A discourse concerning the pretended religious assembling in private conventicles wherein the unlawfullness and unreasonableness of it is fully evinced by several arguments / by John Norris ... Norris, John, 1657-1711. 1685 Approx. 404 KB of XML-encoded text transcribed from 160 1-bit group-IV TIFF page images. Text Creation Partnership, Ann Arbor, MI ; Oxford (UK) : 2003-01 (EEBO-TCP Phase 1). A52421 Wing N1251 ESTC R17164 12210348 ocm 12210348 56282 This keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above is co-owned by the institutions providing financial support to the Early English Books Online Text Creation Partnership. This Phase I text is available for reuse, according to the terms of Creative Commons 0 1.0 Universal . The text can be copied, modified, distributed and performed, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission. Early English books online. (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A52421) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 56282) Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 613:2) A discourse concerning the pretended religious assembling in private conventicles wherein the unlawfullness and unreasonableness of it is fully evinced by several arguments / by John Norris ... Norris, John, 1657-1711. [8], 312 p. Printed for James Norris ..., London : 1685. Includes bibliographical references. Reproduction of original in Huntington Library. Created by converting TCP files to TEI P5 using tcp2tei.xsl, TEI @ Oxford. Re-processed by University of Nebraska-Lincoln and Northwestern, with changes to facilitate morpho-syntactic tagging. Gap elements of known extent have been transformed into placeholder characters or elements to simplify the filling in of gaps by user contributors. 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Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Keying and markup guidelines are available at the Text Creation Partnership web site . eng Dissenters, Religious -- England. 2002-06 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2002-08 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2002-09 Judith Siefring Sampled and proofread 2002-09 Judith Siefring Text and markup reviewed and edited 2002-10 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion A DISCOURSE Concerning the Pretended Religious Assembling In PRIVATE CONVENTICLES WHEREIN The Unlawfulness and Unreasonableness of it is fully Evinced by several Arguments . By Iohn Norris M. A. and late Rector of Aldbourn in the County of Wilts . LONDON , Printed for Iames Norris , at the Sign of 〈◊〉 King's Arms without Temple Bar. ●●●● . PUBLISHER To The READER . THough there be no great need of a Preface to the following Papers , yet partly to comply with custome , and partly out of a Reverential respect to the dear memory of the Authour , my deceased Father , I thought it convenient to premise something by way of Apology to the Reader . And that he may not be disappointed in his after Entertainment , 't will be requisite for him in the entrance to understand , that he is not here to expect a Discourse recommended 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by stroaks of Oratory , neat turns of expression , and harmonious Cadencies , this being no way 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ( as Aristotle says in his Rhetorick ) agreeable to the nature of the thing , which being a determination of a Question , calls for no other ornaments than plainness , perspicuity and solidity . And as such a Rhetorical mode of Writing suits not with the nature of the work , so neither with the design of its Composition . For this Treatise was principally intended by the Authour , for the instruction of ordinary and unlearned persons , and particularly those of his own Congregation , and accordingly he made it his business , to bring it to the level of their Capacities , Of what advantage this work may be to the learned World , it becomes not me to presage , onely thus much I believe I may say , that the Cause has not suffered under his hands , and that as Peace and Vnity was his aim , so Truth and Victory is his attainment . and this is all the Apology I think needfull to make in behalf to the Authour . Now , as to what concerns my Publication of this Posthumous Treatise , I am aware but of one objection that may be made against it , which is , that the World is well stockt with excellent discourses on this Subject already . This I acknowledge to be true , but no way available to the purpose for which it is alledged . For first , may not the same be said of almost all the Arguments that are ? And yet this is not thought sufficient to barr all after-undertakings . And besides , there are different ways of managing the same Subject , and how stale soever the latter be , yet the former may be always new . According to that of Seneca , Etsi omnia a veteribus inventa essent ; hoc tamen semper novum erit , usus & inventorum ab aliis scientia & dispositio . Besides , there is as much ( if not more ) in the advantageous proposal of an Argument , as in the Argument it self , and it often happens , that by the mere placing a thing in a new light conviction is wrought , when the very same consideration in another posture proved unsuccesfull . These Considerations , together with the prospect of being beneficial to the publick , prevailed with me to concern my self in this Publication , and are ( I hope ) sufficient to justifie the undertaking to others . For sure that person would betray a very narrow and selfish spirit , who declines an opportunity of doing good with the fruits of another's labour , as his charity to the Poor must needs be very cold , that refuses to be the Steward of another's Bounty . Farewell . John Norris , Allsouls College June the 1st . 1684 A Seasonable Question fully discussed . Viz. Whether in a constituted Church , where there is a constant preaching Ministry established by Law , if a Silenced Non-conformist Minister , shall come in to reside or inhabit , or otherwise intrude himself into any Town or Parish , and there ( without leave and against the will of the Magistrate ) set up a course of Preaching or other Ministerial acts in Private Meetings ( commonly called Conventicles ) it may be accounted the Ordinance of God , or means to beget and encrease Faith , or any other Saving Grace , in the hearts of such as shall go to hear him . IN the Entrance of my discourse upon this subject , I shall not spend time in explaining the terms of the question ; they are so easie and obvious to every understanding , that they need it not . Without therefore any farther Proeme , the negative ( with submission to better judgments ) I shall defend : And that it is not the Ordinance of God as a means of grace , conducing ought to the Salvation of mens souls , I hope , and will endeavour to make appear to any sober and considerate Christian , upon these Eight following grounds . ARGUMENT . I. THat cannot be the Ordinance of God , or means of grace , that is , ipso facto , a sinfull act . For God , whose words and ways are all of them holy , just and good , hath appointed , ordained , or allowed nothing that hath any thing of sin in it : And it were no less than blasphemy to say the contrary . God doth not warrant any man to doe evil , that good may come by it , no not the least evil , for the procurement of the greatest good , either to our own , or the souls of others . The Apostle rejects the very thought of such a thing , with horror and detestation , as knowing * damnation to be the just reward of it . It is a good saying of Cajetan upon that place ; Secundum sanam veramque doctrinam , peccata non sunt eligenda , ut media ad quemcunque bonumfinem ; According to sound and true doctrine , sins are not to be chosen as means to procure any good end whatsoever . And mark his reason ; Quia suapte naturâ repugnat peccato , quod sit eligibile ; It is contrary to , and disagreeable with the nature of sin , to be at all matter of our choice ; Propterea nec propter se , nec propter aliud bonum , est eligibile ; And therefore it is not to be chosen , either for it self , or for any good that comes by it . They are neither good intents , nor good events , that make good actions . All 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Will-worship is abominable to God. His express Precept is , * Ye shall diligently keep the Commandments of the Lord your God , his testimonies and statutes , and doe that which is right and good in the sight of the Lord. And his Prohibition , † Ye shall not doe every man what is right in his own eyes . The Commandments of God would soon be made of none effect , if every one in the Church should doe what best likes him . Shall the Master's will depend on the pleasure of the Servant , or the Servant 's upon the master's ? He cannot be approved by him that employs him , who busies himself in a work most sutable to his own humour , with neglect of what is given him in Command . Had a good intention been enough to have justified an action , Saul had done very well in sparing Agag , and the best of the spoils of the Amalekites ; and the kingdom of Israel might have continued to him and his house . And Saint Peter had never been call'd * Satan , by our Saviour , as not savouring the things of God , but of men . for dissuading his Master from going up to Ierusalem . The means , as well as the intention , must be good , if we would have our actions pleasing to God. We grant God may , and doth often , bring good out of evil ; but that is no thanks to those that doe it . Evil can naturally produce nothing but evil : It must be no lese than the infinite Wisdom and Almighty power of God , that must over-rule it into good . † As good Ends cannot justifie Evil means , so neither will evil beginnings ever bring forth good conclusions , unless God by a miracle of mercy create light out of darkness , order out of confusion , and peace out of our passions . And as he hath not allowed us to doe any evil , for the obtaining or procuring of the greatest good , so he needs it not . ‖ Wilt thou speak wickedly for God , and talk deceitfully for him ? q. d. his cause , his glory , needs not any ●in of ours to promote it . He will never thank any man for seeking his honour by sinfull means ; he can get himself glory , and save mens souls otherwise . He will say as Achish , * Have I need of mad-men , that ye have brought this fellow to play the mad-man in my presence ? The way God hath taught us to gorifie him by , in seeking or procuring the salvation of our own , or the souls of others , is always to doe that which is good ; and though he can bring good out of evil , yet he never Commands , ordains or allows our evil for that end . But such Preaching and Meetings as are in question , are sinfull acts . Which will appear ( as by other reasons which shall be shewed hereafter , so in this place onely ) because they are done in disobedience and opposition to the known Laws of the Church and Kingdom wherein we live , and which we stand bound in Conscience towards God , to observe and obey . I begin with the Laws of the Church . The Eleventh Canon of the Church of England saith , Whosoever shall affirm or maintain that there are in this Realm other Meetings , Assemblies or Congregations of the King's born-subjects , than by the Laws of this Realm are held and allowed , which may rightly challenge to themselves the names of true and lawfull Churches , Let him be excommunicated , and not restored , but by the Arch-bishop , after his repentance and revocation of such his wicked errour . The sense of this Canon is large and comprehensive , and contains in it , virtually , a prohibition of all Meetings , Assemblies or Congregations whatsoever which are not allowed by the Laws of the Land : as the Meetings in question will , and ( God willing ) shall be made appear to be . Neither can it be restrained onely ( if at all ) to any other Meetings , than such as are under pretence of joyning in religious worship , not authorized by the Laws of the Land , which ( according to the title of the Canon ) are called Conventicles ; for there can be no other unlawfull Meetings , so called , for any other end , but onely these two , viz. First for Ministers and Lay-men , or either of them , to joyn together , to make Rules , Orders or Constitutions in Causes Ecclesiastical , without the King's authority . And that is censured and forbidden as unlawfull in the twelfth Canon . Or else , Secondly , to consult about a course to be taken , to impeach or deprave the Doctrine of the Church of England , the book of Common Prayer , or any part of the Government or Discipline established in the Church : And this is forbidden under pain of Excommunication in the 73 Canon . Any other end , for any other unlawfull Meeting or Assembly , other than what is aforesaid , cannot easily be imagined . therefore ( unless we will make the Reverend , Pious and Learned Authors and Composers of those Canons and Constitutions which are so solemnly established by Supreme authority , guilty of a gross tautology ) this Canon flatly prohibits all Meetings , Assemblies or Congregations ( except the publick , which are commanded and allowed by the Laws of the Land ) of any manner of persons , in private houses , or elsewhere , which under pretence of religious worship , take upon them to be called Churches . Besides , it is expressed in such terms , as are commonly competible to none , but such Meetings , as are under pretence of religious worship . What other Meetings are commonly called Congregations , or do challenge to themselves the name of Churches , but such Meetings as are in question ? The place and order of the Canon , do prove the same ; for immediately after the impugners of the King's Supremacy , the publick worship of God , Articles of Religion , Rites and Ceremonies , Government established in the Church of England , the Authours of Schism , and maintainers of Schismaticks in the Church , are censured ; is subjoyned this Canon censuring Conventicles , as being the Nursery of all the former . In the 71 Canon ; all Ministers whatsoever are forbidden to preach or administer the holy Communion in any private house ( except in be in time of necessity , when any is either so impotent , as that he cannot go to the Church , or very dangerously sick ) under pain of Excommunication . In the 72 Canon it is ordained , that no Minister whatsoever shall without licence from the Bishop of the Diocese , first obtained and had under his hand and seal , presume to appoint any meetings for Sermons or Exercises , in Market-Towns or other places , either publickly or in private houses , under pain of Suspension for tho first fault , Excommunication for the second , and Deposition for the third . Now if a Minister may not doe this in his own Parish , but onely in a case of necessity , much less may a stranger intrude himself into another man's Parish , where there is a Preaching Ministry established by Law , and there set up a course of private house-preaching , administring of Sacraments , and performance of all Ministerial acts , where there can be no need of his so doing , so much as pretended . But is will be thought by some that the Laws and Constitutions of the Church , are not so greatly to be regarded , as that the breach of them should be sinfull ; and that her Canons lay no such obligation on Conscience , as that the neglect of their observation and contrary practice should be criminal . Nay such is the state and condition of our times , that is is rather thought a vertue to despise them , than any fault to disobey them : And they are reputed most pure and holy , who with greatest boldness quarrel and cavil against the Authority , Government , and Lawfull Precepts of the Church . Yet certainly the judgment and practice of Christians in former ages , was otherwise . When vertue and true piety did more abound , they made more conscience of observing the Precepts and Constitutions of the Church , which were made for decency , order , and good government . And if any frowardly , wilfully , or constantly lived in any opposition , or contrariety thereunto , they were adjudged as evil doers . * Nec his quisquam contradicit , quisquis sane vel tenuiter expertus est , quae sunt jura Ecclesiastica . And truly I see not why the same regard and respect ought not to be shew'n in the observation of the Laws of our Church now , as hath been to the like Laws and Canons in former and purer times . Especially if we enquire into these four things : 1. What Power the Church hath to make Laws , Canons and Constitutions ? 2. Who were the Authours and Composers of these , of our Church ? 3. What is the subject matter of them ? 4. What hath been the judgment of Divines , of unquestionable learning , judgment and piety , concerning Laws , Canons and Constitutions of this nature ? Concerning the first . That the Church hath a maternal power to decree , and make Laws to bind all her children , is such a clear truth , as no sober person ( I think ) will question . By [ Church ] I understand not all the number of the faithfull , but those , that have the lawfull rule and government of the Church . Which is the sense , that our Saviour Christ useth it in , when he saith , * Dic Ecclesiae , tell the Church ; for , there is Ecclesia collectiva , and Ecclesia representativa . I take it in the latter sense . By [ Laws ] I understand not any new Article of faith , or any thing contrary to what God hath commanded in the holy Scriptures . For it is a true maxim ( whoever was the Authour of it ) Potestas descendit , non ascendit . None have power in those things that are above them , but in those things which are beneath them . So the Church hath no power in those things , which are above her , but in those things which are below her . Now all Doctrines of faith , and other things already commanded of God , are above the Church , and out of her reach , so that the cannot meddle with them , by any Law de novo , otherwise than to see them duly obeyed and observed . But as for things of an indifferent and adiaphorous nature , serving to external order and decency , in these she hath power , to ordain and make Laws and Constitutions , though not contrary to , yet other than what are already made in God's word , holding still , as near as the can , to the general rules of Scripture . The doctrine of Salvation is always , in all places , the same , and can never be changed : But external rites and order , are alterable and variable according to the diversity of time and place , and the variety of the minds and manners of men . The Church of the Jews had power of ordaining other things , than what were expresly set down in God's word , and that for perpetual observation . She ordained the two days of * Purim as perpetual festivals . † Moreover , Iudas and his brethren , with the whole congregation of Israel , ordained , that the days of the dedication of the Altar should be kept in their season , from year to year , by the space of eight days , from the five and twentieth day of the month Casleu , with mirth and gladness . This feast was instituted by Iudas Machabeus and his brethren , when Antiochus Epiphanes was expelled out of Ierusalem , the worship of God restored , and the Temple ( prophaned by the Heathen ) again consecrated , which was about 167 years before the Coming of Christ. Which feast was yearly kept ever after , and our Saviour Christ himself ‖ honoured it with his own presence . And if the Jewish Church had that power , why then hath not the Christian the like ? And that the Primitive Church of Christians had , and did exercise the like power , is plain to any that shall reade Act. 15. and 1 Cor. 11. Secondly , The Authours and Composers of these Canons and Constitutions Ecclesiastical , were the reverend , learned and godly Bishops , Deans , and Arch-Deacons , and other Clergy-men of every Diocesee , within the Province of Canterbury ; met together * neither with multitude nor with tumult , but lawfully and duly call'd and summoned , by virtue of the King's Majesties Writ , and receiving legal confirmation of that which was done by them . So then , the composers of those Canons , were such persons as were ordained of God to rule the Church , and to order what in their Wisedom should be thought convenient , to whom in all things ( not contrary to God's will revealed in his word ) we are commanded obedience , Luk. 12. 42. Heb. 13. 7 , 17 , 24. 1 Pet. 2. 13 , 14. Thirdly , The subject matter of these Canons and Consitutions is of such things as concern External order , decency and edification , which God hath not particularly determined in Scripture , but hath left to the rulers and governours of the Church , to ordain and appoint within the compass of that general rule of the Apostle , * Let All things be done unto edifying , and in order . In which place , those things that concern the external polity of the Church , are generally expressed , but the particulars are not mentioned , but left to the wisedom and liberty of the Church . Fourthly , What have been the judgment of Divines ( of whose learning and piety and Church of God never yet since their times , made the least doubt or question ) concerning Laws , Canons and Constitutions of this nature ? They have always thought them sacred and venerable ; and their observation an act of Religion and Obedience to the general commands of God. Instead of many , take a few testimonies of Divines of the highest rank , both foreign and domestick . Two I shall quote out of learned Zanchy , † Quatenus hae leges consentaneae sunt cum Sacris Literis , aut saltem non sunt dissentaneae ; Eatenus & verae sunt Ecclesiasticae , eoque admittendae , & nos illis obedientiam debemus ac reverentiam ; So far forth as these Constitutions are agreeable with the Scriptures , or at least , not disagreeing with them , so far forth they are truly Ecclesiastical , and to be received , and we owe reverence and obedience to them . And he gives his reason in these words : Si Consentaneae sunt hae leges verbo Dei , qui illas rejicit , verbum Dei rejicit . Si non repugnant , contemnit Ecclesiam Dei qui illas contemnit ; Contemptus autem Ecclesiae , quam Deo ingratus sit , apparet , cum aliis ex locis Sacrarum Literarum , ubi illam magnificat ; tum maxime ex Evangelio , Mat. 18. 17. If those Laws are agreeable with the word of God , he that rejecteth them , rejecteth the word of God ; if they are not contrary to the word of God , he that rejecteth them despiseth the Church of God ; and how odious a thing unto the Almighty it is , that any should despise his Church , as it appears in many places of Scripture , where the Church is magnified , so especially in Mat. 18. 17. whrere God hath commanded that that person should be accounted as an heathen man and a Publican , who hears and obeys not the Church . Hear the same Learned Authour again . ‖ Credo ea , quae a piis patribus in nomine Domini congregatis , communi omnium Consensu , citra ullam Sacrarum Literarum Contradictionem definita & recepta fuerunt : Ea etiam ( quanquam haud ejusdem cum Sacris Literis authoritatis . ) A SPIRITV SANCTO ESSE . Those things ( saith he ) which have been concluded and received by the Holy Fathers , gathered together in the Name of God , agreed on by Common-consent , and without any Contradiction of the Scripture ( although they are not of the same Authority with the Scriptures , ) Yet , I beleive even those things to be from THE HOLY GHOST . Hinc fit , ut quae sunt hujusmodi , &c. Hence it comes to pass , that those things which are of this nature , I neither will disallow , nor dare I with a good Conscience . Quis enim ego sum , &c. For who am I that I should dissallow that which the whole Church approves of ? So far that worthy Authour . The next , whose judgment in this case I shall produce , is Mr. Calvin , in his Commentary on the Epistle to the Corinthians . † Quinetiam hinc colligere promptum est , has posteriores ( scilicet Ecclesiae ) Leges , non esse habendas pro humanis traditionibus ; quandoquidem fundatae sint in hoc generali mandato , & liquidam approbationem habent , quasi ex ore CHRISTI IPSIVS . Where shewing the difference betwixt the tyrannical Edicts of the Pope , and the Laws of the true Church , in which , discipline and order are contained , he saith ; Whence it is easie to be gathered , that the Laws of the Church , are not to be accounted humane traditions , seeing they are founded upon the general precept of the Apostle , and have as clear an approbation , as if they had been delivered from the mouth of Christ Himself . For , saith he elsewhere , ‖ Dico sic esse humanam traditionem , ut simul sit divina . It is so an humane tradition , as that it is also divine . Dei est , quatenus est pars deeoris illius , cujus cura & observatio nobis per Apostolum commendatur : hominum autem , quatenus simpliciter designat , quod in genere fuit indicatum magis quam expositum . It is of God fo far forth as it is a part of that order and decency , the care and observation whereof is commanded , and commended to us by the Apostle : It is of men so far forth , as it simply names or signifies that , which was in general uttered , rather that particularly expounded . Take a third testimony from that burning and shining Light of the French Church . * Licet quae a regia & aliis Legitimis petestatibus rite praecipiuntur , sunt de jure positivo : quod tamen illis postquam ita constitutae sunt , pareatur , est de jure divino ; cum Legitimae potestates omnes a Deo sint , Deique vices in suo ordine teneant ; dumque illis obedimus , eorumque praecepta observamus , Deo pariter in illis paremus , Deique praeceptum & voluntatem exequimur . Although those things which are commanded by the King's Authority , or other lawfull Powers under him , are of positive right : Yet it is of divine institution that we should obey them in those things , which they command ; seeing all lawfull Powers are of God , and supply the place of God in their several orders : Therefore while we obey them , and keep their Commandments , we obey God in them , and so fulfill the Will and Command of God. Learned Beza shall be the next that shall give in his verdict to this truth ; † Nam etsi Conscientias proprie solus Deus ligat , &c. For although God alone can properly bind the Conscience ; yet so far as the Church with respect to order and decency , and thereby to Edification , doth rightly enjoyn , or make Laws , those Laws are to be observed by all pious persons ; and they do so far bind the Conscience , as that no man wittingly and willingly , with a purpose to disobey , can either doe what is so forbidden , or omit what is so commanded , without Sin. To these above named add we in the last place the verdict of our own learned and judicious Mr. Hooker . ‖ To the Laws ( saith he ) thus made id est according to the general Law of Nature , and without contradiction to the positive Law of Scripture ) and received by a whole Church , they which live within the bosome of that Church , must not think it a matter of indifference , either to yield , or not to yield obedience . * Is it a small offence to despise the Church of God ? † My son keep thy Father's Commandments ( saith Solomon ) and forget not thy Mothers instructions , bind them both always about thine heart . It doth not stand with the duty we owe to our heavenly Father , that to the ordinance of our Mother the Church we should shew our selves disobedient . Let us not say we keep the Commandments of one , when we break the Laws of the other : For unless we observe both , we obey neither . And what doth let , but that we may observe both , when they are not one to the other in any sort repugnant ? Yea , which is more , the Laws of the Church thus made , God himself doth in such sort authorize , that to despise them , is to despise in them , him . Thus far that most judicious Authour . Yea one of the reformed Churches have put it into their very Confession , ‖ That those Laws of the Church deserve to be esteemed divine , rather than humane Constitutions . From all which it appears , that Ecclesiastical Canons and Constitutions are not merely man's Laws , but God's also ; both because they are composed and framed by those Fathers , by divine Authority , and have their general foundation in Scripture ; and also because they are ordained for the Glory of God , for Edification , order and decency of the Church , and the better fulfilling and keeping the Laws of God. For as we have a Command from Christ , to tell the Church when any one is refractary and perverse : So have they which are complained of to the Church , that Command from Christ also , to hear the Voice of God in the Church , and in disobeying the Church , they disobey God. And if Children and Servants , are bound by the Law of God , to obey their Parents and Masters in all things that are reasonable , honest and just , and in their obedience , they obey and serve God himself ( Eph. 6. 1. Col. 3. 20. 24. Tit. 2. 9. 10. ) then it can be no less pleasing to God , that Christians , who live in the bosome of the Church , should be obedient and conformable unto the lawfull Precepts and Constitutions of their spiritual Mother , the Church of Christ , and the Rulers thereof . It is very truly said by Calvin , Semper nimia morositas est ambitiosa . A frowardness and aptness to quarrell with the proceedings of the Church , is accompanied with ambition and pride . It is not because the Church takes too much power on her , but because they would be under none . It is ambition , to have all Government in their own hands , that is the Cause , why some will not be subject to any . All which hath been said of this matter is agreeable with the Doctrine of the Church of England ; who in her twentieth Article saith , The Church hath power to decree and make Laws . So in her 34th Article : That whosoever through his private judgment , willingly and purposely , doth break the Traditions and Ceremonies of the Church , which be not repugnant to the word of God , offendeth against the Common order of the Church , hurteth the Authority of the Magistrate , and woundeth the Conscience of the weak Brethren . Where , by ( traditions ) I suppose is meant the Laws and Canons of the Church , as the words following do intimate , which speak of the Common order of the Church , and Authority of the Magistrate . Thus much of the Laws of the Church . Neither are such meetings onely against the Laws of the Church , but against sundry statute Laws of the Kingdom also , in that behalf made and provided . In the Statute of 35 Eliz. 1. It is provided ; that if any person or persons above 16 years old , shall refuse to repair to some Church , Chapel or usual place of Common-prayer , to hear divine Service , and receive the Communion ; or come to , and be present at , any Assemblies , Conventicles , or Meetings , under Colour or pretence of any Exercise of Religion , contrary to the Laws and Statutes : And if any person shall obstinately refuse to repair to some Church , Chapel or usual place of Common-prayer ; or by any motion , persuasion , inticement , or allurement of any other , willingly joyn in , or be present at , any such Assemblies , Conventicles , or Meetings , under Colour or pretence of any such Exercise of Religion , contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm , as is aforesaid ( which refers to other Statutes formerly made , and yet of force against Conventicles , as well as this one ) shall be committed to prison , and there remain without bail , untill be conform , and untill he make an open Submission in the words set down in the Statute . viz. I. A. B. do humbly acknowledge and confess , that I have grievously offended God , in contemning her Majesties Godly and lawfull Government and Authority , by absenting my self from Church , and from hearing divine Service , contrary to the godly Laws and Statutes of this Realm , and in using and frequenting unlawfull and disorderly Conventicles and Assemblies , under Colour and pretence of Exercise of Religion : And I am heartily sorry for the same , &c. And I do promise and protest without any dissimulation , that from henceforth I will from time to time obey and perform her Majesties Laws and Statutes in repairing to Church , and hearing divine Service , and doe my utmost endeavour to maintain and defend the same . Neither can it be pretended ( as it is by some ) that this Statute was made , or stands in force , against any other sort of People , than those in question , viz. against Popish recusants onely and not against Protestant dissenters , as they call themselves : The answer is easie out of the words of the said Statute . For in the beginning of the Statute , the Persons that are concerned in obedience to it , are expressed in these general and large words . Any person or persons whatsoever above the Age of 16 which shall refuse to repair to Church , and willingly join in and be present at any Conventicle or Meeting , &c. Which words comprehend and take in Persons of all Religions , Sects and Persuasions whatsoever . And whereas the penalty of the Statute to all that shall refuse Obedience and Conformity to it , is abjuration of the Realm , or to be proceeded against as Felons . There is a Proviso toward the End of the Statute , that sixeth the penalty altogether upon Protestant recusants , and not on Popish ; In these words : Provided that no Popish recusant , or feme Covert shall be compelled or bound to abjure by virtue of this Act. And lest the Popish recusants should be the onely Persons therein meant or intended , the Conventiclers of our Age make themselves more perfect Recusants than that Statute supposeth : For whereas that makes absence from the Prayers of the Church , for one Month together , a Crime sufficient to render them obnoxious to the penalties of that Act ; these men ( for the most part ) withdraw themselves for many Years together , and , for ought I see , if they are let alone , resolve so to doe all the days of their lives . In Anno 22. Caroli 2di Regis , there was a Statute made to prevent and suppress seditious Conventicles ( as the Title of that Statute truly calls them ) wherein Every Person of the Age of 16 years and upward , that shall be present at any Assembly . Conventicle or Meeting , under Colour or pretence of any Exercise of Religion , in other manner that according to the Liturgy and Practice of the Church of England , in any place within the Kingdom of England , Dominion of Wales , and Town of Berwick upon Tweed , at which Conventicle or meeting there shall be 5 persons or more assembled together , is made liable to suffer the penalties of 5 s for his first fault , and for his second 10 s ( and so onward ) the Preacher to suffer the penalty of 20 ll . And the owner of the house or ground , that shall wittingly and willingly suffer such Conventicle , Meeting , or unlawfull Assembly to be held , to suffer the penalty of 20 ll . In the late Act for Uniformity , all Non-conformist Ministers and disabled and prohibited from preaching any Sermon or Lecture indefinitely , either publick or private . And for as much as the King's Majesty by the Law of God and the Land , of right is , and ought to be master of all the assemblings together of any of his Subjects ; therefore what Meetings soever , are not allowed and authorized by the Laws of the Realm , are adjudged by the Learned in the Laws , to fall within the compass of those Statutes , that forbid and punish Riots and unlawfull Assemblies ; and are , or may justly be presumed to be , in terrorem populi , and in the Event it is to be feared , will prove to be contrary to the peace of our Sovereign Lord the King. And by the * Law , all the King's Liege-people are commanded to assist in the suppressing of them , upon pain of imprisonment , and to make fine and ransome to the King. Notwithstanding all which good Laws , this practice hath continued in the Church these several years , and still doth ( notwithstanding His Majesties reinforcement of their execution by his late Proclamation ) in open defiance and contempt of all Authority , as if the Laws of the Church and Realm were but fulmen inane , a shadow of a Cloud , that vanisheth as soon as it is made ; and as if obedience to Magistracy were no part of Christian duty . Concerning these Laws of the Realm ( to silence clamour ) I will touch lightly at five things . I. That the King being next under God , within his Dominions , supreme in the Church on Earth , hath Power and Authority over the Persons of Ministers , as well as of any other his Subjects . He being Custos utriusque tabulae , having both tables committed to him , as well the first that concerns our religious duties to God , as the other that concerns our civil duties to men , may and ought to make such laws as conduce as well to † the peace and order in the Church , as as godliness and honesty . ‖ Pertinet hoc ad reges seculi Christianos , ut temporibus suis pacatam velint matrem suam Ecclesiam , unde spiritualiter nati sint ; ( Saith St. Augustine . ) He may upon just Cause depose , discharge , and put to silence , any Minister whatsoever within his Dominions , as to the Execution of his Ministerial function , either in publick or private . Ministers , as well as others , are under civil jurisdiction . for * Every Soul is bound to be subject to the higher powers . And † St omnis anima , cur non est vestra ? Quis vos excepit ex universalitate ? If every soul , then the Souls of Ministers as well as others : For who excepted them from the universality ? Qui dicit omnem , excludit nullam . He that saith every Soul , excludeth no Soul. It was impiously said of ‖ That the Clergy ought not for any cause to be cited before the civil Magistrate , or to be judged by him ; it being absurd that the sheep should judge the shepherd . Christ himself taking upon him man's nature , was subject to humance Authority , submitting himself to Caiaphas and Pilate , so far as to be apprehended , arraigned , condemned and executed . True ( saith Bellarmine ) de facto , Christ was subject to Pilate , but de jure , he ought not to have been so : And that power over him which he did acknowledge , was given to Pilate from above , Iohn 19. 11. ) was onely a bare permission . To which we answer ; if we simply respect the Dignity of Christ's person , being the Son of God , then we acknowledge that he neither was , nor could be subject to any man. But if we consider the dispensation of his incarnation , and that form of a Servant which he took on himself , whereby he became Man and under the Law , then de jure , as he was a Jew , he was a Subject to that power , which at that time had the rule . And what Pilate unjustly did against Christ , that , we grant , God did onely permit ; But he had a lawfull Jurisdiction over his person , not by God's permission onely , but by his effectual will. But suppose it were true which Bellarmine saith ; yet the Example of Christ maketh never the less for the Confirmation of the truth , for which I allege it . For if he submitted himself to a power over him that was usurped onely , and not approved of by God , but barely permitted ; then certainly they are very far from the Humility that was in Christ Jesus , that refuse to be obedient and subject to just and lawfull powers , which are ordained of God and set over them . And therefore when Christ said , date quae sunt Caesaris Caesari , give unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's , he spake as well to the high Priests , Scribes and Pharisees , as to the People . St. Paul , whose apostolical authority and spiritual Weapons , were able to bring down every opposition , yet acknowledged that he must * be judged by Caesar , as his lawfull Superiour . Bellarmine's distinction of de facto , and de jure , will stand him in no more stead here , than it did before ; for to say , the Roman Emperour was St. Paul's Judge de facto , but not de jure , is to doe St. Paul a manifest injury . For if the emperour had no right to judge him , why would he then make use of the benefit of an appeal to Caesar † when no body compelled him so to doe ? and why did he at another time shelter himself under the Privilege ‖ of a Citizen of Rome ? By his very professing himself to be a Roman , he doth acknowledge himself to be subject to the same Laws , and to the same Lord , that other Romans were ; and that he had no more exemption or immunity from subjection and obedience to the Roman Laws , than that Tribune who said * with a great sam have I obtained this freedom . The Scriptures do give us an instance of King Solomon's deposing Abiathar from the Priesthood . The text saith † that King Solomon did thrust out Abiathar from being Priest before the Lord. Neither doth the Holy Ghost mention this historically onely , as thing done ; but by way of approbation , as a thing well and rightly done . This the Iesuites themselves ( who are the onely men , I know , who question the Sovereign power in this Case ) confess . Remarkable to this purpose are the words of one of them . ‖ Alii non dubitant dicere Solomonem in eo facto injuste egisse , usurpando potestatem , quam non habebat ; ego vero id affirmare non audeo , propter verba Scripturae quae ex Cap. 3. allegavi : Et quia apud antiquos patres & expositores non invenio factum illud inter peccata Solomonis numeratum , sive in culpam tributum . Some ( saith he ) doubt not to say that Solomon in that Act did unjustly , in usurping more power than did belong to him : But I dare not say so , both for the words of the Scripture , which I have before alleged out of the third Chapter ; and also , because among the ancient Fathers and Expositours , I find not this Act of his , reckoned for any of Solomon's sins , or him blamed for it . The words which he saith he alleged out of the third Chapter , are these . * And Solomon loved the Lord his God , walking in the ways of David his Father , onely he sacrificed and burnt incense in the high places . Which exception ( saith he ) shews that Kings Solomon untill that time , had kept the Commandments of God , and consequently sinned not in that fact in deposing Abiathar . And if the Kings of Israel might execute such power , why not the Kings of England also ? Who will say that the Power of Christian Kings and Princes is shorter now , than that of the Kings , of Iudah , and the religious Princes of the Primitive Christian Church was ? That the nursing Fathers under the Gospel are abridged in Authority , of what they were under the Law ? And the reason , and wisedom of this Nation in Parliament , hath adjudged this to be a just Cause of such deposition and silencing of any , when he shall refuse to submit , and be obedient and conformable to such Laws and Constitutions , as they have declared to be † Very comfortable to all good People desirous to live in Christian Conversation ; most profitable to the State of the Realm , upon which the Mercy , Favour and Blessing of Almighty God is in no-wise so readily and plentifully powered , as by Common-Prayer , due using of the Sacraments , and often preaching of the Gospel with devotion of the hearers . And ‖ that nothing conduceth more to the setling the peace of this Nation ( which is desired of all good men ) nor the honour of our Religion and the Propagation thereof , than an universal Agreement in the publick Worship of Almighty God. Which is a thing so amiable and excellent in it self , that it hath extracted an acknowledgment and commendation of it from the Mouths of the Divines of the Presbyterian persuasion themselves . For in a Book of theirs entitled , A Vindication of the Presbyterial Government , published by the Ministers and Elders met together in a provincial Assembly , November 2 d. 1649. They have these words . * It is the Duty of all Christians to study to enjoy the Ordinances of Christ , in unity and uniformity as far as is possible . ( Which our Liturgy sets up , by prescribing the manner of it . Whereas otherwise all will be left to the chance of mens wills ; which ( saith Doctour Hammond ) † can no more be thought like to concur in one form , than Democritus's Atomes to have met together into a world of beautifull Creatures , without any kind of providence to dispose them . ) For the Scriptures call for unity and uniformity , as well as purity and verity . And surely it is not impossible to obtain this so much desired unity and uniformity , because that God hath promised that his Children shall serve him with one heart , and with one way , and with one shoulder . And that in the days of the Gospel , there shall be one Lord , and his Name one . And Christ hath prayed , that we may be all one , as the Father is in him , and he in the Father . And he adds a most prevalent reason , That the World may believe that thou hast sent me . Nothing hinders the propagation of the Gospel so much as the division and separation of Gospel-professours . If it be God's promise , and Christ's prayer , it is certainly a thing possible to be obtained , and a duty incumbent upon all good Christians to labour after . Secondly , as it cannot be denyed that the Civil Magistrate hath authority over the persons of Ministers , so 't is as true , that he hath power to act for the regulation of all their Ecclesiastical meetings and assemblies ; though not to act in sacris , Yet circa sacra , non ad docendum , quod est sacerdotale , yet , ad jubendum , quod est regale . As ‖ Constantine the Emperour told the Bishops whom he invited to a banquet , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Ye are Bishops within the Church , and I am ordained by God's Grace a Bishop without the Church . That the King of England ( saith Sir Henry Spelman ) * is persona mixta , endowed as well with Ecclesiastical authority , as with temporal , is not onley a solid position of the Common Law of this Land , but confirmed unto us by the continual practice of our ancient Kings , ever since and before the Conquest , even in hottest times of Popish fervency : For this cause at their Coronation , they are not onely Crowned with the Diadem of the Kingdom , and girt with the Sword of justice to signisie their temporal authority , but are anointed also with † the oil of Priesthood , and cloathed stola Sacerdotali and veste Dalmatica , to demonstrate this their Ecclesiastical jurisdiction ; whereby the King is said to be in Law , the Supremus ordinarius , and in regard thereof among other Ecclesiastical rights and prerogatives belonging to him , is to have all the tithes ( through the Kingdom ) in the places that are not of any Parish , for some such there be , and namely , divers Forests . Magistrates ( we grant ) can neither preach the word , nor administer the Sacraments , any more than Vzziah could burn incense , or offer Sacrifice to God : Yet they are nursing Fathers of the Church , not to give the milk of the word and Sacraments , but of disclipline and Government . During the old Testament times , the King's power extended ‖ to the instituting and commanding of such Religious meetings , as do no where appear to be either instituted , or commanded of God , or his Servant Moses . v. g. The solemnity of the Passover , which was to be kept by the Law of Moses but seven days , by a special Command of * King Hezekiah , with the consent of the people , was commanded to be kept other seven days . The Feast of Purim , in Commemoration of the deliverance of the Nation of the Iews , under Ahasuerus the Persian King , was instituted by † Hester and Mordecai . Moses onely Commanded one day of Fasting to be yearly observed , ( viz. ) in the seventh month ; But the Kings and Magistrates of the people instituted other yearly solemn Fasts : So that in the times of the latter Prophets , there were four yearly Fasts observed , ( viz. ) besides that yearly in the seventh month , three others ‖ in the fourth , fifth , and tenth month . Now if they may by their authority institute and enlarge , why not then as well abridge and restrain ; Provided the publick assembling together of God's people , according to Divine appointment , be no-way prejudiced or infringed . If the Magistrate may appoint , then he may forbid too : Law , reason and sense teach , that appointing and forbidding belong to one power . Thirdly , neither can there be any ground of quarrell made against the justness of these Laws forbidding Conventicles . For ( as it is well observed by * a worthy Divine before me ) that Law is undoubtedly just , in which there is a concurrence of the justice of these four causes of Law , wherein the whole of a Law doth consist , ( viz. ) the justice of the final , efficient , formal and material causes of Laws . 