, though it do not
+weaken, if it be not expedient for edifying our brother, be it never so
+lawful or indifferent in its own nature, the law of charity bindeth us to
+abstain from it: Rom. xiv. 19, "Let us therefore follow after the things
+which make for peace, and the things wherewith one may edify another;"
+Rom. xv. 2, "Let every one of us please his neighbour for his good to
+edification;" 1 Cor. x. 23, "All things are lawful for me, but all things
+are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but all things edify
+not:" where the Apostle teacheth, that _in cibo_, &c.,(1191) "In meat,
+drink, and the whole kind of things indifferent, it is not enough to look
+whether they be lawful, but that, farther, we are to look whether to do or
+omit the same be expedient, and may edify." The Bishop of Winchester,
+preaching upon John xvi. 7, "I tell you the truth: it is expedient for you
+that I go away," &c., marketh, that Christ would not go away without
+acquainting his disciples with the reason of it; and that reason was,
+because it was for their good: whereupon he inferreth, 1. That we should
+avoid Hophni's _non vult enim_, and make our _vult_ our _enim_, 1 Sam. ii.
+15; that is, that we should not give our will for a reason, but a reason
+for our will; 2. That we should not, with the Corinthians, stand upon
+_licet_,--it is lawful, but frame our rule by _expedit_,--it is expedient, 1
+Cor. vi. 13; x. 23; 3. That our rule should not be Caiaphas' _expedit
+nobis_, but Christ's _expedit vobis_,--for you it is good, you, the
+disciples, John xi. 50; and make that the rule of our going out and our
+coming in. The heathens themselves could say that we are born, partly for
+God, partly for our country, partly for our friends, &c. How much more
+ought Christians to understand that we are not born for ourselves, but for
+Christ and his church. And as in the whole course of our life, so
+especially in the policy of the church, we may do nothing (be it never so
+indifferent in itself) which is not profitable for edification: 1 Cor.
+xiii. 26, "Let all things be done to edifying." From which precept Pareus
+inferreth, that nothing ought to be done in the church which doth not
+manifestly make for the utility of all and every one; and that therefore
+not only unknown tongues, but cold ceremonies and idle gestures should be
+exploded out of the church.
+
+The third rule is the rule of purity, which respecteth our peace and
+plerophory of conscience, without which anything is unclean to us, though
+it be clean and lawful in its own nature: Rom xiv. 14, "To him that
+esteemeth anything to be unclean, to him it is unclean," therefore _si
+quis aliquam in cibo immunditiem imagineter, eo libere uti non
+potest_.(1192) Whatsoever indifferent thing a man in his conscience
+judgeth to be unlawful, he may not lawfully do it: Rom xiv. 5, "Let every
+man be fully persuaded in his own mind;" and verse 23, "He that doubteth
+is damned if he eat, because he eateth not of faith; for whatsoever is not
+of faith is sin." _Nefas est omnino_, saith Calvin,(1193) _quippiam
+aggredi quod putes illi (domino) displicere, imo quod non persuasus sis
+illi placere_. Now if a thing indifferent be used according to these three
+rules, the use of it is not only lawful but expedient also; but if it be
+not used according to these rules, the use of it is altogether unlawful.
+
+_Sect._ 3. And since a thing indifferent in the nature of it can never be
+lawfully used, except according to these rules, hence it followeth, that
+the use of a thing indifferent is never lawful to us when we have no other
+warrant for using the same beside our own will and arbitrement.
+
+Dr Forbesse speaks unadvisedly whilst he saith,(1194) _Evenit nonnunquam_,
+&c.: "It falleth out sometimes that that which was expedient for thee to
+do yesterday, and to omit this day, thou mayest, notwithstanding,
+afterward either do it, or not do it, according to thy arbitrement:" As
+if, forsooth, our using of things indifferent should not evermore be
+determined by the rule of expediency which God's word giveth us, but
+sometimes by our own will. Dr Davenant(1195) could not dream that any,
+except the ignorant common people, could be of this opinion which Dr
+Forbesse holdeth _Fallitur vulgus_, saith he, _dum judicat licere __ sibi,
+uti victu, vestitu, sermone, aut quacunque re adiaphora pro arbitrio suo;
+nam haec omnia ad regulam adhibenda sunt_.
+
+Moreover, as we may not use any indifferent thing at our own pleasure; so
+neither may the church, at her will and pleasure, command the use of it:
+but as our practice, so the church's injunction must be determined and
+squared according to the former rules. And if any man think that, in the
+using of things indifferent, he may be led and ruled by the church's
+determination, without examining any further, let him understand that the
+church's determination is but a subordinate rule, or a rule ruled by
+higher rules.
+
+Dr Forbesse, perceiving how these rules of Scripture may subvert his
+cause, desireth to subject them to the church's determination, and to make
+it our highest rule. _Jam autem_, saith he,(1196) _in talium rerum usu, id
+edificat, quod pacificum; illud est pacificum quod est ordinatum; is autem
+decens ordo est in ecclesia ab ipso Christo constitutus, ut in talibus non
+suo quisque se gerat arbitratu, sed audiatur ecclesia, et exhibeatur
+praepositis obedientia._
+
+He hath been speaking of the rules which God's word giveth us concerning
+the use of things indifferent; and all of them he comprehendeth under this
+rule, that we should hear the church, and obey them who are set over us,
+as if God's rules were subordinate to men's rules, and not theirs to his.
+We say not that every man may use things indifferent _sua arbitratu_, but
+we say withal, that neither may the church command the use of things
+indifferent _suo arbitratu_. Both she in commanding and we in obeying must
+be guided by the rules of Scripture.
+
+They who are set over us in the church have no power given them of Christ
+which is not for edifying, Eph. iv. 12. The counsel of the apostles and
+elders at Jerusalem (which is a lively pattern of a lawful synod to the
+world's end) professed they would lay no other burden upon the disciples
+except such things as the law of charity made necessary for shunning of
+scandal, Acts xv. 28; and so that which they decreed had force and
+strength to bind _a charitate propter scandalum_, saith Sanctius;(1197)
+but _suo arbitratu_ they enjoined nothing. Cartwright saith, "It appeareth
+by this place that there may be no abridgement of liberty simply decreed,
+but in regard of circumstance, according to the rule of
+edification."(1198) And if the church's decrees and canons be not
+according to the rules of the word; yet, forasmuch as every one of us
+shall give account of himself and his own deeds, we must look that
+whatsoever the church decree, yet our practice, in the use or omission of
+a thing indifferent, be according to the foresaid rules.
+
+We may not, for the commandment of men, transgress the rule of piety, by
+doing anything which is not for God's glory, and ordered according to his
+will; neither ought any of us to obey men, except "for the Lord's sake," 1
+Pet. ii. 13, and "as the servants of Christ, doing the will of God," Eph.
+vi. 6; which teacheth us the manner how we ought to obey men, namely,
+_propter Christum et sicut Christus praecipit_;(1199) for if we should
+know no more but the will of man for that which we do, then we should be
+the "servants of men," not the servants of Christ. Neither yet may we for
+any human ordinance break the rule of charity; "But whatsoever either
+would weaken, or not edify our brother, be it never so lawful, never so
+profitable to ourselves, never so powerfully by earthly authority
+enjoined, Christians, who are not born unto themselves, but unto Christ,
+unto his church, and unto the fellow-members, must not dare to meddle with
+it."(1200)
+
+Nor, lastly, may we obey men, so as to break the law of purity, and
+"perform any action with a doubtful conscience; that is, whereof either
+the world hath not,(1201) nor we out of it have no warrant, in which case
+tender consciences must be tendered rather than be racked by authority,
+for be the things in themselves never so lawful, &c., they are utterly
+unlawful to me without such information." Whereas, therefore, some say,
+that in the use of matters indifferent, the laws of those who are set over
+us ought to rule us; we still answer that our practice may not be ruled by
+any law of man, except it be according to the rules of the word, whereof
+one is this, _Tantum oportere esse obedientiae studium in
+Christianis,_(_1202_)_ ut nihil agant, quod non existiment vel potius
+certi sint placere Deo_.
+
+_Sect._ 4. These considerations being permitted, for resolution of the
+question in hand, we say, 1. As touching those actions which proceed from
+bare imagination, whether they be evil and inordinate _quo ad speciem_,
+forsomuch as the imagination from which they have their original doth not
+in those actions subject itself to the conduct and moderation of reason,
+but is like Gehazi, running away without his master's leave, let the
+learned give their judgment. Howsoever, it cannot be denied, that such
+actions may be and are of a civil _quo ad individuum_,(1203) or in respect
+of the circumstances, which show forth in them reprovable temerity,
+incogitancy, levity, and indecency. But such actions belong not to our
+purpose. 2. As for those actions which proceed from the deliberation of
+reason, howbeit many of them be indifferent, _quo ad speciem_, yet none of
+them are, nor can be indifferent, _quo ad individuum_. The reason of this
+difference and distinction is, because every action hath its species or
+kind,(1204) from the object, and a human moral action hath its species or
+kind from the object referred to the original of human actions, which is
+reason. Whereupon it cometh, that if the object of the action include
+something that agreeth to the order of reason, it shall be a good action,
+according to its kind; for example, to give alms to an indigent man. But
+if it include something that is repugnant to the order of reason, it shall
+be an evil action according to its kind; as to steal or take away another
+man's goods. Now sometimes it happeneth that the object of an action doth
+not include something that belongeth to the order of reason; as to lift a
+straw from the ground, to go to the field, &c., such actions are
+indifferent, according to their kind. But we must pronounce far otherwise
+of them when we speak of them _quo ad individuum_, because as they are
+individuated by their circumstances, so in their individual being, they
+have their goodness or badness from the same circumstances, as hath been
+showed. So that no such action as is deliberated upon can be indifferent,
+_quo ad individuum_; because _oportet_ (saith Thomas(1205)) _quod quilibet
+individualis actus habeat aliquam circumstantiam, per quam trahetur ad
+bonum vel malum, ad minus ex parte intentionis finis_. Friar Ambrosius
+Catarinus, following the doctrine of Thomas, maintained in the Council of
+Trent,(1206) that to do good was a work, the concurrences of all
+circumstances is necessary, but the want of one only is sufficient for an
+evil, so that howsoever among the works considered in general, some are
+indifferent, yet in the singular there is no medium between having all the
+circumstances and wanting some; therefore every particular action is good
+or evil; and because among the circumstances the end is one, all works
+referred to a bad end are infected. He further alleged St. Augustine, that
+it is sin not only to refer the action to a bad end, but also not to refer
+it to a good end. Thus spake the learned friar very appositely; and the
+same is the judgment of our own divines. _De bis rebus indifferentibus_
+(saith Martyr(1207)) _statuendum est, quod tantummodo ex genere atque
+natura sua indifferentiam habeant, sed quando ad electionem descenditur
+nihil est indifferens_; and so saith Pareus likewise.(1208)
+
+_Sect._ 5. These things are so plain and undeniable, that Dr
+Forbesse(1209) himself acknowledged no less than that every individual
+human action is either good or bad morally; and that there is a goodness
+which is necessary to every action, namely, the referring of it to the
+last end, and the doing of it in faith; which goodness, if it be wanting,
+the action is evil. Notwithstanding, he will have some actions, even _quo
+ad individuum_, called indifferent, for this respect, because they are
+neither commanded of God, and so necessary to be done, nor yet forbidden,
+and so necessary to be omitted.
+
+Of an individual action of this kind, he saith: _Manet homini respectu
+istius actus plena arbitrii libertas moralis; tum ea quae exercitii seu
+contradictionis dicitur, tum etiam ea quae specificationis seu
+contrarietatis libertas appellatur._ He holdeth, that though such an
+action be done in faith, and for the right end (which general goodness, he
+saith, is necessary to the action, and commendeth a man to God), yet the
+action itself is indifferent, because it is not necessary; for a man hath
+liberty to omit the same, or to do another thing; which he illustrateth by
+this example:--
+
+If the widow Sempronia marry at all, it is faith, because, as the Apostle
+teacheth, whatsoever is not of faith is sin. Now whilst everything is
+condemned which is not of faith, two sorts of actions are rejected, as
+Calvin observeth:(1210) 1. Such actions as are not grounded upon, nor
+approven by the word of God. 2. Such actions, as though they be approven
+by the word of God, yet the mind, wanting this persuasion, doth not
+cheerfully address itself to the doing of them. But, I pray, doth the word
+underprop or approve the use of anything indifferent, if it be not used
+according to the foresaid rules, and, by consequence, conveniently and
+profitably?
+
+_Sect._ 9. The Doctor thinks it enough that, in the use of a thing
+indifferent, I believe it is lawful for me to do this thing, albeit I
+believe and certainly know that it is lawful to me to omit it, or do the
+contrary; so that the doing of a thing in faith inferreth not the
+necessity of doing it: but for answer hereunto we say,
+
+1. We have sufficiently proven that it is never lawful for us to do
+anything which is in the nature of it indifferent, except we be persuaded
+not only of the lawfulness of the thing, but of the expediency of doing
+it.
+
+2. Of his comparing of things indifferent together, and not considering
+them positively and by themselves, we have also said enough before.
+
+3. The doing of a thing in faith inferreth the expediency and profit of
+doing it, and that is enough to take away the indifferency of doing it;
+for since every indifferent thing is either expedient to be done, or else
+unlawful to be done (as hath been showed), it followeth that either it
+ought to be done, or else it ought to be left undone; therefore it is
+never indifferent nor free to us to do it, or leave it undone, at our
+pleasure.
+
+4. Because the Doctor (I perceive) sticketh upon the term of necessity,
+and will have everything which is not necessary to be indifferent;
+therefore, to remove this scruple, beside that Chrysostom and the author
+of the interlineary gloss upon Matt. xviii. 7, take the meaning of those
+words, "It must needs be that offences come," to be this, _it is
+profitable that offences come_. Which gloss, though it be not to be
+received, yet as Camero noteth,(1211) it is ordinary to call that
+necessary which is very profitable and expedient. Besides this, I say, we
+further maintain, that in the use of things indifferent, that which we
+deliberate upon to do is never lawful to be done except it be also
+necessary, though not _necessitate absoluta seu consequentis_, yet
+_necessitate consequentiae seu ex suppositione_. Paul's circumcising of
+Timothy was lawful only because it was necessary, for he behoved by this
+means to win the good will of the people of Lystra who had once stoned
+him,(1212) otherwise he could not safely have preached the gospel among
+them. Therefore he had done wrong if he had not circumcised Timothy, since
+the circumcising of him was according to the rules of the word, and it was
+expedient to circumcise him, and unexpedient to do otherwise. And (because
+_de partibus idem est judicium_) whensoever the use of any indifferent
+thing is according to the rules of the word, that is, when it is
+profitable for God's glory, and man's edification, and the doer is
+persuaded of so much, I say, putting this case, then (forsomuch as not
+only it may, but ought to be done) the use of it is not only lawful but
+necessary, and (forsomuch as not only it needs not, but ought not to be
+admitted) the omission of it is not only unnecessary but also unlawful.
+
+Again, put the case, that the use of a thing indifferent be either against
+or not according to the said rules, then (forsomuch as not only it may,
+but ought to be admitted) the omission of it is not only lawful but
+necessary, and (forsomuch as not only it needs not, but may not, neither
+ought to be done) the doing of it is not only unnecessary but also
+unlawful. For which it maketh, that the apostles in their decree, allege
+no other ground for abstinence from blood and things strangled (which were
+in their nature indifferent), but the necessity of abstaining caused and
+induced by the foresaid rules, Acts xv. 28.
+
+The Apostle showeth that that measure of liberality whereunto he exhorted
+the Corinthians was not by any divine commandment necessary, yet he
+adviseth it as a thing expedient, 2 Cor. viii. 8, 10. And were not the
+Corinthians thereunto bound, because of this expediency of the matter,
+though it was not necessary? _Juxta verbum_, &c.: "According to God's word
+(saith the Bishop of Salisbury(1213)) we are obliged to glorify God by our
+good works, not only when necessity requireth, but also when ability
+furnisheth, and opportunity occurreth," Gal. vi. 10; Tit. ii. 14.
+
+_Sect._ 10. As touching the scope of all this dispute, which is the
+indifferency of the controverted ceremonies, we shall hear sundry reasons
+against it afterward. For the present, I say no more but this: As in every
+case, so most especially when we meddle with the worship of God, or any
+appurtenance thereof, the rules of the word tie us so straitly, that that
+which is in its own nature indifferent ought either to be done, or to be
+left undone, according as it is either agreeable or not agreeable to these
+rules; and so is never left free to us to be done or omitted at our
+pleasure: for if at all we be (as certainly we are) abridged of our
+liberty, chiefly it is in things pertaining to divine worship.
+
+But I marvel why Dr Forbesse discourseth so much for the indifferency of
+the ceremonies; for, lib. 1, cap. 7, he holdeth, that there were just
+reasons in the things themselves why the pretended Assembly of Perth
+should enjoin the five articles; some of which he calleth very convenient
+and profitable, and others of them necessary in themselves. Sure, if he
+stand to that which he hath there written, he cannot choose but say that
+it is unlawful, both for us and for all Christians anywhere, to omit the
+controverted ceremonies; and that all such as have at any time omitted
+them, have thereby sinned, in leaving that undone which they ought to have
+done--for the conveniency and necessity of them which he pretendeth is
+perpetual and universal.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+OF THE RULE BY WHICH WE ARE TO MEASURE AND TRY WHAT THINGS ARE
+INDIFFERENT.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. That the word of God is the only rule whereby we must judge of
+the indifferency of things, none of our opposites, we hope, will deny. "Of
+things indifferent (saith Paybody(1214)) I lay down this ground, that they
+be such, and they only, which God's word hath left free unto us."
+
+Now these things which God's word leaveth free and indifferent (in respect
+of their nature and kind) are such things as it neither showeth to be good
+nor evil. Where we are further to consider, that the word of God showeth
+unto us the lawfulness or unlawfulness, goodness or badness of things, not
+only by precepts and prohibitions, but sometimes also, and more plainly,
+by examples. So that, not only from the precepts and prohibitions of the
+word, but likewise from the examples recorded in the same, we may find out
+that goodness or badness of human actions which taketh away the
+indifferency of them.
+
+And as for those who will have such things called indifferent as are
+neither commanded nor forbidden in the word of God, I ask of them whether
+they speak of plain and particular precepts and prohibitions, or of
+general only? If they speak of particular precepts and prohibitions, then,
+by their rule, the baptising of young children, the taking of water for
+the element of baptism; a lecturer's public reading of Scripture in the
+church upon the Sabbath day; the assembling of synods for putting order to
+the confusions of the church; the writing and publication of the decrees
+of the same; and sundry other things which the word hath commended unto us
+by examples,--should all be things indifferent, because there are not in
+the word of God either particular precepts for them, or particular
+prohibitions against them. But if they speak of general precepts and
+prohibitions, then are those things commanded in the word of God for which
+we have the allowed and commended examples of such as we ought to follow
+(for, in the general, we are commanded to be followers of such examples,
+Phil. iv. 8, 9; 1 Cor. xi. 1; Eph. v. 1), though there be no particular
+precept for the things themselves thus exemplified.
+
+_Sect._ 2. To come, therefore, to the ground which shall give us here some
+footing, and whereupon we mind to rear up certain superstructions, we
+hold, that not only we ought to obey the particular precepts of the word
+of God, but that also "we are bound to imitate Christ, and the commendable
+example of his apostles, in all things wherein it is not evident they had
+special reasons moving them thereto, which do not concern us:" which
+ground, as it hath been of a long time holden and confirmed by them of our
+side, so never could, nor ever shall, our opposites subvert it. It is long
+since the _Abridgement_ confirmed and strengthened it, out of those places
+of Scripture: Eph. v. 1, "Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear
+children;" 1 Cor. xi. 1, "Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of
+Christ;" 1 Thess. i. 6, "And ye became followers of us and of the Lord;"
+Phil. iii. 17, "Brethren, be followers together of me."
+
+This ground is also at length pressed by Cyprian, who showeth(1215) that,
+in the holy supper of the Lord, Christ alone is to be followed by us; that
+we are to do what he did; and that we ought not to take heed what any man
+hath done before us, but what Christ did, who is before all.
+
+_Sect._ 3. But Bishop Lindsey(1216) asketh of us, if we hold this rule,
+what is the cause why, at the celebration of the sacrament, we bless not
+the bread severally by itself, and the cup severally by itself, seeing
+Christ did so, yet having no cause to move him which concerns not us.
+
+_Ans._ 1. Beside the common blessing of the elements, in the beginning of
+the action, we give thanks also in the several actions of distribution,
+saying after this or the like manner: "The Lord Jesus, the same night he
+was betrayed, took bread, and when he had given thanks (as we also give
+thanks to God who gave his Son to die for us) he brake it," &c. "In like
+manner also, after supper, he took the cup, and, when he had given thanks
+(as we also give thanks to God who gave his Son to shed his blood for us),
+he gave it," &c. Which form (we conceive) may be construed to be an
+imitation of the example of Christ.
+
+2. Though we did not observe such a form; yet there were two reasons to
+move Christ to give thanks severally, both at the giving of the bread, and
+at the giving of the cup, neither of which concerneth us: 1. The
+eucharistical supper was one continued action with the other supper which
+went before it; for it is said, "That whilst they did eat, he took bread,"
+&c. Wherefore, for more distinction of it from that supper which
+immediately proceeded, it was fit that he should give thanks severally at
+the giving of each element. 2. He had to do with the twelve apostles,
+whose hearts being so greatly troubled with sorrow, John xvi. 6, and whose
+minds not well comprehending that which they heard concerning the death of
+Christ, John xvi. 12, much less those mystical symbols of it, especially
+at the first hearing, seeing, and using of the same, it was needful for
+their cause distinctly and severally to bless those elements, thereby to
+help the weakness of their understanding, and to make them the more
+capable of so heavenly mysteries.
+
+_Sect._ 4. Now, having heard that which the Bishop had to say against our
+rule, let us examine his own. He holdeth,(1217) That in the actions of
+Christ's apostles, or the customs of the church, there is nothing
+exemplary and left to be imitated of us, but that which either being
+moral, is generally commanded in the decalogue, or being ceremonial and
+circumstantial, is particularly commanded by some constant precept in the
+gospel.
+
+_Ans._ 1. This rule is most false; for it followeth from it that the
+example of the apostles' making choice of the element of water in baptism,
+and requiring a confession of faith from the person who was to be
+baptised; the example also both of Christ and his apostles using the
+elements of bread and wine in the holy supper, a table at which they did
+communicate, and the breaking of the bread, are not left to be imitated of
+us; because these things are ceremonial, but not particularly commanded in
+the gospel. So that according to the rule which the Bishop holdeth, we sin
+in imitating Christ and his apostles in those things, forasmuch as they
+are not exemplary, nor left to be imitated of us.
+
+2. His weapons fight against his own fellows, who allege (as we have
+showed elsewhere) the custom of the church(1218) is a sufficient warrant
+for certain ceremonies questioned betwixt them and us, which are not
+particularly commanded by any precept in the gospel. These the Bishop doth
+unwittingly strike at it whilst he holdeth that such customs of the church
+are not exemplary, nor left to be imitated of us.
+
+_Sect._ 5. Wherefore we hold still our own rule for sure and certain.
+Christ's actions are either _amanda_, as the works of redemption; or
+_admiranda_, as his miracles; or _notanda_, as many things done by him for
+some particular reason proper to that time and case, and not belonging to
+us, which things, notwithstanding, are well worthy of our observation; or
+_imitanda_, and such are all his actions which had no such special reason
+moving him thereto as do not concern us.
+
+Calvin, upon 1 Cor. xi. 1, saith well, that the Apostle there calls back
+both himself and others to Christ, _Tanquam unicum recte agendi exemplar_;
+and Polycarpus Lycerus, upon Matt. xvi. 24, under that command of
+following Christ, comprehendeth the imitations of Christ's actions.
+
+Most certainly it is inexcusable presumption to leave the example of
+Christ, and to do that which seemeth right in our own eyes, as if we were
+wiser than he. And now, having laid down this ground, we are to build
+certain positions upon it, us follows.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THE FIRST POSITION WHICH WE BUILD UPON THE GROUND CONFIRMED IN THE FORMER
+CHAPTER.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. From that which hath been said of following Christ, and the
+commendable example of his apostles, in all things wherein it is not
+evident that they had some such special reason moving them to do that
+which they did, as doth not concern us, our first inference is this: That
+it is not indifferent for a minister to give the sacramental elements of
+bread and wine out of his own hand to every communicant; forasmuch as our
+Lord commanded his apostles to divide the cup among them, that is, to
+reach it one to another, Luke xxii. 17. Some of the interpreters are of
+opinion, that the cup spoken of by the Evangelist in that place is not the
+same whereof he speaketh after, ver. 20; but they are greatly mistaken;
+for if it were as they think, then Christ did again drink before his death
+of that fruit of the vine whereof we read ver. 18, which is manifestly
+repugnant to his own words. Wherefore, as Maldonat observeth(1219) out of
+Augustine and Euthimius, there was but one cup; whereof Luke speaketh,
+first, by anticipation, and, afterward, in its own proper place.
+
+_Sect._ 2. But Bishop Lindsey(1220) falleth here upon a very strange
+speculation; and tells us, that if all the disciples did drink, howbeit
+they did not deliver the cup one to another, but received it severally
+from Christ's own hand, they divided the same among them; because every
+one takes his part of that which is parted, they divide the whole among
+them. Alas! that I should blot paper with the confutation of such
+fooleries. I believe, when his Majesty hath distributed and divided so
+many lands and revenues among the prelates of Scotland, every one of them
+takes his part, but dare not say, though, that they have divided these
+lands and revenues among themselves. Can twenty or forty beggars, when an
+alms is distributed among them, because every one of them getteth his
+part, say, therefore, that they themselves have parted it among them?
+What, then, shall be said of the distributor who giveth to every one his
+part severally, and by himself? That man who required that his brother
+should divide the inheritance with him, did not, I trow, desire Christ to
+cause his brother to take his own part of the inheritance (there was no
+fear that he would not take his part); but he desired that his brother
+might give to him his part. So that, to divide anything among men, is not
+to take it, but to give it. And who did ever confound parting and
+partaking, dividing a cup and drinking a cup, which differ as much as
+giving and receiving. Thus we conclude, that when Christ commanded the
+apostles to divide the cup among them, the meaning of the words can be no
+other than this, that they should give the cup one to another; which is so
+plain that a Jesuit(1221) also maketh it to follow upon this command, that
+Christ did reach the cup _non singulis sed uni, qui proximo, proximus
+sequenti, et deinceps daret_. Hence it is that Hospinian(1222) thinks it
+most likely that Christ brake the bread into two parts, _earumque alteram
+dederit illi qui proximus ei ad dextram accumbebat, alteram vero ei qui ad
+sinistram, ut isti deinceps proxime accumbentibus porrigerent, donec
+singuli particulam sibi decerpsissent_.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+ANOTHER POSITION BUILT UPON THE SAME GROUND.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. Our next position which we infer, is this: That it is not
+indifferent to sit, stand, pass, or kneel, in the act of receiving the
+sacramental elements of the Lord's supper, because we are bound to follow
+the example of Christ and his apostles, who used the gesture of sitting in
+this holy action, as we prove from John xiii. 12; from Matt. xxvi. 20,
+with 26; Mark xiv. 18, with 22.
+
+Our opposites here bestir themselves, and move every stone against us.
+Three answers they give us, which we will now consider.
+
+First, They tell us that it is not certain that the apostles were sitting
+when they received this sacrament from Christ, and that _adhuc sub judice
+lis est_. Yet let us see what they have to say against the certainty
+hereof.
+
+Bishop Lindsey objecteth, that, between their eating of the paschal supper
+and the administration of the sacrament to the disciples, five acts
+intervened: 1. The taking of the bread; 2. The thanksgiving; 3. The
+breaking; 4. The precept, "Take ye, eat ye;" 5. The word, whereby the
+element was made the sacrament. In which time, saith he, the gesture of
+sitting might have been changed.
+
+_Ans._ It is first of all to be noted, that the apostles were sitting at
+the instant when Christ took the bread, for it is said that he took bread
+whilst they did eat; that is (as Maldonat(1223) rightly expoundeth it),
+_Antequam surgerent, antequam mensae et ciborum reliquiae removerentur_;
+and so we use to say that men are dining or supping so long as they sit at
+table and the meat is not removed from before them. To Christ's
+ministering of the eucharistical supper together with the preceding
+supper, Christians had respect when they celebrated the Lord's supper
+together with the love-feasts. _Probabile est eos ad Christi exemplum
+respexisse, qui eucharistiam inter coenandum instituit_, saith
+Pareus.(1224) But of this we need say no more; for the Bishop himself hath
+here acknowledged no less than that they were sitting at that time when
+Christ took the bread. Only he saith, that there were five acts which
+intervened before the administration of the sacrament to the disciples
+(whereof the taking of the bread was the first), and that in this while
+the gesture of sitting might have been changed; which is as much as to
+say, when he took the bread they were sitting, but they might have changed
+this gesture, either in the time of taking the bread, or in the time of
+thanksgiving, or in the time of breaking the bread, or whilst he said,
+"Take ye, eat ye," or lastly, in the time of pronouncing those words,
+"This is my body" (for this is the word whereby, in the Bishop's judgment,
+the element was made the sacrament, as we shall see afterward).
+
+Now but, by his leave, we will reduce his five acts to three; for thus
+speaketh the text, "And as they did eat, Jesus took bread, and blessed it
+and break it, and gave it to the disciples, and said, Take, eat, this is
+my body," Matt. xxvi. 26; Mark xiv. 22. Whence it is manifest, that the
+giving of the bread to the disciples, which no man, I suppose, will deny
+to have been the administration of it, went before the two last acts which
+the Bishop reckoneth out. Nothing, therefore, is left to him but to say,
+that their gesture of sitting might have been changed, either in the
+taking or in the blessing, or in the breaking, or else between the taking
+and the blessing, or between the blessing and the breaking; yet doth the
+text knit all the three together by such a contiguity and connection as
+showeth unto us that they did all make up but one continued action, which
+could not admit any interruption.
+
+_Sect._ 2. I saw a prelate sit down to his breakfast, and, as he did eat,
+he took some cups, and, having called for more, he said, he thanked God
+that he was never given to his belly; and with that he made a promise to
+one in the company, which he brake within two days after. Would any man
+question whether or not the prelate was sitting when he made this promise,
+forasmuch as between his sitting down to meat and the making of the
+promise there intervened his taking of some cups, his calling for more,
+and his pronouncing of these words, I thank God that I was never given to
+my belly? Yet might one far more easily imagine a change of the prelate's
+gesture than any such change of the apostles' gesture in that holy action
+whereof we speak. Because the text setteth down such a continued, entire,
+unbroken, and uninterrupted action, therefore Calvin gathereth out of the
+text that the apostles did both take and eat the sacramental bread whilst
+they were sitting. _Non legimus_, saith he,(1225) _prostratos adorasse,
+sed ut erant discumbentes accepisse et manducasse. Christus_, saith
+Martyr,(1226) _eucharistiam apostolis una secum sedentibus aut
+discumbentibus distribuit_. G. J. Vossius(1227) puts it out of doubt that
+Christ was still sitting at the giving of the bread to the apostles. And
+that the apostles were still sitting when they received the bread,
+Hospinian(1228) thinks it no less certain. They made no doubt of the
+certainty hereof who composed that old verse which we find in
+Aquinas:(1229)--
+
+Rex sedet in coena, turba cinctus duodena;
+Se tenet in manibus; se cibat ipse cibus.
+
+Papists also put it out of controversy; for Bellarmine acknowledgeth(1230)
+that the apostles could not externally adore Christ by prostrating
+themselves in the last supper, _quando recumbere cum eo illis necesse
+erat_; where we see he could guess nothing of the change of their gesture.
+_Intelligendum est_, saith Jansenius,(1231) _dominum in novissima hac
+coena, discubuisse et sedisse ante et post comestum agnum_. Dr Stella
+sticketh not to say,(1232) _distribuit salvator mundi panem
+discumbentibus_.
+
+_Sect._ 3. But now having heard Bishop Lindsey, let us hear what
+Paybody(1233) will say. He taketh him to another subterfuge, and tells us,
+that though we read that Christ took bread whilst they did eat, yet can it
+not be concluded hence that he took bread whilst they did sit; because,
+saith he, "as they did eat," is expounded by Luke (chap. xxii. 20) and
+Paul (1 Cor. xi. 25) to be _after they had done eating_, or _after
+supper_. Thus is their languages divided. Bishop Lindsey did yield to us,
+that when Christ took bread they were sitting; and his conjecture was,
+that this gesture of sitting might have been changed after the taking of
+the bread. Paybody saw that he had done with the argument if he should
+grant that they were sitting when Christ took bread, therefore he calleth
+that in question. Vulcan's own gimmers could not make his answer and the
+Bishop's to stick together.
+
+But let us examine the ground which Paybody takes for his opinion. He
+would prove from Luke and Paul, that when Matthew and Mark say, "As they
+were eating, Jesus took bread," the meaning is only this, _After supper,
+Jesus took bread_; importing, that Christ's taking of bread did not make
+up one continued action with their eating, and that therefore their
+gesture of sitting might have been changed between their eating of the
+preceding supper and his taking of the sacramental bread.
+
+Whereunto we answer, that there are two opinions touching the suppers
+which Christ did eat with his disciples that night wherein he was
+betrayed. And whichsoever the reader please to follow, it shall be most
+easy to break all the strength of the argument which Paybody opposeth unto
+us.
+
+_Sect._ 4. First, then, some do think that Christ, having kept the
+passover according to the law (which is not particularly related, but
+supposed, by the evangelists), sat down to a common or ordinary supper, at
+which he told the disciples that one of them should betray him. And of
+this judgment are Calvin and Beza, upon Matt. xxvi. 21; Pareus, upon Matt.
+xxvi. 21; Fulk and Cartwright, against the Rhemists, upon 1 Cor. xi. 23;
+Tolet and Maldonat, upon John xiii. 2; Cornelius Jansenius, _Conc.
+Evang._, cap. 131; Balthazar Meisnerus, _Tract, die Fest. Virid._, p. 256;
+Johannes Forsterus, _Conc. 4, de Pass._, p. 538; Christophorus Pelargus,
+in John xiii., quest. 2, and others. The reasons whereby their judgment is
+confirmed are these:--
+
+1. Many societies convened to the eating of the paschal supper by
+twenties.(1234) And if twenty was often the number of them who convened to
+the eating of the same (which also confirmeth their opinion who think that
+other men and women in the inn did eat both the paschal and evangelical
+supper together with the apostles in Christ's company), it is not very
+likely (say some) that all those were sufficiently satisfied and fed with
+one lamb, which, after it was eight days old, was allowed to be offered
+for the passover, as Godwin noteth.(1235) _Neque esus umus agni_, saith
+Pareus, _toti familiae sedandae fami sufficere poterat._(1236)
+
+2. The paschal supper was not for banquetting or filling of the belly, as
+Josephus also writeth.(1237) _Non tam exsatiendae nutriendaeque naturae_,
+saith Maldonat, _quam servandae legalis ceremoniae causa sumebatur_.(1238)
+_Non ventri_, saith Pareus, _sed religionis causa fiebat_.(1239) But as
+for that supper which Christ and his apostles did eat immediately before
+the eucharistical, Cartwright doubts not to call it a carnal supper,(1240)
+an earthly repast, a feast for the belly, which lets us know, that the
+sacramental bread and wine was ordained, not for feeding their bodies,
+which were already satisfied by the ordinary and daily supper, but for the
+nourishment of the soul.
+
+3. That beside the paschal and evangelical suppers, Christ and his
+apostles had also that night another ordinary supper, Fulk proveth by the
+broth wherein the sop was dipped,(1241) John xiii. 26. Whereas there was
+no such broth ordained by the divine institution to be used in the paschal
+supper.
+
+4. That there were two suppers before the eucharistical they gather from
+John xiii. For, first, the paschal supper was ended, ver. 2, after which
+Christ washed his disciples' feet. And thereafter we read, ver. 12,
+_resumptis vestibus rursum ad caenam ordinariam consedisse._(1242) The
+dividing of the passover into two services or two suppers had no warrant
+at all from the first institution of that sacrament, for which cause they
+think it not likely that Christ would have thus divided it according to
+the device and custom of the Jews in latter times, for so much as in
+marriage (and much more in the passover) he did not allow of that which
+from the beginning was not so. Neither seemeth it to them any way
+probable, that Christ would have interrupted the eating of the passover
+with the washing of his disciples' feet before the whole paschal supper
+was ended, and they had done eating of it.
+
+_Sect_. 5. But others (and those very judicious too) are of opinion, that
+that second course whereunto Christ sat down after the washing of his
+disciples' feet, and at which he told them that one of them should betray
+him, was not an ordinary or common supper (because the paschal supper was
+enough of itself to satisfy them), but a part of the paschal supper. And
+from the Jewish writers they prove that so the custom was to divide the
+passover into two courses or services. As for that wherein Christ dipped
+the sop, they take it to have been the sauce which was used in the paschal
+supper, called _charoseth_, of which the Hebrews write, that it was made
+of the palm tree branches, or of dry figs, or of raisins, which they
+stamped and mixed with vinegar till it was thick as mustard, and made like
+clay, in memory of the clay wherein they wrought in Egypt, and that they
+used to dip both the unleavened bread and the bitter herbs into this
+sauce. And as touching that place, John xiii., they expound it by the
+custom of the Jews, which was to have two services or two suppers in the
+passover; and take those words, ver. 2, "Supper being ended," to be meant
+of the first service, and sitting down again to supper, ver. 12, to be
+meant of the second service.
+
+_Sect._ 6. If those two opinions could be reconciled and drawn together
+into one, by holding that that second course whereunto Christ sat down
+after the washing of his disciples' feet, was (for the substance of it) a
+common supper, but yet it hath been and may be rightly called the second
+service of the paschal supper, for that it was eaten the same night
+wherein the paschal lamb was eaten, so should all the difference be taken
+away; but if the maintainers of these opinions will not be thus agreed,
+let the reader consider to which of them he will adhere.
+
+If the first opinion be followed, then it will be most easily answered to
+Paybody, that _inter coenandum instituta fuit eucharistia, cum jam rursum
+mensoe accubuissent. Sed post coenam paschalem, et usum agni
+legalis._(1243) When Matthew and Mark say, As they did eat, Jesus took
+bread, they speak of the common or ordinary supper; but when Luke and Paul
+say, that he took the cup after supper, they speak of the paschal supper,
+which was eaten before the common supper.
+
+Again, if the reader follow the other opinion, which holdeth that Christ
+had no other supper that night before the evangelical except the paschal
+only, yet still the answer to Paybody shall be easy; for whereas he would
+prove from those words of Luke and Paul, "Likewise also the cup after
+supper," that when Matthew and Mark say, "As they did eat, Jesus took
+bread," their meaning is only this, "After supper Jesus took bread," he
+reasoneth very inconsiderately, forasmuch as Luke and Paul say not of the
+bread, but of the cup only, that Jesus took it after supper. And will
+Paybody say, that he took the cup so soon as he took the bread? If we will
+speak with Scripture, we must say, that as they did eat the preceding
+supper (to which we read they sat down) Jesus took bread; for nothing at
+all intervened betwixt their eating of that other preceding supper, and
+his taking of the eucharistical cup, there intervened the taking,
+blessing, breaking, distributing, and eating of the bread.
+
+Now, therefore, from that which hath been said, we may well conclude that
+our opposites have no reason which they do or can object against the
+certainty of that received tenet, that the apostles received from Christ
+the sacramental bread and wine whilst they were sitting. Dr Forbesse
+himself(1244) setteth down some testimonies of Musculus, Chamier, and the
+professors of Leyden, all acknowledging that the apostles, when they
+received the Lord's supper, were still sitting.
+
+_Sect._ 7. The second answer that our opposites hath given us, followeth:
+They say, that though the apostles did not change their gesture of sitting
+which they used in the former supper, when all this is granted to us, yet
+there is as great difference betwixt our form of sitting and that form of
+the Jews which the apostles used as there is betwixt _sedere_ and
+_jacere_.
+
+_Ans._ 1. Put the case it were so, yet it hath been often answered them,
+that the apostles kept the table-gesture used in that nation, and so are
+we bound herein to follow their example, by keeping the table-gesture used
+in this nation. For this keeping of the usual table gesture of the nation
+wherein we live is not a forsaking but a following of the commendable
+example of the apostles, even as whereas they drank the wine which was
+drunk in that place, and we drink the wine which is drunk in this place,
+yet do we not hereby differ from that which they did.
+
+2. The words used by the evangelists signify our form of sitting no less
+than the Jewish, Calepine, Scapula, and Thomasius, in their dictionaries,
+take {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~},
+and the Latin words _discumbo, recumbo, accumbo_ (used by Arias, Montanus,
+Beza, Marlorat, Tremellius, &c., in their versions), not only for lying,
+but also for such sitting as is opposed to lying, even for sitting upright
+at table after our custom.
+
+3. There is not so great a difference betwixt our form of sitting and that
+which the Jews used as our opposites allege. For as Didoclavius showeth
+out of Casaubon;(1245) their sitting at banquets was only with a leaning
+upon the left arm, and so not lying, but sitting with a certain
+inclination. When, therefore, we read of _lecti discubitorii tricliniares,
+in quibus inter coenandum discumbebant_,(1246) we must understand them to
+have been seats which compassed three sides of the table (the fourth side
+being left open and void for them who served), and wherein they did sit
+with some sort of inclination.
+
+Yet Bishop Lindsey is bold to aver,(1247) that the usual table gesture of
+the Jews was lying along, and this he would prove from Amos vi. 4, "They
+lie upon beds of ivory, they stretch themselves out upon their couches."
+
+_Ans._ 1. If we should yield to this prelate his own meaning wherein he
+taketh these words, yet how thinks he that the gesture of drunkards and
+gluttons, which they used when they were pampering themselves in all
+excess of riot, and for which also they are upbraided by the Spirit of
+God, was either the ordinary table-gesture of the Jews, or the gesture
+used by Christ and his apostles in their last supper?
+
+2. If any gesture at all be touched in those words which the prelate
+citeth, it was the gesture they used when they lay down to sleep, and not
+their table-gesture when they did eat; for _mitta_ and _ngheres_ (the two
+words which Amos useth) signify a bed or a couch wherein a man useth to
+lay himself down to sleep. And in this sense we find both these words,
+Psal. vi. 7, "All the night make I my bed (_mittathi_) to swim: I water my
+couch (_ngharsi_) with my tears." The Shunnamite prepared for Elisha a
+chamber, and therein set for him a bed (_mitta_), and a table, and a
+stool, and a candlestick, 2 Kings iv. 10. The stool or chair was for
+sitting at table, but _mitta_, the bed, was for lying down to sleep. Now,
+the prelate, I hope, will not say, that the _lecti tricliniares_, wherein
+the Jews used to sit at table, and which compassed three sides of the same
+(as hath been said), were their beds wherein they did lie and sleep all
+night.
+
+But, 3. The place must be yet more exactly opened up. That word which is
+turned in our English books, _they lie_, cometh from the radix _schachav_,
+which in Pagnin's lexicon is turned _dormire_. We find, Ruth iii. 7,
+_lischcav_, which Arias Montanus turned _ad dormiendum_, to sleep. Our own
+English translation, 2 Sam. xi. 9, saith, "_Uriah slept_," where the
+original hath _vauschcav_; and the very same word is put most frequently
+in the books of the Kings and the Chronicles, where they speak of the
+death of the kings of Judah and Israel. Pagnin turneth it _et dormivit_;
+and our English translators everywhere, "And he slept with his fathers,"
+&c. These things being considered, we must, with Calvin, read the place of
+Amos thus: _Qui decumbunt vel dormiunt in lectis._ The other word which
+the prophet useth is _seruchim_. Our English version turneth it, "They
+stretch themselves out;" but Pagnin, Buxtorff, Tremellius, and Tarnovius,
+come nearer the sense, who read _redundantes, superfluentes_, or
+_luxuriantes_; which sense the English translation also hath in the
+margin. The Septuagints followed the same sense, for they read,
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, _i.e._, _living in pleasure_. So, 1 Tim. v. 6, _she that
+lived in pleasure_, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}; and, James v. 5, _Ye have lived in
+pleasure_, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}. The radix is _sarach_, _redundavit_, or
+_luxuriavit_. So, Exod. xxvi. 12, _sarach_, and, verse 13, _saruach_, is
+put for a surplusage or superfluous remainder, _redundans superfluum_, as
+Tremellius readeth. Now, then, it is evident that the thing which Amos
+layeth to the charge of those who were at ease in Zion, in the words which
+the prelate citeth against us, is, that they slept upon beds of ivory
+(such was their softness and superfluity), and swimmed in excessive
+pleasures upon their couches; and, incontinent, their filthy and muddy
+stream of carnal delicacy and excessive voluptuousness which defiled their
+beds, led him back to the unclean fountain out of which it issued, even
+their riotous pampering of themselves at table; therefore he subjoineth,
+"And eat the lambs out of the flock," &c. For _ex mensis itur ad cubilia,
+ex gula in venerem_, saith Cornelius a Lapide, commenting upon the same
+text. Thus have I cleared the place in such sort, that the Bishop cannot
+but shoot short of his aims; wherefore I go on to other replies.
+
+4. If the apostles, when they received the Lord's supper, or the Jews,
+when they did eat at table, were lying all along, how could their mouths
+receive drink unspilt? or how could they have the use of both their arms?
+which the Bishop himself would not, I am sure, gainsay, if he would once
+try the matter in his own person, and essay to eat and drink whilst lying
+along.
+
+5. The words used by Matthew, chap. xxvi. 10, and by Mark, chap. xiv. 18,
+where they speak of Christ sitting down with the twelve, is also used by
+John, chap. vi. 11, where he speaketh of the peoples' sitting down upon
+the grass to eat the loaves and fishes: and will any man think that the
+people did eat lying along upon the grass, where they might far better sit
+upright?
+
+6. If our opposites like to speak with others, then let them look back
+upon the testimonies which I have alleged before. Jansenius putteth
+_discubuisse et sedisse_; Martyr, _sedentibus aut discumbentibus_. Pareus
+useth the word _consedisse_; Meisnerus,(1248) _consedendo; Evangelista_,
+saith Dr Stella,(1249) _dicit dominum discubuisse, id est sedisse ad
+mensam_.
+
+7. If they like to speak to themselves: Camero,(1250) speaking of John's
+leaning on Christ's bosom at supper, saith, _Christus autem sedebat
+medius_; Dr Morton saith,(1251) it cannot be denied that the gesture of
+Christ and his apostles at the last supper was sitting,--only, saith he,
+the evangelists leave it uncertain whether this sitting was upright, or
+somewhat leaning.
+
+_Sect._ 8. Their third answer is, that Christ's sitting at the last supper
+is no more exemplary and imitable than the upper chamber, or the night
+season, or the sex and number of communicants, &c.
+
+_Ans._ 1. As for the sex and number of communicants, Dr Fulk(1252) rightly
+observeth, that it is not certain from Scripture that twelve men only, and
+no women, did communicate (as Bishop Lindsey(1253) would have us certainly
+to believe); but suppose it were certain,(1254) yet for this, and all the
+other circumstances, which are not exemplary, there were special reasons
+either in the urgency of the legal necessity, or in the exigency of
+present and accidental occasions, which do not concern us: whereas the
+gesture of sitting was freely and purposely chosen, and so intended to be
+exemplary, especially since there was no such reason moving Christ to use
+this gesture of sitting as doth not concern us.
+
+The Bishop saith,(1255) that his sitting at the former supper might have
+been the reason which moved him to sit at the eucharistical supper; but if
+Christ had not purposely made choice of the gesture of sitting as the
+fittest and most convenient for the eucharistical supper, his sitting at
+the former supper could be no reason to move him, as may appear by this
+example: There are some gentlemen standing in a nobleman's waiting-room;
+and after they have stood there a while, the nobleman cometh forth; they
+begin to speak to him, and, as they speak, still they stand. Now, can any
+man say that the reason which moveth them to stand when they speak to the
+nobleman, is, because they were standing before he came to them? So doth
+the Bishop come short of giving any special reason for Christ's sitting
+which concerneth not us. He can allege no more but Christ's sitting at the
+former supper, which could be no reason, else he should have also risen
+from the eucharistical supper to wash the disciples' feet, even as he rose
+from the former supper for that effect. Wherefore, we conclude, that
+Christ did voluntarily, and of set purpose, choose sitting as the fittest
+and best beseeming gesture for that holy banquet.
+
+Finally, Hooker's(1256) verdict of the gesture of Christ and his apostles
+in this holy supper is, "That our Lord himself did that which custom and
+long usage had made fit; we, that which fitness and great decency hath
+made usual." In which words, because cause he importeth that they have
+better warrants for their kneeling than Christ had for his sitting (which
+is blasphemy), I leave them as not worthy of an answer. Howsoever, let it
+be noted that he acknowledged, by kneeling they depart from the example of
+Christ.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+OTHER POSITIONS BUILT UPON THE FORMER GROUND.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. The third consequence which we infer upon our former rule of
+following the example of Christ is, that it is not a thing indifferent to
+omit the repetition of those words, "This is my body," enunciatively and
+demonstratively in the act of distributing the eucharistical bread; and
+far less is it indifferent so to omit this demonstrative speech in the
+distribution, as in place of it to surrogate a prayer to preserve the soul
+and body of the communicant unto everlasting life. Our reason is, because
+Christ (whose example herein we ought to follow) used no prayer in the
+distribution, but that demonstrative enunciation, "This is my body." But
+we go forward.
+
+_Sect._ 2. The fourth position we draw from the same rule is, that it is
+not indifferent for a minister to omit the breaking of the bread at the
+Lord's table after the consecration and in the distribution of it, because
+he ought to follow the example of Christ, who, after he had blessed the
+bread, and when he was distributing it to them who were at table, brake
+it,(1257) _manibus comminuendo panem acceptum in partes_, but had it not
+carved in small pieces before it was brought to the table. Hence G. J.
+Vossius(1258) doth rightly condemn those who, though they break the bread
+_in multas minutias_, yet they break it not _in actu sacramentali_. Such a
+breaking as this (he saith well) is not _mystica_, but _coquinaria_.
+
+_Sect._ 3. The fifth position, drawn from the very same ground is, that it
+is not indifferent for a minister, in the act of distribution, to speak in
+the singular number, _Take thou, eat thou, drink thou_; because he should
+follow the example of Christ, who, in the distribution, spake in the
+plural number, _Take ye, eat ye, drink ye_; and he who followeth not
+Christ's example herein, by his speaking in the singular to one, he maketh
+that to be a private action betwixt himself and the communicant, which
+Christ made public and common by his speaking to all at one time.
+
+_Sect._ 4. How idly Bishop Lindsey(1259) answereth to these things, it
+cannot but appear to every one who considereth that we do not challenge
+them for not breaking the bread at all,--for not pronouncing at all these
+words, "This is my body," or for never pronouncing at all these speeches
+in the plural, _Take ye, eat ye, drink ye_,--but for not breaking the bread
+in the very act of distribution,--for not pronouncing demonstratively those
+words, "This is my body," in the very act of distribution,--for not
+speaking in the plural number, "Take ye," &c.--in the very act of
+distribution, as Christ did, having no other reasons to move him than such
+as concern us. Why, then, did not the Bishop say something to the point
+which we press him with? or shall we excuse him because he had nothing to
+say to it?
+
+_Sect._ 5. Now, last of all, we find yet another point, whereby the
+Bishop(1260) departeth from the example and mind of Christ. He saith that,
+by the sacramental word, "This is my body," the bread is made the
+sacrament, &c.; and that without this word, &c., all our prayers and
+wishes should serve to no use. Where he will have the bread to be
+otherwise consecrated by us than it was consecrated by Christ; for that
+Christ did not consecrate the bread to be the sacrament of his body by
+those words, "This is my body," it is manifest, because the bread was
+consecrated before his pronouncing of those words; or else what meaneth
+the blessing of it before he brake it? It was both blessed and broken, and
+he was also distributing it to the disciples, before ever he said, "This
+is my body." Beza saith, _Benedictionem expresse ad panis consecrationem
+et quidem singularem, refert; et omnes nostri referunt, consecrationem
+intelligentes, &c._ Pareus saith,(1261) _Qua ex communi cibo, in
+spiritualis alimoniae sacramentum transmutetur._ Wherefore we must not
+think to sanctify the bread by this prescript word, "This is my body," but
+by prayer and thanksgiving, as Christ did. Our divines hold against the
+Papists,(1262) _Verba illa quoe in sacramento sunt consecrata, non esse
+paucula quoedam proscripta; sed praecipue verba orationis, quoe non sunt
+proescripta_; and that, "through use of the prayers of the church, there
+is a change in the elements."(1263) Dr Fulk objecteth(1264) against
+Gregory Martin, "Your popish church doth not either as the Greek
+liturgies, or as the churches in Ambrose and Augustine's time, for they
+hold that the elements are consecrated by prayer and thanksgiving." I know
+none who will speak with Bishop Lindsey in this point except Papists: yet
+Cornelius a Lapide could also say, _Eucharistia conficitur et conditur
+sacris precibus_.(1265)
+
+_Sect._ 6. I say not that these words, "This is my body," have no use at
+all in making the bread to be a sacrament; but that which giveth us
+dislike is,
+
+1. That the Bishop maketh not the word and prayer together, but the word
+alone, to sanctify the bread and wine. Now, if both the word and prayer be
+necessary to sanctify the creatures for the food of our bodies, 1 Tim. iv.
+5, much more are they necessary to sanctify them for the food of our
+souls. _Neque enim solis domini verbis consecratio sit, sed etiam
+precibus._(1266) The fathers, saith Trelcatius,(1267) had not only respect
+to those five words, "For this is my body," _dum eucharistiam fieri
+dixerunt mystica precc, invocatione nominis divini, solemni benedictione,
+gratiarum actione._ 2. That he makes not the whole word of the institution
+to sanctify the bread, but only that one sentence, "This is my body;"
+whereas Christ's will is declared, and, consequently, the elements
+sanctified by the whole words of the institution,(1268) "Jesus took the
+bread, and when he had given thanks, he brake it, and said, Take, eat,
+this is my body which is broken for you, this do in remembrance of me,"
+&c.
+
+That he acknowledged not the bread, though sanctified by prayer, to be the
+sacrament, except that very word be pronounced, "This is my body." Now,
+when a minister hath, from Christ's will and institution, declared that he
+hath appointed bread and wine to be the elements of his body and blood,
+when he hath also declared the essential rites of this sacrament.
+
+And, lastly, when, by the prayer of consecration, he hath sanctified the
+bread and wine which are present, put the case, that all this while those
+prescript sentences, "This is my body," "This cup is the New Testament in
+my blood," have not been pronounced, yet what hindereth the bread and wine
+from being the sacramental elements of the Lord's body and blood? It is
+sounder divinity to say, that the consecration of a sacrament doth not
+depend _ex certa aliqua formula verborum_.(1269) For it is evident that,
+in baptism, there is not a certain form of words prescribed, as Bellarmine
+also proveth;(1270) because Christ saith not, "Say, I baptise thee in the
+name," &c.: so that he prescribeth not what should be done. Aquinas
+likewise holdeth,(1271) that the consecration of a sacrament is not
+absolutely tied to a certain form of words. And so saith Conradus
+Vorstius,(1272) speaking of the eucharist. Wherefore Vossius(1273) doth
+rightly condemn the Papists, _quod consecrationem non aliis verbis fieri
+putant, quam istis, hoc est corpus meum, et hic est sanguis meus_.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+THAT THE CEREMONIES ARE NOT THINGS INDIFFERENT TO THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND;
+BECAUSE SHE DID ABJURE AND REPUDIATE THEM BY A MOST SOLEMN AND GENERAL
+OATH.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. Having spoken of the nature of things indifferent, and showed
+which things be such; also of the rule whereby to try the indifferency of
+things: which rule we have applied to certain particular cases;--it
+remaineth to say somewhat of the main and general purpose, which is
+principally questioned in this last part of our dispute, viz., whether
+cross, kneeling, holidays, bishopping, and the other controverted
+ceremonies wherewith our church is pressed this day, be such things as we
+may use freely and indifferently? The negative (which we hold) is strongly
+confirmed by those arguments which, in the third part of this our dispute,
+we have put in order against the lawfulness of those ceremonies.
+Notwithstanding we have thought fit to add somewhat more in this place.
+And, first, we say, whatsoever be the condition of the ceremonies in their
+own nature, they cannot be indifferently embraced and used by the church
+of Scotland, which hath not only once cast them forth, but also given her
+great oath solemnly to the God of heaven, both witnessing her detestation
+of the Roman Antichrist's "five bastard sacraments, with all his rites,
+ceremonies, and false doctrine, added to the ministration of the true
+sacraments, without the word of God; all his vain allegories, rites,
+signs, and traditions, brought in the kirk, without or against the word of
+God;" and likewise "promising, and swearing to continue," as well "in the
+discipline and use of the holy sacraments," as "in the doctrine," of this
+reformed church of Scotland, which then first she embraced and used after
+she was truly reformed from Popery and popish abuses. And this which I say
+may be seen in the general Confession of Faith, sworn and subscribed by
+his Majesty's father, of everlasting memory, anno 1580, and by the several
+parochines in the land, at his Majesty's strait command; which also was
+renewed and sworn again, anno 1596, by the General Assembly, by provincial
+assemblies, by presbyteries and particular parish churches.
+
+_Sect._ 2. No reformed church in Europe is so strictly tied by the bond of
+an oath and subscription, to hold fast her first discipline and use of the
+sacraments, and to hold out popish rites, as is the church of Scotland.
+And who knoweth not that an oath doth always oblige and bind, _quando est
+factum de rebus certis et possibilibus, vere ac sine dolo praemeditate, ac
+cum judicio, juste, ad gloriam Dei, et bonum proximi_?(1274) What one of
+all those conditions was here wanting? Can we then say any less than a
+pope said before us:(1275) _Non est tutum quemlibet contra juramentum suum
+venire, nisi tale sit, quod servatum vergat in interitum salutis aeternae_?
+O damnable impiety, which maketh so small account of the violation of the
+aforesaid oath, which hath as great power to bind us as that oath of the
+princes of Israel made to the Gibeonites, had to bind their posterity, 2
+Sam. xxi. 1, 2; for it was made by the whole incorporation of this land,
+and hath no term at which it may cease to bind. Nay (in some respects) it
+bindeth more straitly than that oath of the princes of Israel. For, 1.
+That was made by the princes only; this by prince, pastors, and people: 2.
+That was made rashly (for the text showeth that they asked not counsel
+from the mouth of the Lord); this with most religious and due
+deliberation: 3. That was made to men; this to the great God: 4. That
+sworn but once; this once and again.
+
+_Sect._ 3. Some of our opposites go about to derogate somewhat from the
+binding power of that oath of the princes of Israel. They are so nettled
+therewith that they fitch hither and thither. Dr Forbesse(1276) speaketh
+to the purpose thus: _Juramentum Gibeonitis praestitum contra ipsius Dei
+mandatum, et inconsulta Deo, non potuissent Josuae et Israelitae opere
+perficere nisi Deus, extraordinarie de suo mandato dispensasset,
+compassione poenitentis illius populi Gibeonitei, et propter honorem sui
+nominis, ut neque foedifragorum fautor, neque supplicium paenitentium
+aspernator esse videretur._
+
+_Ans._ 1. If the oath was against the commandment of God, what dishonour
+had come to the name of God though he had not patronised the swearers of
+it, but hindered them from fulfilling their oath? If a Christian swear to
+kill a pagan, and hereafter repent of his oath, and not perform it, can
+there any dishonour redound thereby to the name of Christ? The Doctor,
+forsooth, must say so.
+
+2. Where hath he read of the repentance of the Gibeonites, which God would
+not despise?
+
+3. If an oath made against the commandment of God (the breach of the
+commandment being dispensed with) bindeth so strictly and inviolably as
+that oath of the princes of Israel did, how much more ought we to think
+ourselves strictly and inviolably bound, by the solemn oath of the church
+of Scotland, which was not repugnant but most consonant to the word of
+God, even our adversaries themselves being judges? for thus speaketh one
+of them: _Quod antem jurarunt nostrates, __ non erat illicitum, sed a
+nobis omnibus jure praesture potest ac debet_;(1277) so that the Doctor
+hath gained nothing, but loosed much, by that which he saith of the
+Israelites' oath: he hath even fanged himself faster in the snare which he
+thought to escape.
+
+O but, saith the Doctor, that which they did, either in swearing or in
+performing their oath, against the express commandment of God, we may not
+draw into an ordinary example.
+
+_Ans._ It was against the commandment of God; no man will say that we
+should follow either their swearing or their performing of their oath.
+Yet, in the meantime, the Doctor is pressed with this argument, that if
+their unlawful oath (in the case of God's dispensation) did bind their
+posterity, much more doth that oath of the church of Scotland (which the
+Doctor hath acknowledged lawful and commendable) bind us this day.
+
+_Sect._ 4. But, 4. Albeit the Doctor hath hereby given us scope and
+advantage enough against himself; nevertheless, for the truth's sake, I
+add, that it cannot be showed how that oath of the princes of Israel was
+against the express commandment of God; but it rather appeareth that it
+was agreeable to the same. For, as Tremellius(1278) hath it noted, that
+commandment, Deut. xx., whereby the Israelites were commanded to save
+alive nothing in the cities of the Canaanites, was to be only understood
+of such cities among them as should make war with them, and be besieged by
+them. But the Gibeonites were not of this sort; for they sought their
+lives before the Israelites came to them. And by the same means Rahab and
+her father's house got their life, because they sought it, Josh. ii.
+Calvin also serveth:(1279) _Jussos fuisse Israelitas pacem omnibus
+offere._ And Junius, upon Deut. xx., distinguisheth well two laws of war
+given to Israel.
+
+The first law is concerning offering peace to all; which law is general
+and common as well to the Canaanites as to foreign nations: "When thou
+comest nigh unto a city to fight against it, then proclaim peace unto it.
+And it shall be, if it make thee answer of peace, then it shall be that
+all the people that is found therein shall be tributaries unto thee, and
+they shall serve thee." Which commandment was afterward observed by
+Israel; of whom we read, "That when Israel was strong, they put the
+Canaanites to tribute, and did not utterly drive them out," Josh. xvii.
+13; Judges i. 28: by Solomon also, who did not cut off the people that
+were left of the Hittites and the Amorites, but only made them to pay
+tribute, 2 Chron. viii. 7, 8. That which I say is further confirmed by
+another place, Josh. xi. 19, 20, where it is said, "There was not a city
+that made peace with the children of Israel save the Hivites, the
+inhabitants of Gibeon; all other they took in battle. For it was of the
+Lord to harden their hearts, that they should come against Israel in
+battle, that he might destroy them utterly, and that they might have no
+favour; but that he might destroy them, as the Lord commanded Moses." From
+which words it appeareth, that if the Canaanites had made peace with the
+children of Israel, they were to show them favour; and that they were
+bound by the commandment of the Lord to destroy them, then only, and in
+that case, if they would not accept peace, but make war; whence it cometh,
+that the cause of the destruction of the Canaanites is imputed to their
+own hardness and contumacy in not accepting of peace, and not to any
+commandment which God had given to Israel for destroying them. In a word,
+it was _voluntas signi_, which, in one place, Deut. xx. 10, showed the
+Israelites what was their duty, namely, to offer peace to all, even to the
+Canaanites, and not to cut them off if they should accept the peace; but
+it was _voluntas beneplaciti_, which, as we read in another place, Deut.
+vii. 2, decreed to deliver the Canaanites before the Israelites, that is,
+to harden their hearts to come against them in battle, and so to overrule
+the matter, by a secret and inscrutable providence, that the Israelites
+might lawfully and should certainly destroy them and show them no mercy.
+Even as that same God who, by one word, showed unto Abraham what was his
+duty, bidding him offer up his son Isaac, Gen. xxii. 2, by another word
+signified unto him what he had decreed to be done, forbidding him to lay
+his hand upon the lad, or to do anything unto him, ver. 12. But this, I
+know, will be very unsavoury language to many Arminianised conformitants.
+
+The other law of war which Junius, upon Deut. xx., observeth, prescribed
+to the Israelites how they should deal with them who refused their peace.
+And here only was the difference made betwixt the cities which were very
+far off and the cities of the Canaanites, Deut. xx. 15, 16; but the first
+law was common, as hath been proven.
+
+Joseph Hall seemeth to deny that the oath of the princes of Israel had any
+power to bind, but upon another ground than Dr Forbesse took to himself.
+"It would seem very questionable (saith Hall(1280)) whether Joshua needed
+to hold himself bound to this oath; for fraudulent conventions oblige not;
+and Israel had put in a direct caveat of their vicinity."
+
+_Ans._ I marvel how it could enter in his mind to think this matter
+questionable, since the violation of that oath was afterwards punished
+with three years' famine, 2 Sam. xxi. 1, 2. Yet let us hearken to his
+reasons. One of them is forged; for the princes of Israel who sware unto
+them put in no caveat at all. The text saith only in the general, that
+they sware unto them, Josh. ix. 15. As touching his other reason, it is
+answered by Calvin,(1281) _Juris jurandi religio_, saith he, _eousque
+sancta apud nos esse debet, ne erroris praetextu a pactis discedemus,
+etiam in quibus fuimus decepti_. Which, that it may be made more plain
+unto us, let us, with the Casuists, distinguish a twofold error in
+swearing.(1282) For if the error be about the very substance of the thing
+(as when a man contracts marriage with one particular person, taking her
+to be another person) the oath bindeth not; but if the error be only about
+some extrinsical or accidental circumstance (such as was the error of the
+Israelites' taking the Gibeonites to dwell afar off when they dwelt at
+hand), the oath ceaseth not to bind.
+
+_Sect._ 6. This much being said for the binding power of that oath of the
+church of Scotland, let us now consider what shifts our opposites use to
+elude our argument which we draw from the same; where, first, there
+occurreth to us one ground which the Bishop of Edinburgh doth everywhere
+beat upon in the trace of this argument, taken out of the 21st article of
+the Confession of Faith, wherein we find these words: "Not that we think
+that any policy and an order in ceremonies can be appointed for all ages,
+times, and places; for as ceremonies, such as men have devised, are but
+temporal, so may and ought they to be changed when they foster rather
+superstition than that they edify the kirk using the same: 'whereupon the
+Bishop concludeth,(1283) that none who sware the aforesaid article could,
+without breach of this oath, swear that the ceremony of sitting at the
+receiving of the sacrament could be appointed for all ages, times, and
+places.' "
+
+_Ans._ None of us denieth that article: we all stand to it. For that which
+it pronounceth of ceremonies must be understood of alterable
+circumstances, unto which the name of ceremonies is but generally and
+improperly applied, as we have showed elsewhere;(1284) neither can we, for
+professing ourselves bound by an oath ever to retain sitting at the
+receiving of the sacrament in this national church of Scotland, be
+therefore thought to transgress the said article.
+
+For, 1. The article speaketh of ceremonies devised by men, whereof sitting
+at the sacrament is none, being warranted (as hath been showed) by
+Christ's own example, and not by man's device.
+
+2. The article speaketh of such ceremonies as rather foster superstition
+than edify the church using the same; whereas it is well known that
+sitting at the communion did never yet foster superstition in this church;
+so that the Bishop did very unadvisedly reckon sitting at the communion
+among those ceremonies whereof the article speaketh.
+
+_Sect._ 7. But the Bishop hath a further aim, and attempteth no less than
+both to put the blot of perjury off himself and his fellows, and likewise
+to rub it upon us, telling us,(1285) "That no man did by the oath oblige
+himself to obey and defend that part of discipline which concerneth these
+alterable things all the days of his life, but only that discipline which
+is unchangeable and commanded in the word. Yea (saith he), we further
+affirm, that every man who sware to the discipline of the church in
+general, by virtue of the oath standeth obliged, not only to obey and
+defend the constitution of the church that was in force at the time of
+making his oath, but also to obey and defend whatsoever the church
+thereafter hath ordained, or shall ordain, &c., whether thereby the former
+constitution be established or altered," &c. The same answer doth Dr
+Forbesse also return us.(1286)
+
+_Ans._ 1. Here is a manifest contradiction; for the Bishop saith that
+every man did, by this oath, oblige himself only to obey and defend that
+discipline which is unchangeable and commanded in the word. And yet again
+he seemeth to import (that which Dr Forbesse plainly avoucheth(1287)),
+that every man obliged himself by the same oath to obey and defend all
+that the church should afterwards ordain, though thereby the former
+constitutions be altered. The Bishop doth, therefore, apparently
+contradict himself; or, at the best, he contradicteth his fellow-pleader
+for the ceremonies.
+
+2. That ancient discipline and policy of this church which is contrary to
+the articles of Perth, and whereunto we are bound by the oath, was well
+grounded upon God's word, and therefore should not have been ranked among
+other alterable things.
+
+3. Whereas the Bishop is of opinion that a man may, by his oath, tie
+himself to things which a church shall afterwards ordain, he may consider,
+that such an oath were unlawful, because not sworn in judgment, Jer. iv.
+2. Now this judgment which is required as one of the inseparable
+companions of a lawful oath, is not _executio justitiae_, but _judicium
+discretionis_, as Thomas teacheth;(1288) whom Bullinger and Zanchius(1289)
+do herein follow. But there is no judgment of discretion in his oath who
+swears to that he knows not what, even to that which may fall out as
+readily wrong as right.
+
+4. Whereas the Bishop and the Doctor allege that every man who sware to
+the discipline of this church standeth obliged to obey all that the church
+ordained afterward, they greatly deceive themselves.
+
+For, 1. The discipline spoken of in the promissory part of the oath must
+be the same which was spoken of in the assertory part. Now that which is
+mentioned in the assertory part cannot be imagined to be any other but
+that which was then presently used in this church at the time of giving
+the oath; for an assertory oath(1290) is either of that which is past or
+of that which is present: and the assertory part of the oath whereof we
+speak was not of any discipline past and away, therefore of that which was
+present. Moreover, Thomas(1291) doth rightly put this difference betwixt
+an assertory and a promissory oath, that the matter of a promissory oath
+is a thing to come, which is alterable, as concerning the event. _Materia
+autem juramenti assertorii, quod est de praeterito vel praesenti, in
+quandam necessitatem jam transiit, et immutabilis facta est._ Since, then,
+the discipline spoken of in the assertory part was no other than that
+which was used in this church when the oath was sworn; and since the
+promissory part is illative upon, and relative unto the matter of the
+assertory part; therefore we conclude the discipline spoken of in the
+promissory part could be no other than that which was then presently used
+in this church at the swearing of the oath.
+
+2. Since the doctrine mentioned in that oath is said to have been
+professed openly by the King's Majesty, and the whole body of this realm,
+before the swearing of the same, why should we not likewise understand the
+discipline mentioned in the oath to be that which was practised in this
+realm before the swearing of the same?
+
+3. This is further proved by the word _continuing_. We are sworn to
+continue in the obedience of the doctrine and discipline of this church;
+but how can men be said to continue in the obedience of any other
+discipline than that which they have already begun to obey? This the
+Bishop seems to have perceived, for he speaks only of defending and
+obeying, but not of continuing to obey, which is the word of the oath, and
+which proveth the discipline there spoken of and sworn to to be no other
+than that which was practised in the church when the oath was sworn. 4.
+Whilst we hold that he who sweareth to the present discipline of a church,
+is not by virtue of this oath obliged to obey all which that church shall
+ordain afterward, both the school and the canon law do speak for us. The
+school teacheth, that _canonicus qui jurat se servaturum statuta edita in
+aliquo collegio, non tenetur ex juramenta ad servandum futura_;(1292) the
+canon law judgeth, that _qui jurat servare statuta edita, &c., non tenetur
+ex juramento ad novitur edita._(1293)
+
+_Sect._ 8. But we are more fully to consider that ground whereby the
+Bishop thinketh to purge himself, and those of his sect, of the breach of
+the oath. He still allegeth,(1294) that the points of discipline for which
+we contend are not contained in the matter of the oath. Now, as touching
+the discipline of this church which is spoken of in the oath, he
+questioneth what is meant by it.(1295)
+
+_Ans._ 1. Put the case, it were doubtful and questionable what is meant by
+the word discipline in the oath; yet _pars tutior_ were to be chosen. The
+Bishop nor no man among us can certainly know, that the discipline meant
+and spoken of in the oath by those that swear it, comprehendeth not under
+it those points of discipline which we now contend, and which this church
+had in use at the swearing of the oath. Shall we, then, put the breach of
+the oath in a fair hazard? God forbid; for, as Joseph Hall(1296) noteth
+from the example of Joshua and the princes, men may not trust to shifts
+for the eluding of an oath. Surely the fear of God's name should make us
+tremble at an oath, and to be far from adventuring upon any such shifts.
+
+2. The Bishop doth but needlessly question what is meant by the discipline
+whereof the oath speaketh; for howsoever in ecclesiastical use it signify
+oftentimes that policy which standeth in the censuring of manners, yet in
+the oath it must be taken in the largest sense, namely, for the whole
+policy of the church; for, 1. The whole policy of this church did at that
+time go under the name of discipline;(1297) and those two books wherein
+this policy is contained were called The Books of Discipline. And, without
+all doubt, they who sware the oath meant by _discipline_ that whole policy
+of the church which is contained in those books. Howbeit (as the preface
+of them showeth) discipline doth also comprehend other ecclesiastical
+ordinances and constitutions which are not inserted in them. 2. Doctrine
+and discipline, in the oath, do comprehend all that to which the church
+required, and we promised, to perform obedience; therefore the whole
+policy of the church was meant by _discipline_, forasmuch as it was not
+comprehended under doctrine.
+
+_Sect._ 9. The Bishop(1298) objecteth three limitations, whereby he
+thinketh to seclude from the matter of the oath that policy and discipline
+which we plead for.
+
+First, he saith, that the matter of the oath is the doctrine and
+discipline revealed to the world by the gospel, and that this limitation
+excludeth all ecclesiastical constitutions which are not expressly or by a
+necessary consequence contained in the written word.
+
+2. That the matter of the oath is the doctrine and discipline which is
+received, believed and defended, by many notable churches, &c., and that
+this limitation excludeth all these things wherein the church of Scotland
+hath not the consent of many notable churches, &c.
+
+3. That the doctrine and discipline which is the matter of the oath, is
+particularly expressed in the Confession of Faith, &c., and that in this
+confession of faith, established by parliament, there is no mention made
+of the articles controverted, &c.
+
+_Ans._ I might here show how he confoundeth the preaching of the evangel
+with the written word; likewise how falsely he affirmeth, that the points
+of discipline for which we plead, are neither warranted by the Scripture
+nor by the consent of many notable churches. But to the point: These words
+of the oath, "We believe, &c., that this is the only true Christian faith
+and religion, pleasing God, and bringing salvation to man, which now is by
+the mercy of God revealed to the world by the preaching of the blessed
+evangel, and received, believed and defended, by many and sundry notable
+kirks and realms, but chiefly by the kirk of Scotland, the King's Majesty,
+and three Estates, &c., as more particularly expressed in the Confession
+of our Faith, &c.," are altogether perverted by the Bishop; for there is
+no discipline spoken of in these words, but afterward. Why, then, talks he
+of a discipline revealed to the world by the gospel, having the consent of
+many notable churches, and expressed in the Confession of Faith? And if
+the Bishop will have any discipline to be meant of in these words, he must
+comprehend it under the Christian faith and religion, which bringeth
+salvation unto man. But this he cannot do with so much as the least show
+of reason. Thus put we an end to the argument taken from the oath of God,
+wishing every man amongst us, out of the fear of God's glorious and
+fearful name, duly to regard and ponder the same.
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+A RECAPITULATION OF SUNDRY OTHER REASONS AGAINST THE INDIFFERENCY OF THE
+CEREMONIES.
+
+
+_Sect._ 1. That the ceremonies are not indifferent to us, or such things
+as we may freely practise, we prove yet by other reasons:
+
+For, 1. They who plead for the indifferency of the ceremonies must tell us
+whether they call them indifferent _in actu signato_, or _in actu
+exercito_; or in both these respects. Now, we have proven,(1299) that
+there is no action deliberated upon, and wherein we proceed with the
+advice of reason, which can be indifferent _in actu exercito_, and that
+because it cannot choose, but either have all the circumstances which it
+should have (and so be good), or else want some of them, one or more (and
+so be evil). And for the indifferency of the ceremonies _in actu signato_,
+though we should acknowledge it (which we do not), yet it could be no
+warrant for the practice of them, or else the believing Gentiles might
+have freely eaten of all meats, notwithstanding of the scandal of the
+Jews, for the eating of all meats freely was still a thing indifferent,
+_in actu signato_.
+
+_Sect._ 2. The ceremonies are not indifferent _eo ipso_, that they are
+prescribed and commended unto us as indifferent; for, as Aquinas(1300)
+resolveth out of Isidore, every human or positive law must be both
+_necessaria ad remotionem malorum_ and _utilis ad consecutionem bonorum_.
+The guides of God's church have not power to prescribe any other thing
+than that which is good and profitable for edifying; for they are set not
+as lords over Christ's inheritance, but as ministers for their good: "It
+seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us, (say the apostles and elders to
+the churches,) to lay upon you no greater burden than these necessary
+things," Acts xv. 28. They would not, you see, have enacted a canon about
+those things, howbeit indifferent in their own nature, had they not found
+them necessary for the eschewing of scandal. And as for the civil
+magistrate, he also hath not power to prescribe any thing which he
+pleaseth, though it be in itself indifferent; "for he is the minister of
+God unto thee for good," saith the Apostle, Rom. xiii. 4. Mark that word,
+_for good_,--it lets us see that the magistrate hath not power given him to
+enjoin any other thing than that which may be for our good. _Non enim sua
+causa dominantur_, saith Calvin;(1301) _sed publico bono; neque effroeni
+potentia proediti sunt, sed quoe subditorum saluti sit obstricta_. Now,
+the first and chief good which the magistrate is bound to see for unto the
+subjects, is (as Pareus showeth(1302)), _bonum spirituale_. Let us, then,
+either see the good of the ceremonies, or else we must account them to be
+such things as God never gave princes nor pastors power to enjoin; for
+howsoever they have power to prescribe many things which are indifferent,
+that is to say, neither good nor evil in their general nature, yet they
+may not command us to practise any thing which in the particular use of it
+is not necessary or expedient for some good end.
+
+3. The ceremonies are not indifferent, because, notwithstanding that they
+are prescribed and commended unto us as things in themselves indifferent,
+yet we are by the will and authority of men compelled and necessitated to
+use them. _Si vero ad res suo natura medius accedat coactio_, &c., then,
+say the Magdeburgians.(1303) Paul teacheth, Col. ii., that it is not
+lawful to use them freely: "If ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments
+of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to
+ordinances (touch not, taste not, handle not, which are all to perish with
+the using), after the commandments and doctrines of men." Hence is
+Tertullian taxed(1304) for inducing a necessity in things indifferent.
+Now, with how great necessity and co-action the ceremonies are imposed
+upon us, we have made it evident elsewhere.(1305)
+
+_Sect._ 4. 4. Whatever be the quality of the ceremonies in their own
+nature, they are not indifferent to us; neither may we freely practice
+them, because Papists make advantage of them, and take occasion from them
+to confirm sundry of their errors and superstitions, as we have likewise
+elsewhere made evident.(1306) Now, _cum adiaphora rapiuntur __ ad
+confessionem, libera esse desinunt_, saith the Harmony of
+Confessions.(1307) Mark _rapiuntur_. Though they get no just occasion,
+yet, if they take occasion, though unjustly, that is enough to make us
+abstain from things indifferent. _Etiam ea_, saith Balduine,(1308) _quoe
+natura sunt sua liberoe observationis, in statu confessionis, cum ab
+adversariis eorum mutatio postulatur, fiunt necessaria._
+
+_Sect._ 5. 5. Things which are most indifferent in themselves become evil
+in the case of scandal, and so may not be used. So hold the Century
+writers;(1309) so Pareus;(1310) so Zanchius;(1311) so Chemnitius;(1312) so
+Augustine;(1313) and so hath the Apostle taught.(1314) But that out of the
+practice of the ceremonies there groweth active scandal unto the weak, we
+have most clearly proven.(1315) Wherefore, let them be in their own nature
+as indifferent as anything can be, yet they are not indifferent to be used
+and practised by us; and whosoever swalloweth this scandal of Christ's
+little ones, and repenteth not, the heavy millstone of God's dreadful
+wrath shall be hanged about his neck, to sink him down in the bottomless
+lake; and then shall he feel that which before he would not understand.
+
+_Sect._ 6. 6. It is not enough for warrant of our practice that we do
+those things which are indifferent or lawful in themselves, except they be
+also expedient to be done by us according to the Apostle's rule, 1 Cor.
+vi. 12. But I have proven that many and weighty inconveniences do follow
+upon the ceremonies,(1316) as namely, that they make way and are the
+ushers for greater evils; that they hinder edification, and in their
+fleshly show and outward splendour, obscure and prejudice the life and
+power of godliness; that they are the unhappy occasions of much injury and
+cruelty against the faithful servants of Christ, that they were bellows to
+blow up, and are still fuel to increase the church-consuming fire of
+woeful dissentions amongst us, &c. Where also we show,(1317) that some of
+our opposites themselves acknowledge the inconveniency of the ceremonies;
+wherefore we cannot freely nor indifferently practise them.
+
+_Sect._ 7. 7. These ceremonies are the accursed monuments of popish
+superstition, and have been both dedicated unto and employed in the public
+and solemn worship of idols, and therefore (having no necessary use for
+which we should still retain them) they ought to be utterly abolished, and
+are not left free nor indifferent to us, which argument I have also made
+good elsewhere,(1318) and in this place I only add, that both
+Jerome,(1319) Zanchius, and Amandus Polanus,(1320) do apply this argument
+to the surplice, holding, that though it be in itself indifferent, yet
+_quia in cultu idololatrico veste linea utuntur clerici papaxi, et in ea
+non parum sanctimoniae ponunt superstitiosi homines; valedicendum est, non
+solum cultui idololatrico, sed etiam omnibus idololatriae monumentis,
+instrumentis et adminiculis_. Yea, Joseph Hall himself, doth herein give
+testimony unto us, for upon Hezekiah's pulling down of the brazen serpent,
+because of the idolatrous abuse of it, thus he noteth:(1321) "God
+commanded the raising of it, God commanded the abolishing of it.
+Superstitious use can mar the very institutions of God, how much more the
+most wise and well-grounded devices of men!" And further, in the end of
+this treatise, entitled, _The Honour of the Married Clergy_, he adjoineth
+a passage taken out of the epistle of Erasmus Roterodamus to Christopher,
+Bishop of Basil, which passage beginneth thus: "For those things which are
+altogether of human constitution must (like to remedies in diseases) be
+attempered to the present estate of matters and times. Those things which
+were once religiously instituted, afterwards, according to occasion, and
+the changed quality of manners and times, may be with more religion and
+piety abrogated." Finally, If Hezekiah be praised for breaking down the
+brazen serpent (though instituted by God) when the Israelites began to
+abuse it against the honour of God, how much more (saith Zanchius(1322))
+are our reformers to be praised, for that they did thus with rites
+instituted by men, being found full of superstitious abuse, though in
+themselves they had not been evil!
+
+_Sect._ 8. 8. The ceremonies are not indifferent, because they depart too
+far from the example of Christ and his apostles, and the purer times of
+the church; for instead of that ancient Christian-like and soul-edifying
+simplicity, religion is now by their means busked with the vain trumpery
+of Babylonish trinkets, and her face covered with the whorish and
+eye-bewitching fairding of fleshly show and splendour; and I have also
+showed particularly(1323) how sundry of the ceremonies are flat contrary
+to the example of Christ and his apostles and the best times.
+
+_Sect._ 9. 9. The ceremonies make us also to conform, and like the
+idolatrous Papists, whereas it is not lawful to symbolise with idolaters,
+or to be like them in a ceremony of man's devising, or anything which hath
+no necessary use in religion; such a distance and a dissimilitude there is
+required to be betwixt the church of Christ and the synagogue of Satan;
+betwixt the temple of God and the kingdom of the beast; betwixt the
+company of sound believers and the conventicles of heretics who are
+without; betwixt the true worshippers of God and the worshippers of idols,
+that we cannot, without being accessory to their superstitious and false
+religion, and partaking with the same, appear conform unto them in their
+unnecessary rites and ceremonies. Durandus tells us,(1324) that they call
+Easter by the Greek and not by the Hebrew name, and that they keep not
+that feast upon the same day with the Jews, and all for this cause, lest
+they should seem to Judaise. How much more reason have we to abstain from
+the ceremonies of the church of Rome lest we seem to Romanise! But I say
+no more in this place, because I have heretofore confirmed this argument
+at length.(1325)
+
+_Sect._ 10. 10. The ceremonies, as urged upon us, are also full of
+superstition; holiness and worship are placed in them, as we have proven
+by unanswerable grounds,(1326) and by testimonies of our opposites
+themselves. Therefore were they never so indifferent in their own general
+nature, this placing of them in the state of worship maketh them cease to
+be indifferent.
+
+_Sect._ 11. 11. The ceremonies against which we dispute are more than
+matters of mere order, forasmuch as sacred and mysterious significations
+are given unto them, and by their significations they are thought to teach
+men effectually sundry mysteries and duties of piety. Therefore they are
+not free nor indifferent, but more than men have power to institute; for
+except circumstances and matters of mere order there is nothing which
+concerneth the worship of God left to the determination of men, and this
+argument also hath been in all the parts of it fully explained and
+strengthened by us,(1327) which strongly proveth that the ceremonies are
+not indifferent, so much as _quo ad speciem_. _Quare doctrina a nobis
+tradita_ (these be Zanchius' words(1328)) _non licere nobis, aliis externi
+cultus ceremoniis Deum colere, quam quas ipse in sacris literis per
+apostolis proescripsit, firma ac certa manet_.
+
+_Sect._ 12. 12. Whatsoever indifferency the ceremonies could be thought to
+have in their own nature, yet if it be considered how the church of
+Scotland hath once been purged from them, and hath spued them out with
+detestation, and hath enjoyed the comfortable light and sweet beams of the
+glorious and bright shining gospel of Christ, without shadows and figures,
+then shall it appear that there is no indifferency in turning back to weak
+and beggarly elements, Gal. v. 9. And thus saith Calvin(1329) of the
+ceremonies of the _interim_, that granting they were things in themselves
+indifferent, yet the restitution of them in those churches which were once
+purged from them, is no indifferent thing. Wherefore, O Scotland!
+"strengthen the things which remain, that are ready to die," Rev. iii. 2.
+Remember also from whence thou art fallen, and repent, and do the first
+works; or else thy candlestick will be quickly removed out of his place,
+except thou repent, Rev. ii. 5.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+A BROTHERLY EXAMINATION OF SOME PASSAGES OF MR COLEMAN'S LATE SERMON UPON
+JOB XI. 20.
+
+
+ A BROTHERLY EXAMINATION
+
+ OF SOME PASSAGES OF
+
+ MR COLEMAN'S LATE SERMON UPON JOB XI. 20,
+
+ AS IT IS NOW PRINTED AND PUBLISHED:
+
+ BY WHICH HE HATH,
+
+ TO THE GREAT OFFENCE OF VERY MANY,
+
+ENDEAVOURED TO STRIKE AT THE VERY ROOT OF ALL SPIRITUAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
+ GOVERNMENT,
+
+ CONTRARY TO
+
+THE WORD OF GOD, THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT, OTHER REFORMED CHURCHES,
+
+ AND THE VOTES OF THE HONOURABLE HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT,
+
+ AFTER ADVICE HAD WITH THE REVEREND AND LEARNED
+
+ ASSEMBLY OF DIVINES.
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH, 1642.
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE, AND OLIVER & BOYD.
+
+ M. OGLE & SON, AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW.
+
+ J. DEWAR, PERTH. W. MIDDLETON, DUNDEE. G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN.
+
+ W. M'COMB, BELFAST.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS & CO., AND JAMES NISBET & CO., LONDON.
+
+ 1645.
+
+ REPRINTED BY A. W. MURRAY, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH.
+
+ 1844.
+
+
+
+
+NOTICE.
+
+
+In order to render the following controversial writings of Gillespie
+intelligible to the general reader, we have judged it expedient to prefix
+to the "Brotherly Examination" that portion of Coleman's sermon on which
+Gillespie thought it his duty to animadvert. And as a tolerably full
+account of the whole controversy between Coleman and Gillespie will be
+found in the Memoir of Gillespie's Life, we refrain from occupying space
+with any additional remarks here.
+
+
+
+
+EXTRACT FROM COLEMAN'S SERMON.
+
+
+"All eyes are upon government, they look upon it as the only help. If
+anywhere, here let wisdom be used. To prescribe is above me, only let me
+offer two or three rules, which may either be helpful to the work, or
+useful to the workmen.
+
+"1. _Establish as few things by divine right as can well be._ Hold out the
+practice but not the ground: it will gather more, nay all, that hold it
+not unlawful; men differently principled may meet in one practice. _It may
+be_, will be of larger extent than _it must be_. This (the divine right)
+was the only thing that hindered union in the Assembly. Two parties came
+biassed, the one with a national determination, the other with a
+congregational engagement. The reverend Commissioners from Scotland were
+for the divine right of the presbyterial, the Independents for the
+congregational government. How should either move? where should both meet?
+Here was the great bar, which, if you can avoid, you may do much.
+
+"2. _Let all precepts, held out as divine institutions, have clear
+scriptures._ I could never yet see how two co-ordinate governments, exempt
+from superiority and inferiority, can be in one state; and in Scripture no
+such thing is found, that I know of. That place, 1 Cor. v., takes not hold
+of my conscience for excommunication, and I admire that Matt. xviii. so
+should upon any; yet these two are the common places on which are erected
+the chiefest acts of ruling. And when I see not an institution, nor any
+one act of government in the whole Bible performed, how can it be evinced
+that a ruling elder is an instituted officer? Let the Scripture speak
+expressly, and institutions appear institutions, and all must bow.
+
+"3. _Lay no more burden of government upon the shoulders of ministers than
+Christ hath plainly laid upon them._ The ministers have other work to do,
+and such as will take up the whole man, might I measure others by myself.
+It was the king of Sodom's speech to Abraham, 'Give me the persons; take
+thou the goods:' so say I, Give us doctrine; take you the government. As
+is said, Right Honourable, give me leave to make this request in the
+behalf of the ministry, Give us two things, and we shall do well--learning
+and a competency.
+
+"4. _A Christian magistrate, as a Christian magistrate, is a governor in
+the church._ Christ has placed government in his church, 1 Cor. xii. 28.
+Of other governments, beside magistracy, I find no institution; of them I
+do, Rom. xii. 1, 2. I find all government given to Christ, and to Christ
+as Mediator, Eph. i. 22, 23. I desire all to consider it. To rob the
+kingdom of Christ of the magistrate, and his governing power, I cannot
+excuse, no not from a kind of sacrilege, if the magistrate be His."
+
+
+
+
+A BROTHERLY EXAMINATION, &c.
+
+
+I have before touched this purpose in the third branch of the third
+application of my second doctrine; and did, in my sermon in the Abbey
+church, express my thoughts of it at some length. But as I was then
+unwilling to fall upon such a controversy so publicly, and especially in a
+Fast sermon, if that which I intend to examine had not been as publicly
+and upon the like occasion delivered; so now, in the publishing, I have
+thought good to open my mind concerning this thing distinctly, and by
+itself. That which had been too late to be preached after sermon is not
+too late to be printed after sermon. Others (upon occasion offered) have
+given their testimony against his doctrine; and I should think myself
+unfaithful in the trust put upon me, if, upon such an occasion, I should
+be silent in this business; and I believe no man will think it strange
+that a piece of this nature and strain get an answer; and I go about it
+without any disrespect either to the person or parts of my reverend
+brother. Only I must give a testimony to the truth when I hear it spoken
+against; and I hope his objections have made no such impression in any
+man's mind as to make him unwilling to hear an answer. Come we therefore
+to the particulars.
+
+Four rules were offered by the reverend brother, as tending to unity, and
+to the healing of the present controversies about church government. But
+in truth his cure is worse than the disease; and, instead of making any
+agreement, he is like to have his hand against every man, and every man's
+hand against him.
+
+The first rule was this, "Establish as few things _jure divino_ as can
+well be;" which is, by interpretation, as little fine gold, and as much
+dross as can well be. "The words of the Lord are pure words: as silver
+tried in a furnace of earth, purified seven times," Psal. xii, 6. What you
+take from the word of God is fine "gold tried in the fire" (Rev. iii. 18);
+but an holy thing of man's devising is the dross of silver. Can he not be
+content to have the dross purged from the silver except the silver itself
+be cast away? The very contrary rule is more sure and safe; which I prove
+thus:--
+
+If it be a sin to diminish or take aught from the word of God, insomuch
+that it is forbidden under pain of taking away a man's part out of the
+book of life, and out of the holy city; then as many things are to be
+established _jure divino_ as can well be. But it is a sin to diminish or
+take aught from the word of God, insomuch that it is forbidden under pain
+of taking away a man's part out of the book of life, and out of the holy
+city; therefore as many things are to be established _jure divino_ as can
+well be.
+
+It must be remembered, withal, 1. That the question is not now, Whether
+this or that form of church government be _jure divino_; but, Whether a
+church government be _jure divino_; whether Jesus Christ hath thus far
+revealed his will in his word, that there are to be church-censures, and
+those to be dispensed by church-officers. The brother is for the negative
+of this question. 2. Neither is it stood upon by any, so far as I know,
+that what the Parliament shall establish concerning church government must
+be established by them _jure divino_ If the Parliament shall, in a
+parliamentary and legislative way, establish that thing which really, and
+in itself, is agreeable to the word of God, though they do not declare it
+to be the will of Jesus Christ, I am satisfied, and, I am confident, so
+are others. This I confess, That it is incumbent to parliament-men, to
+ministers, and to all other Christians, according to their vocation and
+interest, to search the Scriptures, and thereby to inform their own and
+other men's consciences, so as they may do in faith what they do in point
+of church government, that is, that they may know they are not sinning,
+but doing the will of God. And it ought to be no prejudice nor exception
+against a form of church government that many learned and godly divines do
+assert it from Scripture to be the will of God. And why should _jus
+divinum_ be such a _noli me tangere_? The reason was given. "This was the
+only thing that hindered union in the Assembly (saith he). Two parties
+came biassed. The reverend commissioners from Scotland were for the _jus
+divinum_ of the presbyterial, the Independents for the congregational
+government. How should either move? where should both meet?" If it was
+thus, how shall he make himself blameless, who made union in the Assembly
+yet more difficult, because he came biassed a third way, with the Erastian
+tenets? And where he asketh where the Independents and we should meet, I
+answer, In holding a church government _jure divino_, that is, that the
+pastors and elders ought to suspend or excommunicate (according to the
+degree of the offence) scandalous sinners. Who can tell but the purging of
+the church from scandals, and the keeping of the ordinances pure (when it
+shall be actually seen to be the great thing endeavoured on both sides),
+may make union between us and the Independents more easy than many
+imagine. As for his exceptions against us who are commissioners from the
+church of Scotland, I thank God it is but such, yea, not so much, as the
+Arminians did object(1330) against the foreign divines who came to the
+Synod of Dort. They complained that those divines were pre-engaged and
+biassed, in regard of the judgment of those churches from which they came;
+and that therefore they did not help, but hinder, union in that assembly.
+And might not the Arians have thus excepted against Alexander, who was
+engaged against them before he came to the Council of Nice? Might not the
+Nestorians have made the same exception against Cyril, because he was
+under an engagement against them before he came to the Council of Ephesus?
+Nay, had not the Jewish zealots the very same objection to make against
+Paul and Barnabas, who were engaged, not in the behalf of one nation, but
+of all the churches of the Gentiles, against the imposition of the
+Mosaical rites, and had so declared themselves at Antioch before they came
+to the synod at Jerusalem? Acts xv. 2. It is not faulty to be engaged for
+the truth, but against the truth. It is not blameworthy, but praiseworthy,
+to hold fast so much as we have already attained unto. Notwithstanding we,
+for our part, have also from the beginning professed, "That we are most
+willing to hear and learn from the word of God what needeth further to be
+reformed in the church of Scotland."(1331)
+
+The second rule which was offered in that sermon was this: "Let all
+precepts, held out as divine institutions, have clear scriptures," &c.;
+"Let the Scripture speak expressly," saith he. I answer: The Scripture
+speaks in that manner which seemed fittest to the wisdom of God; that is,
+so as it must cost us much searching of the Scripture, as men search for a
+hid treasure, before we find out what is the good, and acceptable, and
+perfect will of God concerning the government of his church. Will any
+divine in the world deny that it is a divine truth which, by necessary
+consequence, is drawn from Scripture, as well as that which, in express
+words and syllables, is written in Scripture? Are not divers articles of
+our profession,--for instance, the baptism of infants,--necessarily and
+certainly proved from Scripture, although it makes no express mention
+thereof in words and syllables? But let us hear what he hath said
+concerning some scriptures (for he names but two of them) upon which the
+acts of spiritual or ecclesiastical government have been grounded. "That
+place, 1 Cor. v., takes not hold (saith he) on my conscience for
+excommunication, and I admire that Matt. xviii. so should upon any." It is
+strange that he should superciliously pass them over without respect to so
+great a cloud of witnesses in all the reformed churches, or without so
+much as offering any answer at all to the arguments which so many learned
+and godly divines of old and of late have drawn from these places for
+excommunication; which, if he had done, he should not want a reply. In the
+meantime, he intermixeth a politic consideration into this debate of
+divine right. "I could never yet see (saith he) how two co-ordinate
+governments, exempt from superiority and inferiority, can be in one
+state." I suppose he hath seen the co-ordinate governments of a general
+and of an admiral; or, if we shall come lower, the government of parents
+over their children, and masters over their servants, though it fall often
+out, that he who is subject to one man as his master, is subject to
+another man as his father. In one ship there may be two co-ordinate
+governments, the captain governing the soldiers, the master governing the
+mariners. In these and such like cases you have two co-ordinate
+governments, when the one governor is not subordinate to the other. There
+is more subordination in the ministers and other church-officers towards
+the civil magistrate. For the minister of Christ must be in subjection to
+the magistrate; and if he be not, he is punishable by the law of the land
+as well as any other subject. The persons and estates of church-officers,
+and all that they have in this world, are subject to civil authority. But
+that which is Christ's, and not ours, the royal prerogative of the King of
+saints, in governing of his church according to his own will, is not
+subject to the pleasure of any man living. But the reverend brother might
+well have spared this. It is not the independency of the church government
+upon the civil government which he intended to speak against, it is the
+very thing itself, a church government, as is manifest by his other two
+rules.
+
+I come therefore to his next, which is the third rule: "Lay no more burden
+of government upon the shoulders of ministers than Christ hath plainly
+laid upon them." He means none at all, as is manifest not only by his
+fourth rule, where he saith that he finds no institution of other
+governments beside magistracy, but also by the next words, "The ministers
+have other work to do (saith he), and such as will take up the whole man."
+He might have added this one word more, that without the power of church
+government, when ministers have done all that ever they can, they shall
+not keep themselves nor the ordinances from pollution. Before I proceed
+any farther, let it be remembered, when he excludes ministers from
+government: First, It is from spiritual or ecclesiastical government, for
+the question is not of civil government. Secondly, He excludes ruling
+elders too, and therefore ought to have mentioned them with the ministers
+as those who are to draw the same yoke together, rather than to tell us of
+an "innate enmity between the clergy and the laity." The keeping up of the
+names of the clergy and laity savoureth more of a domineering power than
+anything the brother can charge upon presbyteries. It is a point of
+controversy between Bellarmine(1332) and those that write against him; he
+holding up, and they crying down those names, because the Christian people
+are the {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, the heritage of the Lord as well as the ministers. Thus
+much by the way of that distinction of names; and, for the thing itself,
+to object an innate enmity between the ministers of the gospel and those
+that are not ministers, is no less than a dishonouring and aspersing of
+the Christian religion. To return, you see his words tend to the taking
+away of all church government out of the hands of church-officers. Now may
+we know his reasons? He fetcheth the ground of an argument out of his own
+heart: "I have a heart (saith he) that knows better how to be governed
+than govern." I wish his words might hold true in a sense of pliableness
+and yielding to government. How he knows to govern I know not; but it
+should seem in this particular he knows not how to be governed; for after
+both houses of parliament have concluded "that many particular
+congregations shall be under one presbyterial government," he still
+acknowledgeth no such thing as presbyterial government. I dare be bold to
+say he is the first divine, in all the Christian world, that ever advised
+a state to give no government to church-officers, after the state had
+resolved to establish presbyterian government; but let us take the
+strength of his argument as he pretendeth it. He means not of an humble
+pliableness and subjection (for that should ease him from his fear of an
+ambitious ensnarement, and so were contrary to his intention), but of a
+sinful infirmity and ambition in the heart, which makes it fitter for him
+and others to be kept under the yoke than to govern. And thus his
+argumentation runs: "Might I measure others by myself, and I know not why
+I may not (God fashions men's hearts alike; and as in water face answers
+face, so the heart of man to man), I ingenuously profess I have a heart
+that knows better how to be governed than govern,--I fear an ambitious
+ensnarement, and I have cause,--I see what raised Prelacy and Papacy to
+such a height," &c. The two scriptures will not prove what he would. The
+first of them, Psal. xxxiii. 15, "He fashioneth their hearts alike," gives
+him no ground at all, except it be the homonomy of the English word
+_alike_, which in this place noteth nothing else but {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~},--all men's
+hearts are alike in this, that God fashioneth them all, and therefore
+knoweth them all _aeque_ or alike (that is the scope of the place). The
+Hebrew _jachad_ is used in the same sense, Ezra iv. 3, "We ourselves
+together will build;"(1333) they mean not they will all build in the like
+fashion, or in the same manner, but that they will build all of them
+together, one as well as another; so Psal. ii. 2, "The rulers take counsel
+together;" Jer. xlvi. 12, "They are fallen both together." The other
+place, Prov. xxvii. 19, if you take it word by word as it is in the
+Hebrew, is thus: "As in water faces to faces; so the heart of man to man."
+Our translators add the word _answereth_, but the Hebrew will suffer the
+negative reading, _As in water faces answer not to faces_. The Septuagint
+reads: "As faces are not like faces, so neither are the hearts of men
+alike." The Chaldee paraphrase thus: "As waters and as countenances, which
+are not like one another, so the hearts of the sons of men are not alike."
+Thus doth Mr Cartwright, in his judicious commentary, give the sense: "As
+in the water face doth not answer fully to face, but in some sort, so
+there may be a conjecture, but no certain knowledge of the heart of man."
+But let the text be read affirmatively, not negatively, what shall be the
+sense? Some take it thus:(1334) A man's heart may be someway seen in his
+countenance as a face in the water. Others(1335) thus: As a face in the
+water is various and changeable to him that looketh upon it, so is the
+heart of man inconstant to a friend that trusteth in him. Others(1336)
+thus: As a man seeth his own face in the water, so he may see himself in
+his own heart or conscience. Others(1337) thus: As face answereth face in
+the water, so he that looketh for a friendly affection from others, must
+show it in himself. It will never be proved that any such thing is
+intended in that place as may warrant this argumentation. There is a
+particular corruption in one man's heart--for instance, ambition--which
+makes him unfit to be trusted with government; therefore the same
+corruption is in all other men's hearts; even as the face in the water
+answereth the face out of the water so just, that there is not a spot or
+blemish in the one but it is in the other. I am sure Paul taught us not so
+when he said, "In lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than
+themselves," Phil. ii. 3. Nay, the brother himself hath taken off the edge
+of his own argument (if it had any) in his epistle printed before his
+sermon, where, speaking of his brethren, from whose judgment he dissenteth
+in point of government, he hath these words: "Whose wisdom and humility (I
+speak it confidently) may safely be trusted with as large a share of
+government as they themselves desire." Well, but suppose now the same
+corruption to be in other men's hearts, that they are in great danger of
+an ambitious ensnarement if they be trusted with government, is this
+corruption only in the hearts of ministers, or is it in the hearts of all
+other men? I suppose he will say, in all men's hearts, and then his
+argument will conclude against all civil government. Last of all, Admit
+that there be just fears of abusing the power and government
+ecclesiastical,--let the persons to be intrusted with it be examined, and
+the power itself bounded according to the strictest rules of Christ. Let
+abuses be prevented, reformed, corrected. The abuse cannot take away the
+use where the thing itself is necessary. Why might he not have satisfied
+himself without speaking against the thing itself? Once, indeed, he
+seemeth to recoil, and saith, "Only I would have it so bounded, that it
+might be said, Hitherto shalt thou come, and here shalt thou stay thy
+proud waves," yet by and by he passeth his own bounds, and totally
+renounceth the government to the civil power, which I shall speak to anon.
+But I must first ask, Whence is this fear of the proud swelling waves of
+presbyterial government? Where have they done hurt? Was it upon the coast
+of France, or upon the coast of Holland, or upon the coast of Scotland, or
+where was it? Or was it the dashing upon _terra in cognita_? He that would
+forewarn men to beware of presbyterial usurpations (for so the brother
+speaking to the present controversy about church government must be
+apprehended), and to make good what he saith falls upon the stories of
+Pope Paul V., and of the Bishop of Canterbury, is not a little wide from
+the mark. I should have expected some examples of evils and mischiefs
+which presbyterial government hath brought upon other reformed churches.
+
+Well, the reverend brother hath not done, but he proceedeth thus: "It was
+the king of Sodom's speech to Abraham, 'Give me the persons, take thou the
+goods;' so say I, Give us doctrine, take you the government: as is said,
+Right Honourable, give me leave to make this request in the behalf of the
+ministry. Give us two things and we shall do well: 1. Give us learning;
+and, 2. Give us a competency."
+
+This calls to mind a story which Clemens Alexandrinus tells us:(1338) When
+one had painted Helena with much gold, Apolles, looking upon it, "Friend
+(saith he), when you could not make her fair, you have made her rich."
+Learning and competency do enrich. The Jesuits have enough of both, but
+that which maketh a visible ministerial church to be "beautiful as Tizrah,
+comely as Jerusalem," that which maketh fair the outward face of a church,
+is _government_ and _discipline_, the removing of scandals, the preserving
+of the ordinances from pollution. He had spoken more for the honour of God
+and for the power of godliness, if he had said this in the behalf of the
+ministry: It were better for us to want competency and helps to learning,
+than to partake with other men's sins, by admitting the scandalous and
+profane to the Lord's table. His way, which he adviseth, will perhaps "get
+us an able ministry, and procure us honour enough," as he speaketh; but,
+sure, it can neither preserve the purity, nor advance the power of
+religion, because it putteth no black mark upon profaneness and scandal in
+church-members more than in any others. The king of Sodom's speech cannot
+serve his turn except it be turned over, and then it will serve him as
+just as anything, thus: Give us the goods, take you the persons (or _the
+souls_, as the Hebrew and the Chaldee hath it); "Give us a competency,"
+saith he,--here he asketh the goods,--"take you the government,"--here he
+quitteth the persons or souls to be governed only by the civil power.
+However, as at that time Abraham would take nothing that was not his own,
+insomuch as he answereth the king of Sodom: "I will not take from a thread
+even to a shoe-latchet, and that I will not take anything that is thine,"
+Gen. xiv. 23; so this Parliament, I trust, shall be so counselled and
+guided of the Lord, that they will leave to the church what is the
+church's, or rather to Christ what is Christ's. And as Abraham had lift up
+his hand to the most high God to do that (ver. 32), so have the Honourable
+Houses, with hands lift up to the most high God, promised to do this.
+
+And now, seeing I have touched upon the covenant, I wish the reverend
+brother may seriously consider whether he hath not violated the oath of
+God in advising the Parliament to lay no burden of government upon
+church-officers, but to take the government of the church wholly into
+their own hands. In the first article of the solemn league and covenant,
+there is thrice mention made of the government of the church; and namely,
+That we shall endeavour the reformation of religion in the kingdoms of
+England and Ireland, in doctrine, worship, discipline, and government,
+according to the word of God, and the example of the best reformed
+churches. Where observe,
+
+1. The extirpation of church government is not the reformation of it. The
+second article is indeed of things to be extirpated; but this of things to
+be preserved and reformed. Therefore as by the covenant Prelacy was not to
+be reformed, but to be abolished, so, by the same covenant, church
+government was not to be abolished, but to be reformed.
+
+2. Church government is mentioned in the covenant as a spiritual, not a
+civil thing. The matters of religion are put together--doctrine, worship,
+discipline, and government; the privileges of Parliament come after, in
+the third article.
+
+3. That clause, "According to the word of God," implieth, that the word of
+God holdeth forth such light unto us as may guide and direct us in the
+reformation of church government.
+
+4. And will the brother say that the example of the best reformed churches
+leadeth us his way; that is, to have no church government at all distinct
+from the civil government?
+
+And so much concerning his third rule.
+
+The fourth was this: "A Christian magistrate, as a Christian magistrate,
+is a governor in the church." And who denieth this? The question is,
+Whether there ought to be no other government in the church beside that of
+the Christian magistrate. That which he driveth at is, That the Christian
+magistrate should leave no power of spiritual censures to the elderships.
+He would have the magistrate to do like the rich man in the parable, who
+had exceeding many flocks and herds, and yet did take away the little
+ewe-lamb from the poor man, who had nothing save that. The brother saith,
+"Of other governments besides magistracy, I find no institution; of them I
+do, Rom. xiii. 1, 2." I am sorry he sought no better, else he had found
+more. Subjection and obedience is commanded, as due not only to civil but
+to spiritual governors, to those that are over us in the Lord, 1 Thess. v.
+12; so, 1 Tim. v. 17, "Let the elders that rule well be counted worthy of
+double honour;" Heb. xiii. 7, "Remember them which have the rule over you,
+who have spoken unto you the word of God;" ver. 17, "Obey them that have
+the rule over you, and submit yourselves; for they watch for your souls."
+And what understandeth he by "he that ruleth," Rom. xii. 8? If the
+judgment of Gualther and Bullinger have any weight with him (as I suppose
+it hath) they do not there exclude, but take in, under that word, the
+ruling officers of the church.
+
+But now, in the close, let the reverend brother take heed he hath not
+split upon a rock, and taken from the magistrate more than he hath given
+him. He saith, "Christian magistrates are to manage their office under
+Christ, and for Christ. Christ hath placed governments in his church, 1
+Cor. xii. 28, &c. I find all government given to Christ, and to Christ as
+Mediator (I desire all to consider it), Eph. i. 3, 23, and Christ, as Head
+of these, given to the church." If this be good divinity, then I am sure
+it will be the hardest task which ever he took in hand to uphold and
+assert the authority either of pagan or Christian magistrates.
+
+First, He lets the pagan or infidel magistrate fall to the ground, as an
+usurper who hath no just title to reign, because all government is given
+to Christ, and to him as Mediator. But which way was the authority of
+government derived from Christ, and from him as Mediator, to a pagan
+prince or emperor?
+
+Next, He will make it to fare little better with the Christian magistrate.
+For if the Christian magistrate be the vicegerent of Christ, and of Christ
+as Mediator; and if he be to manage his office under, and for Christ,--then
+the reverend brother must either prove from Scripture, that Christ, as
+Mediator, hath given such a commission of vicegerentship and deputyship to
+the Christian magistrate; or otherwise, acknowledge that he hath given a
+most dangerous wound to magistracy, and made it an empty title, claiming
+that power which it hath no warrant to assume.
+
+God and nature hath made magistrates, and given them great authority; but
+from Christ as Mediator they have it not.
+
+I find in Scripture, that church-officers have their power from Christ as
+Mediator; and they are to manage their office under and for Christ; and in
+the name of the Lord Jesus Christ do we assemble ourselves together, Matt.
+xviii. 20; in his name do we preach, Luke xxiv. 47; Acts iv. 17, 18; v.
+28, 41; ix. 27; in his name do we baptise, Acts ii. 38; iv. 12, 16; xix.
+5; in his name do we excommunicate, 1 Cor. v. 5. But I do not find in
+Scripture that the magistrate is to rule, or to make laws, or to manage
+any part of his office in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. And as the
+Mediator hath not anywhere given such a commission and power to the
+magistrate, so, as Mediator, he had it not to give; for he was not made a
+judge in civil affairs, Luke xii. 14, and his kingdom is not of this
+world, John xviii. 36. How can that power which Christ as Mediator hath
+not received of the Father be derived from Christ to the Christian
+magistrate? I know that Christ, as he is the eternal Son of God, and
+"thought it no robbery to be equal with God," doth, with the Father and
+the Holy Ghost, reign and rule over all the kingdoms of the sons of men.
+He that is Mediator, being God, hath, as God, all power in heaven and
+earth (and this power was given to him, Matt. xxviii. 18, both by the
+eternal generation, and by the declaration of him to be the Son of God
+with power, when he was raised from the dead, Rom. i. 4, even as he is
+said to be begotten, when he was raised again, Acts xiii. 33: he had
+relinquished and laid aside his divine dominion and power when he had made
+himself in the form of a servant, but after his resurrection it is
+gloriously manifested), and so he that is Mediator, being God, hath power
+to subdue his and his church's enemies, and to make his foes his
+footstool. But as Mediator he is only the church's King, Head, and
+Governor, and hath no other kingdom. The Photinians have defined the
+kingly office of Christ thus: "It is an office committed to him by God, to
+govern, with the highest authority and power, all creatures endued with
+understanding, and especially men, and the church gathered of them."(1339)
+But those that have written against them have corrected their definition
+in this particular, because Christ is properly King of his church only.
+
+As for those two scriptures which the brother citeth, they are extremely
+misapplied. He citeth 1 Cor. xii. 28 to prove that Christ hath placed
+civil governments in his church. If by the governments or governors there
+mentioned he understood the civil magistrates, yet that place saith not
+that Christ hath placed them, but that God hath done it.
+
+Next, The Apostle speaks of such governors as the church had at that time;
+but at that time the church had no godly nor Christian magistrates. This
+is Calvin's argument, whereby he proves that ecclesiastical, not civil
+governors, are there meant.
+
+Thirdly, I ask, How can we conceive that civil government can come into
+the catalogue of ecclesiastical and spiritual administrations? for such
+are all the rest there reckoned forth.
+
+Lastly, The brother, after second thoughts, may think he hath done another
+disservice to the magistrate, in making the magistracy to be below and
+behind the ministry. The Apostle puts them in this order: "God hath set
+some in the church, first apostles, secondly prophets, thirdly teachers,
+after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments," &c. How
+makes the brother this to agree with his interpretation.
+
+Next, He citeth Eph. i. 21-23, to prove that all government is given to
+Christ, and to him as Mediator; and Christ, as Head of these, given to the
+church. But this place maketh more against him than for him; for the
+Apostle saith not that Christ is given to the church as the Head of all
+principalities and powers. The brother saith so; and, in saying so, he
+makes Christ a head to those that are not of his body.
+
+The Apostle saith far otherwise: That God gave Christ "to be the head over
+all things to the church, which is his body;" which the Syriac readeth
+more plainly,--"And him who is over all he gave to be the head to the
+church." He is a head to none but the church; but He who is head to the
+church "is over all, God blessed for ever," Rom. ix. 5; yea, even as a
+man, he is over or above all. The very human nature of Christ which was
+raised from the dead, being set at the right hand of the Majesty of God,
+is exalted to a higher degree of honour and glory than either man or angel
+ever was, or ever shall he; so that He that is head of the church is over
+all, because he doth not only excel his own members, but excel all
+creatures that ever God made. It is one thing to say that Christ is
+exalted to a dignity, excellency, pre-eminence, majesty, and glory, far
+above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion; another thing
+to say that Christ is head of all principalities and governments, and, as
+Mediator, exerciseth his kingly office over these. The Apostle saith the
+former, but not the latter.
+
+Shall I need to illustrate this distinction? Is there anything more known
+in the world? Will any say that he who excels other men in dignity,
+splendour, honour, and glory, must therefore reign and rule over all those
+whom he thus excels?
+
+The Apostle saith indeed, in another sense, that Christ "is the head of
+all principality and power," Col. ii. 10. But that is spoken of Christ not
+as he is Mediator, but only as he is God; and the Apostle's meaning in
+those words is nothing but this: That Christ is true God, saith Tossanus;
+that he is omnipotent, saith Gualther; that he, being the natural Son of
+God, is together with the Father, Lord of all things, saith Bullinger.
+
+That this is the meaning will soon appear:--
+
+1. From the scope of the place, which is to teach the Colossians not to
+worship angels, because they are but servants, and the Son of God is their
+Lord and Head.
+
+2. The Apostle expounds himself how Christ is the head of all principality
+and power: Col. i. 15-17, "Who is the image of the invisible God, the
+first-born of every creature: for by him were all things created that are
+in heaven, and that are in earth, visible and invisible, whether they be
+thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or powers; all things were
+created by him, and for him: and he is before all things, and by him all
+things consist." Now all this is, without controversy, to be understood
+not of the office, but of the person of Jesus Christ; not of his governing
+and kingly office, as he is Mediator, but to prove that he is true and
+very God; therefore Beza, Zanchius, Gualther, Bullinger, Tossanus, M.
+Bayne, and divers other interpreters upon the place, do generally agree
+that the Apostle (ver. 15-17) speaks of the dignity and excellency of the
+person of Jesus Christ, proving him to be true God; and that (ver. 18) he
+cometh to speak of his office, as he is Mediator: "And he is the head of
+the body, the church," &c. So that we may distinguish a twofold headship
+of Jesus Christ: One, in regard of his Godhead,--and so he is head of all
+principality and power; another, in regard of his office of
+Mediatorship,--and so he is head of the church only. The present question
+is of the latter, not of the former. The former is common to the Son of
+God with the Father and the Holy Ghost; the latter is proper to Christ as
+God and man. The former shall continue for ever; the latter shall not
+continue for ever. The former doth not necessarily suppose the latter; but
+the latter doth necessarily suppose the former. Christ can reign as God,
+though he reign not as Mediator; but he cannot reign as Mediator and not
+reign as God. The object of the former is every creature; the object of
+the latter is the church gathered out of the world.
+
+This digression concerning the headship of Jesus Christ may for the future
+prevent divers objections, so I shall return.
+
+And now (I desire all to consider it) there is not one word in those three
+last verses of Eph. i. which will give any ground for that which the
+brother with so much confidence averreth. Ver. 21 affordeth this argument
+against him: The honour and dignity of Jesus Christ there spoken of hath
+place "not only in this world, but also in that which is to come." But the
+kingdom and government which is given to Christ, as Mediator, shall not
+continue in the world to come (for when Christ hath put his enemies under
+his feet, he shall deliver up the kingdom to the Father, and reign no
+longer as Mediator, 1 Cor. xv. 24, 25); therefore the government given to
+Christ, as he is Mediator, cannot be meant in that place, but the
+dignifying, honouring, preferring, and exalting of Christ to a higher
+degree of glory than either man or angel.
+
+Come on now and see whether ver. 22 maketh any whit more for him: He "hath
+put all things under his feet;" that is, saith Zanchius, all things but
+the church, which is his body. But this must be meant in respect of the
+decree and foreknowledge of God, as Jerome expounds the place; and so doth
+the Scripture expound itself: Heb. ii. 8, "But now we see not yet all
+things put under him;" 1 Cor. xv. 25, "He must reign, till he hath put all
+enemies under his feet;" Acts ii. 34, 35, "Sit thou on my right hand,
+until I make thy foes thy footstool." Now, when Christ shall have put down
+all rule, and all authority, and power, and shall put his enemies under
+his feet, then he shall cease to reign any more as Mediator (which I have
+even now proved); but before that be done he reigns as Mediator. So that
+it can never be proved that the meaning of these words, "He hath put all
+things under his feet," is, that all government in this world is given to
+Christ as Mediator; and whoever saith so, must needs acknowledge that
+Christ's exercising of government, as he is Mediator, over all
+principalities and powers, shall continue after all things shall be put
+under his feet; or that Christ shall not govern as Mediator, "till all
+things be put under his feet," which is so contrary to the Apostle's
+meaning, that Christ shall then cease to reign as Mediator.
+
+The next words, "And he gave him to be the head over all things to the
+church," do furnish another argument against him. Christ's headship, and
+his government as Mediator, are commensurable, and of an equal extent.
+Christ is a head to none but to his church; therefore no government is
+given to him as Mediator but the government of his church.
+
+The last verse doth further confirm that which I say; for the Apostle,
+continuing his speech of the church, saith, "Which is his body, the
+fulness of him that filleth all in all." He calls the church Christ's
+fulness, in reference to his headship, that which makes him full and
+complete so far as he is a head or king. Having his church fully gathered,
+he hath his complete kingdom, his perfect body; and this being done, he
+wants nothing, so far as he is Mediator: so that the Holy Ghost doth here,
+as it were on purpose, anticipate this opinion, lest any should think all
+civil government is given to Christ as Mediator. Though, as God, he
+filleth heaven and earth, yet, as Mediator, his filling of all in all
+extends no further than his body, his church, which is therefore called
+his fulness.
+
+Finally, To avoid the mistake of this place, and upon the whole matter,
+let these three things be well distinguished in the Mediator Jesus Christ.
+1. His {~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~} or {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, his eminence and highness in respect of the glory
+and majesty he is exalted to, far above whatsoever is highest among all
+the creatures. 2. His {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, the power by which he can, and doth by
+degrees, and will more and more subdue his and his church's enemies, and
+dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel, and break them with a rod of
+iron. 3. His {~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, his kingly power, by which he exerciseth acts of
+government. These three are distinguished in an earthly king, the first
+two being of a larger extent than the third. The conclusion of that prayer
+which our Lord taught his disciples doth distinguish the same three in
+God: "Thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory." Now these being
+distinguished in the Mediator Jesus Christ, I conclude with these three
+distinct assertions (the truth whereof I hope I have made to appear): 1.
+As Mediator, he is exalted and dignified above all creatures, and his
+glory is above all the earth; 2. As Mediator, he exerciseth acts of divine
+power and omnipotence over all creatures, in the behalf of, and for the
+good of his church, and restraineth, or diverteth, or destroyeth all his
+church's enemies; 3. As Mediator, he is king, head, and governor to none
+but his church: neither was all government put in his hand, but that of
+the church only.
+
+I could enlarge myself further against that most dangerous principle,
+"That all government, even that which is civil, is given to Christ, and to
+him as Mediator;" but let these things suffice for the present. The
+reverend brother's opinion will find better entertainment among the Jews,
+who expect a temporal monarchy of the Messiah; and among Papists, who
+desire to uphold the Pope's temporal authority over kings, as Christ's
+vicegerent upon earth.
+
+
+
+
+
+NIHIL RESPONDES: OR A DISCOVERY OF THE EXTREME UNSATISFACTORINESS OF MR
+COLEMAN'S PIECE.
+
+
+ NIHIL RESPONDES:
+
+ OR
+
+ A DISCOVERY
+
+ OF THE
+
+ EXTREME UNSATISFACTORINESS OF MR COLEMAN'S PIECE,
+
+ PUBLISHED LAST WEEK UNDER THE TITLE OF
+
+ "A BROTHERLY EXAMINATION RE-EXAMINED."
+
+ WHEREIN HIS SELF CONTRADICTIONS;
+
+ HIS YIELDING OF SOME THINGS, AND NOT ANSWERING TO OTHER THINGS OBJECTED
+ AGAINST HIM;
+
+ HIS ABUSING OF SCRIPTURE; HIS ERRORS IN DIVINITY;
+
+ HIS ABUSING OF THE PARLIAMENT, AND ENDANGERING THEIR AUTHORITY; HIS
+ ABUSING OF THE ASSEMBLY;
+
+HIS CALUMNIES, NAMELY, AGAINST THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND AND AGAINST MYSELF;
+
+ THE REPUGNANCY OF HIS DOCTRINE TO THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT;--
+
+ ARE PLAINLY DEMONSTRATED.
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH, 1642.
+
+"Understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm."--1 TIM. i.
+ 7.
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE, AND OLIVER & BOYD.
+
+ M. OGLE & SON, AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW.
+
+ J. DEWAR, PERTH. W. MIDDLETON, DUNDEE. G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN.
+
+ W. M'COMB, BELFAST.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS & CO., AND JAMES NISBET & CO., LONDON.
+
+ 1645.
+
+ REPRINTED BY A. W. MURRAY, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH.
+
+ 1844.
+
+After that Mr Coleman had preached and printed such doctrine as I was, in
+my conscience, fully persuaded was contrary to the covenant of the three
+kingdoms, and destructive (if it were put in practice) to the reformation
+of religion, he having also flatly and publicly imputed to the
+Commissioners from the church of Scotland a great part of the fault of
+hindering union in the Assembly here, I thought myself obliged in duty,
+and in the trust which I bear, to give a public testimony against his
+doctrine (which others did also) upon occasion not sought, but by divine
+providence, and a public calling then offered, first for preaching, and
+after for printing, in either of which I think there did not appear the
+least disrespect or bitterness towards the reverend brother. The Lord
+knows my intention was to speak to the matter, to vindicate the truth, and
+to remove that impediment of reformation by him cast in; and if he, or any
+man else had, in meekness of spirit, gravely and rationally, for clearing
+of truth, endeavoured to confute me, I ought not, I should not, have taken
+it ill; but now, when this piece of his against me, called "A Brotherly
+Examination Re-examined" (I think he would or should have said _examined_,
+for this is the first examination of it), I find it more full of _railing_
+than of _reasoning_, of _gibing_ than of _gravity_; and when polemics do
+so degenerate, the world is abused not edified. He tells me if I have not
+work enough I shall have more. I confess the answering of this piece is no
+great work; and the truth is, I am ashamed I have so little to make answer
+unto; yet I shall do my best to improve even this work to edification.
+When other work comes I wish it be work indeed, and not words. _Res cum
+re, ratio cum ratione concertet_, as the father said: Arguments, Sir,
+arguments, arguments, if there be any: you have affirmed great things, and
+new things, which you have not proved. The assertions of such as are for a
+church government _in genere_, and for the presbyterial government _in
+specie_, are known; their arguments are known, but your solutions are not
+yet known. If Mr Prynne's book against the suspension of scandalous
+persons from the sacrament be the work for the present which he means, I
+hope it shall be in due time most satisfactorily spoken unto, both by
+others and by myself. I desire rather solid than subitane lucubrations. In
+the meanwhile, "Let not him that putteth on his armour boast as he that
+putteth it off." And let the brother that puts me in mind of other work
+remember that himself hath other work to do which he hath not yet done.
+
+I have, for better method and clearness, divided this following discourse
+into certain heads, taking in under every head such particulars in his
+reply as I conceive to be most proper to that point.
+
+
+
+
+THAT MR COLEMAN DOTH NOT ONLY PREVARICATE, BUT CONTRADICT HIMSELF,
+CONCERNING THE STATE OF THE QUESTION.
+
+
+He tells us often that he doth not deny to church officers all power of
+church government, but only the corrective part of government; that the
+doctrinal and declarative power is in the ministry; see p. 11, 14. He
+denieth that he did "advise the Parliament to take church government
+wholly into their own hands: I never had it in my thoughts (saith he) that
+the Parliament had power of dispensing the word and sacraments." I must
+confess it is to me new language, which I never heard before, that the
+dispensing of the word and sacraments is a part of church government; sure
+the word _government_ is not, nor never was, so understood in the
+controversies concerning church government. But if it be, why did the
+brother in his sermon oppose doctrine and government? "Give us doctrine
+(said he); take you the government."
+
+But behold now how he doth most palpably contradict himself, in one and
+the same page; it is the 11th. "I know no such distinction of government
+(saith he), ecclesiastical and civil, in the sense I take government for
+the corrective part thereof; all ecclesiastical (improperly called)
+government being merely doctrinal; the corrective or punitive part being
+civil or temporal." Again, within a few lines, "I do acknowledge a
+presbyterian government; I said so expressly in my epistle; and do
+heartily subscribe to the votes of the house." If he heartily subscribe to
+the votes and ordinances of Parliament, then he heartily subscribeth that
+elderships suspend men from the sacrament for any of the scandals
+enumerate, it being proved by witnesses upon oath: this power is
+corrective, not merely doctrinal. He must also subscribe to the
+subordination of congregational, classical, and synodical assemblies in
+the government of the church, and to appeals from the lesser to the
+greater, as likewise to ordination by presbyteries. And, I pray, is all
+this merely doctrinal? And will he now subscribe heartily to all this? How
+will that stand with the other passages before cited? or with p. 17, where
+it being objected to him, that he takes away from elderships all power of
+spiritual censures, his reply neither yieldeth excommunication nor
+suspension, but admonition alone, and that by the ministers who are a part
+of the elderships, not by the whole eldership consistorially. Again, p.
+14, he confesseth: "I advised the Parliament to lay no burden of
+government upon them, whom he, this commissioner, thinks church officers,
+pastors and ruling elders." Now I argue thus: He that adviseth the
+Parliament to lay no burden of government upon ministers and ruling
+elders, he adviseth the Parliament to do contrary to their own votes and
+ordinances, and so is far from subscribing heartily thereunto. But Mr
+Coleman, by his own confession, adviseth the Parliament to lay no burden
+of government upon ministers and ruling elders; therefore, &c. How he will
+reconcile himself with himself let him look to it.
+
+Page 11. He takes it ill that one, while I make him an enemy to all church
+government, then only to the presbyterial. _Only_ is his own addition. But
+I had reason to make him an enemy to both, for so he hath made himself;
+yea, in opposing all church government, he cannot choose but oppose
+presbyterial government, for the consequence is necessary, _a genere ad
+speciem_,--negatively though not affirmatively. If no church government,
+then no presbyterial government.
+
+
+
+
+THE PARTICULARS IN MY BRIEF EXAMINATION, WHICH MR COLEMAN EITHER GRANTETH
+EXPRESSLY, OR ELSE DOTH NOT REPLY UNTO.
+
+
+My argument, p. 32, proving that as many things ought to be established
+_jure divino_ as can well be, because he cannot answer it, therefore he
+granteth it.
+
+Page 5. He had in his sermon called for plain and clear institutions, and
+let Scripture speak expressly. Now, p. 7, he yieldeth that it is not only
+a divine truth (as I called it) but clear scripture, which is drawn by
+necessary consequence from Scripture.
+
+He hath not yet, though put in mind, produced the least exception against
+the known arguments for excommunication and church government drawn from
+Matt, xviii. and 1 Cor. v. He tells the affirmer is to prove; but the
+affirmers have proved, and their arguments are known (yea he himself, p.
+1, saith, "I have had the opportunity to hear almost what man can say in
+either side," speaking of the controversy of church government); therefore
+he should have made a better answer than to say that those places did not
+take hold of his conscience; yet if he have not heard enough of those
+places, he shall, I trust, ere long hear more.
+
+He had said, I could never yet see how two co-ordinate governments, exempt
+from superiority and inferiority, can be in one state, p. 35. I gave him
+three instances: A general and an admiral; a father and a master; a
+captain and a master of a ship. This, p. 8, he doth not deny, nor saith
+one word against it; only he endeavoureth to make those similes to run
+upon four feet, and to resemble the General Assembly and the Parliament in
+every circumstance. But I did not at all apply them to the General
+Assembly and the Parliament; only I brought them to overthrow that general
+thesis of his concerning the inconsistency of two co-ordinate governments,
+which, if he could defend, why hath not he done it?
+
+His keeping up of the names of clergy and laity being challenged by me, p.
+36, he hath not said one word in his _Re-examination_ to justify it.
+
+I having, p. 37, 38, confuted his argument drawn from the measuring of
+others by himself, whereby he did endeavour to prove that he had cause to
+fear an ambitious ensnarement in others as well as in himself, God having
+fashioned all men's hearts alike, now he quitteth his ground, and saith
+nothing for vindicating that argument from my exceptions.
+
+I showed, p. 40, his misapplying of the king of Sodom's speech, but
+neither in this doth he vindicate himself.
+
+That which I had at length excepted against his fourth rule concerning the
+magistrate, and his confirmation thereof, he hath not answered, nor so
+much as touched anything which I had said against him, from the end of p.
+42 to the end of p. 48, except only a part of p. 43, and of p. 44,
+concerning 1 Cor. xii. 28. Some contrary argumentations he hath, p. 21, of
+which after, but no answer to mine.
+
+Page 10, He digresseth to other objections of his own framing, instead of
+taking off what I had said.
+
+
+
+
+HIS ABUSING OF THE SCRIPTURES.
+
+
+Mr Coleman did ground an argument upon Psal. xxxiii. 15; Prov. xxvii. 29,
+which cannot stand with the intent of the Holy Ghost, because contrary to
+other scriptures and to the truth, as I proved, p. 38. He answereth, in
+his _Re-examination_, that my sense may stand, and his may stand too. But
+if my sense may stand, which is contrary to his, then his argument had no
+sure ground for it; yea, that which I said was to prove that his
+consequence, drawn from those scriptures, did contradict both the apostle
+Paul's doctrine and his own profession, which still lieth upon him since
+it is not answered.
+
+Page 14, He citeth 1 Cor. x. 32, "Give none offence, neither to the Jews,
+nor to the Gentiles, nor to the church of God," to prove that all
+government is either a Jewish government, or a church government, or a
+heathenish government, and that _there is no third._ Yes, Sir, yourself
+hath given a third (for you have told three), but _transeat cum caeteris
+erroribus_. To the matter. This is a perverting of scripture to prove an
+untruth; for the government of generals, admirals, majors, sheriffs, is
+neither a Jewish government nor a church government, nor a heathenish
+government. Neither doth the Apostle speak anything of government in that
+place. He maketh a distribution of all men who are in danger to be
+scandalised--not of governments; and if he had applied the place rightly to
+the Parliament of England, he had said, They are either of the Jews, or of
+the Gentiles, or of the church of God: and this needeth not an answer. But
+when he saith, "The English Parliament is either a Jewish government, or a
+church government, or a heathenish government," I answer, It is none of
+these, but it is a civil government.
+
+Page 15, Declaring his opinion of church government he citeth Rom. xiii.
+4, "To execute wrath upon him that doeth evil," to prove that the punitive
+part belongs to the Christian magistrate. But what is this to the punitive
+part which is in controversy,--spiritual censures, suspension from the
+sacraments, deposition from the ministry, excommunication? The punitive
+part spoken of, Rom. xiii., belongeth to all civil magistrates, whether
+Christian or infidel.
+
+Page 18. He maketh this reply to 1 Thess. v. 12; 1 Tim. xvii.; Heb. xiii.
+7, 17: "Why, man, I have found these an hundred and an hundred times twice
+told, and yet am I as I was." Why, Sir, was the argument so ridiculous? I
+had brought those places to prove another government (and, if you will,
+the institution of another government) beside magistracy, which he said he
+did not find in Scripture. Here are some who are no civil magistrates set
+over the Thessalonians in the Lord, 1 Thess. v. 12; Paul writeth to
+Timothy of elders that rule well, 1 Tim. v. 17; the churches of the
+Hebrews had some rulers who had spoken to them the word of God, Heb. xiii.
+7; rulers that watched for their souls as they that must give an account,
+ver. 17. Now let the reverend brother speak out, What can he answer? Were
+these rulers civil magistrates? Did the civil magistrate speak to them the
+word of God? If these rulers were not magistrates but ministers, I ask
+next. Is it a matter of indifferency, and no institution, to have a
+ministry in a church or not? I hope, though he do not acknowledge ruling
+elders _jure divino_, yet he will acknowledge that the ministers of the
+word are _jure divino_; yet these were some of the rulers mentioned in the
+scriptures quoted. Let him loose the knot, and laugh when he hath done.
+
+Page 19, 20, He laboureth to prove from 1 Cor. xii. 28, that Christ hath
+placed civil government in his church; and whereas it is said, that though
+it were granted that civil governments are meant in that place, yet it
+proves not that Christ hath placed them in the church. He replieth, "I am
+sure the Commissioner will not stand to this: he that placed governors was
+the same that placed teachers." But his assurance deceiveth him; for upon
+supposition that civil governments are there meant (which is his sense), I
+deny it, and he doth but _petere principium_. God placed civil
+governments, Christ placed teachers; God placed all whom Christ placed,
+but Christ did not place all whom God placed. Next, whereas it was said,
+that governments in that place cannot be meant of Christian magistrates,
+because at that time the church had no Christian magistrates, he replieth,
+That Paul speaks of governments that the church had not, because in the
+enumeration, ver. 29, 30, he omits none but _helps_ and _governments_. I
+answer, The reason of that omission is not because these two were not then
+in being (for God had set them as well as the rest in the church, ver.
+28), but to make ruling elders and deacons contented with their station,
+though they be not prophets, teachers, &c. Thirdly, I asked, How comes
+civil government into the catalogue of ecclesiastical and spiritual
+administrations? His reply is nothing but an affirmation, that Christian
+magistracy is an ecclesiastical administration, and a query whether
+working of miracles and gifts of healings be ecclesiastical. _Ans._ Hence
+followeth, 1. That if the magistrate cease to be Christian he loseth his
+administration; 2. That though a worker of miracles cease to be Christian,
+yet it is a question whether he may not still work miracles. Lastly, Where
+I objected that he puts magistracy behind ministry, he makes no answer,
+but only that he may do this as well as my rule puts the nobility of
+Scotland behind the ministry. No, Sir, we put but ruling elders behind
+ministers in the order of their administrations because the Apostle doth
+so. It is accidental to the ruling elder to be of the nobility, or to
+nobles to be ruling elders: there are but some so, and many otherwise.
+That of placing deacons before elders, 1 Cor. xii. 28, is no great matter;
+sure the Apostle, Rom. xii., placeth elders before deacons.
+
+
+
+
+HIS ERRORS IN DIVINITY.
+
+
+1. Page 21, He admitteth no church government distinct from civil, except
+that which is merely doctrinal; and, p. 14, he adviseth the Parliament to
+take the corrective power wholly into their own hands, and exempteth
+nothing of ecclesiastical power from their hands but the dispensing of the
+word and sacraments. Hence it followeth that there ought to be neither
+suspension from the sacrament, nor excommunication, nor ordination, nor
+deposition of ministers, nor receiving of appeals, except all these things
+be done by the civil magistrate. If he say the magistrate gives leave to
+do these things, I answer, 1. So doth he give leave to preach the word and
+minister the sacraments in his dominions. 2. Why doth he then, in his
+sermon, and doth still, in his _Re-examination_, p. 14, advise the
+Parliament to lay no burden of corrective government upon ministers, but
+keep it wholly in their own hands? It must needs be far contrary to his
+mind that the magistrate gives leave to do the things above mentioned,
+they being most of them corrective, and all of them more than doctrinal.
+3. He gives no more power to ministers in church government than in civil
+government; for, p. 11, he ascribeth to them a ministerial, doctrinal and
+declarative power, both in civil and ecclesiastical government.
+
+2. Page 11, 14, He holds that the corrective or punitive part of church
+government is civil or temporal, and is wholly to be kept in the
+magistrate's own hands; and, in his sermon, p. 25, he told us he sees not
+in the whole Bible any one act of that church government in controversy
+performed. All which how erroneous it is appeareth easily from 1 Cor. v.
+13, "Put away from among yourselves that wicked person" (which Mr Prynne
+himself, in his _Vindication_, p. 2, acknowledged to be a warrant for
+excommunication); 2 Cor. ii. 6, There is a "punishment," or censure,
+"inflicted of many;" 1 Tim. v. 19, "Against an elder receive not an
+accusation, but before two or three witnesses." Where acts of church
+government or censures were neglected it is extremely blamed; Rev. ii. 14,
+15, 20. Was not all this corrective? yet not civil or temporal.
+
+3. Page 9, Whereas I had said, That without church government ministers
+shall not keep themselves nor the ordinances from pollution, he replieth,
+That he understands neither this keeping of themselves from pollution, nor
+what this pollution of the ordinances is. I am sorry for it, that any
+minister of the gospel is found unclear in such a point. I will not give
+my own, but scriptural answers to both. The former is answered, 1 Tim. v.
+22, Be not "partaker of other men's sins: keep thyself pure." It is sin to
+dispense ordinances to the unworthy, whether ordination, or communion in
+the sacrament. For the other, the pollution of ordinances is the Scripture
+language. I hope he means not to quarrel at the Holy Ghost's language:
+Ezek. xxii. 26, "Her priests have violated my law, and have profaned mine
+holy things: they have put no difference between the holy and profane;"
+Mal. i. 7, "Ye offer polluted bread upon mine altar;" ver. 12, "Ye have
+profaned it;" Matt. xxi. 13, "Ye have made it a den of thieves;" Matt.
+vii. 6, "Neither cast ye your pearls before swine, lest they trample them
+under their feet."
+
+4. Page 11, Whereas I had objected to him, that he excludeth ruling elders
+as well as ministers from government, he answers, That ruling elders are
+either the same, for office and ordination, with the minister (which, as
+he thinks, the Independents own, but not I), or they are the Christian
+magistrate; and so he saith he doth not exclude them. Mark here, he
+excludeth all ruling elders from a share in church government who are not
+either the same, for office and ordination, with the minister, or else the
+Christian magistrate; and so, upon the matter, he holdeth that ruling
+elders are to have no hand in church government. Those ruling elders which
+are in the votes of the Assembly, and in the reformed churches, have
+neither the power of civil magistracy (_qua_ elders, and many of them not
+at all, being no magistrates), nor yet are they the same, for office and
+ordination, with the minister; for their office, and, consequently, their
+ordination to that office, is distinct from that of the minister among all
+that I know. And so, excluding all ruling elders from government who are
+neither magistrates, nor the same with ministers, he must needs take upon
+him that which I charged him with.
+
+5. Page 21, Where he makes reply to what I said against his argument from
+Eph. i. 19-21, he saith, He will blow away all my discourse with this
+clear demonstration, "That which is given to Christ he hath it not as God,
+and Christ as God cannot be given. But this place (Eph. i. 19-21) speaketh
+both of dignity given to Christ, and of Christ as a gift given; therefore
+Christ cannot be here understood as God." This is in opposition to what I
+said, p. 45, concerning the headship and dignity of Christ, as the natural
+son of God, "the image of the invisible God," Col. i. 15; and, p. 43, of
+the dominion of Christ, as he is the "eternal Son of God." This being
+premised, the brother's demonstration is so strong as to blow himself into
+a blasphemous heresy. I will take the proposition from himself, and the
+assumption from Scripture, thus: That which is given to Christ he hath it
+not as God. But all power in heaven and in earth is given to Christ, Matt.
+xxviii. 18; life is given to Christ, John v. 26; authority to execute
+judgment is given to Christ, ver. 27; all things are given into Christ's
+hands, John iii. 35; the Father hath given him power over all flesh, John
+xvii. 2; He hath given him glory, John xvii. 22: therefore, by Mr
+Coleman's principles, Christ hath neither life, nor glory, nor authority
+to execute judgment, nor power over all flesh, as he is the eternal Son of
+God, consubstantial with the Father, but only as he is Mediator, God and
+man. As for the giving of Christ as God, what if I argue thus? If Christ,
+as he is the eternal Son of God, or Second Person of the ever-blessed
+Trinity, could not be given, then the incarnation itself, or the sending
+of the Son of God to take on our flesh, cannot be called a giving of a
+gift to us. But this were impious to say; therefore, again, if Christ, as
+he is the Second Person of the blessed Trinity, could not be given, then
+the Holy Ghost, as the Third Person, cannot be given (for they are
+co-essential; and that which were a dishonour to God the Son were a
+dishonour to God the Holy Ghost); but to say that the Holy Ghost cannot be
+given as the Third Person, were to say that he cannot be given as the Holy
+Ghost. And what will he then say to all those scriptures that speak of the
+giving of the Holy Ghost, Acts xv. 8; Rom. v. 5; 1 John iv. 13, &c.?
+
+Finally, As Mr Coleman's demonstration hath blown away itself, so it could
+not hurt me were it solid and good (as it is not); for he should have
+taken notice, that, in my examination, I did not restrict the dignity
+given to Christ, Eph. i. 21, nor the giving of Christ, ver. 22, to the
+Divine nature only. Nay, I told, p. 44, 46, that these words of the
+Apostle hold true even of the human nature of Christ.
+
+6. Page 21, He concludeth with a syllogism, which he calleth the scope of
+my discourse (I know not by what logic, the proposition being forged by
+himself, and contrary to my discourse); thus it is:--
+
+Whosoever do not manage their office and authority under Christ, and for
+Christ, they manage it under the devil, and for the devil; for there is no
+middle--either Christ or Belial: he that is not with me is against me.
+
+But, according to the opinion of the Commissioner, Christian magistracy
+doth not manage the office and authority thereof under Christ, and for
+Christ.
+
+Therefore,--
+
+He believes I shall be hard put to it to give the kingdom a clear and
+satisfactory answer. It is well that this is the hardest task he could set
+me.
+
+The truth is, his syllogism hath _quatuor terminos_, and is therefore
+worthy to be exploded by all that know the laws of disputation. Those
+words in the proposition, "under Christ, and for Christ," can have no
+other sense but to be serviceable to Christ, to take part with him, and to
+be for the glory of Christ, as is clear by the confirmation added, "He
+that is not with me is against me." But the same words in the assumption
+must needs have another sense, "Under Christ, and for Christ;" that is,
+_vice Christi_, in Christ's stead. For that which I denied was, That
+magistracy is derived from Christ as Mediator, or that Christ as Mediator
+hath given a commission of vicegerentship and deputyship to the Christian
+magistrate to manage his office and authority under, and for him, and in
+his name; as is clear in my examination, p. 42. Nay, Mr Coleman himself, a
+little before his syllogism, p. 19, takes notice of so much. His words are
+these: "The Commissioner saith, Magistracy is not derived from Christ: I
+say, Magistracy is given to Christ to be serviceable in his kingdom; so
+that, though the Commissioners assertion be sound (which in due place will
+be discussed), yet it infringeth nothing that I said." Now then, _qua
+fide_ could he, in his argument against me, confound these two things
+which he himself had but just now carefully distinguished? If he will make
+anything of his syllogism he must hold at one of these two senses. In the
+first sense it is true that all are either for Christ or against Christ;
+and it is as true that his assumption must be distinguished. For, _de
+facto_, the Christian magistrate is for Christ when he doth his duty
+faithfully, and is against Christ if he be unfaithful. But, _de jure_, it
+holds true universally, that the Christian magistrate manageth his office
+under and for Christ; that is, so as to be serviceable for the kingdom and
+glory of Christ. In the second sense (which only concerneth me) taking
+"under and for Christ," to be in Christ's stead, as his deputies or
+vicegerents, so his assumption is lame and imperfect, because it doth not
+hold forth my opinion clearly. That which I did, and still do hold, is
+this: That the civil magistrate, whether Christian or pagan, is God's
+vicegerent, who, by virtue of his vicegerentship, is to manage his office
+and authority under God, and for God; that is, in God's stead, and as God
+upon earth: but he is not the vicegerent of Christ as Mediator, neither is
+he, by virtue of any such vicegerentship, to manage his office and
+authority under Christ, and for Christ; that is, in Christ's stead, and as
+Christ Mediator upon earth. This was and is my plain opinion (not mine
+alone, but of others more learned), and Mr Coleman hath not said so much
+as yo{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~} to confute it. So much for the assumption. But in the same sense I
+utterly deny his proposition, as being a great untruth in divinity; for
+the sense of it can be no other than this: Whosoever do not manage their
+office and authority in Christ's stead, or as deputies and vicegerents of
+Christ, as he is Mediator, they manage it in the devil's stead, as the
+devil's deputies and vicegerents. Now I assume pagan magistrates do not
+manage their office as the deputies and vicegerents of Jesus Christ, as he
+is Mediator, therefore as the devil's deputies. Which way was the
+authority derived to them from Christ as Mediator? Mr Coleman, p. 19,
+saith in answer to this particular, formerly objected, that Christ is
+rightful king of the whole earth, and all nations ought to receive Christ,
+though as yet they do not. But this helpeth him not. That which he had to
+show was, that the pagan magistrate, even while continuing pagan and not
+Christian, doth manage his office as Christ's deputy and vicegerent; if
+not, then I conclude by his principles, a pagan magistrate is the devil's
+deputy and vicegerent, which is contrary to Paul's doctrine, who will have
+us to be subject for conscience' sake, even to heathen magistrates, as the
+ministers of God for good, Rom. xiii. 1-7. By the same argument Mr Coleman
+must grant that generals, admirals, majors, sheriffs, constables,
+captains, masters, yea, every man that hath an office, is either Christ's
+vicegerent, or the devil's vicegerent, than which what can be more absurd?
+I might, beside all these, show some other flaws in his divinity, as,
+namely, p. 9 and 13, he doth not agree to this proposition, that "the
+admitting of the scandalous and profane to the Lord's table, makes
+ministers to partake of their sins;" and he supposeth that ministers may
+do their duty, though they admit the scandalous; but of this elsewhere.
+
+
+
+
+HIS ABUSING OF THE HONOURABLE HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+
+Most honourable senators, I humbly beseech you to look about you, and take
+notice how far you are abused by Mr Coleman.
+
+1. While he pretendeth to give you more than his brethren, he taketh a
+great deal more from you, and, so far as in him lieth, even shaketh the
+foundation of your authority. The known tenure of magistracy is from God.
+He is the minister of God (for good, and the powers that are, are ordained
+of God, saith the Apostle). The magistrate is God's vicegerent; but now
+this brother seeketh a new tenure and derivation of magistracy, which
+takes away the old. He told in his sermon, p. 27: "Christ hath placed
+governments in his church, 1 Cor. xii. 28; of other governments besides
+magistracy I find no institution, of them I do, Rom. xiii. 1, 2. I find
+all government given to Christ, and to Christ as Mediator (I desire all to
+consider it), Eph. i. 21-23; and Christ as head of those given to the
+church." Here you have these three in subordination, God, Christ, and the
+Christian magistrate. God gives once all government, even civil, to
+Christ, and to him as Mediator. Well, but how comes it then to the
+magistrate? Not straight by a deputation from God. Mr Coleman's doctrine
+makes an interception of the power. He holds that God hath put it in
+Christ's hands as Mediator. How then? The brother holdeth that Christ, as
+Mediator, hath instituted and placed the Christian magistrate, yea, and no
+other government, in his church. This was the ground of my answer, p. 42,
+that he "must either prove from Scripture, that Christ, as Mediator, hath
+given such a commission of vicegerentship and deputyship to the Christian
+magistrate, or otherwise acknowledge that he hath given a most dangerous
+wound to magistracy, and made it an empty title, claiming that power which
+it hath no warrant to assume." I added: "As the Mediator hath not anywhere
+given such a commission and power to the magistrate, so, as Mediator, he
+had it not to give; for he was not made a judge in civil affairs, Luke
+xii. 14; 'And his kingdom is not of this world,' John xviii. 36." Now, but
+what reply hath he made to all this? Page 19, he saith, Granting it all to
+be true and sound, yet it infringeth not what he said. "The commissioner
+(saith he) saith magistracy is not derived from Christ." I say,
+"Magistracy is given to Christ to be serviceable in his kingdom." But by
+his good leave and favour, he said a great deal more than this, for he
+spake of Christ's being head of all civil governments, and his placing
+these in his church as he is Mediator. Yea, that fourth rule delivered by
+him in his sermon, did hold forth these assertions: 1. That God gave all
+government, even civil, to Christ, and to him as Mediator; 2. That Christ,
+as Mediator, hath power and authority to place, and substitute under and
+for him, the Christian magistrate; 3. That Christ hath placed and
+instituted civil governments in his church, to be under and for him, as he
+is Mediator; 4. That the Christian magistrate doth, and all magistrates
+should, manage their office under and for Christ (that is, as his
+vicegerents), he being, as Mediator, head of all civil government. Now
+instead of defending his doctrine from my just exceptions made against it,
+he resileth, and having brought the magistrate in a snare, leaves him
+there. He endeavours to vindicate no more but this, That magistracy is
+given to Christ to be serviceable in his kingdom. But if he had said so at
+first, I had said with him, and not against him, in that point; and if he
+will yet hold at that, why doth he, p. 19, refer my assertion to further
+discussion?
+
+Secondly, He hath abused the Parliament in holding forth that rule to them
+in his sermon, "Establish as few things _jure divino_ as can well be." And
+yet now he is made, by strength of argument, to acknowledge, p. 5, that
+this is a good rule, "Establish as many things _jure divino_ as can well
+be."
+
+Thirdly, I having stated the question to be not whether this or that form
+of church government be _jure divino_, but whether a church government be
+_jure divino_; whether Christ hath thus far revealed his will in his word,
+that there are to be church censures, and those to be dispensed by
+church-officers. I said the brother is for the negative of this question,
+p. 32. This he flatly denieth, p. 5, 6, whereby he acknowledgeth the
+affirmative, that there is a church government _jure divino_, and that
+Jesus Christ hath so far revealed his will in his word, that there are to
+be church censures, and those to be dispensed by church-officers. But how
+doth this agree with his sermon? "Christ hath placed governments in his
+church. Of other governments (said he) beside magistracy I find no
+institution, of them I do." Is magistracy church government? Are
+magistrates church officers? Are the civil punishments church censures? Is
+this the mystery? Yes, that it is. He will tell us anon that the Houses of
+Parliament are church officers; but if that bolt do any hurt I am much
+mistaken.
+
+Fourthly, He professeth to subscribe to the votes of Parliament concerning
+church government, p. 11; and yet he still pleadeth that all
+ecclesiastical government is merely doctrinal, p. 11, the Parliament
+having voted that power to church-officers which is not doctrinal (as I
+showed before). And he adviseth the Parliament to keep wholly in their own
+hands the corrective part of church government, p. 14, though the
+Parliament hath put into the hands of elderships a power of suspension
+from the sacrament, which is corrective.
+
+Fifthly, He did deliver, in that sermon before the honourable House of
+Commons, divers particulars, which being justly excepted against, and he
+undertaking a vindication, yet he hath receded from them, or not been able
+to defend them, as that concerning two co-ordinate governments in one
+kingdom; and his argument concerning the fear of an ambitious ensnarement
+in ministers, these being by me infringed, he hath not so much as offered
+to make them good.
+
+Sixthly, Having acknowledged, under his own hand, that he was sorry he had
+given offence to the reverend Assembly, and to the Commissioners from
+Scotland, he now appealeth to the Parliament, and tells us they are able
+to judge of a scandalous sermon, and they thought not so of it, p. 3. I
+know they are able to judge of a scandalous sermon: that they thought not
+so of it, it is more than I know or believe. However I know they have a
+tender respect to the offence of others, even when themselves are not
+offended, and so they, and all men, ought to do according to the rule of
+Christ. For his part, after he had acknowledged he had given offence, it
+is a disservice to the Parliament to lay over the thing upon them. For my
+part, I think I do better service to the Parliament in interpreting
+otherwise that second order of the House, not only desiring, but enjoining
+Mr Coleman to print that sermon,--as near as he could,--as he preached it.
+This was not, as he takes it, one portion of approbation above all its
+brethren (for I shall not believe that so wise an auditory was not at all
+scandalised at the hearing of that which was contrary both to the covenant
+and to their own votes concerning church government, nor at that which he
+told them out of the Jewish records, that "Hezekiah was the first man that
+was ever sick in the world, and did recover"); but, as I humbly conceive
+it was a real censure put upon him, his sermon being so much excepted
+against and stumbled at, the honourable House of Commons did wisely enjoin
+him to print his sermon, that it might abide trial in the light of the
+world, and lie open to any just exceptions which could be made against it
+abroad, and that he might stand or fall to himself.