1. The final Cause of End of a just Law , is that it tend to the common and publick good . And of this the Lawgivers are to be Judges , and not the Subjects . And most unreasonable it were that what the Lawgivers shall adjudge to be for the publick good , should be made to yeild to private and particular mens interests . 2. The efficient Cause of a just Law , is the lawfull power of the person , or persons in authority , that made the Law. Otherwise Laws are onely so in name , and not indeed . And as Aquinas , † Violentiae magis quam leges , They are rather acts of violence than Laws . And it is a sure rule in Logick , Causa aequivoca non infert effectum ; a sentence passed by one that is no Judge , binds not the party . 3. The right form of a Law , is that it be a rule of rectitude for humane actions , according to the guidance of distributive justice , giving to every one according to his demerits . 4. The matter of a Law , must be a thing that is good according to the rule of universal justice , at leait indifferent . A Law wherein these 4 things concur must needs be good and obligatory to all persons that are concerned in it . Now in which of these the aforesaid Laws against Conventicles are faulty , I know not . Perhaps some will say , in the latter ; the Matter of it is not good , to lay a restraint on Religious Assemblies and Meetings . It were so indeed , if Religious Assemblies and Meetings were forbidden . But I think it will appear in the sequel , that these in question are not such , whatsoever some conceive them to be . It were so , if all Religious Meetings or Assemblies were forbidden : But ( blessed be God ) 't is otherwise . We have still ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . the publick , ancient , lawfull and orderly assemblies allowed , commanded and encouraged by Authority , in all places of the Kingdom ; and onely such meetings by the Law forbidden , as are private , new and disorderly , and tend to Faction and Schism , and such other evils as are not without trembling to be mentioned . Lastly I answer , with that learned Casuist Dr. * Sanderson , that it is not necessarily requisite , that whatsoever is established by Law , should be bonum positive , that it should be an act of vertue ; but it is sufficient if it be bonum negative , that is , nothing sinfull or morally evil , as all vices are . Otherwise there should be no room for Laws about middle and indifferent things . And suppose a Law should be defective in regard of the efficient , final , or formal cause ; yet if the matter of it be such , as may be done without sin , ●t binds the Subject to obedience . And that the forbearance of such illegal meetings as are in question , may be done without sin ; and that those dissenting brethren , who have been ejected for their non-compliance in Uniformity to the present legal establishment , being under a legal restraint as to the use of their Ministerial Function , may without sin forbear the irregular use of their gifts and labours in the said private meetings , to the undermining and confronting of the Laws , the increase of Sedition , Schism , and divers other Horrid Evils , I think is out of question . Learned Beza thought so , or else he had never returned such an answer , as he did , to that Case of Conscience which was proposed to him , by certain English Ministers , who in the Reign of Q. Eliz. were silenced for non-conformity . The case proposed being , Whether they might , or ought not to preach , notwithstanding their being prohibited by man's law ? His answer verbatim is , † Tertium illud , nempe ut contra Regiam Majestatem , & Episcoporum voluntatem Ministerio suo fungantur magis etiam exhorrescimus propter eas causas , quae tacentibus etiam nobis , satis intelligi possunt . He was so far from thinking it lawfull , that he trembled at the thought of such a thing , that they should exercise their Ministry contrary to the Queen's Laws , and the will of the Governours of the Church . And the same hath been the judgment of Antiquity in the like case . The ancient and orthodox Fathers of the Church , being met together in Council at Antioch , in the first year of the Reign of Aurelianus the Emperour , and in the year of Christ ( according to Eusebius ) 269. decreed ‖ Non licere Episcopo vel Clerico si exauthorizatus fuerit ministrare ; That if any Bishop , being condemned by a Council , or any Presbyter or Deacon by his Bishop , should presume to Preach , or meddle with any thing of , or belonging to the Sacred Office of the Ministry , there should never be any hope for him , ever to be restored again by any other Council or Synod : And all that Communicated with him , should be cast out of the Church . As may be seen more at large in that Canon . Of the like judgment were the Divines of the Presbyterian-way touching those learned , Godly , and orthodox Ministers , who suffered ejection out of their livings , and deprivation of all they had , in the late times of troubles , by a pretended authority of Parliament , for their adherence to his late Majesty of ever Blessed memory . When the Earl of Northumberland discoursing with Mr Calamy about the supplying of above fifty Churches in London , void of Ministers , told him , That they must restore some of the sequestred Clergy of London , and admit them to preach again , for unless they did so , the Parliament could not find men of ability to preach in London : Mr Calamy replied , God Forbid . As it is recorded and published to the world , in a Book called Persecutio undecima , Printed in the year 1648. page 42. And if the thought of the Restauration of those worthies to their Office , how unjustly soever they were suspended from it , was ( in the judgment of that person ) rejected with indignation , as a thing offensive and either forbidden , or wished to be forbidden of God ; how much more execrable and abominable a thing would he have thought it to be , if they should have taken upon them ( as some now do under a lawfull power ) to preach again , without any readmission by that power that silenced them , yea in opposition and defiance of it ? And because no testimony is so fit to convince any party as that which proceeds from their own Mouths ; Let therefore the Judgment of a * Non-conformist ( otherwise a Person in Learning , Sobriety and Solidity inferiour to few of his generation , ) be heard and weighed in this case . He writes in defence of our Church assemblies , against those who being silenced for Non-conformity , ( as he was ) yet ( not as he did ) separated themselves from the publick Congregations ; and not enduring to have their Mouths stopped , or to sit down in silence , thought themselves bound ( according to the Example of the Apostles , Act. 4. 19. and 5. 29. ) to exercise their Ministry , though not in publick , yet in private Meetings , notwithstanding any Legal prohibition to the contrary . First he distinguisheth betwixt the calling of the Apostles , and that of the Ministers now . The former , as they had their ministry immediately from God , so had they the designation of that ministry to their persons immediately from God also . And therefore the exercise of it was not restrainable , or to be forborn at the Commandment of men . The latter , though their ministry be from God also , yet have their Calling to that ministry or the designation of that office to such and such particular persons , from men in God's ordinary way , and cannot exercise that function , but by virtue of that Calling wch they have from men . And therefore ( saith he ) in common sense they ought to obey man , forbidding them the exercise of a Calling , which they do exercise by virtue of a Calling from men . Otherwise there should be no power so to depose a man from his Ministry , but that notwithstanding any Command from the Church or State , he is still to continue in the exercise of his ministry , and should be bound to give that example , which the Apostles did , which is not onely absurd , but a conceit tending plainly to manifest Sedition and Schism . Afterwards he hath these words . Neither were some of the Apostles onely forbidden , so as that others should be suffered to preach the same Gospel in their places ; but the utter abolition of the Christian Religion was manifestly intended , in silencing them . But over Churches , whereof we are Ministers , are no private and secret Assemblies , such as hide themselves from the face of a persecuting Magistrate ; but are publick , professing their worship , and doing their Religion in the face of the Magistrate● and State ; yea and by his Countenance , Authority and Protection : And we Are set over those Churches , not onely by a calling of our People , but also by Authority from the Magistrate , who hath an armed power , to hinder such publick actions ; who is also willing to permit and maintain other true Ministers of the Gospel , in those places where he forbiddeth some . And thereupon the said Authour makes this threefold Conclusion . 1. If after our publick Calling to minister in such a known and publick Church , not by the Church onely , but by the Magistrate also ; the Magistrate shall have matter against us ( just , or unjust , as to our obedience it matters not ) and shall in that regard forbid us to minister to our Church , I see not by what warrant in God's word , we should think our selves bound notwithstanding , to exercise our Ministry still ; except we should think such a Law of Ministry to lie upon us , that we should be bound to run upon the Swords point of the Magistrate , or oppose Sword to Sword , which I am sure Christianity abominates . 2. Yea , suppose the Magistrate should doe it unjustly and against the Will of the Church , and should therein sin ; yet doth not the Church in that regard cease to be a Church , nor ought she therein resist the Will of the Magistrate ; nor doth she stand bound in regard of her affection to her Minister ( how great and deserved soever ) to deprive her self of the protection of the Magistrate , by leaving her publick standing , to follow her Minister in private , and in the dark ; refusing the benefit of other publick Ministers , which with the good leave and liking of the Magistrate , she may enjoy . 3. Neither do I know , what Warrant any ordinary Minister hath by God's word , in such a case , so to draw any such Church or People to his private Ministry , that thereby they should hazard their outward Estate and quiet in the Common-wealth , where they live ; when in some competent measure , they may publickly , with the grace and favour of the Magistrate , enjoy the ordinary means of salvation by another . And except he hath a Calling to minister in some other Church , he is to be content to live as a private member untill it shall please God , to reconcile the Magistrate unto him , and to call him again to his own Church . From which words of this learned Non-conformist , it may easily be gathered , that those persons who are now , by the unquestionable Legitimate power of the Kingdom , for their Non-compliance with the present legal Establishment in the Church , deposed from their Ministry , if they contain not themselves in quietness and silence , as other private Christians ; do , and ought ; but will without a Call of Authority , undertake still to preach the word , and draw People after them to their private Ministry ; they are condemned by the most sober , and judicious of their own party ; and the case of them and their followers , is adjudged to be far different from that of the Apostles , and primitive Christians ; their practice unwarrantable by the word of God , and manifestly tending to Sedition and Schism . But what speak I of the single Testimony and Judgment of one man of that way and perswasion ( though a learned and judicious one ) whenas we have extant to the World the like verdict agreed upon long since by the joint consent of sundry Godly and learned Ministers of this Kingdom , then standing out and suffering in the cause of inconformity , and published by Mr. William Rathband for the good of the Church , and the better setling of mens unstable minds in the truth , against the subtile insinuations and plausible pretences of that pernicious evil of the Brownists or Separatists . For in the 4 th . page of that Book ; First , they justifie themselves against the objection of that faction , in yeilding to the suspensions and deprivations of the Bishops , acknowledging their Power to depose , who did ordain them ; and their own duty to acquiesce therein , and in quietness and silence to subject themselves thereunto , in expressions so full to my present purpose that I should have transcribed them for the Reader 's satisfaction , were it so that I had not been prevented by the reverend and worthy Authour of the * Continuation of the Friendly Debate . As to that place of Scripture . Act. 4. 19. 20. which they acknowledge to be very unskilfully alledged by the adversary , they make this threefold answer , to shew the difference betwixt the Apostles case and theirs . First ( they say ) they that inhibited the Apostles were known and professed Enemies of the Gospel . Secondly , the Apostles were charged not to teach in the Name of Christ , nor to publish any part of the Doctrine of the Gospel ; Which Commandment might more hardly be yeilded unto , than this of our Bishops , who are not onely content that the Gospel should be preached , but are also preachers of it themselves . Thirdly , the Apostles received not their Calling and Authority from † men , nor by the hands of men , but immediately from God himself , and therefore also might not be restrained nor deposed by men ; whereas we , though we exercise as function , whereof God is the Authour , and we are also called of God to it , yet are we also called and ordained by the hands and ministry of men , and may therefore by men be also deposed and restrained from the exercise of our Ministry . I cannot think that any of the Learned sort of the Non-conformists now are ignorant of these things , nor , that ( if their hearts were known ) their Judgments differ ( in this case ) from that of their ancient brethren ; but I fear the busie upholders and promoters of Conventicles in our Age , notwithstanding their prohibition by Law , to preach at all , sin against their own light and conscience in so doing . But I proceed . 4. Now Laws being thus made against all such unlawfull Meetings , and all such His Majestie 's Laws being no way contrary to God's word ; all his Subjects stand bound in the obligation of obedience to them , and that for conscience sake ( Rom. 13. 5. 1 Pet. 2. 13. Tit. 3. 1. ) And under pain of Damnation if they wilfully resist and disobey , Rom. 13. 2. And therefore it is , that in the Schools , they call disobedience to the King's Laws , Sacrilege : for though the trespass seem to be directed but against a man , yet in that man whose Office ( and consequently his person ) is sacred , God is opposed , and his ordinance violated . The King's Laws though in themselves , in regard of their particular Constitution , they put no special obligation upon us under pein of sin and damnation ; yet in a general relation to that God , who is the original of all Power , and hath commanded us to obey Authority , their neglect or disobedience involves us in guilt , and exposeth us to Sin , and consequently to Damnation . ‖ Civilibus legibus quae cum pietate non pugnant , eo quisque Christianus paret promptius , quo fide Christi est imbutus plenius ; Every Christian , by how much the more he hath of the grace of faith , by so much the more ready he is to conform to the Laws of men , which are not contrary to the Laws of God. All power is of God ; That therefore which ▪ Authority enjoins us , God enjoins us by it , the Command is mediately his , though passing through the hands of men . * Hoc jubent imperatores , quod jubet & Christus ; quia cum bonum jubent , per illos non nisi Christus jubet ; When Kings command what is not disagreeable with Christ's Commands , Christ commands by them , and we are called to obey not onely them , but Christ in them . But is not suffering , obedience ? And if men are willing to submit to the Penalty of the Law , is not that sufficient to discharge the Conscience from the guilt of disobedience ? Casuists , that are of that Judgment , say , it holds true onely in those Laws ( whereof there are but very few in the World ) that are purely penal : And the Laws which we now speak of are not such , for these are partly Moral , binding to doe , or to leave undone some moral Act ; and partly Penal , in case of Omission of what the Laws command , or Commission of what the Laws forbid , then to undergoe the Punishment the Laws inflict . Now in these mixt Laws , suffering the Penalty doth not discharge the Conscience from the guilt of sin . For it is a rule of sure truth which Casuists give in such cases , Omnis praeceptio obligat ad culpam ; Every just Command of those who have lawfull Authority to command , leaves a guilt of sin upon those mens Consciences who do not obey . The reason is , because where a Law made by lawfull Authority requires active obedience , and imposeth a Penalty in case of disobedience , the Conscience of the subject stands bound primarily and intentionally to the performance of the duty therein enjoined . As for the Penalty threatned , that is a secondary and accidental thing to the Law , added to keep up the reputation and esteem thereof , in the minds of those who are concerned in it , and to affright them from the neglect and disobedience of it . So that , though the suffering the Penalty of the Law , in case of the transgression of it , be as much as can be required of the Law-giver , yet God , by whom Kings reign , and who requires subjection to Authority , and that for Conscience sake , will not hold such persons guiltless , that doe not the things commanded in the Law. The malefactour satisfies the Law at the time of his execution , but who will say , that without repentance of his fact , the guilt of sin remains not still upon his Conscience , or that he shall be acquitted at God's tribunal ? 5. Neither are they the Laws of the Church and Kingdom of England onely , that are against such Meetings and Ministry as are in question ; But the godly Kings and Princes of the primitive Christian-Church have ever made the like . † Eusebius tells us , that Constantine the Great made a Law , that no Separatists or Schismaticks should meet in Conventicles ; and commanded that all such places , where they were wont to keep their Meetings , should be demolished ; and that they should not keep their factious Meetings either in publick places , or private houses , or remote places , but that they should repair to their parochial Churches . And in the next Chapter he saith , that by that Law , the memory of most of those Sectaries was forgotten and extinguished . Sozomen reports ‖ that Theodosius the great , decreed that the Sectaries ( whose petition for liberty he had first torn in pieces ) should not assemble together , but all of them repair to their own publick Congregations , otherwise to be banished their Country , to be branded with some infamy , and not to be partakers of Common privileges and favours with others . And our neighbours and brethren of Scotland of the Presbyterian judgment , did in one of their late general Assemblies , since the enacting of their solemn League and Covenant , make a special Canon against all private Meetings ; the direct tendency there of being to the overthrow of that Uniformity by them covenanted , to be endeavoured in all the Churches of the three Kingdoms . The very Heathens themselves , by their Laws have made all such Assemblies illegitimate which the highest Authority did not cause to meet , though they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to doe solemn Sacrifice to their Gods ( as may appear by Solon's Laws ) and in their practice , they have shewed themselves ready to yeild obedience to their Governours , in desisting from such irregular Conventions when they have been required . Though Demetrius his Assembly came together disorderly , and of their own heads * rushed into the Theatre , and there kept a shouting and Crying two hours together , some one thing , some another , not knowing , most of them , wherefore they came together : Yet when the Town-clark ( who had Authority ) did dismiss them ; they added not one fault to another , but broke off their disorderly Meeting presently . And they shew themselves more refractary than Demetrius himself , who doe otherwise . And , if it be well considered , the practice in question will be found to interfere with it self ; and to carry in the very face of it a convincing Testimony of its evil and unwarrantableness . For if it be lawfull for these men to preach in private Meetings ( as they do , and have a long time done ) why do they not take upon them to adventure to preach in the publick and Church-assemblies also ? What is it that makes them abstain from the latter , and yet take liberty in the former ? Is it in obedience to the Law of the Land , which forbids them to preach in publick ? The same Law forbids them to preach in private also . It cannot be denied but that one is forbidden as well as the other . Then this must needs be turned upon them , why do they not obey in the one as well as in the other , since they cannot but acknowledge that both are forbidden in the same Law ? surely if it were the Care and Conscience , and desire to obey lawfull Authority , according as Christian duty binds them , that makes them silent in publick ; the same Conscience , the same care and desire would make them sit down in silence in private also . If it be said , that they therefore abstain from publick preaching , because it more exposeth them to the danger and penalty of the Law , than private doth : Then this must be retorted upon them also , that their obedience is not such as God requireth , for Conscience , but for wrath . Good men obey for Conscience ; but those that obey for wrath , have not the fear of God before their Eyes . For , none contemns the power of man , unless he hath first despised the Power of God. And shall that be accounted by any sober Christian , to be the ordinance of God , or means of his appointment to beget grace in mens souls , that is so repugnant to good Laws , both of Church and State , which we all stand bound in Conscience to observe and obey ; is contradictory to it self , and hath in it that , which proclaims to all that will open their Eyes to look into it , its unlawfulness and sin ? God forbid . ARGUMENT II. THAT cannot be the ordinance of God , or means of grace , that is contrary to that order which God himself by his word hath established in his Church . For God is not the Authour of disorder and confusion ; But the Devil . In the Church God's Command is for order in all things : † Let all things be done decently and in order . And St. Paul did as well rejoice to see ‖ the order as the faith of the Church of Coloss. Onely * Death and Hell have no order . And it is a kind of death to a godly Christian to see disorder in the Church of Christ , and his Service . For what is a Church without order , but a kind of an Hell above ground ? Where order is wanting , what is a Kingdom but a Chaos of Confusion ? Yea , But such a Ministry , and such Meetings and Assemblies as are in question , are contrary to the order God hath in his word established in his Church . For the order God hath set in his Church is , that his People should be distinguished into flocks , and that every flock should have its own shepherd . It is God's ordinance ( saith Mr. Hildersham ) as it is agreeable to good order , that Christians should be sorted into Congregations , according to their dwellings , that they who dwell next together , should be of the same Congregation , and from thence the name 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , a parish , first came . As it is against all reason and scripture , that a people scattered about , some here , and some there , in several parts of the Country , should voluntarily associate and combine themselves in a distinct body , under what Ministry they please , and that best suits with their humour , and call themselves a Church , as the manner of some is : So it is agreeable with the very light of nature , and dictates of right reason , that a people in a vicinity and neighbourhood dwelling together , ought to join together with those of that neighbourhood , according as most conveniently they may , for the worship and service of God. We reade of the Church of God at Rome , Corinth , Galatia , Ephesus , &c. And ‖ of seven Epistles written from Heaven to seven several Churches , all which had their abode at the places whence the Churches bare their Names , these are scripture Churches ; saith a Presbyterian . It is the ordinance of God that every . Flock or Congregation should have their own pastour , * Take heed to the flock over whom the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers . Timothy appointed Titus † to ordain Elders in every City . i. e. wheresoever there was a body of people for a fit Congregation , there must be a Pastour or Elder placed . Whence it appears that even in the Apostles days there was a distinction of Churches , and Congregations ; for the Elders had their flocks over whom the Holy Ghost made them Overseers . The like is said of Paul and Barnabas ‖ that they ordained Elders in every Church . Hence ( saith Calvin ) * may be gathered the difference betwixt the office of those Elders , and that of the Apostles . These had no certain station in the Church , but still went up and down , hither and thither , to plant new Churches , Rom. 15. 19. 20. 23. 24. 1 Cor. 4. 17. Act. 1. 8. Rom. 1. 14. 2 Tim. 1. 11. 2 Cor. 10. 14. 16. But the other were by God's appointment fixed and tyed to their own proper Congregations and Flocks , Act. 14. 23. Act. 20. 28. Tit. 15. ●1 Pet. 5. 1. The diminutive 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , used in Luc. 12. 32. Act. 20. 28. 1 Pet. 5. 2. 3. Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , † doth intimate as much ; for , parvum gregem significat , it signifies a small part of the great flock distinguished from the rest . And indeed the state and condition of the Ministers , and Ministry of the Church requires , that every Pastour should not take care of all the Flock or Church , but that rather they should have certain portions or Congregations of God's People , committed to them particularly , amongst whom they should bestow their care and pains . For this cause St. Paul took course to send certain Ministers to certain particular Churches : as ‖ Crescens to Galatia , Titus to Dalmatia , and Tychicus to Ephesus . Vnde rectissime colligimus ( saith a * Learned Casuist ) auditores ordinariis pastoribus contentos esse oportere , ne eos in crimen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 conjiciant . So 't is God's ordinance that Flocks & Congregations should be contented with , and depend on their own Pastours . This appears by that charge of the Apostle . † We beseech you brethren to know them ( to own and acknowledge them ) that labour among you , and are over you in the Lord , and admonish you ; and to esteem them very highly in love for their works sake . ‖ Again , remember them that have the rule over you , which have spoken to you the word of God. And again * obey them that have the rule over you , and submit your selves ; for they watch for your Souls , as they that must give an account , that they may doe it with joy and not with grief . In both places the Command of God is for Obedience to Pastours ; not any , such as people themselves according to their own humours shall chuse ; but it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , in the seventh verse : and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , in the 17 th verse . In both places , YOVR RVLERS , such as are lawfully set over you by those that are in Authority in the Church . And even as St. Paul commends Epaphroditus to the Philippians as their ordinary Pastour , and commands them † to receive him in the Lord with all gladness , and to hold such in rep●tation . So , he doth the like to other Churches , commanding them to honour and obey their own Pastours ; which he would never have done , if it had been lawfull for people , with neglect of their own Ministers , to follow whom they please . People are much mistaken , if they think , they are so much at their own disposal , as that they may put themselves under the teaching and care of what Minister they have a mind to , though never so excellent and orthodox . For , 1. First , God is not so careless of the precious Souls of his People in his Church , as to leave them at random to shift for themselves , every one according to his own foolish fancy ; but doth dispose of them himself by his good providence , by the hand of those , who from and under him have Authority so to doe , to the care and charge of Pastours of his own appointment , the respective Ministers of those Parishes and places where they , with other of his People , do cohabite . And therefore the form of our institutions to our several charges , runs in these words , Curam & regimen omnium animarum parochianorum tibi plenarie in Domino committimus . The definition that our Saviour Christ gives of a Church , is , a ‖ Shepherd and his Sheep that will hear his voice . A lawfull Minister , and a Flock or Congregation lawfully committed to his charge make up a true Church . Hereunto accord the Judgment of the Fathers . St. Chrysostome in an homily de recipiendo Severiano , begins thus ; Sicuti capiti Corpus cohaerere necessarium est , ita Ecclesiam Sacerdoti , & Principi Populum . As it is necessary that the body cleave to the head , so it is likewise of necessity that the Congregation cleave to the Priest , and the People to their Prince . To which the saying of St. Cyprian agrees . Illi sunt Ecclesia , plebs sacerdoti adunita , & pastori suo grex adhaerens . The Church is a Congregation of believers united to their Minister , and a flock adhering to their Shepherd . For people then to imagine that they are at their own liberty to forsake their own Ministers , and to wander whither they please , is a Principle that tends directly to the destruction of the Church , and is contrary to the very nature and being of it . Should the Flocks of these wanderers doe as their Masters doe , leave and run away from their shepherds , and goe whither they please , and feed where they please , their owners would expect to see but little good come of them . 2. Secondly , a man●fest injury will thereby be done to their own Pastours , be they never so vigilant , to be forsaken of their own People , as if they were deficient in the discharge of their duties and offices amongst them . For , if it be lawfull for one to doe so , then 't is lawfull for ten , and if for ten , then for an hundred , and so consequently for all ; and so a Pastour may be forsaken of all his People ; which how contrary it is to the order and rules of the Gospel , I leave to any person of sober and staid Principles to judge . 3. Thirdly , It will be matter of offence to others ( who are prone to live * by example more than by rule ) and an occasion to them to doe the like : and so by this means all that obedience and duty , that by divine Precept , is due to a Minister from his People , would soon perish and come to nothing . 4. Fourthly , An universal liberty of sinning without controll or restraint would by this means be introduced amongst People . For if they may have liberty to wander from one Minister to another , at their pleasure , they will have none at last , to have the cure and care of their souls : neither will any one dare faithfully and freely to rebuke them for any thing they doe amiss , for fear lest they should forsake him also , and still be seeking out to some other . And this is a most cursed condition by the verdict of † God himself , for People to be without a particular Pastour of their own ; as sheep without a shepherd , wandring now here now there , exposed to Dogs and Wolves , Seducers and Deceivers . 5. Fifthly , It is a sinning against and crossing divine Providence , and carries much of impiety and unchristian Ingratitude in it : God's gracious promise to his People is ‖ I will give you Pastours according to mine own heart , which shall feed you with Knowledge and Vnderstanding . Now when God shall be graciously pleased , to make good this promise to a People , and they ( therewithall not contented ) shall out of a vain Curiosity , light and needless affectation of Novelty , ( for as the case in question stands , it can proceed from no other Cause ) flock after Strangers and Usurpers , even to a forsaking , either in whole , or in part , their own faithfull Pastour , it is just with God to blast all such Ministry , and to make all their pretended preaching , become but * a reasoning with unprofitable talk , with Speeches wherewith they can doe no good : And to withdraw his blessing from such unthankfull Peoples attendance on it , so as that † hearing they shall hear and not understand , and seeing they shall see and not perceive . And as God threatned the Jews in the like case ‖ so may he justly punish such ungratefull Male-Contents , with a certain and efficacious permission of them to be deceived , led into , and hardned in all kind of damnable Errours , by their pretended teachers , And so , what Gastius observes of the Anabaptists , may be made true of all such humourists , ‖ Quia à veritate avertunt aures , ideo Deus permittit illis doctores , non qui lingua medica sanarent ulcera ipsorum , sed qui pruritum ac scabiem affectuum ipsorum commode scalperent . Because they turn away their Ears from the truth , therefore God sends them teachers after their own Lusts , not such as should with wholsome tongues heal their sores , but with their nails scratch the itch of their lusts and affections . They may chance to gain some empty notions , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of science falsely * so called , but nothing of sanctified or saving knowledge . And if a man look with an impartial Eye , on the practices of these persons , that transplant themselves out of the Garden of God's Church , into the waste of these unlawfull Assemblies , he may soon discern the visible tokens of divine displeasure upon them and their ways . Such barrenness of true Holiness and Christian-charity , such wilfull hardning in ways of Schism , pride & prophaneness ( I speak within the compass of mine own sad observation and experience , not with any desire to blazon the Crimes of any , but to declare my heart-breaking sorrow for them ) as if that curse pronounced by our Blessed Saviour against the fruitless Figtree in the Gospel , were executed on them , † Let no good fruit grow on thee hencesorth for ever . Their faith seems to be mere faction ; all their Religion but a professed disobedience to their Superiours , and a studied opposition to the truth of that which ( through the Mercy of God ) is established in our Church : their holiness , to be always finding of faults : and , stulto zelo pleni ( as saith Melancthon ) being filled with foolish zeal , they will like nothing but their own inventions . As soon as ever they fansie themselves to be converted , they can teach their King how to govern , and their Ministers how to preach . They can tell what Laws are fit for the Kingdom , and what Orders for the Church ; yea , they are presently so illuminated , that they can see every blemish in both , when in themselves , their companions and families , they cannot see beams and intolerable Evils . Eagle-eyed abroad to spie faults in others , and look into things that concern them not , but as blind as Beetles at home . Like flies , ‖ they will fasten no where , but on the gall or sore ( if there be any ) in Church or State. And whereas Christ in his Gospel hath commanded us , that * each should esteem other better than themselves ; especially where nothing appears notorious in mens lives to the contrary ; these men will be peremptory and Pope-like in their definitions , on all that are not of their way and practice , counting and calling them , Carnal , the men of the world , the wicked , &c. and engross to themselves the Names of Saints , the Godly , God's children and people , with exclusion of all else that are not of their practice and opinions , from having part or lot in that business or privilege . It is holiness enough for any , to be one of them . The Character which the ancient Nonconformists give of the Separatists of their times , doth as exactly fit these of ours , as if it had been made of purpose for them . It is † evident ( say they ) their zeal hath been like the rash and indiscreet zeal spoken of and reproved in the Sons of Zebedeus . And savoureth altogether of Uncharitableness and not of Love : for as all they that have once declined to that Schism , are found to be exceeding proud and disdainfull towards all that are contrary minded ; yea even such as ( before they were infected with that Leaven ) were patterns of all Love , Modesty and Humility unto others ; so will they not acknowledge nor reverence any of the most excellent graces that God hath given to any of his Servants amongst us , nor so much respect them as Papists will do . No , they profess greater detestation and despite to the most godly and most sincere men amongst us , than they do to such as are most notorious in profaneness and malice to the truth . And for shameless lying , spitefull railing , and scurrilous and Ruffian-like profaneness which they observe and describe at large in them , I have not found that these come any whit short , but rather ( I fear ) overpass the deeds of their Predecessours . So that I find that note of St. Augustine to be most true , which he observes out of the Parable ‖ concerning the man that fell among Thieves . 