+
+Seventhly, He abuseth the Parliament by arrogating so much to himself, as
+that his sermon "will, in the end, take away all difference, and settle
+union," p. 3; and that his _Model_ will be, when he is dead, "the model of
+England's church government," as he saith in his postscript. Whether this
+be _prophesying_ or _presuming_ I hope we are free to judge. And what if
+the wisdom and authority of the honourable Houses, upon advice from the
+reverend and learned Assembly, choose another way than this? Must all the
+synodical debates, and all the grave parliamentary consultations, resolve
+themselves into Mr Coleman's way, like Jordan into _Mare Mortuum_.
+
+Eighthly, He doth extremely wound the authority of Parliament in making
+their office to be a church office, and of the same kind with the
+minister's office. P. 14, "Do not I hold ministers church officers?" And a
+little after, "I desire the Parliament to consider another presbyterian
+principle that excludes your honourable Assembly from being church
+officers." If so, then the offices of the magistrate and of the minister
+must stand and fall together; that is, if the nation were not Christian
+the office of magistracy should cease as well as that of the ministry. And
+if he make the magistrate a church officer, he must also give him
+ordination, except, with the Socinians, he deny the necessity of
+ordination.
+
+
+
+
+HIS ABUSING THE REVEREND ASSEMBLY OF DIVINES.
+
+
+Whereas I had objected that his sermon had given no small scandal and
+offence, he replieth, p. 3, "But hath it given offence? To whom? I appeal
+to the honourable audience." Is this candid or fair dealing, when he
+himself knew both that he had given offence, and to whom? I shall give him
+no other answer but his own declaration which he gave under his hand after
+he had preached that sermon:--
+
+"For much of what is reported of my sermon I utterly deny; and refer
+myself to the sermon itself. For what I have acknowledged to be delivered
+by me, although it is my judgment, yet, because I see it hath given a
+great deal of offence to this Assembly and the reverend Commissioners of
+Scotland, I am sorry I have given offence in the delivery thereof. And for
+the printing, although I have an order, I will forbear, except I be
+further commanded.--THO. COLEMAN."
+
+Page 33, I had this passage: "And where he asketh where the Independents
+and we should meet," I answer, "In holding a church government _jure
+divino_; that is, that the pastors and elders ought to suspend or
+excommunicate (according to the degree of the offence) scandalous sinners.
+Who can tell but the purging of the church from scandals, and the keeping
+of the ordinances pure (when it shall be actually seen to be the great
+work endeavoured on both sides), may make union between us and the
+Independents more easy than many imagine." What reply hath he made to
+this? P. 6, "Sure I dream (awake then); but I will tell you news: The
+Presbyterians and Independents are (he should have said _may be_) united;
+nay, more, the Lutherans and Calvinists; nay, more yet, the Papist and
+Protestant; nay, more than so, the Turk and Christian." But wherein? "In
+holding that there is a religion wherein men ought to walk." No, Sir. They
+must be united upon the like terms; that is, you must first have Turks to
+be Christians, and Papists to be Protestants; and then you must have them
+as willing to purge the church of scandals, and to keep the ordinances
+pure. We will never despair of an union with such as are sound in the
+faith, holy in life, and willing to a church-refining and sin-censuring
+government in the hands of church officers. In the meanwhile, it is no
+light imputation upon the Assembly to hint this much, that the harmony and
+concord among the members thereof, for such a government as I have now
+named (though in some other particulars dissenting), can no more unite
+them than Turks and Christians, Papists and Protestants, can be united.
+And now I will tell you my news: The Presbyterians and Independents are
+both equally interested against the Erastian principles.
+
+He reflecteth also upon the Assembly in the point of _jus divinum_, p. 6.
+But what his part hath been, in reference to the proceedings in the
+Assembly, is more fully, and in divers particulars, expressed in the
+_Brief View of Mr Coleman's New Model_, unto which he hath offered no
+answer.
+
+
+
+
+HIS CALUMNIES.
+
+
+Page 3, He desireth me, with wisdom and humility, to mind what
+church-refining and sin-censuring work this church government, with all
+its activity, hath made in Scotland, in the point of promiscuous
+communicating. I shall desire him, with wisdom and humility, to mind what
+charity or conscience there is in such an aspersion. I dare say divers
+thousands have been kept off from the sacrament in Scotland, as unworthy
+to be admitted. Where I myself have exercised my ministry there have been
+some hundreds kept off; partly for ignorance, and partly for scandal. The
+order of the church of Scotland, and the acts of General Assemblies, are
+for keeping off all scandalous persons; which every godly and faithful
+minister doth conscientiously and effectually endeavour. And if, here or
+there, it be too much neglected by some Archippus, who takes not heed to
+fulfil the ministry which he hath received of the Lord, let him and his
+eldership bear the blame, and answer for it.
+
+Page 4, I having professed my unwillingness to fall upon such a
+controversy in a Fast sermon, he replieth, "How can you say you were
+unwilling?" But how can you, in brotherly charity, doubt of it after I had
+seriously professed it? My doing it at two several Fasts (the only
+opportunities I then had to give a testimony to that presently
+controverted truth) is no argument of the contrary. May not a man do a
+thing twenty times over, and yet do it unwillingly?
+
+Page 5, He slandereth those that did, in their sermons, give a public
+testimony against his doctrine; the occasion (as he gives out) not being
+offered, but taken. But had they not a public calling and employment to
+preach as well as himself? And if a Fast was not an occasion offered to
+them, how was a Fast an occasion offered to him to fall upon the same
+controversy first, and when none had dons the like before him.
+
+A fourth calumny is this: He had first blamed two parties that they came
+biassed to the Assembly; I answered, How then shall he make himself
+blameless who came biassed a third way; which was the Erastian way; and
+that, for our part, we came no more biassed to this Assembly than the
+foreign divines came to the Synod of Dort, Alexander to the Council of
+Nice, Cyril to that of Ephesus, and Paul to the synod at Jerusalem. But
+now, p. 6, 7, instead of doing us right he doth us greater injury; for now
+he makes us biassed, not only by our own judgments, but by something
+adventitious from without; which he denieth himself to be (but how truly I
+take not on me to judge: beholders do often perceive the biassing better
+than the bowlers); yea, he saith that I have acknowledged the bias, and
+justify it. Where, Sir? where? I deny it. It is no bias for a man to be
+settled, resolved and engaged in his judgment for the truth, especially
+when willing to receive more light, and to learn what needeth to be
+further reformed. Hath he forgotten his own definition of the bias which
+he had but just now given? But he will needs make it more than probable,
+by the instances which I brought, that the Commissioners from Scotland
+came not to this Assembly as divines, by dispute and disquisition, to find
+out truth, but as judges, to censure all different opinions as errors; for
+so came foreign divines to Dort, Alexander to the Council of Nice, Cyril
+to Ephesus. Is it not enough that he slander us, though he do not, for our
+sakes, slander those worthy divines that came to the Synod of Dort,
+Alexander also, and Cyril, prime witnesses for the truth in their days?
+Could no less content him than to approve the objections of the Arminians
+against the Synod of Dort, which I had mentioned, p. 33? But he gets not
+away so. The strongest instance which I had given he hath not once
+touched: it was concerning Paul and Barnabas, who were engaged (not in the
+behalf of one nation, but of all the churches of the Gentiles) against the
+imposition of the Mosaical rites, and had so declared themselves at
+Antioch, before they came to Jerusalem. Finally, Whereas he doubts, though
+not of our willingness to learn more, yet of our permission to receive
+more: That very paper, first given in by us (which I had cited, and unto
+which he makes this reply), did speak not only of our learning, but of the
+church of Scotland's receiving, and, which is more, there is an actual
+experiment of it, the last General Assembly having ordered the laying
+aside of some particular customs in that church, and that for the nearer
+uniformity with this church of England, as was expressed in their own
+letter to the reverend Assembly of Divines.
+
+A fifth calumny there is, p. 9, 6. "The Commissioner is content that _jus
+divinum_ should be a _noli me tangere_ to the Parliament, yet blames what
+himself grants." I was never content it should be a _noli me tangere_ to
+the Parliament, but at most a _non necesse est tangere_, for so I
+explained myself, p. 32, 33. If the Parliament establish that thing which
+is agreeable to the word of God, though they do not establish it as _jure
+divino_, I acquiesce; in the meantime, both they and all Christians, but
+especially ministers, ought to search the Scriptures, that what they do in
+matters of church government, they may do it in faith and assurance, that
+it is acceptable to God. It was not of parliamentary sanction, but of
+divines doctrinal asserting of the will of God that I said, Why should
+_jus divinum_ be such a _noli me tangere_?
+
+6. It seems strange to him that I did at all give instance of the
+usefulness of church government in the preservation of purity in the
+ordinances and in church-members. He saith, For an Independent to have
+given this instance had been something; but it seems strange to him that
+"I should have given an instance of the power and efficacy of government,
+as it is presbyterial, and contradistinct to congregational." This is a
+calumny against presbyterial government, which is neither privative nor
+contradistinct, but cumulative to congregational government; and the
+congregational is a part of that government which is comprehended under
+the name of presbyterial. But in cases of common concernment, difficulty,
+appeals, and the like, the preserving of the ordinances and church-members
+from pollution, doth belong to presbyteries and synods.
+
+7. He saith of me, p. 9, "He ascribeth this power of purifying men, and
+means of advancing the power of godliness afterward, to government." A
+calumny. It was only a _sine quo non_ which I ascribed to government thus
+far, that without it, ministers "shall not keep themselves nor the
+ordinances from pollution," p. 23. But that church government hath power
+to purify men, I never thought it, nor said it. That which I said of the
+power (which he pointeth at) was, that his way can neither preserve the
+purity, nor advance the power of religion, p. 40, and the reason is,
+because his way provideth no ecclesiastical effectual remedy for removing
+and purging away the most gross scandalous sins, which are destructive to
+the power of godliness. God must, by his word and Spirit, purify men, and
+work in them the power of godliness. The church government which I plead
+for against him, is a means subservient and helpful, so far as _removere
+prohibens_, to remove that which apparently is impeditive and destructive
+to that purity and power.
+
+8. Having told us of the proud swelling waves of presbyterial government,
+I asked upon what coast had those waves done any hurt, France, or
+Scotland, or Holland, or _terra incognita_? He replieth, p. 12, "I confess
+I have had no great experience of the presbyterial government." Why make
+you bold then to slander it, when you can give no sure ground for that you
+say? He tells us, His fears arise from Scotland and from London. The
+reverend and worthy ministers of London can speak for themselves _oetatem
+habent_, for my part, though I know not the particulars, I am bound in
+charity not to believe those aspersions put upon them by a discontented
+brother. But what from Scotland? "I myself (saith he) did hear the
+presbytery of Edinburgh censure a woman to be banished out of the gates of
+the city. Was not this an encroachment?" It had been an encroachment
+indeed, if it had been so. But he will excuse me if I answer him in his
+own language (which I use not), p. 3 and 5: "It is, at the best, a most
+uncharitable slander," and "There was either ignorance or mindlessness in
+him that sets it down."
+
+There is no banishment in Scotland but by the civil magistrate, who so far
+aideth and assisteth church discipline, that profane and scandalous
+persons, when they are found unruly and incorrigible, are punished with
+banishment or otherwise. A stranger coming at a time into one of our
+presbyteries, and hearing of somewhat which was represented to or reported
+from the magistrate, ought to have had so much, both circumspection and
+charity, as not to make such a rash and untrue report. He might have at
+least inquired when he was in Scotland, and informed himself better,
+whether presbyteries or the civil magistrate do banish. If he made no such
+inquiry, he was rash in judging; if he did, his offence is greater, when,
+after information, he will not understand.
+
+9. He makes this to be a position of mine, p. 13, That "a learned ministry
+puts no black mark upon profaneness more than upon others." A calumny.
+For, first, He makes me to speak nonsense; Secondly, I did not speak it of
+a learned ministry, but of "his way," p. 40. How long ago since a learned
+ministry was known by the name of Mr Coleman's way! His way is a ministry
+without power of government or church censures. Of this his way I said,
+that "it putteth no black mark upon profaneness and scandal in church
+members more than in any other;" and the reason is, because the corrective
+or punitive part of government he will have to be only civil or temporal,
+which striketh against those that are without, as well as those within.
+But the Apostle tells us of such a corrective government as is a judging
+of those that are within, and of those only, 1 Cor. v. 12; and this way
+(which is not only ours, but the apostolical way) puts a black mark upon
+profaneness and scandalous sins in church members more than in any others.
+
+10. He saith of me, p. 17, "The Commissioner is the only man that we shall
+meet with, that, forsaking the words, judgeth of the intentions." A
+calumny. I judged nothing but _ex ore tuo_; but in this thing he himself
+hath trespassed. I will instance but in two particulars: In that very
+place he saith, "Admonition is a spiritual censure in the Commissioner's
+opinion." Whence knows he that to be my opinion? Consistorial or
+presbyterial admonition given to the unruly may be called a censure; and
+if this were his meaning, then, ascribing to elderships power of
+admonition, he gives them some power of spiritual censures, and so
+something of the corrective part of government, which were contrary to his
+own principles. But he speaketh it of the ministers' admonishing, who are
+but a part of the elderships, as himself there granteth. Now, where did I
+ever say or write, that admonition, by a minister, is a spiritual censure?
+Again, p. 4, he so judgeth me, that he not only forsaketh, but
+contradicteth my words, "How can you say you were unwilling?"
+
+11. He saith, p. 16, "Now the Commissioner speaks out, &c. What! Not the
+Parliament of England meddle with religion?" A horrid calumny! Where have
+I said it? _Dic sodes._ I never preached before them but I exhorted them
+to meddle with religion, and that in the first place, and above all other
+things. I shall sooner prove that Mr Coleman will not have the Parliament
+of England to meddle with civil affairs, because he makes them church
+officers. It is a _non sequitur_. Their power is civil, therefore they are
+not to meddle with religion. It will be a better consequence: They are
+church officers: so he makes them, p. 14; and "Christian magistracy is an
+ecclesiastical administration," so he saith, p. 20, therefore they are not
+to meddle with civil government.
+
+
+
+
+THE REPUGNANCY OF HIS DOCTRINE TO THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT.
+
+
+Mr Coleman, p. 13, acknowledgeth, that to assert anything contrary to the
+solemn league and covenant, is a great fault in any, in himself more than
+in divers others, if made out; he having, for his own part, taken it with
+the first, and not only so, but having administered it to divers others.
+Yes; and take this one circumstance more: In his sermon upon Jer. xxx. 21,
+at the taking of the covenant, Sept. 29, 1643, he answereth this objection
+against the extirpation of Prelacy: "But what if the exorbitances be
+purged away, may not I, notwithstanding my oath, admit of a regulated
+Prelacy?" For satisfaction to this objection he answereth thus: "First, We
+swear not against a government that is not; Secondly, We swear against the
+evils of every government, and doubtless many materials of Prelacy must of
+necessity be retained as absolutely necessary; Thirdly, Taking away the
+exorbitances, the remaining will be a new government and no Prelacy." Let
+the brother now deal ingenuously. What did he understand by those
+materials of Prelacy absolutely necessary to be retained? Did he
+understand the dispensing of the word and sacraments, which is common to
+all pastors? Or did he understand the privileges of Parliament? Were
+either of those two materials of Prelacy? And if he had meant either of
+these, was this the way to satisfy that scruple concerning the extirpation
+of Prelacy? Again, What was that new government which he promised them
+after the taking away of the exorbitances of the old? Was it the
+minister's doctrinal part? That is no new thing in England. Was it the
+Parliament's assuming of the corrective part of church government, as he
+improperly distinguisheth, wholly and solely into their own hands,
+excluding the ministry from having any hand therein? This were a new
+government, I confess. But, sure, he could not, in any reason, intend this
+as a satisfaction to the scruples of such as desired a regulated Prelacy,
+whose scruples he then spoke to, for this had been the way to dissuade
+them from, not to persuade them to, the covenant.
+
+But I go along with his _Re-examination_. P. 14, He explaineth himself and
+me thus: "He should have said that I advised the Parliament to lay no
+burden of government upon them whom he, this Commissioner, thinks church
+officers, then had he spoken true." I thank him for his explanation. And,
+I pray, who were the church officers whom I said he excluded from church
+government? Were they not pastors and ruling elders? And doth not himself
+think these to be church officers? Yes; of the ministers he thinks so, but
+of ruling elders he seems to doubt, except they be magistrates. Well, but
+excluding those church officers from church government he takes with the
+charge. Why seeks he a knot in the rush? But now how doth he explain
+himself? He will have the Parliament to be church officers (of which
+before), and such church officers as shall take the corrective part of
+church government wholly into their own hands; yet not to dispense the
+word and sacraments, but to leave the doctrinal part to the ministry, and
+their power to be merely doctrinal, as he saith, p. 11. Thus you have his
+explanation. But doth this solve the violating of the covenant? Nay, it
+makes it more apparent; for the government of the church, which the first
+article of the covenant speaks of, is distinguished from the doctrinal
+part: "That we shall endeavour the reformation of religion in the kingdoms
+of England and Ireland, in doctrine, worship, discipline and government."
+So that, excluding pastors and ruling elders from the corrective part of
+government, and from all power which is not merely doctrinal, he thereby
+excludeth them from that discipline and government which the covenant
+speaks of as one special part of the reformation of religion. Come on to
+the reasons.
+
+I had given four reasons; he takes notice but of three. This is the second
+time he hath told three for four, yet even these three will do the
+business.
+
+1. "The extirpation of church government is not the reformation of it."
+Here the brother addeth these words following as mine, which are not mine:
+"Therefore he that finds no church government breaks his covenant." His
+reply is, "We must reform it according to the word of God, if that hold
+out none, here is no tailing." He addeth a simile of a jury sworn to
+inquire into the felony of an accused person, but finds not guilty; and of
+three men taking an oath to deliver in their opinions of church government
+(where, by the way, he lets fall that I hold the national synod to be
+above all courts in the kingdom; which, if he means of ecclesiastical
+courts, why did he speak so generally? If he mean, above all or any civil
+courts, it is a gross calumny.) But now, if this be the sense which he
+gives of that first article in the covenant, then, 1. All that is in the
+second article might have been put into the first article: for instance,
+we might, in Mr Coleman's sense, have sworn "to endeavour the reformation
+of Prelacy, and even of Popery itself, according to the word of God, and
+the example of the best reformed churches;" that is, taking an oath to
+deliver in our opinions of these things according to the word of God, and
+to inquire into the evils of church government by archbishops, bishops,
+deans, &c., whether guilty or not guilty. I strengthened my argument by
+the different nature of the first and second article. I said, "The second
+article is of things to be extirpated, but this of things to be preserved
+and reformed." Why did he not take the strength of my argument and make a
+reply? 2. By the same principle of his we are not tied by the first
+article of our covenant to have any, either doctrine or worship, but only
+to search the Scriptures whether the word hold out any; for doctrine,
+worship, discipline and government, go hand in hand in the covenant. 3.
+His own simile hath this much in it against him. If a jury, sworn to
+inquire into the felony of an accused person, should, after such an oath,
+not only find the person not guilty, but further take upon them to
+maintain that there is no such thing as felony, surely this were
+inconsistent with their oath, so he that swears to endeavour the
+reformation of religion in doctrine, worship, discipline, and government,
+and yet will not only dislike this or that form of government, but also
+hold that there is no such thing as church government, he holds that which
+cannot agree with his oath. 4. This answer of Mr Coleman, leaving it free
+to debate whether there be such as church government, being his only
+answer to my first argument from the covenant, must needs suppose that the
+government mentioned in the covenant, the reformation whereof we have
+sworn to endeavour, is understood even by himself of church officers'
+power of corrective government, it being the corrective part only, and not
+the doctrinal part, which he casts upon an uncertainty whether the world
+hold out any such thing.
+
+2. "Church government as mentioned in the covenant is a spiritual, not a
+civil thing. The matters of religion are put together,--doctrine, worship,
+discipline and government. The privileges of Parliament come after in the
+third article." The reverend brother replies, "What if it be? therefore
+the Parliament is not to meddle with it, and why?" And here he runs out
+against me, as if I held that the Parliament is not to meddle with
+religion, an assertion which I abominate. Princes and magistrates' putting
+off themselves all care of the matters of religion, was one of the great
+causes of the church's mischief, and of popish and prelatical tyranny. But
+is this just and fair, Sir, to give out for my opinion that for which you
+are not able to show the least colour or shadow of consequence from any
+thing that ever I said? That which was to be replied unto was, Whether do
+not the materials of the first article of the covenant differ from the
+materials of the third article of the covenant? or whether are they the
+same? Whether doth the privilege of Parliament belong to the first article
+of the covenant? Whether is that government mentioned in the first article
+a civil thing or a spiritual? If civil, why is discipline and government
+ranked with doctrine and worship, and all these mentioned as parts of the
+reformation of religion? If spiritual, then why doth the brother make it
+"civil or temporal?" p. 11. To all this nothing is answered, but, "What if
+it be?" Then is my argument granted.
+
+And to put it yet further out of question, I add other two arguments from
+that same first article of the covenant. One is this: In the first part of
+that first article we swear all of us to endeavour "the preservation of
+the reformed religion in the church of Scotland, in doctrine, worship,
+discipline, and government," where all know that the words "discipline"
+and "government" (especially being mentioned as two of the principal
+things in which the reformed religion in that church doth consist) signify
+church government and church discipline distinct both from doctrine and
+worship (which, by the way, how Mr Coleman endeavoureth to preserve, I
+will not now say, but leave it to others to judge), therefore, in that
+which immediately followeth,--our endeavouring "the reformation of religion
+in the kingdoms of England and Ireland, in doctrine, worship, discipline
+and government,"--the words "discipline" and "government" must needs have
+the same sense thus far, that it is a church discipline and a church
+government distinct from the civil power of the magistrate, and distinct
+also from doctrine and worship in the church; for we cannot make these
+words, "discipline" and "government," in one and the same article of a
+solemn oath and covenant, to suffer two senses differing _toto genere_
+(especially considering that the civil government is put by itself in
+another article, which is the third), unless we make it to speak so as
+none may understand it.
+
+The other argument which I now add is this. In the third part of that
+first article we swear that we "shall endeavour to bring the churches of
+God in the three kingdoms to the nearest conjunction and uniformity in
+religion, confession of faith, form of church government, directory for
+worship and catechising," where, 1. Church government doth agree
+generically with a confession of faith, directory of worship, and
+catechising. I mean all these are matters of religion, none of them civil
+matters. 2. It is supposed there is such a thing as church government
+distinct from civil government, and therefore it is put out of all
+question, that so far there shall be an uniformity between the churches of
+God in the three kingdoms (and otherwise it were an unswearing of what was
+sworn in the first part of that article), but it tieth us to endeavour the
+nearest conjunction and uniformity "in a form of church government;" which
+were a vain and rash oath, if we were not tied to a church government in
+general, and that as a matter of religion. 3. The uniformity in a form of
+church government which we swear to endeavour must needs be meant of
+corrective government; it being clearly distinguished from the confession
+of faith and directory of worship. So that Mr Coleman's distinction of the
+doctrinal part, and of the dispensing of the word and sacraments, cannot
+here help him.
+
+From these two arguments (beside all was said before) I conclude that the
+covenant doth undeniably suppose, and plainly hold forth this thing as
+most necessary and uncontrovertible, that there ought to be a church
+government which is both distinct from the civil government, and yet not
+merely doctrinal. And if so, what Apollo can reconcile Mr Coleman's
+doctrine with the covenant? And now I go on.
+
+My last reason formerly brought was this: "Will the brother say that the
+example of the best reformed churches leadeth his way?" For the covenant
+tieth us to a reformation of the government of the church both according
+to the word of God and the example of the best reformed churches: that as
+_regula regulans_; this as _regula regulata_.
+
+The reverend brother replieth: 1. "The best reformed church that ever was
+went this way; I mean the church of Israel."
+
+_Ans._ 1. Is the church of Israel one of the reformed churches which the
+covenant speaks of? 2. Was the church of Israel better reformed than the
+apostolical churches? Why then calls he it the best reformed church that
+ever was? 3. That in the Jewish church there was a church government
+distinct from civil government, and church censures distinct from civil
+punishments, is the opinion of many who have taken great pains in the
+searching of the Jewish antiquities; and it may be he shall hear it ere
+long further proved, both from Scripture and from the very Talmudical
+writers.
+
+2. "I desire (saith he) the Commissioner to give an instance in the New
+Testament of such a distinction (civil and church government) where the
+state was Christian."
+
+_Ans._ I desire him to give an instance in the New Testament of these
+three things, and then he will answer himself. 1. Where was the state
+Christian? 2. Where had the ministry a doctrinal power in a Christian
+state? 3. Where doth the New Testament hold out that a church government
+distinct from civil government may be where the state is not Christian,
+and yet may not be where the state is Christian? Shall the church's
+liberties be diminished, or rather increased, where the state is
+Christian?
+
+In the third and fourth place, the brother tells us of the opinions of
+Gualther, Bulhager, Erastus, Aretius. The question is of the examples of
+churches, not of the opinions of men. But what of the men? As for that
+pestilence that walketh in darkness through London and Westminster,
+Liastus' book against Beza, let him make of it what he can, it shall have
+an antidote by and by. In the meanwhile, he may take notice, that, in the
+close of the sixth book, Erastus casts down that which he hath built, just
+as Bellarmine did, in the close of his five books of justification. But as
+for the other three named by the brother, they are ours, not his, in this
+present controversy. Gualther(1340) expounds 1 Cor. v. all along of
+excommunication, and of the necessity of church discipline; insomuch that
+he expounds the very delivering to Satan (the phrase most controverted by
+Erastus and his followers) of excommunication, and the not eating with the
+scandalous (ver 9-11) he takes also to import excommunication. He thinks
+also that ministers shall labour to little purpose except they have a
+power of government. Bullinger is most plain for excommunication, as a
+spiritual censure ordained by Christ, and so he understands Matt. xviv.
+17.
+
+Aretius holds(1341) that God was the author of excommunication in the Old
+Testament, and Christ in the New. And now are these three Mr Coleman's
+way? Or doth not his doctrine flatly contradict theirs? Peradventure he
+will say, Yet there is no excommunication in the church of Zurich, where
+those divines lived, nor any suspension of scandalous sinners from the
+sacrament. I answer, This cannot infringe what I hold, that the example of
+the best reformed churches maketh for us and against him; for, 1. The book
+written by Lavater, another of the Zurich divines, _de Ritibus et
+Institutis Ecclesioe Tigurinoe_, tells us of divers things in that church
+which will make the brother easily to acknowledge that it is not the best
+reformed church, such as festival days, cap. 8, that upon the Lord's days,
+before the third bell, it is published and made known to the people, if
+there be any houses, fields, or lands, to be sold, cap. 9. They have no
+fasts indicted, cap. 9, nor psalms sung in the church, cap. 10.
+Responsories in their Litany at the sacrament, the deacon upon the right
+hand saith one thing, the deacon upon the left hand saith another thing,
+the pastor a third thing, cap. 13. 2. Yet the church of Zurich hath some
+corrective church government besides that which is civil or temporal, for
+the same book, cap. 23, tells us, that in their synods, any minister who
+is found scandalous or profane in his life, is censured with deposition
+from his office, _ab oficio deponitur_. Then follows, _finita censura,
+singuli decani, &c._ Here is a synodical censure, which I find also in
+Wolphius,(1342) a professor of Zurich, and the book before cited, cap.
+24,(1343) tells us of some corrective power committed to pastors and
+elders, which elders are distinguished from the magistrates. 3. The Zurich
+divines themselves looked upon excommunication as that which was wanting
+through the injury of the times; the thing having been so horribly abused
+in Popery, and the present licentiousness abounding among people, did
+hinder the erecting of that part of the church discipline at that time.
+But they still pleaded the thing to be held forth in Scripture, and were
+but expecting better times for restoring and settling of excommunication,
+which they did approve in Geneva, and in other reformed churches, who had
+received it. I give you their own words for the warrant of what I
+say.(1344)
+
+I have been the longer upon this point as being the chief objection which
+can be made by Mr Coleman concerning that clause in the covenant, "The
+example of the best reformed churches."
+
+He hath only one thing more, which may well pass for a paradox. He will
+take an instance, forsooth, from Geneva itself, though presbyterian in
+practice. And why? Because in the Geneva Annotations upon Matt. ix. 16, it
+said, that "the external discipline is to be fitted to the capacity of the
+church." "This is no Scotland presbytery," saith the brother. Nay, Sir,
+nor yet Geneva presbytery; for it doth not at all concern presbytery. It
+is spoken in reference to the choosing of fit and convenient times for
+fasting and humiliation,--that as Christ did not, at that time, tie his
+disciples to fasting, it being unsuitable to that present time; so other
+like circumstances of God's worship, which are not at all determined to
+the word, are to be accommodated to emergent occasions, and to the
+church's condition for the time, which both Scotland and Geneva, and other
+reformed churches do.
+
+If I have now more fully and convincingly spoken to that point of the
+covenant, let the brother blame himself that put me to it.
+
+The Lord guide his people in a right way, and rebuke the spirit of error
+and division, and give us all more of his Spirit, to lead us into all
+truth, and into all self-denial, and grant that none of his servants be
+found unwilling to have the Lord Jesus Christ to reign over them in all
+his ordinances!
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+MALE AUDIS; OR, AN ANSWER TO MR COLEMAN'S MALE DICIS.
+
+
+ MALE AUDIS;
+
+ OR
+
+ AN ANSWER TO MR COLEMAN'S MALE DICIS:
+
+ WHEREIN
+
+ THE REPUGNANCY OF HIS ERASTIAN DOCTRINE TO THE WORD OF GOD,
+
+ TO THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT, AND TO THE ORDINANCES OF PARLIAMENT;
+
+ ALSO HIS CONTRADICTIONS, TERGIVERSATIONS, HETERODOXIES, CALUMNIES,
+
+ AND PERVERTING OF TESTIMONIES,
+
+ ARE MADE MORE APPARENT THAN FORMERLY.
+
+ TOGETHER WITH
+
+ SOME ANIMADVERSIONS UPON MR HUSSEY'S PLEA FOR CHRISTIAN MAGISTRACY:
+
+ SHOWING,
+
+ THAT IN DIVERS OF THE AFORE-MENTIONED PARTICULARS HE HATH MISCARRIED AS
+ MUCH AS,
+
+ AND IN SOME PARTICULARS MORE THAN, MR COLEMAN.
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH, 1649.
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE, AND OLIVER & BOYD.
+
+ M. OGLE & SON, AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW.
+
+ J. DEWAR, PERTH. W. MIDDLETON, DUNDEE. G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN.
+
+ W. M'COMB, BELFAST.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS & CO., AND JAMES NISBET & CO., LONDON.
+
+ 1649.
+
+ REPRINTED BY A. W. MURRAY, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH
+
+ 1844.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE READER.
+
+
+As I did not begin this present controversy, so I do not desire to hold up
+the ball of contention, yet having appeared in it (neither alone, nor
+without a calling and opportunity offered), I hold it my duty to vindicate
+the truth of Christ, the solemn league and covenant, the ordinances of
+Parliament, the church of Scotland, and myself. For this end was I born,
+and for this end came I into the world, that I might bear witness to the
+truth, whereunto I am so much the more encouraged, because it appeareth
+already in this debate, that _magna est vis veritatis_,--great is the force
+of truth, and so great, that my antagonists, though men of parts, and such
+as could do much for the truth, yet, while they have gone about to do
+somewhat against the truth, they have mired themselves in foul errors;
+yea, so far is in them lieth, have most dangerously shaken and endangered
+the authority of magistrates, who are God's vicegerents, and particularly
+the authority of Parliament, and of parliamentary ordinances. They have
+stumbled and fallen, and shall not be able to rise but by the
+acknowledgment of the truth.
+
+In this following reply, I have not touched much of the argumentative part
+in Mr Hussey's _Plea for Christian Magistracy_, reserving most of it to
+another work, unto which this is a _prodromus_ (howbeit much of what he
+saith is the same with what I did confute in my _Nihil Respondes_, and his
+book, coming forth a month after, takes no notice of that second piece of
+mine, but speaketh only to the first). Meanwhile, let him not believe that
+his big looking title can, like Gorgon's head, blockify or stonify
+rational men, so as they shall not perceive the want or weakness of
+argument. It hath ever been a trick of adversaries to calumniate the way
+of God and his servants, as being against authority, but I will, by God's
+assistance, make it appear to any intelligent man, that the reverend
+brother hath pleaded very much against magistracy, and so hath fallen
+himself into the ditch which he hath digged for others, whilst I withal
+escape.(1345)
+
+But, now, what may be the meaning of Mr Coleman's cabalistical title,
+_Male Dicis Maledicis_? Great philologists will tell him that _maledico_
+is taken in a good sense as well as in a bad, according to the difference
+of matter and circumstances. If any kind of malediction be justifiable, it
+is _male dicere maledicis_,--to speak evil to evil speakers, for "as he
+loved cursing, so let it come unto him as he delighted not in blessing, so
+let it be far from him." But he doth worse, and his title, with a
+transposition of letters, will more fitly reflect upon himself _male dicis
+de amicus_. You, Sir, speak evil of your friends, and of those that never
+wronged you. For my part, I have not shared with him in evil speaking, nor
+rendered revilings for revilings. I am sorry that he is so extremely ill
+of hearing, as to take reason to be railing, and good sayings to be evil
+sayings. He applieth to himself the Apostle's words, "Being reviled, we
+bless." But where to find these blessings of his, those unwritten
+verities, I know not. I am sure he had spoken more truly if he had said,
+"Being not reviled, we do revile."
+
+For the matter and substance of his reply, there are divers particulars in
+it which serve rather to be matter of mirth than of argument, as that a
+Parliament parasite cannot be called an abuser of the Parliament, and that
+passage, "How can a clause delivered in a postscript, concerning my
+opinion of my way, be abusive to the Parliament?" A great privilege either
+of postscripts or of his opinions, that they cannot be abusive to the
+Parliament. Many passages are full of acrimony, many extravagant, and not
+to the point in hand, many void of matter. Concerning such
+Lactantius(1346) gives me a good rule, Otiosum est persequi singula,--it is
+an idle and unprofitable thing to persecute every particular. And much
+more I have in my eye the Apostle's rule, "Let all things be done to
+edifying." 1 Cor. xiv. 26. I have accordingly endeavoured to avoid such
+jangling, and such debates as are unprofitable and unedifying, making
+choice of such purposes as may edify, and not abuse the reader.
+
+Peradventure some will think I might have wholly saved myself this labour.
+I confess I do not look upon that which I make reply unto, as if it were
+like to weigh much with knowing men, yet the Apostle tells me that some
+men's mouths must be stopped, and Jerome tells me(1347) there is nothing
+written without skill, which will not find a reader with as little skill
+to judge, and some men grow too wise in their own eyes when they pass
+unanswered. Besides all this, a vindication and clearing of such things as
+I mentioned in the beginning, may, by God's blessing, anticipate future
+and further mistakes. Read therefore and consider, and when thou hast
+done, I trust thou shalt not think that I have lost my labour. I pray the
+Lord that all our controversies may end in a more cordial union for
+prosecuting the ends expressed in the covenant and especially the
+reformation of religion, according to the word of God and the example of
+the best reformed churches, and more particularly the practical part of
+reformation, that the ordinances of Jesus Christ may be kept from
+pollution, profaneness and scandals shamed away, and piety commended and
+magnified.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+THAT MR COLEMAN DOTH STILL CONTRADICT HIMSELF IN THE STATING OF THIS
+PRESENT CONTROVERSY ABOUT CHURCH GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+It was before both denied and yielded by Mr Coleman, that there is a
+church government which is distinct from the civil, and yet not merely
+doctrinal. He did profess to subscribe heartily to the votes of
+Parliament, and yet advised the Parliament to do contrary to their votes,
+as I proved in _Nihil Respondes_, p. 3. He answereth now, in his _Male
+Dicis_, p. 4, "I deny an institution; I assent to prudence; Where is the
+self-contradiction now?" and, p. 5, "The advice looks to _jus divinum_;
+the Parliament votes to prudence." Sir, you have spoken evil for yourself;
+you have made the self-contradiction worse. Will you acknowledge your own
+words, in your sermon, p. 25, "Lay no more burden of government upon the
+shoulders of ministers than Christ hath plainly laid upon them; have no
+more hand therein than the Holy Ghost clearly gives them. The ministers
+have other work to do, and such as will take up the whole man," &c.; "I
+fear an ambitious ensnarement," &c.; and, in your _Re-examination_, p. 14,
+"He should have said, I advised the Parliament to lay no burden of
+government upon them whom he (this Commissioner) thinks church officers,
+then had he spoken true." Now let the reverend brother take heed to
+checkmate, and that three several ways (but let him not grow angry, as bad
+players use to do). For, 1. _Eo ipso_ that he denies the institution, by
+his principles he denies the prudence; for he that denieth the
+institution, and adviseth the Parliament to lay no more burden of
+government upon ministers than Christ hath plainly laid upon them, is
+against the settling of the thing in a prudential way, because it is not
+instituted. But Mr Coleman denies the institution, and adviseth the
+Parliament to lay no more burden of government upon ministers than Christ
+hath plainly laid upon them; therefore Mr Coleman is against the settling
+of the thing in a prudential way, because it is not instituted. And how to
+reconcile this with his denying of the institution and yielding of the
+prudence, will require a more reconciling head than Manasseh Ben Israel
+Conciliator himself. 2. He that adviseth the Parliament to lay no burden
+of government upon ministers, because they have other work to do which
+will take up the whole man, and because of the fear of an ambitious
+ensnarement, is against the laying of any burden of corrective government
+upon ministers, so much as in a prudential way. But Mr Coleman adviseth
+the Parliament, &c.; therefore the consequence in the proposition is
+necessary, unless he will say that it is agreeable to the rules of
+prudence to lay upon them more work besides that which will take up the
+whole man, or to commit that power unto them which is like to prove an
+ambitious ensnarement. 3. He that adviseth the Parliament to lay no burden
+at all of corrective government upon ministers and other officers joined
+with them in elderships, but to keep that power _wholly_ in their own
+hands, is against the prudence of the thing, as well as against the
+institution of it. But Mr Coleman adviseth the Parliament to lay no burden
+at all of corrective government upon these, but to keep that power
+_wholly_ in their own hands; therefore the proposition is proved by that
+which himself saith, The Parliament votes look to prudence. So that the
+Parliament, having voted a power of suspension from the sacrament unto
+elderships, for so many scandals as are enumerate in the ordinance (which
+power is a part of that which he calls _corrective_), he that is against
+this power in elderships is both against the prudence and against the
+ordinance of Parliament. The assumption I prove from his _Re-examination_,
+p. 14, where, after his denial of the power to those whom we think church
+officers, being charged with advising the Parliament to take church
+government _wholly_ into their own hands, his answer was, "If you mean the
+corrective power, I do so."
+
+And now, after all this, I must tell the reverend brother that he might
+have saved himself much labour had he, in his sermon to the Parliament,
+declared himself (as now he doth) that he was only against the _jus
+divinum_, but not against their settling of the thing in a parliamentary
+and prudential way. Did I not, in my very first examination of his sermon,
+p. 32, remove this stumbling block?
+
+And, withal, seeing he professeth to deny the _jus divinum_ of a church
+government differing from magistracy, why doth he hold, p. 19, that the
+Independents are not so much interested against his principles as the
+Presbyterians? Did he imagine that the Independents are not so much for
+the _jus divinum_ of a church government and church censures as the
+Presbyterians? But, saith he, "The Independents' church power seems to me
+to be but doctrinal." But is their excommunication doctrinal? and do they
+not hold excommunication to be _jure divino_? Either he had little skill
+in being persuaded, or some others had great skill in persuading him that
+the Independents' church power is but doctrinal, and that they are not so
+much interested against the Erastian principles as the Presbyterians are;
+as if, forsooth, the ordinance of excommunication (the thing which the
+Erastian way mainly opposeth) and a church government distinct from
+magistracy, were not common to them both.
+
+Lastly, If the reverend brother deny the institution of church censures,
+but assent to the prudence, why doth he allege the Zurich divines to be so
+much for him? _Male Dicis_, p. 23; for it was upon prudential grounds, and
+because of the difficulty and (as they conceived) impossibility of the
+thing, that they were against it, still acknowledging the scriptural
+warrants for excommunication, as I shall show, yea, have showed already;
+so that, if Mr Coleman will follow them, he must rather say, "I assent to
+an institution; I deny a prudence."
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+A CONFUTATION OF THAT WHICH MR COLEMAN HATH SAID AGAINST CHURCH
+GOVERNMENT; SHOWING ALSO THAT HIS LAST REPLY IS NOT MORE, BUT LESS
+SATISFACTORY THAN THE FORMER, AND FOR THE MOST PART IS BUT A
+TERGIVERSATION AND FLEEING FROM ARGUMENTS BROUGHT AGAINST HIM, AND FROM
+MAKING GOOD HIS OWN ASSERTIONS AND ARGUMENTS CONCERNING THE DISTINCTION OF
+CIVIL AND CHURCH GOVERNMENT.
+
+
+The reverend brother said in his sermon, "I could never yet see how two
+coordinate governments, exempt from superiority and inferiority, can be in
+one state." To overthrow this general thesis, I brought some instances to
+the contrary; such as the governments of a general and an admiral, of a
+master and a father, of a captain and a master in a ship. He being thus
+put to his vindication, replieth, "The Commissioner acknowledgeth he did
+not apply them to the Assembly (I said the General Assembly) and
+Parliament; yet that was the controversy in hand," _Male Dicis_, p. 5.
+But, by his favour, that was not the controversy; for he was not speaking
+particularly against the distinction of the government of the General
+Assembly and of the government of the Parliament (neither had he one
+syllable to that purpose), but generally against the distinction of church
+government and civil government, and particularly against excommunication;
+in all which he excluded presbyteries as well as General Assemblies.
+Wherefore he doth now recede not only from defending his thesis, but from
+applying it against the power of presbyteries. And so far we are agreed.
+
+2. I having confuted his argument grounded on Psal. xxxiii. 15; Prov.
+xxvii. 19, he shifteth the vindication of it, and still tells me he
+grounded no argument on those places, but spake "by way of allusion,"
+_Male Dicis_, p. 6. Now let the reader judge. His words to the Parliament
+were these: "Might I measure others by myself, and I know not why I may
+not (God fashions men's hearts alike; and as in water face answers face,
+so the heart of man to man), I ingenuously profess I have a heart that
+knows better how to be governed than govern; I fear an ambitious
+ensnarement," &c. This argument, there largely prosecuted, hath no other
+ground but the parenthesis using the words (though not quoting the places)
+of Scripture. And now, forsooth, he hath served the Parliament well, when,
+being put to make good the sole confirmation of his argument, he tells it
+was but an allusion. But this is not all. I confuted the whole argument
+drawn from his own heart to the hearts of others, and gave several
+answers: but neither before, nor now, hath he offered to make good his
+argument.
+
+3. The reverend brother cited 1 Cor. x. 33, to prove that all government
+is either a heathenish government, or a Jewish government, or a church
+government. This I denied: "Because the government of generals, admirals,
+mayors, sheriffs, is neither a Jewish government, nor a church government,
+nor a heathenish government." What saith he to this? "I deny it; a Jewish
+general is a Jewish government," &c., _Male Dicis_, p. 6. Deny it? No,
+Sir, you must prove (because you are the affirmer) that a Christian
+general, a Christian admiral, are church governments. For I deny it. You
+tell us, p. 7, you are persuaded it will trouble the whole world to bound
+civil and ecclesiastical jurisdiction, the one from the other. You shall
+have them bounded and distinguished ere long, and the world not troubled
+neither. Meanwhile you have not made out your assertion from 1 Cor. x. 33.
+
+4. The reverend brother had cited Rom. xiii. 4, to prove that the
+corrective part of church government belongs to the Christian magistrate.
+And now he brings in my reply thus: that I said he abuseth the place,
+"Because spiritual censures belong not to the civil magistrate;" which,
+saith he, begs the question, _Male Dicis_, p. 7. I replied no such thing
+upon this argument. Look at my words again. How can the brother answer
+it,--to shape answers of his own devising as if they were mine? My answer
+was, That the punitive part, Rom. xiii. 4, belongs to all magistrates,
+whether Christian or infidel; which he takes notice of in the second
+place, and bids me prove "that Scripture-commands belong to infidels;" not
+observing that the question is not of Scripture-commands, but whether a
+duty mentioned in this or that scripture may not belong to infidels. There
+are two sorts of duties in Scripture; some which are duties by the law of
+God, written in man's heart at his creation, some principles and notions
+whereof remain in the hearts of all nations, even infidels by nature;
+other duties are such, by virtue of special commands given to the church,
+which are not contained in the law of nature. The first sort (of which the
+punishing of evil doers, mentioned Rom. xiii. 4, is one) belongs to those
+that are without the church as well as those within. The other only to
+those that are within.
+
+5. The reverend brother had said in his sermon, "Of other governments
+besides magistracy I find no institution." I cited 1 Thess. v. 12; 1 Tim.
+v. 17; Heb. xiii. 7, 17, to prove another government (yea, the institution
+of another government) besides magistracy. And, in my _Nihil Respondes_, I
+told he had laughed, but had not yet loosed the knot. Now hear his two
+answers: _Male Dicis_, p. 8, "First, for the institution; for the
+Commissioner affirms so much. Had he said that these texts hold out an
+office or officer already instituted, the words would have borne him out,"
+&c. "But the institution in this place I cannot see." See the like in Mr
+Hussey, p. 19, 22. I thank them both. That Scripture which supposeth an
+institution, and holds out an office already instituted, shall to me (and,
+I am confident, to others also) prove an institution; for no text of
+Scripture can suppose or hold out that which is not true. Nay, hath Mr
+Coleman forgotten that himself proved an institution of magistracy from
+Rom. xiii. 1, 2? Yet that text doth but hold out the office of magistracy
+already instituted: but the institution itself is not in that place.
+
+Secondly, Mr Coleman answereth to all these three texts. To that, 1 Thess.
+v. 12, "Them which are over you in the Lord," he saith that these words
+prove not that it is not meant of magistracy. But he takes not the
+strength of the argument. My words were, "Here are some who are no civil
+magistrates set over the Thessalonians in the Lord." This the reverend
+brother must admit to be a good proof, or otherwise say that the civil
+magistrates set over the Thessalonians, though they were heathens, yet
+were set over them in the Lord.
+
+For that of 1 Tim. v. 17, he saith it doth not hold out ruling elders.
+Whether it doth hold ruling elders or not, doth not at all belong to the
+present question. It is easy to answer something, so that a man will not
+tie himself to the point. The place was brought by me to prove "another
+government beside magistracy," which he denied. Now suppose the place to
+be meant only of preaching elders, yet here is a rule or government:
+"Elders that rule well;" and these are no civil magistrates, but such as
+"labour in the word and doctrine." Come on now. "But I will deal clearly
+(saith the brother): These officers are ministers which are instituted not
+here, but elsewhere,--and these are the rulers here mentioned. And so have
+I loosed the knot." Now, Sir, you shall see I will not _male dicere_, but
+_bene dicere_. My blessing on you for it. You have at last loosed the knot
+so perfectly, that you are come to an agreement with me in this great
+point, which I thus demonstrate: He that acknowledgeth ministers to be
+instituted rulers, acknowledgeth another instituted government beside
+magistracy. But Mr Coleman acknowledgeth ministers to be instituted
+rulers, therefore Mr Coleman acknowledgeth another instituted government
+beside magistracy.
+
+To the other texts, Heb. xiii. 7, 17, he saith nothing against my
+argument, only expounds the rulers to be guides, as Mr Hussey also doth,
+of which more elsewhere; meanwhile it is certain that {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} is
+usually taken for a name of highest authority, yea, given to emperors; for
+which see learned Salmasius in his _Walo Messalinus_, p. 219, 220. It is
+Joseph's highest title to express his government of Egypt, Acts vii. 10.
+It must the rather be a name of government and authority in this place,
+Heb. xiii. 17, because subjection and obedience is required: "Obey them
+that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves." When the word
+signifieth {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, _seu viae ducem_ (and it is very rarely so used by the
+Septuagints, but frequently, and almost in innumerable places, they use it
+for a name of rule and authority), obedience and subjection is not due to
+such an one _qua talis_; for obedience and subjection cannot be
+_correlata_ to the leading of the way, when it is without authority and
+government.
+
+6. I having charged Mr Coleman's doctrine with this consequence, "That
+there ought to be neither suspension from the sacrament, nor
+excommunication, nor ordination, nor deposition of ministers, nor
+receiving of appeals, except all these things be done by the civil
+magistrate," which things, I said, "are most of them corrective, and all
+of them more than doctrinal,"--instead of making answer, the reverend
+brother expresseth the error, which I objected to him, thus: "That here
+are no church censures," which is the _quaesitum_, saith he, _Male Dicis_,
+p. 10. Here, again, he brings an imagination of his own, both for matter
+and words, instead of that which I said, and doth not take the argument
+right. If the minister's power be merely doctrinal, and government wholly
+in the magistrate's hands, then all the particulars enumerated; for
+instance, suspension from the sacrament, and the receiving of appeals
+(which he must not bring under the _quaesitum_, except he bring the
+ordinance of Parliament under the _quaesitum_), shall be wholly in the
+magistrate's hand; and elderships may not suspend from the sacrament;
+classes and synods may not receive appeals, which yet, by the ordinance,
+they have power to do. One of the particulars, and but one, the reverend
+brother hath here touched, and it is this: "For ordination of ministers, I
+say, it is within the commission of teaching, and so appertains to the
+doctrinal part." This is the effect of his zeal to maintain that all
+ecclesiastical ministerial power is merely doctrinal. But mark the
+consequence of it: He that holds ordination of ministers to be within the
+commission of teaching, and to appertain to the doctrinal part, must hold,
+by consequence, that the power of ordination is given _uni_ as well as
+_unitati_; that is, that every single minister hath power to ordain, as
+well as the classes. But Mr Coleman holds ordination of ministers to be
+within the commission of teaching, &c. The reason of the proposition is
+clear, because the commission of teaching belongs to every single
+minister, so that if the power of ordination be within that commission, it
+must needs belong to every single minister. _Quid respondes_?
+
+7. The reverend brother having brought an odious argument against me,
+which did conclude the magistrate to manage his office for and under the
+devil, if not for and under Christ, I show his syllogism to have four
+terms, and therefore worthy to be exploded. I get now two replies:
+
+First, "This is an error (if one) in logic, not divinity. Is it an error
+in divinity to make a syllogism with four terms?" _Male Dicis_, p. 15. See
+now if he be a fit man to call others to school, who puts an _if_ in this
+business--_if one_. Who did ever doubt of it? And if it be an error in
+divinity to be fallacious, and to deceive, then it is an error in divinity
+to make a syllogism with four terms, yea, as foul an error as can be.
+
+Secondly, He admitteth not my distinction of those words, "Under Christ,
+and for Christ." I said the Christian magistrate is under Christ, and for
+Christ, that is, he is serviceable to Christ, but he is not under Christ
+nor for Christ as Christ's vicegerent, _vice Christi_, in Christ's stead,
+as Christ is Mediator. The reverend brother saith, He foresaw that this
+would be said (the greater fault it was to make his argument so unclear
+and undistinct), but he rejecteth the distinction as being _distinctio
+sine differentia_. "If a magistrate (saith he) be thus far a servant of
+Christ, as Mediator, that he is to do his work, to take part with him, to
+be for his glory, then he doth it _vice Christi_." He adds the simile of a
+servant. Hence it follows, by the reverend brother's principles, that the
+king's cook, because he doth work and service for the king, therefore he
+doth it _vice regis_, and as the king's vicegerent. Likewise, that a
+servant who obeyeth his master's wife, and executeth her commands, because
+it is his master's will, and for his master's honour, doth therefore obey
+his master's wife _vice domini_, as his master's vicegerent; and, by
+consequence, that the duty of obedience to the wife doth originally belong
+to the husband; for the capacity of a vicegerent, which he hath by his
+vicegerentship, is primarily the capacity of him whose vicegerent he is.
+These, and the like absurd consequences, will unavoidably follow upon the
+reverend brother's argumentation, that he who doth Christ service doth it
+_vice Christi_, as Christ's vicegerent; and that to be a man's vicegerent,
+and to do a man's work or service, which I made two different things, are
+all one. But, further, observe his tergiversation. I had, p. 13, proved my
+distinction out of these words of his own: "The Commissioner saith,
+Magistracy is not derived from Christ. I say, magistracy is given to
+Christ to be serviceable in his kingdom; so that, though the
+Commissioner's assertion be sound (which in due place will be discussed),
+yet it infringeth nothing that I said." I asked, therefore, _qua fide_ he
+could confound in his argument brought against me those two things which
+himself had so carefully distinguished. There is no reply to this in _Male
+Dicis_. When the brother thought it for his advantage, he denied that the
+magistrate's being serviceable to Christ doth enter the derivation of his
+power by a commission of vicegerentship from Christ (for that was the
+derivation spoken of), and yielded that the magistrate may be said to be
+serviceable to Christ, though his power be not derived from Christ. Now he
+denieth the very same distinction for substance.
+
+8. Whereas the reverend brother had told the Parliament that he seeth not,
+in the whole Bible, any one act of that church government which is now in
+controversy, I brought some scriptural instances against his opinion, not
+losing either the argument from Matt. xviii. (concerning which he asketh
+what is become of it), or other scriptural arguments, which I intend, by
+God's assistance, to prosecute elsewhere. Now hear what is replied to the
+instances which were given. First, To that, 1 Cor. v. 13, "Put away that
+wicked person from among you," his answer is, "I say, and it is sufficient
+against the Commissioner, If this be a church censure, then the whole
+church jointly, and every particular person, hath power of church
+censure." _Male Dicis_, p. 10. I hope, Sir, it is not sufficient against
+me that you say it, so long as you say nothing to prove it. I told you
+that Mr Prynne himself (who holds not that every particular person hath
+power of church censure) acknowledged that text to be a warrant for
+excommunication, and when you say "every particular person," you say more
+than the Independents say, and I am sure more than the text will admit,
+for the text saith, "Put away from among you," therefore this power was
+given not _uni_, but _unitati_, and this _unitas_ was the presbytery of
+Corinth. The sentence was inflicted {~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~},--_by many_, 2 Cor.
+ii. 6, it is not said _by all_. I might say much for this, but I will not
+now leave the argument in hand; for it is enough against Mr Coleman that
+the place prove an act of church government, flowing from a power not
+civil but ecclesiastical. To whom the power belonged is another question.
+
+To the next instance, from 2 Cor. ii. 6, which is coincident with the
+former, a punishment or censure inflicted _by many_. "It is only a
+reprehension (saith he),--{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~},--which, by all the places in the New
+Testament, can amount no higher than to an objurgation, and so is
+doctrinal." _Ans._ 1. He made it even now an act of the whole church
+jointly, and of every particular person. Why did he not clear himself in
+this,--how the whole church, men, women, children and all, did doctrinally
+reprehend him? 2. If the objurgation must be restricted, To whom? Not to a
+single minister (yet every single minister hath power of doctrinal
+objurgation), but to the presbytery. It was an act of those {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} I
+spake of; and this is a ground for that distinction between ministerial
+and presbyterial admonition, which Mr Coleman, p. 22, doth not admit. 3.
+If it were granted that {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} in this text amounteth to no more but an
+objurgation, yet our argument stands good; for the Apostle having, in his
+first epistle, required the Corinthians to put away from among them that
+wicked person, which they did accordingly resolve to do (which makes the
+Apostle commend their obedience, 2 Cor. ii. 9), no doubt either the
+offender was at this time actually excommunicated and cast out of the
+church, or (as others think) they were about to excommunicate him, if the
+Apostle had not, by his second epistle, prevented them, and taken them off
+with this _sufficit_: Such a degree of censure is enough, the party is
+penitent, go no higher. 4. When the reverend brother appealeth to all the
+places in the New Testament, he may take notice that the word {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} is
+nowhere found in the New Testament, except in this very text. And if his
+meaning be concerning the verb {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~} he may find it used to express a
+coercive power, as in Christ's rebuking of the winds and waves, Matt.
+viii. 26; Mark iv. 39; his rebuking of the fever, Luke iv. 39; his
+rebuking of the devil (which was not a doctrinal, but a coercive rebuke),
+Mark i. 25; ix. 25; Luke iv. 35; ix. 42. Sometimes it is put for an
+authoritative charge, laying a restraint upon a man, and binding him from
+liberty in this or that particular, as Matt. xii. 16; Mark iii. 12; viii.
+30; Luke ix. 21. The word {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} I find in the apocryphal book of
+Wisdom, chap. iii. 10. It is said of the wicked, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH DASIA AND VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, they
+shall have _correction_ or _punishment_. The whole chapter maketh an
+opposition between the godly and the wicked, in reference to punishments
+and judgments. The Hebrew {~HEBREW LETTER GIMEL~}{~HEBREW LETTER AYIN~}{~HEBREW LETTER DALET~} (which, if the observation hold which is
+made by Arias Montanus, and divers others, following Kimchi, when it is
+construed with {~HEBREW LETTER BET~} signifieth _objurgavit_, _duriter reprehendit_; when
+without {~HEBREW LETTER BET~}, it signifieth _corrupit_, _perdidit_, or _maledixit_), the
+Septuagint do most usually turn it {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~} and that in some places where
+it is without {~HEBREW LETTER BET~}, as Psal. cxix. 21, "Thou hast rebuked the proud that are
+cursed;" {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~},--Pagnin, _disperdidisti_,--thou hast destroyed, so the
+sense is; it is rebuke, with a judgment or a curse upon them. The second
+part of the verse, in the Greek, is exegetical to the first part, "Thou
+hast rebuked the proud, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, cursed are they," &c.; so Zech. iii.
+2, "The Lord rebuke ({~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}) thee, O Satan." The same phrase is used
+in Jude, ver. 9, which must needs be meant of a coercive, efficacious,
+divine power, restraining Satan. The same original word they render by
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}, which signifieth to separate and to excommunicate, Mal. ii. 3,
+"Behold I will corrupt your seed," &c. In the preceding words, God told
+them that he would curse them. The same word they render by {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~},
+_extermino_, Isa. xvii. 13, a place which speaks of a judgment to be
+inflicted, not of a doctrinal reproof. Yet Aquila readeth there
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}; likewise the word which the Septuagint render {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~},
+_perdition_, Prov. xiii. 6, and {~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, _wrath_, Isa. li. 20, in other
+places they render it {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}: Psal. lxxvi. 6, "At thy rebuke, O God of
+Jacob, both the chariot and horse are cast into a dead sleep;" lxxx. 16,
+"They perish at the rebuke of thy countenance." These are _real_ rebukes,
+that is, judgments and punishments.
+
+4. What saith Mr Coleman to Pasor, who expounds {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} to be the same
+with {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, _mulcta_, and that, 2 Cor. ii. 6. it is meant of
+excommunication; which he proves by this reason, Because, in the same
+place, the Apostle exhorteth the Corinthians to forgive him. Add hereunto
+Erasmus's observation upon the word {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}(1348) (ver. 8, to "confirm
+your love toward him"); that it implies an authoritative ratification of a
+thing by judicial suffrage and sentence. Which well agreeth to the
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, ver. 6; that is, that they who had judicially censured him,
+should also judicially loose him and make him free. Now, therefore, the
+circumstances and context being observed, and the practice, 2 Cor. ii. 6,
+compared with the precept, 1 Cor. v. 13, I conclude, that, whether this
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} was excommunication already inflicted, or whether it was a lesser
+degree of censure, tending to excommunication,--a censure it was, and more
+than ministerial objurgation. And it is rightly rendered by the English
+translators _punishment_ or _censure;_ which well agreeth with the
+signification of the verb {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~} given us by Hesychius,(1349) and by
+Julius Pollux;(1350) who makes {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, to _punish_ or _chastise_, and
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, _punishment_ or _chastisement_. Clemens Alexandrinus(1351)
+useth {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} as well as {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, _pro poena vel supplicio_. So
+Stephanus, in _Thes. Ling. Gr._ From all which it may appear that the text
+in hand holds forth a corrective church government in the hands of church
+officers; the thing which Mr Coleman denieth.
+
+To the next instance, from 1 Tim. v. 19, "Against an elder receive not an
+accusation, but before two or three witnesses," the reverend brother
+answereth, "It is either in relation to the judgment of charity, or
+ministerial conviction, as the verses following." _Ans._ 1. That of two or
+three witnesses is taken from the law of Moses, where it is referred only
+to a forensical proceeding. But in relation either to the judgment of
+charity, or ministerial conviction, it is not necessary that there be two
+or three witnesses. If a scandalous sin be certainly known to a minister,
+though the thing be not certified by two or three witnesses, yet a
+minister, upon certain knowledge had of the fact, may both believe it and
+ministerially convince the offender. But there may not be a consistorial
+proceeding without two or three witnesses. 2. Since he appealeth to the
+following verses, let ver. 22 decide it: "Lay hands suddenly on no man."
+To whom the laying on of hands or ordination did belong, to them also it
+did belong to receive an accusation against an elder: but to the
+presbytery did belong the laying on of hands, or ordination, 1 Tim. iv.
+14; therefore to the presbytery did belong the receiving of an accusation
+against an elder. And so it was not the act of a single minister, as
+ministerial conviction is.
+
+To the last instance, from Rev. ii. 14, 15, 20, the reverend brother
+answers, That he had striven to find out how church censures might be
+there grounded, but was constrained to let it alone. But what is it, in
+his opinion, which is there blamed in the angels of those churches? Doth
+he imagine that those who are so much commended by Christ himself for
+their holding fast of his name, and of the true faith, did not so much as
+doctrinally or ministerially oppose the foul errors of the Balaamites and
+of Jezebel? No doubt but this was done: but Christ reproves them, because
+such scandalous persons were yet suffered to be in the church, and were
+not cast out. "I have a few things against thee, because thou hast there
+them that hold the doctrine of Balaam;" and, ver. 20, "Thou sufferest that
+woman Jezebel." And why was the very having or suffering them in the
+church a fault, if it had not been a duty to cast them out of the church?
+which casting out could not be by banishment, but by excommunication. It
+did not belong to the angel to cast out the Balaamites out of Pergamos,
+but he might, and ought to have cast them out of the church in Pergamos.
+
+9. Mr Coleman hath another passage against the distinction of church
+censures and civil punishments. "But what are ecclesiastical censures
+(saith he)? Let us take a taste. Is deposition from the ministry? This
+kings have done," &c., _Male Dicis_, p. 7. Now _similia labra lactucis_.
+But for all that, the taste is vitiated, and doth not put a difference
+between things that are different. Deposition is sometimes taken,
+improperly, for expulsion; as Balsamon, in _Conc. Nicoen._, can. 19, doth
+observe. And so the Christian magistrate may remove or put away ministers
+when they deserve to be put away, that is, by a coercive power to restrain
+them, imprison or banish them, and, in case of capital crimes, punish them
+with capital punishments. King James, having once heard a dispute in St.
+Andrews about the deposition of ministers, was convinced that it doth not
+belong to the civil magistrate, "yet (said he) I can depose a minister's
+head from his shoulders." Which was better divinity than this of Mr
+Coleman. If we take deposition properly, as it is more than the expelling,
+sequestering or removing of a minister from this or that place, and
+comprehendeth that which the Council of Ancyra, can. 18, calls {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, _the honour of presbytership to be taken
+away_, or a privation of that _presbyteratus_, the order of a presbyter,
+and that {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, the authority and power of dispensing the word,
+sacraments, and discipline, which was given in ordination, so none have
+power to depose who have not power to ordain. It belongeth not to the
+magistrate either to make or unmake ministers. Therefore, in the ancient
+church, the bishops had power of the deposition as well as of the
+ordination of presbyters, yet they were bound up that they might not
+depose either presbyter or deacon without the concurrence of a presbytery
+or synod in the business.(1352) Mark, of the _synod_, not of the
+magistrate. As for the testimonies brought by Mr Coleman, he doth, both
+here and in divers other places, name his authors, without quoting the
+places. It seems he hath either found the words cited by others, but durst
+not trust the quotations, or else hath found somewhat in those places
+which might make against him. However, all that he can cite of that kind
+concerning deposition of ministers by emperors, is meant of a coercive
+expulsion, not of that which we call properly deposition. And to this
+purpose let him take the observation of a great antiquary.(1353)
+
+And, withal, he may take notice that Protestant writers(1354) do disclaim
+the magistrate's power of deposing ministers, and hold that deposition is
+a part of ecclesiastical jurisdiction: ministers being always punishable
+(as other members of the commonwealth), according to the law of the land,
+for any offence committed against law.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+THAT MR COLEMAN'S AND MR HUSSEY'S OPPOSING OF CHURCH GOVERNMENT NEITHER IS
+NOR CAN BE RECONCILED WITH THE SOLEMN LEAGUE AND COVENANT.
+
+
+Mr Coleman's doctrine was by me charged to be a violation of the solemn
+league and covenant. This he acknowledged in his _Re-examination_, p. 13,
+17, to be a very grievous charge, and a greater fault in him than in
+divers others, if made out; and he desired seriously, yea, challenged it
+by the right of a Christian, and by the right of a minister, that I should
+prosecute this charge; whereupon I did, in my _Nihil Respondes_, prosecute
+it so far, that, by five strong arguments, I did demonstrate the
+repugnancy of his doctrine to the covenant. About a month afterward comes
+out Mr Hussey's book, wherein the charge itself (before desired to be
+prosecuted) is declined expressly by Mr Coleman in the few lines by him
+prefixed (which are ranked together with the errata), in which he desires
+that the argumentative part may be so prosecuted as that the charge of
+covenant-breaking may be laid aside; which, if it be taken up, he lets me
+know beforehand it shall be esteemed by them a _nihil respondes_. It is
+also declined by Mr Hussey, p. 15: "The argument of the covenant is too
+low to be thought on in the discourse: we are now in an higher region than
+the words of the covenant," &c.:--a tenet looked upon by the reformed
+churches as proper to those that are inspired with the ghost of
+Arminius;(1355) for the remonstrants, both at and after the Synod of Dort,
+did cry down the obligation of all national covenants, oaths, &c., in
+matters of religion, under the colour of taking the Scripture only for a
+rule. Well, we see the charge declined as nothing. But this is not all.
+Almost two months after my proof of the charge, Mr Coleman comes out with
+his _Male Dicis_, and declines both the charge itself (which he calls an
+"impertinent charge," p. 22), and my five arguments too, without so much
+as taking notice of them, or offering replies to them; yea, all that I
+said in my _Nihil Respondes_, p. 27-34, in prosecution of this argument
+concerning covenant-breaking, the reverend brother hath skipped over
+_sicco pede_ in the half of one page, p. 23; all that follows is new and
+other matter, wherein he did not mind his own answer to the learned
+viewer, p. 33, "I will keep you to the laws of disputation, and will not
+answer but as it is to the matter in hand." I leave it to be judged by men
+of knowledge and piety, whether such an one doth not give them some ground
+to apprehend that he is {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, that is, self-judged, who first
+calleth so eagerly for making out a charge against him, and then when it
+is made out, doth decline the charge, and not answer the arguments; and
+such as esteem the charge of covenant-breaking to be a _nihil respondes_,
+and the argument of the covenant too low to be thought on in a controversy
+about church government, "O my soul, come not thou into their secret; unto
+their assembly, mine honour, be not thou united." It is in vain for them
+to palliate or shelter their covenant-breaking with appealing from the
+covenant to the Scripture, for _subordinata non pugnant_. The covenant is
+_norma recta_,--a right rule, though the Scripture alone be _norma
+recti_,--the rule of right. If they hold the covenant to be unlawful, or to
+have anything in it contrary to the word of God, let them speak out. But
+to profess the breach of the covenant to be a grievous and great fault,
+and worthy of a severe censure, and yet to decline the charge and proofs
+thereof, is a most horrible scandal; yea, be astonished, O ye heavens, at
+this, and give ear, O earth! how small regard is had to the oath of God by
+men professing the name of God.
+
+As for that little which the reverend brother hath replied unto; first, he
+takes notice of a passage of his sermon at the taking of the covenant,
+which I had put him in mind of, but he answereth only to one particular,
+viz., concerning that clause, "Doubtless many materials of Prelacy must of
+necessity be retained, as absolutely necessary." I asked what he
+understood by this clause? Now observe his answer: "I answer ingenuously,
+as he desires, and fully, as I conceive, These materials of Prelacy are
+ordination." Remember you said, "_many_ materials of Prelacy." I beseech
+you, Sir, How many is ordination? Ordination, ordination, ordination; tell
+on till you think you have made many materials; and, withal, tell us (if
+this be the meaning, that ordination should be retained without any power
+of ecclesiastical government in the ministry) how was it imaginable that
+he could hereby satisfy that scruple which then he spoke to, viz., the
+scruple about the purging away of the exorbitances of Prelacy, and
+retaining a regulated Prelacy? And after all this, I shall desire him to
+expound that other clause (which I desired before, but he hath not done
+it), "Taking away (said he) the exorbitancies, the remaining will be a new
+government, and no Prelacy." Either he means this of a new church
+government distinct from the civil, so that the ministry should have new
+power of government; or he meant it of the way which now he pleads for. If
+the former, I have what I would. Mr Coleman himself, as well as other men,
+took the covenant with an intention to have an ecclesiastical government
+distinct from the civil. If the latter, then let him answer these two
+things: 1. What good sense there was in applying such an answer to such a
+scruple, as if the Erastian way, or the appropriating of all
+ecclesiastical jurisdiction wholly to the civil magistrate, could be the
+way to satisfy those who scrupled the total abolition of Prelacy. 2. How
+will he reconcile himself with himself; for here, p. 22, he saith, That
+his way was in practice before I was born, "and the constant practice of
+England always." This, as it is a most notorious untruth (for the constant
+practice of England hath granted to the clergy, as he calls them, after
+the popish dialect, a power of deposition and excommunication, whereas his
+way denies all corrective power or church censures to the ministry), so,
+if it were a truth, it is utterly inconsistent with that which he said of
+the remaining part, namely, that it will be a new government. If it be his
+way, how will he make it the constant practice of England always, and a
+new government too?
+
+In the next place, the reverend brother makes short work of my five
+arguments to prove the repugnancy of his doctrine to the solemn league and
+covenant. They were too hot for him to be much touched upon: "All is but
+this much (saith he), the covenant mentioneth and supposeth a distinct
+church government." It is hard when arguments are neither repeated nor
+answered. He repeats a point which was proved (and but a part of that),
+but not the proofs; and so he answereth (rather to the conclusion than to
+the arguments) these two things: "First (saith he), the expressions in the
+covenant are according to the general apprehensions of the times, which
+took such a thing for granted, yet I believe Mr Gillespie cannot make such
+a supposition obligatory." Now you yield, Sir, what before you eagerly
+contended against, viz., that the covenant doth suppose a church
+government. Remember your simile of the jury sworn to inquire into the
+felony of a prisoner, which oath doth not suppose the prisoner to be
+guilty of felony, but he is to be tried, guilty or not guilty. We are now
+so far agreed, that the covenant doth suppose a church government distinct
+from the civil government, and yet not merely doctrinal, for that was the
+point which I proved, and which here he yields. As for the obligation of
+an oath sworn upon such supposition, I answer, 1. It is more than
+supposed, the words and expressions of the covenant do plainly hold out
+the thing as I proved, and as the reverend brother here seems to yield. 2.
+That which an oath doth necessarily suppose, if the oath be lawful, and
+the thing supposed lawful, is without all controversy obligatory. Now the
+reverend brother doth acknowledge both the covenant itself to be a lawful
+oath, and that which the covenant supposeth, namely, a church government
+distinct from the civil government, and yet not merely doctrinal, to be a
+lawful thing; for he professeth to yield it (though not _jure divino_,
+yet) in prudence, which he cannot do, if he make the thing unlawful. 3.
+That which an oath doth suppose is sometimes supposed _vi materiae_, or
+_consequentiae_, that is, the words of the oath do necessarily imply such a
+thing, though it be not intended by the swearer; and here I will tell Mr
+Coleman one story of Alexander for another: When Alexander was coming
+against a town to destroy it, he met Anaximenes, who, as he understood,
+came to make intercession and supplication for sparing the town. Alexander
+prevented him with an oath that he would not do that thing which
+Anaximenes should make petition for, whereupon Anaximenes made petition
+that he would destroy the town. Alexander found himself bound by the plain
+words of his oath not to do what he intended, and so did forbear. And to
+add a divine story to an human, Joshua and the princes of Israel did swear
+to the Gibeonites upon a supposition that was not true, yet they found
+themselves tied by their oath. So he that sweareth to his own hurt must
+not change, the oath being otherwise lawful, Psal. xv. 4, yet that
+self-hurt which is wrapped up in the matter of his oath was not intended
+in swearing. Sometimes, again, that which is supposed and implied in an
+oath, lieth also in the thoughts and intentions of those that swear. Now,
+where those two are coincident, that is, where the thing supposed in an
+oath is both implied necessarily in the words of the oath, and is also
+according to the apprehensions of those that swear (which is the case here
+in the covenant, and is acknowledged by the reverend brother), I should
+think it most strange how any divine can have the least doubt concerning
+the obligation of such a thing, except he conceive the thing itself to be
+unlawful.
+
+His second answer is this: "In my way (saith he) the governments, civil
+and ecclesiastical, are in the subject matter clearly distinct. When the
+Parliament handles matters of war, it is a military court; when business
+of state, it is a civil court; when matters of religion, it is an
+ecclesiastical court." If this hold good, then it will follow, 1. That the
+Parliament, when they deliberate about matters of war or matters of
+religion, are not, at least formally and properly, a civil court, else how
+makes he these so clearly distinct? 2. That ministers may be called civil
+officers, for consider his words in his _Re-examination_, p. 11: "I do not
+exclude ministers, neither from ecclesiastical nor civil government, in a
+ministerial way, doctrinally and declaratively." Compare this with his
+present answer, it will amount to thus much: That different denominations
+being taken from the different subject matter, ministers, when they handle
+doctrinally matters of religion, are ecclesiastical ministers; and when
+they handle doctrinally matters of civil government, which himself
+alloweth them to do, they are civil ministers. But now to apply his answer
+to the argument, How doth all this solve the repugnancy of his doctrine to
+the covenant? If he had examined my arguments, he had found that most of
+them prove from the covenant a church government distinct from civil
+government, subjective as well as objective; that is, another government
+besides magistracy; different agents as well as different acts; different
+hands as well as handling of different matters. I know the Christian
+magistrate may and ought to have a great influence in matters of religion;
+and whatsoever is due to him by the word of God, or by the doctrine either
+of the ancient or reformed churches, I do not infringe, but do maintain
+and strengthen it. But the point in hand is, that the covenant doth
+undeniably suppose, and clearly hold forth a government in the church
+distinct from magistracy, which is proved by these arguments (which, as
+they are not yet answered, so I will briefly apply them to the proof of
+that point which now Mr Coleman sticks at): 1. The church covenant
+mentioned in the covenant is as distinct from the privileges of
+parliament, as the first article of the covenant is distinct from the
+third article. 2. The church government in the first article of the
+covenant, the reformation whereof we are to endeavour, differeth from
+church government by archbishops, bishops, &c., mentioned in the second
+article, as much as a thing to be reformed differeth from a thing to be
+extirpated; so that the church government formerly used in the church of
+England is looked upon two ways in the covenant, either _qua_ church
+government, and so we swear to endeavour the reformation of it (which I
+hope was not meant of reforming that part of the privileges of Parliament
+whereby they meddle with religion in a parliamentary way), or _qua_ church
+government, by archbishops, bishops, &c., and so we swear to endeavour the
+extirpation of it. This difference between the first and second articles,
+between reformation and extirpation, proveth that the covenant doth
+suppose that the church government formerly used in the church of England,
+in so far as it was a church government, is not _eatenus_ to be abolished,
+but in so far as it was a corrupt church government, that is, prelatical.
+3. Church government, in the covenant, is matched with doctrine, worship,
+and catechising. Now these are subjectively different from civil
+government, for the civil magistrate doth not act doctrinally nor
+catechetically, neither can he dispense the word and sacraments, as Mr
+Coleman acknowledgeth. 4. In the first part of the first article of the
+covenant, concerning "the preservation of the reformed religion in the
+church of Scotland, in doctrine, worship, discipline, and government," it
+is uncontroverted, that discipline and government are ecclesiastical, and
+subjectively different from civil government, that is, though divers who
+have a hand in the civil government are ruling elders, yet it is as true
+that divers members of Parliament and inferior civil courts are not church
+officers; and of the ministry none are civil governors which makes the two
+governments clearly distinct subjectively. Now the second part of that
+article concerning "the reformation of religion in the kingdoms of England
+and Ireland, in doctrine, worship, discipline, and government," cannot so
+far differ from the first part of that article in the sense of the words,
+"discipline and government," as that the same words, in the same article
+of the same covenant, should signify things differing _toto genere_, which
+will follow, unless "discipline and government" in the second branch, and
+"form of church government" in the third branch, be understood of the
+power of church officers, and not of the magistrate. 6. We did swear to
+"endeavour the reformation of religion in the kingdoms of England and
+Ireland, in doctrine, worship, discipline and government, according to the
+word of God and the example of the best reformed churches." Now the word
+of God holds forth another government besides magistracy; for Mr Coleman
+himself hath acknowledged, that he finds in the New Testament ministers to
+be rulers, yea, instituted rulers; and the example of the best reformed
+churches, without all doubt, leadeth us to an ecclesiastical government
+different from magistracy. Neither hath the reverend brother so much as
+once adventured to allege the contrary, except of the church of Israel,
+which, as it is heterogeneous, being none of the reformed churches
+mentioned in the covenant, so it shall be discussed in due place; from all
+which reasons I conclude, that the wit of man cannot reconcile Mr
+Coleman's doctrine with the covenant. 6. I add a confutation of him out of
+himself, thus: No such church government as Mr Coleman casts upon an
+uncertainty, whether the word hold out any such thing, can be, by his
+principles, the power of magistracy in things ecclesiastical, but another
+government beside magistracy. But the church government, mentioned in the
+first article of the covenant, is such a church government as Mr Coleman
+casts upon an uncertainty, whether the word hold out any such thing;
+therefore the church government mentioned in the first article of the
+covenant cannot be, by his principles, the power of magistracy, but
+another government beside magistracy. The proposition he will easily
+admit, unless he alter his assertions; the assumption is clear from his
+_Re-examination,_ p. 15.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+MR COLEMAN AND MR HUSSEY'S ERRORS IN DIVINITY.
+
+
+Mr Hussey all along calls for divinity schools: I confess himself hath
+much need of them, that he may be better grounded in his divinity; and
+that if he will plead any more for Christian magistracy, he may not
+involve himself into such dangerous heterodoxies as have fallen from his
+pen in this short tractate. I instance in these:--
+
+First, In his epistle to the Parliament he hath divers passages against
+synodical votes; he will have no putting to the vote: "For votes (saith
+he, p. 6) are of no other use but to gather parties, and ought nowhere to
+be used but by those that have the power of the sword." And, p. 3, he will
+have the business of assemblies to be only doctrinal, and "by dispute to
+find out truth. Their disputes ought to end in a brotherly accord, as in
+Acts xv., much disputing, but all ended in accord, no putting to the
+vote." And, p. 5, he will have things carried "with strength of argument
+and unanimous consent of the whole clergy." Behold how he joineth issue
+with the remonstrants against the contra-remonstrants, to introduce not
+only an academical, but a sceptical and Pyrrhonian dubitation and
+uncertainty, so that there shall never be an end of controversy, nor any
+settlement of truth and of the ordinances of Jesus Christ, so long as
+there shall be but one tenacious disputer to hold up the ball of
+contention. One egg is not liker another than Mr Hussey's tenet is like
+that of the Arminians, for which see the Synod of Dort, sess. 25.(1356) It
+was the ninth condition which the Arminians required in a lawful and
+well-constituted synod, that there might be no decision of the
+controverted articles, but only such an accommodation as both sides might
+agree to. And, generally, they hold that synods ought not to meet for
+decision, or determination, but for examining, disputing, discussing; so
+their _Examen Censurae_, cap. 25; and their _Vindiciae_, lib. 2, cap. 6,
+p. 131, 133.
+
+Secondly, In that same epistle to the Parliament, p. 4, he hath this
+passage: "Will-worship is unlawful, I mean in matters that are essential
+to God's worship, which are matters of duty; as for circumstantials of
+time and place, except the Sabbath, which are matters of liberty, in these
+the commonwealth may vote, &c.; and this is your Christian liberty, that
+in matters of liberty ye make rules and laws to yourselves, not crossing
+the ends that you are tied to in duty." And is the Sabbath only a
+circumstantial of time contradistinct from matters of duty? It seems he
+will cry down not only the _jus divinum_ of church censures with the
+Erastians, but the _jus divinum_ of the Sabbath with the Canterburians.
+And if will-worship be unlawful only in the essentials of God's worship,
+why was the argument of will-worship so much tossed, not only between
+Prelates and Nonconformists, but between Papists and Protestants, even in
+reference to ceremonies? And whether hath not Mr Hussey here engaged
+himself to hold it free and lawful to the Christian magistrate, yea, to
+private Christians (for he calls it Christian liberty, not parliamentary
+liberty--now Christian liberty belongs to all sorts of Christians), to make
+laws to themselves for taking the sacrament anniversarily on Christmas,
+Good-Friday, and Easter, or to appoint a perpetual monthly fast or
+thanksgiving; yea, another Parliament may, if so it should seem good to
+them, impose again the surplice and cross in baptism, fonts, railing of
+communion tables, the reading of divert passages of Apocrypha to the
+congregations, doxologies, anthems, responsories, &c., as heretofore they
+were used; or they may appoint all and every one to sit in the church with
+their faces towards the east, to stand up at the epistles and gospels,
+&c.; yea, what ceremonies, Jewish, popish, heathenish, may they not
+impose, provided they only hold the foundation, and keep to those
+essentials which he calls matters of duty? By restraining the unlawfulness
+of will-worship to the essentials, he leaves men free to do anything in
+religion, _praeter verbum_, so that it appear not to them to be _contra
+verbum_; anything they may add to the word, or do beside the word, so that
+the thing cannot be proved contrary to the word.
+
+Thirdly, Mr Hussey, ibid., p. 4, 5, saith, That the Parliament may require
+such as they receive for preachers of truth, "to send out able men to
+supply the places, and that without any regard to the allowance or
+disallowance of the people," where, in the first part of that which he
+saith, there is either a heterodoxy or a contradiction. A heterodoxy, if
+he mean that ministers are to be sent out without ordination: a
+contradiction, if he mean that they must be ordained; for then he gives
+classes a work which is not merely doctrinal. But most strange it is, that
+he so far departeth from Protestant divines in point of the church's
+liberty in choosing ministers. He tells us, p. 14, that Mr Herle, "for
+want of skill and theological disputations," hath granted to people a
+right to choose their minister. Mr Herle's skill, both logical and
+theological, is greater than it seems he can well judge of; neither can
+this bold arrogant censure of his derogate from Mr Herle's, but from his
+own reputation. For the matter itself, it is one, and not the least, of
+the controversies between the Papists and Protestants, what right the
+church hath in the vocation of ministers: read Bellarmine, _de Cleric._,
+and those that write against him, and see whether it be not so. The
+Helvetic Confession tells us that the right choosing of ministers is by
+the consent of the church, and the Belgic Confession saith, "We believe
+that the ministers, seniors and deacons, ought to be called to those their
+functions, and by the lawful elections of the church to be advanced into
+those rooms." See both these in the _Harmony of Confessions_, sect. 11. I
+might here, if it were requisite, bring a heap of testimonies from
+Protestant writers; the least thing which they can admit of is, that a
+minister be not obtruded _renitente ecclesia. Factum valet, fieri non
+debet._ It may be helped after it is done, without making null or void the
+ministry; but in a well-constituted church there ought to be no intrusion
+into the ministry, the church's consent is requisite; for which also I
+might bring both scripture and antiquity, but that is not my present
+business. One thing I must needs put Mr Hussey in mind of, that when the
+prelates did intrude ministers, without any regard to the disallowance of
+the people, it was cried out against as an oppression and usurpation, and
+we are often warned by Mr Prynne, by Mr Coleman, and by myself, to cast
+away the prelates' usurpation with themselves. But who lords it now over
+the Lord's inheritance, the Presbyterians or the Erastians? Nay, he who
+will have ministers put in churches "without any regard to the allowance
+or disallowance of people," falls far short of divers prelatical men, who
+did much commend the ancient primitive form of calling ministers, not
+without the church's consent. See Dr Field, _Of the Church_, lib. 5, cap.
+54; Bilson, _de Gubern. Eccl._, cap. 15, p. 417; the author of _The
+History of Episcopacy_, part 2, p. 360.
+
+Fourthly, Mr Hussey, _Epist._, p. 7, saith, That upon further
+consideration he found "the minister charged only with preaching and
+baptising." The like he hath afterwards, p. 39, "Let any man prove that a
+minister hath any more to do from Christ than to teach and baptise." And
+again, p. 44, he propounds this query, "Whether Christ gave any more
+government (he should have said any more to do, for preaching and
+baptising are not acts of government) than is contained in preaching and
+baptising," and he holds the negative. If only preaching and baptising,
+then not praying and reading in the congregation, ministering the Lord's
+supper, visiting the sick and particular families.
+
+Fifthly, He holdeth, p. 20, That a heathen magistrate is unlawful, "and
+for his government, if sin be lawful, it is lawful." A gross heterodoxy.
+The Apostle exhorteth to be subject even to heathen magistrates, Rom.
+xiii., for there were no other at that time, and to pray for them, 1 Tim.
+ii.; so that by Mr Hussey's divinity, the Apostle would have men to be
+subject unto, and to pray for an unlawful government. It is an
+anabaptistical tenet, that an heathen magistrate is not from God, which
+Gerhard, _de Magistrate Politico_, p. 498, 499, fully confutes.
+
+Sixthly, He saith of Christ, p. 40, "He doth nothing as Mediator which he
+doth not as God or as man." It is a dangerous mistake, for take the work
+of mediation itself, he neither doth it as God, nor as man, but as
+God-man.
+
+Seventhly, He saith, p. 35, "Nothing can be said of Christ as second
+person in Trinity, in opposition to Mediator, but in opposition to man
+there may." So that he will not admit of this opposition. Christ, as the
+Second Person in the Trinity, is equal and consubstantial to the Father,
+but, as Mediator, he is not equal to his Father, but less than his Father,
+and subject and subordinate to his Father--a distinction used by our
+divines against the Anti-Trinitarians and Socinians. Now by his not
+admitting of this distinction, he doth by consequence mire himself in
+Socinianism; for Christ, as Mediator, is the Father's servant, Isa. xlii.
+1; and the Father is greater than he, John xiv. 28; and as the head of the
+man is Christ, so the head of Christ is God, 1 Cor. xi. 3. If, therefore,
+it cannot be said of Christ, as he is the Second Person in the Trinity,
+that his Father is not greater than he, and that he is not subordinate to
+God as his head, then farewell Anti-Socinianism. I dare boldly say, it is
+impossible to confute the Socinians, or to assert the eternal Godhead of
+Jesus Christ, except somewhat be affirmed of him as the Second Person of
+the Trinity, which must be denied of him as he is Mediator, and something
+be denied of him as he is the Second Person in the Trinity, which must be
+affirmed of him as he is Mediator.
+
+Eighthly, He saith, p. 36, That Christ, "by his mediation, hath obtained
+from the Father that he shall not judge any man according to rigour, but
+as they are in or out of Christ; all deferring of judgment from the wicked
+is in and for Christ, which otherwise the justice of God would not allow."
+Then Christ did thus far make satisfaction to the justice of God in the
+behalf of the wicked, and die for them, that judgment might be deferred
+from them, and thus far perform acts of mediation for the savages and
+Mohammedans, and for them that never heard the gospel, that by such
+mediation he hath obtained of the Father that they shall be judged not
+according to rigour, but by the gospel. Which intimateth that Christ hath
+taken away all their sins against the law, so that all men shall now go
+upon a new score, and none shall be condemned or judged by the law, but by
+the gospel only; for if Christ have not taken away their sins against the
+law, the justice of God will judge them according to the rigour of the
+law. Must not every jot of the law be fulfilled? And is there not a
+necessity that every one undergo the curse and rigour of the law, or else
+that the Mediator hath undergone it for them?
+
+Ninthly, He propounds this query, p. 44: "Whether ministers have any right
+to those privileges which are given to the church more than another
+Christian," and he holds the negative. Now the preaching of the word, the
+administration of the sacraments, and the power of the keys, are
+privileges given to the church, that is, for the church's good: "For all
+things are yours (saith the Apostle), whether Paul, or Apollos," &c., 1
+Cor. iii. 21, 22. Therefore, by Mr Hussey's divinity, any other Christian
+hath as much right to administer word, sacraments, keys, as the minister.
+
+Come on now to Mr Coleman's errors in divinity, not to repeat what was
+expressed in my _Nihil Respondes_, but to take off the _Male Dicis_ in the
+main points.
+
+Tenthly, The tenth heterodoxy shall therefore be this, That whatsoever is
+given to Christ, he hath it not as the eternal Son of God. Into this ditch
+did Mr Coleman first fall, and then Mr Hussey, p. 25, after him. I said
+this tenet leadeth to a blasphemous heresy. For the better understanding
+whereof let it be remembered what I did promise in my _Nihil Respondes_,
+p. 11, in reply to his proposition, "That which is given to Christ he hath
+it not as God. This (said I) is in opposition to what I said, p. 45,
+concerning the headship and dignity of Christ, as the natural Son of God,
+the image of the invisible God, Col. i. 15, and, p. 43, of the dominion of
+Christ, as he is the eternal Son of God. This being premised," &c. Mr
+Coleman, without taking the least notice of that which I did purposely and
+plainly premise, begins to speak of God _essentially_; and that if
+something may be given to Christ as God, then something may be given to
+God, and then God is not absolutely perfect, &c., _Male Dicis_, p. 13, 14.
+Thus he turneth over to the essence and nature of God what I spake of the
+Second Person in the Trinity, or of Christ as he is the eternal Son of
+God. Was not the question between him and me, Whether the kingdom and
+dominion over all things may be said to be given to Christ as he is the
+eternal Son of God. This is the point which he did argue against, because
+it takes off his argument first brought to prove that all government, even
+civil, is given to Christ as he is Mediator. And still from the beginning
+I spake of Christ as the Second Person in the Trinity, or the eternal Son
+of God. Thus therefore the case stands: The reverend brother, to prove
+that an universal sovereignty and government over all things is given to
+Christ as he is Mediator, and to confute my assertion that it is given to
+Christ as he is the eternal Son of God, doth frame this argument against
+me, "That which is given to Christ he hath it not as God. But here dignity
+is given to Christ; therefore not here to be taken as God;" where there is
+more in the conclusion than in the premises; for the conclusion which
+naturally follows had been this, Therefore Christ hath not here dignity as
+God. It seems he was ashamed of the conclusion, yet not of the premises
+which infer the conclusion. But this by the way. I speak to his
+proposition, "That which is given to Christ he hath it not as God." These
+words "as God," either he understands {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, _essentially_, or
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, _personally_; that is, either in regard of the nature and
+essence of God, which is common to the Son of God with the Father and the
+Holy Ghost, and in respect whereof they three are one; or in regard of the
+person of the Word, as Christ is the Second Person in the Trinity, and
+personally distinct from the Father and the Holy Ghost. If in the former
+sense, then he must lay aside his whole argument, as utterly impertinent,
+and making nothing at all against my thesis, which affirmed that an
+universal dominion and kingdom over all things is given to Christ, not as
+he is Mediator (in which capacity he is only King of the church), but as
+he is the eternal Son of God. In opposing of which assertion, as the
+reverend brother was before _nihil respondens_, so now he is twice nought.
+But if in the other sense he understands his proposition (which I must
+needs suppose he doth, it being in opposition to what I said), then I
+still aver his proposition will infer a blasphemous heresy, as I proved
+before by a clear demonstration: That which is given to Christ he hath it
+not as God. But life, glory, &c., is given to Christ; therefore Christ
+hath not life, glory, &c., as God. The reverend brother saith, "I
+acknowledge the conclusion unsound, and I deny not but that the major is
+mine own, and the minor is the very Scripture." Yet he denies the
+conclusion, and clears himself by this simile, "That which was given this
+poor man he had not before. But a shilling was given this poor man;
+therefore he had not a shilling before: where both propositions are true,
+yet the conclusion is false (saith he), contrary to the axiom, _Ex veris
+nil nisi verum_." You are extremely out, Sir: your syllogism of the poor
+man is _fallacia ab amphibolia_. The major of it is ambiguous, dubious,
+and fallacious, and cannot be admitted without a distinction. But here you
+acknowledge the major of my argument to be your own, and so not fallacious
+in your opinion. You acknowledge the minor to be Scripture. You have not
+found four terms in my premises, nor charged my major or minor with the
+least fault in matter or form, and yet, forsooth, you deny the conclusion,
+and do not admit that incontrovertible maxim in logic, _Ex veris nil nisi
+verum_; or, as Kekerman hath it, _Ex veris praeemissis falsam conclusionem
+colligi est impossibile_,(1357)--It is impossible that a false conclusion
+should be gathered from true premises. Now let us hear what he would say
+against my conclusion;--it is concerning the sense of the word _hath_: "For
+_hath_ (saith he) by me is used for receiving or having by virtue of the
+gift, but by him for having fundamentally, originally." You are still out,
+Sir. I take it just as you take it. For though the Son of God, as God
+essentially, or in respect of the nature and essence of God, which is
+common to all Three Persons in the blessed Trinity, hath originally of
+himself a kingdom and dominion over all; yet, as he is the Second Person
+in the Trinity, begotten of, and distinct from the Father, he hath the
+kingdom and dominion over all not of himself, but by virtue of the gift of
+his Father. So that the reverend brother is still _nihil respondens_, and
+therefore he shall be concluded in this syllogism: He who holds that
+whatsoever is given to Christ he hath it not by virtue of the gift, as he
+is the eternal Son of God or Second Person in the Trinity, but only as
+Mediator,--he holds, by consequence, that Christ hath not glory by virtue
+of his Father's gift, as he is the eternal Son of God or Second Person in
+the Trinity. But Mr Coleman holds the former; therefore Mr Coleman holds
+the latter. The consequence in the proposition is proved from John xvii.
+22, "The glory which thou gavest me." The assumption he will own, or else
+quit his argument against my distinction of the double kingdom given to
+Christ, as he is the eternal Son of God, and as Mediator. The conclusion
+which follows is heretical; for whereas the Nicene Creed said of Christ,
+in regard of his eternal generation, that he is _Deus de Deo, Lumen de
+lumine_,--God of God, Light of light, Mr Coleman's argument will infer that
+he is not only _ex seipso Deus_, but _ex seipso Filius_; and so deny the
+eternal generation of the Son of God, and the communication of the
+Godhead, and the sovereignty, glory, and attributes thereof, from the
+Father to the Son. For if Christ, as he is the eternal Son of God, hath
+not glory by virtue of his Father's gift, then he hath it not by virtue of
+the eternal generation and communication, but fundamentally and originally
+of himself.
+
+As for the other branch of Mr Coleman's argument, tending to prove that
+Christ, as he is the eternal Son of God, cannot be given, which he
+endeavours to vindicate, p. 14, 15, I answer these two things:
+
+_First_, Granting all that he saith, he concludes nothing against me; for
+I did from the beginning expound these words, Eph. i. 22, "And gave him to
+be the head over all things to the church," in this sense, That Christ as
+Mediator is given only to the church, to be her head, but he that is given
+as Mediator to the church is _over all_. So that the giving of Christ
+there spoken of is as Mediator, and he is given to the church only, which
+I cleared by the Syriac, "And him who is over all he gave to be the head
+to the church." But his being _over all_, there spoken of, if understood
+of glory, dignity, excellency over all, so Christ is over all as Mediator
+(yea, in regard of the exaltation of his human nature), and this helpeth
+not Mr Coleman, who intends to prove from that place that all government,
+even civil, is given to Christ as Mediator. But if understood of a kingdom
+and government over all, so he is over all, as he is the eternal Son of
+God or Second Person of the Trinity, and not as Mediator.
+
+_Secondly_, The question which the reverend brother falls upon, concerning
+the personal inhabitation of the Holy Ghost, will never follow from
+anything which I said, more than God's giving of his Son to us will infer
+a personal inhabitation of the Son of God in us. That which I said was to
+this intent, That both the Son of God and the Holy Ghost are given, not as
+God essentially; that is, in respect of the Godhead itself, or as they are
+one in nature with the Father (for so the Father that giveth, and the Holy
+Ghost which is given, could not be distinguished), but the Son is given as
+the Son proceeding from the Father, and the Holy Ghost is given as the
+Holy Ghost proceeding and sent from the Father and the Son. Whether he be
+given to dwell personally in us, or by his gracious operations only, is
+another question, which hath nothing to do with the present argument, and
+therefore I will not be led out of my way.
+
+Eleventhly, The eleventh heterodoxy is this: "I see no absurdity to hold
+that every man in authority is either Christ's vicegerent, or the
+devil's." _Male Dicis_, p. 16. Here I make this inference: Heathen and
+infidel magistrates, either, 1. They are not men in authority; or, 2. They
+are Christ's vicegerents; or, 3. They are the devil's, _Male Dicis._ If he
+say they are not men in authority, he shall contradict the apostle Paul,
+who calls them higher powers, Rom. xiii. 1, and men in authority, 1 Tim.
+ii. 2, speaking in reference even to the magistrates of that time, who
+were infidels. If he say they are Christ's vicegerents, then, 1. He must
+say, that Christ, as Mediator, reigns without the church, and is a king to
+those to whom he is neither priest nor prophet. 2. He must find a
+commission given by Christ to the infidel magistrate. 3. Whom in authority
+will he make to be the devil's vicegerents if infidel magistrates be
+Christ's vicegerents? If he say that they are the devil's vicegerents,
+then it follows, 1. That they who resist the devil's vicegerent resist the
+ordinance of God; for they that resist an infidel magistrate, and do not
+submit to his lawful authority (which his infidelity takes not away), is
+said, Rom. xiii. 2, to resist the ordinance of God. 2. That the apostle
+Paul bade pray for the devil's vicegerent, 1 Tim. ii. 1, 2. The reverend
+brother doth but more and more wind himself into a labyrinth of errors,
+while he endeavours to take away the distinction of the twofold kingdom,
+and the twofold vicegerentship of God and of Christ.
+
+Twelfthly, The twelfth heterodoxy followeth: "Now it is true that Christ,
+being God as well as man, hath of himself originally, as God, whatsoever
+he hath by virtue of gift as Mediator," _Male Dicis_, p. 13. Now subsume
+Christ hath, by virtue of gift, as Mediator, the priestly office;
+therefore, by Mr Coleman's principles, Christ hath of himself originally,
+as God, the priestly office. And if Christ hath it of himself originally
+as God, then the Father and the Holy Ghost hath it also; so that by his
+doctrine the Father and the Holy Ghost shall be the priests of the church
+as well as Christ, for Christ hath nothing of himself originally as God
+which the Father and the Holy Ghost have not likewise.
+
+Thirteenthly, The thirteenth and last error concerneth the office of
+deacons. Not only a widow but a deacon is denied to be a church officer,
+or to have any warrant from Scripture. "I hold not a widow a church
+officer (saith he); no more do I a deacon; both having a like foundation
+in Scripture, which is truly none at all," _Male Dicis,_ p. 9. If this was
+his opinion formerly, why did he not in so main a point enter his dissent
+from the votes of the Assembly concerning deacons, together with his
+reasons? Well, his opinion is so now, whereby he runneth contrary not only
+to the reformed churches (which it seems weigh not much in his balance),
+but to the plain Scripture, which speaks of the office of a deacon, 1 Tim.
+iii. 10; and this could be no civil office, but an ecclesiastical office,
+for the deacons were chosen by the church, were ordained with prayer and
+laying on of hands, and their charge was to take special care of the poor;
+all which is clear, Acts vi. If he had given us the grounds of his opinion
+he should have heard more against it.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+THE PRELATICAL WAY AND TENETS OF MR COLEMAN AND MR HUSSEY, REPUGNANT ALSO,
+IN DIVERS PARTICULARS, TO THE VOTES AND ORDINANCES OF PARLIAMENT.
+
+
+1. Mr Coleman, in his _Re-examination_, p. 14, makes the Parliament to be
+church governors and church officers to the whole kingdom. It was an
+argument used against the prelates, that ecclesiastical and civil
+government, spiritual and secular administrations, are inconsistent in the
+same persons, either of which requireth the whole man. It was another
+exception against the prelate, that he assumed the power of church
+government and ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the whole diocese, which
+was much more than he could discharge. How will Mr Coleman avoid the
+involving the Parliament into prelatical guiltiness by his principles,
+which we avoid by ours?
+
+2. The prelates sought great things for themselves rather than to purge
+the church of scandals. What other thing was it when Mr Coleman, in his
+third rule, instead of exhorting to the purging the church, called only
+for learning and competency, and told it out, that this will "get us an
+able ministry, and procure us honour enough." Mr Hussey, in his Epistle to
+myself, tells me, that our attending on reading, exhortation and doctrine
+(without government) will obtain the magistrate's love, "more honour, more
+maintenance:" something for shame he behoved to add of the punishing of
+sin (yet he will not have the minister called from his study to be
+troubled or to take any pains in discipline), but behold the love of the
+magistrate; more honour and more maintenance, are strong ingredients in
+the Erastian electuary.
+
+3. Mr Hussey will have ministers placed "without any regard to the
+allowance or disallowance of the people," _Epist. to the Parliament._ This
+is prelatical, or rather more than prelatical.
+
+4. The prelates were great enemies to ruling elders: so are Mr Coleman and
+Mr Hussey, who acknowledge no warrant from the word of God for that
+calling, nor admit of any ruling elders who are not magistrates,--a
+distinction which was used by Saravia and Bilson in reference to the
+Jewish elders, and by Bishop Hall in reference to the elders of the
+ancient church who were not preaching elders, _Assert. of Episcop. by
+Divine Right_, p. 208, 209, 221,--and now, forsooth, Mr Hussey, in his
+_Epistle to the Parliament_, doth earnestly beseech them to "set up
+classes, consisting only of ministers, whose work should be only to preach
+the word," &c. Such classes, I dare say, the prelates themselves will
+admit of. Sure the Scottish prelates, when they were at their highest,
+yielded as much.
+
+Mr Coleman and Mr Hussey hold, that ruling elders and a church government
+distinct from the civil government, in the times of persecution and under
+pagan magistrates, can be no warrant for the like where the state is
+Christian. This plea for Christian magistracy was Bishop Whitgift's plea
+against the ruling elders, _Answer to the Admon._, p. 114.
+
+6. Mr Hussey, p. 22, saith, That granting the incestuous Corinthian to be
+excommunicated, "the decree was Paul's and not the Corinthians'," and that
+it no way appertained to them under the notion of a church. This is
+Saravia's answer to Beza, _de Tripl. Epist. Genere_, p. 42, 43, yea, the
+Papists' answer to Protestant writers, by which they would hold up the
+authority and sole jurisdiction of the prelates, as the apostles'
+successors, to excommunicate.
+
+They do not more agree with the prelatical principles than they differ
+from the votes and ordinances of Parliament, which is the other point that
+I have here undertaken to discover; and I shall do it by the particular
+instances following:--
+
+First, The ordinance of the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, for
+the calling of an assembly of divines, beginneth thus: "Whereas, among the
+infinite blessings of Almighty God upon this nation, none is, or can be,
+more dear unto us than the purity of our religion, and for that as yet
+many things remain in the liturgy, discipline, and government of the
+church, which do necessarily require a farther and more perfect
+reformation than as yet hath been attained: and whereas it hath been
+declared and resolved, by the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament,
+that the present church government, by archbishops, bishops, &c., is evil
+and justly offensive, &c.; and that, therefore, they are resolved that the
+same shall be taken away, and that such a government shall be settled in
+the church as may be most agreeable to God's holy word, and most apt to
+procure and preserve the peace of the church at home, and nearer agreement
+with the church of Scotland, and other reformed churches abroad." After it
+was resolved and voted in both the honourable houses of Parliament, and
+sent as one of the propositions to the treaty at Uxbridge, "That many
+particular congregations shall be under one presbyterial government." Now,
+therefore, what can be more contrary to the votes and ordinances of
+Parliament than that which Mr Coleman and Mr Hussey hold, that there ought
+to be no ecclesiastical government beside civil magistracy, except we
+please to take preaching and baptism under the name of government, as if,
+forsooth, the Parliament had meant, by presbyterial government,
+Parliamentary government; or as if, by the purity of religion in point of
+the discipline of government of the church, they had intended nothing but
+their civil rights and privileges; or as if the wise and honourable Houses
+had understood themselves no better than to intend that for a nearer
+agreement with the church of Scotland and other reformed churches, which
+is the widest difference from them, to wit, the Erastian way.
+
+Secondly, In the same ordinance of Parliament for the calling of an
+assembly of divines, it is ordained that the assembly, after conferring
+and treating among themselves touching the liturgy, discipline, and
+government of the church, or vindication and clearing of the doctrine of
+the same, shall deliver their opinions or advices of or touching the
+matters aforesaid to both or either of the houses of Parliament, yet Mr
+Hussey, _Epist. to the Parliament_, p. 36, will not have classes to put
+anything to the vote, but to hold on the disputes till all end in accord,
+and in unanimous consent of the whole clergy. But how can the Assembly,
+after disputes, express their sense, and deliver their opinions and advice
+to the Parliament, as they are required, except they do it by putting to
+the vote? Mr Coleman himself hath consented, yea, sometime called to put
+things to the vote; and as for classes, will any man imagine, that when
+both houses of Parliament did vote "that many particular congregations
+shall be under one presbyterial government," their meaning was, that the
+classical presbytery shall only schoolwise dispute, and put nothing to the
+vote; or that the classical presbytery shall in common dispense the word
+and sacraments to many congregations, and that either the classical
+presbytery shall go to the several congregations successively, or the many
+congregations come to the classical presbytery, for preaching and
+baptising? I admire what opinion Mr Hussey can have of the Parliamentary
+vote concerning presbyterial government.
+
+Thirdly, Mr Hussey, _Epistle to the Parliament_, p. 4, 5, will have
+ministers placed "without any regard to the allowance and disallowance of
+the people," yet the ordinance of Parliament, for giving power to
+classical presbyteries to ordain ministers, doth appoint that he who is
+examined and approved by the presbytery shall be "sent to the church or
+other place where he is to serve (if it may be done with safety and
+conveniency), there to preach three several days, and to converse with the
+people, that they may have trial of his gifts for their edification, and
+may have time and leisure to inquire into, and the better to know his life
+and conversation," after which the ordinance appointeth public notice to
+be given, and a day set to the congregation to put in what exceptions they
+have against him.
+
+Fourthly, Mr Hussey in that _Epistle to the Parliament_, p. 5, saith, "Oh
+that this honourable court would hasten to set up classes consisting only
+of ministers whose work should be only to preach the word, and weekly meet
+in schools of divinity!" Here is a double contradiction to the ordinances
+of Parliament, for in the directions of the Lords and Commons for choosing
+of ruling elders, and speedy settling of presbyterial government, it is
+appointed that ruling elders shall be members both of classes and
+synodical assemblies, together with the ministers of the word. Again, the
+ordinance about suspension of scandalous persons from the sacrament
+appointeth other work to classes, beside preaching and disputing, namely,
+the receiving and judging of appeals from the congregational eldership. Mr
+Coleman, in _Male Dicis_, p. 12, professeth that he excludeth ruling
+elders from church government, yet he can hardly be ignorant that as the
+Parliament hath voted "that many particular congregations shall be under
+one presbyterial government," so their votes do commit that government to
+pastors and ruling elders jointly.
+
+I will not here repeat the particulars wherein I showed in my _Nihil
+Respondes_ that Mr Coleman hath abused the honourable houses of
+Parliament, unto which particulars he hath answered as good as nothing.
+The honourable houses, in their wisdom, will soon observe whether such
+men, whose avouched tenets are so flatly repugnant to the parliamentary
+votes and ordinances, are like to be good pleaders for Christian
+magistracy.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+MR COLEMAN'S WRONGING OF THE CHURCH OF SCOTLAND.
+
+
+Mr Coleman ends his _Male Dicis_ with a resentment of accusations charged
+upon him by a stranger, a commissioner from another church. The lot of
+strangers were very hard, if, when they are falsely accused to authority,
+they may not answer for themselves. He may remember the first accusation
+was made by himself, when in his sermon to the Parliament, he did flatly
+impute to the commissioners from the church of Scotland a great part of
+the fault of hindering union in the Assembly of Divines, as having come
+biassed with a national determination; his doctrine also at that time
+being such, as did not only reflect upon the government of the church of
+Scotland, but tend to the subversion of the covenant in one principal
+point, without which there can be small or no hopes of attaining the other
+ends of the covenant. Since that time he did in his _Re-examination_, and
+now again in his _Male Dicis_, fall foully upon the church of Scotland,
+not only by gross mistakes and misrepresentations of our way, but by most
+groundless aspersions and most uncharitable and unjust calumnies. I am
+sure I am not so much a stranger to this doctrine as he is to the church
+of Scotland, of which notwithstanding he boldly speaks his pleasure in
+divers particulars, which he will never be able to make good.
+
+First, He hath aspersed that church in the point of promiscuous
+communicating. This I confuted in my _Nihil Respondes_: and told him both
+of the order of the church and practice of conscientious ministers to the
+contrary. Now what replieth he?
+
+"_First_, This refining work, I think, is not one year old in Scotland, or
+much more. I was lately informed that in Edinburgh it is begun: whether
+anywhere else I know not," _Male Dicis_, p. 20. Are not these now good
+grounds of censuring and aspersing a reformed church (whose name hath been
+as precious ointment among other churches abroad), "I think; I was
+informed; whether it be otherwise I know not?" He will sit in Cornhill,
+and tell the world what he imagines or hears of the church of Scotland,
+and that, forsooth, must be taken for a truth. Yet there was both rules
+and practice in the church of Scotland for debarring ignorant and
+scandalous persons from the sacrament before he was born, though all was
+put out of course under the prelates.
+
+"_Secondly_ (saith the reverend brother), It is not a very effectual
+sin-censuring and church-refining government, under which, after fourscore
+years' constant practice, divers thousands in the kingdom, and some
+hundreds in one particular parish, because of ignorance and scandal, are
+yet unfit to communicate," _Male Dicis_, p. 20. _Ans._ 1. It is
+notoriously false that there hath been fourscore years' constant practice
+of presbyterial government in Scotland; for the prelates there were above
+thirty years' standing. 2. "Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one
+day, or shall a nation be born at once?" saith the prophet, Isa. lxvi. 8.
+It is no easy matter to get a whole nation purged of ignorant and
+scandalous persons. 3. He may take notice that the apostle Paul, almost in
+all his epistles, maketh mention of scandalous persons among those to whom
+he wrote, warning them not to have fellowship with such, to note them, to
+avoid them. If the apostolic churches were not free of such, what great
+marvel if we be not? 4. Before he objected promiscuous communicating. This
+being cleared to be a calumny, now he objecteth that there are such as are
+unfit to communicate. But while he thus seeketh a quarrel against church
+government, he doth upon the matter quarrel the preaching of the gospel
+itself; for he that imputeth it as a fault to the church government that
+there are still divers thousands who, by reason of ignorance or scandal,
+are unfit to communicate, doth, by consequence, yea, much more, impute it
+as a fault to the preaching of the gospel in England, Scotland, Ireland,
+France, Germany, the Low Countries, Switzerland, Sweden, Poland,--that in
+all these, and other reformed churches, after fourscore years' constant
+preaching of the gospel (which is appointed of God to turn unconverted and
+unregenerate persons from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan
+to God), there are not only divers thousands, but divers millions, who, by
+reason of ignorance or scandal, are yet unfit to communicate. If the word
+do not open the eyes of the ignorant, and convert the scandalous, what
+marvel that church government cannot do it? Church government is not an
+illuminating and regenerating ordinance as the word is. But this church
+government can and will do, yea, hath done, where it is duly executed: It
+is a most blessed means for keeping the ordinances from visible and known
+pollution, which doth very much honour God, shame sin, and commend piety;
+it putteth a visible difference between the precious and the vile, the
+clean and the unclean, the silver and the dross; and may well be,
+therefore, called a church-refining ordinance.
+
+Secondly, The second calumny was this, "I myself (said he) did hear the
+presbytery of Edinburgh censure a woman to be banished out of the gates of
+the city." I answered him in his own language, "It is at the best a most
+uncharitable slander:" and told him there is no banishment in Scotland but
+by the civil magistrate; and that he ought to have inquired and informed
+himself better.
+
+Now he doth neither adhere to his calumny, or offer to make it good, nor
+yet quit it, or confess he was mistaken, but propoundeth three new queries
+(_Male Dicis_, p. 21), still forgetting his own rule of keeping to the
+laws of disputation and matter in hand. For the particular in hand he only
+saith thus much, "I did make inquiry, and from the presbytery itself I
+received information, but not satisfaction." He tells not what information
+he received. If he will say that he received information that the
+banishment was by the magistrate, how could he then report that it was by
+the presbytery. If he say that the information he had from the presbytery
+gave him any ground for the report which he hath made, let him speak it
+out, and the world shall know the untruth of it. He may remember, withal,
+that by his principles an accusation may not be received against an elder
+(much less against an eldership), in reference either to the judgment of
+charity, or to ministerial conviction, except under two or three
+witnesses. If, therefore, he would have his accusation believed, let him
+find two or three witnesses.
+
+Thirdly, Whereas I had rectified a great mistake of the reverend brother
+when I told him, "It is accidental to the ruling elder to be of the
+nobility, or to nobles to be ruling elders; there are but some so, and
+many otherwise," he is not pleased to be rectified in this, but replieth,
+"I say, first, It is continually so; secondly, The king's commissioner in
+the General Assembly, is his presence accidental?" _Male Dicis_, p. 10.
+See now here whether he understandeth what he saith, or whereof he
+affirmeth. That which he saith is continually so, is almost continually
+otherwise; that is, there are continually some ruling elders who are not
+nobles, and there are continually some nobles who are not ruling elders.
+So that, if anything be accidental, this is accidental, that an elder be
+of the nobility, or nobles be elders; they are neither nobles _qua_
+elders, nor elders _qua_ nobles. It is no less accidental that the king's
+commissioner be present in the General Assembly; for there have been
+General Assemblies in Scotland, both before the erection and since the
+last casting out of Prelacy, in which there was no commissioner from the
+king. And when the king sends a commissioner, it is accidental that he be
+of the nobility; for the king hath sent commissioners to General
+Assemblies who were not of the nobility.
+
+Fourthly, A fourth injury, not to be passed in silence, is this: Mr
+Coleman hath endeavoured to make the world believe that the commissioners
+from the church of Scotland came to the Assembly biassed with something
+adventitious from without, which he calls a national determination, and
+that we are not permitted by those that sent us to receive any further
+light from the word of God. I shall say no more of the bias, because, as I
+told him before, the standers by see well enough which way the bias runs.
+But most strange it is, that after I had confuted his calumny, not only
+from our paper first presented to the grand committee, but from the
+General Assembly's own letter to the Assembly of Divines, showing that
+they had ordered the laying aside of some particular customs in the church
+of Scotland, for the nearer uniformity with the church of England, so much
+endeared unto them, yet he still adhereth to his former calumny (_Male
+Dicis_, p. 20), without taking notice of the evidence which I had given to
+the contrary. And not content with this, he still quarrelleth with my
+allegation of certain parallel examples, which are by him so far
+disesteemed, that he hath not stuck to pass the very same censure upon the
+foreign divines who came to the Synod of Dort which the Arminians did. The
+same he saith of Alexander's coming to the Council of Nice, and of Cyril's
+coming to the Council of Ephesus; all these, I say, he still involveth
+under the same censure with us; for whereas he had alleged that I
+justified the bias, this I denied, and called for his proof. His reply now
+is thus: "Is not the allegation of the examples of the like doing a
+justification of the act done?" _Male Dicis_, p. 20. This reply can have
+no other sense but this, That I justified the thing which he thinks our
+bias, because I justified those other divines who (as he holds) came also
+biassed in like manner. I am persuaded this one particular, his joining
+with the Arminians in their exceptions against the Synod of Dort, would
+make all the reformed churches, if they could all speak to him _uno ore_,
+to cry _Male audis_. And I am as firmly persuaded that the confession
+which I have extorted from him in this place, that he knoweth no
+adventitious engagements those divines had, makes him irreconcileably to
+contradict himself; for he made them but just now biassed in the same
+manner as he thinks us, and made my allegation of their examples to be a
+justification of the bias charged by him upon us: as, therefore, he doth
+must uncharitably and untruly judge us to be biassed with adventitious
+engagements, so doth he judge of them. Neither can he assoil them while he
+condemneth us; for the articles concerning predestination, the death of
+Christ, grace, free will, and perseverance, were determined before the
+Synod of Dort by most (if not by all) of those reformed churches who sent
+commissioners thither, as much as presbyterial government was determined
+in the church of Scotland before the reverend Assembly of Divines was
+called. And this pre-engagement and predetermination of those reformed
+churches was the main objection of the Arminians against the foreign
+divines who came to the Synod of Dort. To conclude this point, Mr Coleman
+himself, in his _Re-examination_, p. 7, avoucheth roundly, that the
+foreign divines came to Dort, not as divines, by dispute and disquisition
+to find out truth, but as judges, to censure all different opinions as
+erroneous.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+CALUMNIES CONFUTED, AND THAT QUESTION BRIEFLY CLEARED, WHETHER THE
+MAGISTRATE BE CHRIST'S VICEGERENT.
+
+
+Mr Hussey, in his title page, tells us he hath prosecuted the
+argumentative part without any personal reflections, yet I could instance
+divers personal reflections in his book which any moderate impartial man
+will extremely dislike; but what should this be to the edifying of my
+reader, the end which, next to the glory of God and the promoting of
+reformation, I have proposed to myself? Yet I must needs take notice of
+some calumnies.
+
+First, In his _Epistle_, p. 8, he offereth it to be examined whether I was
+not beside my text, Mal. iii. 2, when I pressed from it reformation by
+ecclesiastical discipline: whether that refiner's fire and fuller's soap
+doth not point at another and a nearer operation upon the souls and
+spirits of men by the blood, word, Spirit, and grace of Christ: and
+whether such handling of a similitude in a text be to preach the mind of
+God, or men's own fancy. It is no discontent to me, but I shall rejoice in
+it, that men of piety and judgment examine my doctrine by the word of God,
+and hold fast what they find agreeable to the Scriptures, and no more. But
+is this brotherly, or fair, or conscionable dealing, to offer my sermon to
+be examined under such a notion, when he hath not only said nothing to
+confute any of my doctrines, as not arising from my text, or any of my
+applications, as not arising from my doctrines; but hath also untruly
+represented my sermon, as coming short of, or not expressing that which
+indeed it hath most principally and most expressly in it? That of
+reformation was but a part of my sermon; and that of church censures,
+against scandalous sinners, was but the least part of that part. And why
+should not the fuller's soap in the house of God, take off those spots in
+our feasts? Why should not the refiner's fire purge away the wicked of the
+earth like dross? so David calls them. That reformation is one part of the
+Holy Ghost's intendment in that text, is Gualther's opinion as well as
+mine, yet he thinks Gualther his own. Nay, I proved it from comparing
+scripture with scripture, which is the best way that I know to clear
+scripture. Why did he not answer my proofs? But beside all that I said of
+reformation, had I not other three doctrines out of that text
+comprehending all that which Mr Hussey hinteth as omitted by me, and yet
+intended in the text? Dare he say that I did not take in purgation by the
+word? (though I confess he doth not well prove it from the words which he
+citeth, "Is not my word an hammer?" But it is proved by the words which he
+citeth not, "Is not my word like as a fire?") Did I not expressly say that
+Christ is to us as a refiner's fire and as fuller's soap three ways,--by
+reformation, by tribulation, by mortification? Did I not handle the last
+two as well as the first? Oh let no more such gross calumnies be found
+among those who profess to be brethren!
+
+Secondly, Mr Hussey, in his epistle to myself, gives it out that I say,
+"We have leave from the civil magistrate to preach the gospel," which he
+interprets as if I denied that we preach the word with authority from
+Christ. It was _de facto_, not _de jure_, that I spake it. The magistrate
+hath power in his hand to hinder both doctrine and discipline, if he be an
+adversary, though it be the will of Christ that there be both doctrine and
+discipline, and the authority of both is from Christ. When the magistrate
+assisteth or countenanceth, or so much as doth not hinder the preaching of
+the gospel, then he gives leave to it.
+
+Thirdly, Mr Coleman, in his _Male Dicis_, p. 3, saith, "I am confident the
+church of Scotland sent this Commissioner to dispute down our reasons, not
+to revile our persons." Why did he not, if he could, give instance of some
+reviling word written by me against his person? I have not so learned
+Christ. The Lord rebuke every railing and reviling spirit. I have given
+him reason against railing; he hath given me railing against reason; I
+spake to his doctrine, he speaks to my place and relation, which is both
+the _alpha_ and _omega_ of his _Male Dicis_.
+
+Fourthly, "Knowledge (saith he) is only with Mr Gillespie; others
+understand neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm," p. 3. He will
+sooner bring water out of flint than prove this consequence out of my
+title-page. Although I confess himself hath affirmed divers things of the
+church of Scotland which he doth not understand, as I have made plainly to
+appear. If he take a review of the title-page of his _Re-examination_, he
+gives more ground for this consequence,--that Mr Coleman is the only man
+that denies himself; others seek great things for themselves. Or from the
+title-page of his _Male Dicis_ this consequence will be as good,--that Mr
+Coleman is the only man that blesseth; others are revilers.
+
+Fifthly, Thus saith Mr Coleman, "O ye honourable house of Parliament, take
+you notice that you manage that great place of yours under Christ and for
+Christ: He is your head, and you are his servants; and take you notice
+withal that Mr Gillespie accounts this your reproach," _Male Dicis
+Maledicis_, p. 17. But O ye honourable house of Parliament, be pleased to
+take notice of my own plain expression of my mind in my _Nihil Respondes._
+p. 13: "The Christian magistrate manageth his office under and for Christ,
+that is, so as to be serviceable for the kingdom and glory of Christ." And
+now judge whether it be suitable to the sincerity and candour of a
+minister of the gospel to endeavour to make me odious to authority, by
+imputing to me that which not only I did not say, but the contrary whereof
+I did plainly express. The thing which I charged his doctrine with was
+this, that by holding all government to be given to Christ as Mediator,
+and from him, as Mediator, derived to the magistrate as his vicegerent, he
+shaketh the foundation of magistracy. I am sure that which I hold, that
+all lawful magistrates are powers ordained by God, and are to be honoured
+and obeyed as God's vicegerents, is a firm and strong foundation for
+magistracy. But that which Mr Coleman and Mr Hussey hold, viz., that the
+Christian magistrate holdeth his office of, under, and for Christ, as he
+is Mediator, and doth act _vice Christi_, as Christ's vicegerent, gives a
+most dangerous wound to Christian magistracy, which I can demonstrate in
+many particulars. I shall now give instance only in these few: First, They
+must prove from Scripture that Christ, as Mediator, hath given a
+commission of vicegerentship to Christian magistrates, and appointed them
+not only to be serviceable to him, and to do his work (for that they must
+serve Christ, and be for his glory, is not controverted, nay, can never
+enough be commended to them), but also to govern _vice Christi_, in
+Christ's stead, and that not only as he is God, which is not controverted
+neither, but as he is Mediator. This, I say, they must prove, which they
+will never be able to do, or otherwise they do, by their doctrine, lead
+the magistrate into a snare, and leave him in it. For how shall he be
+acknowledged for a vicegerent who can show no commission nor warrant for
+his vicegerentship? Secondly, Their doctrine tendeth to the altering of
+the surest and best known tenure of magistracy, which is from God; for
+they hold that God hath put all government, and all authority civil, and
+all, into the hands of Christ as Mediator; if the tenure from Christ fail,
+then, by their doctrine, the tenure from God shall fail too. Thirdly, The
+vicegerent cannot act in that capacity, nor assume that power which his
+sovereign, whose vicegerent he is, ought not to assume if he were
+personally present; so that, by their principles, it will follow that the
+Christian magistrate can act no farther, nor assume any other power of
+government, than Christ himself might have assumed when he was on earth,
+or might now assume and exercise as Mediator if he were on earth. But
+Christ himself, when he was on earth, neither did exercise, nor was sent
+to exercise, civil judgment, Luke xii. 14; and the temporal sword, John
+xviii. 36; nor external observation and state, Luke xvii. 20, 21; and he
+declined to be an earthly king, John vi. 15. Therefore, by their
+principles, the Christian magistrate ought to forbear and avoid all these.
+
+A sixth calumny is this: Mr Coleman, descanting upon the governments
+mentioned 1 Cor. xii. 28, chargeth me with a circular argumentation: "He
+circularly argues (saith he): they are civil, because God placed them
+there, and God placed them there because they are civil," _Male Dicis
+Maledicis_, p. 9. I neither argued the one nor the other; they are both,
+Sir, of your own forging. But this is not your first allegation of this
+kind. I sometime admire what oscitancy or supine negligence (to judge it
+no worse) this can be, to fancy to yourself that I have said what you
+would, and then to bring forth your own apprehensions for my arguments.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+THAT MR COLEMAN DOTH GREAT VIOLENCE, BOTH TO HIS OWN WORDS AND TO THE
+WORDS OF OTHERS WHOM HE CITETH.
+
+
+The reverend brother hath offered extreme violence to his own declaration,
+of which let the leader now judge, comparing his declaration with his
+interpretation.--
+
+_Declaration_
+
+For much of what is reported of my sermon I utterly deny, and refer myself
+to the sermon itself, for what I have acknowledged to be delivered by me,
+although it is my judgment, yet because I see it hath given a great deal
+of offence to this Assembly and the reverend Commissioners of Scotland, I
+am sorry I have given offence in the delivery thereof; and for the
+printing, although I have an order, I will forbear, except I be further
+commanded. THO. COLEMAN.
+
+_Interpretation_
+
+It is a truth, and a Scripture truth, which I have delivered, and because
+I see a scripture truth hath given offence to the Commissioners of
+Scotland, &c. I am sorry. This must needs be the sense; I am sure this was
+the sense intended, _Male Dicis, Maledicis_, p. 18.
+
+Surely if such Orleans glosses be admitted upon men's declarations, signed
+with their hands, and if he who hath subscribed himself sorry that he hath
+given offence in the delivery of such a doctrine, shall be allowed to
+expound himself thus; that he meant he was sorry others had taken offence
+at a Scripture truth, that is, he was sorry for our fault, not for his
+own. I know not how men shall trust one another's declarations, or how we
+can practically, as well as doctrinally, confute the Jesuitical
+equivocations and mental reservations. And if this must needs be the sense
+which now the reverend brother gives, and was the sense intended, why
+saith he that he did publicly recal that declaration? He might make a
+revocation of it, in the sense wherein I understood it: but how could he
+make a revocation of it as himself understood it, and as he saith the
+sense must needs be? Was this his sorrow for our taking offence at a
+Scripture truth, a sorrow to be sorrowed for? Why did he not rather make a
+second declaration the next day interpreting the former? And whereas he
+thinks that his revocation ought to have been mentioned together with his
+declaration, because the whole truth is to be told as well as the truth,
+his own heart knows that he himself hath not told the whole truth, for he
+could tell much more if he pleased, how he was brought upon the business,
+and particularly upon that revocation. Why will he challenge others for
+not telling the whole truth, when himself doth it not? I should have
+thought that this revocation was neither here nor there as to the point of
+scandal, for proof whereof his declaration was brought; and that, as it
+was not to the business in hand, so it might rather serve for impairing
+his credit than for anything else. But seeing himself thinks it more for
+his credit to tell the world of his saying and unsaying, declaring and
+undeclaring, let him be doing.
+
+In the next place, Will you see how much violence he offereth to divines
+whom he citeth? I had cited plain and full testimonies of the Zurich
+divines, showing that Gualther expounds 1 Cor. v. all along of
+excommunication; that Bullinger holds excommunication to be instituted by
+Christ, Matt. xviii.; that Aretius saith God was the author of
+excommunication in the Old Testament, and Christ in the New, all which see
+in _Nihil Respondes_, p. 32.
+
+The reverend brother, notwithstanding of their plain testimonies, speaking
+for me and against him in the main controversy between him and me, doth
+still allege that they are for him, not for me, _Male Dicis_, p. 23, yet
+he doth not so much as offer any answer to their testimonies by me cited,
+only he bringeth three other passages of theirs, intimating that there may
+be a true church without excommunication; that they thought it not
+necessary where they lived; that they thought it hard, yea
+impossible--_arduum nec non impossible_--to introduce excommunication in
+those parts, by which citations the brother hath proved nothing against
+me, but confirmed what I said. Let him remember first, he himself makes
+the main controversy between him and me about the scriptural warrants of
+church censures, now in that they are clearly against him. Next Aretius,
+who thought it hard, yea impossible, to bring in excommunication at that
+time, saith also, _Dabit posterior aetas tractabiliores forte
+animas_,--peradventure the following age shall bring forth more tractable
+souls; and thereupon he adviseth not to despair of the restitution of
+excommunication. I cited also other testimonies to show that the Zurich
+divines did endeavour and long for the discipline of excommunication,
+though as things stood then and there, they did prudentially supersede the
+restoring of it where they lived, because of the difficulty and
+apprehended impossibility of the thing. If Mr Coleman will follow the
+Zurich divines he must change his tone, and quite alter the state of the
+question, and make it thus: Whether, as things now stand, it be expedient
+to settle excommunication in the church of England. Now if he makes this
+the state of the question, then he must make a revocation of that word, "I
+deny an institution, I assent to a prudence." For the tables were turned
+with the Zurich divines; they assented to an institution; they denied a
+prudence; they held an affirmative precept for excommunication, but that
+it doth not bind _ad semper_, that the thing is not at all times, nor in
+all places necessary; that weighty inconveniences may warrant the
+superseding of it.
+
+The reverend brother brings another testimony out of Aretius against
+suspension from the sacrament: "And further (saith he) for this grand
+desired power, suspension from sacrament, these are his words," &c. A
+testimony three ways falsified: 1. Aretius speaks not at all in that place
+of the power or duty of church officers, of which suspension is a part,
+but he speaks of private Christians, and what is incumbent to them. 2. He
+speaks of separation, not of suspension from the sacrament; that a man is
+not bound to withdraw and lie off from the sacrament, because every one
+who is to communicate with him is not in his opinion a saint. 3. He
+speaketh against separation from both word and sacrament, because of the
+mixture of good and bad in hearing and in communicating; but scandalous
+sinners are invited to, not suspended from the hearing of the word,
+wherefore take Aretius's(1358) words as they are, and then let the
+reverend brother consider what he hath gained.
+
+What hath this now to do with church officers' power of suspension from
+the sacrament?
+
+Observe another testimony which he addeth out of Augustine, _lib. de Fide,
+Excommunicatio debet supplere locum visibilis gladii_, which he Englisheth
+thus: "Excommunication comes in only to supply the want of the civil
+sword." But how comes in your _only_, Sir? Augustine saith no such thing.
+And when I have expunged that word, I must tell you farther, that I can
+find no such passage in Augustine's book _de Fide_; but I find somewhat to
+this purpose in another book of his, which is entitled _De Fide et
+Operibus_, a book which he wrote against the admission of such persons to
+baptism, as being instructed in the faith, are, notwithstanding, still
+scandalous in their lives (which, by the way, will hold _a fortiori_, for
+the exclusion of notorious scandalous sinners from the Lord's supper; for
+they who ought not to be admitted to the sacrament of initiation, ought
+much less to be admitted to the sacrament of confirmation). Now because
+divers scriptures speak of a mixture of good and bad in the church,
+Augustine takes there occasion to reprove those who abused these
+scriptures against the exercise of discipline and church censures, the
+necessity whereof he showeth to be the greater, because the magistrate
+doth not punish by death all such crimes as under the law were punished by
+death, as, namely, adultery, the scandal chiefly by him insisted upon. As
+for that passage concerning excommunication supplying the place of the
+sword,(1359) it plainly holds forth excommunication under Christian
+emperors and magistrates, for such they were at that time, so far it is
+from making against us. For these are the words which say no such thing as
+Mr Coleman would make them say: "And Phinehas the priest did thrust
+through the adulterous persons found together with the avenging sword;"
+which signified that it should be none by degradations and
+excommunications in this time, when, in the discipline of the church, the
+visible sword was to cease.
+
+If the reverend brother had let me know where to find his other
+testimonies of Origen and Chrysostom, peradventure I had given him as good
+an account of them. Tertullian's(1360) words which he citeth, _Praesident
+probati seniores_, I know very well where to find; and I know also, that
+if there be a passage in all antiquity against the Erastians, that is one.
+Which therefore I here offer as it is to be considered.
+
+One instance more of his misalleging and perverting of testimonies. In the
+close, he citeth a passage of Mr Case's sermon, Aug. 22, 1645. "He
+(Christ) is king of nations and king of saints. As king of nations he hath
+a temporal kingdom and government over the world," &c., "and the rule and
+regiment of this kingdom he hath committed to monarchies," &c. "Here is
+Erastianism (saith Mr Coleman, p. 38), a step higher than ever I or
+Erastus himself went. And I desire to know of Mr Gillespie, if he will own
+this as good divinity?" Yes, Sir, I own it for very good divinity; for my
+reverend brother, Mr Case, saith not that Christ, as Mediator, is king of
+nations, and hath a temporal kingdom in the world, and hath committed rule
+and regiment to monarchies or other lawful magistrates (which is the point
+that you and Mr Hussey contend for, being a great heterodoxy in divinity),
+but he saith of the Son of God, that he is king of nations, and hath
+committed rule to monarchies, which I own with all my heart. The
+distinction of the twofold kingdom of Christ,--an universal kingdom,
+whereby he reigneth over all things as God, and a special economical
+kingdom, whereby he is king to the church only, and ruleth and governeth
+it,--is that which, being rightly understood, overturneth, overturneth,
+overturneth the Erastian principles. Let Mr Coleman but own this
+distinction, and that which Mr Case addeth concerning the kingdom, which
+Christ, as king of saints (and so as Mediator), doth exercise both
+invisibly, in the conscience, and visibly, in the church: First, By
+conquering a people and visible subjects; secondly, By giving them laws
+distinct from all the laws and statutes of all the kingdoms and republics
+in the world, Isa. xxxiii. 22; thirdly, By constituting special officers
+in the church not only to promulgate these laws, Matt, xviii. 19, but to
+govern his people according to them, Acts xx. 28; Rom. xii. 8; 1 Cor. xii.
+28; xiv. 32; fourthly, In that he hath commanded all his people to obey
+these ecclesiastical officers, Heb. xiii. 7, 17; fifthly, And hath
+appointed censures proper to this government, Matt, xviii. 17; 1 Cor. v.
+13: I say, let Mr Coleman but own this doctrine of Mr Case, which was
+printed by order of the honourable House of Commons as well as his was,
+then we are agreed. And so much for this time.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN PROPOSITIONS CONCERNING THE MINISTRY AND GOVERNMENT
+OF THE CHURCH.
+
+
+ ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN
+
+ PROPOSITIONS
+
+ CONCERNING
+
+ THE MINISTRY AND GOVERNMENT OF THE CHURCH.
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH, 1642
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE AND OLIVER AND BOYD.
+
+M. OGLE & SON AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW. J. DEWAR, PERTH. W. MIDDLETON,
+ DUNDEE.
+
+ G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN. W. M'COMB, BELFAST.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS, & CO., AND JAMES NISBET & CO., LONDON.
+
+ 1642.
+
+ REPRINTED BY A. W. MURRAY, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH.
+
+ 1844.
+
+_Act approving Eight general Heads of Doctrine against the Tenets of
+Erastianism, Independency, and Liberty of Conscience, asserted in the One
+Hundred and Eleven Propositions, which are to be examined against the next
+Assembly._
+
+Being tender of so great an engagement by solemn covenant,--sincerely,
+really, and constantly to endeavour in our places and callings, the
+preservation of the reformed religion in this kirk of Scotland, in
+doctrine, worship, discipline, and government, the reformation of religion
+in the kingdoms of England and Ireland, in doctrine, worship, discipline,
+and government, according to the word of God and the example of the best
+reformed kirks, and to endeavour the nearest conjunction and uniformity in
+all these, together with the extirpation of heresy, schism, and whatsoever
+shall be found contrary to sound doctrine: and considering, withal, that
+one of the special means which it becometh us in our places and callings
+to use in pursuance of these ends is, in zeal for the true reformed
+religion, to give our public testimony against the dangerous tenets of
+Erastianism, Independency, and (which is falsely called) _Liberty of
+Conscience_, which are not only contrary to sound doctrine, but more
+special lets and hinderances as well to the preservation of our own
+received doctrine, worship, discipline and government, as to the work of
+reformation and uniformity in England and Ireland. The General Assembly
+upon these considerations, having heard publicly read the one hundred and
+eleven following propositions, exhibited and tendered by some brethren who
+were appointed to prepare articles or propositions for the vindication of
+the truth in those particulars, doth unanimously approve and agree unto
+these eight general heads of doctrine therein contained and asserted, viz,
+1. That the ministry of the word and the administration of the sacraments
+of the New Testament, baptism and the Lord's supper, are standing
+ordinances, instituted by God himself, to continue in the church to the
+end of the world; 2. That such as administer the word and sacraments ought
+to be duly called and ordained thereunto; 3. That some ecclesiastical
+censures are proper and peculiar to be inflicted only upon such as bear
+office in the kirk; other censures are common, and may be inflicted both
+on ministers and other members of the kirk; 4. That the censure of
+suspension from the sacrament of the Lord's supper, inflicted because of
+gross ignorance, or because of a scandalous life and conversation, as
+likewise the censure of excommunication or casting out of the kirk
+flagitious or contumacious offenders, both the one censure and the other
+is warrantable by and grounded upon the word of God, and is necessary (in
+respect of divine institution) to be in the kirk; 5. That as the rights,
+power, and authority of the civil magistrate are to be maintained
+according to the word of God, and the confessions of the faith of the
+reformed kirks, so it is no less true and certain, that Jesus Christ, the
+only Head and only King of the kirk, hath instituted and appointed a kirk
+government, distinct from the civil government or magistracy; 6. That the
+ecclesiastical government is committed and entrusted by Christ to the
+assemblies of the kirk, made up of the ministers of the word and ruling
+elders; 7. That the lesser and inferior ecclesiastical assemblies ought to
+be subordinate and subject unto the greater and superior assemblies; 8.
+That notwithstanding hereof, the civil magistrate may and ought to
+suppress, by corporal or civil punishments, such as by spreading error or
+heresy, or by fomenting schism, greatly dishonour God, dangerously hurt
+religion, and disturb the peace of the kirk. Which heads of doctrine
+(howsoever opposed by the authors and fomenters of the foresaid errors
+respectively) the General Assembly doth firmly believe, own, maintain, and
+commend unto others, as solid, true, orthodox, grounded upon the word of
+God, consonant to the judgment both of the ancient and the best reformed
+kirks. And because this Assembly (through the multitude of other necessary
+and pressing business) cannot now have so much leisure as to examine and
+consider particularly the foresaid one hundred and eleven propositions;
+therefore a more particular examination thereof is committed and referred
+to the theological faculties in the four universities of this kingdom, and
+the judgment of each of these faculties concerning the same is appointed
+to be reported to the next General Assembly. In the mean while these
+propositions shall be printed, both that copies thereof may be sent to
+presbyteries, and that it may be free for any that pleaseth to peruse
+them, and to make known or send their judgment concerning the same to the
+said next Assembly.
+
+A. KER.
+
+
+
+
+PROPOSITIONS.
+
+
+1. As our Lord Jesus Christ doth invisibly teach and govern his church by
+the Holy Spirit; so in gathering, preserving, instructing, building and
+saving thereof, he useth ministers as his instruments, and hath appointed
+an order of some to teach and others to learn in the church, and that some
+should be the flock and others the pastors.
+
+2. For beside these first founders of the church of Christ,
+extraordinarily sent, and furnished with the gift of miracles, whereby
+they might confirm the doctrine of the gospel, he appointed also ordinary
+pastors and teachers, for the executing of the ministry, even until his
+coming again unto judgment, Eph. iv. 11-13. Wherefore also, as many as are
+of the number of God's people, or will be accounted Christians, ought to
+receive and obey the ordinary ministers of God's word and sacraments
+(lawfully though mediately called), as the stewards and ambassadors of
+Christ himself.
+
+3. It is not lawful for any man, how fit soever and how much soever
+enriched or beautified with excellent gifts, to undertake the
+administration either of the word or sacraments by the will of private
+persons, or others who have not power and right to call, much less it is
+lawful by their own judgment or arbitrement to assume and arrogate the
+same to themselves. But before it be lawful to undergo that sacred
+ministry in churches constituted, a special calling, yea beside, a lawful
+election (which alone is not sufficient), a mission or sending, or (as
+commonly it is termed) ordination, is necessarily required, and that both
+for the avoiding of confusion, and to bar out or shut the door (so far as
+in us lieth) upon impostors; as also by reason of divine institution
+delivered to us in the Holy Scripture, Rom. x. 15; Heb. v. 4; Tit. i. 5; 1
+Tim. ii. 7.
+
+4. The church ought to be governed by no other persons than ministers and
+stewards preferred and placed by Christ, and after no other manner than
+according to the laws made by him; and, therefore, there is no power on
+earth which may challenge to itself authority or dominion over the church:
+but whosoever they are that would have the things of Christ to be
+administered not according to the ordinance and will of Christ revealed in
+his word, but as it liketh them, and according to their own will and
+prescript, what other thing go they about to do than by horrible sacrilege
+to throw down Christ from his own throne?
+
+5. For our only lawgiver and interpreter of his Father's will, Jesus
+Christ hath prescribed and foreappointed the rule according to which he
+would have his worship and the government of his own house to be ordered.
+To wrest this rule of Christ, laid open in his holy word, to the counsels,
+wills, manners, devices, or laws of men, is most high impiety. But
+contrarily, the law of faith commandeth the counsel and purposes of men to
+be framed and conformed to this rule, and overturneth all the reasonings
+of worldly wisdom, and bringeth into captivity the thoughts of the proud
+swelling mind to the obedience of Christ. Neither ought the voice of any
+to take place or be rested upon in the church but the voice of Christ
+alone.
+
+6. The same Lord and our Saviour Jesus Christ, the only Head of the
+church, hath ordained in the New Testament, not only the preaching of the
+word and administration of baptism and the Lord's supper, but also
+ecclesiastical government, distinct and differing from the civil
+government; and it is his will that there be such a government distinct
+from the civil in all his churches everywhere, as well those which live
+under Christian, as those under infidel magistrates, even until the end of
+the world. Heb. xiii. 7, 17; 1 Tim. v. 17, 19; Rom. xii. 8; 1 Cor. xii.
+28; 1 Thess. v. 12; Acts i. 20; Luke xii. 42; 1 Tim. vi. 14; Rev. ii. 25.
+
+7. This ecclesiastical government, distinct from the civil, is from God
+committed, not to the whole body of the church or congregation of the
+faithful, or to be exercised both by officers and people, but to the
+ministers of God's word, together with the elders which are joined with
+them for the care and government of the church, 1 Tim. v. 17. To those,
+therefore, who are over the church in the Lord, belongeth the authority
+and power, and it lieth upon them by their office, according to the rule
+of God's word, to discern and judge betwixt the holy and profane, to give
+diligence for amendment of delinquents, and to purge the church (as much
+as is in them) from scandals, and that not only by inquiring, inspection,
+warning, reproving, and more sharply expostulating, but also by acting in
+the further and more severe parts of ecclesiastical discipline, or
+exercising ecclesiastical jurisdiction, even unto the greatest and
+weightiest censures, where deed is.
+
+8. None that is within the church ought to be without the reach of church
+law, and exempt from ecclesiastical censures; but discipline is to be
+exercised on all the members of the church, without respect or
+consideration of those adhering qualities which use to commend a man to
+other men, such as power, nobility, illustrious descent, and the like: for
+the judgment cannot be right where men are led and moved with these
+considerations. Wherefore, let respect of persons be far from all judges,
+chiefly the ecclesiastical: and if any in the church do so swell in pride,
+that he refuse to be under this discipline, and would have himself to be
+free and exempt from all trial and ecclesiastical judgment, this man's
+disposition is more like the haughtiness of the Roman Pope, than the
+meekness and submissiveness of Christ's sheep.
+
+9. Ecclesiastical censure, moreover, is either proper to be inflicted upon
+the ministers and office-bearers only, or with them common to other
+members of the church: the former consisteth in suspension or deposition
+of ministers from their office (which in the ancient canons is called
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}); the latter consisteth in the greater and lesser
+excommunication (as they speak). Whatsoever in another brother deserveth
+excommunication, the same much more in a minister deserveth
+excommunication: but justly sometimes a minister is to be put from his
+office, and deprived of that power which by ordination was given him,
+against whom, nevertheless, to draw the sword of excommunication, no
+reason doth compel.
+
+10. Sometime also it happeneth that a minister, having fallen into heresy
+or apostacy, or other grievous crimes, if he show tokens of true
+repentance, may be justly received into the communion of the church, whom,
+notwithstanding, it is no way expedient to restore into his former place
+or charge; yea, perhaps it will not be found fit to restore such an one to
+the ministry in another congregation as soon as he is received into the
+bosom of the church; which surely is most agreeable as well to the word of
+God (2 Kings xxiii. 9; Ezek. xliv. 10-14,) as to that ecclesiastical
+discipline, which in some ages after the times of the Apostle was in use.
+
+So true is it that the ministers of the church are liable as well to
+peculiar as to common censures; or that a minister of the church is
+censured one way, and one of the people another way.
+
+11. Ecclesiastical censure, which is not proper to ministers, but common
+to them with other members of the church, is either suspension from the
+Lord's supper (which by others is called the publican's excommunication),
+or the cutting off of a member, which is commonly called excommunication.
+The distinction of this twofold censure (commonly, though not so properly
+passing under the name of the lesser and greater excommunication) is not
+only much approved by the church of Scotland, and the synod now assembled
+at Westminster, but also by the reformed churches of France, the Low
+Countries, and of Poland, as is to be seen in the _Book of the
+Ecclesiastical Discipline of the Reformed Churches in France_, chap. 5,
+art. 9; in the _Harmony of the Belgic Synods_, chap. 14, art. 8, 9; in the
+canons of the general synod of Torn, held in the year 1597.
+
+12. That the distinction of that twofold church censure was allowed also
+by antiquity, it may be sufficiently clear to him who will consult the
+sixty-first canon of the sixth general synod, with the annotations of
+Zonaras and Balsamon; also the thirteenth canon of the eighth synod (which
+is termed the first and second), with the notes of Zonaras; yea, besides,
+even the penitents also themselves of the fourth degree, or {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}, that is, which were in the _consistency_, were suspended from
+the Lord's supper, though as to other things of the same condition with
+the faithful; for, to the communion also of prayers, and so to all
+privileges of ecclesiastical society, the eucharist alone excepted, they
+were thought to have right: so sacred a thing was the eucharist esteemed.
+See also, beside others, Cyprian, book 1, epist. 11; that Dionysius, the
+author of _The Ecclesiastical Hierarchy_, chap. 3, part. 3; Basil.,
+_Epist. to Amphilochius_, can. 4; Ambrose, _De Officiis_, lib. 2, chap.
+27; Augustine, in his book against the Donatists after the Conference,
+cap. 4; Chrysostom, hom. 83, in Matt.; Gregor. the Great, _Epist._, lib.
+2, chap. 65, 66; Walafridus Strabo, _Of Ecclesiastical Matters_, chap. 17.
+
+13. That first and lesser censure by Christ's ordinance is to be inflicted
+on such as have received baptism, and pretend to be true members of the
+church, yet are found unfit and unworthy to communicate in the signs of
+the grace of Christ with the church, whether for their gross ignorance of
+divine things, the law, namely, and gospel, or by reason of scandal,
+either of false doctrine or wicked life. For these causes, therefore, or
+for some one of them, they are to be kept back from the sacrament of the
+Lord's supper (a lawful judicial trial going before) according to the
+interdiction of Christ, forbidding that that which is holy be given to
+dogs, or pearls be cast before swine, Matt. vii. 6; and this censure of
+suspension is to continue till the offenders bring forth fruits worthy of
+repentance.
+
+14. For the asserting and defending of this suspension there is no small
+accession of strength from the nature of the sacrament itself, and the
+institution and end thereof. The word of God indeed is to be preached, as
+well to the ungodly and impenitent, that they may be converted, as to the
+godly and repenting that they may be confirmed; but the sacrament of the
+Lord's supper is by God instituted, not for beginning the work of grace,
+but for nourishing and increasing grace, and therefore no one is to be
+admitted to the Lord's supper who by his life testifieth that he is
+impenitent, and not as yet converted.
+
+15. Indeed, if the Lord had instituted this sacrament, that not only it
+should nourish and cherish faith, and seal the promises of the gospel, but
+also should begin the work of grace in sinners, and give regeneration
+itself as the instrumental cause thereof, verily even the most wicked,
+most unclean, and most unworthy, were to be admitted: but the reformed
+churches do otherwise judge of the nature of this sacrament, which shall
+be abundantly manifest by the gleaning of these following testimonies.
+
+16. The _Scottish Confession_, art. 23. "But we confess that the Lord's
+supper belongs only to those of the household of faith who can try and
+examine themselves, as well in faith as in the duties of faith towards
+their neighbours. Whoso abideth without faith, and in variance with their
+brethren, do at that holy table eat and drink unworthily. Hence it is that
+the pastors in our church do enter on a public and particular examination,
+both of the knowledge, conversation and life, of those who are to be
+admitted to the Lord's table." The _Belgic Confession_, art. 35:--"We
+believe also and confess that our Lord Jesus Christ hath ordained the holy
+sacrament of his supper, that in it he may nourish and uphold them whom he
+hath already regenerated."
+
+17. The _Saxon Confession_, art. 15:--"The Lord willeth that every receiver
+be particularly confirmed by this testimony, so that he may be certified
+that the benefits of the gospel do appertain to himself, seeing the
+preaching is common, and by this testimony, by this receiving, he showeth
+that thou art one of his members, and washed with his blood." And by and
+by:--"Thus, therefore, we instruct the church, that it behoveth them that
+come to the supper to bring with them repentance or conversion, and (faith
+being now kindled in the mediation of the death and resurrection, and the
+benefits of the Son of God) to seek here the confirmation of this faith."
+The very same things are set down, and that in the very same words, in the
+consent of the churches of Poland in the Sendomirian synod, anno 1570,
+art. "of the Lord's supper."
+
+18. The _Bohemian Confession_, art. 11:--"Next our divines teach that the
+sacraments of themselves, or as some say, _ex opere operato_, do not
+confer grace to those who are not first endued with good motions, and
+inwardly quickened by the Holy Spirit, neither do they bestow justifying
+faith, which maketh the soul of man in all things obsequious, trusting and
+obedient to God; for faith must go before (we speak of them of ripe
+years), which quickeneth a man by the work of the Holy Spirit, and putteth
+good motions into the heart." And after:--"But if any come unworthily to
+the sacraments, he is not made by them worthy or clean, but doth only
+bring greater sin and damnation on himself."
+
+19. Seeing, then, in the holy supper, that is, in the receiving the
+sacramental elements (which is here distinguished from the prayers and
+exhortations accompanying that action), the benefits of the gospel are not
+first received, but for them being received are thanks given; neither by
+partaking thereof doth God bestow the very spiritual life, but doth
+preserve, cherish and perfect that life; and seeing the word of God is
+accounted in the manner of letters patent, but sacraments like seals, (as
+rightly the _Helvetian Confession_ saith, chap. 19), it plainly followeth
+that those are to be kept back from the Lord's supper, who by their fruits
+and manners do prove themselves to be ungodly or impenitent, and strangers
+or aliens from all communion with Christ. Nor are the promises of grace
+sealed to any other than those to whom these promises do belong, for
+otherwise the seal annexed should contradict and gainsay the letters
+patent; and by the visible word those should be loosed and remitted, who
+by the audible word are bound and condemned: but this is such an
+absurdity, as that if any would, yet he cannot smooth or heal it with any
+plaster.
+
+20. But as known, impious, and unregenerate persons, have no right to the
+holy table, so also ungodly persons, by reason of a grievous scandal, are
+justly for a time deprived of it; for it is not lawful or allowable that
+the comforts and promises which belong only to such as believe and repent,
+should be sealed unto known unclean persons, and those who walk
+inordinately, whether such as are not yet regenerate, or such as are
+regenerate, but fallen, and not yet restored or risen from their fall. The
+same discipline plainly was shadowed forth under the Old Testament, for
+none of God's people, during their legal pollution, were permitted to
+enter into the tabernacle, or to have access to the solemn sacrifices and
+society of the church; and much more were wicked and notorious offenders
+debarred from the temple, until, by an offering for sin, together with a
+solemn confession thereof, being cleansed, they were reconciled unto God.
+Num. v. 6-8; Lev. v. 1-7; vi. 1-8.
+
+21. Yea that those who were polluted with sins and crimes were reckoned
+among the unclean in the law, Maimonides (_in More Nevoch._, part. 3, ch.
+47,) proveth out of Lev. xx. 3; xviii. 24; Num. xxxv. 33, 34. Therefore
+seeing the shedding of man's blood was rightly esteemed the greatest
+pollution of all, hence it was that as the society of the leprous was
+shunned by the clean, so that the company of murderers by good men was
+most religiously avoided, Lam. iv. 13-15. The same thing is witnessed by
+Ananias the high priest, in Josephus, _Jewish War_, book 4, ch. 5, where
+he saith that those false zealots of that time, bloody men, ought to have
+been restrained from access to the temple, by reason of the pollution of
+murder; yea, as Philo the Jew witnesseth (in his book of the _Offerers of
+Sacrifices_), whosoever were found unworthy and wicked, were by edict
+forbidden to approach the holy threshold.
+
+22. Neither must that be passed by which was noted by Zonaras, book 4, of
+his annals (whereof see also Scaliger agreeing with him, in _Elench.
+Triheres. Nicserrar._, cap. 28), namely, that the Essenes were forbidden
+the holy place, as being heinous and piacular transgressors, and such as
+held other opinions, and did otherwise teach concerning sacrifices than
+according to the law, and observed not the ordinances of Moses, whence it
+proceeded that they sacrificed privately; yea, and also the Essenes
+themselves did thrust away from their congregations those that were
+wicked. Whereof see Drusius, _Of the Three Sects of Jews_, lib. 4, cap.
+22.
+
+23. God verily would not have his temple to be made open to unworthy and
+unclean worshippers; nor was it free for such men to enter into the
+temple. See Nazianzen, _Orat._ 21. The same thing is witnessed and
+declared by divers late writers, such as have been and are more acquainted
+with the Jewish antiquities. Consult the Annotations of Vatablus, and of
+Ainsworth, an English writer, upon Psal. cxviii. 19, 20; also Constantine
+L'Empereur, _Annot. in Cod. Middoth_, cap. 2, p. 44, 45; Cornelius
+Bertramus, _Of the Commonwealth of the Hebrews_, cap. 7; Henry Vorstius,
+_Animadvers. in Pirk. Rab. Eliezer_, p. 169. The same may be proved out of
+Ezek. xxiii. 30, 38; Jer. vii. 9-12; whence also it was that the solemn
+and public society in the temple, had the name of the assembly of the
+righteous, and congregation of saints, Psal. lxxxix. 5, 7; cxi. 1; cxlvii.
+1; hence also is that (Psal. cxviii. 19, 20) of the gates of righteousness
+by which the righteous enter.