'T is said of him that he went down from Ierusalem to Iericho . Ierusalem was the Church of God , the * holy City . There was the Temple , and publick place of the worship of the God of Israel . Iericho , a type of the world , unkind to † God's spies , as the world is to his Ministers ; where God had no publick worship at all . Betwixt it and Ierusalem , there was a Desart , infamous for frequent Robberies and Murthers there committed : in which respect it was called ADOMIM , for the store of Bloud there shed . There was King Zedekiah taken ‖ by the Army of the Chaldeans , when he fled from Ierusalem . And thither the man bended his course . Whereupon St. Augustine notes , si non descendisset , in latrones non incidisset , had he not gone down from God and his Church , he had not faln into the hands of Thieves : so long as he had kept himself in God's way , he would have kept him from all harm and danger : But if he will goe from the Chruch , let him go whither else he please , God will give him over into the hands of Thieves , who shall strip him , wound him , and leave him half dead . Our Church-forsakers in these days have sped no better than that man did then , but since they left out Ierusalem , the place of God's publick worship , they have faln into the hands of Thieves , that great and old Cheater , the Devil and his Instruments , the Seducers of our times , who craftily lye in wait to deceive : And these have stript them of their Raiment , all that external appearance of Peace , Charity , Modesty and Humility , that formerly they seemed to be clothed withall , and have not left them so much as one ragg remaining to hide their Nakedness : wounded them in their minds and judgments with errours and falshoods ; in their Consciences with Superstition and vain devotion ; in their affections with utter aversness and crosness to all that is orderly and imposed by Authority ; insomuch that they are left half dead ; some life remains in them ; to any thing that is evil and forbidden , they are quick and active , but to any thing that is truly good and enjoined , as dead as a stock : * wise to do evil , but to do good they have no knowledge . Such is God's Justice and Severity on those that leave Ierusalem for Iericho . In a word ; if all of this sort of People throughout the Nation , be as those with whom I have to doe , ( and I know there is the same corruption in the Natures of all , though there may not be the same eruption in all ) God and Godliness have not greater enemies , nor the Devil greater instruments to advance his Kingdom , in the introduction of Atheism and Prophaneness ; than themselves . God's publick worship and worshippers are matter of their loathing and scorn , and if ever any of them afford their presence to any part of it , it is of purpose either to quarrel at or deride it . And as he whom they serve goes about like a roaring Lion seeking whom he may devour , so do they make it their business to beget prejudice in the hearts of all with whom they converse , against their own Ministers and Ministry , and to make Proselytes to themselves and their party , of the worst and easiest sort of People . The pretext of Piety and Conscience is both the Veil wherewith they hide their unparallelled Pride , Malice and Hypocrisie ; and their Bait wherewith they catch simple Souls in their Net. † As at the building of the Temple under Zerubbabel , the adversaries making shew of helping forward the work by setting their hands to it , pretending they sought the same God the Jews did , proved themselves to be the greatest Enemies to God's People , and hinderers of the building by their coloured Friendship ; so I know not any whose courses are more to the disturbance of the peac● , and prejudice to the inlargement of the Church , and furtherance of Religion , than these men that would be noted for a Form of Godliness , but indeed deny the Power of it . I heartily wish , that in their lives they would henceforth stoutly consute this Character I have given of them , which yet comes far short of what by wofull experience I have found in them : And when I see it done , I shall as gladly retract what I have written , as with sorrow of heart I have uttered it . In the mean time I return from what I have digressed . If a greater excellency of gifts and parts in one Minister above another , be pretended , as a cause of their wandring ; they forget what St. Paul wrote to the Corinthians , when there grew Schisms and Divisions amongst them , upon the account of the diversity of gifts which they observed in their Teachers . ‖ I am of Paul ( saith one ) his matter is powerfull , his Doctrine sound , his Method plain . I am of Apolla ( saith another ) he is an Eloquent man , mighty in the Scriptures , him I prefer . I am of Cephas ( saith a third ) his preaching I most affect . I am of Christ ( saith a fourth ) I care for none of all the former , they are but men , I will therefore have my dependance wholly on Christ , with neglect of the instrument . But what saith St. Paul to all this ? * Is Christ divided ? Can he be the head of such divers and disagreeing bodies , being himself but one ? Is he divided from his Ministers , so as not to work by his Spirit , in the hearts of his People , with his word preached by one , as well as by another ? Can ye allow of one self same Gospel , as Christ's , being uttered by one Man , and loath it being uttered by another ? Will ye acknowledge Christ to be the chief Shepherd and Bishop of your Souls , the great Doctour and Prophet of his Church , and yet think that he will not make his word successfull , for the Salvation of those whom he hath ordained to Eternal life , by what Ministry soever he shall appoint ? For who is † Paul , and who is Apollo ? But Ministers by whom ye believe , even as the Lord gave to every man. They are but the Ministers of Christ , and such as do● nothing of themselves ; but God so worketh by them as it pleaseth him . I ‖ will not dare ( saith one of them ) to speak of any of those things which Christ hath not wrought by me , to make the Gentiles obedient by word or deed . The Ministry is God's ordinance , and depends not upon the worthiness of him that is employed in it ; but it hath its virtue , force and efficacy , from the blessing of God and inward operation of his Spirit , which worketh where , and in , and by , whom he will. Christ himself converted very few , in comparison of the many converted by his Apostles . Those Ministers whose parts are most Seraphical , cannot at their pleasure infuse grace into their hearers hearts . * A Paul may plant , and an Apollos may water , but it is God that must give the increase . So as that neither the one nor the other , are any thing in themselves , without God's blessing , which the weakness of the instrument shall not hinder , as making most for the Honour of the supreme Agent to work by it . † We have this treasure in Earthen vessels , that the excellency of the power may be of God , and not of Men. All God's Servants are not alike gifted ; some have five talents , some ten , some but one ; yet all may be his faithfull Servants , and may have their gifts given them to profit withall . And from any of their gifts , any may learn and profit , if the fault be not their own Who th●ives more in grace than they , who conscionably attend and depend on their own godly Pastours ; Who go more empty away with the shell of Religion onely , when others have gotten the kernel , but such as love to wander and heap ●p to themselves Teachers of their own chusing ? The first sort find the p●eaching of God's word to prove wholsome food to them ; which though it seem coiurse , and to be served in with great simplicity ( like Daniel's diet * which was but Pulse and Water ) yet because it is God's allowance , allways hath his blessing with it , and makes his Children so to thrive , that their Countenances do appear fairer , and they are fatter in flesh , than the other , who though they feed upon Varieties , and ( perhaps ) more curiously cook'd dishes , yet have Souls that are still thin and lean , and depart from their banquets without any great satisfaction , for want of that blessing , without which all manner of Varieties prove but wind and vanity . For † Man lives not by bread onely , but by the word of blessing that comes forth of God's mouth . Neither say I this of mine own private opinion , but the brethren of the Non-conformity say the same . He that keepeth in God's order , under a meaner honest Minister , is like to be a more humble thriving Christian , than he , that breaks that order under pretence of Edification . Saith ‖ Mr. Baxter . The ancient and godly Fathers of the Church , taking into consideration this order , that God hath established amongst his People , have both in their publick Councils , and private writings , always disallowed and forbidden the liberty that People are apt to take of their own heads to wander from their own Pastours , to hear Strangers . In the third Council of Carthage ( where Saint Augustine himself was present ) there was this decree made . Placuit * ut a nullo Episcopo usurpentur plebes alienae , nec aliquis Episcoporum supergrediatur in Dioecesi suum Collegam . Be it ordained that no Bishop usurp , or have any thing to doe with another's People , or enter into the Diocese of his Compartner in office , to meddle or make there . And this Canon extends its obligation to Ministers of inferiour order , in reference to each others Congregations , as well as to Bishops in relation to their Dioceses . For † Sicut Episcopus se habet ad Dioecesim suam , sic sacerdos ad suam parochaim , saith Aquinas . As it is with a Bishop , with respect to his Diocese , so 't is with a Minister in respect of his Parish . Sine spe sunt ( saith ‖ that holy Martyr St. Cyprian ) & perditionem maximam de indignatione Dei acquirunt , qui schisma faciunt , & relicto Episcopo , alium sibi foris Pseudoepiscopum constituunt . They are without hope , and procure to themselves the greatest destruction through the just indignation of God , who make Schisms in the Church , and leaving their own Bishop , appoint and set up another , a false Bishop to themselves . Again * singulis pastoribus portio gregis est ascripta , quam reger quisque ac gubernet , rationem sui actus domino reddat . To every Pastour there is a portion of God's People committed , which he ought to Rule and Govern , as one that must give an account to God for them . And saith the same holy man farther , Oportet eos quibus praesumus , non circumcursare , nec Episcoporum concordiam cohaerentem sua subdola & fallaci temeritate collidere . It behoves those over whom God hath set us , not to run about hither & thither , nor by their false and crafty temerity , to break the Concord and good Agreement that ought to be amongst Ministers . In the Canon-law it is ordained * Vt dominicis & festis diebus presbyteri , antequam Sacra celebrent , plebem interrogent , si alterius parochianus sit in ecclesia , qui proprio contempto presbytero , ibi velit Sacris interesse ; si inveniatur , statim ab ecclesia abjiciant . That on Festival and Lord's days , the Ministers , before they beg in Divine Service , shall ask the people , if there be any Person of another Parish in the Church , who neglecting his own Pastour , desires to be present at divine Worship there ; and if any such be found , they shall forthwith thurst him out of the Church . And in another pleea it is thus decreed . † Omnis & quilibet confiteatur proprio Sacerdoti : siquis autem alieno Sacerdoti voluerit justa de causa coufiteri peccata , licentiam prius postulet & obtineat a proprio Sacerdote cum aliter ipse illum non possit absolvere vel ligare . Let every man confess his faults to his own Minister : but if any upon just cause desire to confess to another Minister , let him first ask and obtain Licence so to doe , from his own Minister , seeing otherwise no other can absolve or bind him . Of the same judgment in this case , have the reverend Brethren of the Presbyterian perswasion declared themselves to be ; not onely in their Sermons to their people ( which I have sometimes heard ) but I have seen an Act , and can produce it , of the assembly of Scotland , Entitled , An act against such as withdraw themselves from the publick worship in their own Congregation . Wherein the said Assembly in the zeal of God For preserving order , unity and peace in the Kirk , for maintaining that respect which is due to the ordinances and Ministers of Iesus Christ , for preventing Schisms , noysome errours , and all unlawfull practices , which may follow on the peoples withdrawing themselves from their own Congregations , do ordiain every member in every Congregation to keep their own Paroch Kirk , to communicate there in the Word and Sacraments : and if any Person or Persons shall hereafter absent themselves from their own Congregations , except in urgent Cases , made known to and approved by the Presbytery , the Ministers of these Congregations whereto they resort , shall both in publick by Preaching , and in private by admonition , shew their dislike of their withdrawing from their own Minister , that in so doing they may witness to all that hear them their due care to strengthen the hands of their fellow Labourers in the work of the Lord , and their detestation of any thing that may tend to Separation , or any of the above mentioned Evils : hereby their own flock will be confirmed in their stedfastness , and the unstable Spirits of others will be rectified . Like as the Minister of that Congregation from which they do withdraw shall labour first by private admonition to reclaim them ; and if any after private admonition given by their own Pastour do not amend , in that case the Pastour shall delate the aforesaid Persons to the Session , who shall cite and censure them as Contemners of the comely order of the Kirk . And if the matter be not taken order with there , it is to be brought to the Presbytery . For better observing whereof , the Presbyteries at the several visitations of their Kirks , and provincial Assemblies , in their censure of the several Presbyteries shall enquire hereanent . Which enquiry and report shall be registrate in the provincial Books , that their deligence may be seen in the General Assembly . The contrary course here amongst us of this age , hath been taken notice of by godly Christians beyond the Seas , as our great fault , and contrary to the practice and custome of the reformed Churches of God abroad . Honorius Reggius , a learned man , hath taken the pains to gather together out of Mr. Edwards his Gangrene , and other Authours , no less than 180 errours practised in England , since the year of our Lord 1640. And hath divulged them to the whole World , to the great shame of our nation , and scandal to our Religion ; whereof this is the 125 th errour ‖ Partem Libertatis Christianae esse , non audire proprium Ministrum ; sed ubi libeat , & a quo plus Commodi speretur . That it is a part of Christian liberty , for people not to hear their own Ministers , but to attend that Ministry which they like best , and from whom they hope to receive the most profit . I never heard or read that this disorderly practice was tolerated or allowed in the Church of God in any part of Christendom , but once , and that was by virtue of a Licence and privilege granted by certain Popes to the Mendicant Fryers to intermeddle in matters of Parish Churches , * as to hear Confessions , to preach and teach , with power thereunto annexed to gather the benevolence of the people for their labour . Which occasioned such a contention in France between the Prelates and the Fryers there , An. Dom. 1354 , that the Prelates of France convening and Assembling together in the City of Paris , caused by the Bedles to be called together all the Students , Masters , and Bachelours of every Faculty , with the chief Heads of all the Religious houses , and Fryers in the University of Paris ; who being all congregated together in the Bishop of Paris his house , where there were present 4 Archbishops , 20 Bishops ; and all the rest of the Bishops throughout the whole Kingdom of France , except those who were necessarily absent , with full consent did send in under their hand-writing , a complaint against the insolency & Presumption of the Fryers . The Bishop of † Byters Preaching in that Assembly on that Text of St. Paul , Eph. 3. 18. ut sciatis quae ●it longitudo , latitudo , altitudo & profunditas charitatis , took occasion to shew , That by the vigour of true charity every man ought to hold himself content with that which was his own , and not to intermeddle or busie himself farther than to him appertained or belonged to his Office. For there ( saith he ) all order Ecclesiastical is dissolved , whereas men not containing themselves in their own precincts , presume in other mens charges where they have nothing to doe . But this Charity ( saith he ) now-adays waxeth cold , and all Ecclesiastical order is confounded , and utterly out of order . For many there be now-adays which presume to thrust in themselves where they have nothing to doe , so that now the Church may seem a Monster . For as in a natural body appeareth a Monster , when one Member doeth the office of another ; so in the spiritual body , which is the Church , it may be thought like-wise . Against the same evil and ungodly practice of the Fryers in our Land and Nation , at the same time , did that famous , godly and learned , Richard Armachanus Archbishop and Primate of Ireland , inveigh in 7 or 8 Sermons preach'd on purpose in London : For which being cited by the Fryers before Pope Innocent the Sixth , to appear : So he did ; and before the face of the Pope valiantly defended both in word and writing , that it was better for the parishioners to leave the Fryers , and to resort to their own Pastours , for that the ordinary Pastour is properly appointed of God unto that Ministry which he exerciseth amongst them , whereas the Fryers were but onely permitted of man thereunto : and therein he stood constant unto the Death . For these are the words of Iohn Wickliff ( as they are quoted by † Mr. Fox ) Ab Anglorum Episcopis conductus Armachanus novem in Avione conclusiones coram Innocentio 6 , & suorum Cardinalium coetu , contra fratrum mendicitatem audacter publicavit , veiboque ac scriptis ad mortem usque defendit . Now if this be the order which God hath established in his Church , That People should be divided into flocks , that every flock should have their own Pastour , and that they should depend upon him ; then he can by no means endure to see a breach of that order in his service , that he hath set . How much it hath displeased him , appears in that famous instance in 1 Chron. 15. 13. Because they sought him not according to the right order , therefore God made a breach upon them . And what that breach was both of order on the Peoples part , and of punishment on God's part , may be seen , Cap. 13. 9 , 10. Vzzah , out of a very good intention put forth his hand to stay the Ark when it was in danger of falling , and therefore was smitten with sudden death ; according to the just threatning of God , pronounced before . * They shall not touch any holy thing lest they dye . God will be worshipped and served , not onely in his own ordinances , but in his own order also . There are many duties , † quae cum bona sint opera , perniciem pariunt , cum non eo ordine quo sunt constituta peragantur ; which though they be good works , yet the doers of them may be damned , because they doe them not in that order they should . Upon this account Mart. Luther sharply reprehended those of Wittenberge , who in his absence had abrogated the private Mass and Idols ; had celebrated the Lord's Supper under both kinds ; had taken away auricular Confession , superstitious differences of meats , invocation of Saints , and many other Popish fopperies , and intolerable abuses in the Church ; ‖ non quod impie fecissent , sed quod non ordine . Not but that the work was good in it self , but it was ill done , because not done in a right order ; and therefore it was justly culpable and blameable in them . Circumstances of actions often marr the substance . In divine Worship our care must not onely be to the matter of the service , that it be good , but to the circumstances also wherewith it is attended , that they be warrantable by God's word , or at least , not contrary thereunto . God requires that even the * wood , and every part of the sacri●ce offered to him , be † in order . And doth God look for order among sticks ? And doth he not much more require order to be kept in the use of those means , by which he hath appointed to bring Souls to Heaven ? What gross absurdities would unavoidably follow , from such a manifest breach of order in the Church ? If one Minister may intrude into another's Parish and Congregation , and there set up a course of private house-preaching , and other ministerial Acts ; why then may not the Bishop of one Diocess thrust himself into the Diocess of another , and there take upon him to ordain Presbyters , and exercise Episcopal jurisdiction , whether the Diocesan will or no ? Which as it is contrary to all good Laws and Order , so hath been always forbidden and condemned by the Judgment of the Fathers of the Church assembled in Council . Not onely in that of Carthage , before mentioned ; but also in a Council at Antioch it was decreed ‖ non licere uni Episcopo in Dioecesi alterius Episcopale officium exercere . And in the 36 th Canon of those which goe under the Name of the Apostles , it was ordained ; Episcopum non audere extra terminos proprios ordinationes facere , in civitatibus & villis quae illi nullo jure subjectae sunt . Si vero convictus fuerit , &c. That no Bishop shall dare to confer orders out of his own Diocess , in any City or Village , which by no Law or Right is in subjection to him ; and if he shall be convicted so to doe , without the consent or leave of those to whom those Cities or Towns do belong , he shall be deposed , and those that are ordained by him . So likewise in Civil affairs , why then may not a Judge who is Commissionated for the Northern Circuit , thrust himself into the place and office of him that is appointed for the Western , sit on the bench , judge causes , and condemn Malefactours in alieno foro ? Which were the way to overthrow all Justice ; according to that known Axiome in the Law , Sententia a Iudice non SVO lata , nulla est ipso jure . And , in Military matters , why then may not the Colonel of one Regiment ( or a Reformado Officer that hath lost his Company and hath none left to command ) intrude himself into another Regiment , and there take upon him to muster the Souldiers , and lead a party ? Which is the onely way to open a Flood-gate to all Confusion and disorder that is imaginable , to the Destruction of Magistracy , Ministry , Judges , Armies , and all things . Now order being a great part of God's Law , he that wilfully breaks good order , makes himself guilty of the breach of the whole Law ; and so makes void his Plea for an ordinance of God which may be instrumental to beget faith or grace in the Souls of those that attend unto it . The Queen of Sheba when she had seen the good order of the Servants that ministred to King Solomon , was so astonished with admiration , that * there was no spirit left in her . If order in a Family doth so draw the Eyes and Minds of the Beholders to it , how much more amiable is order in the Church , which † is the house of the Living God , where a greater than Solomon is always present , and where the Glory of the Lord appears in the way and means of the Salvation of Souls ? ARGUMENT . III. THAT cannot be the ordinance of God , as a means of grace , that hath no promise of God's blessing made or annexed to it . For though it be a Paul that plants , and an Apollo that waters * yet it must be God that gives the blessing , or else all their labour will be to no purpose . I deny not but that there may be a very good use made of the meetings of Christians together , otherwise than in the publick Congregation , when they are Lawfully and orderly regulated , without manifest breach of any Divine or humane precept , without intrenchment upon , or infringment of any Gospel-order or ordinance , and that they may so expect God's blessing on them . Yet because Satan hath stretched his hellish Subtilty to the highest , in these last times ( with too unhappy Success ) to put easie and well-meaning people out of the sure and ordinary way of God's blessing , by disparaging the publick Church Assemblies , and advancing private , irregular , and disorderly meeting ( where there is not that ground of expectation of Divine concurrence ) into competition with yea prelation above them : therefore ( makeing a little more than ordinary stay here ) I shall endeavour to let the Reader fee how the Spirit of God in Scripture hath commended the publick Assemblies to us , by affixing more special promises of his presence with , and benediction of them , than on any other , though ordered in all things never so rightly : and how it hath recorded the faith of good men in their belief of these promises , testified in their esteeming , useing , and frequenting the publick ordinances of God accordingly . † Glorious things are spoken of thee , oh thou city of God. To the ancient people of God , the Iews , the special promises of Divine presence were made in their Church Assemblies . ‖ In the places where I record my name , I will come unto thee and will bless thee . * In the Tabernacle ( saith God ) I will meet thee and Commune with thee of all things . Which promises were always performed accordingly as may be seen in Lev. 9. 23. 24. N●mb . 1. 1. Numb . 7. 89. Thence it was that the Tabernacle of the Jewish Church , had the name of † the Tabernacle of meeting , or the Tabernacle of the Congregation . To those that attended God there , his blessing was assured . ‖ Blessed is the man whom thou chusest , and causest to approach unto thee , that he may dwell in thy Court , he shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house even of thy Holy Temple . * Blessed are they that dwell in thy house , they shall ever be praising thee . † He blesseth thy Children within thee , O Sion . ‖ Blessed is the man that heareth me , watching dayly at my Gates , waiting at the posts of my doors ; saith Christ the Wisedom of the Father . And that was the reason of David 's so great love to the Church . * Lord ; I have loved the habitation of thine house , and the place where thine honour dwelleth . And of his desire † to remain in God's house all the days of his Life , that he might behold the beauty of the Lord. And ‖ we have waited ( for so the word may be read ) for the loving kindness of the Lord in the midst of thy Temple . There promises of God's special and extraordinary blessings , on the Church Assemblies of his People in former ages , were so generally known and believed of holy men in those times , that when any of them prayed for any spiritual grace or mercy in behalf of any other , they usually expressed it in this from * The Lord bless thee out of Sion . † For there the Lord commanded the blessing even life for evermore . So again . ‖ We bless you out of the house of the Lord. They seem to be the words of the Priests ▪ whose office it was , at the dismissing of the Congregation of God's People ▪ to * bless them in his house . They being appointed of God there to † bless in his name . Whose benedictions there pronounced , did not prove an empty sound of words in the air , but from the Temple at Ierusalem , where they were spoken , they mounted up to Heaven where they were heard and answered ‖ For the Priests and Levits arose and blessed the People , and their voice was heard , and their prayer came up to his holy dwelling place , even unto heaven . In which respect the publick worship of God , is called * his face and presence . Cain , for the Murther of his Brother , being debarred the benefit of God's publick worship , complains † I shall be hid from thy face , i. e. from the face and presence of God in his Church : as appears afterward . ‖ And Cain went out from the presence of God , and dwelt in the Land of Nod : i. e. from the place of God's publick worship , which in all likelyhood , was celebrated by Adam the Father , * who being a Prophet , had taught his Children how to sacrifice , and to serve the Lord. Thither God's People resorted in multitudes : and David professeth that nothing in all his Life hapned to him more pleasant , than to see such flocking to God's house ; and that he could goe thither with them : as nothing aggravated his misery more in his persecution by Saul , or by his Son Absolom's rebellion ( for 't is uncertain whether of the two was the occasion of Psal. 42. ) than that he could not have the happiness that formerly he enjoyed of being one of the first and forwardest in going thither . * When I remember these things ( saith he ) I pour out my Soul in me . And why ? because there he enjoyed God in a more special manner than he could elsewher : thither he came , ‖ and appeared before the face of God. What longings he shewed for God's publick worship at another time , when By Saul's persecution he was forced from the Temple at Ierusalem , into the Wilderness of Iudah , and wandered in the desart , may be seen in Psal. 63. Though it was grievous to him to fall from that dignity and favour he formerly had , and wherein he flourished in Saul's court : though it was hard for him to lose all his goods , to be alienated from all his friends , to be forced to converse among strangers and infidels , and to expose his life to all sorts of hardships and hazards , yet all these he counted small and Light matters , in comparison of this one great evil , that he was forced to be absent from Church , and to abide there , where there was no publick Ministry or worship of God. And therefore making no mention at all of any of those other evils , he makes this his onely request , that he might be restored again , ut sacris publicis , & Coetui piorum interesse possit , that he might have the liberty of God's house again . Though he might , and doubtless did , converse with God in the Desart , pouring out his Prayers to him , which was the onely support he had in his exile ; And though no doubt those godly friends he had left about him ( for he had such in whose society he might take great comfort in his banishment , he had both ‖ a Prophet , and * a Priest ) did join with him in the private service of God , yet this contented him not , he longs still for the publick worship , bewails greatly the want of it , his ‖ speeches are all of the heavenly benefit of it , and the happiness of such as had free access to it . He know he could no where perform divine worship , with so free and glad an heart , with so much comfort and assurance of so large a blessing , as in that place , where the Ministry was publick , and where the Multitude of God's people did serve and worship him . There he vows his service , * I will give thee thanks in the gr●at Congregation , I will praise thee among much people . ‖ I will praise thee with my whole heart in the assembly of the upright , and in the Congregation . And calls upon others to doe the like * Give the Lord the glory due to his Name , worship him in the beauty of holiness . It was no small blessing promised to good King Hezekiah , that his recovery from his sickness should be so soon effected , that he should not be detained from going to Church , but ‖ the third day he should be able to go up to the house of the Lord. The hearing whereof was equal comfort to him , with the news of the enlargement of the lease of his life . It hath even been a sad affliction to the Souls of God's people , to see the Church-assemblies neglected , and the Congregations more empty than they were wont to be , and to be debarred the liberty of frequenting them , as being thereby deprived of the most lively representation of Heaven on Earth , to the obscuring much of God's Glory , which is seen and spoken of in the Sanctuary , and the seducing them from the mutual and comfortable Fellowship one of another in his ordinances , and from much refreshing and help they had by these means . * I will gather them which are sorrowfull for the solemn Assemblies , who are of thee , to whom the reproach of it is a burthen . 'T is the Character the Holy Ghost makes of a true Child and Member of the Church , to be thus affected . When ever God's people did shew a more then ordinary desire to prevail in prayer , they have shewed more than ordinary care that the Assemblies might be as publick , and as full , as could be , as 't is noted by ‖ a worthy Divine of Ours . * Blow the Trumpet in Sion , sanctifie a Fast , call a solemn Assembly , gather the People , assemble the Children , &c. In the Fast which King Iehosaphat proclaimed , it is said . ‖ All Judah stood before the Lord , with their Little ones , their Wives and their Children . And it was in the publick place of God's worship , * the house of the Lord that they met . The People of Israel went up to the House of the Lord to ask counsel concerning their War with Benjamin . And this they did more than once , and till they did so , they prevailed not . The like course took king Hezekiah at his keeping the Passover to make the Congregation in the house of the Lord ( the Temple at Ierusalem ) as great as he could . ‖ Hezekiah sent to all Israel and Iudah , and wrote Letters also to Ephraim and Manasseh that they should come to the house of the Lord at Ierusalem , and keep the Passover unto the Lord God of Israel . And as there they have prevailed with God in Prayer , more than they could any where else ; so there God hath taught them more than they could learn any where else . * When I sought to know this ( viz. the Doctrine of God's providence and wisedom in the just and righteous management of the affairs of the world ) it was too painfull for me ( saith David ) till I went into the Sanctuary of God , then understood I their end . When all means else did fail , the publick Ministry , ( through God's blessing on it ) became effectual to bring him to understanding in this Mystery . Therefore he concludes , ‖ thy way , O God , is in the Sanctuary . And as in Gospel-times we have the like promises of God's special presence in the publick Congregations of his People ( Mat. 28. 20. 2 Cor. 6. 16. Rev. 1. 13. ) so it was professed long before , that there the Godly should exhort and stir up one another , to seek the true Knowledge of God and his ways , Es. 2. 3. Mic. 4. 2. which was fulfilled accordingly , both in the Disciples of Christ after his Ascension , * who continually were in the Temple ; And also in the converted Jews and Gentiles , who † continued daily in the Temple with one accord . So did the Christians in the primitive times , in their Churches their Ministers did preach ‖ as frequently as the persecution of those times would permit . And there the People assembled themselves together to hear . They did not divide themsleves , some of the Congregation going one way , and some another , but * they came together in one place . And that place was the Church . † If not the publick place of worship , so called , ( as most think , ) yet the place where ( by reason of the hot persecution of those times ) the whole Church did , or could meet together . And St. Hierome gives this commendations of the Faith of the primitive Christians at Rome . ‖ Vbi alibi tanto studio & frequentia ad Ecclesias concurritur ? ubi sic ad similitudinem Coelestis tonitrui Amen reboat ; & vacua Idolorum templa quatiuntur ? non quod aliam habeant Romani fidem ; nisi hanc quam omnes Christi Ecclesiae ; sed quod devotio in iis major sit , & simplicitas ad credendum . In what part of the World else is there such studious flocking and resort to Christian Churches , as here ? Where else doth the Amen of the Congregation , sound so loud , as that it seems to equalize a Clap of Thunder in the Air , insomuch that the Idol-temples being left empty , are made to tremble therewith ? Not that the Romans had any other Faith , than the other Churches of Christ , but they had more devotion and singleness of heart in believing . To this also agrees the Testimony of St. Augustine , * primi credentes in templo veteri Domino servierint ; the first and new Christians did serve God in the old Temple . It will be said by some ; to what purpose is all this that hath been alledged out of the old Testament , touching God's promises to , or benediction of the Church-assemblies of the Iews ? Their Tabernacle and Temple were holy places and the sanctification of them was Levitical , and therefore now abolished , and not to be applied to our Churches . This passeth with some for an objection that hath force enough in the bowels of it to overthrow and demolish the whole fabrick of this my third Argument . But if we carefully look into the inside of it , and not tamely deliver up our hold , we shall find no such formidable matter in it . For , as for the City of Ierusalem , the Tabernacle and Temple , they were , in themselves , places no more holy or religious than any other places in the Land of Canaan were , or than any other places now in England are : But they were therefore holy , Partly because they had many things in them and their worship , that were typical and ceremonial , which are now abolished . The Temple and Tebernacle were types of the body and humane Nature of Christ. Ioh. 2. 19. 21. Heb. 8. 2. Heb. 9. 11. And this ( I grant ) might be one reason that moved David in his banishment , so earnestly to desire his return to the Temple . Ps. 42. 3. And in the beginning of the New Testament , we reade of certain holy and devout persons , that when they prayed , † they went up to the Temple to perform their devotion . And those that could not repair to Ierusalem , they might and did pray elsewhere , but it was ‖ with their faces towards the Temple . And Partly , because God placed a memorial * of his Name there : or caused his Name to be remembred there . i. e. did set apart those places for his publick worship and service , as monuments of him . For as Absolom erected a Pillar ‖ to keep his Name in remembrance , so did God chuse out those places to put his Name there . And therefore they were called * his habitation . In this respect our Churches now are every whit as holy as Ierusalem , the Tabernacle , or Temple there was , being places lawfully set apart for God's publick worship , to have his Name remembred and placed there . And so the Tabernacle and Temple had this in them and their worship , that was moral , and consequently of equal concernment to us now , as to the Jews then , that publick places ought to be assigned for God's publick worship , every way fitting and convenient for Ecclesiastical conventions , where all the Congregation ought to meet , as in a place where God will vouchsafe to be more graciously present in his worship , than elsewhere , according to all those his gracious promises . And touching the holiness of the Tabernacle and Temple , that is excepted against in the objection , as being not to the present purpose : Let the answer of that learned and pious Gent. Sir Henry Spelman in his book ‖ de non temerandis Ecclesiis , be heard and well considered , and the reader will easily find what hath been alledged out of the Old Testament maketh much for my present purpose : his words are these , The Temple was sanctified unto three functions , which also had three several places assigned to them . The first , belonging to the divine presence , and had the custody of the holiest types thereof ; the Oracle , the Ark , the Mercy-Seat , &c. And was therefore called Sanctum Sanctornm , the Holiest of all . The second was for ceremonial Worship and Atonement : viz. by Sacrifices , Oblations , and other Levitical Rites ; the place thereof being the Sanctuary , ( wherein were the holy Vessels ) and the Court of Priest , wherein the Altar of burnt Sacrifice did stand : The third was for simple Worship , Prayer and Doctrine ( without any pomp or ceremony . ) And the place of this was the outward ( Court called * Atrium populi , and ‖ Solomon's Porch ) which had therefore in it , no ceremonial implement at all . The two first of these functions , with the places belonging to them , were indeed particularly appropriated to the Law : for they were Ceremonial , Mystical , Secret , Levitical , Iudaical and Temporal . Ceremonial , as celebrated with much worldly pomp . Mystical , as figuring some spiritual things . Secret , as either performed behind the veil or curtain , or else sequestred and remote from the People . Levitical , as committed onely to the administration of that tribe . Iudaical , as ordained onely for the salvation of that people . And Temporal , as instituted onely for a season , and not to continue . But the sanctification of the third function , and the place thereunto appointed , was directly contrary to all the points alledged to the former two . First it was for simple Worship , Prayer and Doctrine , which were there to be performed and delivered in all sincerity , without any Ceremony or ceremonial Implement used therein . Secondly , there was no matter of Mystery therein to be seen ; but whatsoever was Mystical in the Law or the Prophets , was there expounded . Thirdly , nothing was there hidden or secret from the People , but acted wholly without the veil and publickly for every man. Fourthly it was not appropriated to the Levites , but common alike to all the tribes . Fifthly , not ordained for the Iews particularly , but for all Nations in general . And lastly , not to endure for a time ( as those other two of the Law ) but to continue for ever , even after the Gentiles were called , as well as the Jews ; that is , during the time of the Gospel , as well as of the Law. Therefore , saith God , by Esaias the Prophet * my house shall be called an house of prayer to all Nations . He said not , an house of sacrifice to all Nations ; for the sacrifice ended before the Calling of the Gentiles , and so they could have no part thereof . Nor an house of prayer for the Iews onely , for then had the Gentiles ( when they were called ) been likewise excluded : But an house of prayer to all Nations , i. e. Jews and ●●●ntiles indifferently , which theref●●e must have relation to the times of the Gospel : and consequently the sanctification of that house , and of that function , is also a sanctification of the Churches of the Gospel . We reade not therefore that Christ reformed any thing in the other two functions of the Temple , for they were now as at an end . But because this third function was for ever to continue in his Church , therefore he purged it of that which prophaned it , restored it to the original sanctity ; And that the future world ( which was the time of the Gospel ) might better observe it , than the precedent , and the time of the Law had done , he reporteth and confirmeth the decree , whereby it was ●anctified , It is written ( saith he ) my house shall be called an house of prayer to all people . He saith , my house , excluding all other from having any property therein ; for God will be joint-tenant with no man. And it shall be an house of prayer for all people , i. e. publick , for ever , and not private . The time also when our Saviour pronounced those words , is much to the purpose : for it was after he had turned out the Oxen and Doves , that is , the things for sacrifice . As though he thereby taught us , that when the sacrifical Function of the Temple was ended , yet the sanctification of it to be an house of prayer ever remained . Thus far this learned Gentleman , whose words ( because every one to whom this may come may not have that Book in readiness to peruse ) for the readers satisfaction , I have faithfully transcribed . By which judicious and learned discourse it doth plainly appear , that the holiness of the Jews Tabernacle and Temple was not altogether Levitical , nor abolished , but of perpetual duration in Gospel-times , and that our Churches now are holy as theirs were then ; the sanctification of theirs was the sanctification of ours ; and therefore those promises of divine presence and blessing made to them in their Church-assemblies , do belong to us , as well as to them . To such therefore as neglect the Church now , and say , they can serve God as well elsewhere , as there ; I say , 'T is true , as we are private Christians and single persons , so no doubt according as the exigence of our affairs require , we may any where , or at any time , doe God acceptable service . It was foretold that in Gospel-times ‖ In every place incense shall be offered to the Name of the Lord. And as St. Paul bids us , pray continually , so our Saviour , when you pray enter into your Closets . But as we are members of the visible Mystical body , which is the Church of Christ , so we are bound to constant attendance on the publick service of God , in his house . Though not altogether now in respect of the place , yet still in respect of the Congregation that do and ought to meet in that place , and the worship of God that is , and ought there to be publickly performed . And very much in regard of the place too ; 1. As it is a place freely given and surrendred up into the hands of God , the great Land-lord of the whole world , by the donation of the right owner , under God , of the Land , and Founder of the Edifice . 2. As it is hallowed and dedicated to the publick service of God in such a solemn manner , as hath been the custom and usage of God's people in all ages of the world , both of the Iews in the Old Testament , and of the Christians in the New , from the beginning , in the purest times untill now , at the time when it was delivered up into God's possession , and when the use whereunto it shall ever serve , is established . 3. As it is accepted and owned by God , being thus given and set apart for him ; and he is pleased to take Livery and Seisin of it , as his house ( which is as really true of our Churches at their Consecration , though not as visibly , as it was of * Solomon's Temple at its dedication . ) for the performance of his publick worship and service , and intitles it himself ‖ My house of prayer . And the Argument which our Saviour useth to prove his property in that house , is taken from the use for which it was appointed ; which extends its force equally to our Churches now , as to the Temple at Ierusalem , seeing they are both set apart to the same purpose , even for publick prayer to , and worship of God. 4. As 't is a place to which God hath by promise assured his own gracious and heavenly presence and blessing , and where he may be and is enjoyed , in a more special manner than elsewhere , and consequently where there is more profit and good to be received by the service of God done in the Congregation and assembling together of his people there , than in any other house whatsoever . And therefore though there is not that holiness affixed to places now since our Saviour's coming into the World , as there was before , yet our assembling together in the Church is as holy now as then , and better than elsewhere . And wheresoever the Scripture seems to take away all religious differences of places , as if no place were holier than another , ( as in Mal. 1. 11. Ioh. 4. 21. 1 Tim. 2. 