+
+24. That which is now driven at, is not that all wicked and unclean
+persons should be utterly excluded from our ecclesiastical societies, and
+so from all hearing of God's word; yea there is nothing less intended: for
+the word of God is the instrument as well of conversion as of
+confirmation, and therefore is to be preached as well to the unconverted
+as to the converted, as well to the repenting as the unrepenting: the
+temple indeed of Jerusalem had special promises, as it were pointing out
+with the finger a communion with God through Christ, 1 Kings viii. 30, 48;
+Dan. vi. 10; 2 Chron. vi. 16; vii. 15, 16. But it is far otherwise with
+our temples, or places of church assemblies, "because our temples contain
+nothing sacramental in them, such as the tabernacle and temple contained,"
+as the most learned Professors of Leyden said rightly in _Synops. Pur.
+Theologiae_, disp. 48, thes. 47.
+
+25. Wherefore the point to be here considered, as that which is now aimed
+at, is this, that howsoever, even under the New Testament, the uncleanness
+of those to whom the word of God is preached be tolerated, yet all such,
+of what estate or condition soever in the church, as are defiled with
+manifest and grievous scandals, and do thereby witness themselves to be
+without the inward and spiritual communion with Christ and the faithful,
+may and are to be altogether discharged from the communion of the Lord's
+supper until they repent and change their manners.
+
+26. Besides, even those to whom it was permitted to go into the holy
+courts of Israel, and to ingratiate themselves into ecclesiastical
+communion, and who did stand between the court of Israel and the outer
+wall, were not therefore to be kept back from hearing the word; for in
+Solomon's porch, and so in the _intermurale_ or court of the Gentiles, the
+gospel was preached, both by Christ, John x. 23, and also by the apostles,
+Acts iii. 11; v. 12, and that of purpose, because of the reason brought by
+Pineda, _Of the things of Solomon_, book v. chap. 19, because a more
+frequent multitude was there, and somewhat larger opportunity of sowing
+the gospel: wherefore to any whomsoever, even heathen people meeting
+there, the Lord would have the word to be preached, who, notwithstanding,
+purging the temple, did not only overthrow the tables of money-changers,
+and chairs of those that sold doves, but also cast forth the buyers and
+sellers themselves, Matt. xxi. 12; for he could not endure either such
+things or such persons in the temple.
+
+27. Although, then, the gospel is to be preached to every creature, the
+Lord in express words commanding the same, Mark xvi. 15, yet not to every
+one is set open an access to the holy supper; it is granted that
+hypocrites do lurk in the church, who hardly can be convicted and
+discovered, much less repelled from the Lord's supper; such therefore are
+to be suffered, till by the fan of judgment the grain be separated from
+the chaff; but those whose wicked deeds or words are known and made
+manifest are altogether to be debarred from partaking those symbols of the
+covenant of the gospel, lest that the name of God be greatly disgraced,
+whilst sins are permitted to be spread abroad in the church unpunished; or
+lest the stewards of Christ, by imparting the signs of the grace of God to
+such as are continuing in the state of impurity and scandal, be partakers
+of their sins. Hitherto of suspension.
+
+28. Excommunication ought not to be proceeded unto except when extreme
+necessity constraineth: but whensoever the soul of the sinner cannot
+otherwise be healed, and that the safety of the church requireth the
+cutting off of this or that member, it behoveth to use this last remedy.
+In the church of Rome, indeed, excommunication hath been turned into
+greatest injustice and tyranny (as the Pharisees abused the casting out of
+the synagogues, which was their excommunication) to the fulfilling of the
+lust of their own minds; yet the ordinance of Christ is not therefore by
+any of the reformed religion to be utterly thrust away and wholly
+rejected. What Protestant knows not that the vassals of Antichrist have
+drawn the Lord's supper into the worst and most pernicious abuses, as also
+the ordination of ministers, and other ordinances of the gospel? Yet who
+will say that things necessary (whether the necessity be that of command,
+or that of the means or end) are to be taken away because of the abuse?
+
+29. They, therefore, who with an high hand do persevere in their
+wickedness, after foregoing admonitions stubbornly despised or carelessly
+neglected, are justly, by excommunication in the name of the Lord Jesus
+Christ, cut off and cast out from the society of the faithful, and are
+pronounced to be cast out from the church, until being filled with shame
+and cast down, they shall return again to a more sound mind, and by
+confession of their sin and amendment of their lives, shall show tokens of
+repentance, Matt, xviii. 16-18; 1 Cor. v. 13, which places are also
+alleged in the Confession of Bohemia, art. 8, to prove that the
+excommunication of the impenitent and stubborn, whose wickedness is known,
+is commanded of the Lord: but if stubborn heretics or unclean persons be
+not removed or cast out from the church, therein do the governors of the
+church sin, and are found guilty, Rev. ii. 14, 20.
+
+30. But that all abuse and corruption in ecclesiastical government may be
+either prevented and avoided, or taken away, or lest the power of the
+church, either by the ignorance or unskilfulness of some ministers here
+and there, or also by too much heat and fervour of mind, should run out
+beyond measure or bounds, or contrariwise, being shut up within straiter
+limits than is fitting, should be made unprofitable, feeble, or of none
+effect,--Christ, the most wise lawgiver of his church, hath foreseen and
+made provision to prevent all such evils which he did foresee were to
+arise, and hath prepared and prescribed for them intrinsical and
+ecclesiastical remedies, and those also in their kind (if lawfully and
+rightly applied) both sufficient and effectual: some whereof he hath most
+expressly propounded in his word, and some he hath left to be drawn from
+thence by necessary consequence.
+
+31. Therefore, by reason of the danger of that which is called _clavis
+errans_, or a wrong key; and that it may not be permitted to particular
+churches to err or sin licentiously, and lest any man's cause be
+overthrown and perish, who in a particular church had perhaps the same men
+both his adversaries and his judges; also that common business, which do
+belong to many churches, together with the more weighty and difficult
+controversies (the deciding whereof in the consistories of praticular
+churches is not safe to be adventured upon) may be handled and determined
+by a common council of presbyteries; finally, that the governors of
+particular churches may impart help mutually one to another against the
+cunning and subtile enemies of the truth, and may join their strength
+together (such as it is) by an holy combination, and that the church may
+be as a camp of an army well ordered, lest while every one striveth singly
+all of them be subdued and overcome, or lest by reason of the scarcity of
+prudent and godly counsellors (in the multitude of whom is safety) the
+affairs of the church be undone: for all these considerations particular
+churches must be subordinate to classical presbyteries and synods.
+
+32. Wherefore it is not lawful to particular churches, or, as commonly
+they are called, parochial, either to decline the authority of classes or
+synods, where they are lawfully settled, or may be had (much less to
+withdraw themselves from that authority, if they have once acknowledged
+it), or to refuse such lawful ordinances or decrees of the classes or
+synods as, being agreeable to the word of God, are with authority imposed
+upon them. Acts xv. 2, 6, 22-24, 28, 29; xvi. 4.
+
+33. Although synods assemble more seldom, classes and consistories of
+particular churches more frequently, yet that synods, both provincial and
+national, assemble at set and ordinary times, as well as classes and
+parochial consistories, is very expedient, and for the due preservation of
+church policy and discipline, necessary. Sometimes, indeed, it is
+expedient they be assembled occasionally, that the urgent necessity of the
+church may be the more speedily provided for, namely, when such a business
+happeneth, which, without great danger, cannot be put off till the
+appointed time of the synod.
+
+34. But that, besides occasional synods, ordinary synods be kept at set
+times, is most profitable, not only that they may discuss and determine
+the more difficult ecclesiastical causes coming before them, whether by
+the appeal of some person aggrieved, or by the hesitation or doubting of
+inferior assemblies (for such businesses very often fall out), but also
+that the state of the churches whereof they have the care, being more
+certainly and frequently searched and known, if there be anything wanting
+or amiss in their doctrine, discipline or manners, or anything worthy of
+punishment, the slothful labourers in the vineyard of the Lord may be made
+to shake off the spirit of slumber and slothfulness, and be stirred up to
+the attending and fulfilling more diligently their calling, and not
+suffered any longer to sleep and snore in their office; the stragglers and
+wanderers may be reduced to the way; the untoward and stiff-necked, which
+scarce, or very hardly, suffer the yoke of discipline, as also unquiet
+persons, who devise new and hurtful things, may be reduced to order:
+finally, whatsoever doth hinder the more quick and efficacious course of
+the gospel may be discovered and removed.
+
+35. It is too, too manifest (alas for it!) that there are those who with
+unwearied diligence, do most carefully labour that they may oppress the
+liberties and rights of synods, and may take away from them all liberty of
+consulting of things and matters ecclesiastical, at least of determining
+thereof (for they well know how much the union and harmony of churches may
+make against their designs): but so much the more it concerneth the
+orthodox churches to know, defend and preserve, this excellent liberty
+granted to them by divine right, and so to use it, that imminent dangers,
+approaching evils, urging grievances, scandals growing up, schisms rising,
+heresies creeping in, errors spreading, and strifes waxing hot, may be
+corrected and taken away, to the glory of God, and the edification and
+peace of the church.
+
+36. Beside provincial and national synods, an oecumenical (so called from
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}, that is from the habitable world,) or more truly, a general,
+or, if you will, an universal synod, if so it lie free and rightly
+constituted, and no other commissioners but orthodox churches be admitted
+(for what communion is there of light with darkness, of righteousness with
+unrighteousness, or of the temple of God with idols); such a synod is of
+special utility, peradventure also such a synod is to be hoped for, surely
+it is to be wished that, for defending the orthodox faith, both against
+Popery and other heresies, as also for propagating it to those who are
+without, especially the Jews, a more strait and more firm consociation may
+be entered into. For the unanimity of all the churches, as in evil it is
+of all things most hurtful, so on the contrary side, in good it is most
+pleasant, most profitable, and most effectual.
+
+37. Unto the universal synod also (when it may be had) is to be referred
+the judgment of controversies, not of all, but of those which are
+_controversiae juris_, controversies of right; neither yet of all these,
+but of the chief and most weighty controversies of the orthodox faith, or
+of the most hard and unusual cases of conscience. Of the controversies of
+fact there is another and different consideration to be had; for besides
+that it would be a great inconvenience that plaintives, persons accused,
+and witnesses, be drawn from the most remote churches to the general or
+universal council, the visible communion itself of all the churches (on
+which the universal council is built, and whereupon, as on a foundation,
+it leaneth) is not so much of company, fellowship, or conversation, as of
+religion and doctrine. All true churches of the world do indeed profess
+the same true religion and faith, but there is beside this a certain
+commixture and conjunction of the churches of the same nation, as to a
+more near fellowship, and some acquaintance, conversing and companying
+together, which cannot be said of all the churches throughout the
+habitable world.
+
+38. And for this cause, as in doctrinal controversies, which are handled
+by theologists and casuists, and in those which belong to the common state
+of the orthodox churches, the national synod is subordinate and subjected
+to the universal lawfully-constituted synod, and from the national to the
+oecumenical synod (when there is a just and weighty cause) an appeal is
+open: so there is no need that the appeals of those who complain of injury
+done to them through the exercise of discipline in this or that church,
+should go beyond the bounds of the national synod; but it is most
+agreeable to reason that they should rest and acquiesce within those
+bounds and borders; and that the ultimate judgment of such mutters be in
+the national synod, unless the thing itself be so hard and of so great
+moment, that the knot be justly thought worthy of a greater decider; in
+which case the controversy which is carried to the universal synod is
+rather of an abstract general theological proposition than of the
+particular or individual case.
+
+39. Furthermore, the administration of the ecclesiastic power in
+consistories, classes and synods, doth not at all tend to weaken in
+anywise, hurt or diminish, the authority of the civil magistrate, much
+less to take it away or destroy it; yea, rather, by it a most profitable
+help cometh to the magistrate, forasmuch as by the bond of religion men's
+consciences are more straitly tied unto him. There has been, indeed,
+fantastical men, who, under pretence and cloak of Christian liberty, would
+abolish and cast out laws and judgments, orders also, degrees and honours,
+out of the commonwealth, and have been bold to reckon the function of the
+magistrate armed with the sword among evil things and unlawful: but the
+reformed churches do renounce and detest these dreams, and do most
+harmoniously and most willingly confess and acknowledge it to be God's
+will that the world be governed by laws and policy, and that he himself
+hath appointed the civil magistrate, and hath delivered to him the sword
+to the protection and praise of good men, but for punishment and revenge
+on the evil, that by this bridle, men's vices and faults may be
+restrained, whether these are committed against the first or second table.
+
+40. The reformed churches believe also, and openly confess, the power and
+authority of emperors over their empires, of kings over their kingdoms, of
+princes and dukes over their dominions, and of other magistrates or states
+over their commonwealths and cities, to be the ordinances of God himself
+appointed as well to the manifestation of his own glory, as to the
+singular profit of mankind: and withal, that by reason of the will of God
+himself, revealed in his word, we must not only suffer and be content that
+those do rule which are set over their own territories, whether by
+hereditary or by elective right, but also to love them, fear them, and
+with all reverence and honour embrace them as the ambassadors and
+ministers of the most high and good God, being in his stead, and preferred
+for the good of their subjects, to pour out prayers for them, to pay
+tributes to them, and in all business of the commonwealth which is not
+against the word of God, to obey their laws and edicts.
+
+41. The orthodox churches believe also, and do willingly acknowledge, that
+every lawful magistrate, being by God himself constituted the keeper and
+defender of both tables of the law, may and ought first and chiefly to
+take care of God's glory, and (according to his place, or in his manner
+and way) to preserve religion when pure, and to restore it when decayed
+and corrupted: and also to provide a learned and godly ministry, schools
+also and synods, as likewise to restrain and punish as well atheists,
+blasphemers, heretics and schismatics, as the violaters of justice and
+civil peace.
+
+42. Wherefore the opinion of those sectaries of this age is altogether to
+be disallowed, who, though otherwise insinuating themselves craftily into
+the magistrate's favour, do deny unto him the authority and right of
+restraining heretics and schismatics, and do hold and maintain that such
+persons, how much soever hurtful and pernicious enemies to true religion
+and to the church, yet are to be tolerated by the magistrate, if so be he
+conceive them to be such as no way violate the laws of the commonwealth,
+and in nowise disturb the civil peace.
+
+43. Yet the civil power and the ecclesiastical ought not by any means to
+be confounded or mixed together. Both powers are indeed from God, and
+ordained for his glory, and both to be guided by his word, and both are
+comprehended under that precept, "Honour thy father and thy mother," so
+that men ought to obey both civil magistrates and ecclesiastical governors
+in the Lord; to both powers their proper dignity and authority is to be
+maintained and preserved in force: to both also is some way intrusted the
+keeping of both tables of the law, also both the one and the other doth
+exercise some jurisdiction, and giveth sentence of judgment in an external
+court or judicatory: but these and other things of like sort, in which
+they agree notwithstanding, yet by marvellous vast differences are they
+distinguished the one from the other, and the rights of both remain
+distinct, and that eight manner of ways, which it shall not be amiss here
+to add, that unto each of these administrations, its own set bounds may be
+the better maintained.
+
+44. _First_, therefore, they are differenced the one from the other, in
+respect of the very foundation and the institution: for the political or
+civil power is grounded upon the law of nature itself, and for that cause
+it is common to infidels with Christians; the power ecclesiastical
+dependeth immediately upon the positive law of Christ alone: that
+belongeth to the universal dominion of God the Creator over all nations;
+but this unto the special and economical kingdom of Christ the Mediator,
+which he exerciseth in the church alone, and which is not of this world.
+
+45. The _second_ difference is in the object, or matter about which: the
+power politic or civil is occupied about the outward man, and civil or
+earthly things,--about war, peace, conservation of justice, and good order
+in the commonwealth; also about the outward business or external things of
+the church, which are indeed necessary to the church, or profitable, as
+touching the outward man, yet not properly and purely spiritual, for they
+do not reach unto the soul, but only to the external state and condition
+of the ministers and members of the church.
+
+46. For the better understanding whereof it is to be observed, that so far
+as the ministers and members of the church are citizens, subjects, or
+members of the commonwealth, it is in the power of the magistrate to
+judge, determine, and give sentence, concerning the disposing of their
+bodies or goods; as also concerning the maintenance of the poor, the sick,
+the banished, and of others in the church who are afflicted; to regulate
+(so far as concerneth the civil order) marriages, burials, and other
+circumstances which are common both to holy, and also to honest civil
+societies; to afford places fit for holy assemblies, and other external
+helps by which the sacred matters of the Lord may be more safely,
+commodiously, and more easily in the church performed, to remove the
+external impediments of divine worship or of ecclesiastical peace, and to
+repress those who exalt themselves against the true church and her
+ministers, and do raise up trouble against them.
+
+47. The matter may further be thus illustrated, there is almost the like
+respect and consideration of the magistrate as he is occupied about the
+outward things of the church, and of the ecclesiastic ministry as it is
+occupied about the inward or spiritual part of civil government, that is,
+about those things which in the government of the commonwealth belong to
+the conscience. It is one thing to govern the commonwealth, and to make
+political and civil laws, another thing to interpret the word of God, and
+out of it to show the magistrate his duty, to wit, how he ought to govern
+the commonwealth, and in what manner he ought to use the sword. The former
+is proper and peculiar to the magistrate (neither doth the ministry
+intermeddle or entangle itself into such businesses), but the latter is
+contained within the office of the ministers.
+
+48. For to that end also in the holy Scripture profitable, to show which
+is the best manner of governing a commonwealth, and that the magistrate,
+as being God's minister, may by this guiding star be so directed, as that
+he may execute the parts of his office according to the will of God, and
+may perfectly be instructed to every good work; yet the minister is not
+said properly to treat of civil businesses, but of the scandals which
+arise about them, or in the cases of conscience which occur in the
+administration of the commonwealth, so also the magistrate is not properly
+said to be exercised about the spiritual things of the church, but rather
+about those external things which adhere unto and accompany the spiritual
+things.
+
+49. And in such external matters of the church, although all magistrates
+will not, yet all, yea even heathen magistrates, may and ought to aid and
+help the church: whence it is that by the command of God prayers are to be
+made also for an heathen magistrate, that the faithful under them may live
+a quiet life, with all godliness and honesty, 1 Tim. ii. 1, 2.
+
+50. Unto the external things of the church belongeth, not only the
+correction of heretics and other troublers of the church, but also that
+civil order and way of convocating and calling together synods which is
+proper to the magistrate; for the magistrate ought by his authority and
+power both to establish the rights and liberties of synods assembling
+together at times appointed by the known and received law, and to indict
+and gather together synods occasionally, as often as the necessity of the
+church shall require the same. Not that all or any power to consult or
+determine of ecclesiastic or spiritual matters doth flow or spring from
+the magistrate as head of the church under Christ, but because in those
+things pertaining to the outward man, the church needeth the magistrate's
+aid and support.
+
+51. So that the magistrate calleth together synods, not as touching those
+things which are proper to synods, but in respect of the things which are
+common to synods with other meetings and civil public assemblies, that is,
+not as they are assemblies in the name of Christ, to treat of matters
+spiritual, but as they are public assemblies within his territories; for
+to the end that public conventions may be kept in any territory, the
+license of the lord of that place ought to be desired. In synods,
+therefore, a respect of order, as well civil as ecclesiastical, is to be
+had; and because of this civil order, outward defence, better
+accommodation, together with safe access and recess, the consent and
+commandment of him who is appointed to take care of, and defend human
+order, doth intervene.
+
+52. Moreover, when the church is rent asunder by unhappy and lamentable
+schisms, while they who have raised the troubles, and given cause for the
+solemn gathering of a synod (whether by their heresy, or schism, or
+tyranny, or any other fault of others), use to place the great strength
+and safeguard of their cause in declining and fleeing the trial and
+sentence of a free synod as being formidable to them, who seeth not that
+they cannot be drawn to a public and judicial trial, nor other disobedient
+persons be compelled to obedience, without the magistrate's public mandate
+and help.
+
+53. The object of ecclesiastical power is not the same with the object of
+the civil power, but much differing from it; for the ecclesiastical power
+doth determine and appoint nothing concerning men's bodies, goods,
+dignities, civil rights, but is employed only about the inward man or the
+soul; not that it can search the hearts or judge of the secrets of the
+conscience, which is in the power of God alone: yet notwithstanding it
+hath for its proper object those externals which are purely spiritual, and
+do belong properly and most nearly to the spiritual good of the soul;
+which also are termed {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI AND OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, _the inward things of the
+church_.
+
+54. Those things, then, wherein the ecclesiastical power is exercised, are
+the preaching of the word, the administration of sacraments, public prayer
+and thanksgiving, the catechising and instructing of children and ignorant
+persons, the examination of those who are to come to the holy communion,
+the ecclesiastical discipline, the ordination of ministers, and the
+abdication, deposing, and degrading of them (if they become like unsavoury
+salt), the deciding and determining of controversies of faith and cases of
+conscience, canonical constitutions concerning the treasury of the church
+and collections of the faithful, as also concerning ecclesiastical rites
+or indifferent things which pertain to the keeping of decency and order in
+the church, according to the general rules of Christian love and prudence
+contained in the word of God.
+
+55. It is true that about the same things the civil power is occupied, as
+touching the outward man, or the outward disposing of divine things in
+this or that dominion, as was said, not as they are spiritual and
+evangelical ordinances piercing into the conscience itself, but the object
+of the power ecclesiastical is a thing merely and purely spiritual; and in
+so far as it is spiritual (for even that jurisdiction ecclesiastical which
+is exercised in an outward court or judicatory, and which inflicteth
+public censures, forbiddeth from the use of the holy supper, and excludeth
+from the society of the church) doth properly concern the inward man, or
+the repentance and salvation of the soul.
+
+56. Surely the faithful and godly ministers, although they could do it
+unchallenged and uncontrolled, and were therein allowed by the magistrate
+(as in the prelatical times it was) yet would not usurp the power of life
+and death, or judge and determine concerning men's honours, goods,
+inheritance, division of families, or other civil businesses, seeing they
+well know these things to be heterogeneous to their office; but as they
+ought not to entangle themselves with the judging of civil causes, so if
+they should be negligent and slothful in their own office, they shall in
+that be no less culpable.
+
+57. To the object also of ecclesiastical power belongeth the assembling of
+synods, so far as they are spiritual assemblies proper to the church, and
+assembled in the Holy Ghost; for being so considered, the governors of
+churches, after the example of the apostles and presbyters, Acts xv., in a
+manifest danger of the church, ought to use their own right of meeting
+together and convening, that the churches endangered may be relieved and
+supported.
+
+58. _Thirdly_, These powers are differenced in respect of their forms, and
+that three ways: for, first, the civil power, although in respect of God
+it be ministerial, yet in respect of the subjects it is lordly and
+magisterial. Ecclesiastical power is indeed furnished with authority, yet
+that authority is liker the fatherly than the kingly authority; yea also
+it is purely ministerial, much less can it be lawful to ministers of the
+church to bear dominion over the flock.
+
+59. Emperors, kings, and other magistrates are indeed appointed fathers of
+the country, but they are withal lords of their people and subjects: not
+as if it were permitted to them to bear rule and command at their own will
+and as they list (for they are the ministers of God for the good and
+profit of the subjects), yet it belongs to their power truly and properly
+to exercise dominion, to hold principality, to proceed imperiously. It is
+indeed the duty of ministers and rulers of the church to oversee, to feed
+as shepherds, to correct and rectify, to bear the keys, to be stewards in
+the house of Christ, but in nowise to be lords over the house, or to
+govern as lords, or lord-like to rule; yea, in brief, this is the
+difference between the civil magistrate and the ecclesiastical ministry,
+in respect of those who are committed to their trust, that the lot of the
+former is to be served or ministered unto, the lot of the latter to
+minister or serve.
+
+60. Now we have one only Lord who governs our souls, neither is it
+competent to man, but to God alone, to have power and authority over
+consciences. But the Lord hath appointed his own stewards over his own
+family, that according to his commandment they may give to every one their
+allowance or portion, and to dispense his mysteries faithfully; and to
+them he hath delivered the keys, or power of letting into his house, or
+excluding out of his house those whom he himself will have let in or shut
+out. Matt. xvi. 19; and xviii. 18; Luke xii. 42; 1 Cor. iv. 1; Tit. i. 7.
+
+61. Next, the civil power is endued with authority of compelling; but it
+belongs not to the ministry to compel the disobedient. If any compulsion
+be in or about ecclesiastical matters, it is adventitious from without, to
+wit, from the help and assistance of the magistrate, not from the nature
+of ecclesiastical power, from which it is very heterogeneous; and,
+therefore, if any suspended or excommunicate person should be found who
+shall be so stiff-necked, and so impudent, that at once he cast off all
+shame, and make no account at all of those censures, but scorn and contemn
+the same, or peradventure shall insolently or proudly obtrude himself upon
+the sacrament, or being also filled with devilish malice do more and more
+contradict and blaspheme, the ecclesiastical ministry in such cases hath
+nothing more to do by way of jurisdiction: but the magistrate hath in
+readiness a compelling jurisdiction and external force, whereby such
+stubborn, rebellious, and undaunted pride may be externally repressed.
+
+62. Last of all, the power of the magistrate worketh only politically or
+civilly, according to the nature of the sceptre or sword, maketh and
+guardeth civil laws, which sometimes also he changeth or repealeth, and
+other things of that kind he effecteth with a secular power: but the
+ecclesiastical power dealeth spiritually, and only in the name of our Lord
+Jesus Christ, and by authority intrusted or received from him alone:
+neither is exercised without prayer or calling on the name of God; nor,
+lastly, doth it use any other than spiritual weapons.
+
+63. The same sin, therefore, in the same man may be punished one way by
+the civil, another way by the ecclesiastical power; by the civil power
+under the formality of a crime, with corporal or pecuniary punishment, by
+the ecclesiastical power, under the notion and nature of scandal, with a
+spiritual censure, even as also the same civil question is one way
+deliberate upon and handled by the magistrate in the senate or place of
+judgment, another way by the minister of the church, in the presbytery or
+synod; by the magistrate, so far as it pertaineth to the government of the
+commonwealth, by the minister, as far as it respects the conscience; for
+the ecclesiastical ministry also is exercised about civil things
+spiritually, in so far as it teacheth and admonisheth the magistrate out
+of the word of God what is best and most acceptable unto God; or as it
+reproveth freely unjust judgments, unjust wars, and the like, and out of
+the Scripture threateneth the wrath of God to be revealed against all
+unrighteousness of men: so also is the magistrate said to be occupied
+civilly about spiritual things.
+
+64. Therefore all the actions of the civil magistrate, even when he is
+employed about ecclesiastical matters, are of their own nature and
+essentially civil, he punisheth externally idolaters, blasphemers,
+sacrilegious persons, heretics, profaners of holy things, and according to
+the nature and measure of the sin he condemneth to death or banishment,
+forfeiture of goods, or imprisonment; he guardeth and underproppeth
+ecclesiastical canons with civil authority, giveth a place of habitation
+to the church in his territory, restraineth or expelleth the insolent and
+untamed disturbers of the church.
+
+65. He taketh care also for maintaining the ministers and schools, and
+supplieth the temporal necessities of God's servants; by his command
+assembleth synods, when there is need of them; and summoneth, calleth out,
+and draws to trial the unwilling, which without the magistrate's strength
+and authority cannot be done, as hath been already said; he maketh synods
+also safe and secure, and in a civil way presideth or moderateth in them
+(if it seem so good to him) either by himself or by a substitute
+commissioner: in all which the power of the magistrate, though occupied
+about spiritual things, is not for all that spiritual, but civil.
+
+66. _Fourthly_, They differ in the end. The immediate nearest end of civil
+power is, that the good of the commonwealth may be provided for and
+procured, whether it be, in time of peace, according to the rules of law
+and counsel of judges, or in time of war, according to the rules of
+military prudence, and so the temporal safety of the subjects may be
+procured, and that external peace and civil liberty may be preserved, and,
+being lost, may be again restored.
+
+67. But the chiefest and last end of civil government is, the glory of God
+the Creator, namely, that those who do evil, being by a superior power
+restrained or punished, and those who do good getting praise of the same,
+the subjects so much the more may shun impiety and injustice, and that
+virtue, justice, and the moral law of God (as touching those eternal
+duties of both tables, unto which all the posterity of Adam are obliged)
+may remain in strength and flourish.
+
+68. But whereas the Christian magistrate doth wholly devote himself to the
+promoting of the gospel and kingdom of Christ, and doth direct and bend
+all the might and strength of his authority to that end: this proceedeth
+not from the nature of his office or function, which is common to him with
+an infidel magistrate, but from the influence of his common Christian
+calling into his particular vocation.
+
+69. For every member of the church (and so also the faithful and godly
+magistrate) ought to refer and order his particular vocation, faculty,
+ability, power and honour, to this end, that the kingdom of Christ may be
+propagated and promoted, and the true religion be cherished and defended:
+so that the advancement of the gospel, and of all the ordinances of the
+gospel, is indeed the end of the godly magistrate, not of a magistrate
+simply: or (if ye will rather) it is not the end of the office itself, but
+of him who doth execute the same piously.
+
+70. But the end of ecclesiastical power, yea, the end as well of the
+ministry itself as of the godly minister, is, that the kingdom of Christ
+may be set forward; that the paths of the Lord be made straight; that his
+holy mysteries may be kept pure; that stumblingblocks may be removed out
+of the church, lest a little leaven leaven the whole lump, or lest one
+sick or scabbed sheep infect the whole flock; that the faithful may so
+walk as it becometh the gospel of Christ, and that the wandering sheep of
+Christ may be converted and brought back to the sheepfold.
+
+71. And seeing this power is given of the Lord not to destruction but to
+edification, therefore this same scope is propounded in excommunication
+(which is the greatest and last of ecclesiastical censures), namely, that
+the soul of an offending brother may be gained to Christ, and that, being
+stricken with fear, and the stubborn sinner filled with shame, may by the
+grace of God be humbled, and may (as a brand plucked out of the fire) be
+snatched out of the snare of the devil, and may repent unto salvation; at
+least the rest may turn away from those which are branded with such a
+censure, lest the soul-infection do creep and spread further.
+
+72. _Fifthly_, They are distinguished by the effect. The effect of civil
+power is either proper, or by way of redundance. The proper effect is the
+safety temporal of the commonwealth, external tranquillity, the fruition
+of civil liberty, and of all things which are necessary to the civil
+society of men: the effect by way of redundance is the good of the church,
+to wit, in so far as, by execution of justice and good laws, some
+impediments that usually hinder and disturb the course of the gospel, are
+avoided or taken away.
+
+73. For by how much the more faithfully the magistrate executeth his
+office in punishing the wicked, and cherishing and encouraging good men,
+taking away those things which withstand the gospel, and punishing or
+driving away the troublers and subverters of the church,--so much the more
+the orthodox faith and godliness are reverenced and had in
+estimation,--sins are hated and feared. Finally, All the subjects contained
+(as much as concerneth the outward man) within the lists of God's law,
+whence, also, by consequence, it happeneth, by God's blessing, that the
+church is defiled with fewer scandals, and doth obtain the more freedom
+and peace.
+
+74. But the proper effect of the ecclesiastical power, or keys of the
+kingdom of heaven is wholly spiritual; for the act of binding and loosing,
+of retaining and remitting sins, doth reach to the soul and conscience
+itself (which cannot be said of the act of the civil power): and as unjust
+excommunication is void, so ecclesiastical censure, being inflicted by the
+ministers of Christ and his stewards according to his will, is ratified in
+heaven (Matt, xviii. 18), and therefore ought to be esteemed and
+acknowledged in like manner as inflicted by Christ himself.
+
+75. _Sixthly_, They are also differenced in respect of the subjects. The
+politic power is committed sometimes to one, sometimes to more, sometime
+by right of election, sometime by right of succession; but the
+ecclesiastical power is competent to none under the New Testament by the
+right of succession, but he who hath it must be called by God and the
+church to it; neither was it given by Christ to one, either pastor or
+elder, much less to a prelate, but _to the church_, that is, to the
+consistory of presbyters. It is confessed, indeed, and who can be ignorant
+of it, that the power, as they call it, of order, doth belong to
+particular ministers, and is by each of them apart lawfully exercised. But
+that power which is commonly called of jurisdiction is committed not to
+one, but to the unity, that is, to a consistory; therefore ecclesiastical
+censure ought not to be inflicted but "by many," 2 Cor. ii. 6.
+
+76. _Seventhly_, They differ as touching the correlative. God hath
+commanded, that unto the civil power every soul, or all members of the
+commonwealth, of what condition and estate soever, be subject; for what
+have we to do with the Papists, who will have them whom they call the
+clergy or ecclesiastical persons, to be free from the yoke of the civil
+magistrate? The ecclesiastical power extends itself to none other subjects
+than unto those which are called brethren, or members of the church.
+
+77. _Eighthly_, There remaineth another difference in respect of the
+distinct and divided exercise of authority, for either power ceasing from
+its duty, or remitting punishment, that doth not (surely it ought not)
+prejudice the exercise of the other power, namely, if the magistrate cease
+to do his duty, or do neglect to punish, with secular punishment, those
+malefactors who, by profession, are church members nevertheless, it is in
+the power of the governors of the church, by the bridle of ecclesiastical
+discipline, to curb such men; yea also, by virtue of their office, they
+are bound to do it, and on the other part, the magistrate may and ought to
+punish in life and limb, honours or goods, notwithstanding of the
+offender's repentance or reconciliation with the church.
+
+78. Therefore, the one sword being put up in the scabbard, it is free, and
+often necessary, to draw the other. Neither power is bound to cast out or
+receive him whom the other doth cast forth or receive the reason whereof
+is, because the ecclesiastical ministry doth chiefly respect the
+repentance to salvation, and gaining of the sinner's soul, wherefore it
+also embraceth all kinds of wicked men repenting, and receiveth them into
+the bosom of the church; the magistrate proposeth to himself another and
+much differing scope, for even repenting offenders are by him punished,
+both that justice and the laws may be satisfied, as also to terrify
+others,--hence it is that absolution from ecclesiastic censure freeth not
+at all the delinquent from civil judgment and the external sword.
+
+79. Seeing, then, there are so many and so great differences of both
+offices, and seeing also that the function of ministers and elders of the
+church is not at all contained in the office of the magistrate, neither,
+on the other part, is this comprehended within that, magistrates shall no
+less sin in usurping ecclesiastical power, ministering holy things,
+ordaining ministers, or exercising discipline ecclesiastical, than
+ministers should sin in rushing into the borders of the magistrate, and in
+thrusting themselves into his calling.
+
+80. Neither are those powers more mingled one with another, or less
+distinguished, where the magistrate is a Christian than where he is an
+infidel, for as in a believing father, and in an infidel father, the
+rights of a father are the same, so in a Christian magistrate, and in an
+infidel magistrate, the rights of magistrates are the same; so that to the
+magistrate converted to the Christian faith there is no accession of new
+right, or increase of civil power, although being endued with true faith
+and piety, he is made more fit and willing to the undergoing of his office
+and the doing of his duty.
+
+81. So, then, the word of God and the law of Christ, which by so evident
+difference separateth and distinguisheth ecclesiastical government from
+the civil, forbiddeth the Christian magistrate to enter upon or usurp the
+ministry of the word and sacraments, or the judicial dispensing of the
+keys of the kingdom of heaven, to invade the church government, or to
+challenge to himself the right of both swords, spiritual and corporal; but
+if any magistrate (which God forbid) should dare to arrogate to himself so
+much, and to enlarge his skirts so far, the church shall then straightway
+be constrained to complain justly, and cry out, that though the Pope is
+changed, yet popedom remaineth still.
+
+82. It is unlawful, moreover, to a Christian magistrate to withstand the
+practice and execution of ecclesiastical discipline (whether it be that
+which belongs to a particular church, or the matter be carried to a class
+or synod). Now the magistrate withstandeth the ecclesiastic discipline,
+either by prohibitions and unjust laws, or, by his evil example, stirring
+up and inciting others to the contempt thereof, or to the trampling it
+under foot.
+
+83. Surely the Christian magistrate (if at any time he give any grievous
+scandal to the church), seeing he also is a member of the church, ought
+nowise disdain to submit himself to the power of the keys; neither is this
+to be marvelled at, for even as the office of the minister of the church
+is nowise subordinate and subjected to the civil power, but the person of
+the minister, as he is a member of the commonwealth, is subject thereto,
+so the civil power itself, or the magistrate, as a magistrate, is not
+subjected to ecclesiastical power; yet that man, who is a magistrate,
+ought (as he is a member of the church) to be under the church's censure
+of his manners, after the example of the emperor Theodosius, unless he
+will despise and set at nought ecclesiastical discipline, and indulge the
+swelling pride of the flesh.
+
+84. If any man should again object that the magistrate is not indeed to
+resist ecclesiastical government, yet that the abuses thereof are to be
+corrected and taken away by him, the answer is ready. In the worst and
+most troublesome times, or in the decayed and troubled estate of things,
+when the ordinance of God in the church is violently turned into tyranny,
+to the treading down of true religion, and to the oppressing of the
+professors thereof, and when nothing almost is sound or whole, divers
+things are yielded to be lawful to godly magistrates, which are not
+ordinarily lawful for them, that so to extraordinary diseases
+extraordinary remedies may be applied. So also the magistrate abusing his
+power unto tyranny, and making havoc of all, it is lawful to resist him by
+some extraordinary ways and means, which are not ordinarily to be allowed.
+
+85. Yet ordinarily, and by common or known law and right in settled
+churches, if any man have recourse to the magistrate to complain, that,
+through abuse of ecclesiastical discipline, injury is done to him, or if
+any sentence of the pastors and elders of the church, whether concerning
+faith or discipline, do displease or seem unjust unto the magistrate
+himself, it is not for that cause lawful to draw those ecclesiastical
+causes to a civil tribunal, or to bring in a kind of political or civil
+popedom.
+
+86. What then? Shall it be lawful ordinarily for ministers and elders to
+do what they list? Or shall the governors in the churches, glorying in the
+law, by their transgression dishonour God? God forbid. For first, if they
+shall trespass in anything against the magistrate or municipal laws,
+whether by intermeddling in judging of civil causes, or otherwise
+disturbing the peace and order of the commonwealth, they are liable to
+civil trial and judgments, and it is in the power of the magistrate to
+restrain and punish them.
+
+87. Again, it hath been before showed, that to ecclesiastical evils
+ecclesiastical remedies are appointed and fitted, for the church is, no
+less than the commonwealth, through the grace of God, sufficient to itself
+in reference unto her own end, and as in the commonwealth, so in the
+church, the error of inferior judgments and assemblies, or their evil
+government, is to be corrected by superior judgments and assemblies, and
+so still by them of the same order, lest one order be confounded with
+another, or one government be intermingled with another government. What
+shall now the adversaries of ecclesiastical power object here, which those
+who admit not the yoke of the magistrate may not be ready, in like manner,
+to transfer against the civil judicatories and government of the
+commonwealth, seeing it happeneth sometimes that the commonwealth is no
+less ill governed than the church?
+
+88. If any man shall prosecute the argument, and say that yet no remedy is
+here showed which may be applied to the injustice or error of a national
+synod, surely he stumbleth against the same stone, seeing he weigheth not
+the matter with an equal balance, for the same may, in like sort, fall
+back and be cast upon parliaments, or any supreme senate of a
+commonwealth, for who seeth not the judgment of the supreme civil senate
+to be nothing more infallible, yea, also, in matters of faith and
+ecclesiastical discipline, more apt and prone to error (as being less
+accustomed to sacred studies) than the judgment of the national synod?
+What medicines then, or what sovereign plasters shall be had, which may be
+fit for the curing and healing of the errors and miscarriages of the
+supreme magistrates and senate? The very like, and beside all this, other
+and more effectual medicines by which the errors of national synods may be
+healed, are possible to be had.
+
+89. There wanteth not a divine medicine and sovereign balm in Gilead, for
+although the popish opinion of the infallibility of counsels be worthily
+rejected and exploded, yet it is not in vain that Christ hath promised he
+shall be present with an assembly which indeed and in truth meeteth in his
+name with such an assembly verily he useth to be present, by a spiritual
+aid and assistance of his own Spirit, to uphold the falling, or to raise
+up the fallen. Whence it is that divers times the errors of former synods
+are discovered and amended by the latter; sometimes, also, the second or
+afterthoughts of one and the same synod are the wiser and the better.
+
+90. Furthermore, the line of ecclesiastical subordination is longer and
+further stretched than the line of civil subordination; for a national
+synod must be subordinate and subject to an universal synod in the manner
+aforesaid, whereas yet there is no oecumenical parliament or general civil
+court acknowledged, unto which the supreme civil senate in this or that
+nation should be subject. Finally, neither is the church altogether
+destitute of nearer remedies whether an universal council may be had or
+not.
+
+91. For the national synod ought to declare, and that with greatest
+reverence, to the magistrate, the grounds of their sentence, and the
+reasons of their proceedings, when he demandeth or inquireth into the
+same, and desireth to be satisfied; but if the magistrate nevertheless do
+dissent, or cannot, by contrary reasons (which may be brought, if he
+please), move the synod to alter their judgment, yet may he require and
+procure that the matter be again debated and canvassed in another national
+synod, and so the reasons of both sides being thoroughly weighed, may be
+lawfully determined in an ecclesiastical way.
+
+92. But as there is much indeed to be given to the demand of the
+magistrate, so is there here a twofold caution to be used, for, first,
+notwithstanding of a future revision, it is necessary that the former
+sentence of the synod, whether concerning the administration of
+ecclesiastical discipline, or against any heresy, be forthwith put in
+execution, lest by lingering, and making of delays, the evil of the church
+take deeper root, and the gangrene spread and creep further; and lest
+violence be done to the consciences of ministers, if they be constrained
+to impart the signs and seals of the covenant of grace to dogs and swine,
+that is, to unclean persons, wallowing in the mire of ungodliness; and
+lest subtile men abuse such interims or intervals, so as that
+ecclesiastical discipline altogether decay, and the very decrees of synods
+be accounted as cobwebs, which none feareth to break down.
+
+93. Next it may be granted that the matter may be put under a further
+examination, yet upon condition, that when it is come to the revision of
+the former sentence, regard may be had of the weaker which are found
+willing to be taught, though they doubt; but that unto the wicked and
+contentious tempters, which do mainly strive to oppress our liberty which
+we have in Christ, and to bring us into bondage, we do not for a moment
+give place by subjecting ourselves; for what else seek they or wait for,
+than that, under the pretence of a revising and of new debate, they cast
+in lets and impediments ever and anon, and that by cunning lyings in wait
+they may betray the liberty of the church, and in process of time may, by
+open violence, more forcibly break in upon it, or at least constrain the
+ministers of the church to weave Penelope's web, which they can never
+bring to an end.
+
+94. Moreover, the Christian magistrate hath then only discharged his
+office in reference to ecclesiastical discipline, when not only he
+withdraweth nothing from it, and maketh no impediment to it, but also
+affordeth special furtherance and help to it, according to the prophecy,
+Isa. xlix. 23, "And kings shall be thy nursing-fathers, and their queens
+thy nursing-mothers."
+
+95. For Christian magistrates and princes, embracing Christ, and sincerely
+giving their names to him, do not only serve him as men, but also use
+their office to his glory and the good of the church; they defend, stand
+for, and take care to propagate the true faith and godliness,--they afford
+places of habitation to the church, and furnish necessary helps and
+supports,--turn away injuries done to it,--restrain false religion,--and
+cherish, underprop, and defend the rights and liberties of the church: so
+far they are from diminishing, changing or restraining those rights; for
+so the condition of the church were in that respect worse, and the liberty
+thereof more cut short, under the Christian magistrate, than under the
+infidel or heathen.
+
+96. Wherefore seeing these nursing-fathers, favourers, and defenders, can
+do nothing against the truth, but for the truth, nor have any right
+against the gospel, but for the gospel; and their power, in respect of the
+church whereof they bear the care, being not privative or destructive, but
+cumulative and auxiliary, thereby it is sufficiently clear that they ought
+to cherish, and by their authority ought to establish the ecclesiastical
+discipline; but yet not with implicit faith, or blind obedience; for the
+reformed churches do not deny to any of the faithful, much less to the
+magistrate, the judgment of Christian prudence and discretion concerning
+those things which are decreed or determined by the church.
+
+97. Therefore, as to each member of the church respectively, so unto the
+magistrate belongeth the judgment of such things, both to apprehend and to
+judge of them; for although the magistrate is not ordained and preferred
+of God, that he should be a judge of matters and causes spiritual, of
+which there is controversy in the church, yet is he questionless judge of
+his own civil act about spiritual things; namely, of defending them in his
+own dominions, and of approving or tolerating the same; and if, in this
+business, he judge and determine according to the wisdom of the flesh, and
+not according to the wisdom which is from above, he is to render an
+account thereof before the supreme tribunal.
+
+98. However, the ecclesiastical discipline, according as it is ordained by
+Christ, whether it be established and ratified by civil authority or not,
+ought to be retained and exercised in the society of the faithful (as long
+as it is free and safe for them to come together in holy assemblies), for
+the want of civil authority is unto the church like a ceasing gain, but
+not like damage or loss ensuing; as it superaddeth nothing more, so it
+takes nothing away.
+
+99. If it further happen (which God forbid) that the magistrate do so far
+abuse his authority, that he doth straitly forbid what Christ hath
+ordained, yet the constant and faithful servants of Christ will resolve
+and determine with themselves, that any extremities are rather to be
+undergone than that they should obey such things, and that we ought to
+obey God rather than men; yea, they will not leave off to perform all the
+parts of their office, being ready in the meantime to render a reason of
+their practice to every one that demandeth it, but specially unto the
+magistrate (as was said before).
+
+100. These things are not to that end and purpose proposed, that these
+functions should be opposed one against another, in a hostile posture, or
+in terms of enmity, than which nothing is more hurtful to the church and
+commonwealth, nothing more execrable to them who are truly and sincerely
+zealous for the house of God (for they have not so learned Christ); but
+the aim is, first, and above all, that unto the King of kings and Lord of
+lords, Jesus Christ, the only monarch of the church, his own prerogative
+royal (of which also himself in the world was accused, and for his
+witnessing a good confession thereof before Pontius Pilate, was unjustly
+condemned to death) may be fully maintained and defended.
+
+101. Next, this debate tendeth also to this end, that the power, as well
+of ecclesiastical censure as of the civil sword, being in force, the
+licentiousness of carnal men, who desire that there be too slack
+ecclesiastical discipline, or none at all, may be bridled, and so men may
+sin less, and may live more agreeably to the gospel. Another thing here
+intended is, that errors on both sides being overthrown (as well the error
+of those who, under a fair pretence of maintaining and defending the
+rights of magistracy, do leave to the church either no power, or that
+which is too weak, as the error of others, who, under the veil of a
+certain suppositious and imaginary Christian liberty, do turn off the yoke
+of the magistrate) both powers may enjoy their own privileges; add hereto,
+that both powers being circumscribed with their distinct borders and
+bounds, and also the one underpropped and strengthened by the help of the
+other, a holy concord between them may be nourished, and they may mutually
+and friendly embrace one another.
+
+102. Last of all, seeing there are not wanting some unhappy men, who cease
+not to pervert the right ways of the Lord, and with all diligence go about
+to shake off the yoke of the ecclesiastical discipline where now it is
+about to be introduced, yea, also where it hath been long ago established,
+and as yet happily remaineth in force, it was necessary to obviate their
+most wicked purposes; which things being so, let all which hath been said
+pass, with the good leave and liking of those orthodox churches in which
+the discipline of excommunication is not as yet in use; neither can any
+offence easily arise to them from hence, yea (if the best conjecture do
+not deceive), they cannot but rejoice and congratulate at the defence and
+vindication of this discipline.
+
+103. For those churches do not deny, but acknowledge and teach, that the
+discipline of excommunication is most agreeable to the word of God, as
+also that it ought to be restored and exercised; which also, heretofore,
+the most learned Zachary Ursine, in the declaration of his judgment
+concerning excommunication, exhibited to Prince Frederick, the third count
+elector palatine, the title whereof is, _Judicium de Disciplina
+Ecclesiastica et Excommunicatione, &c._
+
+104. For thus he: "In other churches where either no excommunication is in
+use, or it is not lawfully administered, and nevertheless, without all
+controversy, it is confessed and openly taught, that it ought justly to be
+received and be of force in the church." And a little after: "Lest also
+your Highness, by this new opinion, do sever yourself and your churches
+from all other churches, as well those which have not excommunication as
+those which have it; forasmuch as all of them do unanimously confess, and
+always confessed, that there is reason why it ought to be in use."
+
+105. To the same purpose it tendeth which the highly esteemed Philip
+Melancthon, in his _Common Places_, chap. _Of civil magistrates_, doth
+affirm: "Before (saith he) I warned that civil places and powers are to be
+distinguished from the adhering confusions which arise from other causes,
+partly from the malice of the devil, partly from the malice of men, partly
+from the common infirmity of men, as it cometh to pass in other kinds of
+life and government ordained of God. No man doubteth that ecclesiastical
+government is ordained of God, and yet how many and great disorders grow
+in it from other causes." Where he mentioneth a church government distinct
+from the civil, and that _jure divino_, as a thing uncontroverted.
+
+106. Neither were the wishes of the chief divines of Zurich and Berne
+wanting for the recalling and restoring of the discipline of
+excommunication. So Bullinger, upon 1 Cor. v.: "And hitherto (saith he) of
+the ecclesiastical chastising of wickedness; but here I would have the
+brethren diligently warned, that they watch, and with all diligence take
+care that this wholesome medicine, thrown out of the true church, by
+occasion of the Pope's avarice, may be reduced; that is, that scandalous
+sins be punished; for this is the very end of excommunication, that men's
+manners may be well ordered, and the saints flourish, the profane being
+restrained, lest wicked men, by their impudence and impiety, increase and
+undo all. It is our part, O brethren, with greatest diligence, to take
+care of those things; for we see that Paul, in this place, doth stir up
+those that were negligent in this business."
+
+107. Aretius agreeth hereunto. _Problem. Theolog._, loc. 33: "Magistrates
+do not admit the yoke; they are afraid for their honours; they love
+licentiousness," &c. "The common people are too dissolute; the greatest
+part is most corrupt," &c. "In the meanwhile, I willingly confess that we
+are not to despair, but the age following will peradventure yield more
+tractable spirits, more mild hearts than our times have." See also Lavater
+agreeing in this, homil. 52, on Nehemiah: "Because the popes of Rome have
+abused excommunication, for the establishing of their own tyranny, it
+cometh to pass that almost no just discipline can be any more settled in
+the church; but unless the wicked be restrained, all things must of
+necessity run into the worst condition." See, besides, the opinion of
+Fabritius upon Psal. cxlix. 6-9, of spiritual corrections, which he
+groundeth upon that text compared with Matt. xvi. 19; xviii. 18; John xx.
+23.
+
+108. It can hardly be doubted or called in question, but besides these,
+other learned and godly divines of those churches were and are of the same
+mind herein with those now cited; and, indeed, the very Confession of
+Faith of the churches of Helvetia, chap. 18, may be an evidence hereof:
+"But there ought to be, in the meantime, a just discipline amongst
+ministers, for the doctrine and life of ministers is diligently to be
+inquired of in synods: those that sin are to be rebuked of the elders, and
+to be brought again into the way, if they be curable; or to be deposed,
+and, like wolves, driven away from the flock of the Lord, if they be
+incurable." That this manner of synodical censure, namely, of deposing
+ministers from their office for some great scandal, is used in the
+republic of Zurich, Lavater is witness, in his book of the rites and
+ordinances of the church of Zurich, chap. 23. Surely they could not be of
+that mind, that ecclesiastical discipline ought to be exercised upon
+delinquent ministers only, and not also upon other rotten members of the
+church.
+
+109. Yea, the Helvetian Confession, in the place now cited, doth so tax
+the inordinate zeal of the Donatists and Anabaptists (which are so bent
+upon the rooting out of the tares out of the Lord's field, that they take
+not heed of the danger of plucking up the wheat) that withal it doth not
+obscurely commend the ecclesiastical forensical discipline as distinct
+from the civil power; "And seeing (say they) it is altogether necessary
+that there be in the church a discipline; and among the ancients, in times
+past, excommunication hath been usual, and ecclesiastical courts have been
+among the people of God, among whom this discipline was exercised by
+prudent and godly men. It belongeth also to ministers, according to the
+case of the times, the public estate and necessity to moderate this
+discipline,--where this rule is ever to be held, that all ought to be done
+to edification, decently, honestly, without tyranny and sedition. The
+Apostle also witnesseth (2 Cor. xiii.), that to himself was given of God a
+power unto edification, and not unto destruction."
+
+110. And, now, what resteth but that God be entreated with continual and
+ardent prayers, both that he would put into the hearts of all magistrates,
+zeal and care to cherish, defend, and guard the ecclesiastical discipline,
+together with the rest of Christ's ordinances, and to stop their ears
+against the importunate suits of whatsoever claw-backs who would stir them
+up against the church; and that, also, all governors and rulers of
+churches, being everywhere furnished and helped with the strength of the
+Holy Spirit, may diligently and faithfully execute this part also of their
+function, as it becometh the trusty servants of Christ, who study to
+please their own Lord and Master more than men.
+
+111. Finally, All those who are more averse from ecclesiastical
+discipline, or ill-affected against it, are to be admonished and
+entreated, through our Lord Jesus Christ, that they be no longer entangled
+and inveigled with carnal prejudice, to give place in this thing to human
+affections, and to measure by their own corrupt reason spiritual
+discipline, but that they do seriously think with themselves, and consider
+in their minds, how much better it were that the lusts of the flesh were,
+as with a bridle, tamed; and that the repentance, amendment, and gaining
+of vicious men unto salvation may be sought, than that sinners be left to
+their own disposition, and be permitted to follow their own lusts without
+controlment, and by their evil example to draw others headlong into ruin
+with themselves; and seeing either the keys of discipline must take no
+rust, or the manners of Christians will certainly contract much rust: what
+is here to be chosen, and what is to be shunned, let the wise and godly,
+who alone take to heart the safety of the church, judge.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+
+A SERMON PREACHED BEFORE THE HONOURABLE HOUSE OF COMMONS AT THEIR LATE
+SOLEMN FAST
+
+
+ A
+
+ SERMON
+
+ PREACHED BEFORE
+
+ THE HONOURABLE HOUSE OF COMMONS
+
+ AT THEIR LATE SOLEMN FAST,
+
+ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1644.
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH, 1642.
+
+ "When the Lord shall build up Zion, he shall appear in his glory"--Psal.
+ cii. 16.
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE AND OLIVER AND BOYD.
+
+M. OGLE & SON AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW. J. DEWAR, PERTH. W. MIDDLETON,
+ DUNDEE
+
+ G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN. W. M'COMB, BELFAST.
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS, & CO., AND JAMES NISBET & CO., LONDON.
+
+ REPRINTED BY A. W. MURRAY, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH.
+
+ 1844.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE READER.
+
+
+Divine providence hath made it my lot, and a calling hath induced me (who
+am less than the least of all the servants of Christ) to appear among
+others in this cloud of public witnesses. The scope of the sermon is to
+endeavour the removal of the obstructions, both of _humiliation_ and
+_reformation_; two things which ought to lie very much in our thoughts at
+this time. Concerning both I shall preface but little. _Reformation_ hath
+many unfriends, some upon _the right hand_, and some upon _the left_;
+while others cry up that _detestable indifferency_ or _neutrality_,
+abjured in our solemn covenant, insomuch that Gamaliel (Acts v. 38, 39)
+and Gallio (Acts xviii. 14-17), men who regarded alike the Jewish and the
+Christian religion, are highly commended, as "examples for all
+Christians,"(1361) and as men walking by the rules not only of policy, but
+of "reason and religion." Now, let all those that are either against us or
+not with us do what they can, the right hand of the most High shall
+perfect the glorious begun reformation. Can all the world keep down "the
+Sun of Righteousness" from rising? or, being risen, can they spread a vail
+over it? And though they dig deep to hide their counsels, is not this a
+time of God's overreaching and befooling all plotting wits? They have
+conceived iniquity, and they shall bring forth vanity: "They have sown the
+wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind" (Hos. viii. 7). Wherefore we
+"will wait upon the Lord, that hideth his face from the house of Jacob,
+and will look for him" (Isa. viii. 17); and "though he slay us, yet will
+we trust in him" (Job xiii. 15). The Lord hath commanded to proclaim, and
+to say "to the daughter of Zion, Behold, thy salvation cometh" (Isa. lxii.
+11); "Rejoice ye with Jerusalem, all ye that mourn for her" (Isa. lxvi.
+10); for "behold, now is the accepted time; behold, now is the day of
+salvation" (2 Cor. vi. 2). But I have more to say: Mourn, O mourn with
+Jerusalem, all ye that rejoice for her; "This day is a day of trouble, and
+of rebuke, and of blasphemy: for the children are come to the birth, and
+there is not strength to bring forth" (Isa. xxxvii. 3): it is an
+interwoven time, _warped_ with mercies, and _woofted_ with judgments. Say
+not thou in thine heart, The days of my mourning are at an end: Oh! we are
+to this day an unhumbled and an unprepared people; and there are among us
+both many cursed Achans, and many sleeping Jonahs, but few wrestling
+Jacobs; even the wise virgins are slumbering with the foolish (Matt. xxv.
+5): surely, unless we be timely awakened, and more deeply humbled, God
+will punish us yet "seven times" (Lev. xxvi. 18, 21, 24, 28) more for our
+sins; and if he hath chastised us with "whips," he will "chastise us with
+scorpions;" and he will yet give a further charge to the sword to "avenge
+the quarrel of his covenant" (Lev, xxvi. 25). In such a case, I cannot
+say, according to the now Oxford divinity, that _preces et
+lachrymae_,--prayers and tears,--must be our only one shelter and fortress,
+and that we must cast away defensive arms, as unlawful, in any case
+whatsoever, against the supreme magistrate (that is, by interpretation,
+they would have us do no more than _pray_, to the end themselves may do no
+less than _prey)_; wherein they are contradicted not only by Pareus, and
+by others that are "eager for a presbytery" (as a prelate(1362) of chief
+note hath lately taken, I should say _mistaken_, his mark), but even by
+those that are "eager royalists"(1363) (pardon me that I give them not
+their right name: I am sure, when all is well reckoned, we are better
+friends to royal authority than themselves). Yet herein I do agree with
+them, that "prayers and tears" will prove our strongest weapons, and the
+only _tela divina_, the weapons that fight for us from above: O then "fear
+the Lord, ye his saints" (Psal. xxxiv. 9); O stir up yourselves to lay
+hold on him (Isa. lxiv. 7); "Keep not silence; and give him no rest, till
+he establish, and till he make Jerusalem a praise in the earth" (Isa.
+lxii. 6, 7). O that we could all make wells in our dry and desert-like
+hearts (Psal. lxxxiv. 6), that we may draw out water (1 Sam. vii. 6), even
+buckets-full, to quench the wrath of a sin-revenging God, the fire which
+still burneth against the Lord's inheritance. God grant that this sermon
+be not "as water spilt on the ground" but may "drop as the rain" and
+"distil as the dew" (Deut. xxxii. 2) of heaven upon thy soul.
+
+
+
+
+SERMON.
+
+
+EZEK. xliii. 11.
+
+
+ "And if they be ashamed of all that they have done, show them the
+ form of the house, and the fashion thereof, and the goings-out
+ thereof, and the comings-in thereof, and all the forms thereof,
+ and all the ordinances thereof, and all the forms thereof, and all
+ the laws thereof: and write it in their sight, that they may keep
+ the whole form thereof, and all the ordinance thereof, and do
+ them."
+
+
+It is not long since I did, upon another day of humiliation, lay open
+England's disease from that text, 2 Chron. xx. 33, "Howbeit the high
+places were not taken away; for as yet the people had not prepared their
+hearts unto the God of their fathers." Though the Sun of Righteousness be
+risen, Mal. iv. 2, "with healing in his wings," yet the land is not
+healed, no, not of its worst disease, which is corruption in religion, and
+the iniquity of your holy things. I did then show the symptoms, and the
+cause of this evil disease. The symptoms are your high places not yet
+taken away, many of your old superstitious ceremonies to this day
+remaining, which, though not so evil as the high places of idolatry in
+which idols were worshipped, yet are parallel to the high places of
+will-worship, of which we read that the people, thinking it too hard to be
+tied to go up to Jerusalem with every sacrifice, "did sacrifice still in
+the high places, yet unto the Lord their God only," 2 Chron. xxxiii, 17;
+pleading for their so doing, antiquity, custom, and other defences of that
+kind, which have been alleged for your ceremonies. But albeit these be
+foul spots in the church's face, which offend the eyes of her glorious
+Bridegroom, Jesus Christ, yet that which doth less appear is more
+dangerous, and that is the cause of all this evil in the very bowels and
+heart of the church; the people of the land, great and small, have not as
+yet prepared their hearts unto the Lord their God; mercy is prepared for
+the land, but the land is not prepared for mercy. I shall say no more of
+the disease at this instant.
+
+But I have now chosen a text which holds forth a remedy for this malady--a
+cure for this case; that is, that if we will humble our uncircumcised
+hearts, and accept of the punishment of our iniquity, Lev. xxvi. 41; if we
+be "ashamed and confounded" (Ezek. xxxvi. 32), before the Lord this day
+for our evil ways; if we judge ourselves as guilty, and put our mouth in
+the dust, and clothe ourselves with shame as with a garment; if we repent
+and abhor ourselves in dust and ashes, then the Lord will not abhor us,
+but take pleasure in us, to dwell among us, to reveal himself unto us, to
+set before us the right pattern of his own house, that the tabernacle of
+God may be with men, Rev. xxi. 3; and pure ordinances, where before they
+were defiled and mixed; Zech. xiii. 2, He "will cut off the names of the
+idols out of the land," and cause the false prophet, "and the unclean
+spirit to pass out of the land," and the glory of the Lord shall dwell in
+the land, Psal. lxxxv. 9. But, withal, we must take heed that we "turn not
+again to folly," Psal. lxxxv. 8; that our hearts start not aside, "like a
+deceitful bow," Psal. lxxviii. 57; that we "keep the ways of the Lord,"
+Psal. xviii. 21, and do not wickedly depart from our God. Thus you have
+briefly the occasion and the sum of what I am to deliver from this text;
+the particulars whereof I shall not touch till I have, in the first place,
+resolved a difficult, yet profitable question.
+
+You may ask, What house or what temple doth the Prophet here speak of, and
+how can it be made to appear that this scripture is applicable to this
+time?
+
+I answer, Some(1364) have taken great pains to demonstrate that this
+temple, which the Prophet saw in this vision, was no other than the temple
+of Solomon; and that the accomplishment of this vision of the temple,
+city, and division of the land, was the building of the temple and city
+again after the captivity, and the restoring of the Levitical worship and
+Jewish republic, which came to pass in the days of Nehemiah and Zorobabel.
+This sense is also most obvious to every one that readeth this prophecy;
+but there are very strong reasons against it, which make other learned
+expositors not to embrace it.
+
+For, 1. The temple of Solomon was one hundred and twenty cubits high, the
+temple built by Zorobabel was but sixty cubits high, Ezra vi. 3.
+
+2. The temple of Zorobabel (Ezra iii. 1, 8, vi. 3, 5, 7) was built in the
+same place where the temple of Solomon was, that is, in Jerusalem, upon
+mount Moriah, but this temple of Ezekiel was without the city, and a great
+way distant from it,(1365) chap. xlviii. 10 compared with ver. 15. The
+whole portion of the Levites, and a part of the portion of the priests,
+was betwixt the temple and the city.
+
+3. Moses' greatest altar,--the altar of burnt-offerings, was not half so
+big as Ezekiel's altar, compare Ezek. xliii. 16 with Exod. xxvii. 1,(1366)
+so is Moses' altar of incense much less than Ezekiel's altar of incense,
+Exod. xxx. 2 compared with Ezek. xli. 22.
+
+4. There are many new ceremonial laws, different from the Mosaical,
+delivered in the following part of this vision, chap. xlv. and xlvi., as
+interpreters have particularly observed upon these places.(1367)
+
+5. The temple and city were not of that greatness which is described in
+this vision; for the measuring reed, containing six cubits of the
+sanctuary, not common cubits (chap. xl. 5), which amount to more than ten
+feet, the outer wall of the temple being two thousand reeds in compass
+(chap. xlii. 20), was by estimation four miles, and the city (chap.
+xlviii. 16, 35) thirty-six miles in compass.
+
+6. The vision of the holy waters (chap. xlvii.) issuing from the temple,
+and after the space of four thousand reeds growing to a river which could
+not be passed over, and healing the waters and the fishes, cannot be
+literally understood of the temple at Jerusalem.
+
+7. The land is divided among the twelve tribes (chap. xlviii.), and that
+in a way and order different from the division made by Joshua, which
+cannot be understood of the restitution after the captivity, because the
+twelve tribes did not return.
+
+8. This new temple hath with it a new covenant, and that an everlasting
+one, Ezek. xxxvii. 26, 27. But at the return of the people from Babylon
+there was no new covenant, saith Irenaeus,(1368) only the same that was
+before continued till Christ's coming.
+
+Wherefore we must needs hold with Jerome,(1369) Gregory,(1370) and other
+later interpreters, that this vision is to be expounded of the spiritual
+temple and church of Christ, made up of Jews and Gentiles; and that not by
+way of allegories only, which is the sense of those whose opinion I have
+now confuted, but according to the proper and direct intendment of the
+vision, which, in many material points, cannot agree to Zorobabel's
+temple.
+
+I am herein very much strengthened while I observe many parallel
+passages(1371) betwixt the vision of Ezekiel and the revelation of John;
+and while I remember withal, that the prophets do in many places foretell
+the institution of the ordinances, government and worship of the New
+Testament, under the terms of temple, priests, sacrifices, &c., and do set
+forth the deliverance and stability of the church of Christ, under the
+notions of Canaan, of bringing back the captivity, &c., God speaking to
+his people at that time, so as they might best understand him.
+
+Now if you ask how the several particulars in the vision may be
+particularly expounded and applied to the church of Christ, I answer The
+word of God, the "river that makes glad the city of God," though it have
+many easy and known fords where any of Christ's lambs may pass through,
+yet in this vision, and other places of this kind, it is "a great deep"
+where the greatest elephant, as he said, may swim. I shall not say with
+the Jews, that one should not read the last nine chapters of Ezekiel
+before he be thirty years old. Surely a man may be twice thirty years old,
+and a good divine too, and yet not able to understand this vision. Some
+tell us, that no man can understand it without skill in geometry, which
+cannot be denied, but there is greater need of ecclesiometry, if I may so
+speak, to measure the church in her length, or continuance through many
+generations, in her breadth, or spreading through many nations, her depth
+of humiliation, sorrows and sufferings, her height of faith, hope, joy,
+and comfort, and to measure each part according to this pattern here set
+before us.
+
+Wherein, for my part, I must profess (as Socrates in another case), _Scio
+quod nescio_. I know that there is a great mystery here which I cannot
+reach. Only I shall set forth unto you that little light which the Father
+of lights hath given me.
+
+I conceive that the Holy Ghost in this vision hath pointed at four several
+times and conditions of the church,--that we may take with us the full
+meaning, without addition or diminution.
+
+Observing this rule, That what agreeth not to the type must be meant of
+the thing typified, and what is not fulfilled at one time must be
+fulfilled of the church at another time.
+
+First of all, It cannot be denied that he points in some sort at the
+restitution of the temple, worship of God, and city of Jerusalem, after
+the captivity, as a type of the church of Christ, for though many things
+in the vision do not agree to that time, as hath been proved, yet some
+things do agree this, as it is least intended in the vision, so it is not
+fit for me at this time to insist upon it. But he that would understand
+the form of the temple of Jerusalem, the several parts, and excellent
+structure thereof, will find enough written of that subject.(1372)
+
+Secondly, This and other prophecies of building again the temple, may well
+be applied to the building of the Christian church by the master-builders,
+the apostles, and by other ministers of the gospel since their days. Let
+us hear but two witnesses of the apostles themselves applying those
+prophecies to the calling of the Gentiles: the one is Paul, 2 Cor. vi. 16,
+"For ye are the temple of the living God; as God hath said, I will dwell
+in them, and walk in them; and I will be their God, and they shall be my
+people;" the other is James, who applieth to the converted Gentiles that
+prophecy of Amos, "After this I will return, and will build again the
+tabernacle of David, which is fallen down; and I will build again the
+ruins thereof, and I will set it up," Acts xv. 16.
+
+Thirdly, But there is a third thing aimed at in this prophecy, and that
+more principally than any of the other two, which is the repairing of the
+breaches and ruins of the Christian church, and the building up of Zion in
+her glory, about the time of the destruction of Antichrist and the
+conversion of the Jews; and this happiness hath the Lord reserved to the
+last times, to build a more excellent and glorious temple than former
+generations have seen. I mean not of the building of the material temple
+at Jerusalem, which the Jews do fancy and look for,--but I speak of the
+church and people of God; and that I may not seem to expound an obscure
+prophecy too conjecturally, which many in these days do, I have these
+evidences following for what I say:--
+
+1. If Paul and James, in those places which I last cited, do apply the
+prophecies of building a new temple to the first-fruits of the Gentiles,
+and to their first conversion, then they are much more to be applied to
+the fulness of the Gentiles, and, most of all, to the fulness both of Jews
+and Gentiles, which we wait for. "Now, if the fall of them (saith the
+Apostle, speaking of the Jews) be the riches of the world, and the
+diminishing of them the riches of the Gentiles; how much more their
+fulness?" Rom. xi. 12. And again, "If the casting away of them be the
+reconciling of the world, what shall the receiving of them be, but life
+from the dead?" ver. 15. Plainly insinuating a greater increase of the
+church, and a larger spread of the gospel at the conversion of the Jews,
+and so a fairer temple, yea, another world, in a manner, to be looked for.
+
+2. The Lord himself, in this same chapter, ver. 7, speaking of the temple
+here prophesied of, saith, "The place of my throne, and the place of the
+soles of my feet, where I will dwell in the midst of the children of
+Israel for ever, and my holy name shall the house of Israel no more
+defile, neither they nor their kings," &c.; which, as it cannot be
+understood of the Jews after the captivity, who did again forsake the
+Lord, and were forsaken of him, as Jerome noteth upon the place, so it can
+as ill be said to be already fulfilled upon the Christian church, but
+rather that such a church is yet to be expected in which the Lord shall
+take up his dwelling for ever, and shall not be provoked by their
+defilements and whoredoms again to take away his kingdom and to remove the
+candlestick.
+
+3. This last temple is also prophesied of by Isaiah, chap. ii. 2, "And it
+shall come to pass in the last days, that the mountain of the Lord's house
+shall be established in the top of the mountains (even as here Ezekiel did
+see this temple upon a very high mountain, chap. lx. 2), and shall be
+exalted above the hills; and all nations shall flow unto it," &c.; ver. 4,
+"And they shall beat their swords into plow-shares, and their spears into
+pruning-hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither
+shall they learn war any more." Here is the building of such a temple as
+shall bring peaceable and quiet times to the church, of which that
+evangelical prophet speaketh in other places also, Isa. xi. 9; lx. 17, 18.
+And if we shall read that which followeth, Isa. ii. 5, as the Chaldee
+paraphrase doth, "And the men of the house of Jacob shall say, Come ye,"
+&c., then the building of the temple there spoken of shall appear to be
+joined with the Jews' conversion; but, howsoever, it is joined with a
+great peace and calm, such as yet the church hath not seen.
+
+4. We find in this vision, that when Ezekiel's temple shall be built,
+princes shall no more oppress the people of God, nor defile the name of
+God, Ezek. xlv. 8; xliii. 7;(1373) which are in like manner joined, Psal.
+cii. 15, 16, 22, "The heathen shall fear the name of the Lord, and all the
+kings of the earth thy glory. When the Lord shall build up Zion, he shall
+appear in his glory; when the people are gathered together, and the
+kingdoms (understand here also kings, as the Septuagint do), to serve the
+Lord;" which psalm is acknowledged to be a prophecy of the kingdom of
+Christ, though under the type of bringing back the captivity of the Jews,
+and of the building again of Zion at that time. The like prophecy of
+Christ we have Psal. lxxii. 11, "All kings shall fall down before him; all
+nations shall serve him." But I ask, Have not the kings of the earth
+hitherto, for the most part, set themselves "against the Lord, and against
+his Anointed"? Psal. ii. 2. And how then shall all those prophecies hold
+true, except they be coincident with Rev. xvii. 16, 17, and that time is
+yet to come, when God shall put it in the hearts of kings to "hate the
+whore (of Rome), and they shall make her desolate and naked, and shall eat
+her flesh, and burn her with fire"? It is foretold that God shall do this
+great and good work even by those kings who have before subjected
+themselves to Antichrist.
+
+5. That which I now draw from Ezekiel's vision is no other but the same
+which was showed to John, Rev. xi. 1, 2,--a place so like to this of
+Ezekiel, that we must take special notice of it, and make that serve for a
+commentary to this,--"And there was given me (saith John) a reed like unto
+a rod: and the angel stood, saying, Rise, and measure the temple of God,
+and the altar, and them that worship therein. But the court which is
+without the temple leave out, and measure it not; for it is given unto the
+Gentiles; and the holy city shall they tread under foot forty and two
+months." This time of forty and two months must be expounded by Rev. xiii.
+5, where it is said of the beast, "Power was given unto him, to continue
+forty and two months;" which, according to the computation of Egyptian
+years (reckoning thirty days to each month), make three years and a half,
+or twelve hundred and sixty days, and that is the time of the witnesses'
+prophesying in sackcloth, and of the woman's abode in the wilderness, Rev,
+xi. 3; xii. 6. Now lest it should be thought that the treading down of the
+holy city by the Gentiles (that is, the treading under foot of the true
+church, the city of God, by the tyranny of Antichrist and the power of his
+accomplices) should never have an end in this world, the angel gives John
+to understand that the church, the house of the living God, shall not lie
+desolate for ever, but shall be built again (for the measuring is in
+reference to building), that the kingdom of Antichrist shall come to an
+end, and that after twelve hundred and sixty years, counting days for
+years as the prophets do. It is not to my purpose now to search when this
+time of the power of the beast and of the church's desolation did begin,
+and when it ends, and so to find out the time of building this new
+temple,--only this much I trust, I may say, that if we reckon from the time
+that the power of the beast did begin, and, withal, consider the great
+revolution and turning of things upside down in these our days, certainly
+the work is upon the wheel; the Lord hath plucked his hand out of his
+bosom, he hath whet his sword, he hath bent his bow, he hath also prepared
+the instruments of death against Antichrist: so saith the Psalmist of all
+persecutors, Psal. vii. 12, 13; but it will fall most upon that capital
+enemy. Whereof there will be occasion to say more afterward.
+
+Let me here only add a word concerning a fourth thing which the Holy Ghost
+may seem to intend in this prophecy, and that is, the church triumphant,
+the new "Jerusalem which is above," unto which respect is to be had, as
+interpreters judge, in some parts of the vision, which happily cannot be
+so well applied to the church in this world. Even as the new Jerusalem is
+so described in the Revelation (Rev. xxi.), that it may appear to be the
+church of Christ, reformed, beautified, and enlarged in this world, and
+fully perfected and glorified in the world to come; and as many things
+which are said of it can very hardly be made to agree to the church in
+this world; so other things which are said of it can as hardly be applied
+to the church glorified in heaven, as where it is said, "Behold, the
+tabernacle of God is with men, [having come down from God out of heaven]
+and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people, and God himself
+shall be with them, and be their God," ver. 3. Again, "And the nations of
+them which are saved shall walk in the light of it: and the kings of the
+earth do bring their glory and honour into it," ver. 24.
+
+But now I make haste to the several particulars contained in my text: "I
+pray God (saith the Apostle) your whole spirit, and soul, and body, be
+preserved blameless," 1 Thess. v. 23; Phil. i. 9, 11. And what he there
+prays for, this text, rightly understood and applied, may work in us, that
+is, gracious affections, gracious minds, gracious actions. In the first
+place, a change upon our corrupt and wicked affections,--"If they be
+ashamed of all that they have done," saith the Lord; Secondly, A change
+upon our blind minds,--"Show them the form of the house, and the fashion
+thereof," &c.; Thirdly, A change also upon our actions,--"That they may
+keep the whole form thereof, and all the ordinances thereof, and do them."
+
+For the first, the words here used is not that which signifieth blushing
+through modesty, but it signifieth shame for that which is indeed
+shameful, filthy, and abominable,(1374) so that it were impenitency and an
+aggravation of the fault not to be ashamed for it.
+
+I shall here build only one doctrine, which will be of exceeding great use
+for such a day as this: "If either we would have mercy to ourselves, or
+would do acceptable service in the public reformation, we must not only
+cease to do evil and learn to do well, but also be ashamed, confounded and
+humbled, for our former evil ways." Here is a twofold necessity, which
+presseth upon us this duty,--to loathe and abhor ourselves for all our
+abominations, to be greatly abashed and confounded before our God: First,
+Without this we shall not find grace and favour to our own souls;
+Secondly, We shall else miscarry in the work of reformation.
+
+First, I say, let us do all the good we can, God is not pleased with us
+unless we be ashamed and humbled for former guiltiness. Be zealous and
+repent (Rev. iii. 19), saith Christ to the Laodiceans; be zealous in time
+coming, and repent of your former lukewarmness: "What fruit had ye then in
+those things whereof ye are now ashamed?" (Rom. vi. 21,) saith the Apostle
+to the saints at Rome, of whom he saith plainly, that they were "servants
+to righteousness," (ver. 19;) and had their "fruit unto holiness." But
+that is not all; they were also ashamed while they looked back upon their
+old faults, which is the rather to be observed, because it maketh against
+the Antinomian error now afoot.(1375) It hath a clear reason for it, for
+without this God is still dishonoured, and not restored to his glory: "O
+Lord (saith Daniel), righteousness belongeth unto thee, but unto us
+confusion of faces," Dan. ix. 7. These two go together. We must be
+confounded, that God may be glorified; we must be judged, that God may be
+justified; our mouths must be stopped, and laid in the dust, that the Lord
+may be just when he speaketh, and clear when he judgeth (Psal. li. 4). And
+as the Apostle teacheth us, 1 Cor. xi. 31, that if we judge ourselves, we
+shall not be judged of God; and, by the rule of contraries, if we judge
+not ourselves, we shall be judged of God; so say I now, if we give glory
+to God, and take shame and confusion of faces to ourselves, God shall not
+confound us, nor put us to shame: but if we will not be confounded and
+ashamed in ourselves, God shall confound us, and pour shame upon us; if we
+loathe not ourselves, God shall loathe us.