8. ) It is true of inherent holiness , but not of relative . And this must be always remembred to prevent mistake ) that the Holy Ghost doth no where compare private and profane places , with publick and consecrated , as if the worship we doe to him were as much to his Glory , or as good and profitable to our selves and others which we doe in those places , as that which we doe in the Church . But he compares publick places then , with publick now , and private with private ; and his meaning is , that not onely at Ierusalem , and among the Jews God shall have an house for his publick worship , but in all Nations where he shall be pleased to bestow his Gospel . God will not be worshipped in the Temple at Ierusalem onely , nor shall his presence be tyed to that place more than to other such like houses of God elsewhere ; but he will have houses , which shall be properly his own , and set apart for his publick worship and service amongst all Nations . It was a part of that heavy Yoke that was intolerable on the Necks of our Fathers , that they must take long and tedious journeys , to come from all Quarters of their Country to one place to worship ; and that they did not dare , no not in case of absolute nenessity , to perform publick service in any other place ; yea that their very private Devotions were to be performed either * in , or † toward that place : But now , besides our Closets for our private Devotions , we have Churches in our several Towns , Parishes and Villages , where we may be sure to have God present to hear , accept and bless us , if we can find honest and good hearts to resort to them . Every place hath God's presence , and therefore is , in it self , alike sanctified for his service ; but every place is not alike separated from common and profane use , and dedicated and consecrated to God , nor owned and accepted by him ; and therefore we have no reason to expect God's presence , or to meet with the like blessing in one place as in another . And therefore ( saith that holy and ancient Synod at Gangra in Paphlagonia , under Constantine the Emperour ) ‖ Omnem locum aedificatum in nomine Dei honor amus , & Congregationem in Ecclesia factam ob utilitatem communem recipimus . We do honour every place built in the Name of God , and do reverence and receive the Congregation met in the Church for the Common advantage . Churches then are holy , and to be respected and frequented rather than other places , because of their holy Use , and for the holy Assemblies there made . And therefore that same Council decreed , * Si quis docet domum Dei contemptibilem esse , & Conventus qui in ea celebantur , anathema sit . Cursed be he that shall teach , that the House of God may be slighted , or the Congregations that assemble therein . And in the next Canon , they think fit to ordain , † Si quis extra Ecclesiam seorsum Conventus celebrrat , &c. Cursed be he that shall keep any Convention out of the Church . And the same Synod ( as History ‖ tells us ) condemned and deposed Eustathius Bishop of Sebastia in Armenia , for perswading such as refrained the Church and publick Assemblies , to raise Conventicles and Brotherhood in their private Houses . And in the Civil Law it is decreed , * That the sacred Mystery or Mysteries be not done in private Houses , but be celebrated in publick places , lest thereby things be done contrary to the Catholick and Apostolick Faith ; unless they call to the celebrating of the same such Clerks of whose Faith and Conformity there is no doubt made , or else that are deputed thereunto by the good will of the Bishop . If any thing be done to the contrary , the House wherein these things are done , shall be confiscated , and themselves shall be punished at the discretion of the Prince . 'T is true St. Paul commands us † Every where to lift up holy hands without wrath . But those hands cannot be pure that are profane ; and they cannot have other than such , who contemn the Church . ‖ As therefore we exhort all men every where to worship God , even so for the performance of this service by the People of God assembled , we think not any place so good as the Church , nor any Exhortation so fit , as that of David , O worship the Lord in the Beauty of Holiness . But now ( alas ) we live to see those prophetique words , uttered by a Learned and judicious Gentleman above 60 years agoe , to be verified and fulfilled to the utmost . He discerning then the great increase and growth of Sectaries in this Realm said ; That time would soon bring it to pass ( if it were not resisted ) that God would be turned out of Churches into Barns , and from thence again into Fields , and Mountains , and under Hedges : and the Office of the Ministry ( robbed of all dignity and respect ) be as contemptible as those places ; all Order , Discipline and Church-government left to the newness of Opinion and Mens fancies ; yea and soon after , as many kinds of Religions spring up , as there are Parish Churches within England , every contentious and ignorant Person cloathing his Fancy with the Spirit of God , and his Imagination with the Gift of Revelation . By all which hath been said ( wherein I hope the candid Reader will pardon my Prolixity in this plain Vindication of the langu●shing Reputation of Church-assemblies ) it appears that the speciality of Divine promises are made to the publick Dispensation of God's ordinances , and that we may expect a greater Blessing upon them , in our Church-assemblies , than elsewhere . But I know no promise of God at all , made to such Preaching and Meetings , as are in question . God hath not engaged himself for a Blessing to any People , waiting on him ( as they count it ) in a way out of his appointment , yea contrary to it . But as he hath forbidden to hear Intruders , Ier. 27. 14 , 15. So he hath expresly said , there shall no Blessing at all accompany such a Ministry and such attendance on it . Let that place in * Ieremiah be noted , I sent them not , nor commanded them , therefore they shall not profit this People at all , saith the Lord. Sive vera praedicent , sive falsa , Saith † a Presbyterian Divine : Whether they preach that which is true , or that which is false . The question is , not de facto , but de jure , not what they teach , but by what warrant . Thence it was , as ‖ Tarnovius thinks , that our Saviour Christ rebuked the Devil , and commanded him silence not suffering him to speak , when he confessed and declared the most necessary and Soul-saving truth in the World , viz. * that Christ was the holy one of God , because he had no calling so to doe . The words of St. Paul are full to the same purpose . † How shall they believe on him , of whom they have not heard ? And how shall they hear without a Preacher ? And how shall they preach except they be sent ? The Apostle speaks of such preaching and hearing as should beget Faith , and by which , Grace is ordinarily wrought and increased in the Soul , and upon which , People may expect God's Blessing . Now thus none can hear without a Preacher , neither can any thus preach , i. e. profitably to beget Faith , except he be sent . They cannot be succesfull in their Ministry without a Mission . They may talk , as Usurpers ; but not preach , as God's Ambassadours . They may satisfie the Itch of the Ear , but they cannot be instrumental to work Grace in the heart . God will not concur with that Ministry he sends not . Our Saviour Christ Faith , Iohn 10. 8. All that ever came before me are Thieves and Robbers . Why , Moses and the Prophets , the Priests and Levites were before Christ. Were they all . Thieves and Robbers , and none of them true Pastours ? The Emphasis lies in the word [ came ] which being rightly understood , makes it as true , that all that ever came , or shall come after Christ are Thieves and Robbers also , as well as those that came before him . ‖ St. Hierome's note upon the text makes it clear . Venerunt inquit Christus , non qui missi sunt , de quibus Propheta , veniebant a se & ego non mittebam eos . Our Saviour doth not say that all that were sent before him , were Thieves and Robbers , but all that came before me . Plainly shewing , that whosoever shall come amongst the People of God his Church , to perform the Office of the Ministry , of his own accord , without a lawfull Sending , is a Thief and a Robber , and none of Christ's true Sheep will , or ought to hear him . But it will be said , the Preaching and Ministry of such Persons as are in question , is the Preaching and Ministry of Persons sent ; for they are Persons in holy Orders , and Ministers ordained . 1. I deny not , but that some of such Persons as are in question , may be lawfully ordained Ministers ( all are not , to my knowledge ) yet it followeth not presently from thence , that they are sent to preach , or to perform Acts of the Ministry . For it may so be in a true setled and constituted Church , that for a lawfull Cause , and by lawfull Authority , a Person ordained may be deposed , and justly suspended from performing any ministerial Acts ; as Abiathar in the Church of the Jews was by King Solomon . Otherwise , Ministers in their Office were Lawless , and exempt from all legal and just Restraint and Censure . And although a Person in holy Orders cannot have his Ordination ordinarily made void by any , quoad internam potestatem , in regard of the inward Power of Order that is conferred on him in his Ordination , so as upon his Restauration he need be re-ordained ; yet it may be made void quoad externam executionem , in regard of the outward Execution of that Power in the Church , either in publick or private , either for a set-time or season , or else during his Life . It is in the Power of the Church and Governours thereof , to suspend a Minister from the Execution of his Office , though it be not in their Power to rase out that Characterem insculptum , that intrinsical Authority received in his Ordination . And a Person so lawfully suspended by Authority , as is said , may he in such a case execute the Office of the Ministry , or may he not ? If so , then Acts of lawfull Authority in the Church signifie nothing ; Governours and Government , and Church-discipline is a mere empty Name , and but a Cypher . Then might Abiathar have executed the High-priest's Office , Notwithstanding King Solomon's Exauctoration of him . And so the Ordinance of God in the Church , to which all stand bound in Conscience , to be * in subjection , will be made void and of none effect . If not , then such Ministers as notwithstanding their legal Restraint , or suspension from Execution of their Office , do yet constantly execute the same , by preaching and other ministerial Duties , otherwise than by the Law they are allowed , cannot be said to be sent of God , since they are inhibited by God's Vicegerents on Earth ; and consequently have not that sending , which the word of God saith is necessary to those , whose preaching is to be instrumental to work Faith , and other saving Graces in the Hearts of God's People . But what calling or sending can such a Minister as is in question , pretend to , for his setting up a Course of House-preaching , or other ministerial Acts , in the place or Parish , where there is a publick constant preaching Minister established by Law ? If he hath any , it must be either extraordinary , or ordinary , for there is not a third way of calling or sending , Extradordinary calling or sending is that , which is done by God himself immediately , without the Concurrence or Ministry of any humane Help or Authority . † Not of man , nor by man. Either , 1. By divine Vision or Revelation : and thus St. Paul was called and sent to preach the Gospel at Macedonia ‖ A Vision appeared to Paul in the Night , saying , come over into Macedonia and help us ; And after he had seen the Vision , immediately we endeavoured to go into Macedonia , assuredly , gathering that the Lord had called us to preach the Gospel unto them . 2. By secret impulse on mens spirits for this work , wrought by the extraordinary Power of God in the Primitive times . Such was * Philip the Deacon's going to the City of Samariah , and preaching the Gospel unto them , after the dispersing the Church at Ierusalem . Such also was the Calling of those who at the same dispersion , first preached Christ at Phoenicia and Cyprus † and the Hand of God was with them , though otherwise they were but private Persons . Now I think no wise men will pretend to these extraordinary Callings or Sendings in these days . It is sufficient to say they are extraordinary , and such as but in like Cases cannot be expected , Extraordinary onely take place where ordinary are not to be had . The internal and extraordinary sending is secret and invisible , and therefore it is not sufficient for a man to say that he is sent of God , seeing every Heretick may say the same ; but he ought to prove his extraordinary and invisible Calling by the working of some ‖ Miracle ; or by some special testimony of Scripture . 'T is true Iohn Baptist had 〈◊〉 immediate and extraordinary Calling ▪ * and yet wrought no Miracle , ( that was reserved for the Messiah , of whom he was the immediate Forerunner , to manifest himself unto the world by ) but then , that Calling of his was foretold , and witnessed by plain testimonies of † Scripture . And the manner of his Birth , and Condition of his Life ( as it was well known to all Israel ) were no other than miraculous and extraordinary . Ordinary calling or sending to any place , to preach the Gospel , and to execute the Office of a Minister there , in a setled and constituted Church is , when a Person in holy Orders hath the cure and care of a Flock or Congregation of God's People committed to him , to preach the Gospel to them , and to perform all other ministerial Acts amongst them , by the Ministry of those Men , who under God , have Authority so to doe , according to good and wholsome Ecclesiastical Laws and Constitutions in that behalf made and established . ‖ God calleth ordinarily by his Church , her voice is his . Therefore whensoever the Church of God , that is , the learned , wise , godly , and such as the Church hath publickly appointed for that purpose , saith to any thou shalt he sent to such a place , thou shalt goe for us ; then doth God call ; Saith Mr. Perkins . Sending implies the Act of another that hath Power and Authority to send , He cannot be said to be sent , that comes to a place , and there takes upon him to preach and doe all ministerial Acts , of his own accord . He comes not in Christ's Name , but his own . And a Christian can in nothing shew himself more impudent , than in embracing such , as Teachers sent from God , that come in their own Names . * If one come in his own Name , him ye will receive : saith Christ to the Jews , blaming them much for it . And because there are so many that are apt to run before they are sent , it is necessary , that wheresoever any Person undertakes to preach the word , his calling to that work be clear and manifest , both in respect of his own Comfort and the Peoples profit . Though St. Paul was immediately called of God , yet he was sent to † Ananias for imposition of his hands , that it might be clear to the Church that he was called . And when he was to be sent to the Gentiles , he was again by imposition of hands ‖ ordained or appointed to be their Doctour , that so his Calling might be publickly declared to be lawfull , and that none else might intrude into it . And if this were necessary in him , who was immediately called of God , how much more necessary is it in all those , who have not now that extraordinary Calling , but onely are mediately ordained and appointed to that work by those men , who under God have power to send and appoint Pastours over the several Flocks of his People in the Church ? Now if such a person as is in the question , cannot make out his calling or sending , by one of these two ways , to such a Town or Parish , where he takes upon him thus to execute the Office ( or any part of it ) of a Minister ; certainly then he hath no Calling or sending at all : But is like one that shall enter into another man's house , at the window , or some other way , than by the door : and that ( we know ) is no fair possession of an house ; he that enters in at the windows , ought to be thrown out of doors . Of such our Saviour saith * Verily , verily I say unto you , he that entreth not by the door into the sheepfold , but climbeth up some other way , the same is a Thief and a Robber . And , if such , as they can be no other , who baulking the lawfull and ordinary way of entrance by the Authority of those , who derive their power on earth from Christ , and break in without , yea against the Laws and Leave of their Governours that act in Christ's Name and Stead ) then are not they sent of God , and consequently have none of God's promises of blessing annexed to their Ministry . This is that which renders the best actions that can be performed by the Sons of Men , to be sinfull , when they are done unlawfully , and by such as have no particular Calling or Command for the doing of them . This doth quite alter and diversifie the nature of actions , so as that they are varied from what otherwise they would be , to some other things . It is a rule as true , as old ; Bonum extra proprium subjectum , in malum mutatur ; Every good thing , out of its proper place and subject , is turned into evil . V. g. In the natural body of man , the hand is a very good and usefull member , for the offices of Common life ; yet if the hand be out of its proper place , and grow either out of the Head or Leg , or elsewhere , where it ought not , it is no longer a good or usefull member , but a deformed and monstrous excrescence of Nature . In the body politick or state , the execution of wrath upon him that doeth evil , is a very just and good work ; yet if it be done by one that hath no Authority or Commission , at least in such a place or circuit , it is not justice , but murther . Ammon abusing his Sister Tamar by filthy incest ▪ ought by the Law of God to dye , Absolom killed him with the Sword ; and in so doing he did the very thing that † God commanded : Yet Absolom sinned greatly in doing it , because he was not the man that ought to have done it , but David the King. In the Ecclesiastick body , the Church , the preaching the word is an excellent ordinance of God , for the saving of them that believe , as ‖ foolish as the world do account it : But if it be performed by one that hath no Authority or Commission for so doing , nay , that is under a just and legal prohibition and restraint from the doing it at all , it is not preaching , but quite another thing , even what the Apostle calls it * beating the air . Whensoever a Commandment is limited to persons and places , that Command makes it a sin to them , if they leave the thing required undone ; and the not commanding , yea , forbidding , makes it a sin to others that shall doe it , because 't is the Precept that makes the thing to such persons , in such places , to be lawfull or sinfull . Wrath hath been revealed from Heaven on such , as have rashly adventured on a thing that in it self hath been very good , yet had no particular Command for it . This appears plainly in the case of † Vzzah . Though his intention was good , yet it belonged not to him to touch the Ark , for the charge and care thereof was committed to ‖ others . It is the Policy of Satan , if he cannot prevail with men to abide and abound in those things which are ( materially ) evil , but they will needs be doing good , then he will draw them on to doe that good unlawfully , without a calling to it or warrant for it . And it were well that People who are so easily misled by the specious pretext of good , were not ignorant of this Wile of the Devil , whereby he deceives simple souls , not a few . When we set upon the performance of any thing , it should not be enough to weigh with our selves how good it is , but to look what warrant we have to doe it . The manner of performances is to be regarded , as well as the matter : For God stands upon Circumstances as well as Duties . * It shall be then our righteousness , if we observe to doe all the Commandments before the Lord our God , AS HE HATH COMMANDED VS . Say we doe what is commanded , yet if we doe it not as he commanded us , it is not right in God's sight , who requires that a thing be not onely good , but also regularly performed . It is not the material goodness of the work , that will free us from sin , but the Command we have out of God's word for the doing it . Neither can we depend upon any promise for a blessing , when we have not God's Precept for the action . The promise of edification in faith , knowledge and holiness , is specially appropriated to the Ministry of that Person , who is regularly and orderly in God's ways , set over a Congregation . Christians own pastours have a more special dispensation of the Grace of God given them , to them-ward ; as St. Paul the Doctour of the Gentiles had , towards that People , of whom he was appointed the proper Minister . And ( saith Mr. Baines ) † If this were well considered it would cure in us that affectation of the confluence of strangers , when our hearts do not so fervently embrace our own Pastours . And it should instr●●● People to depend especially upon those who are set over them ; for these are they who are furnished from God in 〈◊〉 eminent manner , with grace towards them ▪ They are foolish sheep that know not the● own shepherds voice , and foolish People that know not their own Ministers . And in reason , whose Ministry may we think God will bless , either his , to whom the Flock is committed by himself ; who ‖ is over them in the Lord● whom * God hath made their overseer ▪ who have † the rule over them , watching for their Souls , as those that must give an account ? Or his , who runs before he is sent , who hath no lawfull call to the Congregation , ordinary or extraordinary ; who hath no relation at all to the Flock , ‖ whose own the sheep are not ▪ he having no charge of them , nor any account to make for them ( other than for his irregular intrusion amongst them , taking upon him to doe that he hath no right to doe , and for seducing them away from their own Pastour ) be his parts and qulifications otherwise Angelical , and his Doctrine never so Evangelical ? Pastours of Congregations are called * Christ's Ambassadours to their People . It is their Commission that makes their Embassie succesfull . Another , perhaps , may be of equal , or greater fitness for the Employment , but he onely that hath deputation for the service , is received and hath audience . Those that have no lawfull mission to a Congregation , but intrude themselves amongst them , may speak the truth , as well as they that have ; yet of him that acts by lawfull appointment , we may say , that he preacheth with Authority , and not like those that come in by stealth and usurpation , and have no other right there to preach , than what themselves have made . They are called † overseers . It is not for every man to oversee the estate of another ; they onely can do it , who by some Deed or Commission are impowered to undertake it . Nay ( which is a dreadfull Consideration ) they must so oversee the Flock ‖ that they may give an account for their Souls . Is there any such charge given to , or undertaken by those unsent teachers , who love to be heard and seen in exercising their parts , but not in taking cure or charge of Souls ? They are called * Stewards . It is not for any one to be a steward in another man's house , to feed the Family ; but for him onely whom the master of that house shall appoint . The ministerial parts performed by a lawfull Pastou● to his own Flock , are like † Iacob's blessing his Sons ; another man might have done it as rhetorically , and , perhaps , as affectionately , but not so effectually , because none had that Right● and Authority to doe it , as he . Of all acts , those that are done ex officio , by virtue of an office , and from a lawfull designation and appointment for the execution of that office , to , or for , such a Person or People , are under a more solemn assurance of a blessing ▪ It is no Solecism to say , God will hear● their Prayers , and bless their Pains , when he will neither hear , nor bless the Prayers or Pains of any else . My ‖ Servant Job shall pray for you ( saith God ) for him will I accept . Eliphaz and his two friends were good men , yet God would not give answer to them , but to Iob onely . See Gen. 20. 7. Es. 37. 4. Iam. 5. 14. If that place in * Matthew be urged , to prove a promise of a blessing to such preaching and meetings as are in question ; Where two or three are met together in my name , there am I present in the midst of them . I answer , that although I conceive the primary and principal Intent and Scope of our Saviour in that place , was not to speak of religious Meetings , for the preaching and hearing of his word ; but of the Meetings of Ecclesiastical Judges of the Jewish Sanhedrin in their Consistory ( as the Context doth declare ) yet because all God's promises are great and pretious , and we ought not to lose ought of them , but improve them to the utmost for his Glory and our Comfort ; therefore suppose it be taken and to be understood of religious Meetings also ( as 't is so applied by the Church of England in her Liturgy , yet to no other , but our Church-assemblies ) yet ( I say ) that text annexeth a Promise onely to such Meetings as are in Christ's Name . Now the meaning of that phrase is commonly expounded to be , at my Command . Nam in nomine Christi , idem est quod e●●authoritate . So our Saviour himself useth the phrase : † I am come in my Father's Name , id est , at his Command ▪ as he expounds it himself . ‖ This Commandment have I received from the Father . So St. Paul useth the phrase , * Now we command you brethren in the Name of our Lord Iesus Christ ; id est , by the Authority of our Lord Christ , committed unto us by him , as if Christ should command by ‖ us . So every inferiour officer amongst us , doth use the phrase , I require you in the King's Name , id est , by Authority derived from him . See Act. 4. 7. And should we extend the promise , without restraint , to other Meetings under pretence of religious Worship , than such as are grounded on Christ's Authority ; 1. Then we should make our own wills , fancies and affections , masters of our actions , and endeavour to bring down the presence of Christ to such irregular Conventions , as are altogether disagreeing with , yea contrary to his Will and Command , which were not onely absurd , but impious to attempt or think . 2. Then also may a Congregation of 1000 People , divide themselves ( contrary to good Laws of God , his Church and the Realm ) into 500 Couples , in so many several places , and in so many several forms of worship , and yet expect Christ's presence and blessing with them all , in ways so abominable to God , and so apparently destructive to his intire body the Church , which he hath purchased with his most pretious bloud . 3. Where were then the threatnings of his withdrawing from our Assemblies upon just occasion ? God hath said * Your Sabbaths , your Calling of Assemblies , I cannot away with , it is iniquity even your solemn Meetings ; my Soul hates them , they are a trouble to me , I am weary to bear them . And , I ‖ hate , I despise your Feast-days , I will not smell in your solemn Assemblies , i. e. I will not accept with Favour ( as I did Noah's * Sacrifice ) their solemn Assemblies . In another place the Holy Ghost useth the same expression , ‖ I will not smell the Savour of your sweet Odours . It is a Judgment ( saith Ainsworth ) opposed to that blessing promised in v. 12. I will walk among you . God threatens to deny his presence to their Assemblies , and one reason is given by a Divine of the Presbyterian Judgment ; * Because they were not any way of Divine institution , but of their own invention , and therefore all along they are called your or thine . Now shew me where Christ in all the Old or New Testament , doth either command , or allow any such Ministry , and attendance on it , as is in question , and then I shall acknowledge it to be the Ordinance of God , and that this promise belongs to it : but not till then . In the mean time I may well ( without any digression ) retort upon the objectours , and tell them , that in my Judgment , they are far out of the way , either of obedience to Christ's Command , or of hopes of enjoying his blessing promised , who in resorting to such kind of Meetings , for which they have neither a command nor promise , separate and withdraw themselves from the publick assemblies , and attendance on his worship and ordinances there , where God hath assured us of his presence and blessing , and whither he hath enjoyned us constantly to repair . For as that Minister , who shall upon any pretence whatsoever of his own forsake a Congregation over whom he was placed by God , and goe to another without any lawfull call , is like Ionah , who being sent by God to Nineve , sinned greatly in going to Tarshish , though he had preached never so duely and diligently there : So those People who in any measure neglect the publick , for those private assemblies , are like Micah , who in the time of the Iudges , when there was a publick Ministry in the place which the Lord had chosen for that purpose , instituted a private worship and ministry in his own house , a certain peculiar Levite being called and set apart for that work . And no wise man that shall reade his story , will think it safe to follow his example . Well may such a Person flatter himself in his course , and say in his heart , as he * Now I know the Lord will doe me good , seeing I have a Levite to my Priest. But ( as Iunius ) † hominis imperiti sermo est , & in pietate parùm instituti . That saying of his shews him to have but little wit , less religion , and that he was but in a golden dream or Fool 's Paradise all that while , though he thought himself wiser and in a better case than his neighbours . But this was done when there was no King in Israel , and every man did that which was right in his own eyes , otherwise so abominable an act could never have passed so clearly as it did . By such I would be soberly and soundly resolved of this demand . Are the People of England in their present state and condition ( assembling themselves together in publick places appointed for God's worship , under the teaching and ministry of their lawfull Pastors , that are set over them by Authority ) a true Church , or true Churches , or not ? If they say , no : they doe that which God ( blessed be his name ) hath not yet done , unchurch us ; and lay us under a judgment , which he hath not yet laid upon us , viz. a divorce from Iesus Christ. * Yet thou O Lord art in the midst of us , and we are called by thy name ; leave us not . † Through the infinite goodness of the most high , we have wherewithall to consute that unchristian and uncharitable judgment of theirs , since we have both the matter and the form of a true Church . The matter is a multitude of rational Creatures that profess saving truth contained in the word of God. Simon Magus and the Eunuch upon their profession , were admitted Members of the Church ; and Members do constitute the body . The form of a true Church is a gracious call into the dignity of the Children of God , so as that Christ becomes ●nited to them . As the form of a man ●s the Soul united to the body , so the ●orm of a Church , which is his body , 〈◊〉 Christ united to it . We have the ●ord and laws of Christ , and those he ●akes effectual for the convincing of ●ll , and conversion of some . And this 〈◊〉 an irrefragable argument to evince 〈◊〉 Church to be a true Church , even in the judgment of the Presbyteria● Divines themselves . For to those of the Independent way , that separated from them , these are their words ; * We beseech you to consider , whether ye did not receive the work of conversion from sin to God , which ye presume to be wrought in you , first of all in those publick assemblies from which ye now separate ? And if ye found Christ walking amongst us , how is it , that 〈◊〉 do now leave us ? If the presence 〈◊〉 Christ , both of his power and grace , be with us , why do ye deny your presence ? Are ye holyer and wiser than Christ ▪ Is not this an evident token , that we are true Churches and have a true Ministry , because we have the seal of our Ministry , even the conversion of many Sons and Daughters to God ? Doth not the Apostle † from this very ground argue the truth of his Apostleship ? 〈◊〉 it not apparent that our Ministers are sent by God , because their Embassage is made succesfull by God for the good of Souls ? Did ye ever reade of true conversion ordinarily in false Church ? Will the Lord concur with those Ministers he sends not ? Doth not the prophet say the quite contrary ? Jer. 23. 23. And therefore either renounce your conversion , or be converted from that great sin of separating from us . Again , where there are the infallible marks of a true Church , there is a true Church . But we have the infallible marks of a true Church , viz. the word of Christ truly taught , and his Sacraments rightly administred . First for the word of Christ. The Church is ( according to the proper signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a People called forth from the rest of the world ; * called to be Saints . Now the best note to know a People called , is by the voice calling ; this was ever an infallible mark of Christ's Church . First among the Apostles , who were called out from amongst others , by the word of Christ , to become followers of him . Then amongst others , as they were added to the Church , they were called by the word ; witness that great work of conversion wrought by the Ministry of St. Peter , † At one Sermon three thousand were severed from the rest of the world , and added to the Church . Next for the Sacraments , these rightly administred are certain marks of a true Church ; for they are the Seals set by God to his word , the signs of his Covenant , whereby he binds himself to be our God , and receives us to be his People . They are sure pledges of his love to us , which we really have , till we come actually to be possessed of perfect holiness and glory with Christ ▪ Whilst we have these blessed ordinances of his amongst us , his word truly preached , and his Sacraments rightly administred , it is not the rash censure of a few giddy heads , that can unchurch us . If they say we are a true Church then God is ever with us , ( Es. 45. 14. ) in our assemblies at all times , and in all parts of his worship . * Lo , I am with you always to the end of the world . An● † I will dwell in the● , and walk in them and will be their God , and they shall 〈◊〉 my People . Thence the Holy Ghost i● Scripture , calls the Church , ‖ his house the dwelling place of his Name , th● place where his honour dwells , the Presence Chamber of the great King , &c. And as the glory of the Lord did Sensibly appear in the Tabernacle , Exod. 40. 34. and in the Temple , 1 kings 8. 10. So doth it now in our Church-assemblies , as really and truly , though not as visibly , as then . * For if the Ministration of Death was glorious , how shall not the Ministration of the Spirit be glorious ? If the Ministration of Condemnation be glory , much more doth the Ministration of Righteousness exceed in glory . If that which is done away was glorious , much more that which remaineth is glorious . Now if God be present with , and in our assemblies , how dare any that are , or ought to be Members thereof , absent themselves ? Dare ye to withdraw at any time from God's presence , whose face at all times ye are † commanded to seek ? I speak not of his omnipresence , in regard of the immensity of his essence , which fills all places . God fills every place , and fills it by containing that place in himself . But I speak of that special presence , which he hath promised to afford to his Church , manifesting himself in that place and assembly more graciously , than elsewhere . If then we retain our Conjunction with Christ , why do ye refuse Communion with us ? May we not therefore justly charge you as guilty of making a Schism in the Body of Christ ? That we may , by your own Doctrine . For ( say the Presbyterian Divines ) * If the Apostle calls those divisions of the Church of Corinth , wherein Christians did not separate into divers formed Congregations , of several Communions , in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper , Schism , 1 Cor. 1. 10. may not your Secession from us , and profession that ye cannot joyn with us as Members , and setting up Congregations of another Communion be more properly called Schism ? And presently after they distinguish ( out of Camero ) of a twofold Schism , negative and positive . The former is when men do peaceably and quietly draw from Communion with a Church , not making a head against that Church from which they are departed : The other is , when persons so withdrawing , do consociate and draw themselves into a disitinct and opposite Body , setting up a Church against a Church , which Camero calls Schism by way of Eminency . Now if this were true Doctrine in those days , against those who were then concerned in it ; I know no reason why the space of a few years should so alter the case , but that it is as true now against themselves , who now doe what they then condemned in others , viz. not onely withdraw from our publick assemblies , but set up Church against Church . And therefore ( to use their own words ) Ye must not be displeased with us , but with your selves , if we blame you as guilty of positive Schism . And that is no small fault in the judgment of any sound Divine , but a far greater than the fault , upon which they pretend separation . The things for which they make a rent , are not so great a fault in the Church , as the want of Charity in them which prompts them so to doe . It is a sin of the first rate , and one of the greatest size that a Christian can commit , in the judgment of the Brethren of the Nonconformists themselves , though now it goes down gli● with too many of them , who not withstanding are obliged to the extirpation thereof , not onely by the common bond of Religion and Christianity , but also by the second Article of their solemn League and Covenant . taken with hands lifted up to the most high God ; wherein they rank it with Popery , Superstition , Heresie , Profaneness , and whatsoever is contrary to sound Doctrine and the power of godliness . Let the words of Mr. Baxter be noted as an evidence of this truth . * If the Scripture were Conscionably observed , men would take Church-divisions for a greater sin than Adultery or Theft . Mutinies and Divisions do more infallibly destroy an Army than almost any other fault , or weakness : and therefore all Generals do punish Mutineers with death , as well as flat Traytors . Our Union is our strength and beauty : commonly they that divide for the bringing in of any inferiour truth or practice , do but destroy that truth and piety , that was there before . I like not him that will cure the head-ach by cutting the throat ; yea , it is a greater sin than Murther ( saith Mr. Paget ) A Murtherer † killeth but one man or two , but a Schismatick goes about , as much as in him lies , to destroy the Church of God. Yea , it is worse to make a Schism in the Church , than to Sacrifice to an Idol , saith * Mr. Calamy out of St. Cyprian . And may Christians then play at sast and loose with the bonds of holy Communion at their pleasure ? St. Peter could say † Lord whither shall we goe ? thou hast the words of Eternal Life . Where this word is truly Preach●d in the way of Christ's appointment , and the rest of his worship celebrated accordingly , wo be to those that are not found there also . Christians in the pure and primitive times , did not take this Liberty in point of Church-fellowship , but ( by the acknowledgment of the Divines before mentioned , and Oh that their Practices now did not contradict their words then ) ‖ All such who professed Christianity , held Communion together , as one Church , notwithstanding the difference in judgment in lesser things , and much corruption in Conversation . Cain was the first that ever separated from the Church ; * he went out from the presence of God. God is every where , the meaning therefore is , from his Church , the place of his publick worship , which was then in his Father's Family . And will it be safe for any to follow such a President ? † The Apostle pronounceth a woe to them that walk in the way of Cain . Those that walk in his way , can expect no less than to arrive at the place whither he is gone before . And if ye would know who they are that so walk , the Apostle tells you , ‖ these are they that separare themselves . Pareus his gloss on the words are not unworthy observation : * Quia sibi ipsi f●●gunt peculiarem cultum , ideo sese segregant ab eorum Ecclesia ac coetu . They feign to themselves a peculiar way and manner of worship , therefore they will not joyn with us in ours , but withdraw from our assemblies ; as if he had purposely described the humour of the men of our times . However such may pretend to the Spirit , as if they were more Sanctified than their Brethren , yet the Apostle by infallible guidance , pronounceth them Sensual not having the Spirit . And that is the reason they keep the Unity of the Church no better . For ( as Fulgentius saith ) Tales † itaque faciles sunt ad divisionem , quia spiritum non habent , in quo uno membra Christi charam servant Spiritualiter unitatem . Such persons are prone to all divisions , because they have not that Spirit , in whom alone all the Members of Christ do Spiritually keep Unity among themselves , as a dear and pretious thing . As the Soul in man's Body doth cease to quicken any Member sundred from the Body , and the scattered bones in Ezekiel's Vision , received no life till they were incorporated and knit together in one by * Sinews , Flesh and Skin : so the Spirit of God , which is the Soul of this mystical Body , denies the derivation of Grace and Comfort , to those that separate themselves from it . If they say , we are a true Church , and that they and their Party separating from us and meeting in private assemblies , are a Church also , and so they do not separate and withdraw themselves from the Church . Then I say that their Church , in that case , refusing Communion with ours , is , ( at least ) a distinct Church from ours ; and so there are two Churches of England in this Nation . And so they make Christ to have two bodies distinct under one head ; which is contrary to sundry plain Texts of Scripture . * Though there be threescore Queens , and fourscore Concubines , and Virgins without number , yet my Dove , my undefiled is but one . † We being many are one body in Christ. And , ‖ As the body is one and hath many members , and all the members of that one body being many , are one body , so is Christ. Again , * There is one Body , one Spirit , one Hope , one Lord , one Faith , &c. And , † is Christ divided ? There cannot be two such opposite Churches in one Nation , but one of them must needs be an Harlot , and not the Spouse of Christ. And that their Church ( as they call it ) and not ours , is so , may easily be made to appear to any man that will vouchsafe to weigh matters in the balance of Reason and Judgment . The whole World is divided betwixt God and the Devil ; there is not a third Party that can challenge any share in the Race of mankind . All Societies and Companies of Men and Women in the world , are either the Church of Christ , or the Synagogue of Satan , Rev. 3. 9. * An assembly of Saints , or a congregation of evil doers , Psal. 26. 5. And that theirs is not the Church of Christ , appears thus : Those assemblies or congregations where there is no true and lawfull Pastor , nor true and lawfull Flock , are not the Churches of Christ , but of Satan : for ( as it hath been shewed before out of the Scriptures and Fathers ) † a lawfull Minister , and a Flock or Congregation of People lawfully committed to his charge , make up a Church : that is the definition of a particular Church . But their Churches ( as they call them . ) have neither true and lawfull Pastors , nor Flocks : therefore they are not the Churches of Christ , but the Synagogues of Satan , and Congregations of evil doers . That they have no true and lawfull Pastors , is ●lear . 1. Because many of them that head those unlawfull meetings and assemblies , were never ordained by Prayer and Imposition of hands , as by Gospel-Rules they ought to be , but are mere Lay-men that take upon them to preach and perform Ministerial Duties , that were never called thereunto . This is true not onely in the assemblies of the Quakers , but of others also , by what name soever they may be called , that separate from our Churches . I know it to be so in divers places . 2. Those of them that were ordained , are ( as to the execution of their Ministry committed to them in their Ordination during the time of their Non-conformity ) under a legal suspension by the highest and fullest Power and Authority of this Nation , to which we are all bound in Conscience to be in Subjection . 