+
+Nay let me argue from the manner of men, as the Prophet doth, Mal. i. 8,
+"Offer it now unto thy governor; will he be pleased with thee, or accept
+thy person?" Will thy governor, nay, thy neighbour, who is as thou art,
+alter an injury done to him, be pleased with thee, if thou do but leave
+off to do him any more such injuries? Will he not expect an acknowledgment
+of the wrong done? Is it not Christ's rule (Luke xvii. 4) that he who
+seven times trespasseth against his brother, seven times turn again,
+saying, I repent? David would hardly trust Ittai to go up and down with
+him, who was but a stranger (2 Sam. xv. 19), how much more if he had done
+him some great wrong, and then refused to confess it? And how shall we
+think that it can stand with the honour of the most high God, that we seem
+to draw near unto him, and to walk in his ways, while, in the meantime, we
+do not acknowledge our iniquity, and even accuse, shame, judge, and
+condemn ourselves? Nay, "Be not deceived, God is not mocked," Gal. vi. 7.
+
+This is the first necessity of the duty which this text holdeth forth. The
+Lord requireth of us not only to do his will for the future, but to be
+ashamed for what we have done amiss before.
+
+The other necessity of it, which is also in the text, is this: That except
+we be thus ashamed and humbled, God hath not promised to show us the
+pattern of his house, nor to reveal his will unto us; which agreeth well
+with that, Psal. xxv. 9, "The meek will he teach his way;" and ver. 12,
+"What man is he that feareth the Lord? him shall he teach in the way that
+he shall choose;" and ver. 14, "The secret of the Lord is with them that
+fear him, and he will show them his covenant." There is sanctification in
+the affections, and here is humiliation in the affections, spoken of as
+necessary means of attaining the knowledge of the will of God. Let the
+affections be ordered aright, then light which is offered shall be seen
+and received; but let light be offered when disordered affections do
+overcloud the eye of the mind, then all is in vain.
+
+In this case a man shall be like "the deaf adder" (Psal. lviii. 4, 5,)
+which will not be taken by the voice of the charmers, "charming never so
+wisely." Let the helm of reason be stirred as well as you can imagine, if
+there be a contrary wind in the sails of the affections, the ship will not
+answer to the helm. It is a good argument: He is a wicked man, a covetous
+man, a proud man, a carnal man, an unhumbled man; therefore he will
+readily miscarry in his judgment. So divines have argued against the
+Pope's infallibility! The Pope hath been, and may be a profane man;
+therefore he may err in his judgment and decrees. And what wonder that
+they who receive not the love of the truth be given over to "strong
+delusion, that they should believe a lie?" 2 Thess. ii. 9, 10. It is as
+good an argument: He is a humbled man, and a man that feareth God;
+therefore, in so far as he acteth and exerciseth those graces, the Lord
+shall teach him in the way that he shall choose. I say, in so far as he
+acteth those graces,--because when he grieves the Spirit, and cherisheth
+the flesh, when the child of God is more swayed by his corruptions than by
+his graces, then he is in great danger to be given up to the counsel of
+his own heart, and to be deserted by the Holy Ghost, which should lead him
+"into all truth," John xvi. 13.
+
+But we must take notice of a seeming contradiction here in the text. God
+saith to the Prophet in the former verse, "Show the house to the house of
+Israel, that they may be ashamed of their iniquities;" and, Jer. xxxi. 19,
+Ephraim is first instructed, then ashamed. And here it is quite turned
+over in my text; if they be ashamed show them the house.
+
+I shall not here make any digression unto the debates and distinctions of
+schoolmen, what influence and power the affections have upon the
+understanding and the will; I will content myself with this plain answer:
+Those two might very well stand together,--light is a help to humiliation,
+and humiliation a help to light. As there must be some work of faith, and
+some apprehension of the love of God, in order before true evangelical
+repentance, yet this repentance helpeth us to believe more firmly that our
+sins are forgiven. The soul, in the pains of the new birth, is like Tamar
+travailing of her twins, Pharez and Zarah (Gen. xxxviii. 28-30): faith,
+like Zarah, first putting out his hand, but hath no strength to come
+forth, therefore draweth back the hand again, till repentance, like
+Pharez, have broken forth,--then can faith come forth more easily. Which
+appeareth in that woman, Luke vii. 47, 48: she wept much, because she
+loved much; she loved much, because she believed; and by faith had her
+heart enlarged with apprehending the rich grace and free love of Christ to
+poor sinners: this faith moves her bowels, melts her heart, stirs her
+sorrow, kindles her affection. Then, and not till then, she gets a prop to
+her faith, and a sure ground to build upon. It is not till she have wept
+much that Christ intimates mercy, and saith, "Thy sins are forgiven thee."
+Just so is the case in this text: Show them the house, saith the Lord,
+that they may be ashamed; give them a view of it, that they may think the
+worse of themselves, that they want it, that they may be ashamed for all
+their iniquities, whereby they have separate betwixt their God and
+themselves, so that they cannot "behold the beauty of the Lord," nor
+"inquire in his temple," Psal. xxvii. 4; and if, when they begin to see
+it, they have such thoughts as these, and humble themselves, and
+acknowledge their iniquities, then go to and show them the whole fabric,
+and structure, and all the gates thereof, and all the parts thereof, and
+all things pertaining thereto.
+
+I suppose I have said enough for confirmation and clearing of the doctrine
+concerning the necessity of our being ashamed and confounded before the
+Lord. I have now a fourfold application to draw from it.
+
+The first application shall be to the malignant enemies of the cause and
+people of God at this time, who deserve Jeremiah's black mark to be put
+upon them: "Were they ashamed when they had committed abomination? nay,
+they wore not at all ashamed, neither could they blush," Jer. vi. 15;
+viii. 12. When he would say the worst of them, this is it: "Thou hadst a
+whore's forehead, thou refusedst to be ashamed," Jer. iii. 3. There are
+some sons of Belial risen up against us, who have done some things
+whereof, I dare say, many heathens would have been ashamed; yet they are
+as far from being ashamed of their outrages as Caligula was, who said of
+himself, that he loved nothing better in his own nature than that he could
+not be ashamed: nay, their glory is their shame, Phil. iii. 19; and if the
+Lord do not open their eyes to see their shame, their end will be
+destruction. Is it a light matter to swear and blaspheme, to coin and
+spread lies, to devise calumnies, to break treaties, to contrive
+treacherous plots, to exercise so many barbarous cruelties, to shed so
+much blood, and, as if that were too little, to bury men quick? Is all
+this no matter of shame? And when they have so often professed to be for
+the true Protestant religion, shall they not be ashamed to thirst so much
+after Protestant blood, and in that cause desire to associate themselves
+with all the Papists at home and abroad whose assistance they can have,
+and particularly with those matchless monsters (they call them subjects)
+of Ireland, who, if the computation fail not, have shed the blood of some
+hundred thousands in that kingdom? For our part, it seems they are
+resolved to give the worst name to the best thing which we can do, and
+therefore they have not been ashamed to call a religious and loyal
+covenant a traitorous and damnable covenant. I have no pleasure to take up
+these and other dunghills, the text hath put this in my mouth which I have
+said. O that they could recover themselves out of the gall of bitterness,
+and bond of iniquity, Acts viii. 23; O that we could hear that they begin
+to be ashamed of their abominations, "Lord, when thy hand is lifted up,
+they will not see: but they shall see, and be ashamed for their envy at
+the people," Isa. xxvi. 11; the Lord "shall appear to your joy, and they
+shall be ashamed," lxvi. 5.
+
+But now, in the second place, let me speak to the kingdom, and to you whom
+it concerneth this day to be humbled, both for your own sins and for the
+sins of the kingdom which you represent. Although yourselves, whom God
+hath placed in this honourable station, and the kingdom which God hath
+blessed with many choice blessings, be much and worthily honoured among
+the children of men, yet when you have to do with God, and with that
+wherein his great name and his glory is concerned, you must not think of
+honouring, but rather abashing yourselves, and creeping low in the dust.
+Livy tells us,(1376) that when M. Claudius Marcellus would have dedicate a
+temple to Honour and Virtue, the priests hindered it, _quod utri deo res
+divina fieret, sciri non posset_, because so it could not be known to
+which of the two gods he should offer sacrifice. Far be it from any of you
+to suffer the will of God and your own credit to come in competition
+together, or to put back any point of truth, because it may seem,
+peradventure, some way to wound your reputation, though, when all is well
+examined, it shall be found your glory.
+
+You are now about the casting out of many corruptions in the government of
+the church and worship of God. Remember, therefore, it is not enough to
+cleanse the house of the Lord, but you must be humbled for your former
+defilements wherewith it was polluted. It is not enough that England say
+with Ephraim in one place, "What have I to do any more with idols?" Hos.
+xiv. 8. England must say also with Ephraim in another place, "Surely after
+that I was turned, I repented; and after that I was instructed, I smote
+upon my thigh: I was ashamed, yea, even confounded, because I did bear the
+reproach of my youth," Jer. xxxi. 19. Let England sit down in the dust,
+and wallow itself in ashes, and cry out as the lepers did (Lev. xiii. 45),
+"Unclean, unclean," and then rise up and cast away the least superstitious
+ceremony "as a menstruous cloth; thou shalt say unto it, Get thee hence,"
+Isa. xxx. 22. I know that those who are not convinced of the intrinsical
+evil and unlawfulness of former corruptions may, upon other
+considerations, go along and join in this reformation; for according to
+Augustine's rule,(1377) men are to let go those ecclesiastical customs
+which neither Scriptures nor councils bind upon us, nor yet are
+universally received by all churches. And according to Ambrose's rule to
+Valentinian, epist. 31, _Nullus pudor est ad meliora transive_,--it is no
+shame to change that which is not so good for that which is better. So
+doth Arnobius(1378) answer the pagans, who objected the novelty of the
+Christian religion: You should not look so much (saith he) _quid
+reliquerimus_ as _quid secuti simus_; be rather satisfied with the good
+which we follow, than to quarrel why we have changed our former practise.
+He giveth instance, that when men found the art of weaving clothes, they
+did no longer clothe themselves in skins; and when they learned to build
+houses, they left off to dwell in rocks and caves. All this carrieth
+reason with it, for _optimum est eligendum_. If all this satisfy not, it
+may be Nazianzen's rule(1379) will move some man: When there was a great
+stir about his archbishopric of Constantinople, he yielded for peace;
+because this storm was raised for his sake, he wished to be cast into the
+sea. He often professeth that he did not affect riches, nor dignities, but
+rather to be freed of his bishopric. We are like to listen long before we
+hear such expressions either from archbishop or bishop in England, who
+seem not to care much who sink, so that themselves swim above. Yet I shall
+name one rule more, which I shall take from the confessions of two English
+prelates. One(1380) of them hath this contemplation upon Hezekiah's taking
+away the brazen serpent, when he perceived it to be superstitiously
+abused: "Superstitious use (saith he) can mar the very institutions of
+God, how much more the most wise and well-grounded devices of men?"
+Another(1381) of them acknowledged that whatsoever is taken up at the
+injunction of men, and is not of God's own prescribing, when it is drawn
+to superstition, cometh under the case of the brazen serpent. You may
+easily make the assumption, and then the conclusion, concerning those
+ceremonies which are not God's institutions but men's devices, and have
+been grossly and notoriously abused by many to superstition.
+
+Now to return to the point in hand, if upon all or any of these, or the
+like principles, any of this kingdom shall join in the removal of
+corruptions out of the church, which yet they do not conceive to be in
+themselves, and intrinsically corruptions in religion, in this case I say
+with the Apostle, "I therein do rejoice, yea, and will rejoice," Phil. i.
+18, because every way reformation is set forward. But let such an one look
+to himself, how the doctrine drawn from this text falleth upon him, that
+he who only ceaseth to do evil, but repenteth not of the evil,--he who
+applieth himself to reformation, but is not ashamed of former defilements,
+is in danger both of God's displeasure, and of miscarrying in his judgment
+about reformation. It is far from my meaning to discourage any who are,
+with humble and upright hearts, seeking after more light than yet they
+have; I say it only for their sake, who, through the presumption and
+unhumbledness of their spirits, will acknowledge no fault in anything they
+have formerly done in church matters.
+
+I cannot leave this application to the kingdom till I enlarge it a little
+farther. There are four considerations which may make England ashamed and
+confounded before the Lord.
+
+1. Because of the great blessings which it hath so long wanted. Your
+flourishing estate in the world could not have countervailed the want of
+the purity and liberty of the ordinances of Christ. That was a heavy word
+of the Prophet, "Now for a long season Israel hath been without the true
+God, and without a teaching priest, and without law," 2 Chron. xv. 3. It
+hath not been altogether so with this land, where the Lord hath had not
+only a true church, but many burning and shining lights, many gracious
+preachers and professors, many notable defenders of the Protestant cause
+against Papists, many who have preached and written worthily of practical
+divinity, and of those things which most concern a man's salvation. Nay, I
+am persuaded, that all this time past, there have been in this kingdom
+many thousands of his secret and sealed ones, who have been groaning under
+that burden and bondage which they could not help, and have been "waiting
+for the consolation of Israel," Luke ii. 25. Nevertheless, the reformation
+of the church of England hath been exceedingly deficient, in government,
+discipline and worship; yea, and many places of the kingdom have been
+"without a teaching priest," and other places poisoned with false
+teachers. It is said (1 Sam. vii. 2), that all the house of Israel
+lamented after the Lord, when they wanted the ark twenty years. O let
+England lament after the Lord, until the ark be brought into the own place
+of it!
+
+2. There is another cause of this great humiliation, and that is, the
+point in the text, to be ashamed "of all that you have done." Sin, sin is
+that which blacketh our faces, and covereth us with confusion as with a
+mantle, and then most of all when we may read our sin in some judgment of
+God which lieth upon us; therefore the Septuagint here, instead of being
+"ashamed of all that they have done," read--"accept their punishment for
+all that they have done," which agreeth to that word in the law:(1382) "If
+then their uncircumcised hearts be humbled (the Greek readeth there
+_ashamed_) and they then accept of the punishment of their iniquity," Lev.
+xxvi. 41. This is now England's case, whose sin is written in the present
+judgment, and graven in your calamity as "with a pen of iron, and with a
+point of a diamond" (Jer. xvii. 1), to make you say, "The Lord our God is
+righteous in all his works which he doeth: for we obeyed not his voice,"
+Dan. ix. 14. Did not the land make idol gods of the court, and of the
+prelatical clergy, and feared them, and followed them more than God, and
+obeyed them rather than God, so that their threshold was set by God's
+threshold, and their posts by God's posts? as it is said, ver. 7. I speak
+not now of lawful obedience to authority. Is it not a righteous thing with
+the Lord to make these, your idols, his rods to correct you? Hath not
+England harboured and entertained Papists, priests, and Jesuits in its
+bosom? Is it not just that now you feel the sting and poison of these
+vipers? Hath there not been a great compliance with the prelates, for
+peace's sake, even to the prejudice of truth? Doth not the Lord now justly
+punish that Episcopal peace with an Episcopal war? Was not that prelatical
+government first devised, and since continued, to preserve peace and to
+prevent schisms in the church? And was it not God's just judgment that
+such a remedy of man's invention should rather increase than cure the
+evil? So that sects have most multiplied under that government, which now
+you know by sad experience. Hath not this nation, for a long time, taken
+the name of the Lord in vain, by a formal worship and empty profession? Is
+it not a just requital upon God's part, that your enemies have all this
+while taken God's name in vain, and taken the Almighty to witness of the
+integrity of their intentions for religion, law and liberty, thus
+persuading the world to believe a lie? What shall I say of the book of
+sports, and other profanations of the Lord's day? This licentiousness was
+most acceptable to the greatest part, and they "loved to have it so," Jer.
+v. 31. Doth not the great famine of the word almost everywhere in the
+kingdom, except in this city, make the land mourn on the Sabbath, and say,
+"I do remember my faults this day?" Gen. xli. 9. Yea, doth not the land
+now enjoy her Sabbaths, while men are constrained not only to cease from
+sports on that day, but from labouring the ground, and from other works of
+their calling upon other days? What should I speak of the lusts and
+uncleanness, gluttony and drunkenness, chambering and wantonness,
+prodigality and lavishness, excess of riot, masking, and balling, and
+sporting, when Germany and the Palatinate, and other places, were
+wallowing in blood, yea, when there was so much sin and wrath upon this
+same kingdom? Will not you say now, that for this the Lord God hath caused
+your "sun to go down at noon," and hath turned your feasts into mourning,
+and all your songs into lamentations? (Amos viii. 9, 10.) Or what should I
+say of the oppressions, injustice, cozenage in trading and in merchandise,
+which yourselves know better than I can do how much they have abounded in
+the kingdom? Doth not God now punish the secret injustice of his people by
+the open injustice of their enemies? Do ye not remember that mischief was
+framed by a law? And now, when your enemies execute mischief against law,
+will you not say, Righteous art thou, O Lord, and just are thy judgments.
+One thing I may not forget, and that is, that the Lord is punishing blood
+with blood, the blood of the oppressed, the blood of the persecuted, the
+blood of those who have died in prisons, or in strange countries,
+suffering for righteousness' sake. He that departed from evil did even
+make himself a prey, Isa. lix. 15. There was not so much as one drop of
+blood spilt upon the pillory for the testimony of the truth but it crieth
+to heaven, for precious is the blood of the saints, (Psal. lxxii. 14.)
+Doth not all the blood shed in Queen Mary's days cry? And doth not the
+blood of the Palatinate and of Rochel cry? And doth not the blood of souls
+cry? which is the loudest cry of all. God said to Cain, "The voice of thy
+brother's blood crieth unto me from the ground," Gen. iv. 10. The Hebrew
+hath it, "Thy brother's blood," which is well expounded both by the
+Chaldee Paraphrase and the Jerusalem Targum, the voice of the blood of all
+the generations and the righteous people which thy brother should have
+begotten crieth unto me. I may apply it to the thing in hand: The
+silencing, deposing, persecuting, imprisoning, and banishing of so many of
+the Lord's witnesses, of the most painful and powerful preachers, and the
+preferring of so many either dumb dogs or false teachers, maketh the voice
+of bloods to cry to heaven, even the blood of many thousands, yea,
+thousands of thousands of souls, which have been lost by the one, or might
+have been saved by the other. God will require the blood of the children
+which those righteous Abels might have begotten unto him. There is, beside
+all this, more blood-guiltiness, which is secret, but shall sometime be
+brought to light. O blood! blood! O let the land tremble, while the
+righteous Judge makes "inquisition for blood," Psal. ix. 12; O let England
+cry, "Deliver me from blood-guiltiness, O God"! Psal. li. 14.
+
+But you will say, peradventure, many of these things whereof I have spoken
+ought not to be charged upon the kingdom, they were only the acts of a
+prevalent faction for the time.
+
+I answer, First, God will impute them to the kingdom, unless the kingdom
+mourn for them. God gives not a charge to the destroying angel (Ezek. ix.
+4) to spare those who have not been actors in the public sins and
+abominations, but to spare those only who cry and sigh for those
+abominations.
+
+Secondly, When the ministers of state, or others having authority in
+church or commonwealth, take the boldness to do such acts, the kingdom is
+not blameless; for they durst not have done as they did, had the Lord but
+disclaimed, discountenanced, and cried out against them. It is marked both
+of John Baptist (Matt. xiv. 5), and of Christ (Matt. xxi. 46), and of the
+apostles (Acts iv. 21), that so long as the people did magnify them, and
+esteem them highly, their enemies durst not do unto them what else they
+would have done.
+
+3. A third consideration concerning the kingdom is this. Notwithstanding
+of all the happiness and gospel-blessings which it hath wanted in so great
+a measure, and notwithstanding of all the sins which have so much abounded
+in it, yet the servants of God have charged it with great
+presumption,(1383) that the church of England hath said with the church of
+Laodicea, "I am rich, and increased with goods, and have need of nothing,"
+Rev. iii. 17. It hath been proud of its clergy, learning, great revenues,
+peace, plenty, wealth, and abundance of all things, and as the Apostle
+chargeth the Corinthians, "Ye are puffed up, and have not rather mourned,"
+that the wicked ones "might be taken away from among you," 1 Cor. v. 2.
+And would God this presumption had taken an end when God did begin to
+afflict the land. It did even make an idol of this Parliament, and trusted
+to its own strength and armies, which hath provoked God so much, that he
+hath sometimes almost blasted your hopes that way, and hath made you to
+feel your weakness even where you thought yourselves strongest. God would
+not have England say, "Mine own hand hath saved me," Judg. vii. 2; neither
+will he have Scotland to say, "My hand hath done it:" but he will have
+both to say, His hand hath done it, when we were lost in our own eyes. God
+grant that your leaning so much upon the arm of flesh be not the cause of
+more blows. God must be seen in the work, and he will have us to give him
+all the glory, and to say, "Thou also hast wrought all our works in us,"
+Isa. xxvi. 12. O that all our presumption may be repented of, and that the
+land may be yet more deeply humbled! Assuredly God will arise and subdue
+our enemies, and command deliverances for Jacob; but it is as certain God
+will not do this till we be more humbled and (as the text saith) ashamed
+of all that we have done.
+
+4. There is another motive more evangelical: Let England be humbled even
+for the mercy, the most admirable mercy which God hath showed upon so
+undeserving and evil-deserving a kingdom. See it in this same prophecy, "I
+will establish my covenant with thee; and thou shalt know that I am the
+Lord: that thou mayest remember, and be confounded, and never open thy
+mouth any more because of thy shame, when I am pacified toward thee for
+all that thou hast done, saith the Lord God," Ezek. xvi. 62, 63. And
+again: "Not for your sakes do I this, saith the Lord God, be it known unto
+you: be ashamed and confounded for your own ways, O house of Israel,"
+Ezek. xxxvi. 32; "O my God (saith Ezra), I am ashamed and blush to lift up
+my face to thee," Ezra. ix. 6. And what was it that did so confound him?
+You may find it in that which followeth: God had showed them mercy, and
+had left them a remnant to escape, and had given them a nail in his holy
+place, and had lightened their eyes: "And now (saith he), O our God, what
+shall we say after this? for we have forsaken thy commandments," Ezra. ix.
+10. Let us this day compare, as he did, God's goodness and our own
+guiltiness. England deserved nothing but to get a bill of divorce, and
+that God should have said in his wrath, Away from me, I have no pleasure
+in you; but now he hath received you into the bond of his covenant, he
+rejoiceth over you to do you good, and to dwell among you; his banner over
+you is love. O let our hard hearts be overcome and be confounded with so
+much mercy, and let us be ashamed of ourselves, that after so much mercy
+we should be yet in our sins and trespasses.
+
+There is a third application, which I intend for the ministry, who ought
+to go before the people of God in the example of repentance and
+humiliation. You know the old observation, _Raro vidi clericum
+poenitentem_,--I have seldom seen a clergyman penitent. As Christ saith of
+rich men (Mark x. 24, 25), I may say of learned men, It is easier for a
+camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a man that trusts in his
+learning to enter into the kingdom of heaven. He will needs maintain the
+lawfulness of all which he hath done, and will not be, as this text would
+have him, ashamed of all that he hath done. Yet it is not impossible with
+God to make such an one deny himself, and that whatsoever in him exalts
+itself against Christ should be brought into captivity to the obedience of
+Christ (2 Cor. x. 5). Among all that were converted by the ministry of the
+apostles, I wonder most at the conversion of a great company of priests,
+Acts vi. 7. I do not suspect, as two learned men have done,(1384) that the
+text is corrupted in that place, and that it should be otherwise read. I
+am the rather satisfied, because there is nothing there mentioned of the
+conversion of the high priest, or of the chief priests, the heads of the
+twenty-four orders which were upon the council, and had condemned Christ:
+the place cannot be understood but of a multitude of common or inferior
+priests, even as, by proportion, in Hezekiah's reformation, the Levites
+were more upright in heart than the priests, 2 Chron. xxix. 34.
+
+And now many of the inferior clergy (as they were abusively called) are
+more upright in heart unto this present reformation than any of those who
+had assumed to themselves high degrees in the church. The hardest point of
+all is, so to embrace and follow reformation as to be ashamed of former
+prevarications and pollutions. But in this also the Holy Ghost hath set
+examples before the ministers of the gospel. I read, 2 Chron. xxx. 15,
+"The priests and the Levites were ashamed, and sanctified themselves, and
+brought in the burnt-offerings into the house of the Lord." They thought
+it not enough to be sanctified, but they were ashamed that they had been
+before defiled. A great prophet is not content to have his judgment
+rectified which had been in error, but he is ashamed of the error he had
+been in; "So foolish was I (saith he) and ignorant: I was as a beast
+before thee," Psal. lxxiii. 22. A great apostle must glorify God, and
+humbly acknowledge his own shame; "For I am the least of the apostles
+(saith he), that am not meet to be called an apostle, because I persecuted
+the church of God," 1 Cor. xv. 9. And shall I add the example of a great
+father? Augustine confesseth(1385) honestly, that for the space of nine
+years he both was deceived, and did deceive others. Nature will whisper to
+a man to look to his credit: but the text here calleth for another
+thing,--to look to the honour of God, and to thine own shame; and yet in so
+doing thou shalt be more highly esteemed both by God and by his children.
+Now without this let a man seem to turn and reform never so well, all is
+unsure work, and built upon a sandy foundation. And whosoever will not
+acknowledge their iniquity, and be ashamed for it, God shall make them
+bear their shame; according to that which is pronounced in the next
+chapter, ver. 10-15, against the Levites, who had gone astray when Israel
+went astray after their idols; and according to that, Mal. ii. 8, 9, "Ye
+have corrupted the covenant of Levi, saith the Lord of hosts: therefore
+have I also made you contemptible and base before all the people."
+
+The fourth and last application of this doctrine is for every Christian.
+The text teacheth us a difference betwixt a presumptuous and a truly
+humbled sinner; the one is ashamed of his sins, the other not. By this
+mark let every one of us try himself this day. It is a saving grace to be
+truly and really ashamed of sin. It is one of the promises of the covenant
+of grace, "Then shall ye remember your own evil ways, and your doings that
+were not good, and shall loathe yourselves in your own sight, for your
+iniquities, and for your abominations," Ezek. xxxvi. 31. Try, then, if
+thou hast but thus much of the work of grace in thy soul; and if thou
+hast, be assured of thy interest in Christ and in the new covenant. A
+reprobate may have somewhat which is very like this grace: but I shall lay
+open the difference betwixt the one and the other in these particulars:--
+
+1. To be truly ashamed of sin, is to be ashamed of it as an act of
+filthiness and uncleanness. The child of God, when he comes to the throne
+of grace, is ashamed of an unclean heart, though the world cannot see it.
+A natural man, at his best, looketh upon sin as it damneth and destroyeth
+the soul, but he cannot look upon it as it defiles the soul. Shame ariseth
+properly from a filthy act, though no other evil be to follow upon it.
+
+2. As we are ashamed of acts of filthiness, so of acts of folly. A natural
+man may judge himself a fool in regard of the circumstances or consequents
+of his sin, but he is not convinced that sin in itself is an act of
+madness and folly. When the child of God is humbled he becomes a fool in
+his own eyes,--he perceives he had done like a mad fool, 1 Cor. iii. 18;
+therefore he is said then to come to himself, Luke xv. 17.
+
+3. The child of God is ashamed of sin as an act of unkindness and
+unthankfulness to a sweet merciful Lord, Psal. cxxx. 4; Rom. ii. 4. Though
+there were no other evil in sin, the conscience of so much mercy and love
+so far abused, and so unkindly recompensed, is that which confoundeth a
+penitent sinner. As the wife of a kind husband, if she play the whore
+(though the world know it not), and if her husband, when he might divorce
+her, shall still love her and receive her into his bosom; such a one, if
+she have at all any sense, or any bowels of sorrow, must needs be
+swallowed up of shame and confusion for her undutifulness and treachery to
+such a husband. But now the hypocrite is not at all troubled or afflicted
+in spirit for sin as it is an act of unkindness to God.
+
+4. Shame, as philosophers have defined it,(1386) is "the fear of a just
+reproof:" not simply the fear of a reproof, but the fear of a just
+reproof. That is servile; this filial. The child of God is ashamed of the
+very guiltiness, and of that which may be justly laid to his charge; the
+hypocrite not so. Saul was not ashamed of his sin, but he was ashamed that
+Samuel should reprove him before the elders of the people, 1 Sam. xv. 15,
+30. Christ's adversaries were ashamed (Luke xiii. 17), not of their error,
+but because their mouths were stopped before the people, and they could
+not answer him. A hypocrite is ashamed, "as a thief is ashamed when he is
+found," Jer. ii. 26; mark that, "when he is found;" a thief is not ashamed
+of his sin, but because he is found in it, and so brought to a shameful
+end.
+
+5. When the cause of God is in hand, a true penitent is so ashamed of
+himself that he fears the people of God shall be put to shame for his
+sake, and that it shall go the worse with them because of his vileness and
+guiltiness. This made David pray, "O God, thou knowest my foolishness; and
+my sins are not hid from thee. Let not them that wait on thee, O Lord God
+of hosts, be ashamed for my sake; let not those that seek thee be
+confounded for my sake, O God of Israel," Psal. lxix. 5, 6. The sorrow and
+shame of a hypocrite (as all his other seeming graces) are rooted in
+self-love, not in the love of God: he hath not this in all his thoughts,
+that he is a spot or blemish in the body or church of Christ, and
+therefore to be humbled, lest for his sake God be displeased with his
+people; lest such a vile and abominable sinner as he is bring wrath and
+confusion upon others, and make Israel turn their back before the enemy. O
+happy soul that hath such thoughts as these!
+
+I have now done with the first part of the text, wherein I have been the
+larger, because it most fitteth the work of the day.
+
+The second follows: "Show them the form of the house," &c.
+
+Before I come to the doctrines which do here arise, I shall first explain
+the particulars mentioned in this part of the text, so as they may agree
+to the spiritual temple or church of Christ, which in the beginning I
+proved to be here intended.
+
+First, We find here the form and fashion of a house; in which the parts
+are very much diversified one from another. There are, in a formed and
+fashioned house, doors, windows, posts, lintels, &c.; there is also a
+multitude of common stones in the walls of the house. Such a house is the
+visible ministerial church of Christ, the parts whereof are _partes
+dissimilares_,--some ministers and rulers; some eminent lights; others of
+the ordinary rank of Christians,--that make up the walls. If God hath made
+one but a small pinning in the wall, he hath reason to be content, and
+must not say, Why am not I a post, or a corner-stone, or a beam? Neither
+yet may any corner-stone despise the stones in the wall, and say, I have
+no need of you.
+
+Secondly, The Prophet was here to show them "the goings out of the house,
+and the comings in thereof." These are not the same but different gates,
+it is plain: "When the people of the land shall come before the Lord in
+the solemn feasts, he that entereth in by the way of the north gate to
+worship, shall go out by the way of the south gate, &c., he shall not
+return by the way of the gate whereby he came in," Ezek. xlvi. 9. And that
+not only to teach us order, and the avoiding of confusion, occasioned by
+the contrary tides of a multitude, but to tell us farther, "No man, having
+put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of
+God," Luke ix. 62. We must not go out of the church the way that we came
+in (that were a door of defection), but hold our faces forward till we go
+out by the door of death.
+
+Thirdly, The text hath twice "all the forms thereof," which I understand
+of the outward forms and of the inward forms, which two I find very much
+distinguished by those who have written of the form and structure of the
+temple. The church is exceedingly beautified, even outwardly, with the
+ordinances of Christ, but the inward forms are the most glorious: "For,
+behold, the kingdom of God is within you," Luke xvii. 21; and it "cometh
+not with observation," ver. 20; "The king's daughter is all glorious
+within;" yet even "her clothing is of wrought gold," Psal. xlv. 13. When
+the angel had made an end of measuring the inner house (Ezek. xlii. 15),
+then he brought forth Ezekiel by the east gate, which was the chief gate
+by which the people commonly entered, and measured the outer wall in the
+last place. God's method is first to try the heart and reins, then to give
+to a man according to his works, Jer. xvii. 10. So should we measure, by
+the reed of the sanctuary, first the inner house of our hearts and minds,
+and then to measure our outer walls, and to judge of our profession and
+external performances.
+
+Lastly, The Prophet is commanded to write in their sight "all the
+ordinances thereof, and all the laws thereof;" for the church is a house
+not only in an architectonic, but in an economic sense. It is Christ's
+family governed by his own laws; and a temple which hath in it "them that
+worship," Rev. xi. 1, it hath its own proper laws by which it is ordered.
+_Alioe sunt leges Coesarum, alioe Christi_ (saith Jerome(1387)),--Caesar's
+laws and Christ's laws are not the same, but divers one from another.
+Schoolmen say,(1388) that a law, properly so called, is both illuminative
+and impulsive: illuminative, to inform and direct the judgment; impulsive,
+to move and apply the will to action. And accordingly there are two names
+in this text given to Christ's laws and institutions: one(1389) which
+importeth the instruction and information of our minds; another,(1390)
+which signifieth a deep imprinting or engraving (and that is made upon our
+hearts and affections), such as a pen of iron and other instruments could
+make upon a stone. It is not well when either of the two is wanting; for
+the light of truth, without the engraving of truth, may be extinguished;
+and the engraving of truth, without the light of truth, may be obliterate.
+
+All these I shall pass, and only pitch upon two doctrines which I shall
+draw from this second part of the text: one concerning the will of God's
+commandment, what God requireth of Israel to do; another concerning the
+will of God's decree, what he hath purposed himself to do.
+
+The first is this: "God will have Israel to build and order his temple,
+not as shall seem good in their eyes, but according to his own pattern
+only which he sets before them," which doth so evidently appear from this
+very text, that it needeth no other proof; for what else meaneth the
+showing of such a pattern to be kept and followed by his people? Other
+passages of this kind there are which do more abundantly confirm it.
+
+The Lord did prescribe to Noah both the matter, and fashion, and measures
+of the ark (Gen. vi. 14-16). To Moses he gave a pattern of the tabernacle,
+of the ark, of the mercy-seat, of the vail, of the curtains, of the two
+altars, of the table and all the furniture thereof, of the candlestick and
+all the instruments thereof, &c. And though Moses was the greatest prophet
+that ever arose in Israel, yet God would not leave any part of the work to
+Moses' arbitrement, but straitly commandeth him, "Look that thou make them
+after their pattern, which was showed thee in the mount," Exod. xxv. 40.
+When it came to the building of the first temple, Solomon was not in that
+left to his own wisdom, as great as it was, but David, the man of God,
+gave him a perfect "pattern of all that he had by the Spirit," 1 Chron.
+xxviii. 11-13. The second temple was also built "according to the
+commandment of the God of Israel" (Ezra vi. 14), by Haggai and Zechariah.
+And for the New Testament, Christ our great Prophet, and only King and
+Lawgiver of the church, hath revealed his will to the apostles, and they
+to us, concerning all his holy things; and we must hold us at these
+unleavened and unmixed ordinances which the apostles, from the Lord,
+delivered to the churches: "I will put upon you (saith he himself) none
+other burden: but that which ye have already hold fast till I come," Rev.
+ii. 24, 25.
+
+I know the church must observe rules of order and conveniency in the
+common circumstances of times, places, and persons; but these
+circumstances are none of our holy things,--they are only prudential
+accommodations, which are alike common to all human societies, both civil
+and ecclesiastical, wherein both are directed by the same light of nature,
+the common rule to both in all things of that kind, providing always that
+the general rules of the word be observed: "Do all to the glory of God," 1
+Cor. x. 31; "Let all things be done to edifying," 1 Cor. xiv. 26; "It is
+good neither to eat flesh, nor to drink wine, nor anything whereby thy
+brother stumbleth, or is offended, or is made weak," Rom. xiv. 21; "Let
+every man be fully persuaded in his own mind. To him that esteemeth
+anything to be unclean, to him it is unclean," Rom. xiv. 5, 14.
+
+The text giveth some clearing to this point: There is here showed to the
+house of Israel a pattern of the whole structure, and of the least part
+thereof, and all the measures thereof; yet no pattern is given of the
+kind, or quantity, or magnificence of the several stones, or of the
+instruments of building. The reason is, because the former is essential to
+a house, the latter accidental,(1391) the former, if altered, make another
+building; the latter, though altered, the building is the same: therefore
+where we have in the text "the forms thereof," the Septuagint read
+{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PERISPOMENI~},--_the substance thereof_.
+
+But to clear it a little farther, I put two characters upon those
+circumstances which are not determined by the word of God, but left to be
+ordered by the church as shall be found most convenient. First, They are
+not things sacred, nor proper to the church, as hath been said. They are
+of the same nature, they serve for the same end and use, both in sacred
+and civil things; for order and decency, the avoiding of confusion and the
+like, are alike common to church and commonwealth. Secondly, I shall
+describe them as one of the prelates hath done, who tells us,(1392) that
+the things which the Scripture hath left to the discretion of the church
+are those things "which neither needed nor could be particularly
+expressed. They needed not, because they are so obvious; and they could
+not, both because they are so numerous, and because so changeable."
+
+I will not insist upon questions of this kind, but will make a short
+application of the doctrine unto you, honourable and beloved. You may
+plainly see from what hath been said, that neither kings, nor parliaments,
+nor synods, nor any power on earth, may impose or continue the least
+ceremony upon the consciences of God's people, which Christ hath not
+imposed; therefore let neither antiquity, nor custom, nor conveniency, nor
+prudential considerations, nor show of holiness, nor any pretext
+whatsoever, plead for the reservation of any of your old ceremonies, which
+have no warrant from the word of God. Much might have been said for the
+high places among the Jews, as I hinted in the beginning; and much might
+have been said by the Pharisees for their frequent washings (Mark vii. 2,
+3, 4, 7), which, as they were ancient, and received by the traditions of
+the elders, so they were used to teach men purity, and to put them in mind
+of holiness; neither was their washing contrary to any commandment of God,
+except you understand that commandment of not adding to the word (Deut.
+iv. 2; xii. 32; Prov. xxx. 6), which doth equally strike against all
+ceremonies devised by man.
+
+"A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump," Gal. v. 9; and a little leak
+will endanger the ship. Thieves will readily dig through a house, how much
+more will they enter if any postern be left open to them. The wild beasts
+and boars of the forest will attempt to break down the hedges of the
+Lord's vineyard (Psal. lxxx. 13), how much more if any breach be left in
+the hedges. If, therefore, you would make a sure reformation, make a
+perfect reformation, lest Christ have this controversy with England,
+"Nevertheless I have somewhat against thee," Rev. ii. 4. And so much of
+our duty.
+
+The second doctrine concerneth God's decree, and it is this: "It is
+concluded in the council of heaven, and God hath it in the thoughts of his
+heart, to repair the breaches of his house, and to build such a temple to
+himself, as is shadowed forth in this vision of Ezekiel." For the
+comparing of this verse with ver. 7 in this same chapter, and with chap.
+xxxvii. 26, 27, will easily make it appear, that this showing of the
+pattern, and all this measuring, was not only in reference to Israel's
+duty, but to God's gracious purpose towards Israel. According to that,
+Zech. i. 16, "Therefore thus saith the Lord, I am returned to Jerusalem
+with mercies: my house shall be built in it, saith the Lord of hosts, and
+a line shall be stretched forth upon Jerusalem." Now this vision cannot be
+said to be fulfilled in Zorobabel's temple, as I proved before, only here
+take notice that the second destruction of the temple by the Romans was
+worse than the first by the Babylonians,--that desolation was repaired, but
+this could never be repaired, though the Jews did attempt the building
+again of the temple,(1393) first under Adrian the emperor, and afterward
+under Julian the apostate. The hand of God was seen against them most
+terribly by fire from heaven, and other signs of that kind; and about the
+same time (to observe that by the way) the famous Delphic temple was
+without man's hand, by fire and earthquake, utterly destroyed and never
+built again,--to tell the world that neither Judaism nor paganism should
+prevail, but the kingdom of Jesus Christ.
+
+Where then must we seek for the accomplishment of Ezekiel's vision, I mean
+for the new temple in which the Lord will dwell for ever, and where his
+holy name shall be no more polluted? Surely we must seek for it in the
+days of the gospel, as hath been before abundantly proved; but that the
+thing may be the better understood, let us take with us, at least, some
+few general observations concerning this temple of Ezekiel, as it
+representeth what should come to pass in the church of Christ.
+
+First of all, there is but one temple, not many, showed to him,--which is
+in part, and shall be yet more fulfilled in the church of the New
+Testament, according to that, Zech. xiv. 8, "And it shall be in that day,
+that living waters shall go out from Jerusalem;" which is the same that we
+have, Ezek. xlvii. 1. Then follows, "And the Lord shall be King over all
+the earth: in that day shall there be one Lord, and his name one." The
+like promise we find elsewhere: "I will give them one heart, and one way,"
+Jer. xxxii. 39; Ezek. xi. 19. It is observed, that for this very end of
+uniformity, the heathens also did erect temples, that they might all
+worship the same idol-god in the same manner. The plague of the Christian
+church hitherto hath been temple against temple, and altar against altar,
+"But thou, O Lord, how long?" Psal. vi. 3.
+
+Secondly, Ezekiel's temple and city are very large and capacious, as I
+showed in the beginning; and the city had three gates looking toward each
+of the four quarters of the world, Ezek. xlviii. 31-34: all this to
+signify the spreading of the gospel into all the earth; which is also
+signified by the holy waters issuing from the threshold of the temple, and
+rising so high that they were waters to swim in, Ezek. xlvii. 1, 5. God
+hath said to his church, "Enlarge the place of thy tent, and let them
+stretch forth the curtains of thine habitations: spare not, lengthen thy
+cords, and strengthen thy stakes: for thou shalt break forth on the right
+hand and on the left," Isa. liv. 2, 3. A great increase of the church
+there was in the apostles' times, Col. i. 6; but a far greater may be yet
+looked for, Rom. xi. 12. Though the enemy did come in like a flood, the
+Spirit of the Lord lifted up a standard against him, Isa. lix. 19; "The
+sea saw it, and fled; Jordan was driven back," Psal. cxiv. 3. But when the
+gospel cometh, "like a noise of many waters" (as the Prophet calls it,
+ver. 2, signifying an irresistible increase), it is in vain to build
+bulwarks against it: God will even break open "the fountains of the great
+deep," and open "the windows of heaven" (Gen. vii. 11); and the gospel
+will prove a second flood, which will overflow the whole earth, though not
+to destroy it (as Noah's did), but to make it glad; "For the earth shall
+be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as the waters cover
+the sea," Hab. ii. 14; Isa. xi. 9.
+
+Thirdly, In this temple, beside the holy of holies, were three
+courts:(1394) the court of the priests; the court of the people, commonly
+called _Atrium Israelis_; and, without both these, _Atrium Gentium_, the
+court of the heathen, so called, because the heathen, as also many of
+those who were legally unclean, might not only come unto the mountain of
+the house of the Lord, but also enter within the outer wall (mentioned
+Ezek. xlii. 20), and so worship in that outer court, or _intermurale_;
+unto which did belong (as we learn from Josephus(1395)) the great east
+porch, which kept the name of _Solomon's porch_,--in which both Christ
+himself did preach (John x. 23), and the apostles after him (Acts v. 12);
+by which means the free grace of the gospel was held forth even to
+heathens, and publicans, and unclean persons, who were not admitted into
+the court of Israel,--there to communicate in all the holy things: "For the
+Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost," Luke xix. 10.
+This outer court of the temple is meant when it is said that the Pharisees
+brought a woman taken in adultery into the temple, and set her before
+Christ, John viii. 2, 3. Now all this will hold true answerably of the
+spiritual temple; for, _first_, As the uncircumcised and the unclean were
+not admitted into the temple among the children of Israel (Ezek. xliv. 9),
+so all that live in the church of Christ are not to be admitted
+promiscuously to every ordinance of God, especially to the Lord's table,
+but only those whose profession, knowledge and conversation, after trial,
+shall be found such as may make them capable thereof: yet as heathens and
+unclean persons did enter into the outer court, and there hear Christ and
+his apostles, so there shall ever be in the church a door of grace and
+hope open to the greatest and vilest sinners who shall seek after Christ,
+and "ask the way to Zion, with their faces thitherward," Jer. i. 5.
+_Secondly_, There shall be also somewhat answerable to the court of the
+children of Israel: God can raise up even of the stones children to
+Abraham (Matt. iii. 9); he will not want a people to tread in the courts
+of his house, and to inquire in his temple. _Thirdly_, And as in the
+typical temple there was a court for the priests, so hath the Lord
+promised to the church: "Yet shall not thy teachers be removed into a
+corner any more, but thine eyes shall see thy teachers," Isa. xxx. 20; and
+again, "I will give you pastors according to mine heart, which shall feed
+you with knowledge and understanding," Jer. iii. 15. _Fourthly_, And as
+there was a secret and most holy place, where the ark was, and the
+mercy-seat, and where the glory of God dwelt, so Christ hath his own
+"hidden ones" (Psal. lxxxiii. 3), "the children of the bride-chamber"
+(Matt. ix. 15), who, "with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of
+the Lord, are changed into the same image, from glory to glory, even as by
+the Spirit of the Lord," 2 Cor. iii. 18. There is also a time coming when
+God will open the secrets of his temple, and make the ark of his testament
+to be seen otherwise than yet it hath been; which shall be at the sounding
+of the seventh trumpet, Rev. xi. 15, 19.
+
+Fourthly, The fourth thing wherein Ezekiel's temple represented the church
+of Christ is in regard of the great strength thereof: it stood "upon a
+very high mountain," chap. xl. 2. The material temple also in Jerusalem,
+as it is described by Josephus, was a very strong and impregnable place.
+Interpreters think that Cyrus was jealous of the strength of the temple,
+and for that cause gave order that it should not be built above threescore
+cubits high, whereas Solomon had built it sixscore cubits high, Ezra vi.
+3. The Romans afterwards, when they had subdued Judea, had a watchful eye
+upon the temple, and placed a strong garrison in the castle Antonia (which
+was beside the temple), the commander whereof was called "the captain of
+the temple" (Acts iv. 1); and all this for fear of sedition and rebellion
+among the Jews when they came to the temple. Now the invisible strength of
+the spiritual temple is clearly held forth unto us by him who cannot
+deceive us: "Upon this rock," saith he (meaning himself), "I will build my
+church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it," Matt. xvi.
+18. The princes and powers of the world are more jealous than they need of
+the church's strength; and yet (which is a secret judgment of God) they
+have not been afraid to suffer Babylon to be built in her full strength:
+"There were they in great fear where no fear was" (Psal. liii. 5); for
+when all shall come to all, it shall be found that the gospel and true
+religion is the strongest bulwark, and chief strength for the safety and
+stability of kings and states.
+
+Lastly, The glory of this temple was very great, insomuch that some have
+undertaken to demonstrate(1396) that it was a more glorious piece than any
+of the seven miracles of the world, which were so much spoken of among the
+ancients. But the greatest glory of this temple was, that "the glory of
+the God of Israel" came into it, and "the earth shined with his glory,"
+ver. 2; Christ, the brightness of his Father's glory (Heb. i. 3), walking
+in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks (Rev. i. 13), is and shall
+be more and more the church's glory; therefore it is said to her, "Arise,
+shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon
+thee," Isa. lx. 1. Surely as it was said of the new material temple, in
+reference to Christ, so it may be said of the new spiritual temple, which
+yet we look for, "The glory of this latter house shall be greater than of
+the former, saith the Lord of hosts; and in this place will I give peace,
+saith the Lord of hosts," Hag. ii. 9. Christ will keep the best wine till
+the end of the feast (John ii. 10); and he will bless our latter end more
+than our beginning, Ezek. xxxvi. 11.
+
+That which I have said, from grounds of Scripture, concerning a more
+glorious, yea, more peaceable condition of the church to be yet looked
+for, is acknowledged by some of our sound and learned writers(1397) who
+have had occasion to express their judgment about it: and it hath no
+affinity with the opinion of an earthly or temporal kingdom of Christ, or
+of the Jews' building again of Jerusalem and the material temple, and
+their obtaining a dominion above all other nations, or the like.
+
+I shall now bring home the point. There are very good grounds of hope to
+make us think that this new temple is not far off; and (for your part)
+that Christ is to make a new face of a church in this kingdom,--a fair and
+beautiful temple for his glory to dwell in: and he is even now about the
+work.
+
+For, first, "The set time" to build Zion is come, when the people of God
+"take pleasure in her stones, and favour the dust thereof," Psal. cii. 13,
+14, 16. The stones which the builders of Babel refused are now chosen for
+corner stones, and the stones which they chose do the builders of Zion now
+refuse: "They shall not take of thee a stone for a corner, nor a stone for
+foundations," Jer. li. 26. Those that have anything of Christ and of the
+image of God in them begin to creep out of the dust of contempt, and to
+appear like stars of the morning. Nay, to go farther than that, the old
+stones, the Jews, who have been for so many ages lying forgotten in the
+dust, those poor "outcasts of Israel" (Psal. cxlvii. 2), have of late come
+more into remembrance, and have been more thought of, and more prayed for,
+than they were in former generations.
+
+Secondly, Are there not great preparations and instruments fitted for the
+work? Hath not God called together, for such a time as this, the present
+Parliament, and the Assembly of Divines, his Zorobabels, and Jehoshuas,
+and Haggais, and Zechariahs? Are there not also hewers of stones, and
+bearers of burdens? much wholesome preaching, much praying and fasting,
+many petitions put up both to God and man? the covenant also going through
+the kingdom as the chief preparation of materials for the work? Is not the
+old rubbish of ceremonies daily more and more shovelled away, that there
+may be a clean ground? and is not the Lord by all this affliction humbling
+you, that there may be a deep and a sure foundation laid?
+
+Thirdly, The work is begun, and shall it not be finished? God hath laid
+the foundation, and shall he not "bring forth the head-stone?" Zech. iv.
+7, 9. Christ hath put Antichrist from his outerworks in Scotland, and he
+is now come to put him from his innerworks in England: "His work is
+perfect" (Deut. xxxii. 4), saith Moses; "I am Alpha and Omega (saith
+Christ), the beginning and the ending," Rev. i. 8; "Shall I bring to the
+birth, and not cause to bring forth, saith the Lord? shall I cause to
+bring forth, and shut the womb, saith thy God?" Isa. lxvi. 9.
+
+I may add three other signs whereby to discern the time, from Rev. xi. 1,
+the place before cited: _First_, Is there not now a measuring of the
+temple, ordinances and worshippers, by "a reed like unto a rod?" The reed
+of the sanctuary in the Assembly's hand, and the rod of power and law in
+your hand, are well met together. _Secondly_, There is a court, which
+before seemed to belong to the temple, left out and not measured: "From
+him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath," Matt. xxv.
+29. The Samaritans of this time, who serve the Lord, and serve their own
+gods too (2 Kings xvii. 33, 34), and do after the manners of idolaters,
+have professed (as they of old to the Jews, Ezra iv. 2), that they would
+build with you; that they will be for the true Protestant religion as you
+are; that they will also consent to the reformation of abuses, for the
+ease of tender consciences. But God doth so alienate and separate betwixt
+you and them, by his overruling providence, discovering their designs
+against you, and their deep engagements to the popish party, as if he
+would say unto them, "Ye have no portion, nor right, nor memorial in
+Jerusalem," Neh. ii. 20; or as it is in the parable concerning those who
+had refused to come when they were invited, yea, had taken the servants of
+Christ and entreated them spitefully, and killed them,--the great king hath
+said in his wrath, that they shall not taste of his supper, and he sends
+forth his armies to destroy those murderers, and to burn up their city,
+Matt. xxii. 6, 7; Luke xiv. 24. Surely what they have professed(1398)
+concerning reformation is scarce so much as the Pope did acknowledge when
+reformation did begin in Germany. However, as it is our heart's desire and
+prayer to God for them that they may be saved, so we are not out of hopes
+that God hath many of his own among them, unto whom he will give
+"repentance to the acknowledging of the truth."
+
+Lastly, The time seemeth to answer fitly: The new temple is built when the
+forty-two months of the beast's reign, and of the treading down the holy
+city (that is, by the best interpretation, twelve hundred and sixty years)
+come to an end. This computation, I conceive, should begin rather before
+the four hundredth year of Christ than after it; both because the Roman
+Emperor (whose falling was the Pope's rising) was brought very low before
+that time by the wars of the Goths and other barbarous nations, and
+otherwise, which will appear from history; and further, because pope
+Innocentius(1399) (who succeeded about the year 401) was raised so high
+that he drew all appeals from other bishops to the apostolical see,
+according to former statutes and customs, as he saith. I cannot pitch upon
+a likelier time than the year 383, at which time (according to the common
+calculation) a general Council at Constantinople (though Baronius and some
+others reckon that Council in the year 381) did acknowledge the primacy of
+the bishop of Rome,(1400) only reserving to the bishop of Constantinople
+the second place among the bishops. Did not then the beast receive much
+power when this much was acknowledged by a council of one hundred and
+fifty bishops, though sitting in the East, and moderated by Nectarius,
+archbishop of Constantinople. Immediately after this council, it is
+acknowledged by one of our great antiquaries,(1401) that the bishop of
+Rome did labour mightily to draw all causes to his own consistory, and
+that he doth scarce read of any heretic or schismatic condemned in the
+province where he lived, but straight he had recourse to the bishop of
+Rome. Another of our antiquaries(1402) noteth not long before that
+Council, that Antichrist did then begin to appear at Rome, and to exalt
+himself over all other bishops.
+
+Now if we should reckon the beginning of the beast's reign about the time
+of that Council, the end of it will fall in at this very time of ours. But
+I dare not determine so high a point. God's work will, ere it be long,
+make a clearer commentary upon his word. Only let this be remembered, We
+must not think it strange if, after the end of the twelve hundred and
+sixty years, Antichrist be not immediately and utterly abolished; for when
+that time is ended he makes war against the witnesses, yea, overcometh and
+killeth them. But that victory of his lasteth only three days and a half,
+and then God makes, as it were, a resurrection from the dead, and a tenth
+part of the great city falls before the whole fall; see Rev. xi. 3, 7, 11,
+13. Whether this killing of the witnesses (which seemeth to be the last
+act of Antichrist's power) be past, or to come, I cannot say: God knows.
+But assuredly, the acceptable year of Israel's jubilee, and the day of
+vengeance upon Antichrist, is coming, and is not far off.
+
+But now, is there no other application to be made of this point? Is all
+this said to satisfy curious wits, or, at the best, to comfort the people
+of God? Nay, there is more than so: it must be brought home to a practical
+use. As the assurance of salvation doth not make the child of God the more
+presumptuous, but the more humble (Ezek. xvi. 63); neither doth it make
+him negligent, but diligent in the way of holiness, and in all the acts of
+his spiritual warfare, Phil. iii. 13, 14; 2 Pet. i. 10; so that "every man
+that hath this hope in him purifieth himself," 1 John iii. 3: so
+answerably, the assurance of the new temple, and of the sweet days to
+come, serveth for a twofold practical use; even as David also applieth
+God's promise of Solomon's building the temple, 1 Chron. xxii. 9; for thus
+he speaketh to the princes of Israel, ver. 19, "Now set your heart and
+your soul to seek the Lord your God; arise, therefore, and build ye the
+sanctuary of the Lord God;" and this is, beside, the charge which he
+giveth to Solomon.
+
+First, then, ye must set your heart and your soul to seek God, forasmuch
+as you know it is not in vain to seek him for this thing, Dan. ix. 2, 3.
+When Daniel understood by books that the seventy years of Jerusalem's
+desolation were at an end, and that the time of building the temple again
+was at hand, then he saith, "I set my face unto the Lord God, to seek by
+prayer and supplications, with fasting, and sackcloth, and ashes." O let
+us do as he did! O let us "cry mightily unto God," Jonah iii. 8; and let
+us, with all our soul, and all our might, give ourselves to fasting and
+prayer. Now, if ever, "the effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man
+availeth much," James v. 16.
+
+Secondly, And the more actively you must go about the business. "Be ye
+stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch
+as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord," 1 Cor. xv. 58.
+What greater motive to action than to know that you shall prosper in it?
+"Arise therefore, and be doing."
+
+And so I am led upon the third and last part of the text, of which I shall
+speak but very little.
+
+The doctrine is this: Reformation ends not in contemplation, but in
+action. The pattern of the house of God is set before us to the end it may
+be followed; and the ordinances thereof to the end they may be obeyed:
+"Give me understanding (saith David), and I shall keep thy law; yea, I
+shall observe it with my whole heart," Psal. cxix. 34; "If ye know these
+things (saith Christ), happy are ye if ye do them," John xiii. 17. The
+point is plain, and needeth no proof but application.
+
+Let me therefore, honourable worthies, leave in your bosoms this one point
+more: Many of the servants of God who have stood in this place, and could
+do it better than I can, have been calling upon you to go on in the work
+of reformation: O "be not slothful in business," Rom. xii. 11; and forget
+not to do as you have been taught. Had you begun at this work, and gone
+about the building of the house of God as your first and chief business, I
+dare say you should have prospered better. It was one cause, among others,
+why the children of Israel (though the greater number, and having the
+better cause too) did twice fall before Benjamin, because, while they made
+so great a business for the villainy committed upon the Levites'
+concubine, they had taken no course with the graven image of the children
+of Dan (Jud. xviii. 30, 31), a thing which did more immediately touch God
+in his honour.
+
+But I am confident errors of this kind will be now amended, and that you
+will, by double diligence, redeem the time. I know your trouble is great,
+and your cares many, in managing the war, and looking to the safety of the
+kingdom, yet mark what David did in such a case: "Behold, in my trouble
+(saith he) I have prepared for the house of the Lord an hundred thousand
+talents of gold, and a thousand thousand talents of silver; and of brass
+and iron without weight," 1 Chron. xxii. 14. David did manage great wars
+with mighty enemies, (2 Sam. v., viii., x., xi.,) the Philistines,
+Moabites, Ammonites, and Syrians; beside the intestine war made first by
+Abner (2 Sam. ii. 8), and afterward by Absalom (2 Sam. xv. 10), and after
+that by Sheba (2 Sam. xx. 1.) Notwithstanding of all this, in his trouble
+and poverty (the word signifieth both), he made this great preparation for
+the house of God; and if God had given him leave, he had, in his trouble,
+built it too, for you well know he was not hindered from building the
+temple by the wars or any other business, but only because God would not
+permit him.
+
+Set before you also the example of the Jews, when the prophets of God did
+stir them up to the building of the temple, Ezra v. 1, 2. They say not, We
+must first build the walls of Jerusalem to hold out the enemy, but the
+text saith, "They began to build the house of God." They were not full
+four years in building the temple, and finished it in the sixth year of
+Darius, Ezra. iv. 24 with vi. 15. Now all the rest of his reign did pass,
+and all Xerxes' reign, and much of Artaxerxes Longimanus's reign, before
+the walls of Jerusalem were built, for about that work was Nehemiah from
+the twentieth year of Artaxerxes to the two and thirtieth year (Neh. v.
+14); and if great chronologers be not very far mistaken, the temple was
+finished fourscore and three years before the walls of Jerusalem were
+finished.(1403)
+
+It is far from my meaning to cool your affection to the laws, liberties,
+peace, and safety of the kingdom. I desire only to warm your hearts with
+the zeal of reformation, as that which, all along, you must carry on in
+the first place.
+
+One thing I cannot but mention: The reverend Assembly of Divines may
+lament (as Augustine in another case), _Heu, heu, quam tarde
+festino!_--_alas, alas, how slowly do I make speed!_
+
+But since now, by the blessing of God, they are thus far advanced, that
+they have found, in the word of God, a pattern for presbyterial government
+over many particular congregations; and have found also, from the word,
+that ordination is an act belonging to such a presbytery, I beseech you
+improve that "whereto we have already attained" (Phil. iii. 16), till
+other acts of a presbytery be agreed on afterward. Yourselves know better
+than I do, that much people is perishing (Prov. xxix. 18), because there
+is no vision: "The harvest truly is great, but the labourers are few,"
+Luke x. 2, Give me leave, therefore, to quicken you to this part of the
+work, that, with all diligence and without delay, some presbyteries be
+associated and erected (in such places as yourselves in your wisdom shall
+judge fittest), with power to ordain ministers with the consent of the
+congregations, and after trial of the gifts, soundness and conversation of
+the men. In so doing you shall both please God and bring upon yourselves
+the blessing of many poor souls that are ready to perish (Job xxix. 13);
+and you shall likewise greatly strengthen the hearts and hands of your
+brethren in Scotland, joined in covenant and in arms with you. I say
+therefore again, "Arise therefore, and be doing, and the Lord be with
+thee," 1 Chron. xxii. 16; yea, the Lord is with you (Hag. ii. 4, 5)
+according to the word that he hath covenanted with you, so his Spirit
+remaineth among you: Fear ye not, but "be strong in the Lord, and in the
+power of his might."
+
+
+
+
+
+A SERMON PREACHED BEFORE THE RIGHT HONOURABLE THE HOUSE OF LORDS, IN THE
+ABBEY CHURCH AT WESTMINSTER.
+
+
+ A
+
+ SERMON
+
+ PREACHED BEFORE THE
+
+ RIGHT HONOURABLE THE HOUSE OF LORDS,
+
+ IN THE ABBEY CHURCH AT WESTMINSTER,
+
+ AUGUST 27, 1645;
+
+ BEING THE DAY APPOINTED FOR SOLEMN AND PUBLIC HUMILIATION.
+
+ BY GEORGE GILLESPIE,
+
+ MINISTER AT EDINBURGH, 1642.
+
+"Aliae sunt leges Caesarum, aliae Christi: aliud Papinianus, aliud Paulus
+ noster praecipit."--_Hieron. in Epitaphio Fabioloe_
+
+ EDINBURGH:
+
+ ROBERT OGLE AND OLIVER AND BOYD
+
+M. OGLE & SON AND WILLIAM COLLINS, GLASGOW. J. DEWAR, PERTH. W. MIDDLETON,
+ DUNDEE.
+
+ G. & R. KING, ABERDEEN. W. M'COMB, BELFAST
+
+ HAMILTON, ADAMS, & CO., AND JAMES NISBET AND CO., LONDON.
+
+ 1645.
+
+ REPRINTED BY A. W. MURRAY, MILNE SQUARE, EDINBURGH
+
+ 1844.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE TO THE READER.
+
+
+I have in this sermon applied my thoughts toward these three things: 1.
+The soul-ensnaring error of the greatest part of men, who choose to
+themselves such a way to the kingdom of heaven as is broad, and smooth,
+and easy, and but little or nothing at all displeasing to flesh and blood,
+like him that tumbled down upon the grass and said, _Utinam hoc esset
+laborare_. 2. The grumbling and unwillingness which appeareth in very
+many, when they should submit to that reformation of the church which is
+according to the mind of Jesus Christ, like them that said to the seers,
+"See not; and to the prophets, Prophesy not unto us right things, speak
+unto us smooth things," Isa. xxx, 10; and again, "Let us break their bands
+asunder, and cast away their cords from us," Psal. ii. 3. 3. The sad and
+desolate condition of the kingdom of Scotland, then calling for our
+prayers and tears, and saying, "Call me not Naomi (pleasant), call me Mara
+(bitter): for the Almighty hath dealt very bitterly with me," Ruth i. 20.
+We were "pressed out of measure, above strength," and "had the sentence of
+death in ourselves, that we should not trust in ourselves, but in God
+which raiseth the dead; who delivered us from so great a death, and doth
+deliver; in whom we trust that he will yet deliver us," 2 Cor. i. 8-10.
+Our brethren also "helping together by prayer for us," that for the mercy
+bestowed on us by means of the prayers of many, thanks may be given by
+many on our behalf. "The Lord liveth, and blessed be my Rock: and let the
+God of my salvation be exalted," Psal. xviii, 46; He is our God; and we
+will prepare for him an habitation; our father's God, and we will exalt
+him, Exod. xv. 2; "Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel, who only
+doeth wondrous things. And blessed be his glorious name for ever: and let
+the whole earth be filled with his glory," Psal. lxxii. 18, 19. Scotland
+shall yet be "a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord, and a royal diadem
+in the hand of thy God," Isa. lxii. 3; and shall be called Hephzi-bah and
+Beulah. Only let us remember our evil ways, and be confounded, and never
+open our mouth any more because of our shame, when the Lord our God is
+pacified towards us. Now are both kingdoms put to a trial, whether their
+humiliations be filial, and whether then can mourn for sin more than for
+judgment. And let us now hear what the Spirit speaketh to the churches,
+and not turn again to folly New provocations, or the old unrepented, will
+create new ones; therefore "sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto us."
+
+
+
+
+SERMON.
+
+
+MALACHI iii. 2.
+
+
+ "But who may abide the day of his coming? and who shall stand when
+ he appeareth? for he is like a refiner's fire, and like fuller's
+ soap."
+
+
+If you ask, "Of whom speaketh the Prophet this, of himself or of some
+other man?" (Acts viii. 34)--it is answered, both by Christian and Jewish
+interpreters: The Prophet speaketh this of Christ, the Messenger of the
+covenant, then much longed and looked for by the people of God, as is
+manifest by the preceding verse. And as it was fit that Malachi, the last
+of the prophets, should shut up the Old Testament with clear promises of
+the coming of Christ (which you find in this and in the following
+chapter), so he takes the rather occasion from the corrupt and degenerate
+estate of the priests at that time (which he had mentioned in the former
+chapter) to hold forth unto the church the promised Messiah, who was to
+come unto them to purify the sons of Levi.
+
+But if you ask again, Of what coming or appearing of Christ doth the
+Prophet speak this? whether of the first, or of the last, or of any
+other?--the answer of expositors is not so unanimous. Some understand the
+last coming of Christ, in the glory of his Father, and holy angels, to
+judge the quick and the dead. This cannot stand with ver. 34, "He shall
+purify the sons of Levi, and purge them," &c.; but at the last judgment it
+will be too late for the sons of Levi to be purified and purged, or for
+Judah and Jerusalem to bring offerings unto the Lord, as in the days of
+old.
+
+Others understand the first coming of Christ. And of these some understand
+his incarnation, or appearing in the flesh; others take the meaning to be
+of his coming into the temple of Jerusalem, to drive out the buyers and
+sellers (Matt. xxi. 10-12), at which time all the city was moved at his
+coming. This exposition hath better grounds than the other, because the
+coming of Christ (here spoken of) did not precede, but soon follow after
+the ministry of John Baptist, and therefore cannot be meant of our
+Saviour's incarnation, but rather of his appearing with power and
+authority in the temple. But this also falleth short, and neither
+expresseth the whole nor the principal part of what is meant in this text;
+for how can it be said that the prophecy which followeth, ver. 3, 4 (which
+is all of a piece with ver. 2), was fulfilled during Christ's appearing
+and sitting in the temple of Jerusalem? or how can it be conceived that
+the offerings of Judah and Jerusalem were pleasant to the Lord at that
+time, when the Gentiles were not, and the Jews would not be brought in, to
+offer unto the Lord an offering in righteousness? So that whether we
+understand by Judah and Jerusalem the Jewish church or the Christian, this
+thing could not be said to be accomplished while Christ was yet upon
+earth. And in like manner, whether we understand by the sons of Levi the
+priests and Levites of the Jews, or the ministers of the gospel, it cannot
+be said that Christ did, in the days of his flesh, purify the sons of Levi
+as gold and silver.
+
+I deny not but the Lord Jesus did then begin to set about this work. But
+that which is more principally here intended, is Christ's coming and
+appearing in a spiritual, but yet most powerful and glorious manner, to
+erect his kingdom, and to gather and govern his churches, by the ministry
+of his apostles and other ministers, whom he sent forth after his
+ascension.
+
+Of this coming he himself speaketh, Matt. xvi. 28, "Verily I say unto you,
+There be some standing here which shall not taste of death till they see
+the Son of man coming in his kingdom;" Mark addeth, "with power" (Mark ix.
+1). Neither was that all. He did not so come at that time as to put forth
+all his power, or to do his whole work. He hath at divers times come and
+manifested himself to his churches; and this present time is a time of the
+revelation of the Son of God, and a day of his coming. We look also for a
+more glorious coming of Jesus Christ before the end be: for "the Redeemer
+shall come to Sion" (Isa. lix. 20), "and shall turn away ungodliness from
+Jacob" (Rom. xi. 26); and he shall destroy Antichrist "with the brightness
+of his coming," 2 Thess. ii. 8; in which place the Apostle hath respect to
+Isa. xi. 4, where it is said of Christ, the rod of Jesse, "with the breath
+of his lips shall he slay the wicked." There, withal, you have the
+church's tranquillity, the filling of the earth with the knowledge of the
+Lord, and the restoring of the dispersed Jews, as you may read in that
+chapter. Some have observed(1404) (which ought not to pass without
+observation) that the Chaldee Paraphrase had there added the word
+_Romilus_: "He shall slay the wicked Romilus;" whereupon they challenge
+Arias Montanus for leaving out that word to wipe off the reproach from the
+Pope. However, the Scriptures teach us, that the Lord Jesus will be
+revealed mightily, and will make bare his holy arm, as well in the
+confusion of Antichrist, as in the conversion of the Jews, before the last
+judgment and the end of all things.
+
+By this time you may understand what is meant in the text by the day of
+Christ's coming, or {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~},--_coming in_, as the Septuagint read, meaning
+his coming, or entering into his temple, mentioned in the first verse; by
+which temple Jerome upon the place rightly understandeth the church, or
+spiritual temple.
+
+When this temple is built, Christ cometh into it, to fill the house with
+the cloud of his glory, and to walk in the midst of the seven golden
+candlesticks. The same thing is meant by his appearing: "When he
+appeareth," saith our translation; "When he shall be revealed,"; others
+read, "When he shall be seen," or "in seeing of him." The original word I
+find used to express more remarkable, divine, and glorious sights, as Gen.
+xvi. 13, "Have I also here looked after him that seeth me?" xxii. 14, "In
+the mount of the Lord it shall be seen." From this word had the prophets
+the name of seers, 1 Sam. ix. 9; and from the same word came the name of
+visions, 2 Chron. xxvi. 5, "Zechariah, who had understanding in the
+visions of God."
+
+Now, but what of all this? might some think. If Christ come, it is
+well,--he is the desire of all nations. O but when Christ thus cometh into
+his kingdom among men with power, and is seen appearing with some beams of
+his glory, "Who may abide, and who shall stand?" saith the text. How shall
+sinners stand before the Holy One? How shall dust and ashes have any
+fellowship with the God of glory? How shall our weak eyes behold the Sun
+of righteousness coming forth like a bridegroom out of his chamber? Did
+not Ezekiel fall upon his face at "the appearance of the likeness of the
+glory of the Lord"? Ezek. i. 28. Did not Isaiah cry out, "Woe is me, for I
+am undone," "for mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts"? Isa.
+vi. 5.
+
+But why is it so hard a thing to abide the day of Christ's coming, or to
+stand before him when he appeareth in his temple? If you ask of him, as
+Joshua did, "Art thou for us, or for our adversaries?" (Josh. v. 13,) he
+will answer you, "Nay; but as a captain of the host of the Lord am I now
+come," (ver. 14.) If you ask of him, as the elders of Bethlehem asked of
+Samuel (while they were trembling at his coming), "Comest thou peaceably?"
+He will answer you as Samuel did, "Peaceably." What is there here, then,
+to trouble us? Doth he not come to save, and not to destroy? Yes, to save
+the spirit, but to destroy the flesh; he will have the heart-blood of sin,
+that the soul may live for ever. This is set forth by a double metaphor:
+one taken from the refiner's fire, which purifieth metals from the dross;
+the other, from the fuller's soap; others read the fuller's grass, or the
+fuller's herb. Some have thought it so hard to determine, that they have
+kept into the translation the very Hebrew word _borith_. Jerome tells
+us,(1405) that the fuller's herb which grew in the marsh places of
+Palestina, had the same virtue for washing and making white which nitre
+hath. Yet I suppose the fuller's soap hath more of that virtue in it than
+the herb could have. However it is certain that {~HEBREW LETTER BET~}{~HEBREW LETTER RESH~}{~HEBREW LETTER RESH~},--_borith_, cometh from
+a word which signifieth to make clean, according to that, Mark ix. 3, "His
+raiment became shining, exceeding white as snow; so as no fuller on earth
+can white them."
+
+But to whom will Christ thus reveal himself? And who are they whom he will
+refine from their dross, and wash from their filthiness? That we may know
+from the two following verses: He is not a refiner's fire to those that
+are "reprobate silver," (Jer. vi. 30,) and can never be refined; neither
+is he as fuller's soap to those whose spot "is not the spot of his
+children" (Deut. xxxii. 5): nay, Christ doth not thus lose his labour, but
+he refineth and maketh clean the sons of Levi, also Judah and Jerusalem.
+This, I doubt not to aver, doth principally belong to the Jews, for to
+them pertain the promises (Rom. ix. 4), saith the Apostle, and the natural
+branches shall be graffed into their own olive-tree (xi. 24); but it
+belongeth also to us Gentiles, who are cut out of the wild olive-tree, and
+are graffed into the good olive-tree. God hath persuaded Japhet to dwell
+in the tents of Shem; and so we are now the Judah and Jerusalem, and our
+ministers the sons of Levi. God's own church and people, even the best of
+them, have need of this refiner's fire and of this fuller's soap.
+
+And so much for the scope, sense, and coherence of the text. The general
+doctrine which offereth itself to us from the words, is this:--
+
+"The way of Christ, and fellowship with him, is very difficult and
+displeasing to our sinful nature, and is not so easy a matter as most men
+imagine."
+
+First of all, this doth clearly arise out of the text. As when the people
+said to Joshua, "God forbid that we should forsake the Lord, to serve
+other gods," (Josh. xxiv. 16,) Joshua answered, "Ye cannot serve the Lord,
+for he is an holy God; he is a jealous God," (ver. 19.) Just so doth the
+Prophet here answer the Jews, when they were very much desiring and
+longing for the Messiah, promising to themselves comfort, and peace, and
+prosperity, and the restoring of all things according to their heart's
+desire, if Christ were once come. Nay, saith the Prophet, not so: "Who may
+abide the day of his coming, and who shall stand when he appeareth?"
+
+Secondly, Other scriptures do abundantly confirm it: The doctrine of Jesus
+Christ was such as made many of his disciples say, "This is an hard
+saying; who can hear it?" John vi. 60. And from that time many of them
+"went back, and walked no more with him." A young man, a ruler, who came
+to him with great affection, was so cooled and discouraged at hearing of
+the cross, and selling of all he had, that he went away sad and sorrowful,
+Mark x. 21, 22. The apostles themselves having heard him say, that "it is
+easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man
+to enter into the kingdom of God," "they were exceedingly amazed [at this
+doctrine], saying, Who then can be saved?" Matt. xix. 24, 25. As for his
+life and actions, they were such that not only did the Gadarenes beseech
+him to depart out of their coasts (Matt. viii. 34), but his own friends
+and kinsfolks were about "to lay hold on him: for they said, He is beside
+himself," Mark iii. 21. His sufferings were such, that all his disciples
+did forsake him, and went away every man to his own home again. And what
+shall be the condition of those that will follow him? If we will indeed be
+his disciples, he hath forewarned us to sit down first, and count our
+cost, Luke xiv. 28. He hath told us, It will cost us no less than the
+bearing of the cross, the forsaking of all, yea, which is hardest of all,
+the denying of ourselves, John v. 26; ii. 33. We must even cease to be
+ourselves, and cannot be his, except we leave off to be our own, Matt.
+xvi. 24. And what shall the world think of us all this while? "Know ye not
+(saith James) that the friendship of the world is enmity with God?
+whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God,"
+James iv. 4; "Let no man deceive himself (saith Paul). If any man among
+you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a fool, that he may
+be wise," 1 Cor. iii. 18. What do ye think now? Are not all these hard
+sayings for flesh and blood to hear? I might add much more of this kind.
+
+Thirdly, Thus it must be, to set the higher value upon Christ, and upon
+the lot of God's children: "Will I offer burnt-offerings to the Lord my
+God (saith David) of that which doth cost me nothing"? 2 Sam. xxiv. 24.
+And shall our lines fall to us in pleasant places? or shall we have a
+goodly heritage which doth cost us nothing? How should the preciousness of
+the saint's portion be known, if we lose nothing that is dear to us to
+come by it? Phil. iii. 7, "What things were gain to me, those I counted
+loss for Christ;" Matt. xiii. 44-46, "The kingdom of heaven is like unto
+treasure hid in a field; the which when a man hath found, he hideth, and
+for joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth that field.
+Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto a merchant-man seeking goodly
+pearls; who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all
+that he had, and bought it." Jacob's family must give away all the strange
+gods, and all their ear-rings also (Gen. xxxv. 4), before they get leave
+to build an altar unto the Lord at Bethel; Abraham must get him out of his
+country, and from his kindred, if he will come unto the land which the
+Lord will show him; Moses must forsake the court of Egypt, if he will take
+him to the heritage of Jacob his father; the disciples must leave ships,
+nets, fathers, and all, if they will follow Christ. And as they who come
+in sight of the south pole lose sight of the north pole, so, when we
+follow Christ, we must resolve to forsake somewhat else, yea, even that
+which is dearest to us.
+
+Fourthly, If it were not so, there should be no sure evidence of our
+closing in covenant with Christ; for then, and never till then, doth the
+soul give itself up to Christ to be his, and closeth with him in a
+covenant, when it renounceth all other lovers, that it may be his only.
+Shall a woman be married to a husband with the reservation of another
+lover, or upon condition that she shall ever stay in her father's house?