3. Suppose that neither of the former were true , yet they are not true and lawfull Pastors of those that flock after them , seeing they have not the Pastoral cure and care of the Souls of any of them committed to their charge by any that , under God , have Authority in the Church , but are commanded to contain themselves in quietness and silence . And that they have no true and lawfull Flocks in their Congregations appears in this , that their Assemblies & Congregations consist altogether of wandring Sheep that are gone astray from their own lawfull Pastors , and sinfully separated from the Congregations and Flocks , to which , of right , they belong , and gathered together into a Schismatical and separate meeting and Society , and so make up a Congregation of evil doers , and Synagogue of Satan . If this were rightly and seriously considered , I think it would startle the minds and shake the confidence of many of them , who bless themselves in their new-found way of Religion and Worship , boast of their number , and compass Sea and Land to make Proselytes , that at least , they might be equally the Children of Hell with themselves . If they say our Church is corrupt , we have that amongst us that we should not have , or , not that which we ought to have , I say then , First , Suppose it be so , ( which I think will yet require more pains than have yet been bestowed , to prove ) yet let them consider what Peter Martyr judiciously saith . * Non ob quamcunque maculam Christi Ecclesiam ita Excidere , ut Dei non amplius appelletur . Every little blemish in the face of a Church , cannot cast her off from being God's . The Church in Canticles is said to be * fair as the Moon ; which in the Hebrew Tongue is called † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lebanah , for her whiteness and bright shining : And yet the Moon is not so white , but still some spots remain therein , and even uncapable of illumination from the Sun. ‖ Coelum ipsum nulla serenitas tam colata purgat , ut non alicujus nubeculae flocculo resignetur . In the clearest Heaven some specled Clouds may be discerned . * Cum tota dicat Ecclesia quam diu hic est , dimitte nobis de●ita nostra , non utique hic est sine macula & ruga : So long as the whole Church is commanded to say , whilst she is in this World , forgive us our trespasses , she cannot be imagined to be altogether without spot or wrinkle . Rather they discover themselves to be most stained , to whom every small spot in the Church seems to be altogether intolerable . † Cum sub specie studii perfectionis , imperfectione● nullam tolerare possumus , aut in corpore aut in membi is Ecclesiae , tum diabolum nos tumefacere superbia & hypocrisi seducere moneamur . When under colour of perfection , ye can endure no imperfection either in the body or members of the Church ; you must be admonished that this your separation is caused by the Devil , who puffs you up with pride , and seduceth you by Hypocrisie . Secondly , We may not upon every slight ground ( to please a fond humour ) leave the Society of God's People in the Church , for sake the assembling of our selves together , as the manner of some is , or goe off from Communion with that Church whereof we are , or ought to be Members . When an Ulcer breaks out in any part of the body ( suppose the hand or the foot ) must that member presently be cut off , or not rather be cured and healed by the use of plasters and other wholsome medicines , or the pain and evil be endured with patience ●ntill nature hath tryed her skill , and ( as it will in short time ) conquered the malignity of the Distemper ? And shall we then presently make use of the knife , as soon as ever there ariseth some diversity of opinions in the Church , especially in matters that are circumstantial in Religion ? This were not Chirurgery , but Butchery . Nay , suppose the very substance and body of Religion were corrupted , and not onely some light errours in circumstances were maintained , but there were Heresie in Doctrine also , in this case we ought to be very tender of making a Schism , and look well to our selves with what mind and affection we doe it . Suppose a Malefactor be really guilty and hath deserved to dye , yet if the Judge condemn him out of cruelty of mind , envy or spleen , and not out of true love to justice and hatred of his sin , though the Sentence were for the matter of it never so just , yet he were most unjust in pronouncing of it ; so a separation from a Church though for just causes , yet would be most unjust and sinfull , if it be done out of malice or any evil respect or affection whatsoever . In such a case that is required of a Christian , which is required of a Chirurgeon , who when necessity forceth him to cut off a member , yet he doeth it unwillingly , with grief , and after trial of all lawfull ways and ●●eans to stop the evil , and to prevent the mutilation of the Patient . The property of true Christian Charity , is , * it rejoyceth not in iniquity , but in the truth . That is iniquity which is so diametrically opposite to Charity , which the Greeks call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , which is a vice that makes men not onely to rejoyce in the Calamity of others , but greedily to such in all evil reports of them , and rejoyce if they are true . Christian Charity , where it is , works the same mind and affection in us towards our neighbours as is in Parents towards their Children , who with joy admit of their commendation , but will not so easily believe any thing that tends to their disparagement , unless they either soe it with their eyes , or have good proof made for it ; and then , not without grief of heart . Faults in a Church call for our lamentation , not separation ; should God separate from a Christian Soul , because there is still some corruption of sinfull nature remaining in it , the condition of us all would be most miserable to Eternity . Did Christ separate from the Church of the Iews , and not hold Communio● with her , because she was not what she had , or ought to have been ? What the state of the Jewish Church in our Saviour Christ's time was , the Scriptures do abundantly shew . In it was a very corrupt Ministry , * blind leaders of the blind . They preach'd well enough ; but did not live accordingly , The High-Priests Office , which by God's Ordinance was to last during Life , was now become annual , and basely bought and sold † for money . The People were wicked , impenitent , haters and ●●●secutors of the Son of God. Their Doctrine was much corrupted and blended with false and Pharisaical ‖ glosses . Many superstitious Ceremonies were used , and urged more strictly * than any of God's Commandments . Church-discipline very much perverted ; † The Jews had agreed that if any did profess Christ , he should be excommunicated . An horrible abuse was crept into the place of God's Service : A Market , and ‖ Money-changing set up in the Temple of God. And yet for all this our Saviour made no separation from this corrupt Church , but communicated with them 〈◊〉 all parts of Divine Worship . In his Infancy he was admitted a Member of that Church * by Circumcision . At the Purification he was presented before the Lord in that Church , and † a Sacrifice offered for him according to the Law of Moses . When he came to riper years he constantly kept the Church , came ‖ to the Congregation to Divine Service , publick Prayers , and reading the Scriptures . He received the Sacraments in their Church . * Baptism , and † the Passover . Yea his conformity to the Iewish Church was not onely in Divin●● Institutions , but in Humane also ; as in his observation of the Feast of the Dedication of the Temple ( mentioned Ioh. 10 ) doth appear . He was so far from breaking the order or custome of that Church . as that he conformed to it in those things that were contrary to Divine Institutions . It was the ordinance of God that the Passover should be eaten by the Iews ‖ with their loyns girded , their shooes on their feet , and their staves in their hands because they were to eat it in haste . Standing was a posture of readiness for travell : and they used long Garments in those Countries , which would have been an hindrance to them , if they had not been trussed up . The Apostle seems to allude to this custome , when he saith * stand therefore having your loyns girded about . But because the Church of the Iews , being now safely escaped out of Egypt , had by long custome omitted and altered these Ceremonies , therefore our Saviour Christ would not break or alter the custome of that Church , but did as they did . He did not stand 〈◊〉 the Passover , but sate or used a leaning posture ( for so the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used by St. Matthew doth signifie ) as appears by the Evangelist . † When the even was come he sate down with the twelve . And all this to teach us that we ought to be tender of violating the ‖ customes of the Church ; not to grow into a prophane contempt or neglect of any part of publick worship , for every imperfection and blemish , nor to separate from a Church , though never so corrupt , so long as the Word , Sacraments , and Doctrine of Salvation may there be enjoyed . Corruptions of a Church are commonly by Divines distinguished into two sorts . They are either such as concern the matter of Religion , which the Apostle calls * demnable Heresies , in fundamental points of Faith and Holiness , which tend to the destroying of the very being of a Church . Or else such as concern the manner of Religion in circumstantials and ceremonials , which are matters of lower concern , and inferiour alloy : Such as ( to use the words of Learned Bp. Davenant ) Non continuo ad fidem fundamentalem spectant † sed ad peritiam theologicam , & fortasse ne ad hanc quidem , sed aliquando ad curiositatem theologorum : belong not to the fundamentals of Faith , but skilfulness in Divinity , and not to that neither , but rather to the curiosity of Divines . Now errours , even in fundamentals , may be in a Church upon a double account , ‖ either through infirmity and humane frailty , the best of us knowing but in part in this Life : God allows no separation in such a case . The Church of Galatia through infirmity , was quickly turned to another Gospel , and erred even in matters fundamental , holding justification by works , and was fallen to the observation of Iewish Ceremonies , which St. Paul calls beggarly Elements . Their Apostle was become their Enemy , and that for telling them the truth . He was afraid of them , lest all the labour he had bestowed amongst them , was in vain , and was fain to travel in birth with them again ; yet he owns them , and writes to them as a Church notwithstanding . Or else , vitioso affectu immorigeroe voluntatis , out of malice , when men know they doe amiss , and yet persist obstinately in so doing . In such a case separation may be with a good Conscience . When St. Paul had preach'd in the Synagogue of the Iews , and they would not believe , but began to blaspheme and speak evil of the ways of God , * then he withdrew and separated from them . So that it must be no small matter , that must be a sufficient ground to any one that means to keep a good Conscience , to warrant his withdrawing from the publick Congregation in any part of God's worship . If a man have not discretion , he may easily run himself into a great evil of sin , whilst he seeks to shun a light inconvenience ; and in avoiding that which he thinks to be superstition , he may soon become really Schismatical and prophane , which is * as if a man did flee from a Lion and a Bear met him , or went into the house and leaned his hand on the wall , and a Serpent bit him . Suppose there were some evil mixtures in our administration of Church-worship , yet ( in the judgment of the Presbyterian Divines themselves ) this is not a sufficient ground of a negative , much less of a positive separation ; For ( say they † ) the learned Authour before mentioned ( that is Camero ) tells us that corruption in manners crept into a Church , is not a sufficient cause of separation from it . This he proves from Matt. 23. 2 , 3. And he also gives this reason for it : Because in what Church soever there is purity of Doctrine , there God hath his Church , though overwhelmed with scandals . And therefore whosoever separateth from such an Assembly , separateth from that place where God hath his Church , which is rash and unwarrantable . And in the next Page , they say : He that will never communicate with any Church , till every thing that offendeth ●e removed out of it , must tarry till the great day of Judgment , when ( and not till then ) Christ will send forth his Angels and gather out of his Kingdom every thing that offendeth , and them that doe iniquity . And though to excuse themselves from the guilt of Schism , they that do separate , may pretend , that they make not a● open breach of Christian Love , wherein the nature of that great sin doth consist . Let their own words answer themselves , * We grant that to make up the formality of a Schismatick , there must be added uncharitableness , as to make up the formality of an Heretick there must be added obstinacy : But yet , as he that denieth a fundamental Article of Faith , is guilty of Heresie though he add not obstinacy thereunto to make him an Heretick ; so he that doth unwarrantably separate from a true Church , is truly guilty of Schism , though he add not uncharitableness thereunto , to denominate him a complete Schismatick . How unjustifiable then is the separation , which some make themselves and cause others to make , in these days from our Churches , which in their Constitution , for Doctrine , Discipline and Worship are the envy of Rome , and the admiration of the rest of the Christian World : where there is nothing Idolatrous in Worship , nothing Heretical in Doctrine , nor Antiscriptural in Discipline ; where there is nothing taught , believed , or done , but what is agreeable with the word of God , or not contrary thereunto : And ( to speak in the words of the learned and godly Dr. Henry More ) * a Church so throughly purged from whatsoever can properly be styled Antichristian , and is , I am confident , so Apostolical , that the Apostles themselves , if they were alive again , would not have the least scruple of joyning in publick worship with us in our common Assemblies . Separation from it , can be no less than the fruit of Pride or bitter Zeal , which tends to strife , † And where envy and strife is , there is confasion and every evil work . I have heard some Church-forsakers , when they have been told of their Apostasie and falling off from the Church whereof they were Members , excuse and please themselves in this , that they are not Apostates from the Faith , they hold the same Doctrine , and believe the same Creed we do . Though in that they doe no more than Papists doe . But in the mean time they consider not . That , 1. This is an improvement and aggravation of their sin , ( so far is it from excusing the fault ) to depart from a Church wherein they were born and baptized , and which ( by their own confession ) continues sound in the Faith. Separation is allowed by no Divines ( no not by the * Presbyterians themselves ) but either in case of cruel Persecution , damnable Heresie , or down right Idolatry . They then that separate from a Church where there is neither of these , have the greater sin . 2. That the hainousness of the sin of Schism doth not consist in renouncing the Faith , but in the breach of Christian Charity , without which † all Faith is nothing . A man may be very Orthodox in his Judgment , and yet be a damnable Schismatick if he break that Union which ought to be religiously kept amongst Christians , in God's worship especially . And because this breach is manifestly perfected in refusing due Ecclesiastical Communion together , therefore that separation is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , called Schism . 3. That the breach of the bond of Charity is equally as dangerous and damnable , as Apostasie from the Faith ; and as destructive and inconsistent to the nature and being of the Church one as the other . 4. What sufficient convincing proof can our Church-forsakers make , that they are not faln from the true Faith , as well as from Christian Charity , seeing they are subdivided into so many severall Parties and Sects , some whereof ( and not the smallest number , viz. the Quakers ) are totally apostatized from all Christianity ; others are faln in part , as the Anabaptists , Antinomians , &c. And those of them that do now and then come to Church ( perhaps because they cannot tell how to dispose of themselves otherwise ) studiously absent themselves from the profession of our Faith contained in the Creeds ; and if any of them chance to be there at that time , yet they willfully refuse to observe and obey that godly and laudable command and custome of the Church , grounded on good authority of God's word , to stand up to their Belief . 5. If they are not yet quite faln from the Faith , yet their Schism and departure from the Church , * is a fair step towards it ; where are they likely to stay ( unless God marvellously stop them ) who are departed from his house ? The Prodigal Son 's leaving his Father's Family was the first step to all that lewd course of Life that afterwards he took . The Donatists of old , did not at first dissent in matters of Faith from the Catholick Church , but their Schism did soon produce Heresie ; as an Ulcer or Wound being inflamed doth soon beget a Fever . In the mean time whatever they esteem themselves , or are esteemed of others to be , they are indeed no more true Members of the Church , than Tares or Chaff are part of the Wheat , or than Mutineers are part of an Army . * Haeretici & Schismatici non sunt ex vera Ecclesia , sed tantummodo Ecclesiae immisti , sicut & excrementa sunt quidem in corpore , sed non de corpore . Alsted . Lexic . Theol. p. 359. Now whilst I write these things , I weep : mine eye , mine eye , runneth down with water ; I cannot refrain my self but must cry out , alas , alas , for my dear mother the poor distressed , distracted , and divided Church of England ; I will bewail thee with the weeping of Iazer , I will water thee with my tears , my bowels shall sound like a harp for thee , and my inward parts like pipes . That thine own Children , like Iacob and Esau , should so jar and disagree in their Womb , as to endanger the very life of her that bore them , by their strugling . What , Brethren , have we not all one God , one Christ , one Spirit , one Baptism , one Scripture , one hope of Eternal Salvation ? And can we not close and communicate together in the Worship and Service , of that one blessed Creator , mercifull Saviour , and most sweet Comforter ? Are our differences about I know not what , grown to such an height , that we cannot goe to Church together , joyn in one confession of Sin , profession of Faith , Prayer , each with , and for other , hear the same Scriptures read and preached , and sit together at the same Table , partake of that same heavenly Feast , to which we are altogether most lovingly invited ? So great is the crime of our present Age in this , that Posterity shall never be able to add to it . Oh tell it not in Gath , publish it not in the Streets of Ashcalon , lest the Daughters of the Philistines rejoyce , lest the Daughters of the uncircumcised triumph . What will very Pagans say , when they shall see Christians thus divided ? As Clemens Alexandrinus brings in the Heathen exprobrating our Religion for untrue , * Quia omnis secta Christianismi titulum sibi vendicat , tamen alia aliam execratur & condemnat ; because every Sect challengeth to it self the Title of true Christianity , yet one curseth and condemneth another . What can they otherwise think , but that the God and Christ whom we all pretend to serve , is ( what he abhors to be ) the authour of confusion ? Oh what Musick is this in the Ears of Papists to hear of our discords ? Did Herod and Pontius Pilate agree as friends to crucifie Christ , and shall Christians that profess themselves to be his Members , disagree as mortal Enemies , about their Service of him ? Oh Religion , Religion ! Hast thou not Enemies enough abroad in the World , that seek thy destruction , but thy deadliest wound must be received in the house of thy friend● Like Ioseph thou art basely sold by thine own Brethren , when thou art bringing them necessary food : like Sampson , thou art betray'd into the hands of the Philistines by those that pretend zeal for thee ; and like thy blessed Master , thou art delivered up to thy mortal Foes by thine own treacherous Disciples : what Ocean can furnish mine eyes with tears enough to pour out , for the scandal and matter of rejoycing , that these things do give to thine adversaries ; and for thy much feared ruine that this portends ! Alas , Alas , that those who pretend much tenderness in lesser matters , should make no Conscience at all of endeavouring thy Preservation and Prosperity , by keeping the unity of the Spirit in the bond of Peace ! What shall I say of those Men , but as our Saviour of his Enemies , Father , forgive them , for they know not what they doe . The Lord open their eyes that they may see , and perswade Japhet to dwell in the Tents of Shem. Oh all ye my Brethren , that make an unchristian separation from the Society of your Christian Friends and Neighbours in the publick worship of God , especially you , to whom I stand nearest related , I beseech you in the bowels of our common Saviour , do not thus give advantage to the adversaries of our Religion , to endeavour and hope for the speedy overthrow both of us and it ; and in the mean time to laugh in their sleeves at our divisions , saying , there , there , so would we have it . * I beseech you , Brethren , in the name of our Lord Iesus Christ , that ye all speak the same thing , and that there be no Schisms amongst you , that ye be perfectly joyned together in the same mind , and in the same judgment . † If there be any Consolation in Christ , if any comfort of Love , if any fellowship of the Spirit , if there be any bowels of Mercies , fulfill ye my joy , that ye be like minded , having the same love , being of one accord , of one mind . Let nothing be done through strife or vain glory , but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves . It is promised as a blessed Fruit of the Gospel , ‖ the envy of Ephraim shall cease , and the adversaries of Judah shall be cut off ; Ephraim shall not envy Judah , and Judah shall not vex Ephraim ; but they shall fly upon the shoulders of the Philistines , toward the West , they shall spoil them of the East together , they shall lay their hands upon Edom and Moab , and the Children of Ammon shall obey them . Oh that all animosity and prejudice were banished from the borders of our hearts , that so meeting together by Troops ( with primitive Concord * ) in the publick places of our Assemblies , being banded together with a kind of holy Violence , we may with one mind and one mouth , lay Seige to the throne of Grace , and give God no rest ( such Forces are to him most acceptable ) till he fulfill this gracious promise , that we perish not in our divisions . Lord grant that all they that confess thy holy name , may agree in the truth of thy holy word , and live in unity and godly love through Iesus Christ. Amen . ARGUMENT . IV. THat cannot be the Ordinance of God , conducing to the Salvation of Souls , which is not onely contrary to good and wholsome Laws ; destructive to Gospel-Order ; and destitute of Divine Promise ; but is also contrary to Gospel-commands . For God is not contradictory to himself , instituting or ordaining that in one place of his word , which he forbids in another ; but throughout the whole Scripture he reveals one constant , and one uninterrupted Tenor of sacred truth . But the practice in question is contrary to sundry Gospel-commands ; as will easily be made out by instancing in two or three , instead of others . The first I shall mention is that in St. Peter * Let none of you suffer as a Murtherer , or as a Thief , or as an evil doer , or as a busie-body in other Mens Matters . The word in the Original is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , which in the proper and genuine construction of it , signifies † a busie Bishop in another Man's Diocess ; or a busie Presbyter in another Man's Parish , that takes upon him to meddle in another Man's Cure , and to be doing in matters that are committed to another Man's Charge ; that is so well at leisure , and hath so little to doe of his own , that ( according to the Proverb ) He thrusts his Sickle into another Man's Harvest . The Apostle reckons such a one among Murtherers and Thieves , and other evil doers , that so he may easily be known what he is , by such as the Holy Ghost sorts with him . Now Murtherers and Thieves and other Malefactors are made the Companions of such , who without a special concession , or commission , undertake to meddle in other Mens Parishes , with the Souls not committed to their Care and Charge ; and the Apostle gives equal Caveat against them all . I know not therefore how such busie-bodies can acquit themselves of the other two sins also mentioned in this black roll . Of the latter , their guilt seems to be too evident , in taking up wandring Sheep from their Folds , when they ought rather to send them home to their own Shepherds : in setting their mark upon them , owning them for theirs , and calling them by the name of their Church , when as in truth they have no more Property or Interest in them , than the Emperour of Vtopia hath in the Pleiades : or the poor Athenian , in Horace , had in the Ships which he saw on the Sea , and called his own , though he had no other right to them , than what his extravagant and distempered fancy did create . For what warrant have they to meddle with other Mens Flocks ? Of the former , ( I fear also ) they will scarce be found altogether guiltless . For truly the Souls of their Proselytes , after they have been their followers a while , seem to be so mortally poisoned with Schism and Separation , profane contempt and neglect of the publick worship and ordinances of God , with despising of all Authority , good Laws , and Government , and many other dangerous evils ; and so metamorphosed , that from being Sheep ( as before they seemed to be ) they turn Wolves , and are ready to worry their own Shepherds : as is found true by too sad experience in all places where these men intrude themselves . The Apostle doth elsewhere reckon up idleness , as another Companion of this sin . * They learn to be idle , wandring about from house to house , and are busie-bodies . Again , † Working not at all , but are busie-bodies . And indeed this is the Root from whence this vice springs . 'T is true ( in the former place ) the Apostle makes it muliebre vitium , the womens sin ; but it is no wonder to see idlers of the other Sex also , to become esseminate , and medlers in other folks matters , when they have none of their own to be doing about . An idler is well at leisure , and if he will not serve God in his own station , rather than he shall doe nothing , Satan will find him employment , in setting him to thrust his Sickle into his Neighbours Corn. * They made me keeper of the Vineyards , but mine own Vineyard have I not kept . Here are Vineyards opposed to her own Vineyard ; false Churches , to true . For † The Vineyard of the Lord of Hoast ▪ is the house of Israel , and the men of Judah his pleasant Plant. When men keep not their own Vineyard , the keeping whereof is committed to them of God , the Spirit that works in the Children of disobedience , will set them to plant and keep Vineyards of his , ‖ The Vine whereof is the Vine of Sodom , and of the Fields of Gomorrah ; their Grapes are Grapes of Gall , their clusters are bitter . What account these Husbandmen will make hereafter , to him that is the Lord of the Vineyard , for such kind of dealing , I wish they may in time seriously consider , e'er it be too late so to doe . Neither may we omit to observe how the Apostle in the afore quoted place , doth ( as it were ) unchristian such a busie Person , and seems to make him no better than a Pagan or Infidel . For he puts a vast difference betwixt the sufferings of a busie Presbyter , and those of a Christian. * If a Christian suffer , let him not be ashamed , but let him glorify God in this behalf . But - if such a busie-body suffer ( as 't is as much pity he should goe scotfree as any of his Mates in the Text ) he hath as great cause to be ashamed as a Thief or a Murtherer . The Second Gospel-command I shall instance in , is that of St. Paul to the Thessalonians . † Study to be quiet , and doe your own business . Quietness is here enjoyned under the notion and quality of an Art or Science ; for we are commanded to study it . ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , seek with an holy ambition , thinking it an honour to live in peace . The quietness there commended to our ambitious endeavour , I conceive , to import , not a quietness from motion , but from commotion or troubling of others ; a contented calm conversation , opposite to tumultuous turbulence , and restless intermedling with things wherein others are concerned . But how shall we attain to be masters of this Art of quietness ? The means most available that way , the Apostle prescribes in the next words , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to doe our own business , letting other mens matters alone to themselves . For a man then not to content himself with his own affairs , but to mix himself with other mens ; and without any lawfull appointment or allowance , to thrust himself into another's Place and Employment , is contrary to that quietness which Christians are to study , a manifest breach of this great Gospel-command , and consequently inconsistent with the ordinance of God. A Third Evangelical precept , is that of our blessed Saviour . * Whatsoever ye would that men should doe unto you doe ye even so to them . It is a principle both natural and divine , enjoyned by our heavenly Law-giver , as a ground and rule of all equity amongst men . Lactantius thus comments on it : Radix & omnis fundamentum aequitatis est illud : vide ut ne facias ulli quod pati nolis , sed alterius animum de tuo metieris . This is the root and foundation of all equity for a man to be carefull no to doe that to another , which he would not suffer himself ; but to measure another man's mind by his own . Now I appeal to the hearts and consciences of those Ministers , that thrust themselves now into other mens Congregations and Parishes , and there in private houses gather together a company of disciples and followers of the more giddy and unstable sort of People , ( for such they are for the most part , that not content with the publick labours of their own Pastors , flock to private Conventicles ) and set up a course of Preaching and other Ministerial Acts : whether , if they were Pastors of Congregations ( as sometimes they were ) and had a charge of a flock of God's People committed to them ( for whose Souls they and none else , must be accountable ) they would take it well , or permit it ( if they could otherwise help it ) that a stranger should thrust himself into their Parishes , and lead away a number of their People to private Assemblies in corners , to a dependence on them for teaching , and other duties , which they obtrude upon them as the worship and service of God , even to the forsaking and loathing of that , which is publickly established , for waiting on them in private ? And whether , when those men were in their Pastoral charges , and in the late time , Anabaptists , Familists , and other Sectaries , did the like , as they themselves now doe , ( set up private Conventicles in several Towns and Parishes ) they did not account themselves much injured thereby , and made their Pulpits sound loud against it , nay , oppose it by all means they possibly could ? Which is a truth sufficiently known to all that have been hearers of them , or know their practices . Neither will it suffice them to say , those whom they then opposed were Persons heterodox in their judgments , and corrupt in their opinions . For , 1. So may these House-creeping Preachers be also , for ought any one knows ▪ If it be sound Divinity they Preach , it is avowable , and publication is a fair Argument of truth . Truth seeks no corners : it is onely ashamed to be hidden ; as the Sun to be clouded or eclipsed . The desire of Secre●ie and Privacy renders their Doctrines suspicious of falshood and errour . In the dark , gross faults are not perceived ; and they are evil-doers onely that are said by our Saviour * to hate the light . While men doe nothing but well , they need not conceal and hide their doings . The very Heathen ( as a Divine of ours observes ) did worship their Gods sub dio , without Roofs or Coverings † in a free openness ; and where they could , in Temples made with Specular Stone , that was transparent as Cristal , so as that they that walked without in the Streets , might see all that was done within . And even nature it self taught the natural man , to make that an Argument of a man truly Religious , aperto vivere voto ; that he durst pray aloud , and let the world hear what he asked at God's hands , which duty ( saith he ) is best performed when we joyn with the Congregation in publick Prayers . St. Austin hath made that note upon the Donatists that they were clanculary , clandestine Divines , Divines in corners . And in Photius we have such a note almost upon all Hereticks ; as the Nestorian was called Coluber , a Snake , because though he kept in the Garden , in the Church , he lurked and lay hid to doe mischief . And truly so long as the Preaching of the Gospel is not persecuted , and there is no prohibition to the contrary , as ( * sometimes there was ) it seems to me to be contrary to the very nature of it ( herein differing from the Law , that it is not confined to any one Nation or Place , nor is subject to ( † bonds or restraint ) to be shut up in private houses , and taught in secret , and not rather to be published in Churches and open Places of free and common resort . The command to the Apostles was ‖ Go stand and speak in the Temple to the People all the words of this Life . And accordingly was their Practice , Act. 9. 20. Act. 13. 14. 44. 'T is true the godly in times past , had their private Meetings , in Deserts , Mountains , Dens , and Caves of the Earth . But the case is not alike with us , as with them . The times then were of most bloudy Persecution , when neither Preacher nor Professour escaped the Fire ; and therefore were enforced to conceal themselves , and privately to enjoy those Comforts , and discharge those Duties and Exercises of Religion , which they could not publickly be suffered to doe . But those who set up and frequent private Meetings now , may enjoy the preaching and reading of the Word , prayers to God , confession of Sin , profession of Faith , and benefit of the Sacraments , in the publick Assemblies of the Saints : Yea , they are not onely allowed , but commanded by Authority so to doe , but they will not . Those Teachers then that in these Halcion days of the Gospel creep into corners to vent their Doctrines , discover themselves to be , either , First , Seditious and Schismatical , seeking to make Parties and Divisions in the Church . Or , Secondly , Proud and Arrogant , preferring their own Opinions and Doctrines , Assemblies and Persons , before all other . Or , Thirdly , False and Erroneous ; for all damnable Heresies , and Doctrines of Perdition , which pervert and destroy Souls , are thus brought in underhand privily , by such as creep into the Church of God by stealth . At least , they are destitute of that means of justification and defence of the truth , which our Saviour Christ had , and which all Christ's Ministers in a setled Church ought to have , viz. to appeal to the publick Audience . * That which is publickly Preached , may be proved and tryed , but not so well that which is taught in obscurity . 2. What the Judgments and Opinions of these Men have been , and that in all those things wherein the Peace of the Church , and the Salvation of Souls of Christians are concerned , I mean the Doctrine , Discipline , and Worship , as it stands established in the Church of England , the World hath had sufficient knowledge and experience , by the late bloudy Wars and Persecutions raised thereabout . 3. Lastly , The question is not ( as hath been said ) de facto , what Doctrine these men deliver in their private Conventions , but de jure , what right they have to Preach any , in other Mens Parishes , as they doe . Such a Person then , whosoever he be , that doeth that to others , which he would not have done to himself , nay , which he hath opposed and disliked in others , is ( as the Apostle calls him ) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ( * condemned of himself , as sinning wittingly , and wilfully spurning against a known truth sparkling and shining in his Conscience . The waiting on such Mens Ministry is so far from being the Ordinance of God , that he commands all men to † avoid them . ARGUMENT . V. THat cannot be the Ordinance of God for the working of Grace , that hath no Scripture President , or warrantable Example , to ground it on . For all the Ordinances of God , of this kind , besides his Mandate , have also their exemplification in Scripture , God ( ordinarily ) working Grace in the hearts of Men , then , as he doth now . But this private and house-preaching , by an intruder , in a constituted Church , where there is a Preaching Minister established , hath none . I deny not , but it may be lawfull in some Cases , to have all the parts of God's Worship used in a private House . As , 1. In case of infirmity of Body , when People are not able to come to Church . Ecclesiastical History tells us , that in the primitive times , divers of the new converted Christians were Baptized , some in Prison ; as appears in the story of Basilides in * Eusebius . And the sick in their beds ; as † Cyprian declares at large . And if any were hindered by Sickness that they could not partake of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper with the Church , it was sent home to them by a Priest or Deacon , if it might be ; if not by some other . As appears by the example of Serapion , in an Epistle of Dionysius Bishop of Alexandria , to Fabius . ‖ 2. In time of Persecution , when the doors of God's House are shut up against us , so as that we cannot have free access to it , or liberty to joyn together with the Congregation in Prayers , hearing the Word , and receiving the Sacraments ; as it was in the days of King * Ahaz . Thus Victor reports that in the Persecution by the Vandals , the Congregations of Christians in Africa , being through the vastations of War deprived of their Churches , did hold their Assemblings together for Divine Worship , whereever they could . And the same Authour tells us , that because of the rage of the Arian Hereticks , the Orthodox Christians had their Meetings in private Houses . Or in such other like Cases of special necessity . Yet our Saviour Christ in the Iewish Church , as , before he was a Preacher , his custome was to frequent the publick Assembly in * the Synagogue every Sabbath-day ; so , after he set upon the execution of that Function , he never used to Preach privately in Houses . Hear what he saith himself , when the High-Priest asked him of his Disciples and Doctrine , † Iesus answered him , I spake openly to the World : I ever taught in the Synagogue and in the Temple , whither the Iews always resort , and in secret have I said nothing . His words are plain ; yet because with some Men , Fancy and Affection do prevail over their Judgments and Reason ( according to that saying of St. Austin , * periit siquidem judicium , postquam res transiit in affectum ; & nostram qualemcunque quia nostra jam facta est , praevalere volumus sententiam ) Therefore I shall endeavour to clear the truth of our Saviour's Speech in that saying of his to the High-Priest ; and shew , that he was always a publick orderly Preacher , and never a private irregular Conventicler . And though the contrary could be proved , yet it would make nothing for the irregular Practice of some in this Age whom I am disputing against , seeing the question is of such Persons onely , as have an ordinary calling to the Ministry ( whereas our Saviour Christ's was extraordinary ) in a setled Gospel-Church ( whereas the Iewish-Church was in Christ's time expiring , and the Gospel-Church beginning , ) and are intruders into other Mens Charges and Congregations , as our Saviour neither was , nor could be , seeing he was the supreme Lord of his Church , and Heir of all things . In those words of his , First ( saith he ) I spake 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , openly . The word properly signifies freedom and liberty of Speech ; which Piscator thus explains * Cum quis omne id dicit quod ad rem pertinet , nihil veritus offensionem eorum , quibuscum loquitur . When a Man speaks that which properly pertains to the matter in hand , not fearing though it offend those to whom he speaks . Oftentimes in Scripture it signifies , o●enly . And in this place Tremelius renders it by apertè , and Beza by palam ; both openly . So that our Saviour professeth here , that his Doctrine , as it was heavenly truth , and delivered without fear of danger , or hatred of Men , or persecution of the World ; so not in a Corner or Conventicle , but openly and in publick . Secondly , I spake ( saith he ) not to a few Select Persons , to a gathered Church , but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to the World , i. e. To all sorts of Men in the World , without any difference or distinction , either of Nation , Place of State , even to as many as would come to hear me . Though indeed for the most part he Preach'd in Iudaea and Galilee ( whence he was called † a Minister of the Circumcision ) and saith , ‖ that he was not sent , save unto the lost Sheep of the house of Israel : yet doubtless sometimes he Preached to a promiscuous Company both of Iews and Gentiles , without making any difference , Matt. 15. 21. Thirdly , I taught , saith he , in the Synagogue . There was one onely Temple among the Iews , and that was at Ierusalem : but as in other Cities and Towns of the Iews , so also in the Metropolitan City , besides the Temple , there were Synagogues ; which were publick places appointed for Prayers , Sermons , Reading , and exposition of the Law and the Prophets to the People . And in the Synagogues at Ierusalem , and other Towns and Cities , Christ did most frequently and constantly Preach , as the Scriptures do abundantly testifie , Matt. 4. 23. Matt. 13. 53 , 54. Matt. 21. 23. Matt. 9. 35. Matt. 12. 9. Mark 1. 21. Mark 6. 2. Luk. 4. 16. 21. and 44. Luk. 6. 6. Ioh. 6. 59 , &c. Fourthly , He saith , I not onely taught in the Synagogues , but in the Temple , the most solemn and publick Place . The Temple at Ierusalem was the place where the Priests did offer daily Sacrifices , and taught the People ; to which , thrice in the year , all the Males , from all the Coasts of Iudaea , were to resort . In this Temple did our Saviour Christ very frequently Preach , Matt. 21. 23. Luk. 19. 47 , &c. Fifthly , I taught , saith he , where the Iews always resort ; where there was a full and free Concourse of all the Nation of the Iews , and many Gentiles also , from all Parts and Quarters of Iudaea . Lastly , And in private , saith he , I have said nothing . As if he had purposely and expressly denied himself to be , what they were apt to charge him with , a private , seditious , and Schismatical Conventicler . 'T is true , that sometimes , through so great a resort of People to him , that neither the Synagogue nor Temple could hold them , he was fain to take * a Mountain for his Pulpit . Sometimes being not able to stand quiet , for the throng of People that crouded him , he retreated to † a Ship , that he might be the better heard , and taught the People from thence . Yet all this was publickly and openly to the World. As for Religious discourse with his Disciples , or others , in private Houses , either by way of explanation , or repetition of his publick Sermons , that we deny not , but he often used it . For we reade that when he was * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alone , they that were about him with the twelve , asked him of the Parable . But as for substance of Doctrine , it was allways publick . He never spake privately to his Disciples , or others , but they were the same things which he Preach'd publickly . He spake not other things to them in private , than what he spake publickly , but in another manner . And therefore even to that exposition of his Doctrine , which he made privately to his Disciples , he adds † Is a Candle brought to be put under a bushel , or under a bed ? And not to be set on a Candlestick ? For there is nothing hid that shall not be manifested ? q. d. these Mysteries of the Kingdom of Heaven are therefore revealed unto you , not that ye should Preach them in Corners , but to the whole World. As for that place of St. Mark ‖ which seems to speak of Christ's Preaching in a private House ; though it be craftily urged on ignorant People , yet if rightly understood , it cannot make ought against what hath been said . For I demand , was it a truth our Saviour Christ said , I always taught in the Synagogues and in the Temple , and in private I have said nothing , or was it not ? To say the latter , were no less than blasphemy , and to give him the lye , who is the God of truth , who knew no * sin , neither was guile ever found in his mouth . If it was a truth ( as it must needs , without monstrous impiety , be acknowledged to be ) then he ever taught in the Synagogues , and in the Temple , and in private he said nothing . The occasion of it was , his being called in question for his Doctrine ; his answer to which plainly declares , that as for substantials of Evangelical Doctrines , he ever taught them openly to the World in the Jewish Synagogues and Temple . Otherwise it would have been absurd for our Saviour to have said as he did † to Pilate , why askest thou me of my Doctrine ? ask them that heard me : Behold they know what I have said . For Pilate could not ask the Iews that were then present of any thing that he had said in private , seeing they were none of his private Companions or Followers . If therefore there be any seeming Antilogy in any other Scripture , it is not so in reality , but appearance ; it may seem so to our weakness , but it is not so in it self . For the Holy Ghost who is the spirit of truth in one place , is so throughout all the Scripture , without any real contradiction to it self , any where . Therefore to that place of St. Mark I have two things to answer . First , our English translation in that phrase ( he preached the word unto them ) doth not properly nor genuinely answer the Original Greek : which is , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , he spake to them ; or as Beza renders it , loquebatur eis sermonem , he made a speech to them . And Tremelius , loquebatur cum eis sermonem , he talked or discoursed with them . Doubtless about Gospel-truths and Heavenly matters . When ever our Saviour Christ preach'd , or spake Sermon-wise , the Scripture useth other words to express it by , as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to teach . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to preach or publish as an Herauld , in open place , in the hearing of a multitude : or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to preach the Gospel . But as for the word here used by the Holy Ghost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , it is never used in Scripture properly and strictly to signifie to preach ; but to speak , talk , or discourse ; which differs much from preaching . For though it be true , that whosoever preacheth , speaketh ; yet it is not true that whosoever speaketh , preacheth . In all Languages there have ever been held a difference betwixt speaking and preaching . Solius sacerdotis est praedicare , loqui autem communis vulgi . Yea it is observed by the most skillfull in that Language that this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 amongst Greek Authours , is still used for the worst kind of speaking or talking . But in the New Testament indeed , it is used in a better sense , but never properly and strictly for , to preach ; but to speak as we do in common talk or discourse . When the Devil speaketh a Lye he speaketh it of his own , Joh. 8. 44. When I was a Child , I spake as a Child . 1 Cor. 13. 11. Speak the truth every man to his neighbour . Eph. 4. 25. And in many other places we have the same word used , which were most absurd to render by the word , preach . So that all that can be rationally or certainly gathered from that saying of St. Mark , is no more but this : That our Saviour Christ seeing such a multitude of people flock about him , took an occasion to fall into a religious discourse with them , and to talk with them of divine and heavenly matters : whether it were by minding them , of what he had publickly thaught , or explaining his Pulpit-doctrines to them , we need not much trouble our selves to inquire . But suppose he did preach ( though it was not privately , but openly enough to the World , as any one that looks into the history , as it is recorded by the Evangelists , may easily perceive ) in that house , or any else ( as by his Divine prerogative he might doe what he would , and that which every private Minister is not bound to follow him in ) yet how it can be made use of to countenance those , that set up a course of house-preaching , and that in other mens Parishes , where there are Preaching Ministers established by Law , and where they have no manner of allowance or Authority so to doe ( as our Saviour Christ had ) nay being forbidden by Authority ( as he was not ) I do not understand . As for speaking to or with the people , in that house or any other ; or making use of that , or any other private meeting , either in separation from , or competition with , much less in opposition to , the publick Ordinances of God then in use ( as our Conventicles now-a-days are used ) that was far from our Saviour's meaning or practice , who improved that , and all meetings and occasions , in subordination and direct subserviency to the Synagogue-service and Temple-worship of the Jewish Church . And that Christ should be a publick , and not a private house-preacher , the Scriptures did foretell long before his coming : By the Prophet Esay . * I have not spoken in secret , in the dark places of the earth . And by Solomon † wisedom crieth without , she uttereth her voice in the streets , she crieth in the chief place of Concourse , in the opening of the gates , in the City she uttereth her words . All which was spoken of Christ , who is the Wisedom of God , ‖ in whom are hid all the treasures of wisedom and knowledge . And it is observable what Iunius notes upon those words : She cried in the chief place of Concourse ; ubicunque est maxima frequentia , sumpta l●●cutio à concionum ritu . The form of speech is taken from the rite , order , and approved custome of Sermons , which were ever publick . * For things are said to be preach'd , not in that they are taught , but in that they are published in open hearing of all ; saith Mr. Hooker . Thus it appears our Saviour Christ was no private Conventicler , or house● creeping Preacher . He disclaims it in himself , and disallows it in his servants● whom he forewarns not to seek him in Corners . † If they shall say unto you behold he is in the desert ( among those that withdraw themselves from the publick worship ) goe not forth : Behold he is in the secret Chambers , believe it not . q. d. When men shall tell you , in such an House , Parlour , or Chamber , there is one that holds forth Christ most sweetly , let us goe hear him ; goe not forth , believe it not . For what sweet Doctrine of Christ , his Person , or Offices , can you hear there , which you cannot or may not hear in the publick ? Why then will you baulk the way of God's appointment , and seek Christ in ways of your own invention ? Now it is a wonder , that such as will pretend to Christ's example in circumstantials of the smallest sort , as gestures , vestures , and such like ; yet will take boldness wilfully and constantly to swerve from his pattern in matters of such weight , as concern mens Eternal Salvation . Neither did the Apostles of Christ after him , ever ( as the Persons in question ) thrust themselves into the places and charges one of another ; But as the World was divided amongst them ( to whom they were to preach the Gospel ) so they did not intrude into one anothers line . They did not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , meddle with the cure of Souls , committed to the care and charge of others , lest God should say unto them , who required this at your hands ? This is plain from the words of the Apostle * we will not boast , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of things without our measure , or not measured out to us . † Significat regiones quas Deus nostrae praedicationi non destinavit , nec admensus est . He means those Countries which God hath not measured out , nor appointed them to preach unto . 'T is likely the false Apostles were wont to glory that they had been Itinerants , and travelled throughout all parts of the World , preaching the Gospel . But ( saith St. Paul ) I will glory onely of this , that I have contained my self within those Limits and Bounds which God by his providence hath set me . He hath appointed me such a portion of his People to preach unto , and * nihil aliud appetam , vel mihi sumam . I will desire no more , nor take upon me to meddle with any more . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , but according to the measure of the rule which God hath distributed to us . By the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ( which properly signifies † a line to measure out Land , to every owner his proper portion ) the Apostle understands ( by a Metonymy ) a certain quantity and portion of God's Field , the Church , in the tilling and manuring of which , he was to labour . And ( saith the ‖ Apostle ) we stretch not our selves beyond this measure of ours . q. d. I do not meddle or make to preach in any of those places , where I have no right so to doe ; nor to till that Field that is appointed for another man to labour in ; nor to plant the Gospel in those Countries , which God hath committed to another man's care and pains . God divided the World amongst the Apostles , distributing to every one of them a certain portion of his people , to preach the Gospel unto , measuring it out unto them , as it were , by line . As the Land of Canaan was divided among the twelve tribes of Israel , the Sons of Iacob . * ( He divided them an inheritance by line : the manner whereof may be seen at large in the Book of Ioshuah ) in like manner to the twelve Apostles was the World divided ; either by a Divine appropriation , or by a voluntary partition , to every one of them was allotted his proper portion , where he was to preach the Gospel and plant a Church . As † to St. Thomas , India : to St. Matthew , Ethiopia : to St. Iohn , Asia : &c. St. Paul was to preach the Gospel to the Gentiles , and St. Peter to the Jews : Gal. 2. 7. It was a great sin which God caveats his People against * to remove their Neighbours Land-mark , whereby every man's inheritance in the Land of Canaan was limited . A great sin it is in all places ; And therefore among the Curses pronounced against the Breakers of the Law , this is the third † Cursed be he that removeth his Neighbours Land-mark : to which all the People were to say Amen . The Hebrews had a saying ‖ He that removeth his Neighbours Land-mark , and taketh of his Neighbours Limit into his own , though it be but one inch ; if he doe it by force it is rapine , if he doe it in secret it is theft . Accordingly , the Apostles thought it a great fault in any of them , to enter into their Neighbours Limits , or to take to themselves but an inch of their possession ; and left that to the false Apostles , to boast in another mans line , and to intrude themselves into those places to preach , where any other was appointed for that work . * Solicitè cavebant ( saith Learned Camero ) they were exceeding carefull not to intrench one upon the other , or not to preach the Gospel in those places where others were appointed to preach , nisi forte vel obiter , vel necessariâ de Causà , unless it were in transitu , onely in a Journey , as St. Paul at Rome , as he travelled into † Spain , or upon some other extraordinary occasion . Therefore the Apostle saith , he did 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ‖ ambitiously study and endeavour , not to preach the Gospel where Christ was named lest he should build upon another mans Foundation : But to keep within his Line , amongst the People appointed for his pains in the Ministry . Not , but that he might , upon occasion preach elsewhere : for we reade that he preached at Damascus * where those Christians were which he would have brought bound to Ierusalem . But this was occasionally , not purposely . As a Minister now may do , when he travels from his own place , and hath occasion to stay abroad , upon request or leave , bestow his pains elsewhere . As Clemens † tells us it was the custome of the primitive times , that if any Bishop or Presbyter came to another , he was intreated to preach . But concerning St. Paul's preaching abroad out of his own precincts , whether upon intreaty , or otherwise , we need not inquire , seeing he had an Apostolical power , which was of universal extent in it self , and such as no Minister now can lay claim to . His Commission was ( as the rest of the Apostles were ) general , and ( originally ) not confined to any one place , as other Ministers are , but they were to teach all * Nations . Yet because every one of them could not travel and preach in every Countrey , therefore it pleased the Lord afterwards in Wisedom , for good Causes , to order it ( as it were ) by a second Decree , that Paul should specially have a care of , and preach to the † Gentiles . Yet this did no way diminish his Apostolical Authority , nor forbid him from preaching at all to the Iews , or Peter to the Gentiles , if occasion did serve ; for of Paul it is expresly said ‖ that he was to carry Christ's Name both to the Gentiles and to the Children of Israel . And it is generally believed that he was the Authour of the Epistle to the Hebrews . And of St. Peter it is not doubted that he both at Antioch and elsewhere , preached the Gospel both to Iews and Gentiles . The Apostolical power did extend to all Nations , but the Conveniency of the Church did require that some of them should be fixed to one sort of People in one place , and some to another . 'T is true , St. Paul saith he was * troubled with the care of all the Churches . i. e. as he was an Apostle , so the care of all the Churches lay upon him , quod ad jus attinet , & potestatem , ( saith Camero ) he had right and power , to take care of all the Churches , as an Apostle , and so differing from all Bishops and Presbyters now . And doubtless ( as all good Ministers of Christ do ) he did take all the care that lawfully he might , or could , of the whole Church of Christ ; especially of all those within his own precincts , and of his own planting ; which , by an usual Synecdoche in Scripture , are termed , all . Yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , for order and peace sake , it pleased God that their persons and labours should be appointed for several distinct parts of the World , as in his infinite Wisedom he saw was most convenient , for the better propagation of the Gospel of Christ , in all the World. And it is the observation of the Excellent Divine Martin Chemnitius in his Commentary on that temporary precept of our Saviour Christ to his Disciples . * Goe not into the way of the Gentiles , &c. ‖ Hoc temporarium praeceptum fideles verbi Dei ministros admonet , ut singuli se intra metas legitimae suae vocationis , ad pascendum illum Dei gregem , qui ipsis commissus est ( 1 Pet. 5. 2. ) contineant , nec latiùs evagentur , aut falcem suam in alterius pastoris messem , nisi speciali concessione vel vocatione , mittant . This temporary percept doth warn all the faithful Ministers of God's word , that all of them should contain themselves within the bounds of their lawfull Calling , to feed that flock of God that is committed unto them , and not to wander abroad or thrust their hook into the harvest of another Pastour , without his special leave or calling . By all which it appears that a forcible or surreptitious entry of one Minister , into another's charge , is destitute of all Scripture president or allowance ; and therefore cannot be the Ordinance of God. The Example of the Apostles meeting and preaching sometimes in private Houses , I conceive , cannot ( but most impertinently ) be urged to defend the practice I here dispute against . For , 1. 'T is not to the question , which is , of a setled constituted Church , where a preaching Ministry is established by Law. The Christian Church in the Apostles days , was not ●etled and established , as is ours , but in a way to be so . 2. The Magistrate was then heathen all the World over , ours now Christian . Publick preaching and Christian meetings , were not then suffered ; our Church-Assemblies , are not onely allowed and protected , but commanded by Sovereign Authority . 3. They had then , either none at all , or very few Christian-Churches erected , and so were forced to meet where they could ; we want not Churches , but hearts to resort to them . 4. The Apostles had a general and extraordinary call to preach any where , through all Coasts and Parts of the World , where they were appointed to plant Churches ; so have not the Persons in question . The office of an Apostle or Evangelist is now ceased . 5. It can never be proved , that the Apostles did , or would have made use of their private meetings , either in competition with or opposition to the publick Ordinances of God ( as our modern Conventicles are ) but in subserviency ( according as the necessity of those times did require ) to what publick and solemn Assemblies , they could then , or might in after-times , enjoy . For as our Saviour made use of all private Conferences and Meetings , not in separation from , competition with , or opposition against , but in professed subserviency to the Synagogue-service , and Temple-worship of the Jewish Church ; so I am perswaded , that the Apostles of Christ , together with the primitive Christians , would have done the like , had the case in their time , with respect to the publick exercise of Christian Religion , been the same , or the like to what it was in our Saviour Christ's time , with respect to the publick exercise of the Religion of the Iews . But forasmuch as there were no Conventions for publick exercise of Christian Religion permitted or commanded in those times , untill the Roman Empire , and other Kingdoms of the World , became Christian ; it was therefore a thing impossible , that the private Meetings of the Apostles and those primitive Christians , should be so made use of , in subordination to the publick Assemblies as were the private Meetings of our Saviour and his Disciples in the Jewish Church . So that the case and condition of Christianity in the primitive times , is so different from , and contrary to , what it is in the Church of England , where the publick worship is protected , and commanded by Authority , that their private Meetings cannot possibly hold any proportion or similitude with ours . So that to argue from private Meetings in those times of persecution of Christianity , to private Meetings in England in these days , is to take away the subject of the question , and then to argue the case . 6. Neither did one Apostle then thrust himself into the place where another was to labour , but contained himself within the compass of his Line , and portion of God's People that he was appointed to preach to . But the matter in question is of a quite contrary nature , viz. of a silenced Minister's intruding himself in amongst a People , over whom there is a preaching Ministry established , and there taking upon him to gather Conventions , teach that People and perform ministerial Acts amongst them contrary to good Laws , without the consent , yea against the allowance of the Pastour of the place . So that neither the example of our Saviour Christ , nor of his Apostles can be brought to justifie or allow any such practice . ARGUMENT . VI. THAT which God in his word hath branded with a black mark , forewarning and commanding his People to avoid , cannot be his ordinance or means of grace . For it is not God's manner to stygmatize or disgrace his own ordinances , or to forbid or discourage any in the use of them ; but to dignifie , advance the honour , and strictly to enjoin the use of them : as knowing that the Devil and his instruments will sufficiently vilifie and disgrace them , and that there will be enough in all ages , who will disuse and forsake them . Yea God hath so far dignified his ordinances of the word and sacrament ; ( which he intends to make use of as means of grace ) that when he might have wrought it in mens hearts immediately by his own spirit , yet he hath put them off to his Ministers to doe it , which is no small honour . The case of the Eunuch in the Acts makes this plain , * The Spirit bad Philip join himself to the Chariot . Yea when God himself hath begun the work , yet he would not perfect it himself , but hath handed it over to his Ministers , to be completed by them . This he did at the Conversion of St. Paul , ‖ He sent Ananias to him , who entered into the House , and put his hands on him and said , Brother Saul , the Lord ( even Iesus which appeared to thee in the way as thou camest ) hath sent me that thou shouldst receive thy sight , and be filled with the Holy Ghost . What greater honour than this , could God have put upon his Ordinance of the Ministry ? But he hath set a black mark , and brand upon the Persons and Ministry in question , and commanded a withdrawing from them . * Now I beseech you , brethren , mark them which cause divisions and offences contrary to the Doctrine which ye have learned , and avoid them : for they that are such , serve not the Lord Iesus , but their own bellies , and by good words and fair speeches deceive the hearts of the simple . The Emphasis of the Apostles words is worthy our observation . Mark them , signifying such a diligent , wary , and circumspect care , as Watchmen use that stand on an high Tower to descry the approach of an Enemie . They mark diligently all Comers , and give notice according as they apprehend any danger , for the preservation of the City . And avoid them ; as dangerous Persons , hurtfull to Christian Society . And how sweet and fair soever their words seem to be , yet they will ‖ eat as doth a Canker . They give not their poison , but wrapt up in Honey . Their smooth Language is their net , wherewith they catch many a simple Soul , that is not exceeding carefull lest any man should beguile him ( as Ioab did * Amasa ) with enticing words . Their flattering speeches and specious pretenses of Purity and Doctrine , and tenderness of Conscience , tend to no other , but to deceive the simple and unwary , to get themselves a maintenance , and to fill their own bellies , they are like the false Apostles in the Church of Corinth ‖ who transformed themselves into the Apostles of Christ , yet were but deceitfull workers , to bring that People into bondage , to devour them , and to take of them . How guilty the persons in question are , of causing Divisions amongst People whereever they come , of renting the Unity of the Church , and disturbing the peace thereof ; of giving offence to Rulers and Governours by their constant and wilfull violation of all Ecclesiastical and Civil order and discipline , is too notoriously known by sad experience in all places . And whether the other Character in the text , belongs to them , that they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , and seek not so much mens Souls ( for therein they may spare their pains as needless , where there is a preaching Ministry established ) as their purses . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 * making merchandize of the word of God ; their hearers and followers are best able to tell , and will ( I think ) in a while , be weary of it . In the mean time , we that are Pastours of Flocks , find by experience , in those places where these persons intrude themselves , that the People are ready to pull their own Ministers bread out of their mouths , to feed those their new Masters , live we never so blamelesly , and take we never so much pains amongst them , for the good of their Souls . Yea , they hate those their Ministers most , who best deserve their love , and lay most obligations on them . According to that of the Philosopher , Leve aes alienum debitorem facit , grave , inin●icum . A bad Debtor when he owes but a small summ , will be contented to look towards you ; but when it is great , more than he can well pay , or , as much as he thinks he can get , then he will be glad to be rid of you . Again : The Apostle foretells , that towards the latter end of the World ( and surely those days are come upon us ) ‖ Perilous times shall come , and there shall be many that shall creep into houses , and lead Captive silly Women — ; from such turn away . And whom do the men ( we are speaking of ) most prevail upon , and draw after them ? but easie and unstable souls , such as have itching Ears , always learning and never able to come to the knowledge of the truth , well meaning People that are spurred on with zeal , and want judgment to hold the reins , many times an over vehement bending into some way of our own chusing , doth not onely withdraw us from the left hand way , the way of Idolatry and Superstition ( from which we should all withdraw ) but from the middle way too , in which we should all walk . And then the danger is great . The Devil doth many times make zeal and religion his instrument , to drive men on to incredible extremities of impiety . For , if he cannot take away mens faith , yet he will quench their Charity to others , even to those to whom they owe it most . For * zeal , except it be ordered aright , when it bendeth it self to conflict with things either indeed , or but imagined to ●e opposite to Religion , useth the razor many times with such eagerness , that the very life of Religion is thereby hazarded , through hatred of tares , the corn in the field is plucked up . So that zeal needeth both ways a sober guide . Zeal against Poperty ( saith another learned Authour , who conceals his name ) except it be bridled by discretion , and attended by equal pace of strength , is not the way to protect , but to betray a cause . Those that were lately zealous for the good old cause , lost it ; and the King had not better friends , than his most implacable Enemies . Fury is as bad in a Champion , as torpour ; it is an even temperature of wisedom and valour that doeth the execution . A sober Protestant though he rageth less , shall prevail more on a Papist , than a mad Fanatique . The greatest part of zeal against Popery that is found amongst the Nonconformists , is like that of one frantick , who wounds himself , whilst he would strike his foe . They cannot confute it without condemning themselves . This unguided zeal will be sure to run far enough from Popery , and so runs into it ; as he that sails round the Globe , the farther he goes , after he is half way , the nearer he approacheth to the place whence he set out . The Quakers , a considerable part of the Nonconformists , railed at Popery , till they began to be taken for Jesuits , or their Disciples . The like Stygma the Apostle St. Iude casts upon such Persons , There are * certain men crept in unawares , &c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . How disgracefully and disdainfully the Scripture seems to speak of them , who irregularly , and contrary to good order and lawfull appointment , intrude themselves , as Teachers , into the Church , under pretence of Religion ! They ‖ creep in amongst People ; they come in by stealth , as if they came in at a Window or Back-door , insinuating themselves into flocks and societies of God's People , creeping to Conventicles ; professing themselves to be the onely Gospel-preachers , and pure Worshippers of God , as if all Religion were lost , except what they bring and profess : Whereas they are indeed ( unless we will mince the Appellation the Holy Scripture fastens on them ) but a new sort of Creepers gotten into the body of the Church . From such ( saith the Holy Ghost ) * turn away . Again , St. Paul , † Now we command you , brethren , in the name of the Lord Iesus Christ , that ye withdraw your selves from every brother that walketh disorderly , and not according to the Tradition he hath received from us . With more Apostolical Gravity and Authority , a Duty cannot be urged on Christians , than this , of withdrawing or separating from such , as walk 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , disorderly . The Metaphor ( say Expositours ) is borrowed from the custome of War ; wherein every Souldier hath his proper station and employment appointed him , from which when he swerves , he becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , out of his rank . Now in an Army , every Officer hath his place , Company and Command assigned him by his General , whereunto he must keep , and from which he must not stir . And if he should leave his place , and take upon him , either to make an attempt on the Enemy of his own head , without Commission and Orders from his General , though with never so good success ; or Command in another Company , than that which is assigned and allotted to him by Authority , he is guilty of a breach of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , good order and discipline that ought to be in an Army , and brings in a most odious and destructive disorder and confusion : and so deserves to be either quite cashiered , or otherwise by Martial Law severely to be punished . Yea , so absolutely necessary hath it been thought , in the opinion of experienced Souldiers , that the Laws and Orders of Martial-discipline in an Army should be strictly observed , that whosoever have erred from it , though in the least Punctilio , have been adjudged worthy of death without mercy . Famous to this purpose is that story we reade in Valerius Maximus , of Manlius Torquatus Consul of the Romans in the Latin War , who commanded his own Son to be beheaded , for fighting the Enemy without his Father's Privity and Command , though he was provoked thereunto by Geminius Metius General of the Tusculans , and although he had obtained a signal Victory , and very much and rich spoil : * Sati●s esse judicans patrem forti silio , quam patriam militari disciplina carere : Judging it better that a Father should be deprived of a valiant Son , than that his Country should want Military discipline . The Church is by Christ twice together in one place † said to be an Army with banners : he that is the Commander in chief is God himself , holy , just and wise ; not the Authour of Confusion , but the institutour and lover of order , and the hater and punisher of such as wilfully transgress such good rules of wholsome discipline , as he , either immediately by himself or mediately by his Deputies on earth , shall establish amongst his People . And is Discipline so needfull in an Army , and can it be thought needless in the Church ? Is our spiritual warfare of less danger of concernment than our bodily ? Shall it be thought to be a venial offence , to be committed without danger , when a person shall undertake to intrude himself into the place and company of another , and lead on , and engage a Party in the Church militant , into ways of schism and profaneness , in opposition to the way of true Religion and Worship of God established , not onely without any lawfull allowance , but contrary to all Law and Discipline , both Civil and Ecclesiastical ? The baseness and wickedness of such doings , is excellently displayed by Learned Doctor Henry More in his Apology annexed to the second part of * his enquiry into the Mystery of iniquity . Because some men ( saith he ) think themselves of more popular gifts for Prayer and Exhortation ; for these to spur out , and run on in a Career , without attending the direction of their Superiours , were as if the Toy should take those Troopers that are best horsed , to set madly a gallopping , because they find their horses will goe so freely , and so turn the orderly . March of the Army into a confused Horse-race , and put themselves into a rout , even without the assault or pursuit of any Enemy . Can it be pleasing to Christ that any should follow such men in their irregular and hare-brain'd ways , when his Apostle bids all men † from such to withdraw ? To what end should there be such flocking after them , unless their followers could be partakers of some spiritual benefit from them ? But this cannot be . For their disorderly walking , and busie medling where they have not to doe , renders all they doe unprofitable , and is ( in effect ) a spending of a great deal of pains , to no purpose ; wearying themselves out to weave the Spiders Webb , and to sow to the wind . The Apostle doth most excellently express it in a most elegant allusion of words , 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , * working not at all , but are busie-bodies . Their work is neither lawfull , nor profitable . For seeing that the Ministers of Christ are disposed of in the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 † according to the dispensation of God ; it doth follow , that those things which they teach or doe , receive their force and effect not from their own wills and authority , but from the Authority , Approbation and Concurrence of him that sends them . And therefore what a Minister doeth contrary to the will of God , cannot be of any force or effect at all , as to the accomplishment of the end , on mens souls , for which God ordained the Ministry , for he is bound to preach not onely those things , but in that manner as God hath appointed . God's Command for a separation and withdrawing from such dividing , house-creeping , and disorderly Persons , must needs argue their Ministry not to be his ordinance , since he so brands it , and gives such Cautions against it . ARGUMENT . VII . THAT cannot be the Ordinance of God for the working of grace , that is performed without any manner of Commission or Authority . For the necessity of keeping that good order which God hath commanded in his Church , requires , that no man should attempt any thing of that important nature and high concernment , upon his own head , or , by a power derived no higher than from himself . Whosoever shall take upon him to preach God's word , in order to the Conversion or saving of souls , must be able to give a good answer , to that question which the chief Priest and Elders of the People , put to our Saviour Christ , when he was teaching in the Temple . * By what Authority doest thou these things , and who gave thee this Authority ? He that cannot make a sufficient and satisfactory reply to it , and yet shall adventure upon the work , may justly be accounted rash , indiscreet , and more hasty than needeth , or than wisedom requireth . But such is the Ministry in question ; undertaken without any Authority or Commission . For all the Authority and Commission that a Minister hath , in a constituted setled Church , he receives in his ordination . Before that , he had no Authority or Warrant at all to preach the word , or to perform any ministerial Act. Now all the Authority that a Minister of the Church of England hath delivered to him in his ordination , is expressed in these words : Take thou Authority to preach the word , and to administer the Holy Sacraments in the Congregation where thou shalt be lawfully appointed thereunto . In which words it is plain that the exercise of his Ministry is restrained to lawfull appointment , as to the place where it shall be exercised . What that lawfull appointment is , I need not trouble my self or the reader here , to look into , seeing the Ministry in question hath not the least colour of it , or pretence to it , for it is supposed to be in a place where there is another lawfully appointed to perform the same . In the Council of Chalcedon ( where there were 630 Fathers met , about the year of our Lord 451 ) It was thus decreed * Neminem absolute ordinari jubemus , Presbyterum , aut Diaconum , nec quemlibet in Ecclesiasticâ ordinatione constitutum : Eos autem qui absolute ordinantur decrevit sancta synodus vacuam habere manûs impositionem . That none should be ordained absolutely , whether Presbyter or Deacon , or any in Ecclesiastical orders : and whosoever should be absolutely ordained , the Holy Synod decreed his ordination void . And the 33th Canon of the Church of England ●aith , That it hath been long since provided by many Decrees of ancient Fathers , that none should be admitted either Deacon or Priest , who had not first some certain place where he might use his function . For though in ordination the person ordained is made a Minister of the Catholick Church ; and being ordained to a function , he may ( by the appointment of those that have Authority in the Church , or with leave of the Pastour of the Congregation ) preach any where : And although ( as Mr. Baines observes ) It is good * for a Minister to be like a young Woman , so full breasted , that she can both feed her own Child , and lend a draught , upon intreaty , to her Neighbours : Yet he is not a Catholick Minister of the Church ( as the Apostles and Evangelists were , whose office , being extraordinary , is long since ceased in the Church , ) and therefore ought not to take upon himself to preach any where . Neither yet did the Apostles themselves doe so , ( as hath been proved ) though their Commission was without Limit , as to place . But kept within their Line measured forth by God to them . It was never God's intention that the two Tribes of Levi , and Gad , should be confounded one with another ; nor is it any way agreeable with Scripture rules and order , that a Minister should be , a wandring star , but fixed regularly in some Orb of the Church , as a Pastour of some Flock or Congregation of his People . Seeing therefore none is lawfully appointed to perform the ministerial function , or any part of it , in such a place as is in question , but the Minister of that Congregation ; acts of the Ministry done by any other Person that shall intrude himself among them , without and against his consent , contrary to lawfull appointment , and all good constitution that concern admission of Ministers to pastoral charges , are done without any Authority , Commission , or effect ; and consequently cannot be God's Ordinance , who doth not use to send any to preach in order to the working of grace in means hearts , without any Power or Authority , yea against both . ARGUMENT . VIII . THAT cannot be the ordinance of God , as instrumental to the work of grace , that instead of building up People in Faith and Holiness , demolisheth Christian Duty , and , in the natural tendency of it , produceth sinfull and pernicious effects . 'T is true , these may accidentally follow , through the Corruption of man's nature , and Satan's suggestions , upon the most right and purest dispensation of God's word and ordinances . St. Peter speaks of some * that stumble at the word . And St. Paul † saith , to some we are the savour of death unto death , as to other some , the savour of life unto life . The word preach'd ( like the water of jealousie ) ‖ when it is received into an honest and good heart , it doeth it good , and makes it fruitfull ; but when into a corrupt , it doeth hurt and causeth it to rot . Yet the most proper intent , and genuine fruit and effect of it , is to doe good , to inlighten , convince , convert , and save means souls . But the Ministry in question doth directly produce sinfull and pernicious effects , and such as a tender heart may tremble to think on . I would not have the reader expect that I should here make a particular enumeration of every one of those sinfull fruits and effects , that are produced by the Ministry of intruders , and upholders of Conventicles : for that is a thing no more possible for me to doe , than it is for any man particularly to reckon up every one of the many thousands of absurdities that will unavoidably follow in dispute , upon one that is granted or yielded to . I will content my self therefore ( and let the reader doe the like ) with the mention of so many of them onely , as I here use arguments against the practice which is the proper cause of them , and thousands more . First , it tends to the breaking of that bond of near relation , that is , and ought to be betwixt a Pastour and his flock . Though it be a truth well known to but a few in this age , and little considered by any , yet it is nevertheless certain and undoubted , that there is a very intimate relation betwixt a lawfull Pastour and his People . The Scripture seems to assert a kind of Matrimonial union betwixt them . A Minister is , after a sort , married to that Congregation over whom he is lawfully set ; and they to him . Our legal incumbency on a Church , is our Marriage to that Church . Hence is that phrase of the Apostle to the Corinthians * I am jealous over you with a Godly jealousie . Sumpta est metaphora à procis zelotypis , as Beza notes ; a Metaphor taken from the manner of a Person espoused to a Woman , who cannot endure any one to be a Companion or sharer with him in her affections . For as a King cannot endure a rival with him in his Kingdom , nor an Husband in the Marriage-bed . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . So neither can a Minister in his Parish . And though in regard of internal , spiritual , everlasting , and inseparable union , Christ himself is the Husband of the Catholick Church . Yet in regard of external and ministerial duty , a particular Minister of Christ , may be said to be married to that particular flock or portion of God's People , over whom , in a regular and orderly manner , the Holy Ghost hath set him . This made St. Ambrose expound that place of St. Paul ( * A bishop must be the Husband of one wife ) allegorically * unius uxoris . Si ad superficiem tantum literae respiciamus , prohibet digamum Episcopum ordinari : si vero ad altiorem sensum conscendamus , inhibet Episcopum duas usurpare Ecclesias . If we respect the Letter of the text ( saith he ) St. Paul forbids any that hath had two Wives to be ordained a Bishop : but if we ascend to an higher sense , he forbids a Bishop to take to himself two Churches . And St. Hierome argues out of those words ( Eph. 5. ) Husbands love your wives : Audiant Episcopi , audiant Presbyteri , audiant Doctores subjectis suis se esse subjectos . Let Bishops , Priests , and Doctours learn in this , that when they have married themselves to a Flock or Congregation , they are become subject to their Subjects . How ? subject to their Subjects ? What are they become inferiour to their Flocks ? In no wise . ‖ They are over you in the Lord ( saith St. Paul ) underlings then they are to none of them . But they are so subject to their flock , as an Husband is subject to his Wife , and no otherwise ; Now she is to be subject to him , and he ( by God's Law ) to * rule over her . So that the subjection he means , is the subjection of Love. As Pliny told Trajan the Emperour † Nihil magis à te subjecti animo factum est , quim quod imperare coepisti . A King doeth nothing so like a subject , as to love his subjects , to devise ways , and to use his power for their good . Such a subjection is that of the Husband to the Wife , and that of a Pastour to his flock , to whom he is married , and to no other . Whence ( as Mr. Prinn observes ) ‖ he is stiled , Parochus , and his People , Parochia , by the Canonists and Lawyers , because he is espoused to that peculiar Parish . And to this agreeth the 15 th Canon of the Nicene Council , matrimonium inter Episcopum & Ecclesiam esse contractum , &c. There are several things that prove a very near relation betwixt a lawfull Pastour and his People . 1. The titles the Holy Ghost gives in Scripture to Ministers and their People . They are called watchmen , and shepherds , Es. 62. 6. These , their flock over whom they watch and whom they keep . Act. 20. 28. They are called Fathers . 2. King. 6. 21. 1 Cor. 4. 15. 1 Thes. 2. 11. These , their Children . 1 Cor. 4. 14. 2 Cor. 6. 13. ●al . 4. 19. 1 Tim. 1. 2. Philom . 10. 1 Ioh. 5. 21. Ministers are called husbandmen , and builders ; and their people , God's tillage , and building , 1 Cor. 3. 9. They , are called steward ▪ their people , God's household , to whom they are to give their portion of meat . Lu● . 12. 41. 2. The duties imposed by God on either party , prove a very near relation betwixt them . As a Minister is commanded to take * the oversight of them ; to † feed them ; and to perform the office of a faithfull servant of Christ , that he may ‖ give an account to him ; for his flock . So the People also are charged with many duties towards their Pastours . As , 1. To know and love them dearly ? as the Galatians did * St. Paul , and as he enjoins all Christians to doe toward their Ministers . † We beseech you Brethren , to know them that labour amongst you , and over you in the Lord , and admonish you , and esteem them very highly in love for their works sake . Indeed the vulgar Latin , reade it , ut noveritis . But Beza renders it , ut adnoscatis , that you acknowledge them as your Pastours and Teachers . And ( as * Learned Zanchi ) pro pastoribus vestris ac patribus reverenter amplectamini , that ye reverently receive and embrace them as your Pastours and Fathers . And as David saith in the●●●●lms † I will not know a wicked per●●● ( where , not to know , is to contemn ) so , to know , is to have in reverence and honour . Thus our Saviour professeth to wicked men † I never knew you . Which places are urged both by Beza and Zanchi , to prove their exposition . And that you highly esteem them in love . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 . Some reade it , abundantly : Some , exceedingly : It properly signifies , more than exceedingly ; Love in abundance ; in an overflowing measure ; an overplus of love . Beza renders the same expression in another place * summâ cum exuperantiâ , with the greatest exuberance of love . And here , ut supra modum charos ducatis , that you account them above measure dear to you . 2. To obey them , and submit to their pastoral office and rule over them . Heb. 13. 17. 3. To afford them an honourable and liberal maintenance . Matt. 10. 10. 1 Cor. 9. 6-15 . Rom. 15. 27. Gal. 6. 6-8 . 1 Tim. 5. 