+So the soul cannot be married to Christ, except it not only renounce its
+bosom sins, lusts, and idols, but be content also to part with the most
+lawful creature-comforts for his sake: "Forget also thine own people, and
+thy father's house," Psal. xlv. 10. The repudiating of creature-comforts,
+and a covenant with Christ, go hand in hand together, Isa. lv. 2, 3.
+Nahash would not make a covenant with the men of Jabesh-Gilead, unless
+they would pluck out their right eyes, intending (as Josephus gives the
+reason) to disable them from fighting or making war; for the buckler or
+shield did cover their left eye when they fought, so that they had been
+hard put to it, to fight without the right eye. This was a cruel mercy in
+him; but it is a merciful severity in Christ, that he will make no
+covenant with us, except the right eye of the old man of sin in us be put
+out.
+
+O then, let us learn from all this how miserably many a poor soul is
+deluded, imagining, as the Jews did, that Christ shall even satisfy their
+carnal and earthly desires, and that the way of salvation is broad and
+easy enough. If the way of Christ be such as you have now heard, then
+surely they are far from it, who give loose reins to the flesh, as David
+did to Adonijah (1 Kings i. 6; Eccl. ii. 10); who have not displeased
+their flesh at any time, nor said, "Why hast thou done so?" who do not
+withhold their heart from any joy, and whatsoever their eyes desire, they
+keep it not from them; who are like the "wild ass used to the wilderness,
+that snuffeth up the wind at her pleasure" (Jer. ii. 24), and like "the
+swift dromedary, traversing her ways" (ver. 23); who cannot endure to be
+enclosed into so narrow a lane as ministers describe the way to heaven to
+be. These are like fed oxen, which have room enough in the meadows, but
+they are appointed for slaughter, when the labouring oxen, which are kept
+under the yoke, shall be brought home to the stall and fed there. Was it
+not so with the rich man and Lazarus? Luke xvi. 25. Nay, and many of the
+children of God fall into this same error, of making the way of Christ
+broader and easier than ever Christ made it, and taking more liberty than
+ever he allowed; therefore mark ye well our Saviour's words: "Enter ye in
+at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that
+leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat: because
+strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, which leadeth unto life, and
+few there be that find it," Matt. vii. 13, 14. There be but few that seek
+it, and yet fewer that find it, but fewest of all that enter in at it.
+
+But how doth all this agree with Matt. xi. 30, "For my yoke is easy, and
+my burden is light;" and 1 John v. 3, "His commandments are not grievous."
+
+I answer, 1. That is spoken to poor souls that are labouring and heavy
+laden; a metaphor taken from beasts drawing a full cart,--which both labour
+in drawing, and are weary in bearing. But my text speaketh to those that
+are like undaunted heifers, and like bullocks unaccustomed to the yoke.
+The same Christ is a sweet and meek Christ to some, but a sour and severe
+Christ to others.
+
+2. Christ's yoke is easy in comparison of the yoke of the law, which
+neither we nor our fathers were able to bear.
+
+3. As wisdom is easy to him that understandeth, so is Christ's yoke easy,
+and his burden light, to those that are well acquainted with it, and have
+good experience of it: "When thou goest, thy steps shall not be
+straitened; and when thou runnest, thou shall not stumble," Prov. iv. 12:
+this is spoken of the way of wisdom. But he saith, "When thou goest," not
+"when thou beginnest," or "when thou enterest." If thou art but once upon
+thy progress, going and running, thou shalt find the way still the easier,
+and still the sweeter.
+
+4. Mark Christ's own words: It is a yoke, though an easy one, and a
+burden, though a light one: a yoke to the flesh, but easy to the spirit; a
+burden to the old man, but light to the new man. He poureth in wine and
+oil into our wounds: oil to cherish them, and wine to cleanse them. He can
+both plant us as trees of righteousness, and at the same time lay the axe
+to the root of the old tree: he will have mercy upon the sinner, but no
+mercy upon the sin; he will save the soul, but yet so as by fire.
+
+And thus much, in general, of the difficulty and hardship of the way of
+Christ,--the great point held forth in this text; which I have the rather
+insisted upon, as a necessary foundation for those particulars which I am
+to speak of. Were this principle but rightly apprehended, it were easy to
+persuade you when we come to particulars.
+
+Some Papists have alleged this text for their purgatory. Here is indeed a
+purgatory, and a fire of purgatory, and such a purgatory that we must
+needs go through it before we can come to heaven. But this purgatory is in
+this world, not in the world to come. The flesh must go through it, and
+not the soul separated: and it must purge us from mortal, not from venial
+sins; and by a spiritual, not a material fire.
+
+I will now come to the particulars: Christ is to us as a refiner's fire,
+and as fuller's soap, three ways: in respect of, 1. Reformation; 2.
+Tribulation; 3. Mortification;--which make not three different senses, but
+three harmonious parts of one and the same sense.
+
+I begin with _reformation_; concerning which I draw this doctrine from the
+text:--
+
+"The right reformation of the church, which is according to the mind of
+Jesus Christ, is not without much molestation and displeasure to men's
+corrupt nature. It is a very purgatory upon earth: it is like the fire to
+drossy silver, and like fuller's soap to slovenly persons, who would
+rather keep the spots in their garments than take pains to wash them
+out."(1406)
+
+Look but upon one piece of the accomplishment of this prophecy, and by it
+judge of the rest. When Christ cometh to Jerusalem, "meek, and sitting
+upon an ass" (as the Prophet said), all the city is troubled at his
+coming, Matt. xxi. 5,10; when he had but cast out the buyers and sellers
+out of the temple, the priests and scribes begin to plot his death, Luke
+xix. 45, 47; nay, where Christ and the gospel cometh, there is a shaking
+of heaven and earth, Hag. ii. 6. The less wonder if I call reformation
+like a refiner's fire. The dross of a church is not purged away without
+this violence of fire.
+
+This is the manner of reformation held forth in Scripture, and that in
+reference, 1. To magistrates and statesmen; 2. To ministers; 3. To a
+people reformed; 4. To a people not reformed.
+
+In reference to magistrates and statesmen, reformation is a fire that
+purgeth away the dross: Isa. i. 25, "And I will turn my hand upon thee,
+and purely purge away thy dross, and take away all thy tin." Here is the
+refiner's fire; and the Chaldee Paraphrase addeth the fuller's _borith_.
+Then followeth, ver. 26, "And I will restore thy judges as at the first,
+and thy counsellors as at the beginning: afterward thou shalt be called,
+The city of righteousness, The faithful city." Interpreters note upon that
+place, that no effectual reformation can be looked for till rulers and
+magistrates be reformed; and that therefore the Lord promiseth to purge
+away the dross and tin of corrupt rulers and judges, and to give his
+people such judges and rulers as they had of old, Moses, Joshua, the
+judges, David, Solomon, and the like.
+
+In reference to ministers the doctrine is most clear. The next words after
+my text tell you, that this refining fire is specially intended for
+purifying the sons of Levi. The same thing we have more largely, though
+more obscurely, in 1 Cor. iii. 12-15. I do not say that the Apostle there
+meaneth only of times of reformation, but this I say, that it holdeth
+true, and most manifestly, too, of times of reformation; and that this is
+not to be excluded, but to be taken in as a principal part of the Holy
+Ghost's intendment in that scripture.(1407) He is speaking of the
+ministers of the gospel and their ministry, supposing always that they
+build upon Christ, and hold to that true foundation. Upon this foundation
+some build gold, silver, precious stones; that is, such preaching of the
+word, such administration of the sacraments, such a church discipline, and
+such a life as is according to the word, and savoureth of Christ: others
+build wood, hay, stubble; whereby is meant whatsoever in their ministry is
+unprofitable, unedifying, vain, curious, unbeseeming the gospel; for the
+ministers of Christ must be purified, not only from heresy, idolatry,
+profaneness, and the like, but even from that which is frothy and
+unedifying, which savoureth not of God's Spirit, but of man's. Now, saith
+the Apostle, "Every man's work shall be made manifest, for the day shall
+declare it, because it shall be revealed by fire, and the fire shall try
+every man's work of what sort it is." The church shall not always be
+deluded and abused with vanities that cannot profit. A time of light and
+reformation discovereth the unprofitableness of those things wherewith men
+did formerly please and satisfy themselves. There is a fire which will
+prove every man's work, even an accurate trial and strict examination
+thereof, according to the rule of Christ; a narrow inquiry into, and exact
+discovery of every man's work (for so do our divines(1408) understand the
+fire there spoken of), whether this fiery trial be made by the searching
+and discovering light of the word in a time of reformation, or by
+afflictions, or in a man's own conscience at the hour of death. If by some
+or all of these trials, a minister's work be found to be what it ought to
+be, he shall receive a special reward and praise; but if he have built
+wood, hay, and stubble, he shall be like a man whose house is set on fire
+about his ears; that is, he shall suffer loss, and his work shall be
+burnt, yet himself shall escape, and get his life for a prey, "so as by
+fire;" that is, so that he can abide that trial and examination whereby
+God distinguisheth between sincere ones and hypocrites; or, so that he be
+found to have been otherwise a faithful minister, and to have built upon a
+right foundation.
+
+In the third place, you shall find reformation to be a refining fire in
+reference to a people or church reformed: "He that is left in Zion, and he
+that remaineth in Jerusalem, shall be called holy," saith the Prophet;
+"when the Lord shall have washed away the filth of the daughters of Zion,
+and shall have purged the blood of Jerusalem from the midst thereof, by
+the spirit of judgment, and by the spirit of burning," Isa. iv. 3, 4.
+Where you may understand(1409) by the filth of the daughters of Zion,
+their former idolatries, and such like abominations against the first
+table (which the prophets call often by the name of filth and pollution);
+and by the blood of Jerusalem, the sins against the second table. These
+the Lord promiseth to purge away by the spirit of judgment; that is, by a
+spirit of reformation (according to that John xii. 31, "Now is the
+judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be cast out").
+Which spirit of reformation is also a spirit of burning; even as the Holy
+Ghost is elsewhere called fire (Matt. iii. 11), and did come down upon the
+apostles in the likeness of cloven tongues of fire (Acts ii. 3). The
+spirit of reformation may be the rather called the spirit of burning,
+because ordinarily reformation is not without tribulation (as we shall
+hear) and by the voice of the rod doth the Spirit speak to men's
+consciences. When the Lord hath thus washed away the filthy spots, and
+burnt away the filthy dross of his church, then (Isa. iv. 5) she becomes a
+glory or a praise in the earth; and the promise is, that "upon all the
+glory shall be a defence:" but, you see, she is not brought to that
+condition till she go through the refiner's fire. It is no easy matter to
+cast Satan out of a person,--how much less to cast his kingdom out of a
+land? Another place for the same purpose we find, Zech. xiii. 9: When two
+parts of the land are cut off, the remnant which escape, the third part
+which is "written to life in Jerusalem," even they must be brought through
+the fire. "I will bring the third part through the fire (saith the Lord),
+and will refine them as silver is refined, and will try them as gold is
+tried." This is the fiery trial of affliction, but the fruit of it is a
+blessed reformation, to make the church as most pure refined gold: "They
+shall call on my name, and I will hear them;" that is, they shall no
+longer worship idols, but me only, and they shall offer to the Lord an
+offering in righteousness, which shall be accepted. And what more? "I will
+say It is my people; and they shall say, The Lord is my God." Behold, a
+reforming people and a covenanting people. But he that hath his fire in
+Zion, and his furnace in Jerusalem (Isa. xxxi. 9), doth first refine them
+and purify them. We are not reformed, in God's account, till the refining
+fire have purged away our dross; till we be refined as silver is refined,
+and tried as gold is tried.
+
+Lastly, In reference to a people not reformed, hear what the Prophet
+saith: Jer. vi. 28-30, "They are brass and iron; they are all corrupters.
+The bellows are burnt, the lead is consumed of the fire, the founder
+melteth in vain; for the wicked are not plucked away. Reprobate silver
+shall men call them, because the Lord hath rejected them." The Chaldee
+Paraphrase expoundeth it of the prophets who laboured in vain, and spent
+their strength for nought, speaking to the people in the name of the Lord,
+to turn to the law and to the testimony; but they would not turn.
+
+I might draw many uses from this doctrine; but I shall content myself with
+these few:--
+
+First of all, it reproveth that contrary principle which carnal reason
+suggesteth: Reformation must not grieve, but please; it must not break nor
+bruise, but heal and bind up; it must be an acceptable thing, not
+displeasing; it must be "as the voice of harpers harping with their
+harps," but not "as the voice of many waters," or "as the voice of great
+thunders." Thus would many heal the wound of the daughter of Zion
+slightly, and daub the wall with untempered mortar, and so far comply with
+the sinful humours and inclinations of men, as, in effect, to harden them
+in evil, and to strengthen their hands in their wickedness; or at least,
+if men be moralised, then to trouble them no farther. Saith not the
+Apostle, "If I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ"?
+Gal. i. 10; and again, "The carnal mind is enmity against God; for it is
+not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be," Rom. viii. 7. So
+that either we must have a reformation displeasing to God, or displeasing
+to men. It is not the right reformation which is not displeasing to a
+Tobiah, to a Sanballat, to a Demetrius, to the earthly-minded, to the
+self-seeking politicians, to the carnal and profane; it is but the old
+enmity between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent (Gen.
+iii. 15): nay, what if reformation be displeasing to good men, in so far
+as they are unregenerate, carnal, earthly, proud, unmortified (for "who
+can say, I have made my heart clean, I am pure from my sin," Prov. xx. 9)?
+What if a Joshua envy Eldad and Medad (Num. xi. 27-29)? What if an Aaron
+and a Miriam speak against Moses (xii. 1, 2)? What if a religious Asa be
+wroth with the seer (2 Chron. xvi. 10)? What if a David will not alter his
+former judgment, though very erroneous, and will not (no, not after better
+information) have it thought that he was in an error (2 Sam. xix. 29)?
+What if a Jonah refuse to go to Nineveh when he is called (Jonah i. 3)?
+What if the disciples of Christ must be taught to be more humble (Mark ix.
+33-35)? What if Peter must be reproved by Paul for his dissimulation (Gal.
+ii. 11)? What if Archippus must be admonished to attend better upon his
+ministry (Col. iv. 17)? What if Christ must tell the angels of the
+churches that he hath somewhat against them (Rev. ii., iii.)? If
+reformation displease both evil men, and, in some respect, good men, this
+makes it no worse than "a refiner's fire;" and so it must be, if it be
+according to the mind of Christ.
+
+My second and chief application shall be unto you, my noble lords. If you
+be willing to admit such a reformation as is according to the mind of
+Christ, as is like the "refiner's fire" and "fuller's soap," then, in the
+name of the Lord Jesus Christ (who will say, ere long, to every one of
+you, "Give an account of thy stewardship; for thou mayest be no longer
+steward," Luke xvi. 2), I recommend these three things unto you,--I mean,
+that you should make use of this "refiner's fire" in reference to three
+sorts of dross: 1. The dross of _malignancy_; 2. The dross of _heresy and
+corruption in religion_; 3. The dross of _profaneness_.
+
+Touching the first of these, take the wise counsel of the wise man, Prov.
+xxv. 4, 5, "Take away the dross from the silver, and there shall come
+forth a vessel for the finer. Take away the wicked from before the king,
+and his throne shall be established in righteousness." Remember, also, the
+fourth article of your solemn league and covenant, by which you have
+obliged yourselves, with your hands lifted up to the most high God, to
+endeavour the discovery, trial, and condign punishment of all such as have
+been, or shall be incendiaries, malignants, or evil instruments, by
+hindering the reformation of religion, dividing the king from his people,
+or one of the kingdoms from another, or making any faction or parties
+among the people contrary to this covenant. There was once a compliance
+between the nobles of Judah and the Samaritans, which I hope you do not
+read of without abominating the thing: You find it, Neh. vi. 17, 19, "In
+those days the nobles of Judah sent many letters unto Tobiah, and the
+letters of Tobiah came unto them. Also (saith Nehemiah) they reported his
+good deeds before me, and uttered my words to him." But you have also the
+error of a godly man set before you as a rock to be avoided, 2 Chron. xix.
+2, "Shouldest thou help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord?
+therefore is wrath upon thee from before the Lord." I am not to dwell upon
+this point: "I speak as to wise men, judge ye what I say."
+
+In the second place, think of the extirpation of heresy and of unsound
+dangerous doctrine, such as now springeth up apace, and subverted the
+faith of many. There is no heretic nor false teacher which hath not some
+one fair pretext or another; but bring him once to be tried by this
+refining fire, he is found to be "like a potsherd covered with silver
+dross," Prov. xxvi. 23. "What is the chaff to the wheat?" saith the Lord
+(Jur. xxiii. 28), and what is the dross to the silver? If this be the way
+of Christ which my text speaketh of, then, sure, that which now passeth
+under the name of "liberty of conscience" is not the way of Christ. Much
+hath been written of this question; for my part I shall, for the present,
+only offer this one argument: If liberty of conscience ought to be granted
+in matters of religion, it ought also to be granted in matters civil or
+military; but liberty of conscience ought not to be granted in matters
+civil or military, as is acknowledged, therefore neither ought it to be
+granted in matters of religion. Put the case: Now there be some
+well-meaning men, otherwise void of offence, who, from the erroneous
+persuasion of their consciences, think it utterly sinful, and contrary to
+the word of God, to take arms in the Parliament's service, or to
+contribute to this present war, or to obey any ordinance of the lords and
+commons, which tendeth to the resisting of the king's forces. Now compare
+this case with the case of a Socinian, Arminian, Antinomian, or the like:
+they both plead for liberty of conscience; they both say our conscience
+ought not to be compelled, and if we do against our conscience, we sin. I
+beseech you, how can you give liberty of conscience to the heretic, and
+yet refuse liberty of conscience to him that is the conscientious recusant
+in point of the war? I am sure there can be no answer given to this
+argument which will not be resolved into this principle: Men's consciences
+may be compelled for the good of the state, but not for the glory of God;
+we must not suffer the state to sink, but if religion sink we cannot help
+it. This is the plain English of it.
+
+When I speak against liberty of conscience, it is far from my meaning to
+advise any rigorous or violent course against such as, being sound in the
+faith, and holy in life, and not of a turbulent or factious carriage, do
+differ in smaller matters from the common rule. "Let that day be darkness;
+let not God regard it from above, neither let the light shine upon it"
+(Job. iii. 4), in which it shall be said that the children of God in
+Britain are enemies and persecutors of each other. He is no good Christian
+who will not say Amen to the prayer of Jesus Christ (John xvii. 21), that
+all who are his may be one in him. If this be heartily wished, let it be
+effectually endeavoured; and let those who will choose a dividing way
+rather than a uniting way bear the blame.
+
+The third part of my application shall be to stir you up, right
+honourable, to a willing condescending to the settling of
+church-government, in such a manner, as that neither ignorant nor
+scandalous persons may be admitted to the holy table of the Lord. Let
+there be, in the house of God, fuller's soap, to take off those who are
+"spots in your feasts," and a refining fire to take away the dross from
+the silver. Psal. cxix. 119, "Thou puttest away all the wicked of the
+earth like dross," saith David. Take away, therefore, the wicked from
+before the King of glory, for they shall not stand before him who hateth
+"all workers of iniquity," Psal. v. 5. You see God puts all profane ones
+in one category, and so should you. There is a like reason against seven,
+and against seventy scandals; or, if you please to make a catalogue of
+seven, you may, provided it be such as God himself makes in the fifth
+verse of this chapter, where seven sorts are reckoned forth, as some
+interpreters compute; but the last of the seven is general and
+comprehensive, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}, as the Septuagint have it,--_and
+those that fear not me_,--those, saith one, who are called in the New
+Testament {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER BETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~},--_ungodly_. Jerome noteth upon the place,(1410) that
+though men shall not be guilty of the aforementioned particulars, yet God
+makes this crime enough, that they are ungodly. Nay, I dare undertake to
+draw out of Erastus himself, the great adversary, a catalogue of seven
+sorts of persons to be kept off from the Lord's table, and such a
+catalogue as godly ministers can be content with. But of this elsewhere.
+
+Most horribly hath the Lord's table been profaned formerly in this
+kingdom, by the admission of scandalous persons. God will wink at it no
+longer,--now is the opportunity of reformation. The Parliament of England,
+if any state in the world, oweth much to Jesus Christ; and he will take it
+very ill at your hands, if ye do him not right in this. I say do him
+right; for, alas! what is it to ministers? It were more for their ease,
+and for pleasing of the people, to admit all; but a necessity is laid upon
+us, that we dare not do it; and woe unto us if we do it. And for your
+part, should you not establish such a rule as may put a difference between
+the precious and the vile, the clean and the unclean, you shall in so far
+make the churches of Christ in a worse condition, and more disabled to
+keep themselves pure, than either they were of old under pagan emperors,
+or now are under popish princes, you shall also strengthen, instead of
+silencing, the objections both of Separatists(1411) and Socinians,(1412)
+who have, with more than a colour of advantage, opened their mouths wide
+against some reformed churches, for their not exercising of discipline
+against scandalous and profane persons, and particularly for not
+suspending them from the sacrament of the Lord's supper. Nay, which is yet
+more, if you should refuse that which I speak of, you shall come short of
+that which heathens themselves, in their way, did make conscience of, for
+they did interdict and keep off from their holy things all such as they
+esteemed profane and scandalous, whom therefore they called {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, that
+is, accused or delated persons. In this manner was Alchibades
+excommunicate at Athens, and Virginia at Rome, the former recorded by
+Plutarch, the latter by Livius. I trust God shall never so far desert this
+Parliament as that, in this particular, pagan and popish princes,
+Separatists, Socinians and heathens shall rise up in judgment against you.
+I am persuaded better things of you, and things that accompany salvation;
+and, namely, that you will not suffer the name and truth of God to be,
+through you, blasphemed and reproached.
+
+Do ye not remember the sad sentence against Eli and his house, "Because
+his sons made themselves vile, and he restrained them not," 1 Sam. iii.
+13. The Apostle tells us, that the judgment of God abideth not only on
+those that commit sin, but those also who consent with them, Rom. i. 32.
+Aquinas upon that place saith, We may consent to the sins of others two
+ways: 1. Directly, by counselling, approving, &c.; 2. Indirectly, by not
+hindering when we can. And so did Eli consent to the vileness of his sons,
+because, though he reproved them, he did not restrain them.
+
+There is a law, Exod. xxi. 29, "But if the ox were wont to push with his
+horn in time past, and it hath been testified to his owner, and he hath
+not kept him in, but that he hath killed a man or woman; the ox shall be
+stoned, and his owner also shall be put to death." It could be no excuse
+to say, I intended no such thing, and it is a grief of heart to me that
+such mischief is done. That which I aim at is this: The Directory which
+you have lately established saith, "The ignorant and the scandalous are
+not fit to receive this sacrament of the Lord's supper;" and therefore
+ministers are appointed to warn all such in the name of Christ, that they
+presume not to come to that holy table. It is now desired that this, which
+you have already acknowledged to be according to the word of God and
+nature of that holy ordinance, may be made effectual, and, for that end,
+that the power of discipline be added to the power of doctrine, otherwise
+you are guilty, in God's sight, of not restraining those that make
+themselves vile.
+
+In the third and last place, I shall apply my doctrine to the sons of
+Levi, and that in a twofold consideration: 1. Actively; 2. Passively.
+
+Actively, because, if we be like our Master, even followers of Jesus
+Christ, or partakers of his unction, then our ministry will have not only
+light, but fire in it,--we must be burning as well as shining lights (John
+v. 35), not only shining with the light of knowledge, and of the doctrine
+which is according to godliness, but burning also with zeal for reforming
+abuses, and purging of the church from the dross thereof. Which made
+Augustine(1413) to apply propologically to ministers, that which is said
+of the angels of heaven, Psal. civ. 4, "Who maketh his angels spirits; his
+ministers a flaming fire." Satan hath many incendiaries against the
+kingdom of Christ. O that we were Christ's incendiaries against the
+kingdom of Satan! If we will indeed appear zealous for the Lord, let it
+not seem strange if the adversaries of reformation say of us, as they said
+of the apostles themselves, "These that have turned the world upside down
+are come hither also," Acts xvii. 6. Yet it shall be no grief of heart to
+us afterward, but peace and joy unspeakable, that we have endeavoured to
+do our duty faithfully.
+
+Passively also the application must be made, because the sons of Levi
+must, in the first place, go through this refining fire themselves, and
+they, most of all other men, have need to be, and must be, refined from
+their dross. I find in Scripture that these three things had a beginning
+among the priests and prophets: 1. Sin, error, and scandal, beginneth at
+them, Jer. l. 6, "Their shepherds have caused them to go astray;" xxiii.
+15, "From the prophets of Jerusalem is profaneness gone forth into all the
+land." 2. Judgment begins at them, Ezek. ix. 6, "Slay utterly old and
+young,--and begin at my sanctuary." 3. The refining work of reformation
+beginneth, or ought to begin, at the purging and refining of the sons of
+Levi; so you have it in the next words after my text, and where Hezekiah
+beginneth his reformation at the sanctifying of the priests and Levites, 2
+Chron. xxix. 4, 5, &c. But as it was then in Judah, it is now in England,
+some of the sons of Levi are more upright to sanctify themselves than
+others. The fire that I spake of before will prove every man and his work.
+
+I am sorry I have occasion to add a third application. But come on, and I
+will show you greater things than these. What will you say, if any be
+found among the sons of Levi, that will neither be active nor passive in
+the establishing of the church-refining and sin-censuring government of
+Jesus Christ, but will needs appear upon the stage against it. This was
+done in a late sermon now come abroad, which hath given no small scandal
+and offence. I am confident every other godly minister will say, let my
+tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth before I do the like.
+
+I have done with that which the text holds forth concerning reformation.
+The second way how Christ is like a refiner's fire, and like fuller's
+soap, is in respect of tribulation, which either followeth or accompanieth
+his coming into his temple. Affliction is indeed a refining fire: Psal.
+lxvi. 10, "For thou, O God, hast proved us: thou hast tried us, as silver
+is tried;" ver. 12, "We went through fire and through water;" 1 Pet. i. 6,
+7, "Ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations; that the trial of
+your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though
+it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise," &c. Affliction is also
+the fuller's soap to purify and make white: Dan. xi. 35; xii. 10, "Many
+shall be purified, and made white, and tried;" where the same word is used
+from which I said before the fuller's soap hath its name.
+
+The doctrine shall be this: "Tribulation doth either accompany or follow
+after the work of reformation or purging of the house of God." So it was
+when Christ himself came into his temple: Luke xii. 49, 51, "I am come to
+send fire on the earth. Suppose ye that I am come to give peace on earth?
+I tell you, Nay; but rather division;"--so it was when the Apostles were
+sent forth into the world: Peter applieth to that time the words of Joel,
+"And I will show wonders in heaven above, and signs in the earth beneath;
+blood, and fire, and vapour of smoke: the sun shall be turned into
+darkness, and the moon into blood," Acts ii. 19, 20. The meaning is, such
+tribulation shall follow the gospel, which shall be like the darkening of
+the great lights of the world, and, as it were, a putting of heaven and
+earth out of their course, so great a change and calamity shall come. The
+experience both of the ancient and now reformed churches doth also
+abundantly confirm this doctrine. Neither must we think that all the
+calamities of the church are now overpast. Who can be assured that that
+hour of greatest darkness, the killing of the witnesses, is past, and all
+that sad prophecy, Rev. xi., fulfilled? And if some be not much
+mistaken,(1414) it is told, Dan. xii. 1, that there shall be greater
+tribulation about the time of the Jews' conversion than any we have yet
+seen: "At that time," saith the angel to Daniel, "there shall be a time of
+trouble, such as never was since there was a nation even to that same
+time: and at that time thy people shall be delivered, every one that shall
+be found written in the book."
+
+I make haste to the uses; and, first, let me give unto God the glory of
+his truth. If we have been deceived, surely he hath not deceived us; for
+he hath given us plain warning in his word, and hath not kept up from us
+the worst things which ever have or ever shall come upon his church. And
+now when the sword of the Lord hath gotten a charge against these three
+covenanting and reforming kingdoms, is this any other than the word of the
+Lord, that when Christ cometh into his temple, "Who may abide the day of
+his coming, and who shall stand when he appeareth? for he is like a
+refiner's fire, and like fuller's soap."
+
+And for the invasion of Scotland by such an enemy after a reformation, is
+it any new thing? May we not say, that which is hath been? Did not
+Sennacherib invade Judah after Hezekiah's reformation? 2 Chron. xxxii. 1.
+And though, after the reformation of Asa, and after the reformation of
+Jehoshaphat also (2 Chron. xiv. 9; xx. 1), the land had a short rest and a
+breathing time, yet not long after a foreign invasion followed both upon
+the one reformation and the other. Nay, look what is the worst thing which
+hath befallen to Scotland as yet;--as much, yea, worse, hath formerly
+befallen to the church and people of God toward whom the Lord had thoughts
+of peace, and not of evil,--to give them an expected end. I say it not for
+diminishing anything either from the sin or shame of Scotland; the Lord
+forbid:--we will bear the indignation of the Lord, because we have sinned
+against him; we will lay our hand upon our mouth, and accept the
+punishment of our iniquity; we will bear our shame for ever, because our
+Father hath spit in our face, our rock hath sold us, and our strength hath
+departed from us;--but I say it by way of answering him that reproacheth in
+the gates, and by way of pleading for the truth of God. Some have objected
+to our reproach, that when the Lord required the Israelites to appear
+before him in Jerusalem thrice a year, he promised that no man should
+invade their habitations in their absence, Exod. xxxiv. 23, 24; "which
+gracious providence of his, no doubt (says one(1415)), continues still
+protecting all such as are employed by his command;" yet it hath not been
+so with Scotland during the time of their armies being in England. I
+answer, besides that which hath been said already, even in this the word
+and work of God do well agree; and that Scripture ought not to be so
+applied to us, except the Canaanites, and the Amorites, and the Jebusites
+of our time had been all cast out of our borders (we find this day too
+many of them lurking there, and waiting their opportunity); for the
+Septuagint, and many of the interpreters(1416) read that text thus: "For
+when I shall cast out the nations before thee, and enlarge thy borders, no
+man shall desire thy land when thou shalt go up to appear before the Lord
+thy God thrice in the year:" and this is the true sense, read it as you
+will; for the promise is limited to the time of casting out the nations,
+and enlarging their borders (which came not to pass till the days of
+Solomon). It is certain that, from the time of making that promise, the
+people had not ever liberty and protection for keeping the three solemn
+feasts in the place of the sanctuary; as might be proved from divers
+foreign invasions and spoilings of that land for some years together;
+whereof we read in the book of the Judges. But I go on.
+
+In the second place, let God have the glory of his just and righteous
+dealings. Let us say with Job, "I will leave my complaint upon myself,"
+[and say unto God,] "Show me wherefore thou contendest with me," Job x. 1,
+2. But, by all means, take heed you conceive not an ill opinion of the
+covenant and cause of God, or the reformation of religion, because of the
+tribulation which followeth thereupon. Say not it was a good old world
+when we burnt incense to the queen of heaven, "for then we were well and
+saw no evil." "But (said the people to Jeremiah) since we left off to burn
+incense to the queen of heaven, and to pour out drink-offerings unto her,
+we have wanted all things, and have been consumed by the sword and by the
+famine," Jer. xliv. 18. To such I answer, in the words of Solomon, "Say
+not thou, What is the cause that the former days were better than these?
+for thou dost not inquire wisely concerning this," Eccl. vii. 10. Was the
+people's coming out of Egypt the cause why their carcasses did fall in the
+wilderness? Or was it their murmuring and rebelling against the Lord which
+brought that wrath upon them? If thou wilt inquire wisely concerning this
+thing, read Zephaniah, chap. i. In the days of Isaiah, even in the days of
+Judah's best reformation, the Lord sent this message by the Prophet: "I
+will utterly consume all things from off the land," Zeph. i. 2; "And I
+will bring distress upon men, that they shall walk like blind men, because
+they have sinned against the Lord: and their blood shall be poured out as
+dust, and their flesh as the dung," ver. 17. What was the reason of it? It
+is plainly told them (and let us take it all home to ourselves), because,
+notwithstanding of that public reformation, there was a remnant of Baal in
+the land, and the Chemarims, and those who halt between two opinions; who
+swear by the Lord (or to the Lord, which is expounded of the taking of the
+covenant in Josiah's time), but they swear by Malcham also, ver. 4, 5.
+There are others who do not seek the Lord, nor inquire after him, and many
+that turn back from the Lord in a course of backsliding (ver. 6); others
+clothed with strange apparel (ver. 8); others, exercising violence and
+deceit (ver. 9); a number of atheists also, living among God's people
+(ver. 12). For these and the like causes doth the land mourn. It is not
+the covenant, but the broken covenant; it is not the reformation, but the
+want of a real and personal reformation, that hath drawn on the judgment.
+Blessed are they who shall keep their garments clean, and shall be able to
+say, "All this is come upon us; yet have we not forgotten thee, neither
+have we dealt falsely in thy covenant," Psal. xliv. 17.
+
+Thirdly, Give God the glory of his wisdom. Many are now crying, "How long,
+Lord? wilt thou hide thyself for ever? shall thy wrath burn like fire?"
+Psal. lxxxix. 46. Your answer from God is, that the rod shall be indeed
+removed, and even cast into the fire in your stead, but when? It shall be
+"when the Lord hath performed his whole work upon mount Zion, and on
+Jerusalem," Isa. x. 12. If the judgment have not yet done all the work it
+was sent for, then "they shall go out from one fire, and another fire
+shall devour them" (Ezek. xv. 7), saith the Lord. God is a wise refiner,
+and will not take the silver out of the fire till the dross be purged away
+from it. He is a wise father who will not cast the rod of correction till
+it have driven away all that folly which is bound up in the hearts of his
+children: "Behold, therefore (saith the Lord) I will gather you into the
+midst of Jerusalem. As they gather silver, and brass, and iron, and lead,
+and tin, into the midst of the furnace, to blow the fire upon it, to melt
+it; so will I gather you in mine anger and in my fury, and I will leave
+you there, and melt you," Ezek. xxii. 19, 20. He speaks it to those who
+had escaped the captivity of Jehoiakim, and also the captivity of
+Jehoiachin, and thought they should be safe and secure in Jerusalem when
+their brethren were in Babylon: I will gather you, saith the Lord, even in
+the midst of Jerusalem, and when you think you are out of one furnace, you
+shall fall into another; and, if you will not be refined from your dross,
+you shall never come out of that furnace, but I will melt you there, and
+leave you there: which did so come to pass; for the residue that escaped
+to Egypt, and thought to shelter themselves there, as likewise those that
+remained in Jerusalem, and held out that siege with Zedekiah,--even all
+these did fall under the sword, and the famine, and the pestilence, till
+they were consumed, Jer. xxiv. 8, 10. Let those that are longest spared
+take heed they be not sorest smitten. Say not with Agag, "The bitterness
+of death is past." The child chastised in the afternoon weeps as sore as
+the child chastised in the forenoon. Remember the Lord will not take away
+the judgment till he have performed his work, yea, his whole work, and
+that upon Mount Zion and Jerusalem itself. It is no light matter; the rod
+must be very heavy before our uncircumcised hearts can be humbled, and the
+furnace very hot before our dross depart from us. We have need of all the
+sore strokes which we mourn under, and if one less could do the turn, it
+would be spared, for the Lord doth not afflict willingly: we ourselves
+rive every stroke out of his hand.
+
+But, in the fourth and last place, let us give God the glory of his mercy
+also; he means to do us good in our latter end. It is the hand of a
+father, not of an enemy: it is a refining, not a consuming fire. The poor
+mourners in Zion are ready to say, "Our bones are dried, and our hope is
+lost: we are cut off for our parts" (Ezek. xxxvii. 11); we are like to lie
+in this fire and furnace for ever, because our dross is not departed from
+us; we are still an unhumbled, an unbroken, an unmortified generation;
+yea, many like Ahaz, in the time of affliction, trespassing yet more
+against the Lord, many thinking of going back again to Egypt. To such I
+have these two things to say for their comfort: First, There is a remnant
+which shall not only be delivered, but purified, and shall come forth as
+gold out of the fire. The third part shall be refined, and the Lord shall
+say, "It is my people," Zech xiii. 9. And a most sweet promise there is
+after the saddest denunciation of judgment: Ezek. xiv. 22, 23, "Yet,
+behold, therein shall be left a remnant that shall be brought forth, both
+sons and daughters; behold, they shall come forth unto you, and ye shall
+see their ways and their doings: and ye shall be comforted concerning the
+evil that I have brought upon Jerusalem, even concerning all the evil that
+I have brought upon it. And they shall comfort you, when ye see their ways
+and their doings: and ye shall know that I have not done without cause all
+that I have done in it, saith the Lord God;" Dan. xii. 10, "Many shall be
+purified, and made white, and tried; but the wicked shall do wickedly: and
+none of the wicked shall understand; but the wise shall understand." After
+the promise of delivering those that were carried away to Babylon, there
+is another promise added of that which was much better: Jer. xxiv. 7, "I
+will give them an heart to know me, that I am the Lord; and they shall be
+my people, and I will be their God; for they shall return unto me with
+their whole heart;" Psal. cxxx. 8, "He shall redeem Israel from all his
+iniquities;" Zeph. iii. 12, 13, "I will also leave in the midst of thee an
+afflicted and poor people, and they shall trust in the name of the Lord.
+The remnant of Israel shall not do iniquity, nor speak lies; neither shall
+a deceitful tongue be found in their mouth." Let your souls now apply
+these and the like promises, and cry, Lord, remember thy promise, and let
+not a jot of thy good word fall to the ground. Secondly, As the promises
+of spiritual and eternal blessings, so the promises of peace and temporal
+deliverances are not legal, but even evangelical. If we be not refined and
+purged as we ought to be, that is a matter of humiliation to us, but it is
+also a matter of magnifying the riches of free mercy: Isa. xlviii. 9-11,
+"For my name's sake will I defer mine anger, and for my praise will I
+refrain for thee, that I cut thee not off. Behold, I have refined thee,
+but not with silver; I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction. For
+mine own name's sake, even for mine own sake, will I do it." The Lord is
+there arguing with his people, to humble them, to convince them, and to
+cut off all matter of glorying from them; and among other things, lest
+they should glory in this, that whatever they were before, they became
+afterward as silver refined seven times in the furnace:(1417) Nay, saith
+the Lord, I have refined you in some sort, but not as silver, not so as
+that you are clean from your dross; but I have chosen you, and set my love
+upon you, even while you are in the furnace not yet refined; and I will
+deliver you, even for my own name's sake, that you may owe your
+deliverance for ever to free mercy, and not to your own repentance and
+amendment. A land is accepted, and a people's peace made with God, not by
+their repentance and humiliation, but by Christ believed on: Mic. v. 5,
+"This man shall be the peace, when the Assyrian shall come into our land."
+There were sin-offerings and burnt-offerings appointed in the law for a
+national atonement (Lev. iv., xiii., xxi.; Num. xv. 25, 26) which did
+typify pardoning of national sins through the merit of Jesus Christ. We
+must improve the office of the Mediator, and the promise of free grace, in
+the behalf of God's people, as well as of our own souls, which, if it be
+indeed done, will not hinder, but further a great mourning and deep
+humiliation in the land. And so much of tribulation.
+
+The third thing held forth in this text (of which I must be very short) is
+mortification. This also is a refining fire: Matt. iii. 11, "He shall
+baptise you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire;" Mark ix. 49, "For every
+one shall be salted with fire, and every sacrifice shall be salted with
+salt." He hath been before speaking of mortification, of the plucking out
+of the right eye, the cutting off the right hand, or the right foot, and
+now he presseth the same thing by a double allusion to the law,--there was
+a necessity both of fire and salt; the sacrifice was seasoned with salt
+(Lev. ii. 13), and the fire upon the altar was not to be put out, but
+every morning the wood was burnt upon it, and the burnt-offering laid upon
+it (Lev. vi. 12, 13). So if we will present ourselves as a holy and
+acceptable sacrifice to God, we must be seasoned with the salt, and our
+corruptions burnt up with the fire of mortification.
+
+The doctrine shall be this: "It is not enough to join in public
+reformation, yea, to suffer tribulation for the name of Christ, except we
+also endeavour mortification." This mortification is a third step distinct
+from the other two, and without this the other two can make us but "almost
+Christians," or, "not far from the kingdom of God." In the parable of the
+sower and the seed, as we find it both in Matthew (chap. xiii.), Mark
+(chap, iv.), and Luke (chap, viii.), this method may be observed, That of
+the four sorts of ground, the second is better than the first, the third
+better than the second, but the fourth only is the good ground, which is
+fruitful, and getteth a blessing. Some men's hearts are like the highway,
+and the hardbeaten road, where every foul spirit, and every lust hath
+walked and conversed, their consciences, through the custom of sin, are,
+as it were, "seared with a hot iron;" in these the word takes no place,
+but all that they bear doth presently slip from them. Others receive the
+word with a present good affection and delight, but have no depth of
+earth; that is, neither having had a work of the law upon their
+consciences for deep humiliation, nor being rooted and grounded in love to
+the gospel, nor, peradventure, so much as grounded in the knowledge of the
+truth, nor having counted their cost, and solidly resolved for suffering;
+thereupon it comes to pass, when suffering times come, these wither away,
+and come to nothing. There is a third sort, who go a step farther; they
+have some root, and some more solid ground than the former, so that they
+can suffer many things, and not fall away because of persecution, yet they
+perish through want of mortification. One may suffer persecution for
+Christ, not being sore tried in that which is his idol lust, yet enduring
+great losses and crosses in other things: of such it is said, that "the
+cares of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, and the lusts of
+other things entering in, choke the word, and it becometh unfruitful,"
+Mark iv. 19. Mark that, "the lusts of other things;" that is, whether it
+be the lust of the eyes, or the lust of the flesh, or the pride of life;
+and he speaks of the "entering in;" meaning of some strong tentation
+coming upon a man to catch him in that which is the great idol of his
+heart, and his beloved lust, whatever it be; such a tentation he never
+found before, and therefore thought the lust had been mortified, which was
+but lurking. Did not Judas suffer many things with Christ during the time
+of his public ministry? Did not Ananias and Sapphira suffer, for a season,
+with the apostles and church at Jerusalem? What was it then that lost
+them? They neither made defection from the profession of the truth, nor
+did they fall away because of persecution; but having shined in the light
+a sound profession, having also taken up the cross, and borne the reproach
+of Christ, they made shipwreck at last upon an unmortified lust.
+
+I shall enlarge the doctrine no further, but touch upon some few uses, and
+so an end.
+
+First, Let all and every one of us be convinced of the necessity of our
+further endeavouring after mortification. The best silver which cometh out
+of the earth hath dross in it, and therefore needeth the refiner's fire;
+and the whitest garment that is worn will touch some unclean thing or
+other, and therefore will need the fuller's soap. The best of God's
+children have the dross of their inherent corruptions to purge away; which
+made Paul say, "I keep under my body, and bring it unto subjection; lest
+that by any means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a
+castaway," 1 Cor. ix. 27. It is a speech borrowed from reprobate silver
+which is not refined from dross, and so is the word used by the
+Septuagint, Isa. i. 22, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} "Thy silver is become
+dross." The Apostle therefore sets himself to the study of mortification,
+lest, saith he, when I have been refining and purifying others, I myself
+be found to be drossy silver. And as there is _inherent_ dross, so there
+is _adherent_ uncleanness in the best; and who can say that he hath kept
+his garments so clean that he is "unspotted of the world" (Isa. i. 27), or
+that he hath so separated himself from the pollutions of the world as that
+he hath touched no unclean thing: so that there is an universal necessity
+of making use both of the refiner's fire, and of the fuller's soap.
+
+Secondly, Let us once become willing and contented, yea, desirous to be
+thoroughly mortified. A man's lusts and corruptions are indeed so strongly
+interested in himself, and his corruptions are his members, therefore,
+when we leave off sin, we are said to live no more "to ourselves," 2 Cor.
+v. 15; and mortification is the greatest violence that can be done to
+nature, therefore it is called a cutting off of the chief members of the
+body (Mark ix. 43, 45, 47), a salting with salt, and a burning with fire
+(ver. 49), a circumcision (Col. ii. 11), a crucifying (Rom. vi. 6): so
+that nothing can be more difficult or displeasing, yea, a greater torment
+to flesh and blood. Yet now art thou willing, notwithstanding of all this,
+to take Christ on his own terms? to take him not only for righteousness
+and life, but to take him as a refiner's fire, and as fuller's soap? O
+that there were such a heart in thee! When Christ bids thee pluck out thy
+right eye, and cut off thy right hand, say not in thy heart, How shall I
+do without my right eye, and my right hand? Nay, thou shalt do well
+enough, thou shalt even enter into life without them, thou shalt be a
+gainer, and no loser. Say not thou, How shall I go through this refining
+fire? Fear not, thou shall lose nothing but thy dross. Thus get thy heart
+wrought to a willingness, and a condescending, in the point of
+mortification.
+
+Lastly, If you say, But after all this, how shall I attain unto it? Put
+thyself in the hands of Jesus Christ, trust him with the work; if you mark
+the text here, and the verse that followeth, Christ is both the refiner,
+and the refiner's fire: thou shalt be refined by him, and thou shalt be
+refined in him. Thou deceivest thyself if thou thinkest to be refined any
+other way but by this refiner, and in this refiner's fire. The blood of
+Christ doth not only wash us from guilt, but purge our consciences "from
+dead works, to serve the living God," Heb. ix. 14; "And they that are
+Christ's, have crucified the flesh, with the affections and lusts." Gal.
+v. 24. Here you may see the thing is feasible and attainable, and not only
+by an apostle or some extraordinary man, but by all that are Christ's.
+Being his, and in him, they are enabled, through his strength, to crucify
+the flesh, with the affections and lusts thereof.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+ 1 It is right to state that a large proportion of those who ultimately
+ formed the presbyterian party, had been brought up in the Church of
+ England, and had received episcopal ordination.
+
+ 2 There is another anecdote commonly repeated respecting a signal
+ defeat which Gillespie is said to have given to one of the
+ Independent divines, when recent from his travel to London. That he
+ did repeatedly refute their arguments is quite certain, of which
+ both Lightfoot's notes and his own record many instances, but no
+ such event could have occurred as that with which the anecdote is
+ commonly introduced; for both Henderson and Gillespie arrived at the
+ same time, and were received formally, and with great respect into
+ the Assembly, before any of the controverted points had begun to be
+ discussed at all. It is easy to conceive how imaginary incidents may
+ be added by tradition, to an anecdote essentially true; and our
+ endeavour has been to restore the anecdote to its true position and
+ character. We may add that Gillespie's expression, "Can ye not admit
+ a pinning?" is one which tradition has preserved; but we find the
+ same word used in his Aaron's Rod, in a similar sense, which
+ confirms the tradition.
+
+ 3 The present Erastian Establishment in Scotland might do well to
+ consider whether theirs be the church of which Gillespie was a
+ distinguished minister.
+
+ 4 The above anecdote is sometimes given with this variation:--that when
+ the youngest member consented, he requested the rest to engage in
+ prayer, while he retired to make the attempt. They did so, and in a
+ short time he returned with the answer exactly as it now appears. We
+ prefer the anecdote as given in the text, both as equally likely,
+ and as much more beautiful.
+
+ 5 These interesting documents are printed in this Series at the
+ conclusion of the Part containing his "Sermons and Controversial
+ Pieces."
+
+ 6 Preface to Stevenson's History.
+
+ 7 This refers to his opposition to the intrigues of the Engagers, and
+ their invasion of England under Hamilton.
+
+ 8 Gillespie must have left London at that time to attend the General
+ Assembly which was summoned to meet at Edinburgh on the 22d of
+ January, 1645.
+
+ 9 The death rattle in the throat of the dying man.
+
+ 10 Bodin. Meth. Hist., cap. 4, p. 47.
+
+ 11 Rep to the Ans. p. 269.
+
+ 12 Enar in Luc. xvii.
+
+ 13 De Civ. Dei., lib. 18, cap. 51.
+
+ 14 Lib. contra Const. Aug.
+
+ 15 Synops. Papis., cont. 13, quest. 7, p. 593.
+
+ 16 Davenant. in col. 2, 8, p. 186
+
+ 17 Osiand. Hist. Eccles., cent. 4, in Ep. Dedic.
+
+ 18 Lib. 5, cap. 20.
+
+ 19 Enarrat in Matt. xv.
+
+ 20 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 65.
+
+ 21 Praef. of the Answ., p. 14.
+
+ 22 Popish Praejud., cap. 10.
+
+ 23 Cent. 2, cap. 2, col. 109.
+
+ 24 Cron. Turcic., tom.3, lib. 4, p. 63.
+
+ 25 Aug. de Civ. Dei. lib. 3, cap. 25.
+
+ 26 Ib., cap. 26.
+
+ 27 Ovid. Metam., lib. 15.
+
+ 28 Apud Binium, tom. 4; Concil., part 1, p. 630.
+
+ 29 No Peace with Rome, sect. 2.
+
+ 30 Lib. Epist., col. 298.
+
+ 31 Medit. in Rev. ii., iii.
+
+ 32 Hist. Eccl. lib. 3 cap. 11.
+
+ 33 Eccl. Pol., lib. 1, sect. 10.
+
+ 34 Natal. Comit. Mythol., lib. 2, cap. 7.
+
+ 35 Praelict., tom. 1, p. 367.
+
+ 36 Ibid., p. 372.
+
+ 37 Sermon on John xvi. 7.
+
+ 38 Apolog., cap. 4.
+
+ 39 Conrad. Pscilen. Clav. Theol., art. 9, p. 373.
+
+ 40 Comm. in Eph. v. de subject.
+
+ 41 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 34.
+
+ 42 Aquin., 1a, 2a, quest. 43, art. 1; Stella in Luke xvii. 1.
+
+ 43 Speed. Hist. of Brit., book 6, chap. 9, sect. 9.
+
+ 44 Lactant., lib. 5, cap. 20.
+
+ 45 P. Mart. in 1 Reg. 8. de Templ. dedic.
+
+ 46 Epist. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 47 Serm. at Perth Assem. insert. by Dr Lindsey.
+
+ 48 Practic. Def. cap. 3, sect. 20.
+
+ 49 Dr Forb. Iren. lib. 1, cap. 5, sect 6; cap. 7, sect. 1, 9; cap. 9,
+ sect. 6.
+
+ 50 Cassand. Ang. p. 270, 11.
+
+ 51 Ans to the Repl. pref. p. 43.
+
+ 52 Ib. p. 53.
+
+ 53 De Cas. Cons. lib. 4, cap. 11, cas. 3.
+
+ 54 Ubi supra.
+
+ 55 De cult. Sanct. cap. 10.
+
+ 56 De Orig. Fest. Christian. cap. 2.
+
+ 57 Repl. to the Ans. p. 258.
+
+ 58 Calv. Com. in hunc locum.
+
+ 59 De Exam. part 1, de Bon. Oper. p. 180.
+
+ 60 Synt. part 2, disp. 27, thes. 30.
+
+ 61 Bell. Enerv. tom. 1, lib. 3. cap. 7.
+
+ 62 Ubi supra, thes. 31.
+
+ 63 Annot. in Act. xv. 29.
+
+ 64 Cens. lit. Angl. cap. 2.
+
+ 65 Comm. in 1 Cor. vii. 23.
+
+ 66 Synt. part. 2, disp. 44, thes. 33.
+
+ 67 Ubi supra.
+
+ 68 Hom. 1, in Ep. ad Tit.
+
+ 69 Synt. Theol. lib. 6, cap. 38.
+
+ 70 Instit. lib. 3, cap. 19, sect. 7.
+
+ 71 Ib. cap. 10.
+
+ 72 Chem. Exam. part. 2. de rit. in adm. Sac. p. 33.
+
+ 73 Zanch. comm. in Col. ii. 20.
+
+ 74 Apol. part. 3, cap. 1, sect. 5.
+
+ 75 Comm. in 1 Cor. vii. 23.
+
+ 76 De haeret. Baptiz.
+
+ 77 B. Lind. Epist. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 78 Spots. Sermon at Perth Assembly.
+
+ 79 Of the Cross, cap. 5, sect. 11.
+
+ 80 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 34.
+
+ 81 Apol. part 3. cap. 1, sect. 4. So Dr Forb. Iren. lib. 1, cap. 11,
+ sect. 5, 6.
+
+ 82 Manuduct. p. 42.
+
+ 83 Thes. Theol. de Libert. Christ thes. 10.
+
+ 84 Prel. in Mat. xviii. 7, tom. 2. p. 340.
+
+ 85 Ubi supra.
+
+ 86 Ubi supra.
+
+ 87 Sermon of the worshipping of Imaginations.
+
+ 88 Til. Synt. part. 2, disp. 27, thes. 38.
+
+ 89 Thuan. Hist. lib. 124, p. 922.
+
+ 90 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 33.
+
+ 91 De Cens. lib. 1, cap. 2.
+
+ 92 Treat. of Cons. cap. 2, sect. 3.
+
+ 93 Theol. Cas. cap. 2.
+
+ 94 Ames. de Cons. lib. 1, cap. 3.
+
+ 95 Instit. lib. 4, cap. 10, sect. 5.
+
+ 96 Synt. part. 2, disp. 32, thes. 4.
+
+ 97 De Rep. Eccl. lib. 5, cap. 2, n. 12.
+
+ 98 Til. Synt. p. 2, disp. 27, thes. 39.
+
+ 99 Chem. examp. 2, de Bon. Oper. p. 179.
+
+ 100 Marc. Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Ec. lib. 6, cap. 10, num. 67.
+
+ 101 Apud Field, of the Church. lib. 4, cap. 34.
+
+ 102 Animad. in Bel. contr. 3, lib. 4, cap. 16, nota 87.
+
+ 103 Synt. p. 2, disp. 27, thes. 39.
+
+ 104 Instit. lib. 4, cap. 10, sect. 32.
+
+ 105 Decr. part. 1, dict. 61, cap. 8.
+
+ 106 Ubi supra, art. 21.
+
+ 107 De Cons. lib. 1, cap. 2.
+
+ 108 Theol. Casuum. cap. 2.
+
+ 109 Synt. per Theol. disp. 35, thes. 19.
+
+ 110 Ames. Bell. Enerv. tom. 1, lib. 3, cap. 7.
+
+ 111 De Pol. Christ. lib. 5, cap. 1.
+
+ 112 De Orig. Fest. Christ, cap. 2.
+
+ 113 Comm. in 1 Cor. xiv. 40.
+
+ 114 Thes. Theol. de Libert. Christ. thes. 11.
+
+ 115 Treat. of Cons. cap. 2, sect. 8.
+
+ 116 Theol. Cas. cap. 2.
+
+ 117 Synt. part. 2, disp. 27, thes. 9.
+
+ 118 Calv. Resp. ad Libel. de pii viri officio, p. 413.
+
+ 119 T. Bez. Conf. cap. 5, art. 18. Perk. ubi supra, et Meisner Philos.
+ Sobr. part. 3, sect. 2, quest. 12.
+
+ 120 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 33.
+
+ 121 De Pont. Rom. lib. 4, cap. 20.
+
+ 122 Ubi supra.
+
+ 123 Of the Cross, cap. 5, sect. 14, 15.
+
+ 124 Prael. tom. 1, de Potest: Eccl. cont. 2, p. 371.
+
+ 125 Ibid. p. 366.
+
+ 126 Par. Com. in Rom. xiv. dub. 7.
+
+ 127 Par. Com. in Rom. xiv. dub. 7.
+
+ 128 In Dan. vi.
+
+ 129 De Pont. Rom. lib. 4, cap. 20.
+
+ 130 Ubi supra.
+
+ 131 Com. in 1 Pet. v. 3.
+
+ 132 Euchyrid. class. 3, cap. 14.
+
+ 133 Synt. pur. Theol. disp. 35, thes. 17.
+
+ 134 Comment. in Rom. xiv. 5.
+
+ 135 Theol. Cas. cap. 2.
+
+ 136 Enchyr. class. 2, cap. 7.
+
+ 137 Bald. de Cons. Cas. lib. 1, cap 8.
+
+ 138 De Cons. Cas. lib. 1, cap. 7.
+
+ 139 1 an. 2 an. quest. 19, art. 5.
+
+ 140 Ames. de Cons. lib. 1, cap 4.
+
+ 141 Manual. lib. 4, cap. 4.
+
+ 142 Zanch. Comm. in Illum Locum.
+
+ 143 Ubi supra.
+
+ 144 Ubi supra.
+
+ 145 Perth Assem. p. 8-10, and B. Lindsey, in the Proceedings set down by
+ him, p. 63, 64.
+
+ 146 Park, of the Cross, cap. 5, sect. 10.
+
+ 147 Camer. Prael. tom, 1, de Potest. Eccl. contr. 2.
+
+ 148 Apol. part. 3, cap. 1, sect. 25.
+
+ 149 Exam. part. 3, de Ceclib. Sacer. p. 38.
+
+ 150 Animad. in Bel. cont. 3, lib. 4, cap. 16.
+
+ 151 Hist. of the Coun. of Trent, lib. 2.
+
+ 152 Polit. Christ, lib. 5, cap. 3.
+
+ 153 Ep. 64.
+
+ 154 In Apologet.
+
+ 155 Chem. Exam. part. 1, de Bon. Oper. p. 180.
+
+ 156 Synt. pur. Theol. disp. 49, thes. 72.
+
+ 157 Magd. cen. 1, lib. 2, cap. 4, co. 443.
+
+ 158 Decr. part. 1, dist. 12, cap. 1.
+
+ 159 Aquin. 2, 2 ae. 4, 147, art. 4.
+
+ 160 Comm. in 1 Cor. x. 15.
+
+ 161 Comm. in 1 Thes. v. 21.
+
+ 162 Eccl. Pol. lib. 5. n. 71.
+
+ 163 Par. aes. ad Sco. cap. 16. p. 64.
+
+ 164 Comm. in Illum Locum.
+
+ 165 Prael. in Eundem Locum.
+
+ 166 Pro. in Perth Assem. par. 3, p. 13.
+
+ 167 Ubi supra.
+
+ 168 Ib. p. 26, 27.
+
+ 169 Apud Bald. de Cas. Cons. lib. 2, cap. 12, cas. 1.
+
+ 170 Prael. tom. 1, de Pot. Eccl. contr. 2.
+
+ 171 Ubi supra, p. 16.
+
+ 172 Ag. the Rhem. annot. on Gal. iv. 10.
+
+ 173 Ubi supra, p. 16, 17.
+
+ 174 Paran. ad Sco. cap. 16, p. 64.
+
+ 175 Ubi supra, p. 25.
+
+ 176 Ibid. p. 17.
+
+ 177 Ibid. p. 27.
+
+ 178 Calv. Comm. in illum locum.
+
+ 179 Zanch. Comm. ibid.
+
+ 180 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part. 3, p. 43.
+
+ 181 Annot. on Col. ii. 16.
+
+ 182 Annot. on Gal. iv. 10.
+
+ 183 Annot. ibid.
+
+ 184 De Cult. Sanct., cap. 10.
+
+ 185 De Orig. Fest. Christ. cap. 2.
+
+ 186 De Templ. et Fest. in Enchyrid contr. inter Evang. et Pontif.
+
+ 187 Ubi supra.
+
+ 188 Epist. 118, ad Januar.
+
+ 189 De Orig. Fest. Christ. cap. 2.
+
+ 190 Paren. ad Scot. cap. 16, pp. 66.
+
+ 191 Comm. in illum locum
+
+ 192 Annot. in Gal. iv. 3.
+
+ 193 Comm. in illum locum.
+
+ 194 Ubi supra, p. 40.
+
+ 195 Comm. in Col. ii. 17.
+
+ 196 Infra. part 3, in the arg. of Superstition.
+
+ 197 Anim. in Bel. cont. 3, lib. 4, cap. 16, nota 20.
+
+ 198 Comm. in illum locum.
+
+ 199 Annot. ib.
+
+ 200 Anim. ad Bel. contr. 3, lib. 4. cap. 16, nota 32.
+
+ 201 Ubi supra.
+
+ 202 Bell. de Euch. lib. 6, cap. 13.
+
+ 203 Annot. on Matt. vi. 15, sect. 5.
+
+ 204 Comm. in Col. ii. 16.
+
+ 205 Ubi supra, p. 7.
+
+ 206 Supra, cap. 7, sect. 7.
+
+ 207 Infra, part. 2, cap. 2.
+
+ 208 Paraen. ad Scot. cap. 16. p. 65.
+
+ 209 Cent. 2, cap. 6, col. 119.
+
+ 210 Lib. 5, cap. 22.
+
+ 211 Lib. 12, cap. 32.
+
+ 212 Lib. 7, cap. 19.
+
+ 213 In Gal. iv.
+
+ 214 Hospin. de Orig. Fest. Christ p. 71.
+
+ 215 Annot. on Matt. xv. 9.
+
+ 216 Ubi supra.
+
+ 217 Part 3.
+
+ 218 Calv. Ep. et Resp. edit. Genev. an. 1617, col. 137.
+
+ 219 Ibid. 138.
+
+ 220 Ib. col. 119.
+
+ 221 Paraen. cap. 16, p. 68.
+
+ 222 Sermon, Jer. iv. 2.
+
+ 223 Ubi supr, p. 84.
+
+ 224 Alsted. in Cronol. Testium Veritatis.
+
+ 225 AEn. Sylv. apud Didocl. alt. Damasc. p. 707.
+
+ 226 Paraen., cap. 16, p. 64.
+
+ 227 Sermon at Perth Assembly.
+
+ 228 Ubi supra, p. 83.
+
+ 229 Ibid. p. 138.
+
+ 230 Ubi supra, p. 91.
+
+ 231 Ibid. p. 41.
+
+ 232 Ibid. p. 95.
+
+ 233 Ubi supra, p. 83.
+
+ 234 Calv. Ep. et Resp. col. 592.
+
+ 235 Serm. at Perth Assembly insert. by B. Lindsey.
+
+ 236 Ans. to the Repl. praef. p. 43.
+
+ 237 Repl. to the Ans., p. 270.
+
+ 238 Cassand. Ang., p. 46.
+
+ 239 Ib. p. 23.
+
+ 240 Ibid., p. 8.
+
+ 241 Ib., p. 9-11.
+
+ 242 Infra, part 3. chap. 1.
+
+ 243 Ubi supra, p. 24, 28.
+
+ 244 Ibid. p. 52.
+
+ 245 Ibid. p. 28.
+
+ 246 Ibid. p. 62.
+
+ 247 Ibid. p. 63.
+
+ 248 Page 67.
+
+ 249 P. 68-70.
+
+ 250 Page 85, 93, 110.
+
+ 251 Hist. of the Wald., part. 3, lib. 1, cap. 6. Thuan. Hist. lib. 6, p.
+ 189.
+
+ 252 Thuan. ibid. p. 186.
+
+ 253 Alsted. Chron. Rolib. p. 550.
+
+ 254 See his treatise entitled _Vera Ecclesiae Reformandae Ratio._
+
+ 255 Alsted. ibid.
+
+ 256 Sleid. Com., lib. 21, p. 388.
+
+ 257 Sleid., ibid., p. 393.
+
+ 258 Polan. Synt., lib. 7, cap. 17.
+
+ 259 Calv. Inst., lib. 4, cap. 10, sect. 32.
+
+ 260 Chem. Exam. par. 2, p. 121.
+
+ 261 Fenner Theol., lib. 2, cap. 2.
+
+ 262 Pareus in 1 Cor. xiv. 26.
+
+ 263 Calv. Ep. et Resp., col. 478.
+
+ 264 Calv. in 1 Cor. x. 23. Taylor on Tit. i. 15, p. 295.
+
+ 265 Ubi supra, p. 55.
+
+ 266 Pareus in 1 Cor. vi. 12.
+
+ 267 Calv. in 1 Cor. x. 23, & Pareus ibid.
+
+ 268 Serm. on Job xvi. 7.
+
+ 269 Serm. at Perth Assembly.
+
+ 270 Fresh Suite, cap. 2, p. 12.
+
+ 271 In 1 Cor. x. 23.
+
+ 272 Thuan. Hist. lib. 39, p. 367.
+
+ 273 Pareus in 1 Cor. viii. 13.
+
+ 274 Page 44, 45.
+
+ 275 Pareus in 1 Cor. x. 23.
+
+ 276 Alsted. Theol. Cas. cap. 12, 199.
+
+ 277 Pareus in Rom. iii. 8.
+
+ 278 Page 210, 211.
+
+ 279 Ubi supra.
+
+ 280 Bald. de Cas. Cons., lib. 4, cap. 11, cas. 3.
+
+ 281 Sleid. Com. lib. 21, p. 381.
+
+ 282 Ibid. lib. 25, p. 485.
+
+ 283 Partic. Def. cap. 1, sect. 1.
+
+ 284 Paraen., cap. 16, p. 65.
+
+ 285 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part 3, p. 7.
+
+ 286 Ibid. P. 121.
+
+ 287 Apol. part 3, cap. 3, sect. 45, 51.
+
+ 288 Sleid. Com. lib. 20, p. 365, 371. Alsted in Chron. Religionis, an.
+ 1548.
+
+ 289 Sleid. Com. lib. 21, p. 377.
+
+ 290 Ibid. p. 388.
+
+ 291 Ibid. p. 393.
+
+ 292 Reg. Eccles. lib. 7, cap. 12, num. 107.
+
+ 293 Ibid. num. 120.
+
+ 294 Ibid. num. 132. See to the same purpose D. Potter, in his book
+ called, "Want of Charity justly charged," p. 76.
+
+ 295 Field, of the Church, append. to the third book, cap. 11, p. 298. B.
+ Andr. Serm. on Jer. xxiii. 6, p. 79-82.
+
+ 296 Sleid. Com. lib. 21, p. 377.
+
+ 297 De Laicis, cap. 19.
+
+ 298 Annot. 1 Tim. vi. 20.
+
+ 299 Rep. Eccl. lib. 7, cap. 12, num. 134.
+
+ 300 Park., of the Cross, part 2, p. 80.
+
+ 301 P. 32.
+
+ 302 Ibid. p. 34.
+
+ 303 Ibid. p. 41.
+
+ 304 Ibid. p. 42.
+
+ 305 Jun. Animad. in Bell. de Cult. Sanct. lib. 3, cap. 5.
+
+ 306 Natal. Comit. Mythol. lib. 1, cap. 15.
+
+ 307 Bell. de Effect. Sacram. cap. 31.
+
+ 308 Hooker, Eccl. Pol. lib. 4, num. 1.
+
+ 309 Hospin. Epist. Dedic. Praefix. Libris de Orig. Monach.
+
+ 310 Censur. Liturg. Angl. cap. 9.
+
+ 311 Exam. part 2, de Rit. In Administ. Sacr. p. 32.
+
+ 312 Com. in John iv. 24.
+
+ 313 Popish Prejud. cap. 10.
+
+ 314 Calv. Com. in Exod. xx. 5.
+
+ 315 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 316 De Divers. Grad. Ministr. Evang. contr. Bez. cap. 24, sect. 25.
+
+ 317 Popish Prejud. cap. 10.
+
+ 318 Camero, ibid.
+
+ 319 Hospin., ubi supra.
+
+ 320 Rev. xvii. 7.
+
+ 321 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 322 Praef. of the Ans. p. 17.
+
+ 323 Sarav. N. Fratri et Amico, art. 17.
+
+ 324 Socrat. lib. 3, cap. 12.
+
+ 325 Decr. part 2, caus. 7, quest. 1, cap. 36.
+
+ 326 The Pastor and the prelate, p. 36.
+
+ 327 Hist. of the Waldenses, lib. 1, cap. 3.
+
+ 328 Calv. Epist. et Resp. col. 132.
+
+ 329 Way to the Church, ans. to sect. 33.
+
+ 330 Epist. ad Regin. Fes. lib. 1, Epistol. p. 112.
+
+ 331 Of the Cross, cap. 9, sect. 1.
+
+ 332 Expos. Conf. Ang. art. 37, et problem, 2 de praedest.
+
+ 333 Maldon. Com. in Matt. viii. 3.
+
+ 334 De Verb. Dom., serm. 6.
+
+ 335 Conrad. Schlusselburg. apud Park. of the Cross, part 2, p. 97.
+
+ 336 De Cas. Consc., lib. 4, cap. 11. cas. 3.
+
+ 337 De Laicis, cap. 19.
+
+ 338 Calv. Epist. et Resp. col. 451, 452.
+
+ 339 Plutin In vita Innoc. VII.
+
+ 340 Sleid. com. lib. 21, p. 376.
+
+ 341 Epist. to the Pastors of the Kirk of Scotland.
+
+ 342 Sarav. N. Fratri et Amico, art. 17.
+
+ 343 Park., of the Cross, cap. 6, sect. 21.
+
+ 344 Ibid. sect. 22.
+
+ 345 Serm. At Perth Assembly.
+
+ 346 Part 1, p. 63.
+
+ 347 Ibid. p. 64.
+
+ 348 Nature Hist. lib. 10. cap. ult.
+
+ 349 Serm. on 1 Cor. xi. 16.
+
+ 350 Thuan. Hist. lib. 16, p. 506.
+
+ 351 Plin. Natur. Hist. lib. 4. cap. 1.
+
+ 352 Com. in Matt. lib. 2 lib. 15.
+
+ 353 Synt. Theol. lib. 6 cap. 3 col. 19.
+
+ 354 Aquin. 2, 2 an. quest. 43 art. 1 Marc. Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Leel
+ lib. 5 cap. 10 num. 44.
+
+ 355 Marc. Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Eccl. lib. 1, cap. 11, num. 18.
+
+ 356 Com. In 2 m. 2 an. quest. 43, art. 7.
+
+ 357 Hemming. Enchir. Theol. class. 3, cap. 17, Magdeburg cont. 1, lib.
+ 2, cap. 4, col. 448, 449.
+
+ 358 Ames, lib. 5, de Consc. cap. 11, quest. 6.
+
+ 359 Ames. Ibid. quest. 3.
+
+ 360 Camero, Prael. In Matt. xviii. 7, de scand.
+
+ 361 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 362 Com. ibid.
+
+ 363 Com. ibid.
+
+ 364 Of the Cross, part 2. p. 57.
+
+ 365 Eccl. Pol. p. 246.
+
+ 366 Supra, cap. 1.
+
+ 367 Maldonat. Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 368 Pareus, Com. ibid.
+
+ 369 Com. in Eph. iv. 13.
+
+ 370 Polan. Synt. Theol. lib, 6, cap. 3, col. 19.
+
+ 371 Aquin. 2, 2 an. quest. 43. art. 2.
+
+ 372 Marc. Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Eccl. lib, 1, cap. 11, num. 18.
+
+ 373 Cent. 1, lib. 2, cap. 4, col. 450.
+
+ 374 Com. in Dan. i. 8.
+
+ 375 De Rep. Eccl. lib. 5, cap. 10, num. 44.
+
+ 376 Com. in 1 Thes. v. 22.
+
+ 377 Of the Cross, cap. 3, sect. 6.
+
+ 378 Annot. on Gal. iv. 10.
+
+ 379 Confer. with Rain. cap. 8, div. 2, p. 408, 410.
+
+ 380 Com. in 1 Cor. x. 28.
+
+ 381 Lib. 1, epist. 41.
+
+ 382 Can. 5.
+
+ 383 Ubi supra.
+
+ 384 Bald, de Cas. Cons. lib. 2, cap. 14, cas. 7.
+
+ 385 N. Fratri et Amico, art. 13.
+
+ 386 Annot. on Acts viii. sect. 5.
+
+ 387 Park, of the Cross, part 2, p. 57; 1 Thes. v. 14; Rom. xiv. 16; 1
+ Cor. lx. 12; 1 Thes, ii. 7; Acts xx 34; Matt xviii. 6.
+
+ 388 Cornel Jansen. Conc. Evang. cap 71.
+
+ 389 Aug. de Morib. Manich. lib. 2, cap. 14; Rom. xiv. 30.
+
+ 390 Ames lib. 5, de Consc. cap. 11, quest. 6.
+
+ 391 Dr Forebesse, Iren. lib. 2. cap. 20, num. 27.
+
+ 392 Alt. Damasc. cap. 9, p. 556.
+
+ 393 Parker, of the Cross, part 2, p. 75.
+
+ 394 Com. upon this place.
+
+ 395 Tom. 1, an. 55, num. 39.
+
+ 396 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 1, cap. 11, num. 18.
+
+ 397 Serm. at Perth Assembly.
+
+ 398 "Non enim solum scandalizure, sed ... dulizari peccatum est, quia
+ ... est," saith Maldonat upon Matt. xviii. 7.
+
+ 399 2 2an., quest. 43, art. 1.
+
+ 400 Pareus, Com. la. illum locum.
+
+ 401 Epist. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 402 Com. in 1 Cor. viii. 9.
+
+ 403 Lib. 2, cap. 20, num. 5, 6.
+
+ 404 Supra, sect 4-6.
+
+ 405 Ibid., num. 7.
+
+ 406 Num. 10-14.
+
+ 407 Num. 15, 16.
+
+ 408 Num. 17.
+
+ 409 Iren., lib. l. cap. 10, sect. 2.
+
+ 410 Supra, cap. 8, sect. 6.
+
+ 411 Ibid. lib. 2, cap. 20, num. 14.
+
+ 412 Supra. cap. 8, sect. 5, cap. 9, sect. 10.
+
+ 413 Ibid, sect 7.
+
+ 414 Mosney Myster. of Iniq. In the conclus.
+
+ 415 Aquin. 3, quest. 66, art. 8, Rhein Annot. on Matt. xvi. sect. 5,
+ Bell de Pontif. Rom., lib. 4, cap. 18; and De Sacrif. Missae, lib. 6,
+ cap 13.
+
+ 416 Eccl. Pol., lib. 4, 11, 12.
+
+ 417 Cap. 1, sect. 3.
+
+ 418 Expos. of the Creed, Art. of Christ's Birth.
+
+ 419 Com. on Gal. iv. 10.
+
+ 420 Parker, of the Cross, cap. 6, sect. 10.
+
+ 421 Sect. 7.
+
+ 422 Apol., part 3, cap 5.
+
+ 423 Com. in Matt. xviii. 6.
+
+ 424 Com. 1 Cor. viii.
+
+ 425 Ames., lib. 5, de Consc., cap. 11.
+
+ 426 Supra, cap. 1.
+
+ 427 Cent. 1, lib. 2, cap. 10, col. 560.
+
+ 428 De Auserib Papae, consider. 12.
+
+ 429 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 430 Ubi Supra, p. 441.
+
+ 431 Of the Cross, part 2, p. 79.
+
+ 432 Serm. on John xvi. 7.
+
+ 433 Pareus, Com. in Rom. xv. 1.
+
+ 434 Serm. on John xvi. 7.
+
+ 435 Fresh Suite ag. Cerem., cap. 9, p. 96, 100.
+
+ 436 Lib. 1, de Vit. Ext. Cult. Oppos., col. 501, 502.
+
+ 437 Aquin. 2. 2, quest. 92, art. 1.
+
+ 438 Syn. Pur. Theol., disp. 44, thes. 53.
+
+ 439 Cent. 4, cup. 6, col. 427.
+
+ 440 De Cas. Consc., lib. 2, cap. 12, Cas. 13.
+
+ 441 Concil. Laodic., can. 58.
+
+ 442 Hist. of the Waldenses, part 3, lib. 1, cap. 6.
+
+ 443 Eccles. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 3.
+
+ 444 Apud Aquin. 2. 2, quest. 93, art. 2.
+
+ 445 J. Rainold's Confer. with J. Hart, cap. 8, divis. 4, p. 489.
+
+ 446 Stella, Com. in Luke xvii. 20.
+
+ 447 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, 70.
+
+ 448 Ibid., sect. 69.
+
+ 449 Ibid., sect. 65.
+
+ 450 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 3.
+
+ 451 Aquin. 3, 4, 25, art. 4.
+
+ 452 Ubi Supra, cap. 15, p. 42.
+
+ 453 Ibid., p. 41.
+
+ 454 Aquin. 2. 2, quest. 95, art. 2.
+
+ 455 De Vera Eccl. Reform., p. 367.
+
+ 456 Annot. on Matt. xv., sect. 5.
+
+ 457 3, quest. 68, art. 6.
+
+ 458 2. 2, quest. 147, art. 4.
+
+ 459 3, quest. 66, art. 10.
+
+ 460 De Sacr. Missae, lib. 6, cap. 13.
+
+ 461 De Pont. Rom., lib. 4, cap. 18.
+
+ 462 Conc. Evan., cap. 60.
+
+ 463 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 5, sect. 6; cap. 7, sect. 7.
+
+ 464 Apud Zanc. Epist., lib. 1, p. 111.
+
+ 465 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 60.
+
+ 466 Hist. of the Counc. of Trent., lib. 2.
+
+ 467 Confess., cap. 5, art. 41.
+
+ 468 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part 3, p. 18.
+
+ 469 Alt. Damasc., cap. 10, p. 878.
+
+ 470 Ubi Supra, p. 29.
+
+ 471 Ibid., p. 28.
+
+ 472 Theol., lib. 6, cap. 3
+
+ 473 Synt., lib. 6, cap. 51, p. 433.
+
+ 474 Syn. Pur. Theol. Disp. 21, thes. 7.
+
+ 475 Fresh Suite, cap. 5, p. 59.
+
+ 476 Comm. in 1 Reg. viii. de Tempt. Dedic.
+
+ 477 Hist. of the Waldenses, lib. 1, cap. 1.
+
+ 478 Cent. 4, cap. 6, col. 480.
+
+ 479 De Orig. Temp., lib. 4, cap. 2.
+
+ 480 Cent. 4, cap. 6, col. 409.
+
+ 481 Com. in Mal. i. 11.
+
+ 482 Eccles. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 16.
+
+ 483 Confer. with J. Hart, cap. 8, divis. 4, p. 491.
+
+ 484 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 485 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 69.
+
+ 486 Annot. on 1 Tim. iv. 5.
+
+ 487 De Cult. Sanct, cap. 10.
+
+ 488 Ubi Supra, p. 21.
+
+ 489 Ep. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 490 On P. 5.