17 , 18. Not out of charity , as a free gift ; but of justice , as a due debt . 3 Ioh. 9. 4. To seek their comfort , and to give them all du●● encouragement , that they may doe the work of the Ministry among them , with joy and not with grief . Heb. 13-17 . All which duties would not have been enjoined on both parties , pastour and people , were there not a very near relation between them . Whereas none at all of these are required either of a stranger , to them ; or of them to a stranger . And this is the Language both of the Presbyterian , and Independent Ministers , when they speak of the relation that is betwixt them and their People , they say , * they are married to their Flock . Now where one of these Demagogues , and Patrons of Conventicles shall intrude himself into a Town or Parish , and take upon him there to set up a course of house-preaching , to administer the Sacraments , to visit the sick , and such like duties to the Ministry ( as they doe ) it tends directly to the breaking this bond and near relation that is betwixt Pastour and People ; and breeds such alienation of affection in them , towards him , as was betwixt the Iews and Samaritans , between whom the Scripture saith * there was no ●onverse . For , they being conscious to themselves of the guilt of that , ( which upon a general , presumption , they cannot but believe , he can in no wise take well at their hands ) viz. that they should put themselves under the Ministry of another they will grow to such a degree of strangeness to him , as to shun common neighbourhood and acquaintance with him ; yea they will easily account him their greatest Enemy ( as Ahab did Elijah , or the Galatians did St. Paul ) because he doth not flatter them in tha● ▪ which , how wicked and unlawfull soever it be , is therefore the sweeter to them , because forbidden , and enjoyed ( as it were ) by stealth . For † stollen waters are sweet , and bread eaten in secret is pleasant ; though the end * of such ill gotten delight be in the depth of hell . What esteem can they have of their Minister's Person or Office , which are look'd upon by them , as either needless or indifferent , if not tedious and burthensome ? What regard to his Doctrine , which ( as experience shews us ) is , and will be so lightly set by , that some will wholly forsake attendance on it , others come to hear ( as there is too much cause to doubt ) more out of curiosity than necessity , and ( as some have not been ashamed to confess ) rather to 〈◊〉 ( as those that listned to our Saviour's Sermons † to catch him in his discourse ) than to learn or to practise ? And so the Pulpit which is God's Tribunal , is made their bar , and they ‖ become not doers of the Law , but Iudges . What dependance can a People have on their own pastour , in his discharge of ministerial Duties amongst them , where some are reduced into a perfect revolt from him , other brought to a loose indeterminacy in Divine worship and Church-communion , and all to a Lukewarm indifference what Ministry they enjoy ; and Church-Assemblies are made matter of Complement rather than necessity . Usurpation and intrusion , as it shall never want store of friends and favourers among the ignorant and unstable vulgar , be it never so unjust ; so the more abbettours and maintainers it hath in any place , the greater must the defection needs be from him , to whom they own their adherence . And thus will that golden chain of relation , that is , and ought to be betwixt a Pastour and his People , by this means be wholly dissolved , and those put asunder whom God bath joined together . For , as it is in a marriage , it is not the having of an Husband , that makes the Wife honest , chast and undefiled , but her loving her Husband , and keeping her self wholly to him , otherwise the Wedlock bond is broken : so in this union betwixt Pastour and People , it is not the having a Minister , that maintains and upholds the relation and conjunction , that God would have to continue between them ; but the acknowledging of him , keeping to him , and depending on him in the Lord , for all ministerial Acts to be performed by him , among them ; otherwise , the knot of unity that ought to be betwixt them , is untyed . Now here I could tell the Reader so lamentable a story , of the truth of this sad effect , which upon mine own experience I have found , of this usurpation and intrusion , I am now disputing against , that if he be such a one , as hath any fear of God before this eyes , any zeal for his house , worship and service , or any care of the Unity and Peace of the Church , it would make both his ears at the hearing of it tingle . My Parish was a Virgin , pure and undefiled , free from all invadours and underminers of her Chastity , till about four years since , when the Act of Parliament for the removal of such of the Nonconformist ministers , as refused to take the oath therein prescribed , out of all Corporations , sent or occasioned one of them ( not to preach but ) to inhabit amongst us . Before whose coming , there was not a Congregation in the Country ( that I know ) for so many People ( being near 1000 souls ) more entire , more unanimous , more constant at all parts of publick worship , more free from all inclination to schism , separation , or any of the raigning Epidemical faults of this Age. We had then what happiness we could desire , and ( it seems ) greater than we deserved . When the ground all about us , was wet with the showres of schism and prophaneness , we ( like Gideon's fleece ) were dry . But because we gave not God thanks sufficient , he suffered Satan to erect Altare contra Altare ( for so went the style of the ancient Church for schism , which in our modern Dialect is ) a Conventicle against the Church . Now , that Congregation which was before entire , is now miserably divided , and those that lived under the oversight and teaching of one lawfull Pastour ( as a chast Wife under the guidance of her own Husband ) according to God's Holy Ordinance , are gone aside to others , and admit of the unlawfull embraces of strangers . I could tell the Reader of some of those people , who were formerly constant attendants on all parts of divine Worship , that are now by this means totally gone off ( non fugati , sed fugitivi , as say the Brethren of the Presbyterian way , of the Independents ) and for the space of several years , have not set their foot over the threshold of God's house : yea , so far are they withdrawn , and to so high and impious an abhorrency of God's publick Worship are they brought , as to detain their very Children from publick Baptism . They are modelled ( as they call it ) into a new Church-way for the enjoyment of Ordinances . And no wonder ; for the Scripture tells us , that besides God's Church , Satan will have his too . There is Ecclesia Credentium , and Ecclesia Malignantium ; according to that of David * odi Ecclesiam malignantium : I have hated the Congregation of Evil doers . And † Tertullian tells us , faciunt favos & vespae , faciunt Ecclesias & Marcionitae . Wasps make Combs , but empty ones ; Schismaticks and Sectaries make Churches , but false ones ; ‖ Singuli quique coetus haereticorum se potissimum Christianos , & suam esse Ecclesiam Catholicam putant ; saith Lactantius . Of others I could relate , that upon this sad occasion are in part revolted from the publick Assemblies of the Saints ; and though they live near enough to the Church , yet come thither but now and then , and that , to hear a Sermon onely , and to no other part of divine Service : To satisfie curiosity , I suppose , rather than Conscience ; wherein they seem to discover much of Hypocrisie , but nothing of Piety . For , I would demand of them , doe they well , or ill , when they come ? If well ; why then come they not at all times , when they may ? If ill ; why then come they at any time ? What moves them at any time to approach the place where God's honour dwells ? Is it because he hath commanded it , or to doe him any service thereby ? I ask him again , whether hath not he commanded the publick Service of the whole day , as well as a part ? A Lamb at the Evening * as well as a Lamb in the Morning ? Of every Lord's day , as well as of one now and then ? Why else did the Lord call the Sabbath of old † an holy Convocation ? As if it ought to be nothing else ; as if the whole day were to be spent at Church , and in keeping publick Assemblies , so far as conveniency and edification of the people will permit . Why else did Holy David desire ‖ to dwell in the house of the Lord for ever ? Why prayed he that he might be so happy . * One thing have I desired of the Lord , that I will seek after : that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life . Therefore if Conscience to obey God , or desire to doe him service , did draw them to his house at any time , or to any part of his Worship , the same would induce them at all times , and to all parts of it . The liberty then that such persons take in God's service , as if all were Arbitrary , argues much of hypocritical wantonness , nothing of sound or sincere godliness . They who are fed with Corn from Heaven , † meat to the full , are thus faln to loath the Mannah , that Rained down upon them twice every Sabbath-day . Of a third sort I could inform the Reader , who being weak , yet ( I hope ) well-meaning Christians , not knowing the depths of Satan , under a specious pretence of Piety , are not content with what they hear at Church , but must afterwards fill their heads with notions which they hear at Conventicles , wherewith they ‖ feast themselves without fear after they have been fed to the full in God's house , with Angels food . Without fear ( I say ) of offending God , by breaking the order he hath set in his Church : by countenancing , abetting , or joining themselves with such unlawfull and ungospel-like Assemblies : without fear of offending or provoking the Rules of the Church ( which they are bound to obey ) by seeing their Laws despised and affronted : without fear of exposing themselves to the temptation and hazard of falling so fearfully as they cannot but see , that some of their Brethren and Neighbours have done : And without fear of losing what they have heard in publick by departing immediately from the Church to a Conventicle ; as if all Religion did consist in nothing but hearing , and all the Service of God were but ( according to the French scoff ) a mere Preach . If this be the way of keeping the Sabbath , where is room then for Meditation , which the Scripture as much enjoins as hearing . * Thou shalt meditate on the Law , that thou mayst observe to doe according as is written . Mary therefore kept Christ's sayings because † she pondered them in her heart . David therefore grew to be ‖ wiser than his teachers , because God's Law was his meditation . Conference with Neighbours , and Family-instructions , will by this means also be issued out . * Thus shall you say every one to his neighbour , and every one to his brother , what hath the Lord answered , and what hath he spoken ? The best of Hearers , even Christ's own Disciples took another course than these now doe : When they had heard their Master Preach , they spent their time after Sermon in conferring among themselves about what they had heard , and went to their . Teacher to be better informed , and † to have all doubts resolved . For want of so doing , it comes to pass with too many , as sometimes it did with some of them , that though they had seen their Lord's mighty power , in feeding five thousand men with five loaves , and two fishes ; yet their Faith was never the stronger : And this was the reason : ‖ They considered not the miracle of the Loaves , for their heart was hardned . They had seen the miracle but they had not considered it , nor meditated on it , and therefore it did them no good at all . In the judgment of the Presbyterian Divines themselves , the way these people take is not the right . For the Assembly of Divines in their Directory for Worship , give this rule for the Sanctification of the Lord's day : * that what time is vacant between , or after the Solemn meetings of the Congregation in publick , be spent in Reading , Meditation , Repetition of Sermons ( especially by calling their Families to an account of what they have heard ) and Catechising of them ; holy conferences , prayer for a blessing upon the publick Ordinances , singing of Psalms , visiting the Sick , relieving the Poor , and such like duties of piety , charity , and mercy , accounting the Sabbath a delight . In a word , I could inform the Reader what impious devices have been used , not onely to make a rent in the Church , but also to keep it open , that it should never close again ; by endeavouring that an irreconcileable prejudice might be perpetuated in the minds of people , against the publick Ministry and Ministers of the Church . And to the end that those poor deluded Souls , which have been drawn off from their due attendance to God's publick Ordinances , to wait on these men in their clanculary and irregular conventions , might never return to the Church any more ; I have observed that the absence of one of these Masters of Conventicles , in the places where they are held , have ever been carefully supplied by the presence of some other Domestick Chaplain , to keep up their House-meetings . As if Ieroboam's impious policy should never be forgotten , who not daring to trust his new divided Tribes in a joint resort to the Temple at Ierusalem , set up † his Calves to be Worshipped by them nearer home . But I will not rake any longer in this puddle , lest it stink in the nostrils of pious and sober Christians , as it cannot but doe in God's already . Now I appeal to all my judicious and learned Brethren of the Clergy , and to all persons else , of stayed principles and piety , whether for a stranger thus to pluck the work of a Pastour of a Congregation out of his hands , be tollerable in the Church of Christ , or no ? Whether this practice that tends thus to divide betwixt Minister and People , breaking the near bond of relation , that is , and ought to continue between them , robbing him of his flock , and taking them off from dependance on him , for the enjoyment of the work of his ministry , be of God , or no ? And whether he hath ordained any such course , as the means of Grace in his Church ; or whether this be not rather a strategem of Satan , to introduce all manner of impiety and ungodliness ? The Presbyterian Divines themselves have given their judgment on my side , already , in this case . In these words : ‖ To make a Rupture in the body of Christ , and to divide Church from Church , and to set up Church against Church , and to gather Churches out of true Churches : And because we differ in something , therefore to hold Communion in nothing ; this we think hath no warrant out of the word of God , and will introduce all manner of confusion in Churches and Families ; and not onely disturb , but in a little time destroy the power of Godliness , purity of Religion , peace of Christians , and set open a wide gap to bring in Atheism , Popery , Heresie , and all manner of wickedness . So also in their Preface to the Ius divinum of Church-government , in the last page save one , they have these words . Gathering Churches out of Churches have no footsteps in Scripture , is contrary to Apostolical practice , is the scattering of Churches , the Daughter of Schism , the Mother of Confusion , but the Step-mother to Edification . If this Doctrine of theirs be ( as doubtless it is ) true and godly , then surely the practices of many of them that are Antipodes to it , must needs be ( by their own confession ) very false and impious . We reade in Scripture that * if fire break out and catch in thorns , so that the stacks of corn , or the standing corn , or the field be consumed therewith , he that kindleth the fire shall surely make restitution . By thorns , are generally understood such thorns as Husbandmen use in hedges , wherewith they separate and distinguish their Land from other mens . By breaking out of fire , any man's making a fire in the field to burn up weeds , or otherwise , to make their Land fruitfull . And 't is meant ( say interpreters ) of such kindling of fire , when any hurt comes of it proeter intentionem accendentis , besides the intention of him that kindles it ; it being carried by the wind , and lighting on some dry hedge , and finding combustible matter , goes farther and burns the Corn , either in shocks , or standing by . And in this cafe of Casualty , by the Law of God , restitution was to be made , because firing the hedge was the cause of the Corn's being burnt . Otherwise , if a man did wilfully and purposely set Corn on fire , he was to sustain greater punishment by the Civil Law , vel decapitetur , vel comburatur , vel bestiis subjiciatur , he was to be beheaded , or burnt , or cast to wild beasts . God , whose own the whole Field of the Church is , hath set an hedge of separation and distinction , to bound out every one of his servants the Minister's property . These are your limits ; and this the portion of my people committed to your charge ; this piece of Land is your several to manure for me , the fruit whereof I will require at your hands at harvest . He that shall ( not casually , but wilfully ) break down , or fire that hedge , and so cause a combustion in the Church , the least that can be required of such a person , is , that he make full restitution for the damage he hath caused , that he set himself to quench the fire he hath kindled , and to make up the hedge again , which he hath consumed ; undeceive the People he hath seduced , by acknowledgment of his fault , restoring what he hath fraudulently taken , and cease to be any more an incendiary for the time to come . To the poor deceived People , shall I say , out of zeal to God's Glory , and safety of your souls , as St. Paul to the Galatians * I would they were even cut off that trouble you ? It were better one man or a few did perish , than that the Unity of the Church should be broken . Rather , for loves sake , I heartily wish , that those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ‖ filii sonitus , tumultuous ones , that delight to make a noise in the Church , that they may be heard , had more peaceable and quiet spirits , and would either content themselves to doe their own business ( if they have any ) or else sit still , and cease troubling you , or themselves , in matters that belong to others . And though you have been drawn away from your Conjugal duty to your own Pastours , and have gone aside to others in stead of them , by means of the amarous Courtship of such , as want not fair speeches and winning Oratory * to deceive the hearts of the simple , but intrude themselves in amongst you , † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with feigned words ; or , ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with wisedom of words ; or ( as elsewhere the Apostle persueth it ) with * excellency of speech and of wisedom ; or , intising words of man's wisedom , insomuch , that ( if it were possible ) the very Elect would be deceived by them : Yet I hope , through the assistence of Divine grace , you will soon bethink your selves and repent , and so return from following after your Lovers , ( with the house of Israel ) and say , I will † goe and return to my first Husband , for then it was better with me than now . Secondly , it divides the intire body of Christ also , and makes such factions as were in the Church of Corinth , where one said * I am of Paul ; another , I am of Apollos ; and another , I am of Cephas : Than which , there is nothing that more demonstrates People to be † carnal , whatsoever they pretend to the contrary . It makes the Church of Christ ( which should always be , as some time the Children of Israel were , from Dan ‖ even to Beershebah , all as one man ) to be a Baal-Perazim ( the place where David smote the Philistins ) * A Valley of Divisions and Breaches . It breeds such animosities and exasperations of mind amongst Christians , that it makes the Members of the Church , militant among themselves , and against their Ministers , doeing us ( though unwillingly ) the kindness , as to free us from that woe denounced by our Saviour * when all men shall speak well of us ; and none at last but Satan and his Servants , Atheists and Papists triumphant . It causeth such rents in the Church , that the end thereof will be ( unless a prodigy of Divine mercy prevent it ) the common Enemy of our Religion will laugh , whilst the promoters of such divisions have cause to weep . It promotes such a War , whose Victory shall have a sorry triumph . It deals worse with the feamless Coat of Christ ( which St. Cyprian saith * was a sign intended by our Saviour , to shew how his Church should be woven together in Unity ) than the Prophet Ahijah the Shilonite did with the new garment , wherewith Ieroboam had clad himself † who even rent it in twelve pieces . It mangles the body of Christ , into as many parts , as there are parties , as if it were no better than the body of the Levite's Concubine , which * he divided with her bones , and sent into all the quarters of Israel . It was a worthy saying of the late reverend and learned Bishop of Sarum ; * Si schismata Ecclesiae tolli possunt ( uti proculdubio possunt ) suspendi mallem ad collum meum molam asinariam , &c. If the schisms that are in the Church may be taken away ( as doubtless they may ) I had rather a Milstone were hanged about my neck , and I drowned in the bottom of the Sea , than that I should any way hinder that work , or not withall my heart and strength promote it , which is so pleasing to God , and so necessary for the avoiding of scandal . A gracious speech ; not unlike that of an holy Father of the Church before him ( Greg. Nazianzene ) who ( as Ruffinus * reports it ) in the tumultuous division of the People , cryed out , mitte me in mare , & non erit tempestas . He offered himself ( Ionah like ) to be cast into the Sea , to appease the tempest in the Church , that neither the peace of it might be disturbed , or Unity broken . Some of the brethren of the Nonconformists have been of the same Judgment , whatever this or their practice , now is . Memorable to this purpose is that saying of Mr. Baxter to his People of Kiderminster ‖ I ever loved ( saith he ) a Godly peaceable Conformist , better than a turbulent Nonconformist ; and should I make a party , or disturb the peace of the Church , I should fear , lest I should prove a Firebrand in Hell , for being a Firebrand in the Church . And by all the interest I have in your judgments and affections , I here charge you , that if God should give me up to any factious Church-renting course ( against which I daily pray ) that you forsake me , and follow me not a step . It is an unhappy degree of wickedness , to be a ring-leader in any schism . Every accessory is faulty enough , but the first Authour abominable . Those who either by his example , suggestion , advice , connivence , or otherwise , are taught to doe ill , increase his sin as fast as they do their own . * Whosoever shall break one of the least Commandments , and shall teach men so , shall be called least in the Kingdom of Heaven . An unruly beast breaks the hedge , and feeds in forbidden Pasture ; the whole herd follows ; but the owner must answer for all the trespass that is committed . Therefore is Ieroboam so often branded in holy Writ with this note of infamy , Ieroboam the Son of Nebat , that made Israel to sin . His fault lived , when he himself was dead ; and 't is often said by Divines , that his torment increased in Hell , according as his sin increased upon earth ; and that the wickedness of Israel will not be taken off from his Soul for ever . It was shame enough to Israel , that they were made to sin by Ieroboam , but O the miserable Estate of Ieroboam , that made Israel to sin ! his pretence was fair enough , but that was no excuse to the foulness of his crime , nor is it any mitigation to his present torment . Let the Authours of schism in the Church , pretend what they please , to Religion and Truth , yet how they can have the true love or power of either in thier hearts or lives , that seek not the Church's Peace and Unity withall , I cannot understand . The Holy Ghost in Scripture joins both together * Love truth and peace . And ‖ speak the truth in love . He follows neither , that persues them not both . It was an unquestionable Maxime amongst Christians in the ancient Church ( which is no less a truth now , than ever ) . * non habet Dei charitatem , qui Ecclesiae non diligit unitatem . The Love of God abides not in them , who do not love , and keep , the Unity of the Church . Nay , the practice in question , tends not onely to the dividing and distracting the Church , but even to the dissolving and destroying her being . It puts the members of the body of Christ out of joint , and causeth a Luxation of the parts ; and so hinders that spiritual Nutrition , thriving and growth in grace , that ought to be in the body of Christ. For , as in the natural body of man , if a member be separated from it , it can receive no nourishment or growth ; nay , if there be but a dislocation of a part , so that it be onely out of joint , it will not thrive or prosper , but wither and consume , till it be set right again : so the mystical body of Christ , can never increase with the increase of God , if either there be not a right Union of the joints to the head , or if that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , * the ligament and bond that knits and fastens one member to another , be broken . Now this Union of the members , the Apostle saith † is made by the Ligament of Love : which he therefore calls ‖ the bond of perfection ; because as it unites Church-members among themselves , so it is the cause , that they communicate mutual help , to the profit and preservation of the whole . The members of the Church , then , being made so loose , and set at such distance ; so divided and distracted one from another , some hurried this way , and some that , it must needs argue that this bond is either quite broken , or much loosned . And if it be a truth ( which Philosophers affirm ) that * every natural body desires no less its unity than its entity ; I fee no reason why the spiritual and mystical body of Christ , the Church , should not in like manner desire its unity , since , if it be , and continue thus unhappily divided , it cannot long subsist in its entity . As a tottering wall of stones heaped up together , without mortar or binding , is easily shaken and thrown down : so must the Church be soon brought to ruine , if this distracting and dividing course be suffered and practised . By concord and good agreement among Christians † the Church grows and is enlarged : So by their discords and divisions it will in short time ‖ perish and come to nothing . Say I this onely ? Or say not the brethren of the Nonconformists the same ? He that is not the Son of peace , is not the Son of God ( saith Mr. Baxter ) all other sins * destroy the Church consequentially , but division and separation demolish it directly . Building the Church is but an orderly joining the materials ; and what then is disjoyning , but pulling down ? † Believe not those to be the Church's friends , that would cure and reform her , by cutting her throat . Pro Ecclesia clamitant ( saith St. Cyprian of such ) they cry out for the Church , but contra Ecclesiam dimicant , their practice is a fighting against the Church . And that , not by open and professed hostility , but by secret and unseen Policy . Their pretences are friendly , but their actions mischievous ; their voice like Iacob's , but their hands like Esau's . Thirdly , it hinders the Communion of Saints , that holy and sweet fellowship which all the Members of Christ's Church ought to have both with Christ their head , and each with other . When , in the natural body of man , the members are joined to the head , and one with another , they have by virtue of that Union , Communion also , and do impart bloud , spirits , and life from one to the other : So in the mystical Body of Christ , the members being joined to the Lord , and one to another , there will be a sweet Communion among themselves in heart and affections , * joy with them that rejoice , and forrow with them that weep , prayer each for , and each with other ; the multitude † of them that believe will be of one heart , and one soul. Now one of the closest bonds of Union amongst Christians , is in their communicating together in holy duties . We are then most one , when ‖ with one mind , and with one mouth , we glorifie God together . When holy David would set forth the greatest intireness of facred friendship , he described it by * walking to the house of God in company together . The end and effect of our joint partaking in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper , is to seal up this Unity . As by one of the Sacraments , we are baptized into one body , so by the other ‖ we are made to drink into one spirit . And therefore the Apostle , from our Communion together at the Lord's Table , concludes our Union one with another , & incorporation into ( not the essential , but ) the spiritual body of Christ. * We being many , are one bread , and one body ; for we are all partakers of that one bread . A Father thus comments on that place . † Omnes unum corpus sumus in Christo , quia etsi multi sumus , unum támen in eo sumus , omnes enim de uno pane participamus . We are therefore all one body in Christ , because , though we are many in our selves , yet in him we are all one , for we all partake of one bread . Nam si in humanis mensoe & salis communicatio , amoris causa est & signum , quanto magis id erit in communione mensoe & panis Domini ? If among men the communicating together at one table , and in one dish , is both a cause and sign of love ; how much more then would it be so , in the communicating together at the Table , and of the bread of the Lord ? Yea , the very assembling of Christians together in the Church , is , by St. Chrysostome ‖ called , the Communion of Saints . That then which tends to make rents and parties in the Church , and divides Christians each from other , in external Conjunction of publick duties , as well as internal concord of hearts and affections ( as the practice in question hath been proved , and by experience is found to doe ) must needs hinder the Communion of Saints . Union being broken , there can be no Communion : for it flows from Union , and is no other ( in the Etymology of the word ) than common Union . And as there is nothing that obstructs Christian Communion so much as divisions do , so , when once they are made , there is nothing more hard to be composed again . * A Brother offended , is harder to be won , than a strong City ; and their contentions are like the barrs of a Castle . For as no bond is so strong , as that of Religion ; so no Hostility so cruel and outragious , as that which difference in Religion occasioneth . † Think not ( saith our Saviour ) that I am come to send peace on the earth ; I came not to send peace , but a sword : for I am come to set a man at variance against his Father , and the Daughter against her Mother , and a man's foes shall be they of his own house . This is commonly through the policy of Satan , and malice of men , the fruit of divisions in point of Religion amongst Brethren . And if the bond of Communion betwixt the members be broken , I see not , but that the bond of Union with Christ their head , must be broken also . How can they exist as members of Christ's body , which have left their coupling and conjunction , with the other members of the same ? Neither they , nor those that cause it , can , in the judgment of St. Austine . ‖ Ii qui a compage corporis membra alia avellere conantur , seipsos a Christi unitate separant . They that draw the members from Communion one with the other , do cut off themselves from their Union with Christ. * Impium enim & sacrilegum divortium est , eos qui in Christi veritate consentiunt distrahere . Saith Calvin , It is an impious and sacrilegious divorce , to divide those , who would otherwise agree in the truth of Christ. The same is acknowledged by the Presbyterian Divines . † If we be the body of Christ , do not they who separate from the body , separate from the head also . ? And by the unanimous consent of the ancient , godly , and learned Nonconformists , in their grave and modest confutation of the † errours of the Brownists and Separatists : where in the first words of their Book , they say , That the Church of England is a true Church , and such a one as from which , whosoever wittingly and willingly separateth himself , cutteth himself off from Christ. And they prove it at large by unanswerable arguments , in the following pages of their Book . * A proesumptione igitur illicitâ excusari nequeunt , qui nimis amando sententiam suam , usque ad proecidendoe communionis audaciam perveniunt . They are therefore no way to be excused from sinfull presumption , who out of a fondness to their own opinion , proceed to that boldness and hardiness , as to interrupt Christian Communion . Malunt nullam habere , quam non suam : They had rather there should be no Religion at all , than that their own should not take place . They that are any way instrumental to break unity , that true-Lovers knot which every Christian should wear in his breast all days of his life , will find at last by miserable experience that destruction will follow it , if repentance precede not to prevent it . For , if the God whom we serve , be the God of peace , Iesus Christ our head and Saviour be the Prince of peace , the spirit of Holiness , the worker of peace , the Blessed Trinity , in Unity of Deity , the authour of peace and lover of concord ( as our Church expresseth it ) how then can it join it self with the disturbers of both , and not rather separate from those which separate from their Brethren , and are instrumental to draw as many after them as they can ? Fourthly , It gratifies ( at least ) two main sinfull Corruptions , to which people are naturally prone , both mentioned together by St. Paul , in one place . The first is , their discontent with their own Pastors , who are regularly and orderly sent of God to them . ‖ After their own lusts they will heap to themselves teachers . 1. The great fault here prophesied to be in the latter times , was , heaping up many teachers . One will not serve a peoples turn , but they must have a multitude . A woman that forsakes her Husband's bed , will be ready to pour out her fornications to every one that passeth by , and not content her self with the embraces of one single stranger alone , but be ready to prostitute her body to any one . 2. And there is an Emphasis in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , to themselves . They will be their own chusers . They will not accept , nor submit to those , who by the hands of the Rulers of the Church , God shall place over them , but take to themselves , upon their own judgment and choice , whom they please . This is according to his opinion , who ( expounding the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 used in this place by St. Paul ) saith , * quod sine judicio , & temere sunt collecturi doctores suos : They shall rashly gather together teachers of their own . 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Teachers : as they esteem and use them in contradistinction to Pastours ; for they will not admit of any to have a pastoral rule and care over them , but teachers to tickle their Ears , and please their fancies . And which is yet worse . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to their own Lusts. Such as do best please their humours ; such as are of the same party with themselves , that are in opposition to that which themselves oppose . Beza Interprets it thus , prout hoc vel illud illis arriserit , : as this or that best pleafeth them . The second is , the itch of the ear . 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , a disease very common , yet never so Epidemical , as in these days . And there are two things , that very much stir and provoke this humour . 1. Novelty . If the thing , either for the matter , or the manner of it , be new and strange , our Athen●an dispositions will soon incline us ‖ to spend our whole time in it . Let a Physician be never so learned , honest , experienced , and successfull in his place , yet if but an Empirick or Mounte●ank come into the Country , and set up his Stage , though he doeth nothing but put off deceitfull and Sophisticate Drugs , and takes mens money , yet he shall not want at all times a full resort to him , because he is a new-corner , and his pretended method and means of cure , are new and unusual . In Religion also , people are naturally 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , apt to be led away with insatiable desire of hearing new men and new things , and listen rather to fables * than to wholesome words that are according to godliness : rather admire and adore the new conceits of every Novellist , than receive the great mysteries of Salvation in love of the truth , from him , whom God hath set to watch over their Souls . Mitte quod scio , dic quod nescio , is their Motto ; we have heard this man long enough , our Ears itch now to attend to some other ; what we know is stale , things fresh and unheard do better please us . It is not the word , but the man they desire to hear . And therein they shew themselves to be the most observant disciples of the great Masters of errour and deceipt , the Papists : For this is a Doctrine taught by Stapleton ‖ in the tenth of his quodlibets , non quid loquitur , sed quis , à bono Catholico attendendum est . A good Catholick ought not to regard what is spoken , but who it is that speaks . And if the speaker prove a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , and stuff up his discourse with idle and impertinent stories , how fabulous soever , he shall find more attention and applause , from such humorous † hearers , than he that with greatest evidence of the spirit and power , makes known the Oracles of God. But certainly that man is under a very great distemper of body , that grows weary of his good ordinary food . The stomach is very sickly , when it cannot take in any solid meat , but the fancy is still working after rarities . And if ever that person recover his former health he will find , that his body will never hold to be in better temper , than when he keeps to his ordinary Diet. 2. Prohibition by Authority . Things denied , are always most desired , and the enjoyment of them is therefore the sweeter , because restrained by Law. * Audax omnia perpeti Gens humana ruit per vetitum nefas . Ever since our first parents transgressed in eating the forbidden fruit , all the sinfull posterity of Adam , are ready to run most dangerous adventures for a taste of that , which they should not touch . How just and reasonable soever the prohibition is , yet it will allways be looked on with a jealous Eye , by those that are concerned in it , as if there were a more than ordinary excellency in the thing denyed ; and it were therefore kept from us by our Superiours ( though they mean us never so much good in it ) because they envy us the enjoyment of it . Whence it comes to pass , that ( as beasts ) though their own pasture be never so good , yet if they are bounded in , they cannot contain themselves , but will adventure to leap the hedge , that they may goe farther , though they fare worse . Were it so that the doors of our Churches were shut up by Authority , People forbidden to resort thither , or to attend the Ministry of their own Pastours any more , and commanded to frequent the private meetings of strangers onely ; the would these People be soon weary of their restraint , and pretend great zeal to God's house , and the place where his honour dwells , then would their Souls seem to long , and even to faint within them , for the Courts of the Lord , to see his Power and his Glory , so as they have seen it in his Sanctuary : Then would they seem to account their own Ministers worthy of double honour , to receive them in the Lord with all gladness , and to hold them in reputation . Oh the strange nature of the Sons of men , to whom a Legal prohibition is a forcible invitation , that know not the worth of Mercies but by the loss of them ! Fifthly , it alienates the affections of People from the true worship of God established by Law in our Church ; shakes the minds of the weak , and begets even in those who have professed , they have not the least exception against it , but suspect somewhat amiss in it onely upon this ground , because they see others ( of whose judgments they have a good confidence ) withdraw from it , and chuse rather to frequent private meetings than to serve God in the publick Congregations . Who have not heard the railings and revilings that have proceeded out of the mouths of those , who are the favourers , and followers of these unlawfull Assemblies , against the Book of Common-prayer ? And who may not observe , their constant and studyed withdrawing from the use of it ? That book , which 1. For the Authours and Compilers of it , was composed by the most Learned and Holy Doctours , Martyrs and Confessours , that the Church of England ever had ; who spent their times , studies , and lives in opposing the Idolatry and Superstition of the Romish Church : Set forth at first , in the Reign , and by the Authority of King Edward the Sixth , who for his Piety , Zeal , Learning and Wisedom , was accounted the miracle of nature . Peter Martyr , in an Oration of his at Argentine , saith thus of his death ; * Praeter omnem spem acerbâ & luctuosâ morte sublatus est Edvardus Angliae Rex , Monarcharum Christiani orbis candidum Lumen , pietatis Legitimus alumnus , & Evangelii Christi propugnator acerrimus . Besides all expectation Edward King of England is taken away by lamentable and cruel Death , who was the clear light of all the Monarchs of the Christian World , the true Son of Piety , and the most zealous and earnest Defender and Maintainer of the Gospel of Christ. And in an Oration of his at Tigurum , he gives this Testimony of him ; * Obiit prohdolor , obiit Edvardus ille sanctissimus Rex , quo adolescente nescio an Sol doctiorem pro●●aetate , sanctiorem atque prudentiorem usquam viderit . The most Holy King Eward is dead , and I know not whether the Sun ever saw a more Learned for his age , and a more sanctified and wise Prince . And again in an Epistle to Queen Elizabeth , speaking of the zeal and care of several godly and religious Kings in reforming Religion , and establishing the true Worship of God , saith , ‖ Hoc frater tuus Edvardus Angliae Rex praeclarissimus , pro viribus , & sane prae quam ejus aetas pateretur , facere studuit , cujus regnum diutius extrahi , peccata nostra & ingratitudo intolerabilis non siver●nt ; eximias illius adolescentis virtutes , & egregiam pietatem , Deus orbi tantum ostendere voluit , deinde ut nos , quemadmodum mala nostra merita exigebant , aliquantulum castigaret , illum e terra citius ad se revocavit . The same your brother Edward the most renowned King of England did study , to the utmost of his Power , and beyond what his age would permit , to doe : whose reign , our sins and most intolerable ingratitude would not suffer to continue longer over us . God onely would shew to the World the singular virtues and most excellent Piety of that young man , and then , to correct us as our evil deservings did require , he soon recalled him from this World to himself . Judicious Mr. Hooker calls him * Edward the Saint , in whom it pleased God , righteous and just , to let England see what a blessing , sin and iniquity would not suffer it to enjoy . This rare and most excellent person God raised up to see this Book composed , to establish it by regal Authority , and then he was taken to his Crown of Glory . 2. For the matter contained in that Book † Sober and Learned men have sufficiently vindicated it , against the cavils and exceptions of those , who thought it a part of Piety , to make what prophane objections they could against it ; especially for Popery and Superstition . Whereas no doubt the Liturgy was exactly conformed to the Doctrine of the Church of England , and this , by all reformed Churches is confessed to be most found and orthodox . It casts out all false Doctrine and Worship , and is , of it self , sufficient to confute a Papist , and other the Enemies of the Protestant Religion . It is fitted for all occasions and uses of the Church , and comprehends the whole Duty of a Christian , both for the credendis , contained in the Confessions of Faith ; the faciendis , in the ten Commandments ; and the petendis , in the Lord's Prayer , and others framed thereby . 3. For the Confirmation of it ; it stands ratified and enjoined by the Laws , Statutes , and Sovereign Authority of five most prudent and pious Persons immediately ( Queen Mary a Papist onely interposing ) succeeding one the other on the English Throne : sealed and confirmed by the bloud of so many Martyrs , that suffered in those Marian days , shortly after the composure of it , and so written in the bloud of those that compiled it . 4. For the approbation of it ; it is commended and allowed by the best Divines of the reformed Churches , both at home and abroad . Such as Cranmer , Tayler , Ridley , Iewel , Calvin , Bucer , and many others . 5. Touching God's acceptance and owning of it , the History of ages past , and the strange providence of God , in relation to the framing , preserving , blessing and restoring it , do so evidently declare this , that he seems to be very much darkned in his mind with prejudice , that can deny or gainsay it . * Which grace and favour of Divine assistence , having not in one thing or two shewed it self , nor for some few days or years appeared , but in such sort so long continued , our manifold sins and transgressions striving to the contrary ; what can we less thereupon conclude , than that God would at leastwise by tract of time teach the World , that the thing which he blesseth , defendeth , keepeth so strongly , cannot chuse but be of him ? Wherefore if any refuse to believe us disputing for it , let him believe God himself thus miraculously working for it . What I have said in commendation of this book , amounts to no more than what the reverend Divines of the Presbyterian perswasion , have been constrained to say of it , even then , when they were to make all the exceptions they could against it . They say , † We have an high , an honourable esteem of those Godly and Learned Bishops , and others , who were the Compilers of the publick Liturgy ; and do look on it as an excellent and worthy work . 'T is true , they add [ for that time — ] But these words seem to me , no way to abate or detract from the acknowledged excellency and worth of it . For , if it were an excellent and worthy work then , what hinders , but that it is so now ? Wherein doth the excellency and worthiness of any form of God's worship at any time consist , but in its Conformity to the Scriptures , which is the rule and measure of Divine worship at all times ? It could never be excellent and worthy , that was at any time unlawfull ; and it could have been no otherwise , had it been contrary to God's word . And they that shall impartially reade the History , and seriously consider the profound Learning , clear Light , admirable Piety , incomparable Zeal , Purity , Patience , Loyalty , and all other Christian Graces and Virtues , which did shine forth in those renowned Fathers and Martyrs , the Compilers of that book , cannot without blushing arrogate to themselves greater● and higher attainments , than they had . Are the men of this age the onely Children of the light , and were those Worthies ( one of whom ‖ prophetically said to his fellow-sufferer at the stake , We shall this day light such a Candle by God's Grace in England , as I trust , shall never be put out ) but in the mist of Popish ignorance and superstition , in comparison of us now ? Rather , I think , they ought to be acknowledged men extraordinarily filled with the Spirit of God : Light and understanding and sound wisedom was found in them , and in nothing did they come behind the very chiefest Servants of God in this generation . We allow and confess them to have been men , not onely profound in Learning , but sound in the faith , Orthodox in judgment , yea , the great assertours of the Protestant Religion , and glorious instruments in the hands of God , of causing that light of truth to break out of darkness , by which we now walk , and which we all profess . How is it then , that they who spent all their time , studies , and strength in opposing the Idolatry and Superstition of the Romish Church , and loved not their lives unto death , but were slain for the word of God , and testimony which they hold , should be thought to retain any thing of Popish superstition in worship ? What is this , but * to condemn the generation of God's Children , which cannot be well pleasing to their Father ? But what if it should be proved that the Liturgy of our Church , was ( for the substance of it ) in use , in the very first and purest times of the Church of Christ , before ever Popish Superstition came into the World ? Then , I hope , it will be acknowledged to be free from that , whereof it is secretly and most ignorantly charged . But Godly and Learned Cranmer in Queen Mary's days ( who knew well what he said , and was well able to make his words good , ) offers to enter the lists with any Papist living ( for it had no other Enemy in those days , neither hath it in these , but such as fight with their weapons , and sharpen their instruments against it , at their forge . ) And ( if the Queens Highness would grant thereunto ) * prove against all that will say the contrary , that all that is contained in the Holy Communion , set out by the most innocent and godly King Edward VI. in his high Court of Parliament , is conformable to that order which our Saviour Christ did both observe , and command to be observed , and which the Apostles and primitive Church used many years . And that if he might be permitted to take to himself Peter Martyr , and four or five others , whom he should chuse , they would , by God's Grace , take upon them to defend , not onely the Common-prayers of the Church , the ministration of the Sacraments , and other the rites and ceremonies , but also all the Doctrine and Religion set out by the said King Edward VI. to be more pure and according to God's word , than any other that have been used in England these thousand years , so that God's word may be judge . And that the Order of the Church set out at that present in the Realm by Act of Parliament , is the same that was in the Church fifteen hundred years past . Neither saith he it alone , but we have the several testimonies of particular Learned and judicious Saints of that and the following generation , touching the excellency and worth of that Book ; such as Saunders , Taylor , Ridley , Iewel , &c. We have a Noble Army of Martyrs standing together in vindication of the purity of it . The whole blessed company of persecuted Preachers , in Prison , at the beginning of Queen Mary's Reign , in a petition of theirs to the King , Queen and Parliament , say thus * If your said Subjects be not able by the Testimony of Christ , his Prophets , Apostles , and Godly Fathers of his Church , to prove that the Doctrine of the Church , Homilies , and Service-book , taught and set forth in the time of our late most godly Prince King Edward VI. is the true Doctrine of Christ's Catholick Church , and most agreeable with the Articles of the Christian faith ; your said subjects offer themselves then , to the most heavy punishment that it shall please your Majesty to appoint . Should but one Nonconformist have said so much , for the antiquity and purity of this Book , it would sooner have been believed by the people of our age , than from the mouths of so many learned and holy Fathers . Take therefore the testimony of one of that way , and a learned one , Mr. Iohn Ball , who having spent great pains in quitting it from the objections of Separatists , lays down this conclusion . * Our Service-book is not a Translation of the Mass , but a restitution of the ancient Liturgy , wherein sundry Prayers are inserted , used by the Fathers , agreeable to the Scriptures . And in the same Chapter in a few pages after , he hath these words . ‖ To the praise of God be it spoken , our Liturgy for purity and soundness , may compare with any Liturgy used in the third and fourth Ages of the Church . Which was long before Popery came into the World. Neither hath any of the several emendations that it hath admitted , since its first composure , been of that nature or moment as to give an occasion to charge it in the least with any thing that is , or was , sinfull or Superstitious . However thus much , I suppose , may unquestionably be concluded from the abovesaid acknowledgment ; that if it were an excellent and worthy work then , it is not sinfull now : but the use of it being enjoyned by Authority , may be conformed to with a good Conscience . Especially considering , that it is farther acknowledged by the Divines first named , That what things soever * are offensive to them in it , and desired to be removed , are not of the foundation of Religion , nor the essentials of publick Worship ; and must therefore be but circumstantials . † Which ought to be the more easily born with in complyance with Lawfull Authority , by all such as mind their own duty , or tender the peace of the Church ; it being a good and safe rule which St. Augustine gives in such a case . ‖ Quod neque contra Fidem , neque contra bonos more 's injungitur , indifferenter est habendum , & pro eorum inter quos vivitur societate servandum est . Whatsoever is enjoined , that is not contrary to Faith or Holiness , ought to be observed for peace-sake with them , among whom we live . Yet how is this Book called to the stake , by the upholders and frequenters of Conventicles , and made to fill up , what was behind of the sufferings of those holy Fathers , that compiled it ! How often have I heard it call'd by some of them Popery , Idolatry , Superstition , and what not ! How are they accounted the onely Virtuoso's in these days , and to have attained to a very high pitch of Piety , when they have onely arrived at such a measure of profaneness , as to rail at it , and carefully to shun their joining with us , in the Worship of God by it ; and think that they have then done him a very acceptable service , when they have done him none at all , but onely afforded their presence at the Preaching of a Sermon ? And to the end that malice may leave nothing unattempted to render it contemptible , I have observed , that these sinfull Assemblies are studiously continued till the end of Common Prayer in the Church , at least ; if not during the Sermon also . Could it ever have been thought , that men who pretend Religion and Conscience , could have proceeded to such a monstrous extremity of wickedness , as to prefer their own private humours and fancies , before God's publick Worship ? And thus endeavour to undermine and destroy so godly and legal an Establishment ? If confession of Sin , profession of Faith , reading of the Scriptures , Prayers and Praise to God ( which is the substance of this whole Book ) be any part of God's Ordinance or Worship , then surely the practice of these men , is contrary not onely to Gospel order and commands , but even to those Rules of Worship , which the principal men of their own way and perswasion have given . For in the Directory composed by the late Assembly of Divines , the first direction for publick Worship which they give , is this , * When the Congregation is to meet for publick Worship , the people ( having before prepared their hearts thereunto ) ought all to come and join therein ; not absenting themselves from the publick Ordinances through negligence , or , upon pretence of Private meetings . How are the mouths of Papists hereby opened against us , to justifie their own Recusancy , and to condemn our Church as false and adulterate , seeing that our own members do revile it ( as they of the Romish Church also do , calling it * an abominable Book , very pesti●erous , &c. the † service of Baal , plain Idolatry ) separate themselves from it , join hands with them to destroy it , and are contented to hazard their Estates and fortunes , rather than to conform to it ? Doth not this harden them in their Superstition and Idolatry , avert them from our Church , and make them sit down in the scorners chair ? Doth not this say ( in effect ) that all those good laws formerly made against Papists , and all penalties and mulcts by virtue thereof inflicted , were most unjust , in punishing them for refusing to join with us in that form of worship , which we our selves cannot approve of ? We may say with the Athenians , Auximus Philippum nos ipsi Athenienses , We have strengthned the hands of our Enemies against us , by our own divisions and contentions . It is an odious quality , and that which obscures the lustre of all the commendable vertues which ‖ Franzius notes of the Cranes , that oftentimes they are so vehemently enraged one with an other , and maintain such a combate among themselves , that they neither observe , nor fear the coming of the Fowler ; Yea , that they rather desire his approach , and to be taken by him , than to be reconciled to their mates , with whom they are faln out . It is a thing much to be feared , that these men will never be at quiet and peace in the Church , untill they make that true of themselves which I have read objected to the aforesaid people of Athens by way of reproach , that they would never vouchsafe to treat or hear of peace , but in mourning gowns , namely , after the loss of their friends and fortunes in the wars . He hath no mind that considers not this , nor heart that condoles it not . Put the case , that though the Liturgy of our Church was composed with so much piety and prudence , yet there might remain any thing capable of amendment , as a freckle in a fair Face : what if it be not in all things suitable with every man's judgment or fancy ( as there is nothing in the world , the Directory it self not excepted , so well done , that doth not displease some : the best cook'd dishes please not every Palate ) yet as St. Augustine of old answered the Donatists * Si peccavit Caecilianus non ideo haereditatem suam perdidit Christus . Shall God therefore loose his publick worship and service , shall it be trampled upon , slighted , and prophanely neglected , because we differ about black and white , as Bishop Ridley told Bishop Hooper in a Letter to him ? And though in these latter days , preaching hath gotten ground of the Prayers of the Church , in the opinion of some whom we shall see present now and then at the former , but seldom or never at the latter ; yet ( withou● any detraction to that excellent ordinance of God be it spoken ) this most despised part of God's worship must needs be granted to have the preheminence of the other ( especially in these days , wherein the Church is so maturely composed and throughly setled in the faith , and the Book of the holy Scriptures so complete and common amongst us in our own Language ) by him that considers , 1. First , that it is the most proper and immediate worship of God , and preaching but mediate , as it is the means which God hath ordained to teach men how to pray , and to fit them for that duty . For , † how can they call upon him in whom they have not believed ? And how can they believe in him , of whom they have not heard ? and how shall they hear without a preacher ? 2. Secondly , it is a duty simply and entirely moral , good in respect of its own nature and quality , before any external constitution passed upon it , and may be resolved into one of the dictates and principles of the Law of Nature , imprinted universally in the hearts of all men at the creation . For before the Law of the ten Commandments ‖ men began to call on the name of the Lord ; as being taught by the light of Nature , that in God we all live , move and have our being ; and that he is the Father of lights , from whom cometh down every good and perfect gift . But preaching and hearing are acknowledged by all ; to be instituted worship , and moral onely by an external imposition and mandate of the Supreme Lawgiver . 3. Thirdly , it is a duty of longer duration than preaching : the one being onely for this life ; the other , for the life to come also : the one proper and peculiar to men as members of the Church militant , the other common to men and Angels , in the Church triumphant . * The knowledge is small which we have on Earth , concerning things done in Heaven : notwithstandings thus much we know , even of Saints in Heaven , that they pray . 4. Fourthly , it is a duty of larger extent and benefit than Preaching is ; this onely profiteth those that be present , that do hear it and attend upon it , but Prayer is available even for those that are far distant , yea though they be in the remotest parts of the world . When Lot's preaching did no good at all to his hearers , yet Abraham's prayers might have been so effectual as to have saved five wicked Cities , if there had been but ten righteous persons in them . What our Blessed Saviour's judgment was in this case , we may easily gather by that place in the Gospel , where he calls the Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an house of Prayer , not of Preaching . Whence in the Primitive times all the Christian Temples were called and known by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , Oratories . And publick Prayers of the Church have as much the preheminence of private , as the duty it self , hath of preaching , in ●egard there is more force in these Prayers , wherein the whole Church joyn † together as one man , than there can be in those , that others , though never so many , make apart any where else . ‖ I say unto you ( saith our Saviour ) that if two of you shall agree on Earth , touching any thing that they shall ask , it shall be done for them of my Father which is in Heaven . Much more then if a Thousand ; and more if the whole Church . They are two excellent and remarkable sayings of St. Chrysostome to this purpose , which are quoted by * Bishop Iewel in his reply to Harding's answer . Non aeque exoras cum solus dominum obsecras , atq●e cum fratribus tuis . Est enim in hoc plus aliquid , videlicet concordia , conspiratio , copula amoris , & charitatis , & sacerdotum clamores . Praesunt enim ob eam rem sacerdotes , ut populi orationes , quae infirmiores per se sunt , validiores eas complexae simul in c●elum evehantur . Thou dost not so soon obtain thy desire when thou prayest alone unto the Lord , as when thou prayest with thy Brethren ; for herein is somewhat more , the concord , the consent , the joyning of love and charity , and the cry of the Priest. For to that end the Priests are made overseers , that they being the stronger sort , may take with them the weaker Prayers of the People and carry them up into Heaven . Again he saith . † Quod quis apud seipsum precatus accipere non poterit , hoc cum multitudine precatus accipiet . Quare ? Quia etiamsi non propria virtus , tamen concordia multum potest . The thing that a man cannot obtain by himself alone , praying together with the multitude , he shall obtain ; and why so ? for although not his own worthiness , yet concord and unity prevaileth much . When the whole Church joyned together in their devotions for St. Peter's enlargment , Omnipotence exerted it self in a series of Miracles ‖ that their Prayers should not be unanswered . * Tunc est efficacior & sanatior devotio , quando in operibus pietatis totius ecclesie unus est animus , & unus est sensus . Prayer is then more holy and effectual , when in the works of piety there is but one mind and one meaning of the whole Church Besides , God hath promised ( as hath been before shewed ) to be more comfortably present in our Church-Assemblies , than in any other houses or places whatsoever . If it had been all one to pray in a private house , or in the publick assemblies of the Church , St. Paul , and the Godly Christians with him , would never have put themselves to an hazard of their lives , in times of hottest persecution , by meeting together in multitudes , in a place † where there was an House of Prayer ; or where they were wont to assemble together to pray . For it is read both ways . The first pleaseth Tremelius best ; the latter , Beza . ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 enim , & orationem & oratorium significat . The word signifies both Prayer , and an House of Prayer . * The House of Prayer is a Court beautified with the presence of celestial powers , there the Almighty doth sit to hear , and his Angels intermingle with us , as our associates , and attend to further our Suits . With reference hereunto the Apostle requires so great care to be had of decency in the Church , for the Angels sake ; saith Mr. Hooker . Sixthly , it begets ill thoughts of his Majesty's most gracious Government , as if he were a persecutor and suppressor of true Religion , and an enemy to piety and godliness . These meetings about in Barnes , and private Houses , look not as if we lived under a Christian Protestant Prince , as if King Charles were upon the throne ; but as if Nero , Dioclesian , or Queen Mary were alive again , and did rule . * Conventicles ( saith Bishop Lake ) make shew as if you had not freedom of Religion , and thereby you derogate from the honour of the King 's most Christian Government , and wrong your Pastour , casting imputation upon him , that he cannot , or will not instruct you as he ought . And indeed it lays the Axe to the Root , and tends to the undermining and destruction of all Government and Governours . Do not the Histories of all Ages give in evidence to the evil tendency of these private , seditious , and unlawfull meetings ? In the late years of war and confusion , those meetings were effectually made use of , by all parties , as the great Engine , to pull down the powers then in being . By these means Presbytery did in a great measure prevail to the forceable and irregular throwing down of the legally established Episcopacy . So by the same means Independency , Anabaptism , Fifth-monarchism hath been prevalent over and against Presbytery . So that it is a wonder the Governours of our Church and State have not a more watchfull and jealous Eye , upon all such illegal , Schismatical , and seditious conventions . It is a sure rule of our Saviour † A Kingdom divided cannot stand . It was a principle of Machiavel , divide , & impera , divide , and take all . Whatsoever may be divided , may be destroyed . When a society is broken , it may soon be brought to confusion . 'T is Satan's way to destroy , by dissolving unions : ‖ Infirma est securitas ab alienis dissidiis , nec unquam stabile est regnum , vbi inter se discordant ii , qui reguntur . This practice then that tends so much to dividing , tends as much to destroying both Church and State. Seventhly , Where this liberty is either taken or given , there is , or may be , dissenting from , yea contrariety of Doctrine to what is taught in publick . And that can no way conduce to edification in faith and holiness , but to the greatest confusion that may be . The whole Church should be , as the whole World was in Noah's time , unius labii , of one Language , the building else will prove to be but a Babel , and the Ministry * for destruction , and not for edification ; which is so far from being God's Ordinance , that it is quite contrary thereunto . This made St. Paul so earnestly to importune the Church of Corinth , † to speak all the same things . And truly such is the condition of the Upholders and Masters of these unlawfull Assemblies in these days , that there is great danger of their prevarication now and then in Doctrine , and of suiting their discourses to their hearers palates . I say they are under a very great temptation to gratifie mens vices , by indulging their prejudices . For , as a worthy Prelate of our Church hath well observed † Where Ministers depend upon voluntary benevolences , if they do but upon some just reproof Gaul the conscience of a guilty hearer , or preach some truth , which disrelisheth the Palate of a prepossessed auditour , he streightway flies out , and not onely withdraws his own pay , but the contribution of others also . So as the free Tongue teacher , must either live by air , or be forced to change his Pasture . Thereupon it is that those Sportulary Preachers are fain to sooth up their many Masters , and are so gagged with the fear of starving displeasure , that they dare not be free in the reprehension of the daring sins of their uncertain benefactors , as being charmed to speak either placentia , or nothing . This is a truth easie to be apprehended . For if even when the Laws enforce men to pay their dues to their Ministers , they yet continue so backward in the discharge of them ( especially if never so little displeased at just reproofs , and lawfull endeavours to reform their vicious lives ) how much less hope can there be , that being left to their own free choice , they will prove liberal or bountifull in their voluntary Contributions , if never so little cross'd upon the like occasion by their new Masters . Lastly , it opens a door to all Errours and Heresies , and is the ready way to bring all Religion to nothing . For ( saith the Apostle ) when people * heap up to themselves teachers , to satisfie the itch of their Ears , they will turn away their Ears from the truth , and shall be turned to fables in a short time . Elsewhere the Holy Ghost joins order and stedfastness together . † Though I be absent in the flesh , yet am I present with you in the spirit , joying to behold your order and stedfastness of your faith in Christ. It is impossible for men to be stedfast in Religion , who keep not God's order . How come so many in our days to fall from their stedfastness , some to Anabaptism , some to Quakerism , and some to Atheism , but by breaking first that order in Religion , that God hath set ? If Souldiers in an Army keep their order , every one abiding in his proper place , and to his proper employment and command , they are invincible : but when once they begin to break their Ranks , they are soon after vanquished and destroyed . If liberty may be taken to given to such private House-preaching in another man's Parish , why may not a Iesuit that preacheth Purgatory , Invocation of Saints , Worshipping of Images , and such like Popish stuff doe the like ? Nay , it is a truth too well known , that there are some of them under the notion of Nonconformists that doe so : And in sundry places of this Nation , some such have been discovered , and more may , were they carefully sought after . I am sure it strengthens the hands of the wicked ; it justifieth and encourageth the Anabaptists , Quakers , and all other Sectaries , ( who in a Book put forth at the beginning of the long Parliament , called , The Compassionate Samaritan ‖ desire that the Parliament would stop all proceedings against them : and for the future provide , that as well particular and private Congregations , as publick , may have protection from them ) in all their unjust and prophane separations from our Churches , and sinfull and unlawfull Conventicles , which none have been more zealous and forward to condemn and suppress , than those men that now tread in their steps , and doe the same thing which they have disallowed and opposed in others . All which things considered , every faithfull Pastour of a Congregation where such Intruders thrust themselves , may say to their people , as St. Paul to the Corinthians * Though yee have ten thousand instructers , yet ye have not many Fathers , for I have begotten you through the Gospel . And , † If I be not an Apostle to others , yet doubtless I am to you , for the seal of mine Apostleship are ye in the Lord. And all such people as content not themselves with the labours of their pious and painfull Pastours , but run after Strangers and Usurpers , may justly fear that curse : ‖ Thus saith the Lord unto the people , Thus have they loved to wander , they have not refrained their feet ; therefore the Lord doth not accept them , he will now remember their iniquities , and visit their sins . For , * as a bird that wandreth from his nest , so is a man that wandreth from his place . God took Notes, typically marginal, from the original text Notes for div A52421-e540 * Rom. 3. 8. * Deut. 6. 17 ▪ 18. † Deut. 12. 8. * Mat. 16. 23. † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 10● . ‖ Job 13. 7. * 1 Sam. 21. 15. * Basil. de Spir. Sanct. c. 27. * Mat. 18. 17. Nihil euiquam largiri potest humana indulgentia , ubi intercedit & legem tribuit divina praescriptio . Cyp. Epist. 4. * Esth. 9. 20 , 21. † 1 Mac. 4. 59. ‖ Joh. 10. 22. * Act. 24. 18. * 1 Cor. 14 26 , 40. † Hier. Zanch. T. 4. de 〈◊〉 ▪ Thes. 4. p. 202. ‖ Hier. Zanch. T. 8. obs . in Confess . suam cap. 25. Aph. 10. 11. † Calv. Com. in 1 Cor. 14. 40. ‖ Calv. Instit. L. 4. c. 10. sect . 30. * Molin . de just . tr . 2. disp . 27. † Beza Epist. 20. ‖ Hooker Eccles . polit . L. 5. Sect. 9. * 1 Cor. 11. 22. † Prov. 6. 20. ‖ Confess . Suev . in Harm Confess . 8. 17. p , 290. St. Paul calleth Ecclesiastical Laws and Constitutions of the Church of Corinth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 , traditions . 1 Cor. 11. 2. 35 Eliz. 1. This treatise was written and composed before the Statute to prevent and suppress seditious Conventicles Car. 2. 22 was made . * 2. H. 5. 8. † 1 Tim. 2. 2. ‖ Aug. tract . 11. in Johan . * Rom. 13. 1. † Bern. Epist. 4. 2. ad Archiepis . Senovensem . ‖ Bellarm. de clericis . c. 28. Ans. 1. Ans. 2. * Act. 25. 10. 11. † Act. 25. 11. ‖ Act. 16. 37. * Act. 22. 28. † 1 King. 2. 27. ‖ Suarez . defens . fid . Cath. l. 3. c. 26. num . 7. * 1 King. 3. 3. † Act. of uniform . p. 68. ‖ Ibid. pag. 71. * Vindicat. of Presbyt . p. 119. 120. † View of the Directory . p. 23. ‖ Euseb. de vit . Constant. l. 4. c. 24. * Sir H. Spelman de non tem●r . Eccl. p. 21 , 22. † Reges sacro oleo uncti sunt spiritualis jurisdictionis capaces . 33 Ed. 3. Tit. Aid de Roy. 103. ex Dom. Cook Rep. part 5. ‖ Sanderson de oblig . Consc. Lect. 6. Sect. 31. * 2 Chron. 30. † Esther 9. ‖ Zach. 8. 19. * Mr. Jo. Mart. in Serm. on Deut. 17. 12. † Aquin. 1 , 2. quest . 96. Answ. 1. Answ. 2. ‖ Act. 19. 39. Answ. 3. * Sand. de obligat . Consc. Lect. 6. Sect. 15. † Bez. Epist. ad quosdam Eccles. Anglic. fratres . p. 97. ‖ Concil . Antioch . Can. 4. * Mr. William Bradshaw unreasonableness of separation . pag. 90 , &c. Firmum est genus probationis quod etiam ex adversario sumitur , & veritas etiam ab inimicis veritatis probetur . Novatian . de Trin. Amici contra amicum ; & inimici pro inimico invincibile testimonium est . L. Vives de instrument . probabilit . * Pag. 345. vide . the last page of this Treatise . 156. where the words are to be seen . † Gal. 1. 1. ‖ Confess . Suev . cap. 14. * Aug. Object . Ans. Sanderson de obligat . Consc. p. 304. &c. † Euseb. de vit .. Constant. L. 3. c. 63. ‖ Sozom. L. 7. c. 12. * Act. 19. 29. † 1 Cor. 14. 33. 40. ‖ Coll. 2. 5. * Job . 10. 21 , 22. Hild. on Joh. 4. p. 242. ‖ Blake defoed . p. 225. * Act. 20. 28. † Tit. 1. 5. ‖ Act. 14. 23. * Calvin in loc . † Jansen . in concord . evang . ‖ 2 Tim. 4. 10. 12. * Baldwin . † 1. Thess. 5. 12 , 15. ‖ Heb. 13. 7. * Heb. 13. 17. † Phil. 2. 29. ‖ John. 10. Chrysost. Cyprian Epis. 69. * Grex totus in agris unius scabie cadit . Juv. † Ps. 119. 176. Jer. 5. 6. 7. 17. Zach. 10. 11. — 11. 10. 15. — 13. 7. Mat. 9. 36. ‖ Jer. 3. 15. * Job . 15. 3. † Mat. 13. 14. ‖ Ezek. 14. 7. — 9. ‖ Gastius de Exord . Anabapt . p. 495. * 1 Tim. 6. 20. † Mat. 21. 19. ‖ Hist. animal . p. 384. * Phil. 2. 3. † Grave and modest Confutat . published by Mr. Rathband p. 61. 62. ‖ Luc. 10. 30. * Ps. 87. 1 , 2 , 3 , Ps. 128. 5. † Josh. 2. ‖ 2 King. 25. 5. * Jer. 4. 22. † Ezra 4. 1 , 2. ‖ 1 Cor. 1. 12. * V. 13. † 1 Cor. 3. 5. ‖ Rom. 15. 18. * 1 Cor. 3. 6. † 2 Cor. 4. 7. * Dan. 1. 15. † Mat. 4. 4. ‖ Christian Concord . p. 36. * Concil . 3. Carthag . l. 10. † Aquin supple . 3. par . 9. 8. A. 4. ‖ Cyprian . L. 1. Epist. 6. * Ibid. L. 1. Epist. 3. * Injure Canon . L. 3. decret . Greg. Tit. 29. de paroeciis . † L. 5. Tit. 38. de paenitentiis & remissis . ‖ Honor. Reg. de statu Eccles . in Anglia . p. 95. * Ex scriptis Godfri . de fontantis . † Episcopus Byturisensis . † Act. mon. T. 1. p. 533. * Num. 4. 15. † Arnob. Cont. Serapion . ‖ Melchior Adam : in vi● . Luth. p. 123. * Lev. 1. 7. 8. † Gen. 22. 9. ‖ Concil . Antioch . Can. 13. & 22. * 1 King. 10. 4. 5. † 1 Tim. 3. 15. * 1 Cor. 3. 6. Psal. 127. 1 , 2. † Ps. 87. 3. ‖ Exod. 20. 24. * Exod. 25. 22. — 29. 42. † Exod. 30. 6. 40. 34. ‖ Ps. 65. 4. * Ps. 84. 4. † Ps. 147. 13 ‖ Prov. 8. 34. * Ps. 26. 8. † Ps. 27. 4. ‖ Ps. 48. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cum silentio expectare . * Psal. 134. 3. † — 133. 3. ‖ — 118. 26. * Num. 6. 24. † Deut. 10. 8. ‖ Car. 30. 27. * Psal. 105. 4. — 42. 2. † Gen. 4. 14. ‖ ver . 16. * Ainsworth in Loc. * Psal. 42. 4. ‖ ver . 2. Mollerg . inloc . ‖ 1 Sam. 22. 5. * — 23. 9. ‖ Ps. 84. 1-5 . * Ps. 35. 18. ‖ Ps. 111. 1. * Ps. 29. 1 , 2. ‖ 2 King. 20. 5. * Zeph. 3. 18. ‖ Mr Hild. on Jo. 4. p. 118. * Joel . 2. 15. ‖ 2 Chron. 20. 13. * V. 5. ‖ 2 Cron. 30. 1. * Ps. 73. 16. ‖ Ps. 77. 13. * Luc. 24. 53. † Act. 2. 46. — 5-42 . — 19. 8. ‖ Act. 19. 8. — 5. 21. 25. * 1 Cor. 11. 20. † 1 Cor. 11. 18. — 14. 30. Jam. 2. 2. ‖ Hierom. ut citatur a Centur . Magdeburg . cent . 4. c. 6. p. 272. * Aug. L. 3. de . Doct. Christi . † Luc. 2. 37. — 18. 10. ‖ Dan. 6. 10. * Exod. 20. 24. ‖ 2 Sam. 18. 18. * Deut. 12. 5. ‖ Pag. 14. 15. 16. * ● Chron. 4. 9. — 6. 12. ‖ Act. 3. 11. * Es. 56. 7. ‖ Mal. 1. 11. * 1 King. 4. 10 , 11. ‖ Mat. 21 13. * Luc. 2. 37. & 18. 10. † Dan. 6. 10. ‖ Concil . Gangrens . in subscriptione , habitum circa Ann. Domi●i . 314. * Concil . Gangrens . c. 5. Citatur etiam in decret . dist . 30. Can. 10. † Can. 6. ‖ Socrat. Hist-Eccles . L. 2. c. 43. * In collatione quinta Authenticorum . † 1 Tim. 2. 8. ‖ Hooker Eccles . polit . L. 5. Sect. 16. Sir Walter Rawleigh in his History of the World. Lib. 2. Cap. 5. Sect. 1. * Jer. 23 32. † Vines Sermon on 2 Pet. 2. 1. p. 9. ‖ Tarnov . de . S. minist . c. 8. * Mark 1. 25. † Rom. 10. 15. Quisquis in Ecclesia docet , non vocatus & missus à Christo , invadit alienam possessionem , fur est & latro ; venit , in nomine suo , non Dei ; Christi minister non est , verbum Christi non habet : imo ne quidem Ecclesiae dici minister debet , quem ipsa non vocavit ; turbator est boni ordinis , causa confusionis , quae non à Deo est . Nic. Arnobd 9. in refutat . Cat. Racov. p. 724. ‖ Hierom. ad vers . Pelag. l. 2. Obj. Answ. 1. * Rom. 13. 5. Ans. 2. † Gal. 1. 1. ‖ Act. 16. 9 , 10. * Act. 8. 5. † Act. 11. 19. 20. 2 Joh. 7. ‖ Exod. 4. 2. — 8. 19. Joh. 5. 36. Mat. 10. 8. 2 Cor. 12. 12. * Joh. 1. 6. † Es. 40. 3. Mal. 3. 1. ‖ Perk. de digminist . pag. 459. and 462. * Joh. 5. 43. † Act. 9. 17. ‖ Act. 13. 3. * Joh. 10. 1. Qui autem non fideliter intra● vit , neque pe● Christum , quidni infideliter agat , & contra Christum . Bernard . ut citatur à Tho. Mortono . Apol. cath . pag. 62. † Lev. 18. 9. 29. ‖ 1 Cor. 1. 21. * 1 Cor. 9. ●6 . Job . 15. 3. † 2 Sam. 6. 6 , 7. ‖ Numb . 4. 15. * Deut. 6. 25. † Mr. P. Baines on . Eph. 3. 2. ‖ 1 Thes. 5. 12. * Act. 20. 28. † Heb. 13. 17. ‖ Joh. 10. 12. * 2 Cor. 5. 20. † Act. 20. 28. ‖ Heb. 13. 17. * 1 Cor. 4. 1. † Gen. 49. ‖ Job . 42. 8. * Mat. 18. 20. † Joh. 5. 43. ‖ Joh. 10. 18. — 12. 49. — 14. 31. * 2 Thes. 3. 6. 1 Cor. 5. 4. ‖ Act. 19. 5. Significatur non forma quà in baptisando usi sint Apostoli ; sed authoritas Christi , ex cujus praescripto utebantur baptismo . Chamier . T. 1. L. 2. c. 4. 5. 5. p. 15. vide Jewel's Reply to Harding 's Answer . Pag. 116. * Es. 1. 13 , 14. ‖ Amos 5. 21. * Gen. 8. 21. ‖ Lev. 26. 31. * Mr. Hutcheson in Amos 5. 21. * Judg. 17. 13. † Junius in loc . * Jer. 14. 9. † Si ecclesiam non habet Christus , nisi inter P. tantum , nimium pauper factus est . Hieron . adv . Luciferanos . * Vindicat. of Presbyt . p. 122. † Cor. 9. 2. * Rom. 1. 7. 1 Cor. 1. 2. † Acts. 2. * Matt. 28. 20. † 2 Cor. 6. 16. ‖ Ps. 74. 7. Ps. 76. 2. * 2 Cor. 3. 7 , — 11. † Psal. 27. 8. * Vindicat. of Presbyt . p. 113 , 114. * Christian Concord . pag. 119. † Haeresiog ▪ pag. 78. * Serm. Decemb . 25. 1644. † Joh. 6. 68. ‖ Vindicat. of Presbyt . pag. 120. * Gen. 4. 16. † Jude 11. ‖ Jude 19. * Pareus in Loc. † Fulgent . l. 2. ad Monim . pag. 67. * Ezek. 37. 7. * Cant. 6. 8 , 9. † Rom. 12. 5. ‖ 1. Cor. 12. — 12. * Eph. 4. 45. † 1 Cor. 1. 13. * Sit una Eva mater cunctorum viventium , & una ecclesia parens omnium Christianor , Sicut illam maledictus Lamech in duas divisit uxores , sic hanc haeretici in plures ecclesias lacerant ; quae juxta Apocalypsin Iohannis Synagogae magis diaboli appellandae sunt , quàm Christi conciliabuta . Hieron . ad Geruntiam . pag. 92. † Ecclesia non est quae non habet sacerdotem . Hieron . advers . Luciferanos . p. 491. Ecclesia est grex Episcopo adunitus . Cyprian . ad Rogatianum . Epist. 69. * Pet. Mart. loc . com . clas . 4. c. 1. s. 1. * Cant. 6. 10. † Es. 24. 23. ‖ Tertul. l. 1. cap. 5. Cont. Nation . * Aug. retract . l. 1. † Clav. adver . Anabapt . art . 2. * 1 Cor. 13. 6. * Mat. 15. 14. — 23 , 16. † Joh. 11. 49. ‖ Mat. 5. 20. — 48. * Mar. 7. 9. † Joh. 9. 22. ‖ Mat. 21. 12. Joh. 2. 14. * Luk. 2. 21. † Luk. 2. 22 , — 23. ‖ Luk. 2. 46. — 3. 21. — 4. 16. * Luk. 3. 21. † Joh. 2. 13. ‖ Exod. 12 11. * Eph. 6. 14. † Mat. 26. 20. ‖ 1 Cor. 11. 16. * 2 Pet. 2. 2. † Dav. exhor● . ad pacem . p. 29. ‖ Bp. Hall. * Act. 19. 9. 1 Tim. 6. 3 , 5. Hos. 4. 15. Rev. 18. 4. vid. Masoni vindi● . ministerii . Angl. p. 167. * Amos. 5. 19. † Vindicat. of Presbyt . p. 116 , 117. * Vindicat. of Presbyt . p. 118. * Inquiry into the mystery of iniquity . p. 561. † Jam. 3. 16. * Dr. Manton on Jude 12. p. 496. † 1 Cor. 13. 2. * Omne Schisma , ubi progressu temporis inveteratum fuerit , Haeresin aliquam sibi confingit , ut recte ab Ecclesia recessisse videatur . Mason vindic . ministerii Anglic. p. 163. * Camero . tract . in quo eccl . Rom. pre . ad . exam . c. 14. Quae gens , quae regio tulit tam multa dictu gravia , perpessu aspera quam hodie nos ? Non enim partes solum inter nos sunt , sed partium ( ô patria quae salus te servet ? ) novae partes . Just. Lipsius . de constant . l. 2. c. 20. Dij talia Graiis , erroremque hostibus illum . * Clem. Alex. Strom. l. 7. * 1 Cor. 1. 10. † Phil. 2. 1 , 3. ‖ Es. 11. 13 , — 14. * Coimus in coetum & congregationem , ut ad Deum quasi manu factâ precationibus ambiamus orantes . Tertul. Apol. c. 39. * 1 Pet. 4. 15. † Alienorum inspector , sive curator . Composita vox ab alieno & Episcopo . Erasm. in loe . * 1 Tim. 5. 13. † 2 Thes. 3. — 11. * Cant. 1. 6. † Es. 5. 7. ‖ Deut. 32. 32 , — 33. * 1 Pet. 4. 15 , — 16. † 1 Thes. 4. — 11. ‖ Proprie est honoris consequendi gratia anniti . Piscat . in loc . * Mat. 7. 12. Sic cum unoquoque agas tanquam tu illius indueris personam , ille tuam . Hierocles apud Stobaeum Serm. 84. Quicunque malis vitam maculaverit actis , Ad tenebras pavidus refugit , ne lumineclaro Sordida pollutae pateant contagia mentis . Juven . l. 2. * 1. Joh. 3. 20. † Dr. Don. Honesta semper publico gaudent , scelera secreta sunt . Cur nunquampalam loqui , nunquam libere congregari sustinent , nisi illud quod colunt , aut puniendum est aut pudendum . * 2 Chron. 28. — 24. Act. 16. 6. † 2 Tim. 2. 9. ‖ Act. 5. 20. 2 Pet. 2. 1. * Joh. 18. 21. * Tit. 3. 11. † Tit. 3. 10. * L. 6. c. 5. † Epist. ad Magnum . ‖ Euseb. l. 6. c. 44. * 2 Chron. 28. — 24. * Luk. 4. 16. † Joh. 18. 19 , — 20. Matt. 26. 55. * Aug. cont . Julian . l. 1. * Piscat . in 1 Thes. 2. 2. † Rom. 15. 8. ‖ Mat. 15. 24. * Matt. 4. ult . with Matt. 5. — 1 , 2. † Luk. 5. 13. * Mark. 4. 10. † Matt. 4. 21. — 22. ‖ Mark 2. 2. * 1 Pet. 2. 20. † Joh. 18. 12. Ans. 1. Ans. 2. * Es. 45. 19. † Prov. 1. 21. 22. ‖ Col. 2. 3. * Hooker 's Eccles . polit . l. 5. Sect. 18. † Mat. 24. 26. * 2 Cor. 〈…〉 † C. A. 〈◊〉 & Bez. in 〈◊〉 * Calv. in Loc. † 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocavit assignatam sibi certam veluti arvi Dominici portionem , in quâ excolendâ laboraret . Beza . in Loc. ‖ v. 14. * Ps. 78. 55 † C. A Lapide . vid. Platina in vita Petri. * Deut. 19. 14. Prov. 22. 28. † Deut. 27. 17. ‖ Maymon . tract . de furt . c. 7. l. 11. * Camero praelect . ad Mat : 16. 18 , 19. pag. 11. col . 2. † Rom. 15. 24. ‖ Rom. 15. 20. * Act. 9. 20. † Clem. constit . L. 2. c. 48. * Mat. 28. 19. † Act. 22. 21. Rom. 1. 5. 1 Tim. 2. 7. Gal. 2. 7. ‖ Act. 9. 15. * 2 Cor. 11. 28. * Mat. 10. 5 , 6. ‖ Chemnit . Harm . Evang. c. 72. pag. 1025. * Act. 8. 29. ‖ Act. 9. 17. * Rom. 16. — 17 , 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 scl't attente & diligenter quasi hostes è speculaâ observare . Beza . ‖ 2 Tim. 2. 17. * 2 Sam. 20. — 9 , 10. ‖ 2 Cor. 11. — 13. 20. * 2 Cor. 2. 17. Sen. ‖ 2 Tim. 3. 5 , 6. Saepè fit ut qui falsum ex una parte apparens vident , ejus fugiendi studio abrepti longiùs , non in verum deveniant , sed in falsum alia parte positum , atque ita errorem non exuunt sed mutent . Hug. Grotius , in disquisit . Pelagiana . pag. 1. * Hooker Ec●●es . polit . ● . 5. sect . 3. * Jude 4. ‖ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 subrepo , furtim intro . * 2 Tim. 3. 5 , 6. † 2 Thes. 3. 6. * Valer. Max. L. 2. c. 7. † Cant. 6. 4. 10. * Pag. 549. † 2 Thes. 3. 6. * Syr. nihil quicquam operantes nisi vana . † Col. 1. 25. * Mat. 21. 23. * Concil . Chalced. Can. 6. * P. Balnes in Eph. 3. 2. * 1 Pet. 2. 8. † 2 Cor. 2. 16. ‖ Numb . 5. — 27 , 28. Posito uno absurdo mille sequuntur . * 2 Cor. 11. 2. Rom. 7. 4. Rom. 19. 7. John 3. 29. * 1 Tim. 3. 2. * Ambros. ut citatur à Coto● exc . 4. de dig . Sacerd. Vid. Hieronymi Epist. Oceano p. 676. Nè virginalis pauperculae societate contempta , ditioris adulterae quaerat amplexus . ‖ Thes. 3. 11. * Gen. 3. 16. 1 Cor. 11. 3. † Plin. adus in Epist. Trajano . see 1 King. 12. 7. ‖ Legal . vesol p. 6. Council , Nicen. Can. 15. * Act. 20. 28. † 1 Pet. 5. 2. ‖ Heb. 13. 17. * Gal. ● . 14. 15. † 1 Thes. 5. — 12 , 13. * Zanch. in Loc. † Ps. 101. 4. † Matt. 7. 23. * Bez. in Eph. — 3. 20. * Vindicat. of Presbytery . p. 123. * John 4. 9. † Prov. 9. 17 , — 18. * Medio de fonte leporum surgit amari aliquid . † Matt. 22. 15. ‖ Jam. 4. 11. Claudite quaeso aures qui audituri estis , ne tantae impictatis vocibus polluamini . * Ps. 26. 5. † Tertul. l. 4. contra Marcion . 1. ‖ Lactant. lib. 4. divinarum inst . cap. 30. * Exod. 29. 39 , 41. † Levit. 23. 2. ‖ Ps. 23. 6. * Ps. 27. 4. † Ps. 78. 24 , 27 , — 27. ‖ Jude . 12. * Josh. 1. 8. † Luk. 2. 19. ‖ Ps. 119. 99. * Jer. 23. 25. † Joh. 16. 17 , — 19. Mark 4. 10. — 7. 17. — 10. 10 , 11. ‖ Mark 6. 52. * Directory page . 57. † 1 King. 12. — 27 , 28. ‖ Vindicat. of Presbyte page 121. Ius divinum regim . Eccles. in praefat . * Exod. 22. 6. * Gal. 5. 12. ‖ Jer. 48. 45. * Rom. 16. 18. † 2 Pet. 2. 3. ‖ 1 Cor. 1. 17. * 1 Cor. 2. 1. 4. † Hos. 2. 7. * 1 Cor. 1. 11. — 12. † 1 Cor. 3. 4. ‖ Judg. 20. 1. — 11. * 1 Chron. 14. — 11. * Luc. 6. 26. As the Tyrian Woman that opened the gates of the City to the Enemy , and was herself trodden to death at their entry . * Sacramento vestis & signo , declaravit Ecclesiae unitatem . Cyp. de unit . Eccles. Sect. 6. † 1 King. 11. — 30. * Judg. 19. 29. * Davenant ad pacem exbort . p. 21. 22. * Ruffin . Hist. Eccl. l. 2. c. 9. ‖ Baxter Epist. to his Book of Rest. * Mat. 5. 19. * Zach. 3. 19. ‖ Eph. 4. 15. * Aug. cont . Don. de bapt . L. 3. c. 16. * 1 Col. 2. 19. † Eph. 4. 3. 16. ‖ Col. 3. 14. * Quodlibet corpus non minus appetit unitatem quamsuam entitatem . † Act. 2. 43-47-5 . 12. 14. ‖ Mat. 12. 25. Gen. 4 8. 2 Sam 3. 1. * Baxter ubi supra . † Si in sinu meo natus , si uberum meorum lacte nutritus , adversus me gladium levas redde quod dedi , & esto , si potes , aliter Christianus . Hieronim . advers . Luciferanos . p. 493. * Rom. 12. 15. † Act. 4. 32. ‖ Rom. 15. 6. * Ps. 55. 14. ‖ 1 Cor. 12. 1● . * Cor. 10. 17. † Cyril . l. 10. c. 13. in Johan . ‖ Chrys. Serm. de Eucharist . * Prov. 18. 19. † Mat. 10. 34. — 36. ‖ Aug. Tom. 3. de fid . ad Pet. Diac. cap. 43. * Calv. Comment in Rom. 16 , 17. † Vindicat. of Presbyt . pag. 112 , 113. † Published by Mr. William Rathbane an . Dom. 1644. * Aug. Tom. 3. de Baptist. cont . Don. c. 5. ‖ 2 Tim. 4. 3. * Leigh in● crit . Sac. ‖ Act. 17. 21. * 2 Tim. 4. 4. ‖ Stap. lib. 1 de Doct. princ . cap. 5. † Apud quos de humano arbitratu divinitas pensitatur , ni●i homini Deus placuerit , Deus non erit , homo jam Deo propitius esse debebit . Tertull. Apol. cap. 5. * Horat. carm . lib. 1. * Peter Martyr , Loc. com . pag. 741. Col. 1. * Pet. Mart. Loc. com . pag. 745. ‖ Ib. p. 788. * Hooker . Eccles. polit . l. 4. sect . 14. † Basil , p. 90. * Hook. Eccles. Polit. l. 4. s. 14. † Account of proceedings . P. 1 , 2. ‖ Mr. Latimer Act. & Mon● T. 3. p. 503 * Ps. 73. 15. * Act. & Mon. T. 3. pag. 94. * Act. & Mon. T. 3. P. 119. * Trial of Grounds tending to Separation , c. 9. c. 155 , 156. ‖ Page 176. * Account of proceedings . page 11. † Or as Dr. Owen in his plea for Nonconformists , p. 9. saith , they differ from us onely in significant fringes and laces of Forms and Ceremonies . ‖ Aug. ad Jan. Epist. 118. * Directory . page 1. * Act. & Mon. Tom. 3. p. 19 , 138 , & 1012. † Rhemist annotat . in 1 Cor. 6. 14. & 1 Cor. 10. 9. ‖ Franzius Hist. Animal . pag. 321 , 322. * Aug. Epist. 50. † Rom. 10. 14. ‖ Gen. 4. 26. * Hook. Eccles● polit . l. 5. Sect. 23. † Vis unita fortior ‖ Mat. 18. 19. * Pag. 215. Chrysost. de incomprehensib . Dei natura . Hom. 3. † Chrysost. in 2 ad The● . 4. Hom. ‖ Act. 12. 5● &c. * Leo Serm. 4. de Iejunio Septimi mensis . † Act. 16. 13. ‖ Cornel. A Lapid . * Hook. Eccles. polit . l. 5. Sect. 25. * Bishop Lake Serm. on 1 Tim. 2. 11. † Mat. 12 25. ‖ Casp. Si bel in Ps. 133 P. 597. VII . * 2 Cor. 13. — 10. † 1 Cor. 1. 10. † Bishop Hall resolv . of decis . Pag. 131 , 132. * 2 Tim. 4. 3. 4. † Col. 2. 5. ‖ Pag. 75 , 76. * 1 Cor. 4. 1● ▪ . † 1 Cor. 9. 2. ‖ Jer. 14. 10. * Prov. 27. 〈◊〉