+
+ 491 Bonifac. VIII., de Reg. Juris, reg. 51.
+
+ 492 Hook. Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 12.
+
+ 493 Serm. on Matt. vi. 16.
+
+ 494 Ubi Supra, p. 25.
+
+ 495 De Cult. Sanct, cap. 10.
+
+ 496 Zanc. in 4 Praec, p. 682.
+
+ 497 Pareus Com. in Gen ii. 3.
+
+ 498 Ubi Supra, p. 20.
+
+ 499 Ubi Supra p. 29.
+
+ 500 On Praec. 4.
+
+ 501 See Serm. on Gal. iv. 4; Serm. on Luke ii. 10, 11; Serm. on Lam. i.
+ 12; Serm. on John xx. 19; Serm. on Job xix. 23; Serm. on John xx.
+ 17; Serm. on Heb. xiii. 20, 21; Serm. on Matt. vi. 16; Serm. on Acts
+ ii. 16; Serm. on John v. 6, &c.
+
+ 502 P. 67.
+
+ 503 Ubi Supra, p. 23.
+
+ 504 Serm. on Matt. xii. 39, 40.
+
+ 505 Serm. on Luke iv. 18, 19.
+
+ 506 Serm. on Matt. vi. 16.
+
+ 507 Synop. Pur. Theol., disp. 19, thes. 30.
+
+ 508 Manduct, lect. 2, p. 38.
+
+ 509 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 510 Jude 23.
+
+ 511 Com. In Thess. v. 22.
+
+ 512 Anal. in illum locum.
+
+ 513 Expos. upon Rev. ii. 14.
+
+ 514 In Praec. 2, p. 534.
+
+ 515 Annot. on 1 Cor. x. 21.
+
+ 516 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 517 Anal. in 1 Cor. x.
+
+ 518 Ibid.
+
+ 519 Annot. Ibid.
+
+ 520 De Bono Conjugall, cap. 16.
+
+ 521 Com. In illum locum.
+
+ 522 Apud Wolphinm, com. in 2 Reg. xviii. 4.
+
+ 523 Calv. Epist. et Resp., p. 79.
+
+ 524 Serm. on Phil. ii. 10.
+
+ 525 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 526 G. Sanctus, com. ibid.
+
+ 527 Com. in 2 Reg. xxiii. 6.
+
+ 528 Com. in Isa. xxvii. 9.
+
+ 529 Calv. Com. in Exod. xxiii. 24.
+
+ 530 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 531 N. Fratri et Amico, art. 17.
+
+ 532 Iren. lib. 1. cap. 7, 9, 6.
+
+ 533 Resp. ad Versipel., p. 41-44.
+
+ 534 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 535 Supra, cap. 1, sect. 11.
+
+ 536 Com. in Deut. xii. 2.
+
+ 537 In 4 Praec., col. 709.
+
+ 538 Magdeb., cent. 4, cap. 16, col. 1538, 1539.
+
+ 539 Cent. 6, cap. 15, col. 1511.
+
+ 540 Danaeus Polit. Christ., lib. 3, p. 229; Polan. Synt. Theol., lib. 10,
+ cap. 65.
+
+ 541 Epist. Hist., lib. 1.
+
+ 542 Com. in 2 Reg. x. 27.
+
+ 543 Calv. Res. ad Versipel., p. 413.
+
+ 544 De Imagin., col. 402.
+
+ 545 Tho Naogeorgus in 1 John v. 21.
+
+ 546 Calv. Epist. et Resp., p. 86.
+
+ 547 Ibid., col. 136.
+
+ 548 Com. in Col. ii. 17.
+
+ 549 De Imagin., col. 403.
+
+ 550 Com. in 2 Kings xviii. 4.
+
+ 551 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part 2, p. 120.
+
+ 552 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 553 Aquin. 2, 2 an., quest. 43, art. 1.
+
+ 554 Confer, with J. Hart, cap. 8, divis. 4, p. 509.
+
+ 555 Apol., part 3, cap. 4, sect. 15-17.
+
+ 556 Supra, sect. 9.
+
+ 557 Supra, sect. 6.
+
+ 558 Epist. ad Regin. Elizab. Epistolar., lib. 1, p. 112.
+
+ 559 Ibid., p. 111.
+
+ 560 Sleid. Com., lib. 25, p. 481.
+
+ 561 Apol., part 3, cap. 4.
+
+ 562 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part 2, p. 118, 119.
+
+ 563 Ibid., p. 22.
+
+ 564 Ration., lib. 5, Tit. de Prima et lib. 6, Tit. de Die Sancta Pasc.
+
+ 565 Annot. on Matt. viii., sect. 3; and on 1 Cor. xi., sect. 18.
+
+ 566 Way to the Church, Answer to sect. 51.
+
+ 567 Exam. Conc. Trit. de Euchar., can. 6, p. 86.
+
+ 568 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 21, p. 65.
+
+ 569 Ibid., p. 69.
+
+ 570 Concil. Laodicaen., can. 19. See also Conc. Tolet. 4, can. 17.
+
+ 571 Ubi Supra, p. 61.
+
+ 572 Ubi Supra, p. 118.
+
+ 573 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 574 Eccl. Pol. lib. 4, sect. 6.
+
+ 575 Apol., part 3, cap. 4, sect. 5.
+
+ 576 In Praec. 2, p. 543.
+
+ 577 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 578 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 579 Eccl. Pol., lib. 4, sect. 6.
+
+ 580 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 581 Com. in Lev. xix. 27, 28.
+
+ 582 Aquin., 2, 2ae, quest. 103, art. 4.
+
+ 583 De Cas. Cons., lib. 2, cap. 14, cas. 7.
+
+ 584 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 585 Annot. ibid.
+
+ 586 Ag. the Rhem., Annot. on 1 Cor. x., sect. 8.
+
+ 587 Apud Gratian. Decr., p. l, dist. 37, cap. 15.
+
+ 588 De Corona Militis.
+
+ 589 Partic. Def., cap. 1, sect. 1.
+
+ 590 Magd., cent. 3, cap. 6, col. 147.
+
+ 591 Concil. Laodicen., can. 37.
+
+ 592 Apud Theod., lib. 1, cap. 10.
+
+ 593 Epist. 86, ad Casulan.
+
+ 594 Lib. 1, epist. 41.
+
+ 595 Apud Bell. de Effect. Sacr., lib. 2, cap. 31.
+
+ 596 Conc. African., can. 27; Conc. Tolet. 4, can. 5, et 10; Conc. Brac.
+ 2, can. 73.
+
+ 597 Magd., cent. 4, cap. 6, col. 458.
+
+ 598 Eccl. Pol., lib. 4, sect. 7.
+
+ 599 Can. 5.
+
+ 600 Can. 40.
+
+ 601 Sims. Hist. of the Church, lib. 4, cent. 6.
+
+ 602 Eccl. Pol., lib. 3, sect. 1.
+
+ 603 Decr., part 2, causa 26, quest. 7, cap. 13.
+
+ 604 Ibid., cap. 14.
+
+ 605 Ibid., cap. 17.
+
+ 606 Aquin. 1, 2ae, quest. 102, art. 6, resp. ad 6m.
+
+ 607 Ibid., resp. ad 11m.
+
+ 608 Baruch. 6, 3 Reg. xviii.
+
+ 609 Ibid., resp. ad 8m.
+
+ 610 Rhem. Annot. on 2 Cor. vi. 14.
+
+ 611 Rhem. on 1 Tim. vi., sect. 4.
+
+ 612 Rhem. on Apoc. i. 10.
+
+ 613 Rhem. on 2 John x.
+
+ 614 De Effect. Sax., lib. 2, cap. 31.
+
+ 615 Magd. Cent. 4, cap. 6, col. 406.
+
+ 616 Hosp. de Orig. Templ., lib. 2, cap. 7, p. 115.
+
+ 617 Confer. with J. Hart, divis. 4, cap. 8.
+
+ 618 Antith. Pap. et Christ., art. 9.
+
+ 619 In 2 Praec., col. 363.
+
+ 620 Com. in Psal. xvi. 4.
+
+ 621 Com. in 1 Cor. x. 14.
+
+ 622 Synops. Purior. Theol., disp. 19.
+
+ 623 Usher, of the Relig. Prof. by the Anc. Irish, cap. 4.
+
+ 624 Apud Hosp. de Orig. Imag., p. 200.
+
+ 625 De Vit. Pil. 4.
+
+ 626 Bel. de Effect. Sacr., lib. 2, cap. 31.
+
+ 627 Annot. in illum locum.
+
+ 628 Annot. ibid.
+
+ 629 Com. ibid.
+
+ 630 Sect. 48.
+
+ 631 Elench. Relig. Papist. in Praefat.
+
+ 632 Part 2, cap. 6.
+
+ 633 Supra, cap. 1.
+
+ 634 De Imag. Sanct., cap. 29.
+
+ 635 Proc. in Perth Assemb., part 2, p. 22.
+
+ 636 Rhem. Annot. on Act. ii. 1.
+
+ 637 Rain. Confer. with J. Hart, cap. 8, divis. 4, p. 496.
+
+ 638 Zanch., lib. 1, in 4 Praec, col. 674.
+
+ 639 Aquin., 1, 2ae, quest. 102, art. 6, resp. ad 11m.
+
+ 640 N. Fratri et Amico, resp. ad art. 12m.
+
+ 641 Ubi Supra, p. 510.
+
+ 642 Supra, part 2, cap. 9, sect. 14.
+
+ 643 Infra, cap. 4, sect. 26-28.
+
+ 644 Of the Cross, cap. 2, sect. 2.
+
+ 645 Upon Gen. xxxv. 4.
+
+ 646 Expos. in Col. iii. 5.
+
+ 647 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 18, p. 62.
+
+ 648 History of the Church of Scotland, lib. 1, p. 181.
+
+ 649 Part 1, quest. 3.
+
+ 650 Charact. of the Superstit., lib. 2.
+
+ 651 Com. In 1 Kings ii.
+
+ 652 A. Polan. Synt. Theol., lib. 6, cap. 3; D. Pareus Explic. Catech.,
+ part 1, quest. 71; Scarpius Curs. Theolog. de Peccato, cap. 8.
+
+ 653 Ibid., ver. 44.
+
+ 654 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 7. cap. 12, num. 88.
+
+ 655 Ibid., num. 89.
+
+ 656 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 65.
+
+ 657 Cornel. a Lapide; Com. in Hag. ii. 24.
+
+ 658 Confer. with Hart, chap. 8, divis. 5, p. 509.
+
+ 659 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 66.
+
+ 660 Eram., part 2, de Rit. in Admin. Sacr., p. 32.
+
+ 661 Lib 1, de Viti. Ext. Cult. Oppos., col. 505.
+
+ 662 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 69
+
+ 663 Supra, part 1, cap. 1.
+
+ 664 Supra, cap. 1.
+
+ 665 Infra, cap. 5.
+
+ 666 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling. p. 115, 116.
+
+ 667 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 5, cap. 6, num. 126.
+
+ 668 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 5, cap. 6, num. 138.
+
+ 669 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part 2, p. 22.
+
+ 670 Serm. at Perth Assembly.
+
+ 671 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 10, p. 17.
+
+ 672 Apol., part 3, sect. 16.
+
+ 673 Cap. 1, sect. 35.
+
+ 674 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 22, p. 85.
+
+ 675 Ibid., cap. 23.
+
+ 676 Annot. on Heb. xi. 21.
+
+ 677 Expos. Artic. Confes. Angel., art. 28.
+
+ 678 De Sacr. Euchar, lib. 4, c. 29.
+
+ 679 Zanch., lib. 1, De Viti. Ext. Cult. Oppos., col. 504.
+
+ 680 Bell. ubi supra.
+
+ 681 Cartwright on 1 Cor. xi., sect. 8.
+
+ 682 De Orig. Imag., p. 245.
+
+ 683 Ans. to the Les. Chal. of the Real Pres., p. 74.
+
+ 684 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, p. 116.
+
+ 685 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part 2, p. 92.
+
+ 686 Ubi supra.
+
+ 687 Ubi supra.
+
+ 688 Gener. Def., cap. 3.
+
+ 689 Rejoynd., p. 296.
+
+ 690 Cornel. a Lapide, Com. in Mal., cap. xi.
+
+ 691 Part 3, cap. 3, sect. 29.
+
+ 692 De Fugiend. Idolat., homil. 1.
+
+ 693 Homines qui ex corpore et spiritu sunt constituti, corpore colunt
+ materialiter, spiritu formaliter, as Junius saith upon Deut. xii.
+
+ 694 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 695 Lindsey, ubi supra, p. 18.
+
+ 696 Ibid., p. 92.
+
+ 697 Ibid.
+
+ 698 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 32, p. 115.
+
+ 699 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 7, cap. 12, num. 42.
+
+ 700 Com. 1, disp. 50, sect. 3.
+
+ 701 See Dr Usher's Ans. to the Jesu. Chall. of Images, p. 499.
+
+ 702 Allud est picturam adorare; allud per picturae historiam quid sit
+ adorandum addiscere, saith Durand, Ration, lib. 1, Tit. de Pictur.
+
+ 703 Manual, lib. 3, cap. 2, quest. 5.
+
+ 704 Ubi supra.
+
+ 705 Zanch, lib. 1, De Viti. Ext. Cult. Oppos., col. 510.
+
+ 706 Ubi supra p. 88.
+
+ 707 Ubi supra, p. 69.
+
+ 708 Partic. Def., cap. 3 sect. 20.
+
+ 709 Part 3, cap. 3, sect. 45.
+
+ 710 Ubi supra p. 72, 73.
+
+ 711 Ans. to the Chall. of the Real Pres. p. 50, 51.
+
+ 712 Ubi supra p. 55.
+
+ 713 Ibid. p. 61.
+
+ 714 Alt. Dam., p. 809.
+
+ 715 Ea (veneratio) potest esse etiam sine cultu, saith Scaliger, De
+ Subtil. ad Card., exert. 317, dist. 3.
+
+ 716 De Sacram. Confirm., cap. 13.
+
+ 717 Part 3, cap. 3, sect. 50.
+
+ 718 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 8.
+
+ 719 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 5, cap. 6, num. 137, et lib. 7, cap. 12, num.
+ 48.
+
+ 720 Ubi supra, p. 70.
+
+ 721 Ubi supra, cap. 21, p. 73.
+
+ 722 Cartright on 1 Cor. xi., sect. 18.
+
+ 723 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 7, cap. 12, num. 50.
+
+ 724 Didoclav., ubi supra, p. 803.
+
+ 725 Lib. 1, De Viti. Ext. Cult. Oppos., col. 504, 505.
+
+ 726 Sermon at Perth Assembly.
+
+ 727 Ubi supra, p. 142.
+
+ 728 Aquin. 3, quest. 25, art. 2.
+
+ 729 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 7, cap. 12, num. 43.
+
+ 730 Franc. a S. Clara, Expos. Artic. Confess. Angl., art. 28.
+
+ 731 Of the Church, lib. 5, sect. 15.
+
+ 732 Aquin. 1, quest. 13, art. 1.
+
+ 733 Cent. Flosc Tur. Disput. Flosc., 26.
+
+ 734 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 23, p. 88.
+
+ 735 Synt. lib. 6, cap. 16, col. 125.
+
+ 736 Eccl. Pol. lib., sect. 55.
+
+ 737 Ubi supra.
+
+ 738 Zanch., tom. 8, col. 521.
+
+ 739 We adore Christ as well in the preaching of the gospel and sacrament
+ of baptism, as in the sacrament of the supper, saith Cartwright on 1
+ Cor. xi. sect. 18.
+
+ 740 Ubi supra.
+
+ 741 De Rep. Eccl. lib. 7 cap. 11 num. 7.
+
+ 742 Supra, sect. 13.
+
+ 743 Zanch., lib. 1, De Vitit. Ext. Cult. Oppos., col. 504.
+
+ 744 Marc. Ant. de Dom. Ostens. Error. Fr. Suarez, cap. 2, num. 13.
+
+ 745 Burges, of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 32, P. 113, Paybody,
+ part 3, cap. 3, sect. 4.
+
+ 746 Ubi supra, p. 94.
+
+ 747 Bishop Lindsey, ubi supra, p. 76.
+
+ 748 Ibid., p. 91.
+
+ 749 Ubi supra, sect. 15.
+
+ 750 Paybody, part 3, cap. 3, sect. 4.
+
+ 751 Paybody, ibid., sect. 5.
+
+ 752 Ib., part 2, cap. 1, sect. 7.
+
+ 753 Dr Forbesse, Iren., lib. 1, cap. 1.
+
+ 754 Jos. Hall, Apol. against Brown, sect. 36.
+
+ 755 Dr Forbesse, ubi supra.
+
+ 756 Dr Forbesse, ibid.
+
+ 757 Dr Forbesse, ubi supra.
+
+ 758 Com. in 1 Cor. xi. 26.
+
+ 759 Ubi supra, p. 104.
+
+ 760 Didoc. Alt. Dam., p. 803.
+
+ 761 Ubi supra, p. 112.
+
+ 762 Ibid., p. 101.
+
+ 763 Ubi supra.
+
+ 764 Partic. Def, cap. 3, sect. 38.
+
+ 765 Alt. Dam, p. 756, 782, 794.
+
+ 766 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 22.
+
+ 767 De Corona Militis.
+
+ 768 De Jejun., cap. 2, 14.
+
+ 769 Haeres, 75.
+
+ 770 Hist. Eccl. cent. 4, lib. 2, cap. 22, p. 160.
+
+ 771 Magd. cent. 3, cap. 6, col. 135.
+
+ 772 Epiphan, ubi supra.
+
+ 773 Ubi supra, cap. 22, et 23.
+
+ 774 Rep. Eccl. lib. 5, cap. 6.
+
+ 775 Lib. 1, cap. 1.
+
+ 776 Alt. Dam, p. 784.
+
+ 777 Cent. Magd. 3, cap. 6, col. 133.
+
+ 778 De Orig Templ, lib. 2, cap. 28.
+
+ 779 Pareus in 1 Cor. xi. 21, et Calv, ibid.
+
+ 780 Cartwright in 1 Cor. xi., sect. 6.
+
+ 781 Lib. 5. c. 22.
+
+ 782 Quia Paulus has epulas sacram caenam vocarit Et quia scriptum est
+ apud Lucain, similiter et cali ceni postquam caen ivit Quae etiam
+ fucrunt ut arbitror causae, cur illi AEgyptu de quibus loquitur
+ Socrates, lib. 5, prius quam ad mysteria accedercut, laute
+ caenarent, saith Casaubon Exerc. 16. 31.
+
+ 783 Conc. Laodic., can. 28.
+
+ 784 N. Fratri et Amico, art. 17.
+
+ 785 Patric. Def., cap. 1, sect. 6.
+
+ 786 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 65.
+
+ 787 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, cap. 17, p. 52.
+
+ 788 Apol. for Kneeling, part 3, cap. 2, sect. 15.
+
+ 789 Sarav. de Divers. Grad. Minist. Evang., cap. 24, sect. 25; Dr Field,
+ of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 31, p. 396; Ant. de Dom. Rep. Eccl.,
+ lib. 5, cap. num. 48, sect. 2.
+
+ 790 Apol., part 3, cap. 2.
+
+ 791 Eccl. Pol., lib. 4, sect. 1.
+
+ 792 Ames. Fresh Suite, p. 223.
+
+ 793 Supra, cap. 4, sect. 4.
+
+ 794 Ibid., sect. 5.
+
+ 795 Antith. Papal. et Christian., art. 11.
+
+ 796 On Luke xxiv. 50.
+
+ 797 Synt. Theol., lib. 9, cap. 38.
+
+ 798 Com. on Gal. iii. 24.
+
+ 799 Exam., part 2, De Rit. in Admin. Sacram., p. 32.
+
+ 800 Animad. in Bell. de Cult. Sanct., cap. 5.
+
+ 801 Luke xvi. 16.
+
+ 802 Ames, Fresh Suite, p. 266.
+
+ 803 Synt. Theol., lib. 6, cap. 10, p. 58, 59.
+
+ 804 Synop. Pur. Theol., disp. 19, thes. 4.
+
+ 805 Supra, cap. 4, sect. 9.
+
+ 806 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, p. 116.
+
+ 807 Apol., part 3, cap. 2, sect. 4.
+
+ 808 Homil. 27, in 1 Cor.
+
+ 809 Camer. Praelict., tom. 3, p. 37.
+
+ 810 Calv. in Matt. xxi. 25.
+
+ 811 Hist. of the Church of Scotland, lib. 1, p. 157-159.
+
+ 812 Calv. in Josh. xxii.
+
+ 813 Ibid.
+
+ 814 On 1 Cor. xi, sect. 6.
+
+ 815 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 816 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 69.
+
+ 817 On Praec. 4.
+
+ 818 Epist. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 819 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, p. 3.
+
+ 820 Ibid, p. 11.
+
+ 821 Ibid, p. 4.
+
+ 822 Ibid., p. 14.
+
+ 823 Ibid., p. 6, 7.
+
+ 824 Fresh Suite, p. 153.
+
+ 825 De Effect. Sacr., lib. 2, cap. 31.
+
+ 826 In Praefat. Elench. Relig. Papistic.
+
+ 827 De Cas. Consc., lib. 4, cap. 11.
+
+ 828 Ames, Bell. Enerv., tom. 1, lib. 3, cap. 7.
+
+ 829 Ubi supra.
+
+ 830 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 831 On Matt. xix., sect. 9.
+
+ 832 Iren., lib. 2, cap. 7, p. 6, 7.
+
+ 833 Eccl. Pol. lib. 5, sect. 65.
+
+ 834 De Imag. Sanct., cap. 29.
+
+ 835 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 836 Com. in Ezek. ix. 4.
+
+ 837 Ibid.
+
+ 838 Gram. Hebr., part 1, cap. 1.
+
+ 839 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 840 Animad. ad Bell. de Imag. Sanct., cap. 29.
+
+ 841 Serm. on that place.
+
+ 842 Lib. 5, cap. 22.
+
+ 843 In Epist. ad quendam qui a Reform. Relig. ad Papism. defecerat.
+
+ 844 Proc. in Perth Assembly, part. 3, p. 30.
+
+ 845 Sermon on Esth. ix. 31.
+
+ 846 De Pol. Mosis, cap. 7.
+
+ 847 Moses and Aaron, lib. 3, cap. 11.
+
+ 848 De Orig. Festor, cap. 2, ad finem.
+
+ 849 Ubi supra, p. 31.
+
+ 850 Annot. on John x.
+
+ 851 Annot. on John x. 22.
+
+ 852 Ubi supra, p. 31.
+
+ 853 Com. in ilium locum.
+
+ 854 Praelect. in Matt. xix. 3, de Pharis.
+
+ 855 Antiq. Jud., lib. 13, cap. 24.
+
+ 856 Antiq. Jud., lib. 17, cap. 3.
+
+ 857 Ubi supra, p. 32.
+
+ 858 In John x. 22.
+
+ 859 Com. ibid.
+
+ 860 Annot. ibid.
+
+ 861 Aulmad. in Bell., contr. 3, lib. 4, cap. 17, nota. 6.
+
+ 862 De Orig. Templ., lib. 4, cap. 22.
+
+ 863 Calv. in Act. xviii. 21.
+
+ 864 Sermon on 1 Cor. xi. 16.
+
+ 865 Epist. 80, ad Eustath. Medic.
+
+ 866 Ad Pompeium contra Epist. Stephani.
+
+ 867 De Bapt. contra Donatist, lib. 4, cap. 5.
+
+ 868 Ep. 31.
+
+ 869 Decr., part 1, dist. 8, cap. 7.
+
+ 870 Decr., part 2, caus. 35, quest. 9. cap. 3.
+
+ 871 J. Lips., Lib. de Una Relig. Advers. Dialogistam.
+
+ 872 Calv. Epist. et Resp., col. 484, 485.
+
+ 873 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 8, sect. 3.
+
+ 874 Annot. on 1 Cor. xi. 16.
+
+ 875 Supra, cap. 2.
+
+ 876 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 31.
+
+ 877 Lib. 4, cap. 6, 34.
+
+ 878 Supra, cap. 6, sect. 3.
+
+ 879 Ep. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 880 Lib. 5, cap. 22.
+
+ 881 Lib. de Baptismo.
+
+ 882 Prael., tom. 1, de Potest. Eccl., contr. 2.
+
+ 883 Epist. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 884 Sermon on Esth. ix. 31.
+
+ 885 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 31.
+
+ 886 De Polit. Mos., cap. 7.
+
+ 887 De Sacram., lib. 2, cap. 29.
+
+ 888 Bell. Enerv., tom. 3, lib. 1, cap. 8.
+
+ 889 Manuduct., p. 33.
+
+ 890 Praelect., tom. 1, p. 367.
+
+ 891 In Apologet.
+
+ 892 Chemnit. Exam., part 2, p. 121.
+
+ 893 Calv. Instit, lib. 4, cap. 10, sect. 32.
+
+ 894 Calv. Epist. et Resp., col. 478.
+
+ 895 Manuduct., p. 37.
+
+ 896 Of the Lawfulness of Kneeling, p. 2.
+
+ 897 Cap. 1.
+
+ 898 Supra, part 1, cap. 4, 6.
+
+ 899 Fr. Jun. de Polit. Mos., cap. 1.
+
+ 900 Apol., part 3, cap. 1, sect. 25.
+
+ 901 Just., lib. 4, cap. 10, sect. 17.
+
+ 902 Letter to the Regent of Scotland.
+
+ 903 Eccl. Pol., lib. 2.
+
+ 904 Praelect, tom. 1, p. 369.
+
+ 905 Epist. to the Pastors of the Church of Scotland.
+
+ 906 Course of Conformity, p. 153.
+
+ 907 Epist. 118.
+
+ 908 Com. in 1 Reg. viii. 65.
+
+ 909 Supra, cap. 1, sect. 6.
+
+ 910 In 2 Praec., col. 363.
+
+ 911 Ib., col. 502.
+
+ 912 Annot. on Phil. ii. 10.
+
+ 913 Epist. ad Protect. Angl.
+
+ 914 Causa 11, quest. 3, cap. 101.
+
+ 915 In 4 Praec., col. 791.
+
+ 916 De Jud. Controv., cap. 14, p. 76.
+
+ 917 Of the Church, lib. 4, cap. 34, p. 400.
+
+ 918 Gerard, Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 1280; Polan. Synt., lib. 10, cap.
+ 162, col. 960.
+
+ 919 Lib. 6, cap. 5, num. 3, 174.
+
+ 920 Ostens. Error. Fr. Suarez, cap. 3, num. 23.
+
+ 921 De Rep. Eccl., cap. 6, num. 38.
+
+ 922 Ostens. Error. Fr. Suarez, cap. 3, num. 23.
+
+ 923 Lib. 6, cap. 5, num. 174.
+
+ 924 Ibid., num. 177.
+
+ 925 J. Wolph. in 2 Reg. xii.
+
+ 926 Id., ibid.
+
+ 927 Zanch. In 3 Praec. 575-558.
+
+ 928 Supra, cap. 6.
+
+ 929 Prompt Morall, in Domin 1, quadrag. text 10.
+
+ 930 Proc. in Perth Assembly.
+
+ 931 Onuphr. de Vit. Hadr., 6.
+
+ 932 De Imper. aut, lib. 2, cap. 55.
+
+ 933 Praelect, tom. 1, p. 370, 372; tom. 2, p. 41.
+
+ 934 Calv. in Psal. ii.
+
+ 935 Taylor on Tit. iii. 1, p. 543.
+
+ 936 Pareus in illum locum.
+
+ 937 Iren., lib. 2, cap. 4, sect. 3.
+
+ 938 Lib. 1.
+
+ 939 Pareus in Rom. xiii. 4.
+
+ 940 Dr Forb. Iren., lib. 2, cap. 4, sect. 10.
+
+ 941 Taylor on Tit. i. 15, p. 295.
+
+ 942 Animad. in Bell. Cont. 1, lib. 3, cap. 10.
+
+ 943 Zanch. in Phil. 1. 10.
+
+ 944 Ibid.
+
+ 945 Cap. 14, p. 77.
+
+ 946 Ibid., cap. 26, p. 152.
+
+ 947 Danaeus Pol. Christ., lib. 6, cap. 3.
+
+ 948 Zanch. in 4 Praec., col. 791; Polan. Synt., lib. 10, cap. 65.
+
+ 949 Martyr. in 1 Reg. viii. 31.
+
+ 950 Ibid., 1 Reg, viii. 32.
+
+ 951 Ibid.
+
+ 952 Hospin. De Orig. Templ., lib. 1, cap. 1, Wolph. in 2 Reg. xii. 4.
+
+ 953 Hospin., ibid., p. 3.
+
+ 954 De Justit. Actual., cap. 41.
+
+ 955 De Judice Controv., cap. 26, p. 153.
+
+ 956 De Imper. Author, lib. 2, cap. 52.
+
+ 957 Animad. in Bell. contr. 4, lib. 1, cap. 12, 18.
+
+ 958 Cartwr. on Matt. xxii., sect. 3.
+
+ 959 Of the Church, lib. 5. cap. 53.
+
+ 960 Decr., part 1, dist. 3, cap. 4.
+
+ 961 Aquin. 1a, 2ae, quest. 92, art. 2.
+
+ 962 Bald. de Cas. Consc., lib. 4, cap. 11, cas. 1.
+
+ 963 Ibid.
+
+ 964 Ibid., cas. 2.
+
+ 965 Praelect., tom. 2, p. 50.
+
+ 966 Til. Synt., part 2, disp. 32, th. 33.
+
+ 967 Danaeus Pol. Christ., lib. 6, cap. 1.
+
+ 968 Fr. Jun. Ecclesiat., lib. 3, cap. 4.
+
+ 969 De Judice Controv., cap. 14, p. 70.
+
+ 970 Gerard. locor. Theol., tom. 6, p. 840.
+
+ 971 Zanch. in Eph. iv. 12.
+
+ 972 De Cas. Consc., lib. 6, cap. 11, cas. 2.
+
+ 973 Lib. 1, cap. 8.
+
+ 974 Pol. Christ., lib. 6, cap. 3.
+
+ 975 In 2 Reg. xii. 5.
+
+ 976 Ubi supra.
+
+ 977 Perk. on Rev. iii. 7.
+
+ 978 Aquin, 3a, quest. 85, art 2.
+
+ 979 Apud Parker of the Cross, cap. 5, sect. 6.
+
+ 980 De Judice Controv., cap. 16, p. 92.
+
+ 981 Praelect, tom. 1, p. 25.
+
+ 982 Locor. Theol., tom. 6, p. 963.
+
+ 983 De Judice Controv., cap. 16, p. 86, 87.
+
+ 984 Perkins on Rev. i. 5.
+
+ 985 Iren, lib. 2, cap. 4, sect. 3.
+
+ 986 Just, lib. 4, cap. 20, sect. 9.
+
+ 987 Cart, on Acts viii. seq 7.
+
+ 988 G. Buchan. Hist. Rer. Scot, lib. 5, p. 152.
+
+ 989 Confess., cap. 5, art. 20.
+
+ 990 Epist. ad Regin. Elisab. Epistolar., lib. 1, p. 112.
+
+ 991 De Effect. Sacr., cap. 31.
+
+ 992 Rat., lib. 1; Tit. de Pictur. et Cortin.
+
+ 993 Fr. Jun. Animad in Bell., con. 5. lib. 1, cap. 11.
+
+ 994 Lib. 4, dist. 24.
+
+ 995 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 2, cap. 3, num. 47.
+
+ 996 Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 374-376.
+
+ 997 Tertullian also maketh mention of them, Apologet., cap. 39; and
+ Clemens, epist. 1, ad Jacob.
+
+ 998 On 1 Tim. v. 1.
+
+ 999 On 1 Tim. v. 17.
+
+ 1000 Zanch. in 4 Praec, col. 766, 767.
+
+ 1001 Jun. Anim. in Bell., cont. 5, lib. 1, cap. 13.
+
+ 1002 Jun. ubi sup., cap. 7, nota. 17; Bald. de Cas. Cons., lib. 4, cap.
+ 5, cas. 5; Ger. Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 835, 132.
+
+ 1003 In 4 Praec., col. 794.
+
+ 1004 Anim. in Bell., cont. 5, lib. 1, cap. 7, nota. 59.
+
+ 1005 Charity Mistaken, sect. 5, p. 145.
+
+ 1006 De Cleric., lib. 1, cap. 7.
+
+ 1007 Ubi supra., nota. 55.
+
+ 1008 Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 151.
+
+ 1009 On Acts xiv. 23.
+
+ 1010 Ubi supra., nota. 63, 64.
+
+ 1011 Dec., part. 1, dist. 62.
+
+ 1012 Thuar. Hist., lib. 83, p. 85.
+
+ 1013 Hist. Eccl., cent. 4, lib. 3. cap. 38.
+
+ 1014 In Acts xiv. 23.
+
+ 1015 Ubi supra., p. 178.
+
+ 1016 Ubi supra., nota. 16.
+
+ 1017 Jun., ubi supra., nota. 24.
+
+ 1018 In Tim. iv. 14.
+
+ 1019 Ubi supra., cap. 3.
+
+ 1020 De Gubern. Eccl.
+
+ 1021 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 2, cap. 3, num. 54; et cap. 4, num. 13, 19; et
+ lib. 2, cap. 5, num. 48.
+
+ 1022 Ubi supra., cap. 7. nota. 59.
+
+ 1023 Exam., part 2, p. 221.
+
+ 1024 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1025 Supra, cap. 5.
+
+ 1026 Supra., cap. 2.
+
+ 1027 Anim. in Bell, cont. 5, hb. 1. cap 3.
+
+ 1028 Ger. Loc. Theol, tom 6, p. 135; Bald. de Cas. Consc, lib. 4, cap. 6,
+ cas. 4.
+
+ 1029 On Rom. x. 15.
+
+ 1030 On Rom. x. 15.
+
+ 1031 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 1032 Syn. Pur. Theol., disp. 42, thes. 32, 37.
+
+ 1033 Com. in Tit. i.
+
+ 1034 Gerhard Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 134, 164.
+
+ 1035 Jun, ubi sup., nota. 5, 12, Syn. Pur. Theol., disp. 42, thes. 37.
+
+ 1036 Serm. on Rev. i. 20.
+
+ 1037 Iren., lib. 2, cap. 11, p. 161.
+
+ 1038 Epist. ad Evagr.
+
+ 1039 Jun., ubi sup., nota. 22.
+
+ 1040 Ibid., nota. 10.
+
+ 1041 Iren., lib. 2, cap. 11, p. 165.
+
+ 1042 Dist. 23, cap. 8.
+
+ 1043 Ubi sup., p. 175, et seq.
+
+ 1044 Apud Forbesse, ubi sup., p. 177.
+
+ 1045 Ibid, p. 194-196.
+
+ 1046 Disp. 49, thes. 20.
+
+ 1047 Ibid, thes. 21.
+
+ 1048 Thes. 22.
+
+ 1049 Thes. 23.
+
+ 1050 Thes. 21.
+
+ 1051 M. Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Eccl., lib. 6. cap. 5, num. 89.
+
+ 1052 Animad. In Bell., cont. 4, lib. 1, cap. 12, not. 4, 18.
+
+ 1053 De Rep. Eccl., lib, 6, cap. 5, num. 16.
+
+ 1054 Animad. in Bell., cont. 4, lib. 1, cap. 19, not. 12.
+
+ 1055 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 7, cap. 3, not. 43.
+
+ 1056 Jun., cont. 1, lib. 3, cap. 4, not. 17.
+
+ 1057 M. Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Eccl., lib. 7, cap. 3, not. 32.
+
+ 1058 Davenant de Jud. Controv., cap. 25; Jun., ubi supra.
+
+ 1059 Of the Church, lib. 5, cap. 53.
+
+ 1060 De Jud. Controv., cap. 16, p. 92.
+
+ 1061 Ibid., cap. 14, p. 75.
+
+ 1062 Animad. in Bell., cont. 4, lib. 1, cap. 23, nota. 15.
+
+ 1063 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 6, cap. 5, num. 8, 30.
+
+ 1064 De Rep., num. 33.
+
+ 1065 Decr., part 2, causa 2, quest. 7, cap. 41.
+
+ 1066 On 1 Cor. v. 4.
+
+ 1067 De Cas. Consc., lib. 4, cap. 10, cas. 9.
+
+ 1068 Cent. 5, cap. 4, col. 383.
+
+ 1069 Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 236, 237.
+
+ 1070 In Matt. xviii. 17.
+
+ 1071 On Jude 3.
+
+ 1072 De Tripl. Episc. Gen., p. 42, 43.
+
+ 1073 In 1 Cor. v. 4.
+
+ 1074 Animad. in Bell., cont. 4, lib. 2, cap. 16, n. 6.
+
+ 1075 Jun. ubi supra., n. 7.
+
+ 1076 Id., cont. 3, lib. 4, cap. 16, n. 37.
+
+ 1077 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1078 Supr. Digr.
+
+ 1079 Apud Zanch. in 4 Praec., col. 745.
+
+ 1080 In 4 Praec., col. 741.
+
+ 1081 Cont. 3, lib. 1, cap. 6, n. 19.
+
+ 1082 Praelect, tom. 1. p. 23.
+
+ 1083 Calv. et Cart. on Matt. xviii 17; Par. in 1 Cor. v.
+
+ 1084 Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 137.
+
+ 1085 Trelcat. Inst. Theol., lib. 1, p. 291.
+
+ 1086 In 1 Cor. v. 4.
+
+ 1087 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1088 De Divers Minist. Grad., cap. 8, p. 85.
+
+ 1089 On 2 Cor. ii. 6.
+
+ 1090 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1091 Exam., part 4; de Indulg., p. 53.
+
+ 1092 Com. in hunc locum.
+
+ 1093 Annot., ibid.
+
+ 1094 Trelcat. Inst. Theol., lib. 2, p. 287, 288; Pareus in 1 Cor. v., de
+ Excom.
+
+ 1095 In 4 Praec., col. 756.
+
+ 1096 Lib. Epistolar., col. 180.
+
+ 1097 Iren., lib. 2, cap. 12.
+
+ 1098 Zanch. in 4 Praec., col. 756; Dr Fulk on 1 Cor. v. 4.
+
+ 1099 De Tripl. Episc. Gener., p. 43.
+
+ 1100 De Divers. Minist. Grad., p. 85, 86.
+
+ 1101 Zanch., ubi supra; Synop. Pur. Theol., disp. 48, thes. 9.
+
+ 1102 Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 463.
+
+ 1103 Ubi Supra.
+
+ 1104 Lib. 3, Contra. Epist. Parmen.
+
+ 1105 Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Eccl., lib. 5, cap. 12, n. 67.
+
+ 1106 Ib. cap. 9, n. 8.
+
+ 1107 In 2 Cor., hom. 18.
+
+ 1108 Apologet., cap. 39; See Rhenanus' Annotation upon that place, and M.
+ Ant. de Dom. de Rep. Eccl., lib. 5, cap. 12, n. 6, 7.
+
+ 1109 Lib. 3, epist. 14-16, et lib. 5, epist. 12.
+
+ 1110 Epist. ad Evagr.
+
+ 1111 In Matt. xvi.
+
+ 1112 Decr., part 2, causa 11, quest. 3, cap. 108, 110.
+
+ 1113 Iren., lib. 2, cap. 11, p. 195.
+
+ 1114 Ib., p. 191.
+
+ 1115 P. 195, n. 25.
+
+ 1116 Lib. 6, cap. 9.
+
+ 1117 Calv., Lib. Epistolar. Lar., col. 169; Gratian, caus. 11, quest. 1,
+ cap. 20.
+
+ 1118 Contr. 4, lib. 1, cap. 20, n. 8.
+
+ 1119 Fenner. Theol., lib. 7, cap. 7, p. 153.
+
+ 1120 Hemmin. Enchir., class. 3, cap. 11, p. 390, 391.
+
+ 1121 Can. 11.
+
+ 1122 Hist. Ecc., cent. 4, lib. 2. cap. 48, p. 242.
+
+ 1123 Loc. Theol., tom. 6, p. 838.
+
+ 1124 De Cas. Consc., lib. 4, cap. 5, cas. 12.
+
+ 1125 Ecclesiast., lib. 3, cap. 3.
+
+ 1126 Apud Forb. Iren., lib. 2, cap. 11, p. 177.
+
+ 1127 Defens., lib. 1, p. 8.
+
+ 1128 Bonifac. VIII., De Regal. Juris. reg. 79.
+
+ 1129 Of the Church, lib. 5, cap. 53, p. 682.
+
+ 1130 Novel. 83. cap. 1.
+
+ 1131 Supra, cap. 6, sect. 1.
+
+ 1132 Eccl. Pol., lib. 4, sect. 1.
+
+ 1133 Zanch., lib. 1, De Lege Dei. Thess., col. 190.
+
+ 1134 A. Pol. Synt., lib. 6, cap. 9, col. 49; D. Pau., Explic. Catech.,
+ part. 3, quest. 92, p. 503.
+
+ 1135 Fr. Irn. de Pol. Mos.
+
+ 1136 Id., ibid.
+
+ 1137 Instit., lib. 1, tit. 2.
+
+ 1138 De Rep. Eccl., lib. 6, cap. 2, n. 35.
+
+ 1139 Schol. in Instit., lib. 1, tit. 2.
+
+ 1140 1, 2, quest. 91, art. 2.
+
+ 1141 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1142 Antiquit. Rom., lib. 8. cap. 1.
+
+ 1143 Ubi supra., quest. 95, art. 4.
+
+ 1144 Schol. in Instit., lib. 1, tit. 2.
+
+ 1145 Rosin. ubi supra; Synops. Pur. Theol., disp. 18, thes. 16; Til.
+ Synt., part 1, disp. 35, thes. 16; Jun. de Pol. Mos., cap. 1.
+
+ 1146 Aquin. ubi supra., quest. 94, art. 2.
+
+ 1147 Zanch. ubi supra., col. 188, 189; Jun. ubi supra.; Sharp. Curae
+ Theol. de Lege Del., p. 299.
+
+ 1148 De Subtil., exerc. 9, dist. 8.
+
+ 1149 Lib. 3, Offic.
+
+ 1150 Par. Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1151 Jun. de Pol. Mos. cap. 1; Par. Com. in Rom. i. 19.
+
+ 1152 1a., 2ae., quest. 91, art. 4.
+
+ 1153 Jun., ubi supra.
+
+ 1154 Jun., ibid.
+
+ 1155 De Subtil., everc. 77, dict. 2.
+
+ 1156 Jun. ubi supra.
+
+ 1157 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1158 Disp. 18, thes. 26.
+
+ 1159 1a., 2ae., quest. 94, art. 4.
+
+ 1160 Ubi supra., thes. 9.
+
+ 1161 In Luke vi. 31.
+
+ 1162 Lib. 2, Confess., cap. 4.
+
+ 1163 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1164 Lib. 10, Confess., cap. 6.
+
+ 1165 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1166 De Subtil., exerc. 2.
+
+ 1167 Lib. 2, de Nat. Deor.
+
+ 1168 Jun. ubi supra.
+
+ 1169 De Benef., lib. 5, cap. 16.
+
+ 1170 1. 2ae., quest. 18, art. 9.
+
+ 1171 Bald. de Cas. Consc., lib. 2, cap. 9, cas. 9.
+
+ 1172 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 13, sect. 7.
+
+ 1173 Ibid., sect. 10.
+
+ 1174 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1175 Ubi supra., ap. 13, sect. 7.
+
+ 1176 Questio, quid est; de quolibet individuo contento sub specie, non
+ petit quidditatem ejus singuarem, sed communem totius speciei, saith
+ P. Fonseca, Com. in Metaph. Arist., lib. 7, cap. 15, quest. unic.,
+ sect. 2.
+
+ 1177 Aquinas 1, 2, quest. 21, art. 2.
+
+ 1178 De Subtil., exerc. 307, dict. 27.
+
+ 1179 1a., 2ae, quest. 10, art. 1.
+
+ 1180 Ubi supra., cap. 13, sect. 7.
+
+ 1181 Aquin. 1, 2, quest. 31, art. 8.
+
+ 1182 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1183 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1184 Ubi supra., lib. 2, cap. 5, num. 1.
+
+ 1185 Schol. in lib. 2, de Benif.
+
+ 1186 Jun. de Pol. Mos., cap. 5.
+
+ 1187 Aquin. 1, 2, quest. 18, art. 3.
+
+ 1188 Camer. Prael., tom. 2, p. 49.
+
+ 1189 Dr Burges of the Lawf. of Kneel., cap. 1.
+
+ 1190 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1191 Pareus Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1192 Calv. Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1193 In Rom. xiv. 7, 8.
+
+ 1194 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 12, sect. 16.
+
+ 1195 Expos. in Col. iii. 17.
+
+ 1196 Ubi supra., cap. 11, sect. 36.
+
+ 1197 In Acts xv., n. 18.
+
+ 1198 Annot. on Acts xv., sect. 10.
+
+ 1199 Zanch. in Eph. vi. 5, 6.
+
+ 1200 Taylor on Tit. i. 15, p. 295.
+
+ 1201 Id. Ibid., p. 289.
+
+ 1202 Cal. in Rom. iv. 5.
+
+ 1203 Ames., lib. 3; de Consc., cap. 8, quest. 5.
+
+ 1204 Aquin. 1, 2, quest. 18, art. 8.
+
+ 1205 Ibid., art. 9.
+
+ 1206 Hist. of the Council of Trent., lib. 2, p. 196.
+
+ 1207 Com. in 1 Cor. vi. 12.
+
+ 1208 In Rom. xiv., dub. 1.
+
+ 1209 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 13, sect. 7, 9, 10.
+
+ 1210 Com. in Rom. xiv. 23.
+
+ 1211 Prael., tom. 2, p. 345.
+
+ 1212 G. Sanctius in Acts xvi. 3.
+
+ 1213 De Instit. Actual., cap. 42, p. 490.
+
+ 1214 Apol., part 1, cap. 9, sect 1.
+
+ 1215 Lib. 2, epist. 3.
+
+ 1216 Proc. in Perth Assemb., part. 2, p. 38, 40.
+
+ 1217 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1218 Supra., part 3, cap. 6, sect, 12.
+
+ 1219 Com. in Matt. xxvi. 27.
+
+ 1220 Ubi supra, p. 62.
+
+ 1221 Maldon., ubi supra.
+
+ 1222 De re Sacram., lib. 2, p. 31.
+
+ 1223 Com. in Matt. xxvi. 26.
+
+ 1224 Com. in 1 Cor. xi. 21.
+
+ 1225 Instit., lib. 4, cap. 17, sect. 35.
+
+ 1226 Apud Didoclav., p. 794.
+
+ 1227 Disp. 3, de Symb., Coenae Dom., thes. 4.
+
+ 1228 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1229 Aquin. 3, quest. 81, art. 1.
+
+ 1230 De Sacr. Eucharist., lib. 4, cap. 30.
+
+ 1231 Concord Evang., cap. 129.
+
+ 1232 In Luke xxii. 19.
+
+ 1233 Apol., p. 2, cap. 3, sect. 5.
+
+ 1234 Joseph., lib. 7; de Bello Jud., cap. 17.
+
+ 1235 Moses and Aaron, lib. 3, cap. 4.
+
+ 1236 Com. in Matt. xxvi. 21.
+
+ 1237 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1238 Com. in John xiii. 2.
+
+ 1239 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1240 Annot. in 1 Cor. xi. 13.
+
+ 1241 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1242 Par., ubi supra.
+
+ 1243 Jansen. Conc. Evan., cap. 131.
+
+ 1244 Iren., lib. 2, p. 55, 361, 362.
+
+ 1245 Alt. Dam., p. 739.
+
+ 1246 Hadr. Jun. in Nomenclat.
+
+ 1247 Ubi supra., p. 46.
+
+ 1248 Tract, die Festo Virid., p. 256.
+
+ 1249 In Luke xxii. 14.
+
+ 1250 Praeletc., tom. 3, p. 27.
+
+ 1251 Partic Def., cap. 3, sect. 4.
+
+ 1252 Annot. on 1 Cor. xi. 23.
+
+ 1253 Ubi supra., p. 11.
+
+ 1254 See Alt. Dam., p. 742.
+
+ 1255 Ubi supra., p. 40.
+
+ 1256 Eccl. Pol., lib. 5, sect. 68.
+
+ 1257 Pareus in 1 Cor. xi. 24.
+
+ 1258 De Symb. Coenae Dom., disp. 2, thes. 5.
+
+ 1259 Part 2, p. 55-57.
+
+ 1260 Ibid.
+
+ 1261 Com. in Matt. xxvi. 26.
+
+ 1262 Ames. Bell. Ener., tom. 3, lib. 1, cap. 2, quest. 1.
+
+ 1263 Cartwr. on Matt. xxvl., sect. 6.
+
+ 1264 Defence of the English Translation, cap. 17, n. 5.
+
+ 1265 Com. in Mal. i. 11.
+
+ 1266 G. J. Voss. de Symb. Coenae Dom., disp. 2, thes. 2.
+
+ 1267 Instit. Theol., lib. 2, p. 258.
+
+ 1268 Ames., ubi supra.
+
+ 1269 Ames. ubi supra., lib. 4, cap. 6.
+
+ 1270 Apud Ames. ibid., lib. 1, cap. 2.
+
+ 1271 Aquin. 3, quest. 60, art. 8.
+
+ 1272 In Euchir. Contr. inter Evang. et Pontif.
+
+ 1273 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1274 Alsted Theol. Cas., cap. 15, p. 170.
+
+ 1275 Decret. Greg., lib. 2, tit. 24, cap. 8.
+
+ 1276 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 9, sect. 2.
+
+ 1277 Dr Forbesse, ibid., sect. 3.
+
+ 1278 In Jos. ix. 19.
+
+ 1279 Com. in Jos. ix.
+
+ 1280 Contempl., lib. 8, of the Gibeon.
+
+ 1281 Com. in Jos. ix.
+
+ 1282 Ames., lib. 4, de Consc., cap. 22, quest. 9.
+
+ 1283 Part 2, p. 5.
+
+ 1284 Supra, part 3, cap. 7, sect. 5.
+
+ 1285 Ubi supra, p. 16.
+
+ 1286 Iren., lib. 1, cap. 7, sect. 3, 4, 6.
+
+ 1287 Ibid., sect. 4, 6.
+
+ 1288 Aquin., 2a., 2ae., quest. 49, art. 3.
+
+ 1289 Zanch. in 3 um. Praec., p. 599.
+
+ 1290 Polan. Synt, Theol., lib. 9, cap. 23, p. 802; Zanchius in 3 um.
+ Praec., p. 599.
+
+ 1291 Aquin., 2a., 2ae., quest. 89, art. 9.
+
+ 1292 Aquin., ubi supra., quest. 48, art. 2.
+
+ 1293 Detr. Greg, lib. 2, tit. 24, cap. 35.
+
+ 1294 Ubi supra., p. 9.
+
+ 1295 Ibid., p. 12.
+
+ 1296 Ubi supra.
+
+ 1297 Zanchius giveth the name of ecclesiastical discipline to the rights
+ and policy of the church and laws made thereanent in 4 Praec., col.
+ 763.
+
+ 1298 Ubi supra., p. 10.
+
+ 1299 Supra., cap. 3.
+
+ 1300 Aquin., 1a., 2ae., quest. 95, art. 3.
+
+ 1301 Com. in illum locum.
+
+ 1302 Com., ibid.
+
+ 1303 Cent. 3, cap. 4, col. 86.
+
+ 1304 Ibid.
+
+ 1305 Supra, part 1, cap. 3, 4.
+
+ 1306 Supra, part 1, cap. 6, 9, sect. 4.
+
+ 1307 Apud Park. of the Cross, cap. 3, sect. 6.
+
+ 1308 De Cas. Consc., lib. 4, cap. 11, cas. 3.
+
+ 1309 Cent. 1, lib. 2, cap. 4, col. 441.
+
+ 1310 Com. in Rom. xiv., dub. 1.
+
+ 1311 De Imagn., p. 390.
+
+ 1312 Exam., part 1, p. 179.
+
+ 1313 Epist. 86, ad Casulam.
+
+ 1314 1 Cor. viii. 8, 9.
+
+ 1315 Supra, part 2, cap. 9.
+
+ 1316 Supra, cap. 1.
+
+ 1317 Ibid., cap. 1.
+
+ 1318 Supra, part 3, cap. 2.
+
+ 1319 Lib. 1, de Cult. Dei Extern., col. 46.
+
+ 1320 Synt. Theol., lib. 9, cap. 38.
+
+ 1321 Lib. 7, Contempl. of the Brazen Serpent.
+
+ 1322 Com. in Eph. v.; de Bapt., cap. 7.
+
+ 1323 Supra, cap. 5-7; part 1, cap. 8, 9, sect. 2; part 3, cap. 1, sect.
+ 3, 4, 5, 28; part 2, cap. 9, sect. 14.
+
+ 1324 Ration., lib. 6, tit. de Die Sanct. Pasch.
+
+ 1325 Supra, part 3, cap. 3.
+
+ 1326 Supra, part 3, cap. 1.
+
+ 1327 Supra, part 3, cap. 5, 6, sect. 3, 7; sect. 5, 10-14.
+
+ 1328 De Cult. Dei Extern., col. 494.
+
+ 1329 Calv. Epist. et Resp., col. 119.
+
+ 1330 Grotii Apologet, cap. 5. "Extranci autem quo rum maximus esse
+ debuerut usus in pace concili anda ex partium altera erant
+ conquisiti. Et infia losa mandata externis data damnationem remon
+ strautium prae se ferebant, ut et orationes habitae ante causam
+ cognitam." The Arminians, in their Presbyterorum Censurae, cap. 25,
+ p. 286, 287, hold this as a necessary qualification of those that
+ are admitted into synods, that they be not astricted to any church,
+ not to any confession of faith.
+
+ 1331 In our first paper presented to the Grand Committee.
+
+ 1332 Bellarm. de Cler., lib. 1, cap. 1.
+
+ 1333 {~HEBREW LETTER YOD~}{~HEBREW LETTER HET~}{~HEBREW LETTER DALET~} _una simul_, from {~HEBREW LETTER YOD~}{~HEBREW LETTER HET~}{~HEBREW LETTER DALET~} _unire_.
+
+ 1334 Maldonatus, Mercerus.
+
+ 1335 Melancthon.
+
+ 1336 Jansenius, Diodati.
+
+ 1337 D. Jermin.
+
+ 1338 Paedag., lib. 2, cap. 12.
+
+ 1339 Religionis Christianae brevis Institutio. Anno 1634, ca. 23. Quid
+ est regium munus? Resp. Est munus ipsi a Deo commissum omnes
+ creaturas intelligentia praeditas, ac imprimis homines et ecclesiam
+ ex iis collectam, summa cum auctoritate ac potestate gubernandi.
+ Jac. Martini Synops. Relig. Photin., cap. 23. Etiamsi non negemus
+ Christo jam ad dextrum Dei sedenti subjecta esse omnia, inimicosque
+ ipsi subjici tanquam scabellum pedum suorum, &c. Proprie tamen
+ dicitur Rex suae ecclesiae, uti etiam ecclesia, proprie loquendo
+ ejus regnum est. Sic enim de ipso vaticinatus est Zecharias, cap.
+ ix. 9, &c. Unde etiam nos cum Hasenreffero officium Christi regium
+ definimus, quo Christus cives suos Verbi ministerio usque ad mundi
+ finem colligit, eosque praeclaris donis ornat, contra hostes (in
+ quorum medio dominatur) fortiter defendit, ac tandem aeterna gloria
+ et honore coronat. Fr. Gomar. Aral. prop. Obad. vers. ult. Is autem
+ Jesus Christus, in N.T. exhibitus Rex. Qui ut cum patre habet regnum
+ generale omnipotentiae: ita habet speciale, de quo hic agitur,
+ mediationis.
+
+ 1340 Gualther Archetyp in 1 Cor. v. 5 Decrevi impurum hunc tradendum ease
+ Satanae, id est ejiciendum ex ecclesta, &c. Ratio locutionis quia
+ extra ecclesiam Satan regnat, in ver 6, lta vero in nuit disciplinam
+ necessariam esse, ne contagium peccandi serpat, in ver 9-11,
+ Catalogus eorum qui debent excommunicari, ibid, Imo non sufficiunt
+ ministri nisi publica authoritate juventur Ideo Paulus Corinthios
+ tam multis monet, ut ecclesiae disciplinam instaurent, et formentum
+ omne ex purgent, in ver 13, Tollite, &c. Si Christiam eatis si
+ ecclesiam vultus habere puram, utimini jure vestro Bullinger in 1
+ Cor. v. 3-5 Viri ergo Apostolici et veterea quique contuinaces et
+ eccle slastica censura dignos e contubernio sanctorum abjecerent,
+ excludentes eoa a sacris caetibus, et communione corporis et
+ sanguinis mystici. And a little after Quod si his quoque addas
+ ordinationem Christi ex Matthaeo, vidobis cam hue quoque spectare, ut
+ publice mulctetur quis pretis commonitionibus amicis, in honcate
+ perrexerit vivere Esae cum ethnicum et publicanum, est deleri e
+ catalogo ecclesiastico et reccasori haberiquc futer factnorosos
+ quibus nihil neque officii, nequc sinceri tuto cominittas.
+
+ 1341 Aret. Theol. Probl. loc. 133. A Deo originem habet, et a Christo
+ confirmata fuit. And after Supra de origine dixi, indicans a Deo
+ indictam fuisse hauc disciplinam, &c. Demum Christus filius Dei
+ eandem ecclesiae suae commendavit.
+
+ 1342 Wolphius Com. in Lib. Esdrae, p. 21: Atque hoc exemplo veteris
+ Testamenti discimus quid facto opus sit in novo Tiempe ut crebris
+ synodis ac censuris, in vocationem in doctrinam, in vitam aec mores
+ ecclesiustarum inspiciatur.
+
+ 1343 In ecclesiis ditionis Tigurinae, deliguntur seniores, qui una cum
+ pastore vitia corrigant. Postea magistratus de facinorosis veluti
+ blasphemia, per juris, paetias sumit.
+
+ 1344 Bullinger in 1 Cor. v.: Et hac tenus de castigatione scelerum
+ ecclesiastica. Hic tamen diligenter admonitos volo fratres,
+ vigilent, et omni diligentia curent, ut salutare hoc pharmacum, e
+ caetu sanctorum pontificis avaritia eliminatum, reducatur, hoc est ut
+ scelera offendentia plectantur. Hic enim unicus est
+ excommunicationis finis, ut mores excolatur et florcant sancti,
+ prophani vero coerceantur, ne mali porro impudentia ac impietate
+ grassentur. Nostrum est ista o fratres, summa cum diligentia curare.
+ Videmus enim et Paulum cessantes hoc loco incitare. Aretius, ubi
+ supra: Magistratus jugum non admittunt, timent honoribus, licentiam
+ amant, &c. Vulgus quoque et pleba dissolutior: major para
+ corruptissima est, &c. Interea non desperandum esse libenter fateor
+ dabit posterior aetas tractabiliores forte animas, mitiora pectora,
+ quam nostra habent secula. Lavater in Nebem, homil. 52: Quia
+ pontifices Romani excommunicatione ad stabiliendam suamt yranuidem
+ abusi sunt, factum est ut nulla fere justa disciplina amplius in
+ ecclesiis justitul possis nisi autem flagitiosi coerceautur, omnia
+ ruaut in pejus neccesse est.
+
+ 1345 Math Martinius in Lex Philol Maledico malum loquor alvo juste sine
+ Injuria.
+
+ 1346 Lib. 2. cap. 4.
+
+ 1347 Illeron Bustochio.
+
+ 1348 {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} Quod propemodum valet ac si dicas, facite ut pondus et
+ auctoritatem habeat charitas erga illum. Loquitur enim velut ad
+ judices et concionem, quorum suffragiis velit absolvi eum, qui
+ traditus fuerat Satanae. Nam {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} concionem significat, in qua
+ creantur magistratus, quae Latini vocant comitia, et diem alicujus
+ rei causa praestitutum, et jus aliquod agendi. Quin et {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} Graeci
+ dicunt scriptum authenticum, authoribus Hesychio et Suida. Mihi
+ videtur et ea sententia quae vicisset in suffragiis dicta fuisse
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}.
+
+ 1349 Hesych., {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH PERISPOMENI~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}.
+
+ 1350 Julius Pollux, lib. 8, cap. 5, {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~},
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}. {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER THETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~},
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA AND VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, &c.
+
+ 1351 Clemens Alexandrinus, Paedag, lib. 1, cap. 10, useth promiscuously
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} and {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}, in one and the same sentence, to express
+ punishment: {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~},
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER XI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH DASIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER GAMMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}, {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PSI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}
+ {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}. Which Gentianus Hervetus, his interpreter, readeth thus:
+ _Cum peccatorum poenas, et facilem et tanquam ventis perflabilem
+ eorum dissipationem ostendisset poedagogus, per poenam a causa
+ dehortatus est._ Again, Paedag, lib. 3, cap. 2, _ad finem_: {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}
+ {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER MU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ZETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~}. The interpreter thus: _Quin
+ etiam Sichimitoe puniuntur, qui lapsi sunt, sanctoe virgini probrum
+ inferentes. Sepulchrum eis est supplicium, et poenoe monimentum nos
+ ducit ad salutem._
+
+ 1352 Concil. Antioch sub Constantio, can. 4. Si quis episcopus a synodo
+ depositus, vel diaconus a proprio episcopo, sacrum celebrare ausus
+ fuerit, &c. Concil. Hispal. 2, can. 6, Ut nullus nostrum sine
+ concilii examine, dejicere quemlibet presbyterum vel diaconum
+ audeat. Episcopus enim sacerdotibus et ministris solus honorem dare
+ poteat: auferre solus non potest. Vide etiam Conc. Afric., can. 20;
+ Conc. Carthag. 4, can. 23.
+
+ 1353 Salinas. Appar. ad lib. de Primat., p. 298, 299. Non enim potestatem
+ quam in ordinatione accepit per impositionem manuum, potest eripere
+ princeps, cum nec eam possit dare. Si princeps igitur velit
+ ministrum aliquem ob sua peccata proreus degradari et ministerium
+ simul cum ejus functione amittere, per pastores ipsos id faciendum
+ debet curare, qui Judices veri ipsius sunt, et auferre soli possunt
+ quod per ordinationem dederunt. Imperatores Romani quos per vim
+ ejicerent, quia intelligebant potestatem ministerii fungendi non
+ aliter iis adimere posse, in exilium eos mittebant. Quod possemus
+ infinitis testimoniis demonstrare. Relegatus hoc modo episcopus
+ remanebat nihilominus episcopus, non ordine excidebat episcopali,
+ nec ad laicorum ordinem redigebatur.
+
+ 1354 Gerhard. loc. Com., tom. 6, p. 201. Probari nequit illorum
+ pseudopoliticorum opipio, qui ad jura regalia magistratus remotionem
+ ministrorum pertinere censent. See Fr. Junius, Ecclesiast., lib. 3,
+ cap. 3; et Animad. in Bell. Contr., 4, lib. 1, cap. 20, not. 8;
+ Balduin., de Cas. Conscient., lib. 4, cap. 5, cas. 12.
+
+ 1355 Vide apud Synod Dordrac, sess. 25, Conditiones synodi legitime
+ instituendae quas remonstrantes, &c., condit. 9.
+
+ 1356 Ut de controversis articulis non fiat decisio, sed accommodationi
+ studeatur: cujus tamen via et ratio rata non habeatur, nisi
+ accedente utriusque partis consensu.
+
+ 1357 System. Log., lib. 3, cap. 5.
+
+ 1358 Aret. Probl. Theol., loc. 8. Privatis satis est ferre utrinque
+ utrosque (infirmos et palam sceleratos) emendare autem quoties fert
+ examplo et doctrina. Si parum vel nihil etiam proficiat, non habet
+ ob id causam secedendi. Nec est quod contaminationem metuat, modo
+ non consentiat sceleribus, &c., nihil ad me attinet in communione
+ coenae Domini, in caetu publico cum audio verbum Dei (which last
+ clause Mr Coleman leaves out without so much as &c.), quales singuli
+ sint mecum participantes.
+
+ 1359 Aug. de Fide et Operibus, cap. 2, Et Phinees sacerdos adulteros
+ simul inventos ferro ultore confixit. Quod utique degradationibus et
+ excommunicationibus significatum est esse faciendum in hoc tempore,
+ cum in ecclesiae disciplina visibilis fuerat gladius cessaturus.
+
+ 1360 Tert. Apologet., cap. 39. Ibidem etiam exhortationes, castigationes,
+ et censura divina. Nam et judicatur magno cum pondere, ut apud
+ certos de Dei conspectu: summumque futuri judicii praejudicium est,
+ si quis ita deliquerit, ut a communicatione orationis, et conventus,
+ et omnis sancti commercii relegetur. Praesident probati quique
+ seniores, honorem iatum non pretio sed testimonio adepti.
+
+ 1361 Liberty of Conscience, p. 34, 35.
+
+ 1362 Armagh, Serm. at Oxford, March 3, p. 17, 19, 27.
+
+ 1363 Grotius, de Jure Belli ac Pacis, lib. 1, cap, 4, sect 7. Haec autem
+ lex de qua agimus (_de non resistendo supremis potestatibus_)
+ pendere videtur a voluntate eorum qui se primum in societatem
+ civilem consociant, a quibus jus porro ad imperantes manat. Hi vero
+ si interrogarentur an velint omnibus hoc onus imponere, ut mori
+ praeoptent, quam ullo casu vim superiorum armis arcere, nescio an
+ velle se sint responsuri. Ibid., sect. 13, Si rex partem habeat
+ summi imperii, partem alteram populus aut senatus, regi in partem
+ non suam involanti, vis justa opponi poterit. I might add the
+ testimonies of Bilson, Barclaus, and others.
+
+ 1364 J. Baptista, Villalpandus Explan. Ezek., tom. 2 part 2, lib. 1,
+ Isag., cap. 9, 12, 13 Corn a Lapide, in Ezek. xl.
+
+ 1365 C. a Lapide himself reckoneth the city to be twenty seven miles
+ distant from the temple.
+
+ 1366 See also Codex Middoth, cap. 3, sect. 1.
+
+ 1367 Polanus et Sanctius.
+
+ 1368 Lib. 4, cap. 67.
+
+ 1369 Lib. 13, in Ezek.
+
+ 1370 Hom. 13, in Ezek.
+
+ 1371 Compare Ezek. xxxvii. 27 with Rev. xxi. 3; Ezek. xl. 2 with Rev.
+ xxi. 10; Ezek. xl. 3-5 with Rev. xi. 1, xxi. 15; Ezek. xliii. 2 with
+ Rev. xiv. 2; Ezek. xlv. 8, 9 with Rev. xvii. 16, 17, xxi. 24; Ezek.
+ xxxviii. 2, xxxix. 1 with Rev. xx. 8; Ezek. xlvii. 12 with Rev.
+ xxii. 2; Ezek. xlviii. 1-8 with Rev. vii. 4-9; Ezek. xlviii. 31-34
+ with Rev. xxi. 12, 13, 16; Ezek. xl. 4 with Rev. i. ll, iv. l.
+
+ 1372 Codex Middoth cum Commentariis Const. L'Empereur. Arias Montanus, in
+ his Libanus. J. Baptista Villalpandus, Explan. Ezck. tom. 2, par. 2;
+ tom. 3. Tostatus, in 1 Reg vi. Lud Capellus, in Compendlo Hist.
+ Judaicae. Ribera, de Templo, hb. 1; and others.
+
+ 1373 Polanus, in Ezek. xlv. De Reformatione Status Civilis agitur, v.
+ 8-10. In quibus praedictio est, etiam principes et magistratus
+ politicos, adducendos ad obedientiam fidel in Christum, aut saltem
+ coercendos et in officio continendos, ne amplius opprimant populum
+ Dei.
+
+ 1374 It is not {~HEBREW LETTER BET~}{~HEBREW LETTER VAV~}{~HEBREW LETTER SHIN~}, _bosch_, but {~HEBREW LETTER KAF~}{~HEBREW LETTER LAMED~}{~HEBREW LETTER FINAL MEM~}, _calam_. Which two some Hebricians
+ distinguish by referring the former to the Greek {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER DELTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} and the Latin
+ _verecundia_: the latter to the Greek {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER CHI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}, and the Latin
+ _pudor_.
+
+ 1375 Vide Martyr in Rom. vi. 21.
+
+ 1376 Decad. 3, 1. 7.
+
+ 1377 Aug., Epist. 119, c. 19. Omnia itaque talia quae neque sacrarum
+ Scripturarum auctoritatibus continentur nec in Episcoporum Conciliis
+ statuta inveniuntur, nec consuetudine universae ecclesiae roborata
+ sunt, sed diversorum locorum diversis moribus innumerabiliter
+ variantur, ita ut vix aut omnino nunquam inveniri possint causae,
+ quas in eis instituendis homines secuti sunt, ubi facultas
+ tribuetur, sine ulla dubitatione, resecanda existimo.
+
+ 1378 Arnob., adversus Gentes, lib 2. Com igitur et vos ipso modo ilios
+ mores, modo alias leges, fueritis secuti, multaque vel erroribus
+ cognitis, vel animadversione meliorum sint a vobis repudiata: quid
+ est a nobis factum, contra sensum judiciumque commune, si majora et
+ certiora delegimus?
+
+ 1379 Greg. Nazia. Orat. 28. Primariae sedis dignitatem nobis eripient?
+ quam prudentum etiam quispiam aliquando admiratus est: nunc autem
+ eam fugere ut mihi quidem videtur primae et singularis est prudentiae:
+ propter hanc enim res omnes nostrae jactantur ac concutiuntur:
+ propter hanc fines orbis terrae suspicione et bello flagrant &c.
+ Utinam autem ne ullus quidem sedis principatus esset, nec ulla loci
+ praelatio, et tyrannica praerogativa, ut ex sola virtute
+ cognosceremur. Vide etiam Orat. 27, 32; Carm. 12, ad Constantinop.
+
+ 1380 Bp. Hall, lib. 7, Contempl.
+
+ 1381 Bp. Andrew's Sermon on Phil. ii. 10.
+
+ 1382 {~GREEK CAPITAL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH VARIA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PSI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA WITH VARIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER KAPPA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMICRON WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER LAMDA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH PERISPOMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER FINAL SIGMA~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER UPSILON WITH DASIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER RHO~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER OMEGA WITH OXIA AND YPOGEGRAMMENI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~} {~GREEK SMALL LETTER EPSILON WITH PSILI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER PI~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA WITH OXIA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ETA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER SIGMA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER NU~}.
+
+ 1383 Brightman on Rev. iii. 17, Rogers, of Faith, chap. 10.
+
+ 1384 Casaubon and Beza.
+
+ 1385 Confess., lib. 4. Per idem tempus annorum novem, &c., seducebamur et
+ seducebamus, falsi atque fallentes in variis cupiditatibus, &c.
+ Irrideant me arrogantes, el nondum salubriter prostrati et elial a
+ te Deus mens: ego tamen confiteor tibi dedecora mea, in laude tua.
+
+ 1386 Gellius, lib. 19, cap. 6. Pudor est timor justae reprehensionis. Ita
+ enim philosophi definiunt.
+
+ 1387 In Epitaphio Fabiola.
+
+ 1388 Suarez. de Leg., lib. 1, cap. 5. Caspensis, Curs. Theol., tract. 13,
+ disp. 1, sect. 1.
+
+_ 1389 Torah_, from _jarah_, demonstravit, docuit.
+
+_ 1390 Chok_, from _chakah_, which is _insculpere lapidi vel ligno_.
+
+ 1391 Illa quasi naturam aedificii substantiamque denotant, haec
+ accidentia. Illa si tollas deerit fabrica: haec quamvis
+ desiderentur, manet tamen aedificium. Illa si invertas aut mutes,
+ non idem aedificium manebit, sed aliud: haec quamvia tollas, idem
+ manere potest aedificium: haud secus quam de homine quoquam, deque
+ ejus vestimentis philosopheris. Villalpan., tom. 2, part 2, lib. 1,
+ Isa., cap. 12.
+
+ 1392 The bishop of Down, of the Authority of the Church, p. 29.
+
+ 1393 Wolph., Lection. Memor., cent. 16, p. 962.
+
+ 1394 Vid. Joseph. Antiq., lib. 15, cap. 14; Tostat., in 1 Reg. vi.,
+ quest. 21; A. Montan., de Sacr. Fabric., p. 15; L'Empereur, Ann. in
+ Cod. Middoth., cap. 2, sect. 3.
+
+ 1395 Antiq., lib. 20, cap. 8. Suasit (populus) regi ut orientalem
+ instauraret porticum. Ea tempi extima claudebat, profundae valli et
+ angustae imminens, &c. Opus Solomonis regis qui primus integrum
+ templum condidit. Compare this with lib. 15, cap. 14.
+
+ 1396 Villalp., tom. 2, part 2, lib. 5, cap. 61-63.
+
+ 1397 Walaeus, de Opinione Chiliastaerum, tom. 1, p. 558. Haec quidem
+ (ruinae Babylonis et deletio hostium) a nobis expectari, et
+ fortassis non longe absunt succedetque laetior aliquis ecclesiae
+ status, et amplior. Vide ibid., p. 541; Rivetus, Explic. Decal., p.
+ 229. Posset etiam dici, et fortasse non minus apte vaticiniae de
+ regno Christi suam habere latitudinem nec semper intelligi debere de
+ eo quod vel continuo vel omni tempore fieri debet, sed de aliqua
+ periodo temporis, quae et si nondum advenerit, adveniet nihilominus.
+ Fieri enim potest, ut quemadmodum expectatur adhuc Judaeorum
+ generalis conversio, ita etiam ecclesia sua tempore ea pace fruitura
+ sit, in qua ad literam implebuntur, quae hujus vaticinii verbis
+ (Isa. ii. 4) significantur. Others of this kind might be cited.
+
+ 1398 In ehortu evangelicae doctrinae, legatus Hadriani pontificis in
+ comitiis Nerobergae habitis, publice confessus est, in doctrina et
+ vita spiritualium, recessum esse a regula verbi divini:
+ reformationem ecclesiae in capitibus et membris esse necessariam: ut
+ hac confessione cursum evangelii impediret. Lavater, hom. 9, in lib.
+ Ezrae.
+
+ 1399 Innoc., Epist. 2, ad Victricium Rothomag. Majores causae in medium
+ devolutae, ad sedem apostolicam, sicut synodus, statuit, et baeta
+ consuetudo exigit post judicium episcopale, referantur. Vide Myster.
+ Iniq., edit. Salmur, 1611, p. 51.
+
+ 1400 Can. 5.
+
+ 1401 Mornay, Myster. Iniq., p. 46.
+
+ 1402 Wolphius, Lection, Memorab., tom. 1, p. 113. Hoc scilicet tempore
+ jam gliscebat Antichristus Romae.
+
+ 1403 Vide Funcc. Chron., fol. 51-53.
+
+ 1404 Broughton on Rev. ix.
+
+ 1405 In Jer. ii. 2.
+
+ 1406 Gualt., hom. 8, In Malach.: Vult enim docere propheta, venturum
+ quidem Christum, sed reformatorem fore, et acerrimum divini cultum
+ vindicem.
+
+ 1407 Gualther on the place. Martyr on the place. Accessione temporis
+ declarantur. Experimur hodie retegi complura quae a multis annis
+ latuerunt,--Gualther. Orietur dies, id est, clarior lux veritatis,
+ quae omnia protrabet,--Tossanus. Mundus tandem agnoscet vanitatem
+ traditionum humanarum.
+
+ 1408 Chamier-Panst., tom. 3, lib. 26, cap. 13, 14.
+
+ 1409 Bullinger on the place.
+
+ 1410 Grotius, Annot. in Mal. iii.
+
+ 1411 See Mr Robinson's _Apology_, cap. 12.
+
+ 1412 Faustus Socinus wrote a book to prove that all those in the reformed
+ churches of Poland, who desire to be truly godly, ought to separate
+ themselves, and join with the assemblies, who (saith he) are falsely
+ called Arians and Ebionites. One of his arguments is this, because,
+ in those reformed churches, there is a great neglect of church
+ discipline, whereby it cometh to pass that scandalous persons are
+ admitted to the Lord's table. The same argument is pressed against
+ some Lutheran churches by Schlichtingius, _Disput pro Socino Contra
+ Memerum_, p. 484. Licet vero dolendum sit talis promiscue passim que
+ fieri, et abiisse in morem pejus tamen adhuc est quod malis istis,
+ praeter conciones interdam ali quas, quibuedam in locis, nulla
+ adhibeatur medici na, nec rectores ecclesiarum haec cura tangat, ut
+ vi tia tam late grassantia, disciplina et censura ecclesiastica, ab
+ ipso Christo et apostolis instituta coer ceantur. Unde factum est ut
+ non solum ista pec cata, qua leviora videntur, acd etiam alia
+ graviora, puta comessationes, compotationes, chrietates,
+ acortationes, libidines, irae, inimicitiae, vimae, obtrectationes, aedes
+ ac bella, diluvio quodam ecclesiastico iundarint.
+
+ 1413 Enar in Psal. civ: Cum audis, ignis est minister Dei, incensurum
+ illum putas? Incendat licet sed foenum tuum, id est, carnalia omnia
+ tua desideria.
+
+ 1414 Brightman and Alstod, in Dan. xii. 1.
+
+ 1415 Answer to Mr Prynne's Twelve Questions.
+
+ 1416 Cajetan in Exod. xxxiv. 24: Non obligabat (praeceptum apparendi ter
+ in annot.) usque ad dilatatos terminos terrae promissae, quando secura
+ universa regio futura erat. D. Rivet. Comment in illum loc., Tum
+ quia Deus ejecturua erat hostes ex eorum terminis: tum quia
+ dilataturus erint fines populi sul, ot vicinoa non tam haberent
+ hostes, quam subditos et tributarios.
+
+ 1417 Bulling., Gual., and Aricularius on the place.
+
+
+
+
+
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